George Washington Kinney1,2
M, b. 1836
| Father | Stephen Kinney1 b. 1803 |
| Mother | Caroline Smith Weller1 b. 1807, d. 18 Apr 1875 |
George Washington Kinney was born in 1836 at Ontario; Date 1836 & location Cda. per 1861 Census. Date 1836 & location Cda. per 1851 Census.1,2 He appeared on the census of 1851 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 15 at 1851 Census: see Stephen Kenny.1 He appeared on the census of April 1861 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 25 at 1861 Census: see Stephen Kinney.2
Mary Caroline Kinney1,2
F, b. 1839
| Father | Stephen Kinney1 b. 1803 |
| Mother | Caroline Smith Weller1 b. 1807, d. 18 Apr 1875 |
Mary Caroline Kinney was born in 1839 at Ontario; Date 1841 & location Cda. per 1861 Census. Date 1839 & location Cda. per 1851 Census.1,2 She appeared on the census of 1851 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 12 at 1851 Census: see Stephen Kenny.1 She appeared on the census of April 1861 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 20 at 1861 Census: see Stephen Kinney.2
Marge Martha Kinney1
F, b. 1841
| Father | Stephen Kinney1 b. 1803 |
| Mother | Caroline Smith Weller1 b. 1807, d. 18 Apr 1875 |
Thomas Weller Kinney1,2,3
M, b. 1844, d. 21 April 1912
| Father | Stephen Kinney1 b. 1803 |
| Mother | Caroline Smith Weller1 b. 1807, d. 18 Apr 1875 |
Thomas Weller Kinney was born in 1844 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Date 1845 & location Cda. per 1861 Census. Date 1844 & location Cda. per 1851 Census. Date 1845 & location Chatham Twp., Kent Co. per family tree of julie92711 on ancestry.com, Oct 8 2016.1,2,3 He appeared on the census of 1851 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 7 at 1851 Census: see Stephen Kenny.1 He appeared on the census of April 1861 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 16 at 1861 Census: see Stephen Kinney.2 He died on 21 April 1912 at Dover Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; per family tree of julie92711 on ancestry.com, Oct 8 2016.3
Margaret Eliza Kinney1
F, b. 1846
| Father | Stephen Kinney1 b. 1803 |
| Mother | Caroline Smith Weller1 b. 1807, d. 18 Apr 1875 |
Margaret Eliza Kinney was born in 1846 at Ontario; Date 1847 & location Cda. per 1861 Census. Date 1846 & location Cda. per 1851 Census.1,2 She appeared on the census of 1851 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 5 at 1851 Census: see Stephen Kenny.1 She appeared on the census of April 1861 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 14 at 1861 Census: see Stephen Kinney.2
Victoria Louise Kinney1,2,3
F, b. 1848
| Father | Stephen Kinney1 b. 1803 |
| Mother | Caroline Smith Weller1 b. 1807, d. 18 Apr 1875 |
Victoria Louise Kinney was born in 1848 at Ontario; Date 1852 & location Ont. per 1871 Census. Date 1851 & location Cda. per 1861 Census. Date 1848 & location Cda. per 1851 Census.1,2,3 She appeared on the census of 1851 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 3 at 1851 Census: see Stephen Kenny.1 She appeared on the census of April 1861 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 10 at 1861 Census: see Stephen Kinney.2 As of May 1870,her married name was Sharp.3 She married Joseph Sharp in May 1870 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; per 1871 Census.3 Victoria Louise Kinney appeared on the census of April 1871 at Chatham Twp., Kent Co., Ontario; Age 19 at 1871 Census: see Caroline S. Kinney (mother.)3
Family | Joseph Sharp b. 1847 |
John Pettit1
M, b. 1753, d. 1804
John Pettit was born in 1753; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 He married Catherine Wilson before 1780; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 John Pettit died in 1804; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1
Family | Catherine Wilson b. c 1760 |
| Children |
|
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Catherine Wilson1
F, b. circa 1760
Catherine Wilson was born circa 1760; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 She married John Pettit before 1780; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 As of before 1780,her married name was Pettet.1
Family | John Pettit b. 1753, d. 1804 |
| Children |
|
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Joseph Pettet1
M, b. 1786, d. 13 July 1847
