Jim, The map I was referring to is in C.M. Hopkins ATLAS OF BALTIMORE COUNTY, MARYLAND: 1877. You can buy it from Willow Bend Books and other Genealogy book stores. It has a two page detailed map of each District, plus more detailed maps of a number of small towns in the county. http://www.willowbendbooks.com/search.asp?SearchType=Book&SearchTopic=&Searc hState=maryland&SearchCounty=baltimore&x=19&y=5 It is one of the best $15 I've spent on genealogy. But then I love looking at old maps. You can also find detailed searchable maps (from the 1850's and 1860's) for each election District in the entire State of Maryland online at http://mdslavery.net/html/mapped_images/mapsindex.html John -----Original Message----- From: Jim Snyder [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Saturday, February 25, 2006 5:29 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Fw: [BALTGEN-L] Seeking Info on Melchior Family Cemetery, Gardenville John, How can I obtain an 1877 (Balto. Co.) map showing individual properties? I am interested in Stansburys' and related families. Thanks, Jim Snyder ( [email protected] )
Would anyone have knowledge of either or both of the below families? Thanks! Shadrach BUSH 1. 1732: Shadrach (Shadrack/Shade) BUSH was born in 1732 in (perhaps Suffolk County) England. 2. 1761: The year of his immigration to the colonies is unknown but he purchased 50 acres of land in Baltimore Co., MD on 16 February 1761. 2. 1768: He was married to Sarah OSBORN; their only known child Shadrach BUSH, JR. was born on 23 March 1768 in Baltimore Co., MD 3. 1778: Oath of Allegiance: I found Shadrach BUSH (23 March 1778) and a James BUSH, both of Baltimore County and both designated as Non-Juror to The Oath of Allegiance. -Comment from me: Per the American Bush Family Oral History, sometime thereafter Shadrach returned to his home country "to take care of some business" and was never heard from again. He might have had a brother named James BUSH. Bush Family Oral History has that Shadrack did immigrate with an unnamed brother! The 1778 list was the first time I ran across any mention of a James BUSH; I did find a little more on a James after I went looking. He might have also returned to England. There were other Bush families in Maryland but none in Baltimore County in this time frame. The last record that has been found on Shadrack or James in Baltimore Co., MD is March 1778. 7. 1822 Burial: 01 Jan. 1822 Shadrach Bush - Kingston-Corfe Castle; age 90; buried in St Edward's Parish Church Yard of the Village of Corfe Castle or in Gods Acre a little further away. AND Thorny BUSH - this person might or might not have been a relative of Shadrach Bush (Sr.) 8. 1735: The Suffolk Record Office send me the following: the minute book for 1735 has the following entry, B105/2/19 fol 117: Court held 13 October 1735, Bury St Edmunds: Thorny BUSH being committed for stealing a Lamb the property of Thomas BENNETT and having confessed the same, is to remain in Gaol until the next Assizes and then and there to receive his Tryall. 9. 1736: CD "British Emigrants in Bondage 1614-1788" material transcribed from the book by Peter Wilson Coldham. Name: Bush, Thorny S. Lent 1736. SU (I was told that meant that he was sentenced during lent of 1736). 10. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index 1500s-1900s Record Name: Thorny Bush Year: 1736 Place: America Source Publication Code: 1217.7 Primary Immigrant: Bush, Thorny Source Bibliography: Coldham, Peter Wilson - Bonded Passengers to America. 9 vols. in 3. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1983. Vol. 7. Norfolk Circuit, 1663-1775: Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Huntingdonshire, Norfolk, and Suffolk. 57p. Page: 48 -Comment from me: Neither entry has to what port in the colonies he was sent, what ship he traveled on, what age he was, or if he had family traveling with him! 11. 1737: Tax list of Baltimore County, Maryland: Wm Hamilton, John Hamilton, Toney Bush, John Black, 2 slaves, 5 others Location: Soldiers Delight Hundred. -Comment from me: This is in the book "Inhabitants of Baltimore County 1691-1763" by F. Edward Wright. It looks like the four individuals above were sharing expenses, etc. Maybe they were renting the land with an agreement that they were responsible for the taxes. I am assuming that Toney was "of age" at this time. I wish I knew who the "five others" were! 12. 1745: Thorny Bush was married to Elisha (Elizabeth) Pike on 24 August 1745 in Baltimore Co., MD at St. Paul's Church. -Comment from me: This was in the book "Records of St. Paul's Parish - The Anglican Church Records of Baltimore City and Lower Baltimore County [MD] early 1700s through 1800 Volume I" by Bill and Martha Reamy. This was not necessarily a first marriage for Thorny. I could find nothing on the Pike family in Maryland nor could I find anything on the couple after their marriage.
