Advertisement
Advertisement

Sherry Owen

About me:


I haven't shared any details about myself.

About my family:


I haven't shared details about my family.

Interested in the last names:


Updated: May 15, 2021

Message Sherry Owen

Message Sherry
The simple act of leaving a comment shows you care.
Loading...one moment please loading spinner

Recent Activity

Sherry Owen joined AncientFaces!
May 15, 2021 6:12 PM
joined
Member as of May 15, 2021

Photos Added

Sherry hasn't shared any photos yet.

Recent Comments

Sherry hasn't made any comments yet

Sherry's Followers

Be the first to follow Sherry Owen and you'll be updated when they share memories. Click the to follow Sherry.
13

Favorites

Loading...one moment please loading spinner
Lost & Found
Lost & Found
Help reunite mystery or 'orphan' photos that have lost their families.
Photos with the names and dates lost in history. AncientFaces has been reuniting mystery and orphan photos with their families since we began in 2000. This 'Lost & Found' collection is of photos foun...
11.1k+ photos
Political
Political
Original photos of the politicians and political events throughout the past few centuries.
Welcome to a collection of photographs that document the fascinating history of politics. From democracies to monarchies, communism to fascism, and everything in between, this page captures the divers...
17.9k+ photos
Notorious
Notorious
The people and places that live on in our memories - not for good reasons but because of how they shocked and saddened.
Images of serial killers, mass murderers, despots and dictators, prisons, and the victims of these horrors. These people & places live on in infamy in our history. There are the notorious killers: Th...
2.97k+ photos
1800s
1800s
The 1800s where the end of the industrial revolution and the birth of scientists.
The Industrial Revolution began around 1760 and ran through the 1840's. Then began the birth of the profession of science. Louis Pasteur, Charles Darwin, Michael Faraday, Thomas Edison, and Nikola Te...
84.0k+ photos
African Americans
African Americans
See the faces of just some of the many African Americans who have contributed to building the United States into the country it is today.
African Americans in the early history of the United States had an extremely difficult start as immigrants. Having been primarily forced to immigrate to a new continent, African Americans worked throu...
4.02k+ photos
Native Americans
Native Americans
Images of the Native American people - the tribes, their dress, and their lifestyles. We honor and celebrate Native American history with this collection of historic photos.
The best way to understand the people who first inhabited North America, Native Americans, is through their own words. The following quotes contain some of the wisdom passed down through generations o...
1.44k+ photos
Popular Photos
Popular Photos
These historical photos have generated quite the buzz!
This collection of historical photos has got people talking. These photos - either because of the subject and/or the story - have generated a lot of comments among the community. What do you have to s...
337 photos
Fashion
Fashion
Discover how fashion has changed over the years with this collection of photos.
Fashion styles & vintage clothing throughout the decades that will inspire, make you wish for those times again, or may make you ask "What were they thinking"? Clothing styles have obviously changed ...
22.1k+ photos
Celebrities
Celebrities
Discover the lives and legacies of notable celebrities from the past, like Bette Davis and John Wayne, by browsing photographs of them in their prime.
The lasting impact of celebrities from the past cannot be denied; they continue to be an essential part of our cultural history. Through their talent, charisma, and unique personalities, they entertai...
3.78k+ photos
Owens Cemetery Virginia
Owens Cemetery Virginia
Photo courtesy of Sheila Compton Ramsey