| Father | John Pettit1 b. 1753, d. 1804 |
| Mother | Catherine Wilson1 b. c 1760 |
Joseph Pettet was born in 1786 at New York, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 He married Bethania Herriman, daughter of Nathaniel Harriman and Bathania Snow, in 1809; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 Joseph Pettet died on 13 July 1847 at Pamelia, Jefferson Co., New York, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1
Family | Bethania Herriman b. 5 Dec 1788, d. 15 Aug 1860 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Bethania Herriman1
F, b. 5 December 1788, d. 15 August 1860
| Father | Nathaniel Harriman b. 24 Sep 1758, d. 2 Feb 1810 |
| Mother | Bathania Snow b. 6 Sep 1760, d. 26 Dec 1829 |
Bethania Herriman was born on 5 December 1788 at New York, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 As of 1809,her married name was Pettet.1 She married Joseph Pettet, son of John Pettit and Catherine Wilson, in 1809; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 Bethania Herriman died on 15 August 1860 at Greenbush, Sheboygan Co., Wisconsin, U.S.A., at age 71; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1
Family | Joseph Pettet b. 1786, d. 13 Jul 1847 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Moses Harriman1
M, b. 1737, d. 1784
Moses Harriman was born in 1737; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 He married Jane Hale circa 1757; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 Moses Harriman died in 1784; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1
Family | Jane Hale b. 1739, d. 1825 |
| Child |
|
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Jane Hale1
F, b. 1739, d. 1825
Jane Hale was born in 1739; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 She married Moses Harriman circa 1757; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1 As of circa 1759,her married name was Harriman.1 Jane Hale died in 1825; per GEDCOM of Krsiti (kateblossoms@hotmail.com) Feb 2 2016.1
Family | Moses Harriman b. 1737, d. 1784 |
| Child |
|
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
James Edwin Guillet1
M, b. 14 January 1927, d. 23 September 2005
| Father | Edwin Clarence Guillet1 b. 29 Sep 1898, d. 26 Jun 1975 |
| Mother | Mary Elizabeth Scott1 b. 27 May 1897, d. 28 Oct 1984 |
James Edwin Guillet was born on 14 January 1927 at Toronto, York Co., Ontario; per family tree of jamesscott175 on ancestry.com, Feb 5 2016.1 He "http://content.library.utoronto.ca/utarms/researchers/Fonds/guilletjamese
James Edwin Guillet was born in Toronto on 14 January 1927, the son of Edwin Clarence Guillet, a prominent historian. He attended Huron Street School, the University of Toronto Schools, and then entered Victoria College at the University of Toronto in 1944. He excelled in his academic studies in Chemistry and Physics but also found time for many extra-curricular activities. His passion for photography drew him to the Camera Club where he won a competition judged by Yousuf Karsh; it also helped him find summer jobs with Eastman Kodak. While a student he was a member of the Canadian Officers Training Corps and the Royal Canadian Air Force and later, while at Cambridge, served with the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve as a pilot.
Following graduation with honours in 1948, Guillet moved to Rochester, New York and later Kingsport, Tennessee, as a research chemist for Eastman Kodak where he worked on new types of graft and block polymers which led to the commercial development of new acrylic fibres. In 1953 he married Helen Bircher and the following year they left for St. John?s College, Cambridge, where he studied under R. G. W. Norrish, a future Nobel laureate. He obtained his doctorate in photochemistry in 1955, after which he returned to Kingsport where he worked first as a senior research chemist in the Eastman Laboratories. In 1963 he became research associate in charge of polyolefin research for Tennessee Eastman. Later that year he joined the Department of Chemistry at the University of Toronto with the status of associate professor. In 1969 he was appointed full professor and in 1991 professor emeritus. By the time of his death he had authored or co-authored over 300 papers, had registered more than 100 patents, and had written two books on polymers.