John, How can I obtain an 1877 (Balto. Co.) map showing individual properties? I am interested in Stansburys' and related families. Thanks, Jim Snyder ( [email protected] ) ----- Original Message ----- From: "John Siemon" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, February 24, 2006 10:01 PM Subject: RE: [BALTGEN-L] Seeking Info on Melchior Family Cemetery, Gardenville > Carol, > I'm not sure how much it will help, but I can send you an 1877 map showing > the property of D. Melchior, off of Franklin Road (now Frankford Avenue), > about a block south of Radecke Avenue. There were several adjacent > properties labeled "H. Melchior." Let me know if you want it. > > John > > -----Original Message----- > From: Carol Ann Wald [mailto:[email protected]] > Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2006 8:39 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: [BALTGEN-L] Seeking Info on Melchior Family Cemetery, Gardenville > > I've learned that some of my Schaub relations were at one time buried in a > family farm cemetery in Gardenville belonging to Daniel Melchior. Some > graves were moved at some point after 1902 to Oak Lawn Cemetery, but I > would > > like to find out what happened to the rest of the remains, which mut have > included those of the Melchior family. Any info or suggestions for > research > avenues would be appreciated. I've already hit all the grave and tomb > transcription databases I know of. > > For more info on Melchiors and Schaubs: > http://wald.bol.ucla.edu/Shaub#Melchior > > Thanks . . . > > Carol Ann Wald > > > > ==== BALTGEN Mailing List ==== > USGenWeb/MDGenWeb site for Carroll Co. http://www.rootsweb.com/~mdcarrol > USGenWeb/MDGenWeb site for Howard Co.http://www.rootsweb.com/~mdhoward > > > > > > ==== BALTGEN Mailing List ==== > Please Check Our New web site for the BALTGEN-L mailing list. > http://www.rootsweb.com/~mdbaltim/baltgen-l.htm > >
They possibly are part of the Bush family that were in Ohio and WV.At the time the area was still Virginia. ----- Original Message ----- From: "SpiritHawk/Martha" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, February 25, 2006 2:52 PM Subject: [BALTGEN-L] Bush Families in 1700s > Would anyone have knowledge of either or both of the below families? > Thanks! > > Shadrach BUSH > 1. 1732: Shadrach (Shadrack/Shade) BUSH was born in 1732 in (perhaps Suffolk > County) England. > 2. 1761: The year of his immigration to the colonies is unknown but he > purchased 50 acres of land in Baltimore Co., MD on 16 February 1761. > 2. 1768: He was married to Sarah OSBORN; their only known child Shadrach > BUSH, JR. was born on 23 March 1768 in Baltimore Co., MD > 3. 1778: Oath of Allegiance: I found Shadrach BUSH (23 March 1778) and a > James BUSH, both of Baltimore County and both designated as Non-Juror to > The Oath of Allegiance. > -Comment from me: Per the American Bush Family Oral History, sometime > thereafter Shadrach returned to his home country "to take care of some > business" and was never heard from again. He might have had a brother named > James BUSH. Bush Family Oral History has that Shadrack did immigrate with > an unnamed brother! The 1778 list was the first time I ran across any > mention of a James BUSH; I did find a little more on a James after I went > looking. He might have also returned to England. There were other Bush > families in Maryland but none in Baltimore County in this time frame. The > last record that has been found on Shadrack or James in Baltimore Co., MD is > March 1778. > 7. 