Genealogie Wylie » Oliver Young Bonner [PH Bu] (1861-1929)

Persoonlijke gegevens Oliver Young Bonner [PH Bu] 

Bron 1
  • Hij is geboren op 10 november 1861 in Stewards Mill, Freestone County, Texas.
  • Hij is gedoopt.
  • Beroepen:
    • Trustee of Steward's Mill Common School District.
    • in het jaar 1880 FARMER in Freestone County, Texas.
  • Volkstelling in het jaar 1870, Freestone County, Texas.
  • Volkstelling in het jaar 1880, Freestone County, Texas.
  • Volkstelling op 4 februari 1920, Freestone County, Texas.
  • (EDUC ) in het jaar 1883 in Erskine College in Due West, Abbeville County, South Carolina.
  • (Misc ) : FREESTONE CO BOOK VOL I, #124.
  • (Misc ) : RACOON HUNTER.
  • (Misc ) : PICTURE OF HIM & FAMILY IS IN BONNER FOLDER ON HARD DRIVE.
  • (Tombstone ) : BONNER, O. Y. 11/10/1861 - 1/19/1929.
  • Hij is overleden op 19 januari 1929 in Stewards Mill, Freestone County, Texas, hij was toen 67 jaar oud.
  • Hij is begraven in Bonner Cemetery, Freestone County, Texas.Bron 2
  • Een kind van John Laird Bonner en Sarah Elizabeth Bonner
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 28 mei 2014.

Gezin van Oliver Young Bonner [PH Bu]

Hij is getrouwd met Sarah Hope "Sallie" [twin) Robinson.

Married by Rev. T.J. Bonner
==========================

Marriage Licenses - Freestone Co., TX. (Book III 1880-1887)
Freestone County Geneological Society, Copyright

O. Y. Bonner Miss Sallie H. Robinson 20 Dec 1883 by T. J. Bonner,
MG p. 134

Zij zijn getrouwd op 20 december 1883 te Freestone County, Texas, hij was toen 22 jaar oud.


Kind(eren):

  1. Jim Billie Bonner  1885-1938 
  2. Paul Young Bonner  1888-1974 
  3. Tom Robinson Bonner  1891-1961 
  4. John Lee Bonner  1893-1983 
  5. Joel Isaac Bonner  1895-1972
  6. Irvin Hunter Bonner  1898-1985 
  7. Andrew Sneed Bonner  1904-1993 


Notities over Oliver Young Bonner [PH Bu]

http://www.rootsweb.com/~txfreest/Families/GrpSheets/BonnerOliverYoung
.htm

"Young Bonner farmed in Stewards Mill and served as a trustee of the
Stewards Mill Common School District; his mules were well-known and
sought after by farmers in several counties. While small in stature,
his strength allowed him to grasp a bale of cotton and lift it from
the ground. His word was his bond and his generosity and willingness
to help legendary. Sallie Bonner attended Due West Female College in
South Carolina. She taught all her children excellent manners and
always had food available for any visitor. Devout and faithful members
of Harmony Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church at Stewards Mill,
they instilled high ideal and morals in all their children."
==========================================================
Oliver Young Bonner lived in Bonnerville (east down the road from the
Parker Place on the north side of the road) just prior to the "Lake
Place".

========================================================
Fairfield Recorder - Feb 14, 1929

"Boys, I Am Going Home"
"... at 6:30 PM Saturday, January 19th, 1929, Oliver Young
Bonner, son of John L. Bonner and Sarah Elizabeth Bonner, went home.
...He and his faithful wife, Sallie Hope Robinson, whom he
married December 20th, 1883, who was both his help-meet and companion,
...
...In such a home the devoted parents reared a loving and dutiful
family, eight sons and one daughter, all living but one daughter who
died in infancy; Jim Billie, Bettie, Paul, Tom, John L., Joel,
Hunter, Oliver and Sneed, these with the wife, one brother, T. H.
Bonner, and two half brothers, Wirt and Millen, survive and sorrow,
but not as those who have no hope. He lived to see all these noble
sons settle in life, and fortune has so smiled upon the children the
father was as far removed from anxious care concerning them as his
beautiful, peaceful, God-loving home was removed from the noise and
turmoil of the busy city.
He did not leave to his children that doubtful blessing, a large
fortune, but left the price heritage which money cannot buy, a name
without stain, a reputation without blemish.
.. Born November 10th, 1861, for sixty-eight years his home was
at the Bonner Settlement in Freestone County, Texas. There he
attended school, spent the days of his boyhood and manhood, and in his
youth was baptised, and received into the church by Rev. W. H. Millen,
and thereafter, he had almost completed three-score years and ten, he
rests from his labors. The sorrowing multitude who attended his
funeral and burial in the Bonner Cemetery testified as no language can
to the character of the man..."
========================================================

