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Rodriguez Lopez y Uribe Senior | pagina de Genealogia.

El transcurso legendario de cuatro hilos de sangre.
Genealogias de Colombia. Historia familiar. Investigadores Genealogicos

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Clara Elena Cortissoz Alvares Correa

Clara Elena Cortissoz Alvares Correa

Mujer 1893 - 1978  (85 años)

Información Personal    |    Medios    |    Notas    |    Mapa del Evento    |    Todos

  • Nombre Clara Elena Cortissoz Alvares Correa 
    Parentescowith Maritza Uribe Senior
    Nacimiento 8 Jun 1893  Barranquilla, Atlantico, Colombia Buscar todos los individuos que registran eventos en este lugar. 
    Sexo Mujer 
    Fallecimiento Dic 1978  Bermuda Island Buscar todos los individuos que registran eventos en este lugar. 
    ID Persona I2267  rodriguezuribe.co
    Última Modificación 6 Jun 2024 

    Padre Antepasados Jacob de Joseph Cortissoz y Jessurun Pinto,   n. 16 Jul 1848, Curacao, Antillas Holandesas Buscar todos los individuos que registran eventos en este lugar.f. 12 Nov 1927, Manhattan, New Yor, New York, USA Buscar todos los individuos que registran eventos en este lugar. (Edad 79 años) 
    Madre Antepasados Julia Alvares Correa Jessurun Pinto,   n. 1855, Barranquilla, Atlantico, Colombia Buscar todos los individuos que registran eventos en este lugar.f. 27 Dic 1939, Manhattan, New Yor, New York, USA Buscar todos los individuos que registran eventos en este lugar. (Edad 84 años) 
    Marriage 28 Oct 1874  Barranquilla, Atlantico, Colombia Buscar todos los individuos que registran eventos en este lugar. 
    Age at Marriage He : 26 años y 3 months - She : ~ 19 años y 10 months. 
    Hijos 14 hijos 
    Notas 
    • El dato de los hijos de Jacob Cortissoz esta en su "Testamento Abierto", escritura numero 43 de la notaria segunda de Barranquilla el 24 de Enero de 1898.
      Falta Augusto.
    ID Familia F598  Hoja del Grupo  |  Family Chart

    Familia Adrian Weill Emanuel Heineman,   n. Feb 1894, New York, New York, USA Buscar todos los individuos que registran eventos en este lugar.f. 6 Feb 1960, Malone, Franklin, New York, USA Buscar todos los individuos que registran eventos en este lugar. (Edad 66 años) 
    Marriage 12 Jul 1916  Manhattan, New Yor, New York, USA Buscar todos los individuos que registran eventos en este lugar. 
    Tipo: Sinagoga 
    Age at Marriage She : 23 años y 1 month - He : 22 años y 5 months. 
    Notas 
    • Name Adrian Weil Emanuel
      Sex Male
      Age 23
      Birth Year (Estimated) 1893
      Birthplace New York
      Marital Status Single
      Race White
      Father's Name Henry Emanuel
      Father's Sex Male
      Mother's Name Sarah Heineman
      Mother's Sex Female
      Spouse's Name Clara Elena Cortissoz
      Spouse's Sex Female
      Spouse's Age 23
      Spouse's Birth Year (Estimated) 1893
      Spouse's Birthplace Baraiquilla, Colombia
      Spouse's Marital Status Single
      Spouse's Race White
      Spouse's Father's Name Jacob Cortissoz
      Spouse's Father's Sex Male
      Spouse's Mother's Name Julia Correa
      Marriage Date 12 Jul 1916
      Marriage Place Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States
      Marriage Place (Original) Manhattan, New York
      Event Type Marriage
    ID Familia F1270  Hoja del Grupo  |  Family Chart
    Última Modificación 3 Oct 2022 

