Hi Barbara, I don't know. I just forwarded on the message, since it was a BOWER. You would need to contact the original poster, who was <palionfox@aol.com>. Good luck, Lisa Bowers Brown ----- Original Message ----- From: Barbara Argo <barbgo@arbuckleonline.com> To: <BOWER-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 5:38 PM Subject: Re: [BOWER] FOX-BOWER-MILLER FAMILY MANCHESTER, ENGLAND > Lisa, My grandmother was a Fox, Married James Madison Bower. Her name was > Iola Fox, Father Clement L. Fox Is it the same line? Barbara Bower Argo > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Lisa K. Brown <brownlisak@home.com> > To: <BOWER-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 12:26 PM > Subject: [BOWER] FOX-BOWER-MILLER FAMILY MANCHESTER, ENGLAND > > > > Hi, > > > > This was posted on another list I watch for my FOX line. Thought someone > > here might have some information for this person since it said Thomas FOX > > married a BOWER. > > > > Have a good day! > > > > Lisa > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: <palionfox@aol.com> > > To: <FOX-L@rootsweb.com> > > Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 12:03 AM > > Subject: [FOX] FOX-BOWER-MILLER FAMILY MANCHESTER, ENGLAND > > > > > > > > > > > > > IF ANYONE IN MANCHESTER, ENGLAND WOULD RECOGNIZE THOMAS FOX MARRIED TO A > > BOWER. THERE SON WAS PARKINSON G. FOX WHO CAME TO PHILA. PA. USA IN THE > LATE > > 1800'S. ANY HELP FROM OVER THERE ? > > > > > > > > > ==== FOX Mailing List ==== > > > Affiliated with the FOX mail list > > > is the Fox Genealogical Research Group, The Fox Hounds. > > > We have a web site at http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~fox If you would > be > > interested in becoming a member of the group and including your infomation > > on the site please contact the group coordinator Terry at TGLatey@aol.com. > > > Happy huntin'! > > > > > > > > > ============================== > > > Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the #1 > > > Source for Family History Online. Go to: > > > http://www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11HB > > > > > > > > > ==== BOWER Mailing List ==== > > Need to reach Colleen, the discussion coordinator? Send her an email > > at <ladyaudris@earthlink.net>. > > > > > > > ==== BOWER Mailing List ==== > To post messages to the Bower discussion list, send them to > BOWER-L@rootsweb.com > >
Lisa, My grandmother was a Fox, Married James Madison Bower. Her name was Iola Fox, Father Clement L. Fox Is it the same line? Barbara Bower Argo ----- Original Message ----- From: Lisa K. Brown <brownlisak@home.com> To: <BOWER-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 12:26 PM Subject: [BOWER] FOX-BOWER-MILLER FAMILY MANCHESTER, ENGLAND > Hi, > > This was posted on another list I watch for my FOX line. Thought someone > here might have some information for this person since it said Thomas FOX > married a BOWER. > > Have a good day! > > Lisa > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: <palionfox@aol.com> > To: <FOX-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 12:03 AM > Subject: [FOX] FOX-BOWER-MILLER FAMILY MANCHESTER, ENGLAND > > > > > > > > IF ANYONE IN MANCHESTER, ENGLAND WOULD RECOGNIZE THOMAS FOX MARRIED TO A > BOWER. THERE SON WAS PARKINSON G. FOX WHO CAME TO PHILA. PA. USA IN THE LATE > 1800'S. ANY HELP FROM OVER THERE ? > > > > > > ==== FOX Mailing List ==== > > Affiliated with the FOX mail list > > is the Fox Genealogical Research Group, The Fox Hounds. > > We have a web site at http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~fox If you would be > interested in becoming a member of the group and including your infomation > on the site please contact the group coordinator Terry at TGLatey@aol.com. > > Happy huntin'! > > > > > > ============================== > > Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the #1 > > Source for Family History Online. Go to: > > http://www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11HB > > > > > ==== BOWER Mailing List ==== > Need to reach Colleen, the discussion coordinator? Send her an email > at <ladyaudris@earthlink.net>. > >
Thanks Colleen, I never enjoyed Coffee so much Wanda
Hey, Kate, fear not, the children will come to it in time (I did!). At least you are giving them somewhere to come to it FROM! Dixie Bower Cutler Vancouver, BC Kwelkuz@aol.com wrote: > Colleen and list, > > I enjoy the pieces that have been provided by Colleen. I used the Christmas > traditions, broken out by decade, at my family's Christmas gathering, and > interspersed information on where the ggrandparents were living, what > children had arrived etc, for a 70 year flowchart of life. It was > interesting for the adults, and mind numbing for the children, but I can't > please everyone. > > Kate > Sugar Land, TX > > ==== BOWER Mailing List ==== > Bower Cottage, sister site to the Bower Family Homestead, homesites of > the Bower research group -- http://bowercommunity.com/cottage
I also enjoy Colleen's stories, and wonder how Grandma existed without a computer!! Loved your story, Kate - you can't EVER please EVERYONE at Christmas! But your effort was appreciated by most, I'm sure. Barbara Bower Yorktown, VA ----- Original Message ----- From: <Kwelkuz@aol.com> To: <BOWER-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 4:10 PM Subject: [BOWER] Re: Additional pieces of historical significance > Colleen and list, > > I enjoy the pieces that have been provided by Colleen. I used the Christmas > traditions, broken out by decade, at my family's Christmas gathering, and > interspersed information on where the ggrandparents were living, what > children had arrived etc, for a 70 year flowchart of life. It was > interesting for the adults, and mind numbing for the children, but I can't > please everyone. > > Kate > Sugar Land, TX > > > ==== BOWER Mailing List ==== > Bower Cottage, sister site to the Bower Family Homestead, homesites of > the Bower research group -- http://bowercommunity.com/cottage > >