John Polanyi, a member of Guillet?s hiring committee, noted that, although he had a string of patents to his name (30 American ones in 1963), ?his bent was to do academic science and to figure out why things happened rather than how useful they were. He warned all the time against letting the application of science dominate the university agenda.? <../../../> His main areas of research involved studying the ways polymers react to light. His specialty was polymer science, particularly as it relates to synthetic fibres, coatings, and plastics. At the University of Toronto he began work on the photochemistry of polymeric materials (plastics) and held basic patents on the processes for the synthesis of photo- and biodegradable plastics (which he assigned to the U of T), high density polyethylene, polyolefin waxes and coatings resins, and peroxides and other catalysts for olefin polymerization. In the 1970s and the 1980s his lab was regarded as the ?best in the world in photophysics and photochemistry and ?supervisors were fighting? to find places for their students ?to work with Jim Guillet?.?
While he and the University could not interest any Canadian companies in his inventions in biodegradable plastics, there was a great deal of interest from other countries so Professor Guillet set up three high-technology companies that were based on inventions and technology originating at the University of Toronto. EcoPlastics Limited manufactured degradable plastics and polymer flocculants and also carried out contract research on tar sands recovery, light sensitive plastics, greenhouse films and related products. Medipro Sciences Limited was founded in 1976 to research medical applications of plastics materials and is noted for its development of ?artificial skin? for burn victims. Solarchem Corporation developed proprietary methods for making pharmaceuticals and specialty chemicals using sunlight as the primary energy source. Guillet served as president of each company at various times (EcoPlastics, 1976-1985; Solarchem, 1984-1985, and Medipro, 1985-1993). EcoPlastics and Medipro achieved modest commercial success (Medipro was purchased by Pharma Patch PLC in 1993) and Solarchem became a major manufacturer of equipment for the decontamination of water and air using high-intensity UV lamps.
Throughout his years at the University of Toronto, Professor Guillet was very active in administrative work. From 1969 to 1976 he sat on the University of Toronto Patents Committee and in 1977 was appointed chair of the University?s Task Force on Patent Policy. From 1983 to 1984 Professor Guillet was Associate Dean for Research and Planning at Scarborough College and served on numerous committees relating to policies for invention and other intellectual property. Other University bodies he served on included the Innis College Council (1969-1970), the Faculty of Arts and Science Council (1971-1973), the Department of Chemistry?s undergraduate curriculum committee (1971-1975), as a fellow of New College (1975-1979), on the Faculty Club?s board of directors, on the review panel for physical sciences for the Connaught Committee (1977), as chair of the Wiegand Committee (1982-1983), and on the Decanal Promotion Committee (1983). In 1986 he chaired the Research Board?s Computer Software Taskforce and in 1987 the Ad Hoc Committee on the PhD/MBA Program.
Professor Guillet was renowned for his ability to attract students and researchers to his laboratory and for forging links with chemists in other countries, more than 30 in all. He ?immersed himself in the lives and problems of his students and the scientists who came from around the world to work with him??[he] would spend hours and hours tutoring them [his students] if they were having a problem??He was just incredible?He knew what their log jam was and who they should speak to.?? During his career he supervised 28 Ph.D. theses, 26 masters degrees and 50 post-doctoral fellows and research associates. He was also active in giving lectures about science to primary and secondary students in Ontario schools.
Professor Guillet had numerous visiting academic appointments. The principal institutions he was invited to were Vanderbilt University in Tennessee (twice), the CNRS Macromolecular Institute (Strasbourg, France), Acadia University, Kyoto University; the University of California at San Diego,
IBM Research Laboratories (San Jose, California), the University of Mainz, St. Andrew?s University, St. John?s College, Cambridge, and the International School of Advanced Studies in Polymer Science (Ferrara, Italy).
