6/9/12

Index and Links as of June, 2012 

This link will take you to the latest update to the index for this blog...

Claire Dunn (June 17, 1921 - January 10, 2012)

Claire Dunn, 90, died January 10th of natural causes in Seattle [Washington]. Born Fleeta Claire Jones, once on her own as a young adult she adopted her mother’s maiden name and became known as Claire Field until her marriage in 1940.

Born in Roseburg, Oregon, she grew up in Ohio, was married to  Bill [William Edward] Dunn between 1940 and 1957, and for many years lived in East Chicago, Indiana, where her children were raised. She moved to Seattle in 1963.

Claire was an avid reader and liked doing crafts, including crocheting hundreds of afghans. A medical secretary, Claire retired from the Voluntary Service Department at the VA Medical Center in 1988. During retirement, Claire volunteered at the King Tut exhibit, the Crisis Line, and for Senior Services. Her volunteerism continued at death with the donation of her body to the University of Washington School of Medicine.


Claire is survived by her five children and their spouses. They include Pat[rick] and his wife Bonnie Dunn, Tim[othy] and his wife Jeanette Dunn, Cory and his wife Pam[ela] Dunn, Toby and his wife Marilyn Dunn, and Molly Dunn Sain and her husband Larry Sain, along with many grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Claire is also survived by her extended family and friends, including cousins Maurine Wilcoxon and Bonnie Ward, and her beloved cat J'nell.


Claire's family is very grateful for the wonderful and highly professional care that was extended to her by Group Health. Their collective efforts were amazingly helpful and beneficial.


This is a slightly edited version of the obituary originally published in The Seattle Times on January 29, 2012 

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Claire was the eldest of four children born to Rev. Carleton Duane Jones and Nelle Virginia Field Jones and the last survivor of the siblings, who were Paul Wesley Jones, DeRand Jones and Virginia Lee Jones Pecaro.

Last updated 6/9/2012

10/15/11

Origin and History of the Surname Chambers

William Maston Chambers, b. about 1823, married Sallie Magdalene, b. about 1835. They were my generation's GGG grandparents and the parents of Elizabeth Jane Chambers, known as Eliza, b. 1854.

Eliza married Arlendo Robert Heath
, b. about 1850. They were the parents of Cora Lee Heath, b. 1872, who married William Samuel Field, b. 1865;
They were the parents of Nelle Virginia Field, b. 1899, who married Carleton D Jones, b. 1895;
They were the parents of Fleeta Claire, Paul Wesley, DeRand and Virginia Lee (Ginger) Jones;
Claire, Paul and Ginger were the parents of my generation.

(Source of crest)

The Surname Chambers

 "This distinguished surname, with over fifteen entries in the "Dictionary of National Biography", and having no less than twenty-five Coats of Arms, is of French origin, and is an occupational name for an officer charged with the management of his lord's private living quarters.
The derivation is from the Old French "cha(u)mbre", room, chamber, ultimately from the Latin "camera". In medieval times, servants in royal households were held in high regard, and frequently those who occupied senior positions enjoyed certain privileges, and the post would often become hereditary. The name is synonymous in origin with Chamberlain, which originally denoted an official in charge of the private chambers of his master, and later became a title of high rank.
An interesting quote from the "Household Book of Queen Isabelle", dated 1358, reads "Griffin del Chambre, scutifier of Princess Isabel". Christopher Chambers, aged 24 yrs., who embarked from London on the ship "Constance" bound for Virginia in October 1635, was one of the earliest recorded namebearers to settle in America.
Sir Thomas Chambers (1814 - 1891), treasurer, 1872, and G.C., 1861, was recorder of the City of London in 1878. One of the earliest Coats of Arms granted to the family is a silver shield with a black chevron, surmounted of another ermine, between three chambers placed transverse of the escutcheon of the second, fired proper.
The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Nicholas de Chambres, which was dated 1219, in the "Curia Regis Rolls of Derbyshire", during the reign of King Henry 111, known as "The Frenchman", 1216 - 1272.
Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling." 
Last revised 10/16/2011