Baptized by Rev. W. H. Millen

http://www.euphemian.org/alumnidata.html#1840
Listed as a member of the Euphemian Literary Society at Erskine
University.
1840 Bonner, Thomas Joel
1842 McCrery, David
1842 Robinson, David Pressly
1844 Bonner, James Isaac
1844 Pressly, Joseph Hearst
1845 Posey, James Willis
1848 McCrery, J. H.
1872 Robinson, G. S.
1878 Bonner, J. B. <= Believe Jim Billy Bonner
1878 Bonner, Samuel Andrew <=
1883 Bonner, O. Y.

1880 Census:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation
Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
John L BONNER Self Widowed Male White 40 AL Farmer SC
NC
Andrew BONNER Son Single Male White 20 TX Works On Farm
AL AL
O Young BONNER Son Single Male White 18 TX Works On
Farm AL AL John J BONNER Son Single Male White 14 TX
At School AL AL
Theophulus W BONNER Son Single Male White 12 TX At
School AL AL
Henry JOHNSON Other Single Male White 33 AL Farm
Laborer AL AL
Dick PACKER Other Married Male Black 20 TX Farm Laborer
AL AL
Amy PACKER Other Female Black 17 TX Cook AL AL
----------------------------------------------------------------------
----------
Source: District 54, Freestone, Texas
Family History Library Film 1255304, NA Film # T9-1304, Page #
533C

========================================================
1870 Census for Freestone Co., TX - done on 7/20/1870
Roll: M593-1586, pg. 18, Image 36

93/94 Bonner, John 39 M W Farmer 10,000 1,000 AL.
-, Sarah 38 F W Keeps House AL.
-, James 13 M W At home AL.
-, Andrew 11 M W ditto TX.
-, Young 8 M W TX.
-, Jackson 4 M W TX.
-, Theopolis 3 M W TX.
-, Samuel 41 M W Farmer AL.

Bonner, James 41 M W Doctor 7,000 3,000 AL.
-, Martha 37 F W At Home 700 AL.
-, Martha 17 F W ditto AL.
-, S. B. 11 F W ditto TX.
-, A. W. 8 F W ditto TX.
-, J. A. 4 M W TX.
-, 1 F W TX.
========================================================

1920 Census for Freestone Co., TX - Precinct 4
Roll T625_1805, Page: 6B; Enumeration District 21, Image 0183
Supervisor's District: 6, Enumeration District 21, Sheet 6B - done
2/4/1920 to 2/5/1920
Enumerator - Earnest A. Adams

[Oliver Young Bonner]
FM 136/136 Bonner, Ovlier [sic] Y. Head; Owns home, farm; M W 58
Married; TX. AL. AL.; Farmer, General Farming;
-, Sallie H. Wife; F W 59 Married; TX. SC. AL.; None;
-, Bettie Daughter; F W 33 Single; TX. TX. TX.; None;
-, John L. Son; M W 26 Single; TX. TX. TX.; Laborer, General
Laborer;
-, Sneed Son; M W 16 Single; TX. TX. TX.; None;

from History of Freestone County - Vol I
by Michael Edd Bonner

"Oliver Young Bonner, son of John Laird Bonner and Sarah Elizabeth
Bonner, was born November 10, 1861 in the Bonnerville Community. On
December 20, 1883, he married his cousin, Sallie Hope Robinson. Rev.
Thomas Joel Bonner performed the ceremony.

