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| Birth: | About. 1635 in Cavanacor, County Donegal, Ireland (See Notes) 14 |
| Death: | About. 1727 in Maryland., Probably Somerset Co. 14 8 |
| Sex: | F |
| Father: | Roger Tasker b. Before. 1600 |
| Mother: | |
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Individual:
[danbuckley62.ged]
Natural relationship to Tasker, Roger
Natural relationship to Unknown Father
NOTES BY BILL POLK, KANSAS CITY, MO.:
Much of the following information (to >>>>>>>>>>>>) is taken from "Polk Family and Kinsmen, " William Harrison Polk, 1912, [see master sources for complete citation]. I have many ques tions about some of the data below and the ancestry of Robert Polk and his wife Magdalen . I have set up an additional file under D:\GENEALOGY\FTM TEXT CONTINUATION FILES\ Polk Ance stry, Ireland and Scotland, Notes, to address these questions. The reader should access tha t file to secure a better understanding of the questions/problems which I have with the ances try of the Polks. I have supplemented the W. H. Polk data below with material from other sou rces and and with my own opinion as to events, dates, places, etc.:
Magdalen was the youngest daughter of Colonel Roger Tasker of Broomfield Castle, near London derry, Ireland. Colonel Tasker was a distinguished chancellor of Ireland, whose seat was "Ca stle Hill," near the village of Ballindrate, commanding a view of the River Dale. Colonel Ta sker was much renowned for his wealth and honor. His word of command was "Death or Liberty. " He distinguished himself in many ways--command, horsemanship and bravery. He always rod e a white horse and died after the "Derry Spree." He had just two children, Barbara and Magd alen, who were said to have been good singers. The Taskers were related to the Countess of M ornington and her sister Prudence, aunts to the Duke of Wellington.
When Colonel Tasker of Donegal County, Ireland, died, he owned two fine estates lying near th e river Foyle, above Londonderry--"Broomfield Castle" and "Moneen Hall." [Col. Tasker appear s to have owned more than these two estates (or one of the estates came to be known as someth ing other than the original name); see below]. The first was a famous estate and accordin g to a statement made to William Harrison Polk, author of Polk Family & kinsmen, by one who w as born near it, had on it "one of the finest old castles in Ireland." At his death, Colone l Tasker devised Broomfield to his eldest daughter Barbara and Moneen to Magdalen. Moneen em braced six hundred Cunningham acres with a fine mansion on it. It lay close to the little vi llage of Strabane, in the Barony of Rafo, County of Donegal. Correspondence, in 1874, betwee n William Harrison Polk and the Postmaster at Strabane, Hugh McMenamin, revealed many interes ting items regarding Colonel Tasker's estates including the fact that ancestors of the Tasker s still retained part of the old estates as of that year.
Barbara, the eldest daughter, married Captain John Keys who served under Colonel Tasker. Sh e had only one child, a son named Tasker, who was born about 1640 and died about 1725. Capta in Keys was a close friend of Robert Pollok. The castle on the estate inherited by Barbara f ell into decay and a new one called "Castle Keys" was erected by Tasker Keys, greatgrandson o f John Keys, about 1780. Captain keys and Barbara went with the British army to India, wher e he accumulated a large fortune. On their return to Ireland they again occupied their ances tral estate. At a later date, Barbara purchased from Joseph Polk of Maryland, son of Robert a nd Magdalen, "Moneen," who inherited the estate from his mother.
Magdalen married Colonel Porter, a regimental commander of the parliamentary forces of Olive r Cromwell. The marriage was of short duration. Colonel Porter died and it was said that Ma gdalen "ran off with one Polk, who was a companion or friend to Colonel Porter," as well a s a captain in his regiment. The Porters were a strong family with many connections in tha t area at the time. It appears that the Porters threatened Robert Pollok and Magdalen. Magd alen, having no children by Colonel Porter, gave up most of the property in the estate of "Mo neen."
