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6401 Richard was an accountant. Ridgway, Richard Lott (I26140)
 
6402 Richard was an engineer. Wilmot, Richard (I23736)
 
6403 Richard was an oil field pumper. Elam, Richard Henry (I58820)
 
6404 Richard's father was President of the Washington National Bank. Read, Richard Horrall (I985)
 
6405 Richmond was an employee of Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph for 33 years, and was promoted to supervisor of the directory department. He had served as bishop of the Provo 13th Ward for seven years. He became president of the High Priests Quorum in his ward, and later served as a member of the East Provo Stake High Council. Young, Scott Richmond (I56585)
 
6406 Ricky was killed in an automobile accident near Milton, Kentucky. Juilfs, Ricky Lee (I47903)
 
6407 Rita was employed as an electrician for 22 years with the IBW of Electrical Worker's Local #369 in Louisville, Kentucky, retiring in 2001. She loved to travel after her retirement and enjoyed working in her flowers and gardening. Scudder, Rita E. (I32176)
 
6408 Robb graduated from the University of Wisconsin where he received his Bachelor's and Master's in Chemical Engineering. He also served in the United States Army stationed at Fort Stewart in Georgia. He was a Chemical Engineer and worked his entire career for TDK (formerly Allen Bradley). His job with TDK took him from Wisconsin to Oklahoma where he retired. Brusberg, Robar (I35755)
 
6409 Robert and Sarah bought and lived in the old Scudder house at Scudders Falls on the Delaware. Green, Robert Welling (I11190)
 
6410 Robert attended school in Norman, Oklahoma, and graduated from the University of Oklahoma as a geology major. He was a resident of Corsicana, Dallas, San Antonio and San Angelo in the early and middle 1920ís and came to Fort Worth in 1928. He was president of Rio Oil Corporation from 1928 to 1947, when it was dissolved. He began ranching in 1932, and for a long time ran registered Herefords on the Silver Creek Farm. Goodrich, Robert David (I52316)
 
6411 Robert became a dentist, practicing in Cincinnati. Scudder, Dr. Robert Paul (I3731)
 
6412 Robert came to America early in life and settled in Sharon, now the northern portion of Bridgewater. He was one of the early hotel keepers of Beaver county and also established, early in the 19th Century, a very successful general store and warehouse trade in Sharon, which was then a shipping point. He was elected to the Pennsylvania Senate in 1846.

During the War of 1812, when word reached Sharon of an Indian massacre of women and children near the present city of Warren, Ohio, Robert sent at his own expense all of the powder, shot, lead and flints stored in his warehouse, to aid the endangered settlers.

Robert later built a large iron foundry at Sharon, which he successfully operated with his sons, John Stafford, Hart, Mattison and Scudder Hart under the name R. Darragh & Sons until 1848, when all withdrew except Mattison and Scudder Hart, who continued the business until 1902 when they sold out and retired. 
Darragh, Major Robert (I9412)
 
6413 Robert Charles Anderson, "Israel Stoughton," Great Migration Begins, v. 3, P–W, 1774. https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/2496/42521_b158320-00461?pid=70967&backurl=http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?_phsrc%3Dtfi11%26_phstart%3DsuccessSource%26usePUBJs%3Dtrue%26indiv%3D1%26db%3DGreatMigration%26gss%3Dangs-d%26new%3D1%26rank%3D1%26msT%3D1%26gsfn%3DIsrael%26gsfn_x%3DNN%26gsln%3DStoughton%26gsln_x%3DNN%26MSAV%3D1%26uidh%3D5v2%26pcat%3D40%26fh%3D0%26h%3D70967%26recoff%3D4%25205%26ml_rpos%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=tfi11&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true#?imageId=42521_b158320-00462 Knight, Elizabeth (I65033)
 
6414 Robert Charles Anderson, "Simon Huntington," Great Migration Begins, v. 2, G–O, 1045.
https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/2496/42521_b158319-00369?pid=55020&backurl=https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?_phsrc%3DWgc1%26_phstart%3DsuccessSource%26usePUBJs%3Dtrue%26indiv%3D1%26db%3DGreatMigration%26gss%3Dangs-d%26new%3D1%26rank%3D1%26msT%3D1%26gsfn%3DSimon%26gsfn_x%3DNN%26gsln%3DHuntington%26gsln_x%3DNN%26MSAV%3D1%26uidh%3D5v2%26pcat%3D40%26fh%3D0%26h%3D55020%26recoff%3D4%25205%26ml_rpos%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=Wgc1&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true#?imageId=42521_b158319-00370 
Rockwell, William (I65016)
 
