1816 - 1890 (74 years)
-
Name |
Solomon Heydenfeldt |
Born |
14 Sep 1816 |
Charleston, Charleston Co., SC |
Gender |
Male |
1840 Census |
1840 |
- ____, Tallapoosa Co., AL, p. 170, 000 020 000 0000 - 000 000 000 0000
|
Died |
15 Sep 1890 |
San Francisco, San Francisco Co., CA |
Notes |
- Solomon Heydenfeldt found in:
Land Records: AL, AR, FL, LA, MI, MN, OH, WI, 1790-1907
Document number: 5988 Description number: 1
Number of acres: 321.2800 Accession number: AL5060__.487
Patentee Surname: Heydenfeldt Patentee given name: Solomon
State name: Alabama
Volume: 5060 Page number: 487
Land office: Montgomery Aliquot part reference: W½
Section number: 6
Township: 23 North Range: 22 East
Meridian or special survey area: St. Stephens Meridian
Title transfer authority: Indian Allotment-General
Combined signature date: May 18, 1841
Multiple patentees: N Multiple warrantees: N
Signature: Y Canceled document: N Subsurface rights reserved: N
Metes and bounds: N Fractional section: N
________________________________
Alabama: Slave Manumissions Gleaned from County-Court Records, National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 83, p. 140 (1995)
Heydenfeldt: Elisa
Tallapoosa Co., Petition by Solomon Heydenfeldt later county judge). Seeks to manumit his mulatto slave, Elisa, aged 25-30. He has given public notice by publishing in the county newspaper for 60 days. Granted. (Tallapoosa Co., Minutes, County Court, Nov. Term 1834-Feb. Term 1842: 28)
___________________________________
Passenger and Immigration Index, 1500s-1900s
Place: San Francisco Year: 1851
Primary immigrant: Heydenfeldt, Solomon
Permanent entry number: 1886203
Accession number: 8921109
Source publication code: 7158
Source publication page number: 205
Source publication: RASMUSSEN, LOUIS J. San Francisco Ship Passenger Lists. Coloma, Calif.: the author. Vol. 2, 1966. 384p. 2nd printing, 1969. Covers April 6, 1850-November 4, 1851.
Source annotation: Names of passengers arriving through the port of the San Francisco in mid-nineteenth century. San Francisco was the main port of entry in settlement of the West, and it is probable that many immigrants had already landed at New York and then taken ship to San Francisco, particularly in the Gold Rush days. Passengers came from all over the world, and vessels often called in other ports en route, embarking extra passengers. San Francisco ship passenger lists were formerly printed in the San Francisco Genealogical Bulletin (later San Francisco Historic Record and Genealogy Bulletin), 1963-1965. See nos. 7875-7891.
Source: Passenger and Immigration Lists Index
|
Person ID |
I45343 |
Stedman/Steadman/Steedman Families of the New World |
Last Modified |
7 Jan 2006 |
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