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Note H1083 :
Geneva daily times. (Geneva, N.Y.), June 28, 1901, Page 4, Coroner at Halls' Investigated Death of Mr. Crosier, Who Wa s Killed by Cars. Coroner H. D. Weyburn returned last evening from Halls Corners, where he investigated the death of Jefferson Crosier, who was killed by the cars. Crosier, who was 80 years of age, was driving across the Pennsylvania railway tracks at Mead's Crossing when he was struck by a special on board Which were General Sopt. J.B. Hutchinson and other railway officials. Mr. Crosier was deaf and did not hear the train, The horse was Killed and the wagon Was demolished. The body of Crosier was carried 115 feet from the place where it was struck. Coroner Weyburn granted a certificate of death from accident. , The deceased had resided in the Town of Seneca all his life. He was one of the best known farmers in this section. He is survived by his wife, by two sons, who reside in California, and by one daughter, Mrs. Sherman Whitney, of the Town of Seneca, |
Note N1084 :
Find A Grave Memorial# 145558726 |
Note H1085 :
Published in The Berkshire Eagle on Apr. 22, 2015 : 1948 - 2015 PITTSFIELD Jeffrey Steven Crosier, 66, of 119 Seymour Street, died Wednesday, April 15, 2015, at his home. Born in Pittsfield on Aug. 21, 1948, the son of Robert E. and Susan Jason Crosier, he was educated in Pittsfield schools and was a graduate of Pittsfield High School. A Viet Nam veteran, Mr. Crosier enlisted with the United States Air Force on July 17, 1967. He attained Secret Security clearance and served a year overseas. He was honorably discharged with the rank of Sergeant on July 16, 1971. Mr. Crosier worked in managerial positions for Pepsi-Cola, Mohawk Beverages, and Litco Supply. He had also been a bartender at The Madison Cafe. He was a member of the Berkshire County Deputy Sheriffs Association, Veterans of Foreign Wars, the East Side Men's Club, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Polish Falcons, and the Rainbow Club. Mr. Crosier is survived by four sons, Jeffrey R. Crosier and his wife, Carol, of Pittsfield, Kevin M. Crosier of Pittsfield, Marc S. Crosier and his wife, Natalie, of Milford, and Timothy P. Crosier of Hinsdale; as well as five grandchildren, Jenna, Jeffrey, Milo, Emily, and Hannah. FUNERAL NOTICE: Calling hours will be held Saturday, April 25, from 12 noon - 3 p.m., at DERY FUNERAL HOME, 54 Bradford Street, Pittsfield. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Alzheimer's Association in care of the Funeral Home. Published in The Berkshire Eagle on Apr. 22, 2015 : 1948 - 2015 PITTSFIELD Jeffrey Steven Crosier, 66, of 119 Seymour Street, died Wednesday, April 15, 2015, at his home. Born in Pittsfield on Aug. 21, 1948, the son of Robert E. and Susan Jason Crosier, he was educated in Pittsfield schools and was a graduate of Pittsfield High School. A Viet Nam veteran, Mr. Crosier enlisted with the United States Air Force on July 17, 1967. He attained Secret Security clearance and served a year overseas. He was honorably discharged with the rank of Sergeant on July 16, 1971. Mr. Crosier worked in managerial positions for Pepsi-Cola, Mohawk Beverages, and Litco Supply. He had also been a bartender at The Madison Cafe. He was a member of the Berkshire County Deputy Sheriffs Association, Veterans of Foreign Wars, the East Side Men's Club, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Polish Falcons, and the Rainbow Club. Mr. Crosier is survived by four sons, Jeffrey R. Crosier and his wife, Carol, of Pittsfield, Kevin M. Crosier of Pittsfield, Marc S. Crosier and his wife, Natalie, of Milford, and Timothy P. Crosier of Hinsdale; as well as five grandchildren, Jenna, Jeffrey, Milo, Emily, and Hannah. FUNERAL NOTICE: Calling hours will be held Saturday, April 25, from 12 noon - 3 p.m., at DERY FUNERAL HOME, 54 Bradford Street, Pittsfield. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Alzheimer's Association in care of the Funeral Home. |
Note H1087 :
in 1900 lived in Port Jervis, Village Orange, N.Y. |
Note N1088 :