6415 Robert Charles Anderson, "Simon Huntington," Great Migration Begins, v. 2, G–O, 1045.
https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/2496/42521_b158319-00369?pid=55020&backurl=https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?_phsrc%3DWgc1%26_phstart%3DsuccessSource%26usePUBJs%3Dtrue%26indiv%3D1%26db%3DGreatMigration%26gss%3Dangs-d%26new%3D1%26rank%3D1%26msT%3D1%26gsfn%3DSimon%26gsfn_x%3DNN%26gsln%3DHuntington%26gsln_x%3DNN%26MSAV%3D1%26uidh%3D5v2%26pcat%3D40%26fh%3D0%26h%3D55020%26recoff%3D4%25205%26ml_rpos%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=Wgc1&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true#?imageId=42521_b158319-00370 
Huntington, Simon (I65017)
 
6416 Robert Charles Anderson, "Simon Huntington," Great Migration Begins, v. 2, G–O, 1045.
https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/2496/42521_b158319-00369?pid=55020&backurl=https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?_phsrc%3DWgc1%26_phstart%3DsuccessSource%26usePUBJs%3Dtrue%26indiv%3D1%26db%3DGreatMigration%26gss%3Dangs-d%26new%3D1%26rank%3D1%26msT%3D1%26gsfn%3DSimon%26gsfn_x%3DNN%26gsln%3DHuntington%26gsln_x%3DNN%26MSAV%3D1%26uidh%3D5v2%26pcat%3D40%26fh%3D0%26h%3D55020%26recoff%3D4%25205%26ml_rpos%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=Wgc1&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true#?imageId=42521_b158319-00370 
Barrett, Margaret (I65018)
 
6417 Robert Charles Anderson, "Simon Huntington," Great Migration Begins, v. 2, G–O, 1045.
https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/2496/42521_b158319-00369?pid=55020&backurl=https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?_phsrc%3DWgc1%26_phstart%3DsuccessSource%26usePUBJs%3Dtrue%26indiv%3D1%26db%3DGreatMigration%26gss%3Dangs-d%26new%3D1%26rank%3D1%26msT%3D1%26gsfn%3DSimon%26gsfn_x%3DNN%26gsln%3DHuntington%26gsln_x%3DNN%26MSAV%3D1%26uidh%3D5v2%26pcat%3D40%26fh%3D0%26h%3D55020%26recoff%3D4%25205%26ml_rpos%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=Wgc1&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true#?imageId=42521_b158319-00370 
Huntington, Thomas (I65019)
 
6418 Robert Charles Anderson, "Simon Huntington," Great Migration Begins, v. 2, G–O, 1045. Crane, Hannah (I65020)
 
6419 Robert Charles Anderson, "Simon Huntington," Great Migration Begins, v. 2, G–O, 1045. Huntington, Ann (I65022)
 
6420 Robert Charles Anderson, "Simon Huntington," Great Migration Begins, v. 2, G–O, 1045. Huntington, Simon (I65023)
 
6421 Robert Charles Anderson, "Simon Huntington," Great Migration Begins, v. 2, G–O, 1045. Huntington, Henry (I65024)
 
6422 Robert Charles Anderson, "Simon Huntington," Great Migration Begins, v. 2, G–O, 1045. Family: Simon Huntington / Sarah Clark (F23545)
 
6423 Robert Charles Anderson, "Simon Huntington," Great Migration Begins, v. 2, G–O, 1045. In his will of 1 October 1678, Jasper Crane of Newark stated he was father of Hannah, "wife of Thomas Huntington." Crane, Jasper (I65021)
 
