These Ranney feet through the ages: Civil War to Present Day

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RoMoney
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Re: These Ranney feet through the ages: Civil War to Present Day

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macky wrote: Sun 24th Dec 2017 04:31 pm @romoney You will find Angela,s ashes (a book) more the Irish story of that period.
That book is actually quite famous but I've never read it. I think they even made it into a movie.


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Re: These Ranney feet through the ages: Retrieving Revolutionary Rainey

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dfas
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Re: These Ranney feet through the ages: Cousins

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Cousins George and Thomas
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Re: These Ranney feet through the ages: Civil War to Present Day

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macky wrote: Sun 24th Dec 2017 04:31 pm Interesting about the farm,My family was given origanal homesteader plaque a few years back from Alberta goverment .
The homestead was 30,000 acres ,now full of oil fracking rigs.
My dad,s family was given land in Nova Scotia,my dad always said his family was swindled out of it by Indians :lol:
@romoney You will find Angela,s ashes (a book) more the Irish story of that period.
I think the real beauty here is we all have these incredible histories there for the finding.

I don't know if you happened to see Amy Shumer's story on Finding Your Roots, a very interesting Canadian/Indian story.
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Re: These Ranney feet through the ages: Rainey Farm

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Re: These Ranney feet through the ages: Tavern, Blacksmith & Wampum Business

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Re: These Ranney feet through the ages: 'Cavalier' John Mottrom - 1610

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10th great grandfather John Mottrom was a Cavalier in England. He was among the "nobility and gentry" supporting King Charles I who reigned from 1642 to 1649, in opposition to the 'Roundheads', a political, religious party made up of Puritans and other non-conformists and radicals who gained control of Parliament and opposed the will and authority of the Charles I. After King Charles I was executed in 1649, more than a thousand Cavaliers and their families came in one year to Virginia. John Mottrom debarked at York River and first settled in York County which then embraced both sides of the river near Chesapeake Bay.
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These Ranney feet through the ages: Cousin William Tylee Ranney

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We share Fife immigrant great grandfather Thomas Ranney.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Ranney
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William Tylee Ranney (May 9, 1813 – November 18, 1857) was a 19th-century American painter, known for his depictions of Western life, sporting scenery, historical subjects and portraiture. In his 20-year career, he made 150 paintings and 80 drawings, and is considered the first major genre painter to work in New Jersey, and one of the most important pre-Civil War American painters.His work is on display in several museums across the United States. One of his contemporaries opined, "A specimen of Ranney is indispensable wherever a collection of American art exists."
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William Tylee Ranney was born in Middletown, Connecticut on May 9, 1813, the son of William Ranney, a sea captain, and Clarissa Ranney. In 1826, at the age of 13, he moved to Fayetteville, North Carolina, to live with his maternal uncle, merchant William Nott, and be apprenticed as a tinsmith. It is believed that Ranney developed his first sketches during this period.

At the age of 20 Ranney moved to Brooklyn in 1833 to study painting. On March 12, 1836, six days after the fall of the Alamo, he volunteered in the Texas Army to fight in the Texas War of Independence under General Sam Houston. His experience during this period is understood as the most significant influence on the subject matter of his future works. Ranney was reportedly in the guard placed over Mexican President Santa Anna following his capture at the Battle of San Jacinto. Ranney's nine-month tenure in the Texas Army ended on November 23, 1836. He remained in West Columbia, Texas until returning to Brooklyn in 1837.
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Ranney resumed his artistic endeavors in Brooklyn, becoming a self-taught oil painter, having never received formal training. In 1838 he publicly exhibited his paintings for the first time at the National Academy of Design in New York City. He received an award for his first genre painting A Courting Scene, which was exhibited at the New York Mechanics' Institute Fair. He traveled back and forth between North Carolina and New York from 1839 and 1842. In 1843, he opened a studio in New York City, where he advertised as a portrait painter, though few of the works from this period have been identified.

