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John Bayles, the immigrant ancestor, was originally thought to have been born in England in 1617. Howard Green Bayles stated that in 1635 at the age of 18, John sailed from London on the Truelove for Bermuda, and that his whereabouts were unknown from 1635 – 1654.[1] Bayles seems to have had second thoughts about this. In the 1946 supplement to his book Bayles, on page 2 says: “There seems to be no evidence that we can find that identifies the youth of 18 who, according to Hotten, left England for Bermuda 1635, with the man who appeared 1654 in Southold, and no trace of his movements during the interim.”

 

The records of the First Church of Southold show that John Bayles was living there before 1654. In 1661 he sold his home to John Tuthill and moved to Jamaica.[2] In 1664-1665 John was involved in a New Jersey land grant but probably did not move his family to New Jersey. He resided in Setauket from 1668-1674, and died in Jamaica between October 18, 1682 when he made his will, and December 13, 1682 when his will was proved.[1]

 

John's wife was Rebecca ____, who survived him. They had 11 children. Birth order and dates estimated primarily by the order named in his will:

 

John, born 1641-2, died 1696, married Ruth Rusco March 12, 1665

Rebecca, born about 1643, died by about 1662, married Nicholas Stilwell

Elias, born about 1645, died after 1699, married Sarah ____ about 1674

Elizabeth, born about 1646, died after 1682, married James Hubbard December 31, 1664

Thomas, born about 1647, died about 1689, married Elizabeth Cardell about 1685

Jonathan, born about 1650, died after 1682

Mary, born 1654, died 1733, married George Hewlett about 1680

Damaris, born about 1656, died after 1682, married Nathaniel Lyns of Gravesend November 13, 1679

Abigail, born about 1658, died after 1682, married Daniel Smith before 1682

Ruth, born about 1660, died after 1682

Rebecca, born about 1662, died after 1694, married Richard More January 11, 1694

  

** The book The Baylis Family does not mention Elias Bayley in New Haven Colony and that John Bayley crossed the Long Island sound to Long Island in New Amsterdam with Daniel Denton the son of Rev. Richard Denton were they bought land from the Indians and established Hempstead. The ancestors of the Baylis family in the United States 1617-1900 mentions that John Bailey from the West Indies joined his brother in Stamford Connect and that both worked for Rev. Richard Denton (source) Stamford Connecticut record Elias Bayley was Mr. Dentons attorney for the settlement of Rev. Dentons accounts here in 1650.

  

www.wikitree.com/wiki/Bayles-44

WPT World Championship_Season 13

Spinning ride at night. Coconino County Fair.

Lt. Col. William F. McCollough, commanding officer, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, shakes the hand of the Nawa district governor’s son after presenting him a new watch for his punctuality and hard work around Nawa at a lunch party Dec. 8. (Photo by Sgt. Brian Tuthill Regimental Combat Team-7, 1st Marine Division Public Affairs)

 

The Schinasi House is a 12,000-square-foot (1,100 m2), 35-room marble mansion on Riverside Drive in the Upper West Side of Manhattan, New York City. It was built in 1907 for Sephardic Jewish tobacco baron Morris Schinasi. The mansion was designed by Carnegie Hall architect William Tuthill and reportedly retains almost all of its historic detail, including a Prohibition-era trap door that once extended all the way to the river.

 

The structure was designated a New York City Landmark on March 19, 1974 and added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 23, 1980. It has been cited as being the last remaining detached single-family house in Manhattan. Since 2013, it is owned by Mark Schwartz, a Goldman Sachs executive, who purchased it for $14 million.

 

The Schinasi mansion is made of various carved materials, on the interior there is a mix of Egyptian carved marble, hand carved wood, and hand painted frescos. Within the wood are intricately carved symbols and décor, and the pineapple, a symbol of hospitality, is repeated throughout all carvings.

 

The exterior is built completely of white Vermont marble, structurally and aesthetically. The roof is a mansard terra cotta and green tile with steel girders and copper cornices.[4] The construction manager of the mansion, Charles T. Willis, predicted the house would cost $180,000 to build, and he was right. The mansion completed construction one year after it began in 1909.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schinasi_Mansion

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_Creative_Commons_...