1822 Burial: 01 Jan. 1822 Shadrach Bush - Kingston-Corfe Castle; age 90; > buried in St Edward's Parish Church Yard of the Village of Corfe Castle or > in Gods Acre a little further away. > > AND > > Thorny BUSH - this person might or might not have been a relative of > Shadrach Bush (Sr.) > 8. 1735: The Suffolk Record Office send me the following: the minute book > for 1735 has the following entry, B105/2/19 fol 117: Court held 13 October > 1735, Bury St Edmunds: Thorny BUSH being committed for stealing a Lamb the > property of Thomas BENNETT and having confessed the same, is to remain in > Gaol until the next Assizes and then and there to receive his Tryall. > 9. 1736: CD "British Emigrants in Bondage 1614-1788" material transcribed > from the book by Peter Wilson Coldham. > Name: Bush, Thorny S. Lent 1736. SU (I was told that meant that he was > sentenced during lent of 1736). > 10. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index 1500s-1900s Record > Name: Thorny Bush Year: 1736 Place: America Source Publication Code: > 1217.7 Primary Immigrant: Bush, Thorny > Source Bibliography: Coldham, Peter Wilson - Bonded Passengers to America. 9 > vols. in 3. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1983. Vol. 7. Norfolk > Circuit, 1663-1775: Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, > Huntingdonshire, Norfolk, and Suffolk. 57p. Page: 48 > -Comment from me: Neither entry has to what port in the colonies he was > sent, what ship he traveled on, > what age he was, or if he had family traveling with him! > 11. 1737: Tax list of Baltimore County, Maryland: Wm Hamilton, John > Hamilton, Toney Bush, John Black, 2 slaves, 5 others Location: Soldiers > Delight Hundred. > -Comment from me: This is in the book "Inhabitants of Baltimore County > 1691-1763" by F. Edward Wright. It looks like the four individuals above > were sharing expenses, etc. Maybe they were renting the land with an > agreement that they were responsible for the taxes. I am assuming that > Toney was "of age" at this time. I wish I knew who the "five others" were! > 12. 1745: Thorny Bush was married to Elisha (Elizabeth) Pike on 24 August > 1745 in Baltimore Co., MD at St. Paul's Church. > -Comment from me: This was in the book "Records of St. Paul's Parish - The > Anglican Church Records of Baltimore City and Lower Baltimore County [MD] > early 1700s through 1800 Volume I" by Bill and Martha Reamy. This was not > necessarily a first marriage for Thorny. I could find nothing on the Pike > family in Maryland nor could I find anything on the couple after their > marriage. > > > > ==== BALTGEN Mailing List ==== > USGenWeb/MDGenWeb page for Anne Arundel Co. - 350 Years of Settlement > 1649-1999 > http://www.rootsweb.com/~mdannear >
Is anyone researching these families from Fells Point in the mid 1800s? James Diggs and Susannah Long married 1832 in St Patrick's. He was a ship carpenter. She was the widow of Thos. Appleton. Beverly Diggs was James' brother. I've traced the Diggses pretty well, but would like to find parents of Susannah. What resources would you suggest other than St Pat's which I have done.
