sábado, 14 de septiembre de 2013

Amigos Vaught. Aquí les va información importantísima sobre la familia Vuaght y la Bayne:Y esta entrevista a la madre del Dr. TNOMAS LIVINGSTON BAYNE VAUGHT DATA DE HACE 100 AÑOS:



It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of our partner George Denègre, the last living named partner of our firm. Mr. Denègre died on March 19, 2008, after nearly 60 years of dedicated service to the firm. A memorial service will be held in New Orleans at Lakelawn Funeral Home on Saturday, April 26, at 11 a.m., with visitation from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
After receiving his Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 1943, Mr. Denègre went on to earn his Juris Doctorate from Tulane University Law School, graduating Order of the Coif in 1948. While at Tulane, he was a member of Phi Delta Phi and served as the Statutory Interpretation Editor of the Tulane Law Review. Mr. Denègre's practice was predominantly transactional, with an emphasis in business, maritime, and corporate law.
The attorneys and staff of Jones Walker extend their deepest condolences to the family of Mr. Denègre.

Mrs. Mary S.
Lockwood.

Mrs. Lockwood died at Plymouth,
Massachusetts, on November 9th, in
her ninety-third year. To her we
owe that initial inspiration, that far-seeing vis-
ion which founded our Society and made it
what it is today. From the days when her
inspired pen stirred the patriotism of the foun-
ders and organizers of our Society, she gave
herself heart and soul to its interests. She was
its inspiration and guiding spirit, lovingly
heeded by all administrations as they came and
went. From its very beginning she gave her
life, literally, to our Society, until failing health
kept her from our meetings, but it did not divert
her mind and heart from dwelling upon thoughts
of her " girls."

The " Little Mother " of our Society she
was and ever will be, and she will live in our
hearts as long as our Society endures.

We have had a great and wonderful past.
As we look back to that little group of women
who planned our Society and laid down the
broad and comprehensive lines of its work,
and then look at our Society as it is today, we
can well believe that God raised them up for
service to our Country m the hours of her
greatest need.

In 1890 they founded a Society which more
than any other was unconsciously preparing our
country for 1914 and the even more stormy
times since then. They renewed the spirit of
our ancestors ; they awakened a dormant
patriotism; they brought us back to the ideals
which built up the nation; they helped largely
to arouse the soul of the nation once more to
the things of the spirit, the things that America
stands for in the world, the things that made us
a nation, dedicated to liberty, equality and fra-
ternity. This awakening of America's soul
16



carried us in triumph through the World War
and will carry us, please God, through the still
greater conflicts that are even now dimly seen
in the future.
The subject for the year's program was :
" Woman in American History." It was
arranged by the Historian, Mrs. S. O. Bankson,
and embraces the following subjects: "Women
in the Beginning ;" " Colonial Women " of the
Revolution ;" " Pioneer Women ;" " Women of
the West;" and "Women of the Civil War."

The last two meetings of the year were de-
voted to the modern woman, or the evolution
of women, and the subjects were: "Women in
the Business World ;" " Women in Professions
women in sufrage
"Beginnings of Sufferage;" and the "Achieve-
ments of Sufferage.
The Chapter has paid its full 
quota to the National Society for the erection 
of the fountain at Plymouth, and for the 
American picture to be placed in the War 
Museum in France. The subject of the picture 
is the transportation of troops to the war zone, 
and was reported delivered to the French 
Government recently. 
 
 
Cooperating with the American Legion the 
Chapter sent gifts of wreaths to the public 
funeral of two heroes of the World War, which 
occurred on Armistice Day. 
 
Nancy Ward Chapter has had a part in plac- 
ing the last of a complete set of lineage books in 
the Genealogical Room of the library. 
 
The members continued the support of the 
two French orphans long after the close of the 
war, and as the hearts of the members were 
so greatly touched by this wort, they responded 
to the appeal sent out in the name of the Near 
East, and adopted the first little orphan taken 
in Chattanooga. The French orphans were the 
first to be adopted in Tennessee. 
 
A social entertainment, which proved of 
great pleasure, was the Patriotic Luncheon, 
given on Washington's Birthday. This was 
given by the three chapters and was a great 
success. A pageant written by Mrs. L. M. 
Russell, entitled ; " Women Prominent in His- 
tory," was staged, personally directed by her. 
She was gowned in a white satin robe fashioned 
along Colonial lines. 
 
