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Note    N398         Index
John Davis came from Ireland in the 1700's. Source (Four Generations Before by Jean Marshall Davis (Crutcher))

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Note    N400         Index
Located to Pike County, MO. Source (Four Generations Before by Jean Marshall Davis (Crutcher))

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Note    N404         Index
Obituary for Lucy Dexter (Glenn)

Daily Nevada State Journal, Reno Nevada August 11, 1891

Mrs. Lucy Glenn, the wife of Charles H. Glenn, died at Willows, California, last Saturday. It is only a few weeks since the death of Mrs. Dita Glenn, the wife of Frank B. Glenn, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Bradley, occurred at the same place. A dispatch says the death of these two estimable ladies in such a short time has cast a gloom over the community, and much sympathy is expressed for the bereaved families.

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Note    N406         Index
Obituary for Charles H. Glenn

Oakland Tribune, Oakland, California - September 16, 1920

Willows Banker Dies; Is Pioneer of Valley

Willows. Sept. 16. - Charles H. Glenn. 62, founder of the Glenn County Bank and one of the most widely known men of the Sacramento Valley, died here this morning of asthma. Glenn was a son of Dr. Hugh C. Glenn, one of the pioneers of the Valley. Glenn County was named for him.

He is survived by his widow and four children. Cleve Glenn of San Francisco and Mrs W. K. Hatch of Willows. *Mrs. Charles L. Leonard of Glenn and *Frank B Glenn of Willows.

The funeral will be held Friday.

*Mrs. Charles Leonard is his sister Ella and Frank B Glenn is his brother.

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Note    N407         Index
Account of Hugh J Glenn, II's Death

from: Colusa County : its history traced from a state of nature through the early period of settlement and development to the present.
by: Justus H Rogers - Orland, California 1891

September 15, shortly after midnight, Hugh J. Glenn, Jr., fell from the porch of the Commercial House, in Willows, to the curb-stone, striking on his back, from the effect of which he died shortly after. He was the fourth son of the late Dr. H. J. Glenn.

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Note    N408         Index
Obituary for Roy Glenn

From Woodland Daily Democrat (Woodland, California) 1890 January 23

The sad news of Roy Glenn's death was announced yesterday evening at 7 o'clock. He was taken sick last week with the grippe which soon turned into pneumonia and all that skilled doctors could do failed to save his life. Roy was the youngest son of the late Dr. Green. He was born in Jacinto, March 3, 1871. His mother and sister, Mrs P. French are on their way home from Ney York, the two brothers, Charles and Frank, were with him until he breathed his last. The family have the sympathy of the entire community. This will be a severe affliction to the dear mother following so fast upon the deaths of her husband, then oldest son, A. G., and then the sudden death, a little over a year ago, of H. J. Glenn. - Willows Journal, Jan 21.

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Note    N410         Index
The Harvard graduates' magazine, Volume 29
William Roscoe Thayer, William Richards Castle, Mark Antony De Wolfe Howe, Arthur Stanwood Pier, Bernard Augustine De Voto, Theodore Morrison
Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association, 1921 - Education

Michael Henry Guerin was drowned near Chicago, Sept. 11, 1919. He was born at Chicago, Dec.' 27, 1871, of old Irish stock, his parents being Dr. John and Mary (Jackson) Guerin. He entered in 1889 from the Harvard School of Chicago, and completed the usual course of four years in three. Wishing to graduate with his Class, he obtained leave of absence and spent what would have been his Senior year, half at the University of Berlin and half in study at Paris. After receiving his A.B. in 1893 he returned to Chicago, went to the Chicago College of Law, and took his LL.B. in 1895. The next year he opened an office for himself in the same city. He rapidly made a name in his profession, and in three years was appointed to the chair of Corporation Law in the Chicago Kent College of Law, the law department of Lake Forest University, where he taught until his death. He collaborated in publishing the Illinois Digest, and from 1906 to 1911 was a master in chancery in the circuit court of Cook County. In 1917 he was honored by being elected a judge of the superior court there. He was an enthusiast in outdoor sports, and belonged to several country clubs. With an open, social, and winning disposition, strikingly handsome, of marked ability in his chosen field, and a warm supporter of Harvard, he was one of '93's best representatives in the Middle West. At Oakland, Cal., April 8, 1896, he married Mary Esther Glenn, who with four children survives him.