Young Bonner was a farmer and served many years as a trustee of the
Stewards Mill Common School District. Although slight of stature, he
was strong enough to grasp a bale of cotton and lift it from the
ground. It is said that prior to his death on January 19, 1929, among
his last words were, "Boys, I'm going home." Perhaps the following
quotation, written by a friend and published in the Fairfield Recorder
after his death, speaks best of his character: "He did not leave his
children that doubtful blessing, a large fortune, but he left the
priceless heritage which money cannot buy, a name without stain, a
reputation without a blemish. With him citizenship was a sacred trust
as well as a privilege, and in the discharge of its responsibilities
he exercised the most conscientious care. He was honest, both with
himself and with others." He was a member of the Harmony Presbyterian
Church at Stewards Mill. He is buried in the Bonner Cemetery.

Sallie Hope Robinson was the daughter of James Robinson and Eliza Ann
Bonner. She was born in Freestone County on May 23, 1860, was the
youngest of thirteen children and had a twin brother. She lived in
Fairfield briefly while her father was in the merchantile business and
while he served as Sheriff during the early 1870s. She and her
parents resided on the ground floor of the jail - now the Freestone
County Museum. She was educated at the Fairfield Female College and
attended Due West Female College in Due West, South Carolina in 1876.
After the death of Young Bonner, she and her daughter moved to
Fairfield and lived there until her death on October 1, 1935. She is
buried beside her husband. She was also a member of the Harmony
Presbyterian Church.

Oliver Young Bonner and Sallie Hope Robinson were the parents of ten
children, one of whom died in infancy. Jim Billie Bonner married
Nannie Belle York; Sarah Elizabeth "Bettie" Bonner never married;
Paul Young Bonner married Lula May Willard; Tom Robinson Bonner
married Annie Laura Willard; John Lee Bonner married Eleanor Belle
Bass; Joel Issac Bonner married Clara Elizabeth Shick; Irvine Hunter
Bonner married Mary Lucille Garrett; Oliver Alexander Bonner married
Lulabel McAdams; Andrew Sneed Bonner married Mary Margaret Marshall.
All of these children except Sneed made their homes in Freestone
County."

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Bronnen

  1. The Bonner Family History, Sue Bonner Thornton, Texian Press, Waco,TX.1972
  2. Find A Grave, via http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi..., 28 mei 2014
    Oliver Young "Young or O.Y." Bonner

    Birth: Nov. 10, 1861
    Bonnerville
    Freestone County
    Texas, USA
    Death: Jan. 19, 1929
    Bonnerville
    Freestone County
    Texas, USA