Owens Cemetery Interments, Duty, Dickenson County,Virginia USA

Bowman, Onie Owens 26342498
b. Apr. 17, 1927 d. Apr. 16, 1978 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Bumgarner, Carolyn Ruth 26378395
b. Dec. 13, 1941 d. Nov. 15, 1942 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Bumgarner, Jackie Ray 26378440
b. Apr. 4, 1937 d. Jul. 20, 1938 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Lester, Arther Scott 26378048
b. Oct. 20, 1917 d. Jul. 28, 1981 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Lester, Danny Lee 26343509
b. Jan. 15, 1955 d. Apr. 4, 1977 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Lester, Eivens 26343629
b. Nov. 10, 1926 d. Nov. 22, 2005 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Lester, Ella A. Cary 26378011
b. Oct. 13, 1867 d. Mar. 8, 1945 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Lester, Fern Sutherland 26343698
b. Mar. 11, 1935 d. Feb. 2, 1998 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Lester, Jessie 26378004
b. Oct. 11, 1863 d. Jun. 4, 1931 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Lester, Jim 26377984
b. Apr. 13, 1890 d. May 9, 1907 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Lester, Lula Stevens 26378036
b. Sep. 29, 1889 d. Sep. 11, 1963 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Lester, Walker 26378021
b. Sep. 22, 1887 d. Jun. 17, 1936 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Mullins, Kelsie O. 26377976
b. Mar. 2, 1937 d. Mar. 4, 1937 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Albert Ross 26343002
b. Dec. 19, 1872 d. Jun. 29, 1932 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Bettie Marline 26377949
b. Apr. 29, 1932 d. Aug. 15, 1932 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Bonnie 26378214
b. unknown d. Apr. 21, 1907 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Carson Edward 26342911
b. Aug. 28, 1935 d. Oct. 6, 1935 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, David Crocket 26378518
b. Feb. 24, 1953 d. Apr. 16, 1953 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Delh 26377858
b. Oct., 1930 d. Feb., 1935 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Elizabeth 26343870
b. Sep. 12, 1882 d. May 16, 1944 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Find your ancestors at Ancestry.com

Owens, Eunicy May Sutherland 26343113
b. Jan. 13, 1882 d. Nov. 3, 1938 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, James 26377900
b. Mar. 17, 1849 d. Dec. 28, 1922 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Lacy P. 26378103
b. Apr. 16, 1905 d. May 9, 1907 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Lillie B. 26378164
b. Aug. 17, 1900 d. Nov. 13, 1919 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Mary Bowman 26378139
b. Oct. 18, 1874 d. Jan. 31, 1939 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Mazie 26377882
b. unknown d. unknown Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Oliver 26377929
b. 1897 d. unknown Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Rean 26378122
b. Jan. 27, 1876 d. May 3, 1941 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Rufus G. 26342589
b. Aug. 5, 1880 d. Jan. 25, 1950 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Sylvia Sutherland 26377912
b. Mar. 6, 1856 d. Mar. 17, 1938 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Unknown 26378264
b. ???. 17, 1907 d. Sep. Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Utah 26377893
b. unknown d. unknown Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Vallie E. 26343781
b. Dec. 26, 1908 d. May 30, 1925 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens, Zack 26378179
b. Jul. 7, 1897 d. Mar. 19, 1910 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Owens Powers, Maxie Dona 74921237
b. Jul. 4, 1898 d. Jul. 8, 1946 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Powers, Bryan 26377869
b. 1897 d. 1953 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Powers, Bryan 74919235
b. 1897 d. 1953 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Powers, Frank H. 26378068
b. Jul. 10, 1914 d. Feb. 16, 1992 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Powers, Maxie Dona Owens 26377889
b. Jul. 4, 1898 d. Jul. 8, 1946 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Powers, Ruby H. Lester 26378092

Sheckler, Dewey B. 26343210
b. Jul. 9, 1927 d. Nov. 3, 1931 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Sheckler, Paul R. 26343283
b. May 24, 1914 d. Dec. 16, 1931 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Sutherland, Garland 26378302
b. unknown d. unknown Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Sutherland, Henry 26378356
b. unknown d. unknown Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Sutherland, Margaret Counts 26378329
b. unknown d. unknown Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Sutherland, Melissa Kiser 26377849
b. Apr. 11, 1852 d. Apr. 25, 1952 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Sutherland, Rosie 26342709
b. Sep. 13, 1949 d. Sep. 13, 1949 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Sutherland, Zachary Taylor 26377842
b. Mar. 8, 1847 d. Dec. 18, 1923 Owens Cemetery
Duty
Dickenson County
Virginia, USA