Burial: Evergreen Cemetery Salem, Washington County, New York, USA Plot: Sec C Lot 241 Find A Grave Memorial# 142325278 |
Note N1089 :
Burial: Robinson Cemetery Calais, Washington County, Vermont, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 136220277 |
Note H1090 :
Graduated from Herkimer County Community College May 2014 |
Note N1091 :
Burial: Evergreen Cemetery Salem, Washington County, New York, USA Plot: Sec B Lot 209 Find A Grave Memorial# 141818546 |
Note H1092 :
From: yakimaherald.com/obituaries Our beloved mother, Jewel Janett (Crosier) Gaudette, passed away on Sunday, March 26, 2017 at the age of 85. She was born to Earl E. Crosier and Elva M. Crosier on February 16, 1932 in Granger, Washington. She was the sixth of seven children. She was an avid gardener, skilled seamstress, an excellent homemaker and dedicated mother and wife. She loved to be out in all of nature’s beauty. Everyone who knew her loved her. She was a lifetime resident of the Yakima Valley and a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Two sisters, Betty Everts and Alice Wright, and her three older brothers, Roy La Point, Bill Crosier and Bud Crosier, as well as her husbands, James L. Gaudette and Allen R. McMillin, preceded Jewel in death. She is survived by her five children, Dennis W. (Terri) McMillin, Pamela J. Wise, Paula M. (Steve) Klingele, Paulette D. Lorz and Jerry A. (Irene) Gaudette; her brother Allen Duane Crosier and brother-in-law Jack Gaudette of Pennsylvania. She had 20 grandchildren and 44 great grandchildren. She will be greatly missed. Memorial Services will be held on Friday, March 31, 2017, at 1:00 pm, at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on 705 S. 38th Ave., Yakima, WA 98902. |
Note H1093 :
A John Crozier Jr. appears on the Pelham MA muster roll for 1757 [Co. of Capt. Robert Lotheridge in Regt. of Col. Israel Billings to relief of Ft. William Henry -- RL Keyes] See R Austin notes first land record in Halifax 1786, 22 Oct "in lot 50 next to sd Crosier's settling lot"; 1805, 9 Jan to son John Jr. "all I own" appears in 1771 Halifax census, 1784 school dist #10 and 1790, 1800, 1820 census records 6 children listed in R Austin notes, records for 5 in Halifax Vr and IGI 1988 IGI[Iris Baird] DNA test of living descendants of John and his brother Arthur(b. ~1735) confirm that they are a genetic match. Lewis Halsea Crosier listed John Crosier as being born in Coleraine, Londonderry, Northern Ireland. He acknowledged to Peter Miller that this was a guess. A review of Griffiths' Valuation of Ireland gives no Cros/zier families living in Londonderry during this time period. Some of the Scotch Irish that were in New England had lived in Coleraine, Ireland and they may have left Ireland from the port of Coleraine, Ireland, however there is no record of a Cros/zier family living or having children in Coleraine or Londondery. DNA testing has found a match with a Crozier lineage presently living in Drumbrick, Fermanagh, Northern Ireland who can trce their family living in the area of Magheraculmoney Parish, Fermanagh, Ireland back to the mid 1700's. |
Note H1094 :
John Crosier Died: after 1771 before 1788 The Massachusetts Militia records say that he was 59 years old at the same date that his son Arthur was 19. Arthur’s gravestone says that he died October 6, 1811 at the age of 76 years making him born in1735 which means that his father John Crosier was born in 1695, this could be in error as the miltia records calculate out to a birth date in about 1740. From 5/21/1738 to 5/20/1739 a John Cosar Pvt. Is listed as serving under Captain John Gyles at St. Georges Fort, Maine, this could be John Crosier with the nonrhotic spelling. On March 15, 1748/49 John Crozer mortgages to Thomas Dick, housewright, a certain tract of land 100 acres more or less in Pelham, Province of Massachusetts Bay bounded on the east by land of Robert Pebbles, south by Jonathan Edwards and Madam Hawley, west by land of Thomas Dick, and on the north by the south line of the Lisburn Propriety so called. The deed states that John has this land by inheritance. From the History