Professor Guillet held numerous offices in scientific societies and attended many conferences where he often delivered plenary lectures. He organized seven international meetings in chemistry, including the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC). At the Chemical Institute of Canada he chaired several committees. He served on the editorial advisory boards of five important international scientific journals and was an active reviewer of publications and research proposals in Canada and the United States. In 1987 he co-founded the Polymers and Composites Program of the Ontario Centre for Materials Research, a consortium of five university research groups. In 1988 he acted as an adviser to the Foundation for Research and Development in South Africa.
Professor Guillet received numerous honours for his work, beginning in 1967 with a fellowship in the Chemical Institute of Canada. In 1977 he was awarded the Gold Medal and Canada?s patent number 1,000,000 for the invention of degradable plastic. In 1981 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and received a Guggenheim Fellowship, which was followed by a Killam Fellowship in 1987. He received an honorary doctorate from Cambridge University in 1974 and the Chemical Institute of Canada awarded him its Montreal Medal in 1998. In 1999 the Society of Polymer Science of Japan presented him with its International Award.
Professor Guillet died in Toronto on 23 September 2005, from complications following successful bypass surgery." from GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016. circa 1960 at Eastman Kodak, Kingsport, Tennessee, U.S.A..2 He died on 23 September 2005 at Toronto, York Co., Ontario, at age 78; per family tree of jamesscott175 on ancestry.com, Feb 5 2016.1
James Edwin Guillet was born in Toronto on 14 January 1927, the son of Edwin Clarence Guillet, a prominent historian. He attended Huron Street School, the University of Toronto Schools, and then entered Victoria College at the University of Toronto in 1944. He excelled in his academic studies in Chemistry and Physics but also found time for many extra-curricular activities. His passion for photography drew him to the Camera Club where he won a competition judged by Yousuf Karsh; it also helped him find summer jobs with Eastman Kodak. While a student he was a member of the Canadian Officers Training Corps and the Royal Canadian Air Force and later, while at Cambridge, served with the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve as a pilot.
Following graduation with honours in 1948, Guillet moved to Rochester, New York and later Kingsport, Tennessee, as a research chemist for Eastman Kodak where he worked on new types of graft and block polymers which led to the commercial development of new acrylic fibres. In 1953 he married Helen Bircher and the following year they left for St. John?s College, Cambridge, where he studied under R. G. W. Norrish, a future Nobel laureate. He obtained his doctorate in photochemistry in 1955, after which he returned to Kingsport where he worked first as a senior research chemist in the Eastman Laboratories. In 1963 he became research associate in charge of polyolefin research for Tennessee Eastman. Later that year he joined the Department of Chemistry at the University of Toronto with the status of associate professor. In 1969 he was appointed full professor and in 1991 professor emeritus. By the time of his death he had authored or co-authored over 300 papers, had registered more than 100 patents, and had written two books on polymers.
John Polanyi, a member of Guillet?s hiring committee, noted that, although he had a string of patents to his name (30 American ones in 1963), ?his bent was to do academic science and to figure out why things happened rather than how useful they were. He warned all the time against letting the application of science dominate the university agenda.? <../../../> His main areas of research involved studying the ways polymers react to light. His specialty was polymer science, particularly as it relates to synthetic fibres, coatings, and plastics. At the University of Toronto he began work on the photochemistry of polymeric materials (plastics) and held basic patents on the processes for the synthesis of photo- and biodegradable plastics (which he assigned to the U of T), high density polyethylene, polyolefin waxes and coatings resins, and peroxides and other catalysts for olefin polymerization. In the 1970s and the 1980s his lab was regarded as the ?best in the world in photophysics and photochemistry and ?supervisors were fighting? to find places for their students ?to work with Jim Guillet?.?
