Fisher Family Genealogy
Photos
Matches 51 to 100 of 180 » See Gallery » Slide Show
# | Thumb | Description | Info | Linked to |
---|---|---|---|---|
51 | Fred R McCabe |
Owner of original: photo posted to findagrave.com by Williamdmc Date: 26 Sep 2020 |
||
52 | Frederick and Anna Marie Launer |
Owner of original: Stephen Fisher |
||
53 | George Allen Kaylor 1950s |
Owner of original: The Winchester Sun, Winchester KY, p 1 Date: 20 Nov 1957 |
||
54 | George and Mariah Creasey Foster 1940s |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com photo by bwisherd65 Date: 13 Jun 2012 |
||
55 | George Foster |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com photo by 4PearJ7 Date: 14 Oct 2010 |
||
56 | George Foster family (back) Cora and Chlora (middle) George, Alta, Mariah (front) John Robert, Nancy |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com photo by 4PearJ7 Date: 29 Apr 2020 |
||
57 | George Foster Family (from left) John Robert, Clora, George, Cora, Mariah, Alta and Nancy Foster |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com photo by 4PearJ7 Date: 21 Jan 2018 |
||
58 | George Foster family ca 1894 Left to right: John Robert, George Jerome, Clora May, Alta, Mariah Adaline Creasey, Nancy Mariah, and Cora Edith Foster |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com photo by StevenMurray1950 Date: 25 May 2017 |
||
59 | Girls Industrial School, Beloit KS |
Owner of original: Kansas Historical Society Date: 1930 |
||
60 | Harold Johnston in 1952 aged 43 |
Owner of original: Stephen Fisher Date: 1952 |
||
61 | Harold Ward ca. 1930 |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com photo posted by Andrea Pike Date: 10 Apr 2022 |
||
62 | Harold Ward ca. 1975-1980 |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com photo posted by Andrea Pike Date: 18 Mar 2022 |
||
63 | Henry C. Ward |
Owner of original: findagrave: Photo by Pam Dale Date: 25 Sep 2013 |
||
64 | Henry English and Valentine "Vollie" Ward |
Owner of original: photo posted to Ancestry.com by Pamela Rollins Date: 12 Feb 2022 |
||
65 | Herbert and Bessie Kaylor family Left to right: Herbert holding daughter Sallie M, Bessie's sister Jessie Webb standing, Bessie holding son Johnny, |
Owner of original: findagrave.com photo by Kevin Scott Foster Date: 23 Jun 2023 |
||
66 | Herman Charles Ancelet |
Owner of original: H Eugene Johnston (findagrave) Date: 9 Aug 2016 |
||
67 | Illinois Canning Co early 1900s This may be the cannery Riley Hoskinson describes in his letter to The Waycross Weekly Herald, 15 Sep 1902. Three canning companies were in operation in Hoopeston in 1902. The Illinois Canning Company was established by S.S. McCall in 1875. In 1877 it was incorporated as Joan of Arc. Pillsbury bought Joan of Arc some time after and retained ownership until 1995, when employees bought the company renaming it Hoopeston Foods. Teasdale Latin Foods, a California based business, bought Hoopeston Foods in 2012. The canning company under Teasdale in still in business as of 1 Jan 2024. |
Owner of original: http://cityofhoopeston.com/history/ Date: 1902 |
||
68 | Illinois Training School for Girls Ariel view of the school ca 1970s. A map of the site ca 1912 is here. The "school" opened in 1894, was closed in 1978, later removed, the land converted into a housing subdivision. A small cemetery used by the school, with 56 graves still exists on the site of the original school. In 1900 the school described as "for the confinement, education and reformation of girls between the ages of 10 and 16 years who have been convicted of offenses punishable at law." Other references state the school was also used to confine girls who were mentally handicapped or sexually active. Children born out of wedlock were also sent to the school, many never reunited with their mothers. Many alumni described the school as a cruel prison, with locked doors and barred windows. Girls described being sent to the “hole” and of being beaten for minor offenses, as well as rape and sexual abuse by staff and other girls. Chicago journalists accused the institution of using handcuffs and whips for discipline. The term inmate used in census records for its "guests" seems to confirm a prison-like atmosphere, though the school did offer training in classic "women's work" - sewing, cooking, hairdressing, typing, stenography - and later some non-traditional roles like an electrician program. |