    About 5 miles northeast of the Stewards Mill Store, lies an area once known to many as Bonnerville. On November 10, 1861, John Laird Bonner and his wife Sarah Elizabeth Bonner welcomed a new son into their family. Their sixth child and fifth son received the name Oliver Young. Two brothers, Jim Billie and Andrew, greeted him. Later births included two more brothers, John Irvine "Jack" and Theophilus Hunter "Offie." Older siblings, Joseph Samuel, Eliza Jane Williams, and another John Irvine, died as children and are buried in Hamburg Cemetery, Wilcox County, Alabama. As John Laird Bonner enlisted in Peck's Reserve Company, Braxton Bragg's Cavalry on August 21, 1861, perhaps he was not present at the birth of his son. John Laird Bonner married his first cousin, Sarah Elizabeth Bonner, in Wilcox County, Alabama on April 25, 1850. Arriving in Freestone County in late 1857 or early 1858 with their children and their slaves, they purchased hundreds of acres of land and made their home near those of his parents and their uncle, William Bonner. John Laird Bonner operated a successful plantation and had a split-rail-fence constructed between his house and Tehuacana Creek to control straying livestock. He used a Z as his cattle brand. Oliver Young Bonner, called Young by his family, grew to manhood in a house near the modern day corner of Farm Road 833 and County Road 121. His grandparents, Dr. John and Eliza Feribry Williams Bonner, lived less than a mile away near Anglin Spring. His mother, orphaned at the age of six in Alabama with the death of her father, Dr. Samuel Bonner, in 1831 and her mother, Sarah C. Hearst Bonner Gaskins, in 1838, was known as Bettie. Necessities not produced on the plantation could be purchased at the Stewards Mill Store. Harmony Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, across the road from the store, met spiritual needs.
    Oliver Young Bonner, called Young by his family and friends, grew to manhood in a house near the northwest corner of modern day Farm Road 833 and County Road 121 in Freestone County, Texas. He lived his entire life within a half mile of his birthplace. After his marriage to Sarah Hope "Sallie" Robinson on December 20, 1883 by her uncle, Reverend Thomas Joel Bonner, they made their home just east of his father's house at what is now the northeast corner of those same roads. In later years, they moved the house about a half mile west on Farm Road 833 and lived there. Everyone remembers how deep the sand was around that house making it difficult to drive and hot to walk barefooted. We can only surmise at the events that molded his character. His father's incarceration in a Union prison during the Civil War and the ultimate loss of the family fortune, with the exception of their land, must have played a part. The death of his mother in 1871 when he was only ten years old must have been a big blow. Also affecting him were the deaths of his two older unmarried brothers: Jim Billie died in 1878 at age 21 and Andrew died in 1889 at age 30. His education in a country school provided the basics essential for life while farming skills came from both observing and working.
    Young Bonner's physique did not impress. Small in stature and wiry, he worked hard. His grandson, Edd Bonner, recalled, "Grandpa Bonner was a little man like Hugh. He could take a bale of cotton [500 pounds] by the bands and lift it off the ground." He raised fox hounds and enjoyed fox hunting. Young Bonner's main asset was his character. He disciplined his sons by example, a look, or a soft word. He was known far and wide as a good, honest, honorable man. His word was his bond. He enjoyed having peacocks, mules, jacks, jennys, and other animals around. Everyone remembered that Young raised and enjoyed coon hounds. John told the following: "My Daddy got up one morning and I was out to the lot with him. We heard them dogs barking out from the house there in them woods….Papa caught an old mare, throwed me up on it, and said, 'Let's ride out there and see Papa.' His Daddy. They'd treed a dang coon….They sat there and talked awhile and rode around, you know. After a little bit, Grandpa said, 'Well, I reckon we just as well to go.' I said, "Ain't you gonna git him?'….But they left him up a tree. Grandpa he went and stayed out all night by hisself; he'd ride a horse and carry them dogs." However, Young never complained about visitors because "They were Sallie's friends." John L. told the following story about his father's demeanor to Harry Glenn: "One very hot day he [John L.] was plowing in new ground. The gnats or flies were so bad a sack was put over the mules' noses to filter the bugs out. The gnats were all over him. The plowing tough, the mules difficult to control, and he was miserable so he unloaded a good cussing on the mules. He looked up and saw Papa who turned and walked away. John L. felt ashamed the rest of his life." John L. also remembered that every Saturday the boys worked until noon. Then they put the mules up, cleaned up, and Young had saddled their horses and they went to town. No other father did that for his sons. Young also raised cattle and added an O to his father's Z and made his cattle brand OZ.

    Ties to the land assumed importance and all the sons pursued agriculture in some form all their lives. Both Young and Sallie emphasized faith by example. Together they formed a home that produced upright and upstanding citizens. They had to make do with what was available. A half-gallon jug of whiskey was kept for medicine. Young served many years as trustee for the Stewards Mill Common School District. He also served as road foreman. Young rode his horse the two miles to Jim Billie's house daily in January 1929 to check on him and his family because they had the flu. As the bridge was out, he had to swim the creek each way. One night Young arrived home, lay down on the hearth, and said, "I'm not going to make it." He developed pneumonia and died at his home on January 19, 1929 with his family gathered around him and was buried beside his parents in the Bonner Cemetery. Pauline remembered being allowed to peek out the kitchen window and see her father Paul driving the wagon that carried Young's coffin to the cemetery. She said it was very cold and the children did not attend the funeral. Pete remembered Cousin Hale Robinson keeping the children in the kitchen.