While he and the University could not interest any Canadian companies in his inventions in biodegradable plastics, there was a great deal of interest from other countries so Professor Guillet set up three high-technology companies that were based on inventions and technology originating at the University of Toronto. EcoPlastics Limited manufactured degradable plastics and polymer flocculants and also carried out contract research on tar sands recovery, light sensitive plastics, greenhouse films and related products. Medipro Sciences Limited was founded in 1976 to research medical applications of plastics materials and is noted for its development of ?artificial skin? for burn victims. Solarchem Corporation developed proprietary methods for making pharmaceuticals and specialty chemicals using sunlight as the primary energy source. Guillet served as president of each company at various times (EcoPlastics, 1976-1985; Solarchem, 1984-1985, and Medipro, 1985-1993). EcoPlastics and Medipro achieved modest commercial success (Medipro was purchased by Pharma Patch PLC in 1993) and Solarchem became a major manufacturer of equipment for the decontamination of water and air using high-intensity UV lamps.
Throughout his years at the University of Toronto, Professor Guillet was very active in administrative work. From 1969 to 1976 he sat on the University of Toronto Patents Committee and in 1977 was appointed chair of the University?s Task Force on Patent Policy. From 1983 to 1984 Professor Guillet was Associate Dean for Research and Planning at Scarborough College and served on numerous committees relating to policies for invention and other intellectual property. Other University bodies he served on included the Innis College Council (1969-1970), the Faculty of Arts and Science Council (1971-1973), the Department of Chemistry?s undergraduate curriculum committee (1971-1975), as a fellow of New College (1975-1979), on the Faculty Club?s board of directors, on the review panel for physical sciences for the Connaught Committee (1977), as chair of the Wiegand Committee (1982-1983), and on the Decanal Promotion Committee (1983). In 1986 he chaired the Research Board?s Computer Software Taskforce and in 1987 the Ad Hoc Committee on the PhD/MBA Program.
Professor Guillet was renowned for his ability to attract students and researchers to his laboratory and for forging links with chemists in other countries, more than 30 in all. He ?immersed himself in the lives and problems of his students and the scientists who came from around the world to work with him??[he] would spend hours and hours tutoring them [his students] if they were having a problem??He was just incredible?He knew what their log jam was and who they should speak to.?? During his career he supervised 28 Ph.D. theses, 26 masters degrees and 50 post-doctoral fellows and research associates. He was also active in giving lectures about science to primary and secondary students in Ontario schools.
Professor Guillet had numerous visiting academic appointments. The principal institutions he was invited to were Vanderbilt University in Tennessee (twice), the CNRS Macromolecular Institute (Strasbourg, France), Acadia University, Kyoto University; the University of California at San Diego,
IBM Research Laboratories (San Jose, California), the University of Mainz, St. Andrew?s University, St. John?s College, Cambridge, and the International School of Advanced Studies in Polymer Science (Ferrara, Italy).
Professor Guillet held numerous offices in scientific societies and attended many conferences where he often delivered plenary lectures. He organized seven international meetings in chemistry, including the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC). At the Chemical Institute of Canada he chaired several committees. He served on the editorial advisory boards of five important international scientific journals and was an active reviewer of publications and research proposals in Canada and the United States. In 1987 he co-founded the Polymers and Composites Program of the Ontario Centre for Materials Research, a consortium of five university research groups. In 1988 he acted as an adviser to the Foundation for Research and Development in South Africa.
Professor Guillet received numerous honours for his work, beginning in 1967 with a fellowship in the Chemical Institute of Canada. In 1977 he was awarded the Gold Medal and Canada?s patent number 1,000,000 for the invention of degradable plastic. In 1981 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and received a Guggenheim Fellowship, which was followed by a Killam Fellowship in 1987. He received an honorary doctorate from Cambridge University in 1974 and the Chemical Institute of Canada awarded him its Montreal Medal in 1998. In 1999 the Society of Polymer Science of Japan presented him with its International Award.
