Charles burton irwin biography of abraham
When Joseph Marvin Irwin was born on 16 October 1846, in Henry, Indiana, United States, his father, Charles B Irwin, was 41 and his mother, Malinda Coleman, was 33. He married Malinda Elizabeth Brandenburg on 26 January 1865, in Indiana, United States. He lived in Sugar Creek Township, Harrison, Missouri, United States in 1860 and Jackson Township, Livingston, Missouri, United States in 1870. He registered for military service in 1865. He died on 27 July 1914, in Colorado Springs, El Paso, Colorado, United States, at the age of 67, and was buried in Colorado Springs, El Paso, Colorado, United States.
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Charles Burton Newenham (1793 - 1887)
CharlesBurtonNewenham
Son of Edward Worth Newenham and Elizabeth (Persse) Newenham
Brother of Unknown Newenham, Edward Worth Newenham, William Persse Newenham, Charles Burton Newenham, Robert Burton Newenham, Eliza Grace Anna Newenham, Henry Hood Newenham and Grace Anna Eliza Newenham
Husband of Mary Louisa (Darley) Newenham — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
DescendantsFather of Emily Grace (Newenham) Cooper, Mary Louisa (Newenham) Hardy, George Cobbe Newenham, Anna Maria Clarissa (Newenham) Henderson and Sydney Frances (Newenham) Irwin
Profile last modified | Created 13 Mar 2017
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Biography
THE LATE MR. C. B. NEWENHAM. .
Mr. Charles Burton Newenham, news of whose death at Bath at the very advanced age of between 93 and 94 has been received by his grandson, Mr. C. B. Hardy, was essentially one of the pioneers of South Australia, and as such some details of his career will no doubt be of interest to our readers. Mr. Newenham, who was born in Dublin on June 25, 1794, married a Miss Darley, and for some years after his marriage occupied a post under the Imperial Government in connection with the Pigeon-house Fort, near Dublin. Being of a very energetic and enter prising nature, the young oolony of South Australia, then in its infancy, tempted him to emigrate to Adelaide, and he arrived here with a family of three sons and four daughters by the ship Navarino in December, 1837, and shortly after his arrival he was appointed Auditor-General of the province. Reaching Adelaide from Glenelg by the then most usual form of conveyance, a bullock-dray, Mr. Newenham and his family took up their abode for a time in a tent until he had completed the erection (most of the work being done with his own hands) of a wooden cottage, which with its vine-covered roof was for many years afterw