    From the Fairfield Recorder

    Tribute of Respect
    "Boys, I Am Going Home"
    It was evening, and a man with the sunlight in his face was nearing home. The journey had been long and hard and the sky overcast with clouds. But now he was almost home and the gold and crimson lights of sunset was just ahead.
    It had been a journey full of toil and self sacrifice. He had not minded the harships so much, for he had early learned that they were to be expected by all who traveled that way.
    The shadows were lowering behind him, but the sunset light gleamed before.
    He thought of those whom he had loved and helped, yes, but he also thought of those who yet needed even greater help. He know, but they did not; he hesitated to go on, though rest and home were just ahead. Perhaps it was not given him to help any more, for he was very, very tired, so he paused long enough on his homeward journey to pray for those who needed the greater help, the help he himself could not give, and now when he was so near home, he did not regret, but was glad, as glad as one so weary could be. For the simple faith that had not questioned the commands did not question the promise. Often he thought of what seemed to him the little accomplished; but he has tried faithfully to do his best, and he remembered God's mercy.
    Home was almost in sight. There were rest and peace and joy without shadow of pair or sorrow. There was something wonderful about his home-going. He himself had announced it. Conscious of it, he said to his sons at his bedside, "Boys, I am going home." And later announced the time. "I am going Saturday."
    Wonderful, too, was this home-going for as the light faded in the sunset, a new day would dawn, a day made glorious by the light which filled it, the light of the glory of God. This day would never end.
    In place of sorrow and pain and fastings, there would be peace and gladness and meetings wonderful in their joy. There would be glory and joy unspeakable. So the weary traveler journeyed on to the sunset, and at 6:30 PM Saturday, January 19th, 1929, Oliver Young Bonner, son of John L. Bonner and Sarah Elizabeth Bonner, went home.
    Mr. Bonner was my friend and while no work of mine could add peace to his ashes or sweetness to his sleep, I beg to place on record my tribute of affection and esteem. The acquaintance which he formed when I became his pastor ripened into an attachment which I enjoyed during his life, and which I cherish in memory now.
    He was not a one-sided man, a man with but one idea or virtue. He blended graces and good qualities, so combined the traits and characteristics which distinguish men as to be worthy of Anthony's compliment to Brutus:
    "His life was gentle, and the elements
    So mixed in him, that nature might stand up
    And say to allthe world. This was a man."
    He was a man of the home, he found his inspiration at his fireside, and approached the ideal in his domestic life.
    He and his faithful wife, Sallie Hope Robinson, whom he married
    December 20th, 1883, who was both his help-meet and companion, inhabitants in common in that sacred spot called home, and needed no Court to define their relative rights and duties.
    The invisible walls, which shut in that home and shut out all else, had their foundation upon the earth and their battlements in the skies. No force could break them down, no poisoned arrows could cross their top, and the gates thereof, love and confidence, stood ever upon guard.
    In such a home the devoted parents reared a loving and dutiful family, eight sons and one daughter, all living but one daughter who died in infancy; Jim Billie, Bettie, Paul, Tom, John L., Joel, Hunter, Oliver and Sneed, these with the wife, one brother, T. H. Bonner, and two half brothers, Wirt and Millen, survive and sorrow, but not as those who have no hope. He lived to see all these noble sons settle in life, and fortune has so smiled upon the children the father was as far removed from anxious care concerning them as his beautiful, peaceful, God-loving home was removed from the noise and turmoil of the busy city.
    He did not leave to his children that doubtful blessing, a large fortune, but left the priceless heritage which money cannot buy, a name without stain, a reputation without a blemish.
    With him citizenship was a sacred trust as well as a privilege, and in the discharge of its responsibilities he exercised the most conscientious care. He was honest, both with himself and with others. His fidelity to others was insured by strict adherence to the injunction:
    "To thine own self be true.
    And it must follow, as the night the day,
    Thou canst not then be false to any man."
    His life was one long journey upwards without a halt or backward step; he pitched his tent on higher ground at the end of each day's travel. Born November 10th, 1861, for sixty-eight years his home was at the Bonner settlement in Freestone County, Texas. There he attended school, spent the days of his boyhood and manhood, and in his youth was baptized, and received into the church by Rev. W. H. Millen, and thereafter, he had almost completed three-score years and ten, he rests from his labors. The sorrowing multitude who attended his funeral and burial in the Bonner Cemetery testified as no language can to the character of the man. Their expressions of tenderness and affection, and their gentle ministration fitly crowned the career of this man, who spent his life for others. "The path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and more until the perfect day."
    I shall not believe that even now his light is extinguished. If the Father deigns to touch with Divine power the cold and pulseless heart of the buried acorn, and to make it burst forth from its prison walls, will He leave neglected in the earth the soul of man, who was made in the image of his Creator?
    If He stoops to give the rosebud, whose withered blossoms float upon the breeze, the sweet essence of another spring time, will He withhold the words of hope from the sons of men, when the frost of winter comes?
    If matter, mute and inanimate, though changed by force of nature into a multitude of forms, can never die, will the imperial spirit of man suffer annihilation after it has paid a brief visit, like a royal guest to this tenement of clay?
    Rather let us believe that He who, in His apparent prodigality, waste not the rain drop, or the blade of grass, or the evening sighing zephyrs, but make them all carry out His eternal plan, has given immortality to the mortal, and gather to Himself and home the generous spirit of our friend.
    Instead of mourning, we look up and address him in the words of the poet:
    "The day has come, not gone;
    The sun has risen, not set;
    Thy life is now beyond
    The need of death or change.
    Not ended---but begun,
    O, Noble Soul; O gentle heart; Hail, our farewell."