of Pelham we get the following information: Page 106 in April/May of 1760 the acreage of crops of John Croser. Page 110 March 2, 1761 John Croser is the Fence Viewer. Page 343 Arthur Crozier and John Crozier Jr. are listed as responding to Fort William Henry in 1757. Page 344 John Crozier Sen. And Arthur Crozier are noted as enlisting in April 2,1759 with Jeffery Amherst for the invasion of Canada. "Arthur Crozier son of John Crozier". John sen. 59 years old, Arthur 19. Page 458 Nov. 15, 1793, William Hunt, Shutesbury, and Polly Crosher, Pelham. A digestion of Town of Pelham records from R.L.Keyes, Tax invoice 1748, 1760 and 1771 in West Parish, fence viewer 1761; in "Southwest District" on 28 Dec 1767 school tax list appears on Pelham inv. with 2 polls, house, etc. There is no mention of John Crosers’ wifes’ names in the Pelham records. DNA Study Results are on going. Termnal SNP is R-Z29460 on June 2017. Earlier genealogist have confused the Crosier and Crossett names and families of Pelham See "The Crosier Crossett Connection" at this website For a short time 2011~2012 it was thought that John Crosier of Pelham, Ma. was the same as John Cosier of Norwalk, Ct. Probate records from Egg Harbor, Gloustershire, New Jersey indicate that he removed to there, married and died ~1767. So they are not the same person. Records relating to the early history of Boston ..., Volume 28 By Boston (Mass.). Registry Dept, Boston (Mass.). Record C Massacusetts Officers and Soldiers 1723-1743 Dummers’ War to the War of Jenkins’ Ear, edited by Myron O. Stachiw Hampshire County Deeds at Hamden County Registry of Deeds Springfield, Mass. Book Page Date R 491 1748 John Crozer Mortgage to Thomas Dick History of Pelham, Mass. From 1738 to 1898 by C.O. Parmenter, published in Amherst, Mass. by the Press of Carpenter & Morehouse, 1898. In October 7, 1756 there is an entry in the Town of Pelham book that John Croser has a bay colt with the letter "P" branded on its' shoulder. John Croser/Crowser/Crowzer is listed in an accounting in Leicester, Ma.town records in 1741-1744. The American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI) has a listing of a John Crosier b. 1700 living in Massachusetts.Volumne 37 page 354. |
Note H1095 :
see Tandragee Belfast Newsletter March 16, 1762 for John Crosier leaving Ballybay, Ireland for New York, USA. |
Note N1096 :
Burial: Lyndon Center Cemetery Lyndon, Caledonia County, Vermont, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 147599240 |
Note N1097 :
Burial: Oxford Cemetery Oxford, Talbot County, Maryland, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 99224489 |
Note H1098 :
From: Kent & Pelczar Funeral Home Dover - John D. Crosier, 75 of Dover, NH died Sunday November 18th, 2012 after a long battle with cancer. Son of the late Walter S. and Felicie S. Crosier, he was born in North Adams, MA. He was predeceased by his brother Walter and twin sister Janie. He leaves his wife Judith (Decker) of 43 years, his son John Jr. of Dover and his wife Kristen and grandchildren Matthew and Katherine, and son Michael of White River Junction, VT, and several friends who John considered family. He was a graduate of Lenox School and Hamilton College. John enjoyed a successful career, where he created countless business relationships and lifelong friends. His career was a great source of pride for him. Before retiring in 2005, he was president of the Business and Industry Association of New Hampshire for 16 years. He also served as President of the Massachusetts Business Roundtable. He was appointed by two different Massachusetts' Governors to serve as the Director of the Massachusetts' Division of Employment Security and the Commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Commerce and Development. In 1997, as a testament to how well respected John was in the business community, he was named Business Leader of the year by Business NH Magazine and the NH Association of Chamber of Commerce 1997. In 1999, John was appointed to the New Hampshire System’s Board of Trustees, where he volunteered his time for 16 years. He also