Three periods in American history were 
presented. The Colonial, the Revolutionary, and 
the A'lodern period. 
Our Chapter was named for a tribe of
Indians, the " Mandans," a race generally con-
ceded to be superior to other western Indians
in many respects, and whom history first men-
tions in 1738. In 1750 they lived in nine vil-
lages on the west bank of the Heart river, near
the mouth, three miles from the present town of
Mandan. They were almost exterminated by
disease, and through wars with the Sioux.
They moved north to the Knife river about
1784, and were there found by Lewis and
Clark in 1804. Their lodges were circular and
mostly made of clay.

Our city is situated on historic ground. Lewis
and Clark established their camp near the
present town of Mandan — a post known as
Fort Mandan — where the American flag was
raised for the first time in North Dakota
on December 25, 1804. It was from this camp
that the Shoshone, Sakakawea. " The Bird
Woman," guided Lewis and Clark on their
journey to the Pacific coast and helped them
to escape hostile Indians.

Fort Abraham Lincoln, long since abandoned,
was located five miles south of Mandan, and
it was from this point that General Custer led
his brave band to what proved to be their last
stand against the Siou.x, in the battle of the
Little Big Horn. The trail which they took
across the country can still be seen.

During the present fiscal year, we have stud-
ied the early history of our State, beginning
with its topography. As the life of the Indians
was intertwined with that of the early settlers,
we have included in our programs papers on
Indian music and other items pertai
A survey has been made of the cemeteries in 
Clinton County and the graves of many Revo- 
lutionary soldiers and their wives located. A 
list has been made and reported to the State 
Chairman and to the Smithsonian Institution. 
Arrangements have been made to mark the 
graves of four Revolutionary soldiers recently 
found unmarked. 
 
Lists have been sent to the State Historian of 
historic paintings, portraits and manuscripts in 
this locality with names of their present owners, 
also several histories of this section, which are 
 
 
 
WORK OF THE CHAPTERS 
 
''Now, Be It Resolved, that the National 
Society of the Sons of the American Revolu- 
tion, in Congress assembled, urges upon the 
Congress of the United States and the Legis- 
latures of the several States that laws be 
enacted by them forbidding any person to 
assume a family surname belonging to a 
family distinguished in the Colonial, ReTolu- 
tionary or Civic history of this country or its 
original Colonies ; and also forbidding the use 
of the names of present or former Presidents 
of this country in connection with the sale of, 
or as the name of an article of display 
or merchandise." 


Stanhope Bayne-Jones


The 17th President of AAI


A Biographical Sketch


Born in New Orleans on November 6, 1888, Stanhope


Bayne-Jones was orphaned when his father committed


suicide in 1894, one year after his mother had passed


away due to complications arising from the birth


of his younger brother. Bayne-Jones lived with his

Walter Walter Reed General Hospital, ca. 1915 r Reed General d l Hospital, ca. , . 1915


grandfather, Joseph Jones, a practicing physician



Stanhope Bayne-Jones, ca. 1917 and a professor of medicine and chemistry at Tulane

Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division,



Harris & Ewing Collection


National Library of Medicine, Stanhope University, for two years, until Joseph’s death in 1896.





Bayne-Jones Papers




After a childhood filled with boarding schools and

One soldier-scientist’s story



moves from one relative’s home to another’s, Bayne-Jones entered Yale, where he received his

At the war’s outset in Europe in


A.B. in 1910. Determined to follow in his grandfather’s footsteps, he began his medical studies


August 1914, more than two and a


at Tulane University before transferring to the Johns Hopkins University in 1911. He received


half years before the U.S. Congress


his M.D. in 1914 and remained at the Johns Hopkins Hospital as house officer (1914–15) and


declared war on Germany on April 6,


assistant resident pathologist (1915–16). After he was appointed head of the new Laboratory of


1917, just 776 of the approximately


Bacteriology and Immunology at Johns Hopkins in early 1916, Bayne-Jones studied bacteriology

140,000 practicing physicians and


and immunology under Hans Zinsser (AAI 1917, president 1919–20) at the Columbia University




College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York for six months before the laboratory opened.