    J. Walter Simpson - February 14, 1929


    Family links:
    Parents:
    John Laird Bonner (1831 - 1905)
    Sarah Elizabeth Bonner Bonner (1832 - 1871)

    Spouse:
    Sarah Hope Robinson Bonner (1860 - 1935)

    Children:
    Jim Billie Bonner (1885 - 1938)
    Sarah Elizabeth Bonner (1887 - 1943)
    Paul Young Bonner (1888 - 1971)
    Tom Robinson Bonner (1891 - 1961)
    Infant Daughter Bonner (1892 - 1892)
    John Lee Bonner (1893 - 1983)
    Joel Isaac Bonner (1895 - 1972)
    Irvin Hunter Bonner (1898 - 1985)
    Oliver Alexander Bonner (1900 - 1953)
    Andrew Sneed Bonner (1904 - 1993)

    Siblings:
    Joseph Samuel Bonner (1851 - 1852)
    Eliza Jane Williams Bonner (1853 - 1855)
    John Irvine Bonner (1855 - 1857)
    Jim Billy Bonner (1857 - 1878)
    Andrew Bonner (1859 - 1889)
    Oliver Young Bonner (1861 - 1929)
    John Irvine Bonner (1865 - 1926)
    Theophilus Hunter Bonner (1868 - 1940)
    Annie Lee Bonner (1883 - 1897)**
    Janie Belle Bonner (1886 - 1887)**
    Sallie Robinson Bonner (1887 - 1889)**
    Wirt Knox Bonner (1891 - 1959)**
    James Millen Bonner (1893 - 1966)**

    **Half-sibling


    Burial:
    Bonner Cemetery
    Fairfield
    Freestone County
    Texas, USA

    Maintained by: Michael Edd Bonner
    Originally Created by: Patricia
    Record added: Dec 09, 2006
    Find A Grave Memorial# 16968387