  • Mapa del Evento
    Enlace a Google MapsNacimiento - 8 Jun 1893 - Barranquilla, Atlantico, Colombia Enlace a Google Earth
    Enlace a Google MapsMarriage - Tipo: Sinagoga - 12 Jul 1916 - Manhattan, New Yor, New York, USA Enlace a Google Earth
    Enlace a Google MapsFallecimiento - Dic 1978 - Bermuda Island Enlace a Google Earth
     = Enlace a Google Earth 
    Leyenda del Marcador< Direccion Calle Localidad Aldea Parroquia Pueblo Ciudad Municipio Area Condado/Comarca Departamento Region Estado Pais Continente No Establecido

  • Fotos
    Clara Cortissoz Alvarez Correa
    Clara Cortissoz Alvarez Correa

  • Notas 
    • Sylvia makes a century
      Jonathan Bell
      Created: Sep 05, 2020 08:00 AM

      A woman who notched up a century today had a fast answer when she was asked the secret to a long life. Sylvia Spearing said: “Live every day. Try to be decent and helpful. That’s the only thing we’re put on earth for — to help each other.”Ms Spearing, who lives just off Pitts Bay Road in Pembroke, said yesterday she planned to spend her birthday with friends and family “having a couple of good laughs and sharing some funny memories”.
      She added she was an agnostic.Ms Spearing said: “I’m not afraid, but let me put it this way — what I do regret, because I’m nosy, is I would like to see what happens, and why.“I want to know if we have learnt anything from it all.”“I wonder what comes afterwards. I don’t know of the beginning, and I certainly don’t know the ending.”Ms Spearing, a mother of five, said she followed the news and nature programmes and took time to think about what message may lie behind the Covid-19 pandemic.
      Ms Spearing’s grandfather, an importer-exporter, uprooted the family from Barranquilla, Colombia, and moved them “lock, stock and barrel to New York City”.Her mother, Clara Cortissoz, met Adrian Emanuel, her father, and Ms Spearing’s life started in an Irish immigrant neighbourhood in Upper Manhattan, near the City College of New York on Convent Avenue.She said: “They were lovely people, nice neighbours. The neighbours were great.”Bermuda was popular for holidays as Furness Bermuda liners plied the short distance between New York and the island.
      She met Robert Spearing, a Bermudian engineer on the liner Monarch of Bermuda, and they got married in 1938.She came to Bermuda in 1939 on board the Monarch with Elaine, their first daughter.She said: “My first trip down was to live here. It was beautiful. No cars. Everything was horse and buggy, or bikes.”The couple lived a “simple, nice” life on the North Shore by Deep Bay in Pembroke, where Ms Spearing looked after the family home, raised their child, and watching the “lady boat” liners cruising in — until the Second World War intervened later that year.
      Ms Spearing said there was no great hardship during the war and more children followed — Robert, Alfred and Claudia.But her marriage was not a success. Her mother came to help with the children and Ms Spearing’s took her first job at the Goody Shop on Reid Street in Hamilton.The American base later opened, and the US services created an airport at St George’s.Ms Spearing started work there in 1945, at first in the mail room, and later in accounting.
      Now living on Hinson’s Island in Hamilton Harbour, she was expected to be at her desk and ready for work by 8am.In early days she had to cross to Hamilton on a rope-pulled boat, then drive to the base in her Austin car, which she left parked on Front Street.Ms Spearing rose to head of accounts at the US Base where, as an American, officials decided she did not have to bother getting a driver’s licence.She said she counted herself lucky to be paid American wages.She added: “Uncle Sam was good to me.”
      A second marriage was also unsuccessful, but produced a fifth child, Pamela.
      Ms Spearing said the island changed “entirely” in the decades after the Americans arrived.But she added: “Everywhere changes. ”She retired from the base in 1985. She said she was not tempted to return to New York after she had built a life in Bermuda with her children, and has been happy with her lot ever since.Ms Spearing added the question about life was: “What are you in it for? Greed and money? No. “What can you do to make it better? How many of us are really in it to make things better for mankind?”