Unknown, Emma 26342824
b. Dec. 19 d. Feb. 5, 1934
Nest ferch Rhys (Princess of Wales)
Nest ferch Rhys (Princess of Wales)
Nest ferch Rhys (b. c. 1085 - d. before 1136) was the only legitimate daughter of Rhys ap Tewdwr, last King of Deheubarth, by his wife, Gwladys ferch Rhiwallon ap Cynfyn of Powys. She is sometimes known, incorrectly, as "Nesta" or "Princess Nesta"



She was a king's daughter, another's hostage, and mistress of a third. Her beauty made men tremble at the mention of her name. She was seized from the Celts by the Normans, abducted from her husband's bed by an infatuated rebel, vanished into the hills with him, and plunged a nation into war. She loved conquerors and conquered alike and had at least seven children by four different men. She was Helen of Troy. But in the pantheon of female history she suffered one handicap. She was Welsh.
At last Princess Nest, daughter of King Rhys of Deheubarth, has been given her just deserts, albeit in an academic essay by Kari Maund (published by Tempus). The ancient bards and chroniclers did their best to jazz up her story, but are unreliable. Nest's clerical grandson, Gerald of Wales, hardly mentioned her, perhaps disapproving of her Norman liaisons. As a result, Maund's account of her life is mostly surmise. But Nest's ghost still flits through the castles where she lived, and Welsh girls are called Nesta (Welsh for Agnes) in her honour.

The Norman invasion of Britain ground to a halt in the rain-soaked hills and tribal feuds of Wales. William the Conqueror settled his barons along Offa's Dyke and cut deals with the rulers of Powys, Gwynedd and Deheubarth to the west. In the last, he formally acknowledged Rhys ap Tewdwr as king and made a pilgrimage to St Davids. William's death in 1087 was a catastrophe for the Welsh. The cruel and insecure William Rufus encouraged his barons to march forth into Wales and plunder the principalities with which his father had sought peace. Montgomery, Earl of Shrewsbury, reached Cardigan Bay and turned south. Playing Welshman against Welshman, he wore down resistance until, in 1093, Rhys of Deheubarth was killed in battle outside Brecon. South Wales was overrun by Normans, and Nest, her mother and brothers were seized as hostages.

The princess was probably no more than 12 at the time. As the virgin daughter of the last reigning king of Wales, she was a valuable asset in the murky world of Anglo-Celtic politics. Accustomed to the ways of Wales and familiar only with Irish and Vikings over the seas, she must have been terrified by William's rough and ruthless barons. Yet she was lovely enough to be taken into William II's court and catch the eye of Henry, his shrewd but lustful brother.

A man whose womanising was noted even by medieval chroniclers, Henry was a dashing figure who had fathered some 20 illegitimate children by the time of his marriage and coronation as Henry I in 1100. His coupling with Nest, naked apart from their crowns, is the first depiction of such a relationship, in a medieval manuscript now in the British Library. The result was Henry Fitzhenry. The Welsh girl was clearly a fixture at the Norman court.

Not for long. Nest was insufficiently high-born to be queen and was duly "donated" to Gerald of Windsor, the king's governor in the strategically crucial province of Pembroke. It was a clever move. Maund points out that, as daughter of its former king, she would "lend to a Norman lord some aura of legitimacy in the eyes of the Welsh ... a voice of some kind close to the centre of power". Gerald built for her a new castle at Carew. Two of their children carried Norman names, William and Maurice, and two Welsh, David and Angharad.

Gerald knew no peace. The Welsh from the north were ever threatening, especially under the powerful prince of Powys, Cadwgan. Gerald built a new castle at what is now Cilgerran, on a spectacular bluff over the Teifi gorge. Here in 1109 he appears to have installed Nest, now in her late-20s and by all accounts a remarkable beauty. Cadwgan was raiding deep into the neighbouring country and held a great feast for his kinsmen, attended by his hot-blooded son, Owain. On hearing that Nest was nearby at Cilgerran, Owain and a band of friends fell on the castle, set fire to part of it and surrounded the chamber in which Gerald and Nest were asleep.