6424 Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Ewer," The Great Migration Begins, vol. 2, G-O, 1165 states:
"SARAH, b. about 1607 (aged 28 in 1635 [Hotten 88]; m. (1) Bermondsey, Surrey, 13 January 1623/4 THOMAS EWER; m. (2) 11 December 1639 THOMAS LATHROP, son of Rev. John Lathrop ('My son Tho[mas] and Brother Larnett's daughter, widow Ewer, in the Bay' [NEHGR 9:286]). http://interactive.ancestry.com/2496/42521_b158313-00581?pid=577&usePUB=true#?imageId=42521_b158313-00583 
Family: Thomas Ewer / Sarah Learned (F23553)
 
6425 Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Ewer," The Great Migration, v. 2, C–F, 481 states baptism; "no further record."
https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/2496/42521_b158313-00581?pid=577&backurl=https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?_phsrc%3DWec1%26_phstart%3DsuccessSource%26usePUBJs%3Dtrue%26indiv%3D1%26db%3Dgreatmigration%26gsfn%3DThomas%26gsln%3DEwer%26gsln_x%3D1%26new%3D1%26rank%3D1%26uidh%3D5v2%26redir%3Dfalse%26gss%3Dangs-d%26pcat%3D40%26fh%3D6%26h%3D577%26recoff%3D%26ml_rpos%3D7&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=Wec1&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true#?imageId=42521_b158313-00583 
Ewer, William (I65042)
 
6426 Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Ewer," The Great Migration, v. 2, C–F, 481.
http://interactive.ancestry.com/2496/42521_b158313-00581?pid=577&usePUB=true#?imageId=42521_b158313-00583 
Ewer, Elizabeth (I65043)
 
6427 Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Ewer," The Great Migration, v. 2, C–F, 481–482.
https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/2496/42521_b158313-00581?pid=577&usePUB=true#?imageId=42521_b158313-00583 
Hipsley, Bridget (I65050)
 
6428 Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Stoughton," The Great Migration Begins, v. 3, 1778. Stoughton, Elizabeth (I65027)
 
6429 Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Stoughton," The Great Migration Begins, v. 3, 1778. Stoughton, Elizabeth (I65028)
 
6430 Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Stoughton," The Great Migration Begins, v. 3, 1778. Stoughton, Sarah (I65030)
 
6431 Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Stoughton," The Great Migration Begins, v. 3, 1778. Stoughton, Katherine (I65031)
 
6432 Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Stoughton," The Great Migration Begins, v. 3, 1778. Cites her marriage at Hartford 18 January 1649/50 to John Wilcock. Stoughton, Katherine (I65031)
 
6433 Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Stoughton," The Great Migration Begins, v. 3, 1778. Cites marriage at Windsor, 30 November 1655 to Mary Wadsworth. Stoughton, Thomas (I65032)
 
6434 Robert Charles Anderson, "William Learned," The Great Migration Begins, vol. 2, G-O, 1165 states:
"SARAH, b. about 1607 (aged 28 in 1635 [Hotten 88]; m. (1) Bermondsey, Surrey, 13 January 1623/4 THOMAS EWER; m. (2) 11 December 1639 THOMAS LATHROP, son of Rev. John Lathrop ('My son Tho[mas] and Brother Larnett's daughter, widow Ewer, in the Bay' [NEHGR 9:286]). http://interactive.ancestry.com/2496/42521_b158313-00581?pid=577&usePUB=true#?imageId=42521_b158313-00583

Robert Charles Anderson, "Thomas Ewer," The Great Migration, v. 2, C–F, 481–482.
https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/2496/42521_b158313-00581?pid=577&usePUB=true#?imageId=42521_b158313-00583

Daughter Sarah's marriage to Thomas Lothrop in The Great Migration, v. 4, I–L, p. 348.

From "Updates for Some Great Migration Immigrants," The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, (Fall 2018):
William Learned: "Married Goodith Gilman, 22 April 1606 at St. Olave, Southwark, Surrey; five of his six known children were baptized at St. Mary Magdalene, Bermondsey, Surrey (a parish immediately to the east of Southwar): Bethia, Mary, Abigail, Elizabeth, and Isaac; and he had a daughter Sarah born about 1607 (aged 28 in 1635).
"'Addition: The baptism of his daughter Sarah has now been found in the parish of St. Olave, Southwark, as Sara D[aughter] of w[illia]m Larnet showmaker' on 18 January 1606/7. In addition, the burial at St. Mary Magdalene, Bermondsey, of 'Abigaill Larnett a child' on 8 August 1625 is almost certainly for William's daughter.'"
https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/72616063