Professor Guillet died in Toronto on 23 September 2005, from complications following successful bypass surgery." from GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016. circa 1960 at Eastman Kodak, Kingsport, Tennessee, U.S.A..2 He died on 23 September 2005 at Toronto, York Co., Ontario, at age 78; per family tree of jamesscott175 on ancestry.com, Feb 5 2016.1
Peter Mitchell1
M, b. 10 July 1846, d. after 1911
Peter Mitchell was born on 10 July 1846 at Mariposa Twp., Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 He married Mary Ann Guillet, daughter of John Guillet and Hannah Patience Payne, on 18 September 1873 at Cobourg, Northumberland Co., Ontario.1 Peter Mitchell died after 1911; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | Mary Ann Guillet b. 28 Mar 1834, d. 27 Feb 1914 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Charlotte Payne1
F, b. 3 April 1806, d. 8 August 1845
Charlotte Payne was born on 3 April 1806 at Deverill-Longbridge, Wiltshire, England; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 As of 1835,her married name was Guillet.1 She married John Guillet in 1835 at Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 Charlotte Payne died on 8 August 1845 at Ontario at age 39; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | John Guillet b. 15 Sep 1802, d. 27 May 1872 |
| Children |
|
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Fannie Ann Bickle1
F, b. circa 1840
Fannie Ann Bickle was born circa 1840; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 As of 1917,her married name was Guillet.1 She married George Guillet, son of John Guillet and Charlotte Payne, in 1917; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | George Guillet b. 19 Jul 1840 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Neletta Elida Pettet1
F, b. 14 December 1874, d. 27 March 1970
| Father | Jonathan Pettet1 b. 31 Oct 1845, d. 24 Sep 1940 |
| Mother | Emma Guillet1 b. 20 Sep 1849, d. 28 Oct 1877 |
Neletta Elida Pettet was born on 14 December 1874 at Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 As of 18 September 1901,her married name was Howard.1 She married Harry Delos Howard on 18 September 1901 at Engelwood, Illinois, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 Neletta Elida Pettet died on 27 March 1970 at Cheyenne, Wyoming, U.S.A., at age 95; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | Harry Delos Howard b. 31 Dec 1873, d. 26 Aug 1964 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Harry Delos Howard1
M, b. 31 December 1873, d. 26 August 1964
Harry Delos Howard was born on 31 December 1873 at Chenao, Illinois, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 He married Neletta Elida Pettet, daughter of Jonathan Pettet and Emma Guillet, on 18 September 1901 at Engelwood, Illinois, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 Harry Delos Howard died on 26 August 1964 at Manville, Wyoming, U.S.A., at age 90; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | Neletta Elida Pettet b. 14 Dec 1874, d. 27 Mar 1970 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Ormsby Elroy Pettet1
M, b. 24 January 1877, d. 26 January 1961
| Father | Jonathan Pettet1 b. 31 Oct 1845, d. 24 Sep 1940 |
| Mother | Emma Guillet1 b. 20 Sep 1849, d. 28 Oct 1877 |
Ormsby Elroy Pettet was born on 24 January 1877 at Ohio, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 He married Pearl Sharp on 29 August 1911; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 Ormsby Elroy Pettet died on 26 January 1961 at age 84; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | Pearl Sharp b. c 1892 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Pearl Sharp1
F, b. circa 1892
Pearl Sharp was born circa 1892 at Ohio, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 As of 29 August 1911,her married name was Pettet.1 She married Ormsby Elroy Pettet, son of Jonathan Pettet and Emma Guillet, on 29 August 1911; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | Ormsby Elroy Pettet b. 24 Jan 1877, d. 26 Jan 1961 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Ernestine Bush1
F, b. 15 November 1859, d. after 1926