Carol, I'm not sure how much it will help, but I can send you an 1877 map showing the property of D. Melchior, off of Franklin Road (now Frankford Avenue), about a block south of Radecke Avenue. There were several adjacent properties labeled "H. Melchior." Let me know if you want it. John -----Original Message----- From: Carol Ann Wald [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2006 8:39 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [BALTGEN-L] Seeking Info on Melchior Family Cemetery, Gardenville I've learned that some of my Schaub relations were at one time buried in a family farm cemetery in Gardenville belonging to Daniel Melchior. Some graves were moved at some point after 1902 to Oak Lawn Cemetery, but I would like to find out what happened to the rest of the remains, which mut have included those of the Melchior family. Any info or suggestions for research avenues would be appreciated. I've already hit all the grave and tomb transcription databases I know of. For more info on Melchiors and Schaubs: http://wald.bol.ucla.edu/Shaub#Melchior Thanks . . . Carol Ann Wald ==== BALTGEN Mailing List ==== USGenWeb/MDGenWeb site for Carroll Co. http://www.rootsweb.com/~mdcarrol USGenWeb/MDGenWeb site for Howard Co.http://www.rootsweb.com/~mdhoward
Hi, Sorry that I can't be of any help. I just remembered the name of the singer. I live on the Eastern Shore of Maryland and don't think we have any of them here. Betty ----- Original Message ----- From: "T.M. Sommers" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, February 24, 2006 2:21 PM Subject: Re: [BALTGEN-L] Seeking Info on Melchior Family Cemetery, Gardenville > tippytoe wrote: >> From: "Carol Ann Wald" <[email protected]> >> >>> I've learned that some of my Schaub relations were at one time buried in >>> a family farm cemetery in Gardenville belonging to Daniel Melchior. Some >>> graves were moved at some point after 1902 to Oak Lawn Cemetery, but I >>> would like to find out what happened to the rest of the remains, which >>> mut have included those of the Melchior family. Any info or suggestions >>> for research avenues would be appreciated. I've already hit all the >>> grave and tomb transcription databases I know of. > > > > Just a thought. There was a singer named Lawrence Melchoir. > > You might try looking for his biography. > > That was Lauritz Melchior: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauritz_Melchior > > -- > Thomas M. Sommers -- [email protected] -- AB2SB > > > > ==== BALTGEN Mailing List ==== > USGenWeb/MDGenWeb page for Anne Arundel Co. - 350 Years of Settlement > 1649-1999 > http://www.rootsweb.com/~mdannear > >
If interested in full text of these obits, contact ETTA directly at [email protected] Include date of newspaper with your request. > A - L > > ALBERY, Lieut. Robert H. > ALLEN, William M. > ALLENBAUGH, Winfield S. > APPLEBY, Ira > BERRYMAN, Albert L. > BIGGS, Annette > BLAIR, William > BREWIS, Mabel > BROOKHART, Irene > BROWN, Lester C. > CAMPBELL, Larry Clifton > CONAWAY, William G. > CONNOR, Thomas L. > CROMWELL, Margaret Ann > DASHER, Annie C. > DAVISON, Capt. Andrew C. > DEMMITT, Charles > DIEDEL, Graham > DISLEY, Sally S. > DORSEY, Leonard Worrell > DRISCOLL, Genevieve L. > EARECKSON. Frederick > ELLIOTT, Eda K. > ELLIS, Francis Cahill > EMRICH, Meyer F. > ENGLE, William L. > FALLIN, R. Ellen > FELDMANN, Mildred E. > FERREE, Charles A. > FOUST, George F. > GALLAGHER, Charles H. > GARMATZ, Herman M. > GLAESER, Henry > GRASON, Elizabeth Ridgley > GROTSKY, Julius F. > GUNTHER, Walter > GUTHEIL, Herman > GUTMAN, Francis H. > HACKER, Clara Stella > HANUS, John William > HICKS, Ernest P. > HOLBROOK, James Elbie > HUNTER, Edmund Penbleton > ISAACS, Minna > JACKSON, Anna > KENNEDY, John J. > KOHLER, Nicholas J. > LACEY, Mary Patricia > LAWS, Henry Milton > LINEWEAVER, Charles N., Jr. > LIPPY, Emma G, > LOUGH, Minnie B. > LUDWIG, John A. G. > > Kathy for Etta- [email protected] > > >