Owner of original: Geneva History Center Archives Collection, Geneva IL Date: c 1970s |
||
69 | Illinois Training School for Girls map 1912 Map of the site ca 1912. An ariel photo of the school ca 1970s is here. The "school" opened in 1894, was closed in 1978, later removed, the land converted into a housing subdivision. A small cemetery used by the school, with 56 graves still exists on the site of the original school. In 1900 the school described as "for the confinement, education and reformation of girls between the ages of 10 and 16 years who have been convicted of offenses punishable at law." Other references state the school was also used to confine girls who were mentally handicapped or sexually active. Children born out of wedlock were also sent to the school, many never reunited with their mothers. Many alumni described the school as a cruel prison, with locked doors and barred windows. Girls described being sent to the “hole” and of being beaten for minor offenses, as well as rape and sexual abuse by staff and other girls. Chicago journalists accused the institution of using handcuffs and whips for discipline. The term inmate used in census records for its "guests" seems to confirm a prison-like atmosphere, though the school did offer training in classic "women's work" - sewing, cooking, hairdressing, typing, stenography - and later some non-traditional roles like an electrician program. |
Owner of original: asylumprojects.org, Illinois State Training School for Girls at Geneva Image Gallery Date: 1912 |
||
70 | Jack and Doris Kaylor |
Owner of original: findagrave.com photo by wrs Date: 8 Jul 2014 |
||
71 | Jane Botts Cropped from family portrait |
Owner of original: findagrave photo by Sandy Bushnell; Corning, NY |
||
72 | Janet (Roberts) Johnston 1844-1916 | |||
73 | Janet (Roberts) Johnston; twin daughters Anna and Elizabeth, and daughter Ellen | |||
74 | Jerry and Mellie Kaylor family 1910 Jerry (short man) and wife Mellie Jenkins Kaylor, his 2nd wife, taken in late 1914/15. The children are their daughters Price, age 10ish, Elizabeth (Bessie), age 9ish, and Nancy (Nannie) , age 7ish, and son Thomas (though looks like a girl in the photo), age 2ish in 1914/15. The girls are all listed in the 1910 census With Jerry and Mellie. Thomas was not born until 1912. The tall man in the photo Jerry's son Mathew, by first wife Sarah Adams. He also is listed as living with Jerry and Mellie in the 1910 census. He would be about 23 in 1914/1915, and remained with the family until wed to Zelma Webb in 1918. Two other people appear in the 1910 census in Jerry and Mellie's family: Mollie, Jerry's eldest daughter with Sarah Adams, and Olivia (Viola) Jerry's youngest daughter with Mellie Jenkins. It is easy to guess why neither appears in the photo. Mollie married Henry Ward in 1914 and would have moved on with him. Vola died in 1912, age 4. |
Owner of original: Polly Chmiel Date: 1910 |
||
75 | Jerry Kaylor portrait |
Owner of original: photo posted to Ancestry.com by Teresa Mattison Date: 26 Dec 2020 |
||
76 | Jerry Lee Fisher |
Owner of original: Stephen Fisher Date: ca. 2008 |
||
77 | Jerry Lee Fisher Memorial Video |
Owner of original: Stephen Fisher Date: 3 Mar 2013 |
||
78 | Jerry M and Melvina Jenkins Kaylor |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com: Tina Dickerson Family Tree Date: 21 Jul 2018 |
||
79 | Jerry M Kaylor |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com: Tina Dickerson Family Tree Date: 21 Jul 2018 |
||
80 | John B. and Edith Wood family Left to right: Edith Garrison Peabody> Wood, son John Arthur, daughter Lurrene, and husband John B. Wood, presumably taken around 1904/1905 judging by the age of the children. |
