Web: Torrent records in the Genealogy Bank. Torrent family in Old Colony Ancestors. Web: Free Torrent results at FamilySearch. Web: Torrent family tree results from MyHeritage.
Web: America's Obituaries - Current. Web: Free citation lookup at Obituary Depot. Funeral Cards with Online Images. American Revolutionary War Records Navy Pension Fund Records American Civil War Records Medal of Honor Recipients - Torrent.
List of Pearl Harbor Casualties - Torrent. Web: Countries of Origin for the Torrent last name. Web: The Wikipedia Torrent Surname page. Find used Torrent books on ABEbooks. Petitions for Naturalization. Web: DeadFred photos that match Torrent. Web: FamilyOldPhotos. Find Torrent photos on eBay. Free Torrent queries at CousinConnect. Saturday am - pm. Sunday Closed. Popular Online Resources These are some of the external websites used most often in our department.
Subscription Databases Free through the Library. The Muskegon Chronicle Digital Edition Blank microfilm is no longer being produced, so NewsBank has contracted with formerly-microfilmed publications to provide digital archives.
Explore local history with our new full-color digital archive of The Muskegon Chronicle! You can search this archive in the library or remotely through the library website. This new digital archive covers January 1, and will grow going forward there is a 90 day embargo from publication date. Archival issues prior to are still available on microfilm. This database is available both within the library and remotely with a valid Hackley Public Library card.
Accessible from within the library only. Search current and archived issues with full-color newspaper pages, full-text articles an content only published online. Search current and archived issues with full-color newspaper pages, full-text articles and content only published online. America's News Explore and stay informed on local and national topics, people and events in areas such as business, health, education, jobs and careers, political and social issues and more.
Features a wide variety of credible, vetted news sources spanning the U. Free Online Resources. The word Huguenot was coined, so to speak, by a monk and attached by him to the Protestants at Tours, France, who assembled by night, near the gate of King Hugo, whom the people regarded as a spirit.
The name became quite popular from onward. Note The name Torrance was well known prior to the time of Robert Bruce, , which date was very much earlier than the existence of the word Huguenot. Beyond these Scottish references, nothing can be determined as to the origin of the Torrences, since information concerning races prior to the Scots is uncertain and obscure. Fitzgerald's Ireland and her People, pages 52 and The Picts were the ancient inhabitants of Scotland and Scots was the name by which the Irish were generally known from the 3rd to the 12th century, during which Ireland was commonly called Scotia, and its people Scoti or Scots.
These names were in time transformed to what is now known as Scotland, or the land of the Scots. From these Irish Dalriadians, through the Scottish kings, the house of Stewart, the present royal family of England, is descended. In the development of Scotland, the southeast portion gradually extended to comprise Fife, while the southwest embraced Sterlingshire, Lanarkshire, Ayrshire and beyond. These sections learned to adopt the ideas of western Europe.
The southern were English and beyond. The northern were comprised in Pictland. The western was the realm of the Dalriadic kings, Scots from Ireland. Gaelic was the language spoken. Roughly speaking, the above outlines the relative divisions of the country which arose as results of the obscure wars of the fifth, sixth, and seventh centuries. The question of religion, has, from the earliest known dates, played an important part in the destinies of these people. Protestantism, Presbyterianism, and Patriotism found a battle-ground here.
Following this period, wars in England, feuds of the nobles, clashes as to sovereign rights of succession, and intrigues kept the population away from productive pursuits and resulted in the destruction of their homes and institutions. Whereas he had English and Scottish estates and was a friend of Edward I, King of England, his patriotic feelings for Scotland and its ultimate independence led him to make a decision as to which course to follow.
His father died in It was about this time that Bruce made an alliance with William Lambroton, which bound them together in all of their future activities and resulted in freedom for Scotland, as well as, for Bruce, a crown.
0コメント