tippytoe wrote: > From: "Carol Ann Wald" <[email protected]> > >> I've learned that some of my Schaub relations were at one time buried >> in a family farm cemetery in Gardenville belonging to Daniel Melchior. >> Some graves were moved at some point after 1902 to Oak Lawn Cemetery, >> but I would like to find out what happened to the rest of the remains, >> which mut have included those of the Melchior family. Any info or >> suggestions for research avenues would be appreciated. I've already >> hit all the grave and tomb transcription databases I know of. > > Just a thought. There was a singer named Lawrence Melchoir. > You might try looking for his biography. That was Lauritz Melchior: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauritz_Melchior -- Thomas M. Sommers -- [email protected] -- AB2SB
Just a thought. There was a singer named Lawrence Melchoir. You might try looking for his biography. Betty ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carol Ann Wald" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2006 8:39 PM Subject: [BALTGEN-L] Seeking Info on Melchior Family Cemetery, Gardenville > I've learned that some of my Schaub relations were at one time buried in a > family farm cemetery in Gardenville belonging to Daniel Melchior. Some > graves were moved at some point after 1902 to Oak Lawn Cemetery, but I > would like to find out what happened to the rest of the remains, which mut > have included those of the Melchior family. Any info or suggestions for > research avenues would be appreciated. I've already hit all the grave and > tomb transcription databases I know of. > > For more info on Melchiors and Schaubs: > http://wald.bol.ucla.edu/Shaub#Melchior > > Thanks . . . > > Carol Ann Wald > > > > ==== BALTGEN Mailing List ==== > USGenWeb/MDGenWeb site for Carroll Co. http://www.rootsweb.com/~mdcarrol > USGenWeb/MDGenWeb site for Howard Co.http://www.rootsweb.com/~mdhoward > >
Mona- where is the St David's Day dinner? Kathy ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2006 5:00 PM Subject: BALTGEN-D Digest V06 #36
Hours of Operation for the Historical Society of Baltimore County are: Library Hours Tuesday - Saturday 10am - 4pm Museum Hours Tuesday - Friday 10am - 4pm Saturday 10am - 3pm Reservations and group tours phone 410-666-1878 Mary Vincent -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2006 12:40 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [BALTGEN-L] Question about Balt. Co. Hist. Society In a message dated 2/23/2006 12:22:26 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, [email protected] writes: Can someone tell me the days and hours the Baltimore County Historical Society (the old Almshouse) is open for research? For some reason I cannot get to their website today. I couldn't get on it, either, but found the hours at another site: Tuesday - Friday 10-4 Saturday 10-3 ==== BALTGEN Mailing List ==== Please Check Our New web site for the BALTGEN-L mailing list. http://www.rootsweb.com/~mdbaltim/baltgen-l.htm
I've learned that some of my Schaub relations were at one time buried in a family farm cemetery in Gardenville belonging to Daniel Melchior. Some graves were moved at some point after 1902 to Oak Lawn Cemetery, but I would like to find out what happened to the rest of the remains, which mut have included those of the Melchior family. Any info or suggestions for research avenues would be appreciated. I've already hit all the grave and tomb transcription databases I know of. For more info on Melchiors and Schaubs: http://wald.bol.ucla.edu/Shaub#Melchior Thanks . . . Carol Ann Wald
Hi, All, SInce I was asked, here is some info about St. David, the patron saint of Wales. His feast day is March 1, and many Welsh societies around the world celebrate with a dinner or other meeting. I got interested in this through my genealogy research into my Welsh DAVIS family who came to Baltimore in the 1840s. I have been to Wales once and plan to go again later this year. There is a fabulous cathedral named for St. David that is a must-see to anyone who goes to Wales. This info is from www.davidmorgan.com/stdavid.html and was partially reprinted in the latest Baltimore St. David's Welsh-American Society's newslwtter. Their