Magdalen married Robert Pollok before the Pollok family moved to America. It is not known ho w many of Robert and Magdalen's children were born in Ireland and how many in America. Tha t most of them came to America with their parents seems certain. John Polk, by tradition th e eldest child, must have been of age to register the ear marks of his cattle in 1680. If h e was aged 18 or so in 1680, then his birth would have occurred about 1662. As women marrie d younger in those days, and Magdalen had been married once before marrying Robert Pollok, i t is safe to assume she was probably in her early twenties when she married him. Her birth mu st have occurred about the same time as Robert Pollok's birth, about 1639. All of the childr en of Robert and Magdalen were mentioned in Robert's will except Anne, supposedly the younges t child. Why she is not mentioned is not known. That she was born after her father's death i s not likely, for Magdalen must have been over sixty years of age at the demise of Robert. Th e omission of Anne's name may have been because she was dead before he executed his will. I t is possible, but not certain that Robert Polk, in his will, mentioned his children in thei r proper numerical order, Robert coming first, David next, Joseph fourth, and John and Willia m last. However, this is not the order of birth so long recognized by most Polk family histor ians, such order beginning with John as the eldest son and ending with Joseph as the younges t son.
Colonel William T. Polk, who was born and lived all his life in Somerset County, Md., near th e area where Captain Robert Polk and his family settled, and who owned at his death, "Polk' s Folly," the original land grant to Robert Polk in the Colony of Maryland, took great intere st in the Polk family history and wrote many letters to William Harrison Polk about the famil y. Colonel Polk was very familiar with the history and traditions of the locality. He was , for many years, the Clerk of the Court of Somerset County, thus having free and unlimited a ccess to the various records available for research. William Harrison Polk stated that Colon el Polk was a man of the highest standing and of unblemished character. What he has stated m ay be relied on with the utmost confidence. In a letter of October 1874, Colonel Polk write s about three items the Polloks brought from Ireland to America: "The first was a large quar to bible, containing the Old and New Testaments, and an old version of the Psalms. The spell ing was antique and the punctuation queer. The date on the title page was 1669. That on th e Testaments was different. Evidently printed separately and bound up together. Seventy yea rs ago the book was in a dilapidated condition as to the binding and my father had it substan tially rebound in calf. It was said that our ancestors hid it in a hollow tree, in the day s of the Persecution, after the Restoration, to prevent it from being taken from them. It i s said that while one read it, others of the family would stand guard to give warning of th e approach of Papists. And truly, it seems that this might have been probable, as the book w as very much stained, as though it had been thoroughly saturated with water many times. It w as destroyed in 1847, together with the dwelling of my brother and all the ancient recording s it contained."
The letter continued: "The second article is a case containing fifteen square bottles, eac h holding over two and a half gallons. Since my recollection, the bottles were all perfect , and when all full contained about forty gallons. But General Temperance, causing King Alco hol to retire, these bottles have been used for vinegar and other liquids that would freeze . Hence all have been cracked and most of them lost. I have but two or three of them left , useless except a a connecting link between the present and the past. My nephew, Ephraim G . Polk, who owns the old homestead, has the old case."
The letter continued: The third article is a large brass clock, which, in the case stands ei ght or nine feet high, with great leaden weights of ten or twelve pounds each. In addition t o keeping the hours of the day, it keeps the day of the month and the phases of the moon, an d is a repeater. A string may be attached to a lever inside the clock and carried to the foo t of your bed. At any hour of the night, if the string is pulled, whe will repeat the last s troke, unless it is within a half hour of the next strike. So you can know within a half hou r the time, without rising from your bed. Seventy years ago it was given by my grandfather t o my father with the old homestead. When he took possession of them he found the old clock i n a lumber room covered with dust. Supposing it to have finished its work, he proposed to a c lock-maker to trade it in part payment for a new clock, if there was any value to it. It wa s sent and when my father saw the clock-man, the latter told him that no man need want a bett er clock. He cleaned it up for a few dollars. I left it thirty years ago on a farm which ha s been in my immediate family one hundred and nine years, with some servants, and although i t has not been cleaned in that time, when I have occasion to spend a few days on the farm, o r when I send mechanics to repair or build houses, if she is wound up, she will run eight o r nine days and keep excellent time. My father laid aside the old case and had a new one o f mahogany made. This clock was made, I suppose by W. Nicholson, White Haven, which is inscr ibed on a plate screwed to the face, and there is an inscription, also on the face--'Tempus e dax Rerum,' and I find true in reference to our family, for Time has consumed almost everythi ng relating to its early history."