was the Junior Warden of the Vestry of St. George's Episcopal Church of Durham. Some of John’s greatest pleasures in life included spending time with family and friends, golfing at Concord Country Club, and a lifetime of summers on Lake Winnipesaukee. His passion was leaving a community rich in opportunity for future generations of NH citizens. A memorial service will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, December 8th at St. George's Episcopal Church at 1 Park Court in Durham, NH. In lieu of flowers donations can be made to the Hyder Family Hospice House, 285 County Farm Road, Dover, N.H. 03820. From: https://www.hamilton.edu/magazine/spring13 John David Crosier ’59, who, as head of the New Hampshire Business and Industry Association, contributed importantly to the economic development of that state, was born on April 21, 1937, in North Adams, MA. The younger son of Walter S., a manufacturer’s sales representative, and Felicie Strickland Crosier, he was a grandson of John L. Strickland, Class of 1904, a trustee of the College, and nephew of John L. Strickland, Jr. ’30. John Crosier prepared for college at Lenox School in Massachusetts and enrolled at Hamilton from Grafton, MA, in 1955. He was accompanied by glowing recommendations from Lenox as a leader and "one of the top boys" at the school. "Crose" joined his older brother Walter’s fraternity, Alpha Delta Phi. He soon became active in campus governance as a member of the Student Senate and later its treasurer, and chaired the rushing committee. A leader of his fraternity and advisor to freshmen in South Dormitory during his junior year as well, he was tapped for Pentagon. John Crosier, who majored in economics, left the Hill with his diploma in 1959. He found employment back in Massachusetts as a sales representative and later supply sales manager for Crompton & Knowles Corp., chemical manufacturers in Worcester. Over the course of 15 years, he would hold marketing and general management positions with three Massachusetts manufacturing companies, including the vice presidency of American Steel and Aluminum Corp. The experience he gained led to his appointment as director of the state’s Division of Employment Security in 1974. Two years later, John Crosier was named commissioner of the Commonwealth’s Department of Commerce and Development. In that post he promoted the state as a good place to do business and acted as a mediator between the business community and state government. In 1980, after two years as executive vice president of Jobs for Massachusetts, he became executive director of the Massachusetts Business Roundtable, an organization of the state’s top business leaders that facilitated the development of public policy. Earlier he had served, by appointment of Speaker of the House Thomas P. "Tip" O’Neill, as a member of the National Commission on Unemployment Compensation. While residing in the Worcester area, John Crosier took a prominent role in the community, serving on planning boards and as president of the Worcester Young Businessmen’s Association and chairman of the board of the Worcester Cooperative Council. He was also vice president of the Worcester Chamber of Commerce and vice chairman of the board of Worcester Memorial Hospital. In 1989, John Crosier left his home state when he became president and chief executive officer of the Business and Industry Association of New Hampshire. He took up residence in Concord and, for the next 16 years, became, in the words of Governor (now U.S. Senator) Jeanne Shaheen, "a tireless advocate for New Hampshire business, big and small." He established countless fruitful relationships within the business community as well as with state legislators and officials, and earned their respect for his bipartisanship. That respect was evidenced in 1997 when he was named Business Leader of the Year by Business NH Magazine and the New Hampshire Chamber of Commerce Association. Called New Hampshire’s "business guru," John Crosier was appointed by both Democratic and Republican governors to serve on public and advisory panels. In 1989, then