M.D.s entering the new research



Bayne-Jones joined the U.S. Army Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) in 1915. He was

facilities in the United States were



commissioned at the rank of first lieutenant and promoted to captain the following year. In May

4 serving in the military.  By the end



1917, he volunteered to be integrated into the British Expeditionary Force. He was reassigned to

of February 1918, more than 15,000



the American Expeditionary Forces upon their arrival in March 1918. After the armistice, he was

doctors were serving, and, by the



promoted to major and remained in Germany until he was relieved of active duty in May 1919.

time of the armistice, nine months


Bayne-Jones returned to Johns Hopkins in the summer of 1919 and became assistant


later, that number had grown to


professor of bacteriology the following year. In 1923, he accepted a position as a professor of


5 38,000.  During this period of rapid


bacteriology at the recently opened University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry.


mobilization, the professional


He left Rochester in 1932 and became a professor of bacteriology at Yale University School of


trajectories of thousands of


Medicine, where he was appointed dean three years later. From 1932 to 1938, he was also


American physicians were altered.


Master of Trumbull College at Yale.


Entering medicine at a time that the


When the Second World War began in 1939, Bayne-Jones was promoted to lieutenant colonel

emergence of research laboratories in


in the MRC and, two years later, headed the Commission on Epidemiological Survey of the Board



the United States widened the range
for the Investigation and Control of Influenza and other Epidemic Diseases in the Army. From 1942




to 1946, Bayne-Jones was once again an active-duty officer, serving multiple positions within

of career choices, this generation 



the Office of the Surgeon General. He quickly rose through the ranks, becoming colonel in 1942

of American M.D.s faced a new set 



and brigadier general in 1944. He was relieved from active duty in 1946 and, the following year,

of choices for service in wartime: 



accepted an appointment as president of the Joint Administrative Board of the New York Hospital-

they could serve as combat



Cornell Medical Center, a position he held until 1953. After serving as the technical director of

physicians, work in U.S. Army


research and development for the Office of the Surgeon General (1953–56), Bayne-Jones was

laboratories, or remain in their


appointed by the secretary of the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare in 1957 to


laboratories carrying out research


chair an advisory committee charged with establishing guidelines for National Institutes of Health


necessary for the war effort.


research following that year’s dramatic increase in the NIH budget.



His many military and civilian honors include a British Military Cross (1917), a French Cruix de

One young M.D., who put his



Guerre (1918), election to the American Philosophical Society (1944), the U.S. Typhus Commission

prestigious position in immunology



Medal (1945), the Chapin Medal of the Rhode Island State Medical Society (1947), the Bruce

research on hold and volunteered



Medal of the American College of Physicians (1949), the Passano Foundation Award (1959), and a

in May 1917 for early deployment as



Decoration for Outstanding Civilian Service from the U.S. Army (1965).

a combat physician, was Stanhope


In addition to serving AAI as president (1930–31), Bayne-Jones was an associate editor of


Bayne-Jones, a future AAI president.


The Journal of Immunology (1936–49).


Continued next page


Bayne-Jones died at his home in Washington, DC, on February 20, 1970, at the age of 81.

 
 


Stanhope Bayne-Jones


The 17th President of AAI


A Biographical Sketch


Born in New Orleans on November 6, 1888, Stanhope


Bayne-Jones was orphaned when his father committed


suicide in 1894, one year after his mother had passed


away due to complications arising from the birth


of his younger brother. Bayne-Jones lived with his

Walter Walter Reed General Hospital, ca. 1915 r Reed General d l Hospital, ca. , . 1915


grandfather, Joseph Jones, a practicing physician



Stanhope Bayne-Jones, ca. 1917 and a professor of medicine and chemistry at Tulane

Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division,



Harris & Ewing Collection


National Library of Medicine, Stanhope University, for two years, until Joseph’s death in 1896.