Magdalen must have been very aged when she died, having been a widow for about twenty-five ye ars. If it is accepted that her eldest child, John was born about 1662, and if she was age d twenty-two or so at his birth, she would have been 87 or 88 years of age when she died in l ate 1726 or early 1727. Some Polk family historians believe she was over ninety years old wh en she died at her home place, "White Hall," in Somerset County, MD.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
The following contains the text of Magdalen Polk's will with the spelling and capitalizatio n exactly as in the original:
In the name of God Amen I, Magdalen Pollok, being weak and sick of body, yet of perfect min d and memory, praise be to Almight God, do make and ordain this my last will and Testament, i n manner and form as followeth. First:--I give my soul into hands of Almight God, hoping thro ugh the merits of my Saviour Jesus Christ to receive full pardon of all my sins. And my bod y I commit to the Earth from whence it was taken, to be buried in Christian burial, at the di scretion of my Executor hereafter nominated.
Item--I give and bequeath a tract of land called Moning lying in the
Kingdom of Ireland, in the Barrony of Rafo and County of Donegal, and in the Parish of Liford , unto my son Joseph Pollok and to the heirs of his body forever, with all the rest of my mov eable estate, and him to be whole Executor of this my last Will and Testament, hereby Revokin g all other Wills and Testaments by me made by word or writing.
In Testimony whereof I set my hand and seal this 7th day of April, 1726.
Signed, sealed and delievered in sight Magdalen Polk Seal
and presents of us her mark
David Polk, William Pollet, Magdalen Pollet.
March ye 20th, 1727. Then came David Polk, William Pollett & Magdalen
Pollett, subscribing evidences to ye within will, who made oath upon ye Holy Evangelist of Al mighty God that they see ye within named Magdalen Polk, ye Testator, sign and seal ye withi n Instrument as her last Will and Testament, and that they heard her publish and declare ye s ame as so to be, and that at ye time of her so doing she was of sound, disposing mind and mem ory. Sworn to before me the day and year above written.
John Tunstall, Deputy, Com'y of
Somerset County,
The exr. hath not got letter of Administration on this Estate nor doth not design.
Recorded in Liber LL No 2 folio 125 PR Geo. Plater, Reg'r Recorded in Liber E B No. 9, foli o 117---
Examined. Test. Esme. Bayley, R. W. S. C.
In the beginning of the document, Magdalen calls her name "Pollok," but her X mark is shown u nder the name Magdalen Polk. She also calls her son Joseph "Pollok." It would appear that Mag dalen could not read or write. Her will is typical of many of the Pollok/Pollock/Polke/Polk w ills and land transactions in that these four variations of the family name are used intercha ngeably. Magdalen made Joseph her sole devisee. Colonel William T. G. Polk, A Polk family hi storian, suggested the reasons moving her to do this may have been because Joseph, judging b y the various records, appears to have been less thrifty in the gathering of worldly possessi ons than his brothers, most of whom seem to have been men of good business qualities and to h ave accumulated fine landed estates, either by grant from Lord Baltimore or by purchase. Fam ily tradition states that Joseph went to Ireland and sold his Irish estate, about ten years a fter he inherited it, to his aunt, Barbara Keys, and then returned to Somerset County.
Magdalen's will is recorded in both Somerset County and in Annapolis, Anne Arundel, Co., MD. , at the Maryland State Archives. In Somerset County, it is recorded at the Office of the Re gister of Wills, Liber EB No. 9, folio 117.
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Stella Polk Gipson of Texas, Vernell Endicott, of Drumright, OK., and Pauline Polk Gilbreth o f Mason, TX., compiled a genealogy of the Polks entitled "The Pollock-Polk Family," with th e main emphasis on their family lines. In the beginning of the genealogy is an interesting l etter from a John Sheils of Ireland to Pauline. It reads as follows:
"Conney Burrow Road
Lifford Co. Donegal
Ireland 18'4'77
Dear Mrs. Gilbreth,
I have been reading in our local newspaper that you are trying to trace your ancestors from C o. Donegal. In this connection I can give you some information. There was a gentleman who li ved in Lifford & who owned a lot of property in that area. His names was Knox Pollock & som e of his descendants lived in Lifford till about forty years ago. They went to reside in Cas tlefin later but I believe that they are all dead. Now regard of Magdalen Tasker Porter, I k now the House well where she was born. It is situated at Broomfield near Lifford not Castlef in near Derry as you thought. The original House is still standing & is now occupied by a fa mily by the name of Maxwell. In the last century it was in the ownership of Tasker Keys wh o I would assume was a descendant of Magdalen Tasker Porter. This Home is still in very goo d condition & is situated on the main Lifford Letterkeny Road. I understand it was called th e castle in days gone by & there was a very large farm connected to it. Apparently much of th e land has been sold to other neighboring farmers. Regarding the estate which Magdalen Taske r Porter inherited at Moneen. This House is occupied by the McBeth family. The original Buil ding was replaced by a new Building some years ago & I understand that this was a very larg e farm in days gone by. You are right about the name being contracted to Polk. That was com monly used in Lifford to describe Knox Pollock. All the places I have mentioned in this lett er are quite close to Strabane which you mention in your letter. If there are any other ques tions you would like to ask or if you have any other information about the matter or should y ou think that Tasker Keys was descendant of Mary Tasker Porter please write to me & let me kn ow. I think this is all the information I have at the moment. If anything else comes to han d in the meantime I will write to you again.