Ernestine Bush was born on 15 November 1859 at Kars Twp., Wellington Co., Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 As of 2 August 1882,her married name was Guillet.1 She married James Guillet, son of John Guillet and Sarah Catharine Payne, on 2 August 1882 at Cobourg, Northumberland Co., Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 Ernestine Bush died after 1926; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | James Guillet b. 24 Mar 1854, d. 24 Jan 1885 |
| Child |
|
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Herbert J. Guillet1
M, b. 19 January 1884, d. 23 January 1919
| Father | James Guillet1 b. 24 Mar 1854, d. 24 Jan 1885 |
| Mother | Ernestine Bush1 b. 15 Nov 1859, d. a 1926 |
Herbert J. Guillet was born on 19 January 1884 at Cobourg, Northumberland Co., Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 He died on 23 January 1919 at Elizabethtown Twp., Brockville, Leeds Co., Ontario, at age 35; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Jessie Maude Roberts1
F, b. circa 1860, d. 5 July 1894
Jessie Maude Roberts was born circa 1860 at Cobourg, Northumberland Co., Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 As of 27 December 1882,her married name was Guillet.1 She married Charles Guillet, son of John Guillet and Sarah Catharine Payne, on 27 December 1882 at Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 Jessie Maude Roberts died on 5 July 1894 at Cobourg, Northumberland Co., Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | Charles Guillet b. 16 Feb 1859, d. 22 Nov 1902 |
| Children |
|
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Charles Alfred Guillet1
M, b. 31 December 1883
| Father | Charles Guillet1 b. 16 Feb 1859, d. 22 Nov 1902 |
| Mother | Jessie Maude Roberts1 b. c 1860, d. 5 Jul 1894 |
Charles Alfred Guillet was born on 31 December 1883 at Cobourg, Northumberland Co., Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
George Leroy Guillet1
M, b. 14 October 1887, d. 18 September 1944
| Father | Charles Guillet1 b. 16 Feb 1859, d. 22 Nov 1902 |
| Mother | Jessie Maude Roberts1 b. c 1860, d. 5 Jul 1894 |
George Leroy Guillet was born on 14 October 1887 at Rochester, New York, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 He married Edna Sowry on 22 July 1925; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 George Leroy Guillet died on 18 September 1944 at age 56; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | Edna Sowry b. c 1890 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Edna Sowry1
F, b. circa 1890
Edna Sowry was born circa 1890; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 As of 22 July 1925,her married name was Guillet.1 She married George Leroy Guillet, son of Charles Guillet and Jessie Maude Roberts, on 22 July 1925; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | George Leroy Guillet b. 14 Oct 1887, d. 18 Sep 1944 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Lillian Marguerite Guillet1
F, b. 15 December 1891, d. 13 April 1969
| Father | Charles Guillet1 b. 16 Feb 1859, d. 22 Nov 1902 |
| Mother | Jessie Maude Roberts1 b. c 1860, d. 5 Jul 1894 |
Lillian Marguerite Guillet was born on 15 December 1891 at New York, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 She died on 13 April 1969 at North Carolina, U.S.A., at age 77; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Helga E. Sorenson1
F, b. January 1873
Helga E. Sorenson was born in January 1873 at Norway; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 As of 25 October 1899,her married name was Guillet.1 She married Charles Guillet, son of John Guillet and Sarah Catharine Payne, on 25 October 1899 at Massachusetts, U.S.A; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | Charles Guillet b. 16 Feb 1859, d. 22 Nov 1902 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.
Lockburn Bertie Scott1
M, b. 21 January 1862, d. 17 May 1951
Lockburn Bertie Scott was born on 21 January 1862 at Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 He married Harriet "Hattie" Guillet, daughter of John Guillet and Sarah Catharine Payne, on 25 December 1883 at Port Hope, Ontario; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1 Lockburn Bertie Scott died on 17 May 1951 at age 89; per GEDCOM of Cheryl (Kemp) Taber, Feb 5 2016.1
Family | Harriet "Hattie" Guillet b. 18 Feb 1861 |
Citations
- [S22] Rootsweb, online unknown url.