When Evelyn Marie Lynch was born on 26 April 1917, in Loretto, Cambria, Pennsylvania, United States, her father, Charles Paul Lynch, was 29 and her mother, Rosemary Hertzog, was 29. She married Merrill Dalrymple Kelsey on 21 April 1957, in Los Angeles, California, United States. She lived in Cambria, Pennsylvania, United States in 1930 and Cresson, Cambria, Pennsylvania, United States in 1940. She died on 16 March 1995, in Sylmar, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States, at the age of 77.
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To end World War I, President Wilson created a list of principles to be used as negotiations for peace among the nations. Known as The Fourteen Points, the principles were outlined in a speech on war aimed toward the idea of peace but most of the Allied forces were skeptical of this Wilsonian idealism.
The Eighteenth Amendment established a prohibition on all intoxicating liquors in the United States. As a result of the Amendment, the Prohibition made way for bootlegging and speakeasies becoming popular in many areas. The Eighteenth Amendment was then repealed by the Twenty-first Amendment. Making it the first and only amendment that has been repealed.
Japanese attack Pearl Harbor.
Some characteristic forenames: Irish Brendan, Liam, Kieran, Dermot, Donovan, Brigid, Caitlin, Siobhan, Aileen, Colm, Conley, Conor.
Irish: shortened Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Loingsigh ‘descendant of Loingseach’, a personal name meaning ‘mariner’ (from long ‘ship’). This is now a common surname in Ireland but of different local origins, for example chieftain families in counties Antrim and Tipperary, while in Ulster and Connacht there were families called Ó Loingseacháin who later shortened their name to Ó Loingsigh and also Anglicized it as Lynch.
Irish (Anglo-Norman): from de Línse, a Gaelicized form of the Norman French name de Lench, deriving from one of the manors named Lench in Worcestershire. The placename derives from Old English hlenc ‘hill-side’.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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