Nest pleaded with her husband to hide for his life in the latrine tower. According to the chronicles, the infatuated Owain, "at the instigation of the Devil and moved by passion and love", entered the room and seized Nest, her children and the castle's treasure before making his escape. Her degree of compliance in this operation has long been a source of delighted Welsh conjecture, enhanced today by a walk along Cilgerran's massive walls and under its fragmentary chambers, where the mist rises from the Teifi below. Maund rather spoils the fun by claiming no evidence that Nest colluded in this romantic abduction, though her instinct for survival suggests at least a temporary compromise with her virtue.

Owain's exploit was anything but wise. A proud Norman had lost his family and been incarcerated in his own loo. Carried off into the wilds of Ceredigion, Nest pleaded with Owain to release her children to Gerald, but he was a wanted man. Henry I, her old lover, was no fool. He summoned Cadwgan's many Welsh rivals and offered them all of Powys if they could rescue Nest and avenge Gerald. Somehow Nest found her way back to Pembroke, but Owain fled to Ireland, even his outraged father denying him protection.

Nest's errant brothers now entered the picture, rising in rebellion against the Normans. Her loyalties must have been torn as her husband, brothers and cousins fought battle upon battle, often pitting Welshman against Welshman. Owain recklessly returned from Ireland to plunge into the general feuding, at one point carelessly finding himself fighting with Gerald's Normans against the marauding armies of Gwynedd. For Gerald the opportunity was too good to miss. He turned his Flemish archers on Owain and felled him in a hail of arrows.

Gerald died some time in the 1120s, and the widowed Nest appears to have accepted the comfort of the sheriff of Pembroke, a Flemish settler named William Hait. She delivered him a son, also William. But she was soon married to the Norman constable of Cardigan, Stephen, with yet another son, Robert Fitzstephen, and possibly two, born when she must have been in her 40s. Half of Wales must have Nest's genes in their blood.

Wars continued to swirl round her, sons fighting cousins in tragic rivalry and vendetta. We do not know when she died but she left Norman dynasties based on the Fitzstephens, lords of Cork in Ireland, Fitzgeralds, Fitzowens and Fitzhenrys. Meanwhile, her grandson by her daughter, Angharad, was a Welsh nationalist and the first British topographer, Gerald of Wales. Her son by Henry I gave his own son the charming name of Meilyr and others used such names as Gwladys and Hywel.

The remarkable feature of the Norman conquest was that, unlike most such imperial ventures, it was a true marriage of peoples, a mingling of Norman, Celt and Saxon blood. They fought each other for centuries, but whatever quality is meant by Britishness was the outcome. No one more vividly initiated that melting pot than the exquisite Nest ap Rhys,The Princess of Wales.
Nasta daughter Angharad, who married William Fitz Odo de Barry (William de Barry), by whom she was the mother of Philip de Barry, founder of Ballybeg Abbey at Buttevant in Ireland Robert de Barry Edmond de Barry Gerald of Wales Nest is the maternal progenitor of the Fitzgerald and Barry dynasty, two of the most celebrated families of Ireland and Great Britain.
Princess Nesta was a very remarkable woman. She is sometimes referred to as the "mother of the Irish invasion" since her sons, by various fathers, and her grandsons were the leaders of the invasion. She had, in the course of her eventful life, two lovers, two husbands, and many sons and daughters. Her father is quoted as saying that she had 10 children as a result of her matrimonial escapades, eight sons and two daughters, among them William fitzGerald de Windsor. One of her lovers was King Henry I of England. Some years before she married Gerald, her father, the fierce old Prince of South Wales, was fighting the English under Henry, (then the Prince and later King). Henry succeeded in taking the lovely Nesta as hostage. By this royal lover, she had two sons; Meyler fitzHenry and the celebrated Robert of Gloucester. It would seem that Gerald, busily engaged in military business, could have had no peace about his wife, since she was clever as well as beautiful, and every warrior seems to have fallen in love with her. In 1095, Gerald led an expedition against the Welsh on the borders of what is now Pembrokeshire. In 1100, he went to Ireland to secure for his lord, Arnulf Montgomery, the hand of the daughter of King Murrough in marriage. He was the first of the Geraldines to set foot in Ireland, where they were later to rule like kings. Later, Arnulf joined in a rebellion against the King, was deprived of his estates and exiled in 1102. Then the King granted custody of Pembroke Castle to Gerald. Later, he was appointed president of the County of Pembrokeshire.