"William Learned was freeman 1634, selectman 1636, one of the founders of Woburn, and died there April 5, 1646."
Richard Frothingham, History of Charlestown, 79.
https://books.google.com/books?id=8bNIAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA88&lpg=PA88&dq=%22John+Scudder%22+%2B%22Charlestown,+Massachusetts%22&source=bl&ots=r9s5aCa6Y2&sig=ACfU3U2qEIpRnJGxEubcnLInYD9DPDeLtA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjyscTQrJ7hAhXM8YMKHe3qDNsQ6AEwBHoECAcQAQ#v=onepage&q=%22John%20Scudder%22%20%2B%22Charlestown%2C%20Massachusetts%22&f=false 
Learned, William (I65040)
 
6435 Robert died at sea. Kurtz, Robert George (I31374)
 
6436 Robert enlisted in the Army in San Francisco on 6 June 1942. Morris, Robert E. (I30064)
 
6437 Robert enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1916 for four years. He served on various ships that protected European ports. Following his tour of duty, he returned to Nashville with his Croatian bride Katarina and their first-born daughter. Three more daughters were to join the family. Ryman, Robert Rufus (I58598)
 
6438 Robert graduated from Dartmouth College in 1932, having held the school's heavyweight boxing title all four years of his attendance. After graduation, the 6′ 4" Ryan found employment as a stoker on a ship, a WPA worker, and a ranch hand in Montana. He attempted to make a career in show business as a playwright, but had to turn to acting to support himself.

When he ended up in California, he enrolled at the Max Reinhardt acting school, which led to a contract at Paramount Pictures, where he made his film debut, appropriately cast as a boxer in a B movie intitled Golden Gloves. He found steady work in small parts, with his first big break coming as co-star to Ginger Rogers in Tender Comrade (1943). This film was later cited as an example of how the Communist party had infiltrated the film industry. Both its director, Edward Dmytryk, and its screenwriter, Dalton Trumbo, were among the original blacklisted Hollywood Ten. Ryan, however, was helped by his appearance in Tender Comrade, although his enlistment in the Marines in 1943 temporarily halted his promising career.

In January 1944, after securing a contract guarantee from RKO Radio Pictures, Ryan enlisted in the United States Marine Corps and served as a drill instructor at Camp Pendleton, in San Diego, California. At Camp Pendleton, he befriended writer and future director Richard Brooks, whose novel, The Brick Foxhole, he greatly admired. He also took up painting. 
Ryan, Robert Bushnell (I42827)
 
6439 Robert graduated from Phillips Academy in 1854. After a course of study in Harvard Law School, he began practice in Boston, where he shortly became a leader of the bar. He served as State Senator, and as President of the Senate, and was finally appointed a Judge of the Superior Court, Bishop, Judge Robert Roberts (I49995)
 
6440 Robert graduated from the College of New Jersey, now Princeton University, and from the Medical Department, University of Pennsylvania. He was a surgeon in the United States Navy in 1864. Clark, Dr. Robert Woodhull (I26116)
 
6441 Robert graduated from Toledo High School in 1943. He served his country in the U.S. Navy during World War II. Following his discharge from the Navy, Robert joined his parents in running Scudder's Maid-Rite, the family business located in downtown Toledo. In 1956, Robert and his parents built a new Maid-Rite restaurant at the junction of highways 63 & 30. Robert continued operation of the restaurant until 1973. He then joined the Iowa Veterans Home, working in dietary until he retired in 1990. Robert was a member of Christ United Methodist Church in Toledo, Fraternal Order of Eagles and the American Legion. He enjoyed fishing, playing cards and watching sports on TV. Scudder, Robert Lyman (I20295)
 
6442 Robert graduated in 1918 from St. Lucie High School in Ft. Pierce, Florida, and after several years working with the Florida East Coast Railroad, felt himself called to some type of Christian service. He attended Southern College of YMCA in Nashville, Tennessee, and graduated in 1926. He had a career with the YMCA, working in that program in Florida and Richmond, Virginia, until the war years of the 1940s when he worked as a production engineer for an aircraft company in Baltimore, Maryland. After the war, he taught high school industrial arts in Madison, Virginia.