Yours Faithfully
John Sheils"
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------ ----------------------------------[danbuckley62.ged]
RESEARCH NOTES:
See notes under the marriage of Robert Polk and Magdalen (Tasker) Porter for more information .[danbuckley62.ged]
RESEARCH NOTES:
(1) When did the marriage of Magdalen (Tasker) Porter and Robert Polk occur? It must have o ccurred between 1665 and 1671. The 1665 date stems from the fact that John Porter was stil l alive in 1665 as given in the Hearth Tax rolls of the Parish of Clonleigh (Lifford). Wome n usually remarried quickly (as did men) and so the marriage could have taken place in 1665 , if John Porter died in 1665 (his death date is not known as of Sep 1999). The 1671 dates s tems from the fact that William Polk, supposedly the 2nd son of Robert Polk and Magdalen wa s b. c1673 (this based on deposition of said William Polk in 1639..... see that source unde r William Polk's birth). If William was the 2nd son/child, as stated by William Harrison Pol k in "Polk Family and Kinsmen," and John Polk was older (all information found attests to Joh n Polk being the eldest child), then John was born by 1672, and therefore the marriage must h ave taken place by then, or most likely, by 1671. All factors considered, the marriage of Ro bert Polk and Magdalen (Tasker) Porter is believed by this researcher (Bill Polk of Kansas Ci ty, MO.) to have occurred c1671.
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- Title: The Polks of North Carolina and Tennessee
Author: Mrs. Frank M. Angellotti
Publication: Originally published by the New England Historical and Genealogical Soc., 1923-1924; republished for the James K. Polk Me
Page: pg. 2
Text: name shown is "Magdalen (Tasker) Porter," ......"daughter of Colonel Tasker of Broomfield Castle, near Londonderry, Ireland..."
- Title: Polk Family and Kinsmen
Author: William Harrison Polk
Publication: 1912, by Bradley and Gilbert Inc. of Louisville, KY.
Page: pp. 6-14
Text: on page 12, in a letter dated 1 Sep 1877, from Tasker Keys of Broomfield, Ireland, to William Harrison Polk, Tasker states: "My name is Tasker Keys, son of John Crayton Keys, and grandson to Lieutena
nt Tasker Keys, who was a great grandson of Capt. John Keys, whose wife was daughter to Colonel Tasker and sister to Magdalen, who married Colonel Porter, and next a Mr. Pollock."
- Note: William Harrison Polk, Polk Family and Kinsmen, (1912, by Bradley and Gilbert Inc. of Louisville, KY.), pp. 6-14, on page 12, in a letter datd 1 Sep 1877, from Tasker Keys of Broomfield, Ireland
, t o William Harrison Polk, Tasker states: "My name is Tasker Keys, son of John Crayton Keys, and grandson to Lieutenant Tasker Keys, who was a great grandson of Capt. John Keys, whose wife was daughte r to Colonel Tasker and sister to Magdalen, who married Colonel Porter, and next a Mr. Pollock."
- Title: A Genealogical Tree of The Polk Family, 1849
Text: "Robert Polk was born and married in Ireland, his wife was Magdalen Tasker the Widow of Col. Porter and heiress of Mowning Hill. Robert Polk and Margalen had Eight children, Six Sons and two Daughter
s, their names, John, William, Ephriam, James, Robert, Joseph, Margaret and Ann."
- Title: Pedigree of the Pollok or Polk Family From Fulbert the Saxon (A. D. 1075) to the Present Time
Author: Miss Mary Winder Garrett of Williamsburg, VA.