Origin and History of the Surname Webb


In 1832, Ervin Heath, b. 1812, married Mary Webb, b. 1813. They were my generation's GGG grandparents and the parents of Arlendo Heath, born about 1850;
Arlendo married Elizabeth Jane Chambers, b. 1854. They were the parents of Cora Lee Heath, b. 1872, who married William Samuel Field, b. 1865;
They were the parents of Nelle Virginia Field, b. 1899, who married Carleton D Jones, b. 1895;
They were the parents of Fleeta Claire, Paul Wesley, DeRand and Virginia Lee (Ginger) Jones;
Claire, Paul and Ginger were the parents of my generation.
The Surname Webb
"This famous surname recorded as Webb, Webbe, Webber and Webster, is Olde English pre-7th Century. It derives from the word "web", meaning to weave.
Originally a male occupational name, the term "webbe" referred specifically to a male weaver and later "webster" to a female weaver; although this distinction was not always made in medieval English.
In the pipe rolls of the county of Suffolk, we find Osbert Webbe so recorded in 1221 and Alice la Webbe, in the rolls of the borough of Colchester, in 1327. The following quotation from the famous medieval book of social history "Piers Plowman" reads: "My wife was a webbe and woollen cloth made".
Later church recordings of the post medieval period include: Mary Webb, the daughter of George Webb, who was christened on March 5th 1550 at the church of St. Mary Woolnoth, in the city of London, and Mary Webbe who was christened on February 17th 1566, at the church of St. Benet Fink, also city of London.
One of the earliest famine emigrants who fled Ireland in the tragic year of 1846 was Richard Webb, aged 20 yrs., who sailed on the "coffin" ship "Cornelia of Liverpool" bound for New York on January 26th 1846. Rather more happily, Captain Webb was the first person to swim the twenty two miles of the English Channel in 1872.
The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Alger se Webba which was dated circa 1100, in the "Olde English Byname Register", during the reign of King William 11, known as "Rufus", 1087 - 1100.
Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling."
Last revised 10/15/2011

10/11/11

Origin and History of the Surname Field

WIlliam Samuel Field married Cora Lee Heath and they were my generation's great grandparents;

They were the parents of Nelle Virginia Field, who married Carleton D Jones;

They were the parents of Fleeta Claire, Paul Wesley, DeRand and Virginia Lee (Ginger) Jones;


Claire, Paul and Ginger were the parents of my generation.
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The Surname Field
"This ancient name of pre-7th century German origins and Anglo-Saxon origins, is recorded in over seventy spellings. These range from Feild, Feld, and Field, to Delafield, Veld, Van den Velde, Feldmann, and the various ornamental compounds such as Feldblum or Fieldstone. However spelt, the name is topographical for someone who lived or worked on land which had been cleared of forest, but not brought into arable cultivation.
The derivation is from "feld", translating as pasture or open country, almost the opposite of the 20th century meaning.. The earliest recordings are to be found in England and Germany. These include Hugo de la Felde, in the Pipe Rolls of the county of Bedfordshire, England, in the year 1188, and Petrus im dem Velde, of Mengen, Germany, in 1216. Other recordings include Franz van de Velde, the bishop of Herzogbusch, Germany, in 1576, and Margarett Feilde, who married at the church of St. Martin Orgar, London, in 1586.
Amongst the very first settlers to the new colony of Virgina, America, was James Feild. He arrived in the ship "Swan of London", in 1624.. The first recorded spelling of the family name anywhere in the world is believed to be that of Robert de Felde, which was dated 1185, in the list of Knights Templars, in the registers of the county of Gloucestershire, England. This was during the reign of King Henry 11nd, known as "The Builder of Churches", 1154 - 1189.

Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop", often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling."
(Source)
(Source of Crest)
Last revised 10/11/2011