In 1950, he resumed his career with the YMCA as general secretary of the "Y" in Lake Charles, Louisiana. While in Lake Charles, he became a lay pastor for the Louisiana conference and served small churches in that area, later moving to the "Y" in Alexandria, Louisiana, where, again, he accepted part-time appointments to small churches. In 1958, he accepted a position with the "Y" in Pulaski, Virginia, where he also served small churches for the Holston conference. In the spring of 1964, he retired from his YMCA career and returned to Florida, appointed as a local pastor to the Tarbough Memorial Methodist Church in Miami where he stayed until 1969 when the church merged with Grace United Methodist Church. During these years this church shared its facilities with a Cuban congregation, being somewhat in the forefront of the current emphasis in ethnic ministries. He returned to make his retirement home in Madison, Virginia, while yet spending two more winters in Miami as minister of visitation for Grace Church.

As a retired local pastor from the Florida conference, he was appointed in the Charlottesville District in Virginia to the Gentry-Binghams Charge in 1971, and Woodland Church in 1976-1977. 
Athearn, Robert Humphrey (I32509)
 
6443 Robert held an Engineering degree from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Class of 1942. He served as a naval officer, Lieutenant, in World War II. He worked for the General Aniline and Film Corporation as Plant Engineering Manager for 35 years. He also was a partner in Engineering Components, a manufacturer's representative business, for several years. He attended Trinity Memorial Episcopal and St. Casimir's Church. He was a longtime member of the Binghamton Club, American Legion, and an avid snowmobiler, belonging to several snowmobile clubs and organizations. He was a great bowler (nicknamed the Machine), model airplane builder, and a handyman, especially for the greatest love of all, his cottage. Scudder, Robert Charles (I23890)
 
6444 Robert Hicks came to Plymouth Colony early, arriving on the Fortune in 1621. His wife and children arrived on the Anne in 1623.

The Doane Family, p 19.
https://archive.org/details/doanefamily1deac00doan/page/18 
Hicks, Robert (I64962)
 
6445 Robert Junious (named after his Uncle "June") was a truck driver and an electrician. He had a gift for gab and was a great story-teller. He never had a problem getting a job. McKinney, Robert Junious (I25857)
 
6446 Robert lied about his age to join the Army when he was 17. He made a career of the Army and retired as a Captain. He later worked as a Seattle policeman and became a Lieutenant before retirement. He and his first wife, Esther, divorced in 1946 and gave up the two youngest boys for adoption. Alfred changed his last name to Frederick Schutt in 1948, and Robert II became Robert Alvin Kullgren in 1946. All three of the boys found each other and reunited in 1995 on the very plot of land they were taken from. Peggy, Robert's daughter from his second marriage, met her three half-brothers at the reunion. When Robert died in 1988, his ashes were spread over the Olympia Mountains of Washington, his favorite place. Cummings, Captain Robert Irving (I13883)
 
6447 Robert participated in the Revolutionary War. He enlisted as a private in the 5th Connecticut Regiment, 4th Company, under Colonel Waterbury on 13 May 1775. He was discharged 17 December 1775. Scudder, Robert (I379)
 
6448 Robert proudly served in the US Army during the Vietnam Conflict. He provided for his family as an IT manager for Dentsply International in York, PA., he was also a former Police Officer for Winslow Twp. Scuba diving, jet skiing, traveling, cruise vacations, NASCAR , and technology were some of his favorite activities. Outgoing & energetic Robert was quite the character; his witty sense of humor will be fondly remembered Scudder, Robert Lee (I26384)
 
6449 Robert received his education at Princeton. Scudder, Robert Finley Bacon (I3508)
 
6450 Robert returned to Somerset county, New Jersey, when he was seventeen and became a clerk in a country store. He eventually owned his own store there where he remained until 1840. He then returned to Seneca county. He operated a successful store in Romulus, and owned a 200-acre farm. He was postmaster for a few years, and town Supervisor for two terms. For three years, he was treasurer of Seneca county, and was a member of the Assembly in 1852, returning for a subsequent term. Steele, Robert Ross (I10657)
 

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