dinner, which I will be attending, is Mar. 4. Hope this is interesting to some of you and I promise to keep other remarks off-list. BTW--How many know that St. Patrick was a Welshman?? Mona -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- St. David, Dewi Sant, is the patron saint of the Welsh, and March 1, his feast day, is celebrated as a patriotic and cultural festival by the Welsh in Wales and around the world. Dewi Sant was a Celtic monk of the sixth century. His mother was Non. The ruins of a small chapel dedicated to her memory may be seen near St. David's Cathedral. Its ruins remain there now. His father was Sant, a son of Ceredig, King of Cardigan. Little is known for certain about Dewi Sant, but he founded several religious centers in Wales and western England, was consecrated archbishop during a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and led an ascetic life. An account of his life was written towards the end of the 11th century by Rhygyfarch, a monk at Llanbadarn Fawr near Aberystwyth. Many prophesies were said to have preceded the birth of Dewi Sant, and many miracles were attributed to him. One miracle often recounted is that once when Dewi was preaching to a crowd at Llandewi Brefi those on the outer edges could not hear, so he spread a handkerchief on the ground, and stood on it to preach, whereupon the ground swelled up beneath him, and all could hear. A short account of Dewi Sant has been given by Nona Rees in St. David of Dewisland. March 1, the date given by Rhygyfarch for the death of Dewi Sant, was celebrated as a religious festival up until the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century. In the 18th century it became a national festival among the Welsh, and continues as such to this day. The celebration usually entails singing and eating, which may mean a meal followed by singing, or much singing followed by a Te Bach, tea with teisen bach and bara brith. Y Ddraig Goch, the Red Dragon, is flown as a flag or worn as a pin or pendant, and leeks are worn, and sometimes eaten. In schools in Wales the boys take leeks to school, status being given to those who bring the biggest leeks, and eat them earliest in the day. The heraldic emblem of Wales is Y Ddraig Goch, the Red Dragon. The emblem of Wales is the leek, arising from an occasion when a troop of Welsh were able to distinguish each other from a troop of English enemy dressed in similar fashion by wearing leeks. An alternative emblem developed in recent years is the daffodil, used and preferred over the leek by the English government as it lacks the overtones of patriotic defiance associated with the leek. St. David's Day meetings are not boisterous celebrations of democracy and freedom in Wales, but rather the subdued remembrance allowed a captive nation under colonial rule. For information on local St. David's Day meetings in the U.S. and Canada consult the Welsh-American paper Ninnau: Ninnau 11 Post Terrace Basking Ridge NJ 07920 A monthly newspaper devoted to North-American Welsh affairs and news from Wales. Subscription is $20.00/year. http://www.ninnau.com >From: "tippytoe" <[email protected]> >Reply-To: [email protected] >To: [email protected] >Subject: Re: [BALTGEN-L] Slightly OT--St. David's Day dinner >Date: Thu, 23 Feb 2006 15:05:33 -0500 >MIME-Version: 1.0 >Received: from lists5.rootsweb.com ([66.43.27.41]) by >bay0-mc1-f3.bay0.hotmail.com with Microsoft SMTPSVC(6.0.3790.211); Thu, 23 >Feb 2006 12:14:06 -0800 >Received: (from [email protected])by lists5.rootsweb.com (8.12.8/8.12.8) id >k1NK5n4M021738;Thu, 23 Feb 2006 13:05:49 -0700 >X-Message-Info: KtxBqYfPyq2PmWVCTrZmjbGZTupA/L4wsrPh1M9CLQw= >Resent-Date: Thu, 23 Feb 2006 13:05:49 -0700 >X-Original-Sender: [email protected] Thu Feb 23 13:05:49 2006 >Old-To: <[email protected]> >References: <[email protected]> >X-MSMail-Priority: Normal >X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2900.2180 >X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2900.2180 >X-Scanned-By: MIMEDefang 2.52 on 192.168.65.34 >Resent-Message-ID: <[email protected]> >Resent-From: [email protected] >X-Mailing-List: <[email protected]> archive/latest/19315 >X-Loop: [email protected] >Precedence: list >Resent-Sender: [email protected] >Return-Path: [email protected] >X-OriginalArrivalTime: 23 Feb 2006 20:14:06.0808 (UTC) >FILETIME=[B2E2C580:01C638B5] > >Hi Mona, >Please explain St. David's Day. >Why is he a patron Saint. >This is something new for me. >Thanks, >Betty > >----- Original Message ----- From: "mona everett" <[email protected]> >To: <[email protected]> >Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2006 2:13 PM >Subject: [BALTGEN-L] Slightly OT--St. David's Day dinner > > >>Hi, >> >>Is anyone else going to go to the St. David's Day dinner on March 4th? If >>so, please email me, as I will be in town and attending and would love to >>meet others from the list! >> >>FYI--St. David is the patron saint of Wales. >> >>Mona >> >> >> >>==== BALTGEN Mailing List ==== >>Please make sure the options in your E mail program disables quoting the >>message in HTML when posting to any Roots-L mailing list. >> >> > > >==== BALTGEN Mailing List ==== >Please note that hitting reply will send your response to the entire list. >Please respond to people privately and not through the list unless your >response >contains information of general interest. >
Hi Mona, Please explain St. David's Day. Why is he a patron Saint. This is something new for me. Thanks, Betty ----- Original Message ----- From: "mona everett" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2006 2:13 PM Subject: [BALTGEN-L] Slightly OT--St. David's Day dinner > Hi, > > Is anyone else going to go to the St. David's Day dinner on March 4th? If > so, please email me, as I will be in town and attending and would love to > meet others from the list! > > FYI--St. David is the patron saint of Wales. > > Mona > > > > ==== BALTGEN Mailing List ==== > Please make sure the options in your E mail program disables quoting the > message in HTML when posting to any Roots-L mailing list. > >
Hi, Is anyone else going to go to the St. David's Day dinner on March 4th? If so, please email me, as I will be in town and attending and would love to meet others from the list! FYI--St. David is the patron saint of Wales. Mona
In a message dated 2/23/2006 12:22:26 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, [email protected] writes: Can someone tell me the days and hours the Baltimore County Historical Society (the old Almshouse) is open for research? For some reason I cannot get to their website today. I couldn't get on it, either, but found the hours at another site: Tuesday - Friday 10-4 Saturday 10-3
Hi, Can someone tell me the days and hours the Baltimore County Historical Society (the old Almshouse) is open for research? For some reason I cannot get to their website today. Thanks! Mona
BA Co. Historical Society website http://www.hsobc.org/ Kathi Jones-Hudson MD Tombstone Transcription Project Manager http://www.rootsweb.com/~cemetery/maryland/maryland.html __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com
My great Uncle read these to me over the phone several years ago. Now he doesn't remember them and I have had no luck find information on the people mentioned. The first one sounds like an obituary. Does anyone have any idea how/where I can find more information? 1859 ________ding, son of Peter and Margaret Elizabeth Reding, Husband of Anna Kexel, widow (Elizabeth Wolf) John Redding, Co. I, 3rd Maryland Infantry was enrolled and mustered 1-17-1862 at Baltimore and was honorably discharged 3-20-1863 on surgeons certificate of disability at convelescent camp Virginia. 28 years of age, born in Trenton NJ. Light complexion, blue eyes, brown hair. Mason by occupation. There is an August Kesel buried at Baltimore Cemetery in 1855 but I don't know how he's related. He is on the cemetery card with Mary Ruding (could possibly be Reding) buried in 1862, an Infant Nizer buried 1905. Vernon L. Deise buried 14 Sept. 1928, Elizabeth Deise buried 28 Jan 1946 and her husband Louis Deise buried 7 Aug. 1905. Any help would be greatly appreciated.