But it was Nesta that occupied the center of their stage during their marriage. Her beauty continued to excite wonder and desire throughout Wales. At Christmas in 1108, Cadwgan, Prince of Cardigan, invited the native chieftains to a feast at Dyvet (St. David's). Nesta's beauty was a subject of conversation. She excited the curiosity of Owen, the son of Prince Cadwgan, who resolved to see her. She was his cousin, so that the pretense of a friendly visit was easy. He successfully obtained admission with his attendants into Pembroke Castle. Her beauty -- it was even greater than he expected -- excited his lust. He determined to carry her off! In the middle of the night, he set fire to the castle, and his followers surrounded the room where Gerald and Nesta were sleeping. Gerald was awakened by the noise and about to discover the cause, but Nesta, suspecting some /treason, persuaded him to make his escape. She pulled up a board and let her husband escape down a drain by a rope. Then Owen broke open the door, seized Nesta and two of her sons, and carried them off to Powys, leaving the castle in flames. Owen had his way with Nesta, (historians say that one of her ten children was his), though whether she yielded from desire or force was uncertain. But at her request, Owen hastened to send back the two sons to Gerald. When King Henry heard of Nesta's abduction, he was furious. He regarded it as an injury almost personal, since Gerald was not only his steward, but his particular friend. The abduction of Nesta led to a war, which resulted in her return to her husband, and Owen fled to Ireland. Gerald took a conspicuous role in the fighting. In 1116, Henry ordered Owen, who had returned to Wales, to apprehend Gruffuyd, son of Rhys ap Tewdyr. As he passed through a wood on his march to join up with the royal forces, Owen seized some cattle. The owners of the cattle, as they fled, met Gerald, Constable of Pembroke. Gerald was also on his way to join the royal forces. When the cattle owners requested his assistance, he was only too delighted to have the opportunity for revenge for the insult to his honor done by Owen's abduction of Nesta. He lost no time in pursuing Owen, found him, and a skirmish followed. Owen was slain, an arrow piercing his heart, and Gerald's honor was avenged.

Gerald died about 1135, leaving three sons and a daughter by Nesta. They were: Maurice, one of the principal leaders of the Irish invasion in 1169; William, ancestor of the families of Carew, Grace, Fitzmaurice, Gerald, and the Keatings of Ireland; David, who became bishop of St. David's; and Angareth, wife of William de Bari, and mother of the historian, Gerald Cambrensis. Nesta married again. Her second husband was Stephen, Constable of Cardigan, by whom she had one son, Robert fitzStephen. Nesta's children and their descendants constituted a menace to the English rule of Wales. Royal Welsh blood mingled with the blood of the nobles of Normandy in all the half-brothers, sons of Gerald of Windsor and Stephen of Cardigan. B****** or legitimate, they were turbulent princes in a /troubled land. Now fighting the Welsh natives, now allying themselves with their cousin, Nesta's brother Gruffuyd, the unconquered Prince of Wales, on whose head Henry had set "a mountain of gold", they remained a constant source of /trouble to the King, an ever-present threat to his security.
It was thus that the Norman invasion of Ireland came about, and the Geraldines and de Barry's arrived in 1169.
People tagged:
Fontes
Last name
978 people1 photo
AncientFaces
This account is shared by Community Support (Kathy Pinna & Daniel Pinna & Lizzie Kunde) so we can quickly answer any questions you might have. Please reach out and message us here if you have any questions, feedback, requests to merge biographies, or just want to say hi!
2020 marks 20 years since the inception of AncientFaces. We are the same team who began this community so long ago. Over the years it feels, at least to us, that our family has expanded to include so many. Thank you!
Loading records
Back to Top