Bayne-Jones Papers





After a childhood filled with boarding schools and

One soldier-scientist’s story



moves from one relative’s home to another’s, Bayne-Jones entered Yale, where he received his

At the war’s outset in Europe in


A.B. in 1910. Determined to follow in his grandfather’s footsteps, he began his medical studies


August 1914, more than two and a


at Tulane University before transferring to the Johns Hopkins University in 1911. He received


half years before the U.S. Congress


his M.D. in 1914 and remained at the Johns Hopkins Hospital as house officer (1914–15) and


declared war on Germany on April 6,


assistant resident pathologist (1915–16). After he was appointed head of the new Laboratory of


1917, just 776 of the approximately


Bacteriology and Immunology at Johns Hopkins in early 1916, Bayne-Jones studied bacteriology

140,000 practicing physicians and


and immunology under Hans Zinsser (AAI 1917, president 1919–20) at the Columbia University




College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York for six months before the laboratory opened.

M.D.s entering the new research



Bayne-Jones joined the U.S. Army Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) in 1915. He was

facilities in the United States were



commissioned at the rank of first lieutenant and promoted to captain the following year. In May

4 serving in the military.  By the end



1917, he volunteered to be integrated into the British Expeditionary Force. He was reassigned to

of February 1918, more than 15,000



the American Expeditionary Forces upon their arrival in March 1918. After the armistice, he was

doctors were serving, and, by the



promoted to major and remained in Germany until he was relieved of active duty in May 1919.

time of the armistice, nine months


Bayne-Jones returned to Johns Hopkins in the summer of 1919 and became assistant


later, that number had grown to


professor of bacteriology the following year. In 1923, he accepted a position as a professor of


5 38,000.  During this period of rapid


bacteriology at the recently opened University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry.


mobilization, the professional


He left Rochester in 1932 and became a professor of bacteriology at Yale University School of


trajectories of thousands of


Medicine, where he was appointed dean three years later. From 1932 to 1938, he was also


American physicians were altered.


Master of Trumbull College at Yale.


Entering medicine at a time that the


When the Second World War began in 1939, Bayne-Jones was promoted to lieutenant colonel

emergence of research laboratories in


in the MRC and, two years later, headed the Commission on Epidemiological Survey of the Board



the United States widened the range
for the Investigation and Control of Influenza and other Epidemic Diseases in the Army. From 1942




to 1946, Bayne-Jones was once again an active-duty officer, serving multiple positions within

of career choices, this generation 



the Office of the Surgeon General. He quickly rose through the ranks, becoming colonel in 1942

of American M.D.s faced a new set 



and brigadier general in 1944. He was relieved from active duty in 1946 and, the following year,

of choices for service in wartime: 



accepted an appointment as president of the Joint Administrative Board of the New York Hospital-

they could serve as combat



Cornell Medical Center, a position he held until 1953. After serving as the technical director of

physicians, work in U.S. Army


research and development for the Office of the Surgeon General (1953–56), Bayne-Jones was

laboratories, or remain in their


appointed by the secretary of the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare in 1957 to


laboratories carrying out research


chair an advisory committee charged with establishing guidelines for National Institutes of Health


necessary for the war effort.


research following that year’s dramatic increase in the NIH budget.



His many military and civilian honors include a British Military Cross (1917), a French Cruix de

One young M.D., who put his



Guerre (1918), election to the American Philosophical Society (1944), the U.S. Typhus Commission

prestigious position in immunology



Medal (1945), the Chapin Medal of the Rhode Island State Medical Society (1947), the Bruce

research on hold and volunteered



Medal of the American College of Physicians (1949), the Passano Foundation Award (1959), and a

in May 1917 for early deployment as



Decoration for Outstanding Civilian Service from the U.S. Army (1965).

a combat physician, was Stanhope


In addition to serving AAI as president (1930–31), Bayne-Jones was an associate editor of


Bayne-Jones, a future AAI president.


The Journal of Immunology (1936–49).


Continued next page


Bayne-Jones died at his home in Washington, DC, on February 20, 1970, at the age of 81.

From: JoAnn Bayless < kb5zzs@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: [VAUGHT] Information on D.A.S. Vaught
Date: Sat, 25 Apr 2009 17:17:13 -0500
References: <BAY131-DAV528E50B71EEDF05AC2B62C0740@phx.gbl>
In-Reply-To: <BAY131-DAV528E50B71EEDF05AC2B62C0740@phx.gbl>

Sorry I looked up Thomas Bayne Vaught a few years ago but all I found was a draft and where he had came back to USA.



