Mary Emily (Duncan) Rutherford was born on February 2, 1910 in Bonnybridge, Scotland United Kingdom to Isabella (Fletcher) Duncan and Andrew Duncan, and had siblings Ellen Mitchell Duncan and William Duncan. She was in a relationship with David Rutherford, and had children Helen MD (Rutherford) Crerar, Isabella Fletcher Rutherford, Ian Kenneth Rutherford, Morag Duncan (Rutherford) McCusker, Andrew Duncan Rutherford, Isabella Davina Rutherford, David Rutherford, Jeanie Munro Robertson (Rutherford) Barr, Anne Munro Rutherford, and Irene Mary (Rutherford) Robertson. Mary Rutherford died at age 49 years old on March 1, 1959 at Southern General Hospital 133 Govan Road, in Glasgow. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Mary Emily (Duncan) Rutherford.
Photos of the 1900's which brought us from the industrial age to the technological age.
From 1900 through 1999 we witnessed the beginning of flight to a man on the moon and a Mars Rover. We went from using phones tethered by cords and computers that filled rooms, to carrying the equivale...
The 1930's were a decade of severe stress: the Great Depression, the Dust Bowl, the rise of Nazism. But it was also the end of Prohibition, the beginning of the change of land management (poor farm ...
I want to build a place where my son can meet his great-grandparents. My grandmother Marian Joyce (Benning) Kroetch always wanted to meet her great-grandchildren, but she died just a handful of years before my son's birth.
So while she didn't have the opportunity to meet him, at least he will be able to know her.
For more information about what we're building see About AncientFaces. For information on the folks who build and support the community see Daniel - Founder & Creator. My father's side is full blood Sicilian and my mother's side is a combination of Welsh, Scottish, German and a few other European cultures. One of my more colorful (ahem black sheep) family members came over on the Mayflower. He was among the first to be hanged in the New World for a criminal offense he made while onboard the ship.