Publication: The American Historical Magazine,The University Press, 208 N. College St., Nashville, TN. April 1896 issue begins the
Page: October 1897 issue, Vol. II, No. 4, pp. 379-382:
Text: pg. 379, "Robert Bruce Pollok, the second son of Sir Robert II, married the widow of Col. Porter. Her maiden name was Magdaline Tasker. She was of French descent, and heiress of the estate of 'Mowni
ng or Morning Hall,' in the Barony of Ross, County of Donegal, Parish of Saford, Ireland."
- Title: The Civil Survey A.D. 1654-1656, Counties of Donegal, Londonderry, and Tyrone, Vol. III, With the Returns of Church Lands
Author: H. M. Stationary Office, Dublin, with introductory notes by Robert C. Simington of the uit Rent Office, Dublin
Publication: 1937
Page: County of Donegal, Parish of Lifford, folio 21
Text: referring to the land called "Monyn," "Jon. Portr claimes one seshoch of ye sd Qr. with a house & Garden plot in Ballendrait being given him by his father in law Roger Tasker as a porcon with his wife
, it being purchased by him from Thomas fflood who held the same in freehold from the sd. Sr. Richard." This proves the first name of Col. Porter and also proves that Roger Tasker had a daughter (Magdalen, although not named here) who married John Porter.
- Note: H. M. Stationary Office, Dublin, with introductory notes by Robert C. Simington of the uit Rent Office, Dublin, The Civil Survey A.D. 1654-1656, Counties of Donegal, Londonderry, and Tyrone, Vol. II
I , With the Returns of Church Lands for the Three Counties, (1937). County of Donegal, Parish of Lifford, folio 21, referring to the land called "Monyn," "Jon. Portr claimes one seshoch of ye sd Qr. w ith a house & Garden plot in Ballendrait being given him by his father in law Roger Tasker as a porcon with his wife, it being purchased by him from Thomas fflood who held the same in freehold from th e sd. Sr. Richard." This proves the first name of Col. Porter and also proves that Roger Tasker had a daughter (Magdalen, although not named here) who married John Porter.
- Title: Will, Magdalen Pollok or Polk
Page: Somerset Co., MD., Office of the Register of Wills, No. 9, folio 117
Text: In the beginning of the will Magdalen refers to herself as "Magdalen Pollock," and signs it with her "X" as "Magdalan Polk."
- Note: Will, Magdalen Pollok or Polk, Somerset Co., MD., Office of the Register of Wills, No. 9, folio 117. In the beginning of the will Magdalen refers to herself as "Magdalen Pollock," and signs it wi
t h her "X" as "Magdalan Polk."
- Title: Burke's Presidential Families of the United States
Author: Burke's Peerage
Publication: Burke's Peerage Limited, 1975, London; distributed in America by Arco Publishing Co., Inc., NY, NY.
Page: pg. 243
Text: Under Robert Pollok (or Polke), "m Magdalen (will dated 7 April 1726), widow of ---Porter, and dau of ---Tasker, of Moneen, nr Strabane, co Tyrone, Ireland..."
- Title: Will, Robert Polke (Robert Bruce Polk)
Page: MD. Archives, Perogative Court (Wills), 11, pp. 416-418
Text: "I leave to my Beloved Wife Magdalen Polke my now dwelling house and plantation..." "I constitute and appoint my son David Polke and my wife Magdalen Polke to be Executors of this my last will."
- Note: Will, Robert Polke (Robert Bruce Polk), MD. Archives, Perogative Court (Wills), 11, pp. 416-418: "I leave to my Beloved Wife Magdalen Polke my now dwelling house and plantation..." "I constitute a
n d appoint my son David Polke and my wife Magdalen Polke to be Executors of this my last will."
- Title: Ancestors of American Presidents
Author: Compiled by Gary Boyd Roberts, Santa Clara, CA.
Publication: 1989
Page: pg. 18
Text: Magdalen Tasker is shown as "Magdalen Tasker, who inherited Moneen, an estate in the Barony of Rafo, parish of Lyford, Donegal, will dated 7 Apr. 1726 (filed in Somerset Co., Md.)."
- Title: danbuckley62.ged
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: Jun 7, 2002
- Title: Our Heritage, a genealogy and history column published in the Monroe Enquirer, Monroe, NC.
