When Emily Jane Gertrude Noe was born on 14 November 1813, in Saint Paris, Johnson Township, Champaign, Ohio, United States, her father, Robert Dennis Noe, was 35 and her mother, Emily Shipman, was 28. She married Lemuel Leonard Taylor on 10 February 1831, in Champaign, Ohio, United States. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 2 daughters. She lived in Johnson Township, Champaign, Ohio, United States in 1850. She died on 9 December 1852, in Saint Paris, Johnson Township, Champaign, Ohio, United States, at the age of 39, and was buried in Lutheran Cemetery, Saint Paris, Johnson Township, Champaign, Ohio, United States.
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With the Aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars the global market for trade was down. During this time, America had its first financial crisis and it lasted for only two years.
The Missouri Compromise helped provide the entrance of Maine as a free state and Missouri as a slave state into the United States. As part of the compromise, slavery was prohibited north of the 36°30′ parallel, excluding Missouri.
The Crimes Act was made to provide a clearer punishment of certain crimes against the United States. Part of it includes: Changing the maximum sentence of imprisonment to be increased from seven to ten years and changing the maximum fine from $5,000 to $10,000.
German, Dutch, and English (London); French and Spanish (Noé); Catalan (Noè): from the Biblical personal name Noach ‘Noah’, which means ‘comfort’ in Hebrew. According to the Book of Genesis, Noah, having been forewarned by God, built an ark into which he took his family and representatives of every species of animal, and so was saved from the flood that God sent to destroy the world because of human wickedness. The personal name was not common among non-Jews in the Middle Ages, but the Biblical story was an extremely popular subject for miracle plays. In many cases, therefore, the surname probably derives from a nickname referring to someone who had played the part of Noah in a miracle play or pageant, rather than from a personal name. The usual English form of the surname is Noy .
French (Noë): habitational name from La Noë, the name of several places in the northern part of France, derived from the Gaulish word nauda ‘water meadow, boggy place’; it is a cognate of Noue (see Lanoue ) and, in North America, possibly also an altered form of this.
French (Noé): variant of Noël (see Noel ).
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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