Historische gebeurtenissen

  • De temperatuur op 10 november 1861 lag rond de 8,3 °C. Er was 2 mm neerslag. De winddruk was 18 kgf/m2 en kwam overheersend uit het zuid-zuid-westen. De luchtdruk bedroeg 75 cm kwik. De relatieve luchtvochtigheid was 83%. Bron: KNMI
  • Koning Willem III (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 1849 tot 1890 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van 23 februari 1860 tot 14 maart 1861 was er in Nederland het kabinet Van Hall - Van Heemstra met als eerste ministers Mr. F.A. baron Van Hall (conservatief-liberaal) en Mr. S. baron Van Heemstra (liberaal).
  • Van 14 maart 1861 tot 31 januari 1862 was er in Nederland het kabinet Van Zuijlen van Nijevelt - Loudon met als eerste ministers Mr. J.P.P. baron Van Zuijlen van Nijevelt (conservatief-liberaal) en Mr. J. Loudon (liberaal).
  • In het jaar 1861: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 3,6 miljoen inwoners.
    • 18 februari » Samenkomst van het eerste Italiaanse parlement in Turijn.
    • 4 maart » Abraham Lincoln wordt beëdigd als 16e president van de Verenigde Staten
    • 11 maart » De grondwet van de Geconfedereerde Staten van Amerika wordt aangenomen.
    • 1 juli » In Rome verschijnt het eerste nummer van de L'Osservatore Romano, het officiële nieuwsblad van het Vaticaan.
    • 10 augustus » Slag bij Wilson's Creek tijdens de Amerikaanse Burgeroorlog. Dankzij deze veldslag wonnen de Zuidelijken de controle over het zuidwesten van Missouri.
    • 30 september » De 3739 meter hoge Weißkugel, gelegen in Oostenrijk, wordt voor de eerste maal beklommen.
  • De temperatuur op 20 december 1883 lag rond de 4,7 °C. Er was 2 mm neerslag. De winddruk was 1 kgf/m2 en kwam overheersend uit het west-zuid-westen. De luchtdruk bedroeg 76 cm kwik. De relatieve luchtvochtigheid was 100%. Bron: KNMI
  • Koning Willem III (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 1849 tot 1890 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van 20 augustus 1879 tot 23 april 1883 was er in Nederland het kabinet Van Lijnden van Sandenburg met als eerste minister Mr. C.Th. baron Van Lijnden van Sandenburg (conservatief-AR).
  • Van 23 april 1884 tot 21 april 1888 was er in Nederland het kabinet Heemskerk met als eerste minister Mr. J. Heemskerk Azn. (conservatief).
  • In het jaar 1883: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 4,5 miljoen inwoners.
    • 13 april » Alfred Packer wordt schuldig bevonden aan kannibalisme.
    • 1 juli » Oprichting van de ANWB.
    • 12 augustus » De laatste levende Quagga (een zebra-soort) sterft in dierentuin Artis
    • 27 augustus » Uitbarsting van de Krakatau, met een vloedgolf tot gevolg.
    • 18 november » Amerikaanse en Canadese spoorwegen stellen vier standaard tijdzones in voor het hele continent, waarmee een eind komt aan de verwarring door het gebruik van duizenden lokale tijdrekeningen.
    • 6 december » Het Londense warenhuis Harrods brandt af.
  • De temperatuur op 19 januari 1929 lag tussen 0.1 °C en 5,9 °C en was gemiddeld 3,1 °C. Er was 1,8 uur zonneschijn (21%). De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 3 Bft (matige wind) en kwam overheersend uit het west-zuid-westen. Bron: KNMI
  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 1890 tot 1948 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van 8 maart 1926 tot 10 augustus 1929 was er in Nederland het kabinet De Geer I met als eerste minister Jonkheer mr. D.J. de Geer (CHU).
  • Van 10 augustus 1929 tot 26 mei 1933 was er in Nederland het kabinet Ruys de Beerenbrouck III met als eerste minister Jonkheer mr. Ch.J.M. Ruys de Beerenbrouck (RKSP).
  • In het jaar 1929: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 7,7 miljoen inwoners.
    • 6 januari » Proclamatie van het koninkrijk van Joegoslavië.
    • 18 januari » IJe Wijkstra doodt in het Groningse Doezum vier veldwachters die zijn minnares Aaltje van der Tuin bij hem willen weghalen.
    • 4 maart » Herbert Hoover wordt beëdigd als 31e president van de Verenigde Staten
    • 22 juni » De Sint-Janskathedraal in 's-Hertogenbosch krijgt de eretitel basiliek.
    • 23 juli » Inwijding van de Christus Koning-kathedraal in Reykjavik door kardinaal Willem Marinus van Rossum, prefect van de Propaganda Fide.
    • 7 augustus » Oprichting van de Griekse voetbalclub Ergotelis FC.


Dezelfde geboorte/sterftedag

Bron: Wikipedia

Bron: Wikipedia


Over de familienaam Bonner

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Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Kin Mapper, "Genealogie Wylie", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogie-wylie/I154239.php : benaderd 30 april 2024), "Oliver Young Bonner [PH Bu] (1861-1929)".