In 1847 he moved to Weehawken, marrying Margaret Agnes O'Sullivan the following year. He and his wife briefly moved back to New York City around 1850.
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In 1853 they crossed back into New Jersey, settling permanently with their two sons at a 14-room homestead in the growing artist community of West Hoboken, New Jersey, which today is the southern portion of Union City. The homestead, which was located at Twelfth Street and Palisade Avenue atop the then-rural Hudson Palisades, and overlooked the Manhattan skyline, was characterized by Ranney's interests in both painting and Western life. It included a two-story, glassed-in studio, and a stable for horses that Ranney, an avid horseback rider, painted in many of his works. Henry T. Tuckerman, in his Book of the Artists, described Ranney's studio thus:

It was so constructed as to receive animals; guns, pistols, and cutlasses hung on the walls; and these, with curious saddles and primitive riding gear, might lead a visitor to imagine he had entered a pioneer's cabin or border chieftain's hut; such an idea would, however, have been once dispelled by glance at the many sketches and studies which proclaimed that an artist, and not a bushranger, had here found a home.

Ranney was a regular contributor and an associate member of the National Academy of Design and the American Art Union, both based in New York. He also painted historical scenes, such as those of the American Revolution. He mostly depicted the everyday lives of the affected populace rather than heroic battle scenes. Among his subjects of local landscapes was Hackensack Meadows.

By 1846, his work began to show the influences of his experiences in Texas, including frontier backdrops depicting the Rocky Mountains. He featured pioneers, hunters, trappers, and explorers before the West was more widely settled by European Americans. Among these are The Old Oaken Bucket, The Match Boy, Prairie Burial, Scouting Party, Hunting Wild Horses and Trapper's Last Shot, which are straightforward presentations of everyday subjects, lacking overt sentiment.

Ranney enjoyed duck hunting, which is reflected in some of his paintings on that theme, which are noted for their solidly constructed, almost sculpture-like figures. His most popular and requested work is his 1850 painting On the Wing, which portrays a sportsman with dead game at his feet, about to shoot down his next target. Ranney produced at least four different versions of this print, the most recognized of which was reserved for the Butler Institute of American Art. It was published in the gift book Ornaments of Memory in 1856 and 1857. This version is set in a more windblown environment, noted for the contrast generated with the stillness of the human figures within it. The portrayal of the outdoorsman in On the Wing contributed to the era's nationalistic imagery.Mark Thistelthwaite of the Butler Institute, describes this piece as:

"Capital, in its style. Sportsman and dog are both in the best spirits, and are transferred to the canvas without losing anything of their keen relish of the sport." The appeal of Ranney's painting lies in its convincing portrayal of the alert, poised hunter and the tense, crouching boy and dog, all motionless, yet charged with potential energy. Dead game on the ground underscore the figures' vitality. Ranney plants the compactly rendered, centralized group in the midst of wind-blown marsh vegetation.

Ranney, who adored the rural, marshy lands that typified the area in the 19th century, also enjoyed fishing. Among the fellow artists and residents he befriended were Hoboken founding father Colonel John Stevens III, who organized the first ferry system between New York and Hoboken. As Ranney was an avid cricket player, he was one of the founders of New York Cricket Club, and one of its top scorers. The club met at the Elysian Fields in Hoboken. He also played Hoboken's Fox Hill, which today is Columbus Park, and the high school field between 9th and 11th streets on Grand Street. Ranney played cricket until 1854.
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These Ranney feet through the ages: 1st Feet Final Stop

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Cromwell, CT
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Great Aunt Mary
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Cousin Daniel
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Cousin Simeon's two stones
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Cousin Ebenezer
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Cousin William
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Many Ranneys
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The man that started us all, Thomas.
We burned one together.
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Re: 1616-1713: Atlantic Crossing and marriage into Cromwell's, relocation to Virginia

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