Owner of original: Kitsap Co. History Museum, photo G.A. 40 80 Date: 1905 |
||
81 | John B. Wood photo taken 11 Sep 1950 at age 89 |
Owner of original: shared by samtd1 on Ancestry.com Date: 5 May 2013 |
||
82 | John Foster and Daughter Not sure which daughter |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com photo by 4PearJ7 Date: 21 Jan 2018 |
||
83 | John Foster Drill Seeding 1930s presumably on his farm in Saskatchewan, CN |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com photo by 4PearJ7 Date: 21 Jan 2018 |
||
84 | John Kells Fisher cropped from family portrait |
Owner of original: findagrave photo by Sandy Bushnell; Corning, NY |
||
85 | Knights of Pythias Dist. Meeting in Pond Creek, OK, 22 Feb 1906 Oklahoma Historical Society Photograph Collection Archival Resource Key: ark:/67531/metadc1619383 Stephen Douglas Million is almost certainly in this picture. |
Owner of original: Oklahoma Historical Society Date: 22 Feb 1906 |
||
86 | Laura Isabel Johnston - 1954 |
Owner of original: Harold Eugene Johnston Date: 1954 |
||
87 | Louis J. Chmiel from his 2009 obituary |
Owner of original: The Standard Times Date: 1 Mar 2009 |
||
88 | Lucien Adolph Ancelet |
Owner of original: H Eugene Johnston (findagrave) Date: 9 Aug 201 |
||
89 | Map of Chickamauga, GA battlefield - Sept. 19 and 20, 1863 This map shows location of forces around Lookout Mountain at the time of the Battle of Chickamauga on September 19 and 20, 1863. As noted in the Library of Congress citation, the direction indicator at the top of the map is incorrect. North and west should be interchanged to orient the map correctly. Riley and Stuart Hoskinson served at a field hospital at Crawfish Spring, located in the lower right of the map. They were captured by the Confederate Army at this location on September 20, 1863. On September 25, they escaped and fled west to Lookout Mountain, then north across the Mountain to Chattanooga, TN, arriving at the Union Army encampment there on September 27. |
Owner of original: Library of Congress Date: Oct 20, 1863 |
||
90 | Map of Franklin, TN Battlefield Nov. 30th 1864 This map shows the location of forces around Franklin, TN at the time of the Battle of Franklin on November 30, 1864. The location of the Carter House where some of the bloodiest fighting took place and where Stuart Hoskinson was wounded in action is shown just south of the town. (Note north is toward the bottom of the page.) When the battle ended, Stuart was taken to a field hospital located in the Presbyterian Church in Franklin. The Union army then retreated, leaving Stuart and other Union wounded to be captured by the Confederate Army. He remained a confederate prisoner in the church until the Union Army recaptured Franklin on Dec 17, 1864. |
Owner of original: Library of Congress Date: ca. 1864 |
||
91 | Mariah Adeline Creasey |
Owner of original: Ancestry.com photo by 4PearJ7 Date: 14 Oct 2010 |
||
92 | Mariah Charter Foster |
Owner of original: photo posted to Ancestry.com by LyndaGeorge5347 Date: 21 Feb 2019 |
||
93 | Marietta Phelps and St. Francis Hospitals, Macomb IL |
Owner of original: Stephen Fisher Place: Marietta Phelps Hospital, Macomb, McDonough Co., IL 40.4592076, -90.67179709999999 |
||
94 | Marion L. Bond |
Owner of original: Kay McElhaney Moore/Find-a-Grave Date: 31 Mar 2011 |
||
95 | Martha (Fisher) Hoskinson Excerpt from larger Portrait of Riley and wife Martha (Fisher) Hoskinson |
Owner of original: Findagrave: Photo by William McCabe |
||
96 | Martha Jane Farris Bond |
Owner of original: Kay McElhaney Moore/Find-a-Grave Date: 31 Mar 2011 |
||
97 | Mary Alice Craig Stephens Cowser |
Owner of original: photo posted on findagrave by Rose Stout Date: 3 mar 2019 |
||
98 | Mary Ann Gibson Fisher Hover |
Owner of original: Rose Stout |
||
99 | Mary Lou Bartlett |
Owner of original: Stephen Fisher |
||
100 | Matthias Fisher Excerpt from photo of Fisher brothers |
Owner of original: findagrave photo by Bushnell Date: 18 May 2012 |