Republican Governor Judd Gregg named him to a blue ribbon commission on health care issues, and in 2006 he was selected by Democratic Governor John Lynch as a member of a committee to study the state welfare system. In 1998, he was appointed by Governor Shaheen to the University System of New Hampshire’s board of trustees, and at the time of his death he was its longest serving member. John Crosier, who retired as president of the Business and Industry Association in 2005, took great pleasure in golfing as well as spending summers with his family at Lake Winnipesaukee. Diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2000, he engaged in a long struggle with the disease until his death. John D. Crosier, a loyally supportive alumnus, died on November 18, 2012, in Dover, NH, where he had long resided. He is survived by his wife, the former Judith Ann Decker, a schoolteacher, whom he had wed on September 9, 1969. Also surviving are two sons, John D., Jr. and Michael D. Crosier, and two grandchildren. He was predeceased by his twin sister, Jane, and, in 2010, by his brother, Walter S. Crosier ’55. Memorial services for John Crosier were held at St. George’s Episcopal Church in Durham, NH, where he had been junior warden of the vestry. |
Note N1099 :
Find A Grave Memorial# 101653106 |
Note N1100 :
Burial: Cashmere Cemetery Cashmere, Chelan County, Washington, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 35235706 |
Note N1101 :
Burial: Memory Gardens Cemetery and Memorial Park Colonie, Albany County, New York, USA Plot: Fraternal Garden Find A Grave Memorial# 154812581 |
Note H1102 :
Descendants of Nicholas Cady of Watertown, Mass. 1645-1910 By Orrin Peer Allen |
Note N1103 :
Burial: Hollywood Cemetery Richmond, Richmond City, Virginia, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 92988898 |
Note H1104 :
Crosier, John H. MILITARY SERVICE: Age: 18, credited to Bennington, VT Unit(s): 4th VT INF Service: enl 3/22/62, m/i 4/12/62, Pvt, Co. C, 4th VT INF, m/o 4/12/65 source: Vermont in the Civil War website John died intestate his estate was probated in 1906 by his siblings (heirs at law) |
Note N1105 :
Burial: Old Bennington Cemetery Bennington, Bennington County, Vermont, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 22440011 Burlington free press., May 27, 1864 Company C, John H. Crosier of Bennington, missing |
Note N1106 :
Find A Grave Memorial# 168979261 |
Note N1107 :
Burial: Little Church Cemetery Stanley, Ontario County, New York, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 117716072 |
Note N1108 :
Burial: Evergreen Cemetery Salem, Washington County, New York, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 142325206 |
Note N1109 :
Burial: New Hebron Cemetery Hebron, Washington County, New York, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 118820597 |
Note N1110 :
Burial: Liberty Cemetery Liberty, Gage County, Nebraska, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 167789777 |
Note N1111 :
Burial: Wilhelm's Portland Memorial Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 177836342 |
Note N1112 :
Burial: Lake Delton Cemetery Lake Delton, Sauk County, Wisconsin, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 79251498 |
Note N1113 :
Burial: Rippey Cemetery Rippey, Greene County, Iowa, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 38201603 |
Note H1114 :
My Genealogy Home Page Updated October 7, 2002 c l pelayo po box 576 garden grove, CA 92842 United States 714-000-0000 pelayo@sbcglobal.net |
Note N1115 :
Burial: Cave Hill Cemetery Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 165334685 |
Note H1116 :
The Suffolk County news. (Sayville, N.Y.), January 15, 1932, Page 7. A daughter was barn to Mr. and Mrs. Mark A. Crosier, of Center Moriches, last week, while Mr. Crosier was hurrying his wife to Miss Hughes' private hospital in Patchogue by automobile, Crosier sped on to tho hospital, where Dr, W. W, Gardner reported mother and daughter "doing nicely." |
These pages have been generated by the software Oxy-Gen version 1.41b, on 17/08/2023. You can download it here.