Author: Compiled by the John Foster Chapter of the DAR
Page: issue of 20 Aug 1959
Text: quoting from an article in the "Herald-Post," El Paso, TX., 12 July 1909, "Mrs. Susan Spratt Polk Rayner, ....... great-great-grandaughter of Robert Pollock and Magdaline Tasker, who were married in I
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Individuals from other files that are believed to be the same person:
Magdalen (Porter) Tasker | of kingharry |
MAGDALEN TASKER | of blumberg |
Magdalen Tasker | of Baran Family 2006 WLB@GenCircles |
Magdalen (Porter) Tasker | of Hall-Ernst Genealogy |
Magdalen Tasker | of Duke family |
Magdalen Tasker | of Pages from the Paige family tree |
Magdalen Tasker | of Chesebro' Genealogy@Gen Circles |
Magdalen Tasker | of McKay/Caldwell |
Magdalen Tasker | of Hammond family tree |
Magdalen Tasker | of Abercrombie Families |
Magdalen Tasker | of McKelvey Tree Top |
Magdalen (Porter) Tasker | of Cates-Tinajero Genealogy |
Magdalen Tasker | of Ancestors of nancy Gobble |
Magdalen Tasker | of Current Connections 9 22 02 |
Magdalen Tasker | of Current Connections 6 28 2002 |
Magdalen Tasker | of Lynch Family Tree |
Magdalen "Margaret" Tasker | of Stockard-Family of Captain John Stockard |
Magdalen Tasker | of Pat's Family Tree7-2005 |
Magdalen Tasker | of Pat's Ancestors 7-2005 |
Magdalen (Porter) TASKER | of HerveyGanoKrebill |
Magdalen Tasker | of Southern Burkett |
Magdalen Tasker | of Pike County Miley Martin Peach Fowler |
Magdalen Tasker | of Meri's Family Tree |
Magdalen Tasker | of Robertson |
Magdalen,Porter TASKER | of Bruce Hiltz Ancestors |
Magdalen Tasker | of Haljohnson |
Magdalen TASKER | of Relatives of Miles & Angela Meyer |
Magdalen Tasker | of North Carolina Starting Point |
Magdalen Tasker | of gedcom |
Magdalen Tasker | of gedcom |
Magdalen Porter Tasker | of Peter Mick |
Magdalen Tasker | of Snow-Hawkins-Corcoran-McKenzie |
Magdalen Tasker (Widow) | of TinaSmithSansoneFiles |
Magdalen Tasker | of Ancestors of Hamilton Swayne Prestridge |
Magdalen Tasker | of Family of Legends & The Unknown |
Magdalen Tasker | of Worley/Price & Starner/Spitters |
Magdalen Tasker | of jdhaydon's file |
Magdalen TASKER | of Ancestry of Roy Polk |
Magdalen Tasker | of Haas-Victoria |
Magdalen Tasker | of Haas-Victoria |
Magdalen Tasker | of Ancestors of Martha Cross Mordecai |
Magdalen Tasker | of Gowens and Reed Families |
Magdalen Tasker | of Baker Byrd Logan Family |
Magdalen Tasker | of Family Heritage |
Magdalen Tasker | of Bill Polk - Direct Ancestry |
Magdalen Tasker | of KAH Genealogy |
Magdalen Tasker | of Southeastern Kentucky Roots |
Magdalen Tasker | of Rommel, Brown, Kidd, Gentry Family |
Magdalen Tasker | of Robinson Family Tree |
Magdalen Tasker | of Robinson Family Tree |
Magdalen Tasker | of Robinson Family Tree |
Magdalen Tasker | of robinson family tree |
Magdalen Tasker | of Robinson, Babin, Phillips |
Magdalen Tasker | of FAMILY TREE LEGENDS #! |
Magdalen Tasker | of 2007gedcom |
Magdalen "Marty" Tasker | of POLK Family Annex |
Magdalen Tasker | of Baker, Byrd, Logan, Bean, Moody &c. |
$Magdalen Tasker | of Pennys Roots |
Magdalen Tasker | of Jody L. Howards Family Tree |
Magdalen Tasker | of Ancestors, David B. Demeaux |
Magdalen (Porter) Tasker | of Lindsey Family |
Magdalen (Porter) Tasker | of Lindsey, Baker, Wormington, McWaters |
Magdalen Tasker | of Carolina |
Magdalen Tasker | of Thomas Family Genealogy |
Magdalen Tasker | of Hollis/Wilson Ancestors |
Magdalen Tasker | of HOLLIS/WILSON FAMILIES |
Magdalen Tasker | of July 2007 |
Magdalen Tasker | of HOLLIS/WILSON Ancestors |
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