Jo Ann Bayless
> From: tbvaught@hotmail.com
> To: VAUGHT@rootsweb.com
> Date: Wed, 22 Apr 2009 15:21:13 -0500
> Subject: [VAUGHT] Information on D.A.S. Vaught
>
> Greetings from Mexico, Cousins!
>
>
>
> Excuse me, can you please help me to find information abour ancestors for
> Darrah Albert Shelby VAUGHT? I´ve deducted so far that he was son of Mary
> Frances DARRAH, and that he was born in TN about 1847 and married to Mary
> Aiken BAYNE. He´s father of Thomas Levingston Bayne VAUGHT.
>
>
>
> I´ve received some information before from some of you but I lost my e-mail
> and backups… sorry.
>
>
>
> Thanks in advance and best regards,
>
>
>
>
>
> Jorge Denegre VAUGHT
>
>
>
>
> -------------------------------
> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VAUGHT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

_________________________________________________________________
Windows Live™ Hotmail®:…more than just e-mail.
http://windowslive.com/online/hotmail?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_HM_more_042009

This thread:


Bayne Family

Last Modified 
21 Nov 2005 

Family 
Amelia Behn,   b. 1879 
Children 

1. T. L. Bayne Vaught,   b. 1882,   d. 1919

2. Mary Vaught,   b. 1886

3. Amet Vaught,   b. 1891
Bayne Family

Last Modified 
21 Nov 2005 

Father 
Mother 
Mary Aiken Bayne,   b. 1855,   d. 1921 
Married 
Nov 1877 
New Orleans, Orleans, Louisiana Find all individuals with events at this location 
Family ID 
F0296 

Family 
Children 

1. T. L. Bayne Vaught,   b. 1882,   d. 1919

2. Mary Vaught,   b. 1886

3. Amet Vaught,   b. 1891
PAST DIVISION PRESIDENTS

*Mrs. J. Pinckney Smith (Founder)
*Mrs. T.B. Pugh
*Mrs. D.A.S. Vaught
*Miss Mattie McGrath
*Mrs. P.J. Fredericks
*Mrs. M.C. Gottschalk
*Mrs. Peter Youree
*Miss Doriska Gauthreaux
*Mrs. M.M. Bannerman
*Mrs. Charles Granger
*Mrs. Arthur Weber
*Mrs. Fred C. Kolman
*Mrs. Florence C.T. Tompkins
*Mrs. Louis B. Babin
*Mrs. F.P. Jones
*Mrs. Harry W. Earhardt
*Mrs. Rudolph Krause
*Mrs. John A. Fulmer
*Mrs. A.G. Hendrick
*Mrs. H.C. Falcon
*Mrs. James F. Terrell
*Mrs. J.G. Action
*Mrs. Robert J. Abbott
*Mrs. Walter L. Bienvenu
*Mrs. Kemble K. Kennedy
*Mrs. Ned W. Jenkins
*Mrs. Elgin K. Harper
*Mrs. Alvin D. Carpenter
*Mrs. Harrison W. Littleton
*Mrs. Frank J. Fava
*Mrs. M.D. O'Neil
*Mrs. Louise A. Zollinger
*Mrs. John Wesley Glover
*Mrs. J. Wallace Kingsbury
*Mrs. L.J. Dumestre
*Mrs. Wilhelmina H. Lyles
*Miss A. Norma Lambert
*Mrs. Frank J. Douglass
*Mrs. Robert Earhardt
*Mrs. James O'Neil
*Mrs. G.W. Weimer, Jr.
Mrs. Walter Neely, Jr.
Mrs Lenora (Lewis F.) Martin)
*Mrs. Stockton B. Jefferson
*Mrs. Charles F. Baker
Mrs. Fritzi (Jack L.) Martin
*Mrs. Ruby C. Ball
*Mrs. George A. Miestchovich, Jr.
Mrs. Joe C. Hague
Mrs. Molly (Robert G.) Wiggins
Miss Patricia E. Gallagher
*Miss Mary Elizabeth Sanders
Mrs. Joyce (Charlie L.) Bridges
Mrs. Lou Ann (William W.) Rigby
Mrs. Terri Forrest Reed
Mrs. Carol Sutton Willis
Mrs. Rachel Grace

*Deceased 
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