When Charles Ephraim Whittecar was born on 18 January 1858, in Milford, Van Buren Township, Kosciusko, Indiana, United States, his father, Diamond Whittecar, was 38 and his mother, Malissa Donaldson, was 35. He married Jenny Melissa Mcclaughry on 20 September 1879, in Grand Island, Hall, Nebraska, United States. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 6 daughters. He lived in Iowa, United States in 1870 and Colorado Springs, El Paso, Colorado, United States in 1910. He died on 28 February 1911, in Denver, Colorado, United States, at the age of 53, and was buried in Denver, Colorado, United States.
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Historical Boundaries: 1859: Arapahoe, Kansas Territory, United States 1859: El Paso, Kansas Territory, United States 1861: Colorado Territory, United States 1861: El Paso, Colorado Territory, United States 1876: El Paso, Colorado, United States
Abraham Lincoln issues Emancipation Proclamation, declaring slaves in Confederate states to be free.
In the Mid 1870s, The United States sought out the Kingdom of Hawaii to make a free trade agreement. The Treaty gave the Hawaiians access to the United States agricultural markets and it gave the United States a part of land which later became Pearl Harbor.
From a Germanic word, karl, meaning ‘free man’, akin to Old English ceorl ‘man’. The name, Latin form Carolus, owed its popularity in medieval Europe to the Frankish leader Charlemagne ( ?742–814 ), who in 800 established himself as Holy Roman Emperor. His name (Latin Carolus Magnus) means ‘Charles the Great’. Carolus—or Karl, the German form—was a common name among Frankish leaders, including Charlemagne's grandfather Charles Martel ( 688–741 ). Charles is the French form. The name occurs occasionally in medieval Britain as Karolus or Carolus; it had a certain vogue in West Yorkshire from the 1400s, particularly among gentry families. The form Charles was chosen by Mary Queen of Scots ( 1542–87 ), who had been brought up in France, for her son, Charles James ( 1566–1625 ), who became King James VI of Scotland and, from 1603 , James I of England. His son and grandson both reigned as King Charles , and the name thus became established in the 17th century both in the Stuart royal house and among English and Scottish supporters of the Stuart monarchy. In the 18th century it was to some extent favoured, along with James , by Jacobites, supporters of the exiled Stuarts, opposed to the Hanoverian monarchy, especially in the Highlands of Scotland. In the 19th century the popularity of the name was further enhanced by romanticization of the story of ‘Bonnie Prince Charlie’, leader of the 1745 rebellion.
Dictionary of First Names © Patrick Hanks and Flavia Hodges 1990, 2003, 2006.
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