Tuthill House, circa 1870

GT ONE Concept by Tuthill Porsche. A homage to the Porsche GT1 Race Car which won the Le Mans 24 Hour Race in 1998

Lt. Col. William F. McCollough, commanding officer, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, laughs as he shakes the hand of Col. Said Aga, commanding officer of the Afghan Counter Narcotics Battalion, who gave McCollough an Afghan hat and scarf during a transfer-of-authority ceremony at Forward Operating Base Geronimo Dec. 11. (Photo by Sgt. Brian Tuthill Regimental Combat Team-7, 1st Marine Division Public Affairs)

 

A collapsed bungalow in Tuthill, NY. twenty some years ago this was still standing and some fixtures were still inside. It is rubble now. A few people still live in what was Tuthill, and a grist mill now a distillery is in buisness.

Florence Martin, Anna Tuthill, Anna, Carol McNeely, and Esther Johnson pose with bows and arrows in 1931.

A vendor selling bracelets and paintings at the Coconino County Fair

Janssens - Prévot

Tuthill Porsche 911

1st place Historic Division

Belgian Champion in the Division

cockpit of the car

Couple of girls enjoying some grub.

From the back balcony of the LCC Library. Looking south-west across the Tuthill Courtyard, toward Middle Loch of Pearl Harbor, and Ewa Beach in the background.

 

The white spot, low over the horizon on the left, is probably an airplane. The approach paths into the Honolulu International Airport cut through this area.

 

View On Black

fort tuthill-flagstaff arizona

A group of men outside the beer tent at the Coconino County Fair.

Kinotek Ypres Rally 2015 - Test day François Delecour Team Tuthill

Carnegie Hall (pronounced /kɑɹˈneɪɡi/ (kar-NAY-gee), also frequently /ˈkɑɹnɨɡi/ or /kɑɹˈnɛɡi/) is a concert venue in Midtown Manhattan in New York City located at 881 Seventh Avenue, occupying the east stretch of Seventh Avenue between West 56th Street and West 57th Street, two blocks south of Central Park.

 

Designed by architect William Burnet Tuthill and built by philanthropist Andrew Carnegie in 1891, it is one of the most prestigious venues in the world for classical music and popular music.

 

It was intended as a venue for the Oratorio Society of New York and the New York Symphony Society, on whose boards Carnegie served. Construction began in 1890, and was carried out by Isaac A. Hopper and Company. Although the building was in use from April 1891, the official opening night was on May 5, with a concert conducted by maestro Walter Damrosch and composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky. Originally known simply as "Music Hall" (the words "Music Hall founded by Andrew Carnegie" still appear on the façade above the marquee), the hall was renamed Carnegie Hall in 1893 after board members of the Music Hall Company of New York (the hall's original governing body) persuaded Carnegie to allow the use of his name. Several alterations were made to the building between 1893 and 1896, including the addition of two towers of artists' studios, and alterations to the smaller auditorium on the building's lower level.

 

The hall was owned by the Carnegie family until 1925, when Carnegie's widow sold it to a real estate developer, Robert E. Simon. When Simon died in 1935, his son, Robert E. Simon, Jr. took over. By the mid-1950s, changes in the music business prompted Simon to offer Carnegie Hall for sale to the New York Philharmonic, which booked a majority of the hall's concert dates each year. The orchestra declined, since they planned to move to Lincoln Center, then in the early stages of planning. At the time, it was widely believed that New York City could not support two major concert venues. Facing the loss of the hall's primary tenant, Simon was forced to offer the building for sale. A deal with a commercial developer fell through, and by 1960, with the New York Philharmonic on the move to Lincoln Center, the building was slated for demolition to make way for a commercial skyscraper. Under pressure from a group led by violinist Isaac Stern and many of the artist residents, special legislation was passed that allowed the city of New York to buy the site from Simon for $5 million (which he would use to establish Reston, VA), and in May 1960 the nonprofit Carnegie Hall Corporation was created to run the venue. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1962.

 

Carnegie Hall has its own artistic programming, development, and marketing departments, and presents about 250 performances each season. It is also rented out to performing groups. The hall has not had a resident company since 1962, when the New York Philharmonic moved to Lincoln Center's Philharmonic Hall (renamed Avery Fisher Hall in 1973).

 

I found this thing at the Ft. Tuthill Hamfest swap several years ago. It cost me a pittance (i.e. under $2) "Unit 2" I wonder if "Unit 1" is still out there somewhere. Before I took this shot I'd already removed the crystal selector switch, the mike jack and a broken neon lamp. The hole in the lower left corner is where the power cord came out. It has a cabinet which is a black painted steel box.

A security guard leans against a food tent at the Coconino County Fair.

People walk by the haute cuisine at the Coconino County Fair

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