Search this site (uses FreeFind)
  • Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on him personally.

    Abraham Lincoln
  • My formula for living is quite simple. I get up in the morning and I go to bed at night. In between, I occupy myself as best I can.

    Cary Grant
  • Analyzing humor is like dissecting a frog. Few people are interested and the frog dies of it.

    E. B. White
  • I'm living so far beyond my income that we may almost be said to be living apart.

    e. e. cummings
  • What then is time? If no one asks me, I know what it is. If I wish to explain it to him who asks, I do not know.

    — Saint Augustine
  • Don't go around saying the world owes you a living. The world owes you nothing. It was here first.

    Mark Twain
  • If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer.

    Henry David Thoreau
  • If two things look the same, look for differences. If they look different, look for similarities.

    John Cardinal
  • In theory, there is no difference. In practice, there is.

    — Anonymous
  • Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.

    John Adams
  • People who like this sort of thing will find this the sort of thing they like.

    Abraham Lincoln
  • History - what never happened described by someone who wasn't there

    — ?Santayana?
  • What's a "trice"? It's like a jiffy but with three wheels

    — Last of the Summer Wine
  • Inside every old person is a young person wondering what happened

    — Terry Pratchett
  • I'll be more enthusiastic about encouraging thinking outside the box when there's evidence of any thinking going on inside it.

    — Terry Pratchett
  • .. we were trained to meet any new situation by reorganising; and a wonderful method it can be for creating the illuson of progress

    — Petronius (210 BC)
  • The time we have at our disposal every day is elastic; the passions that we feel expand it, those that we inspire contract it; and habit fills up what remains

    — Proust
  • So just as it is not the desire to become famous but the habit of being laborious that enables us to produce a finished work, so it is not the activity of the present moment but wise reflexions from the past that help us to safeguard the future

    — Proust "Within the Budding Grove"
  • You cannot help men permanently by doing for them what they could and should do for themselves.

    William J. H. Boetcker
  • Only a genealogist thinks taking a step backwards is progress

    — Lorna
  • No man ever believes that the Bible means what it says: He is always convinced that it says what he means.

    — George Bernard Shaw
  • A TV remote is female: It easily gives a man pleasure, he'd be lost without it, and while he doesn't always know which buttons to push, he just keeps trying.

    — Anon
  • Hammers are male: Because in the last 5000 years they've hardly changed at all, and are occasionally handy to have around.

    — Anon
  • The right thing to do is to do nothing, the place to do it is in a place of concealment and the time to do it is as often as possible.

    — Tony Cook "The Biology of Terrestrial Molluscs"
  • All that mankind has done, thought, gained or been: it is lying as in magic preservation in the pages of books.

    — Thomas Carlyle "The Hero as Man of Letters"
Elizabeth UnknownSurname (bef. 1630 - aft. 1673)
Augustine Algar (cir. 1635 - )
Florence Bootel (bef. 1655 - cir. 1689)
John King (bef. 1655 - cir. 1686)
Andrew Algar (say 1660 - )
Andrew Graham (cir. 1662 - bet. 1736 - 1739)
Jane UnknownSurname (bef. 1665 - aft. 1739)
James Barter (bef. 1669 - cir. 1711)
Ann UnknownSurname (bef. 1673 - )
John King (aft. 1676 - cir. 1737)
Elizabeth Northmore (cir. 1680 - cir. 1708)
Richard Peek (bef. 1690 - )
Stephen Graham (cir. 1690 - bet. 1757 - 1757)
Samuel Algar (cir. 1690 - 1770)
Martha UnknownSurname (bef. 1692 - )
James Barter (1693 - cir. 1767)
Joseph Rowe (say 1700 - 1757)
Ann Stephens (cir. 1700 - cir. 1778)
Florence Stephens (bef. 1701 - 1760)
Walter King (1706/7 - cir. 1771)
Jane Corry (bef. 1710 - )
Richard Peek (cir. 1712 - cir. 1778)
Abigail Rea (cir. 1714 - aft. 1789)
Ellin Graham (bef. 1715 - )
Thomas Wines (bef. 1717 - cir. 1784)
Robert Pyke (say 1720 - 1786)
Joseph Rowe (bet. 1721 - 1725 - 1763)
Ann Barter (cir. 1723 - cir. 1804)
Anne Cuff (bef. 1724 - )
John Andrews (bef. 1724 - 1776)
Elizabeth Algar (cir. 1725 - cir. 1763)
Elizabeth UnknownSurname (bef. 1735 - aft. 1762)
Jane Graham (say 1736 - aft. 1804)
Andrew Graham (cir. 1736 - cir. 1801)
William Baty (cir. 1742 - cir. 1810)
Thomas Andrews (cir. 1745 - 1821)
Walter Turnbull (cir. 1745 - aft. 1791)
Elizabeth Cross (1747 - 1844)
Joseph Rowe (cir. 1749 - cir. 1811)
Elizabeth Dickson (cir. 1750 - )
1620
1630
1640
1650
1660
1670
1680
1690
1700
1710
1720
1730
1740
1750
1760
1770
1780
1790
1800
1810
1820
1830
1840
1850
1860
1870
1880
1890
1900
1910
1920
1930
1940
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
Samuel Wines (cir. 1750 - bef. 1841)
Betty Andrews (bef. 1751 - cir. 1786)
James B. King (cir. 1754 - 1824)
Sarah Baty (cir. 1754 - cir. 1791)
Elizabeth Ralph (cir. 1754 - cir. 1818)
Richard Matters (cir. 1757 - 1830)
Sarah Peek (cir. 1758 - cir. 1795)
Patience Pike (cir. 1758 - 1829)
William Parker (bef. 1769 - )
Isaac Dawe (cir. 1769 - 1840)
Sarah Smith (cir. 1773 - bef. 1833)
Stephen Graham (cir. 1774 - 1856)
Robert Turnbull (cir. 1774 - 1854)
John Andrews (cir. 1777 - cir. 1867)
Jane Baty (cir. 1778 - cir. 1826)
Matthias Rowe (cir. 1780 - 1835)
Rebekah Wines (1782 - 1870)
William Clinton (1787 - bet. 1830 - 1851)
Eleanor Scott (cir. 1788 - 1846)
Ann King (cir. 1788 - 1850)
Bettsey Metters (1792 - 1863)
Jemima Parker (1793 - 1861)
Isaac S. Dawe (1797 - 1851)
Jane Gibson (J1a) (1812 - 1906)
Simon Andrews (1814 - 1900)
Jane Graham (cir. 1819 - 1907)
James Turnbull (1820 - 1891)
Emma P. Clinton (1827 - 1894)
William Rowe (cir. 1827 - 1915)
William Austin (cir. 1829 - aft. 1854)
Honor Daw (1831 - 1897)
George G. Andrews (1851 - 1920)
Matthias Rowe (1852 - 1901)
Caroline E. Austin (1854 - 1899)
Ellen Turnbull (1854 - 1926)
George E. Andrews (1881 - 1944)
Honor Rowe (1886 - 1971)
Jessie A. Andrews (1912 - 2005)
Leslie A. Henderson (1913 - 1995)
Misc. Events
Music
People
Immigrations