Colleen and list, I enjoy the pieces that have been provided by Colleen. I used the Christmas traditions, broken out by decade, at my family's Christmas gathering, and interspersed information on where the ggrandparents were living, what children had arrived etc, for a 70 year flowchart of life. It was interesting for the adults, and mind numbing for the children, but I can't please everyone. Kate Sugar Land, TX
Hi, This was posted on another list I watch for my FOX line. Thought someone here might have some information for this person since it said Thomas FOX married a BOWER. Have a good day! Lisa ----- Original Message ----- From: <palionfox@aol.com> To: <FOX-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 12:03 AM Subject: [FOX] FOX-BOWER-MILLER FAMILY MANCHESTER, ENGLAND > > > IF ANYONE IN MANCHESTER, ENGLAND WOULD RECOGNIZE THOMAS FOX MARRIED TO A BOWER. THERE SON WAS PARKINSON G. FOX WHO CAME TO PHILA. PA. USA IN THE LATE 1800'S. ANY HELP FROM OVER THERE ? > > > ==== FOX Mailing List ==== > Affiliated with the FOX mail list > is the Fox Genealogical Research Group, The Fox Hounds. > We have a web site at http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~fox If you would be interested in becoming a member of the group and including your infomation on the site please contact the group coordinator Terry at TGLatey@aol.com. > Happy huntin'! > > > ============================== > Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the #1 > Source for Family History Online. Go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11HB >
) ( ) Good Morning Family! .-.,--^--. ( Come on in. . . \\|`----'| - The coffee pot's on. . . \| |// ...and we even have decaf, | |/ tea, and hot chocolate! \ / ------ Today's topics include: 1. Welcome to new cousins 2. Those were the days TO OUR NEWEST COUSINS ~~ On behalf of the entire family, I'd like to extend a most hearty welcome to those cousins who came into the family fold this past week. We are very glad to have you with us and hope you'll stay and remain a part of our online family. As soon as you're comfortable with us and the list, please send in your Bower[s], Bauer or Baur lines so we can all see how we're related to you. We do not have a fancy format for sending in records or queries to the list. Post as many as you wish! If the data has anything to do with Bower[s], Bauer or Baur ancestors or any of the 81+ variant spellings we research that might help someone, please feel free to post it. Every scrap of information is appreciated. If you haven't visited the homesite of this list yet, you are encouraged to do so. Our home is Bower Community, located at <http://bowercommunity.com>. There, we currently have two sites: The Bower Family Homestead [a.k.a., the Homestead] is our primary homesite and the gathering place for much of our information. It waits to join us all in welcoming you into the family at <http://bowercommunity.com/homestead>. Smaller is our sister site, the Bower Cottage, which houses most of our projects including an online GEDCOM fed by quite a few cousins from our research groups. Find the Cottage is at <http://bowercommunity.com/cottage>. THOSE WERE THE DAYS The drudgery of laundry day! Ugh! ... or is it today really "drudgery" and "ugh"? You may have thought I've totally "lost it" here, but I don't think so. As newbies and novices we learn to put flesh on our ancestors by telling as many of their stories as we can. This section is going to do just that, but with a twist. For today's subject picture yourself doing laundry. Not a fun picture, huh? Now picture your great grandmother doing laundry, then your 3x great grandmother. Put yourself in your grandmothers' position and picture what it must have been like for them. You're now stepping into the frame of mind for this section... Before the days of washing machines, people got dirt out of their clothes by pounding them on rocks and washing the dirt away in streams. Sand was used as an abrasive to free the dirt. Soap was discovered at Rome's Sapo Hill where ashes containing the fat of sacrificial animals was found to have good cleaning powers. Technology has taken us a fair way to the modern rectangular shaped white box with appropriate buttons for permanent press and delicate fabrics. What would grandma have thought if she were given the choice of "delicate" or "permanent press"? Certainly the pair of bib-overalls that had been on granddad for the past week, or two, would not have fit within either category. The earliest washing "machine" - the scrub board - was invented in 1797. In those days the process went something like this... Build your own laundry soap (no running to the store for detergent). Heat water for the laundry on the old cook stove, pour it in the wooden wash and rinse tubs. After scrubbing the clothes, wring them out by hand, then hang everything on outside lines. Hope it didn't rain or a dust-storm wouldn't come along. An 1800's housekeeping book gives the following instructions for making detergent: "A Washing Mixture. Mix and boil twenty minutes one gallon soft soap; half a gallon of weak boiled lye; four ounces sal soda; half a gill of spirits turpentine. Soak the clothes over night in milk-warm water. In the morning, rinse and wring them. To every gallon cold water add one pint of the above mixture. Stir it well in the water. Open the clothes and boil fifteen or twenty minutes; rinse out of those suds. If the articles are not thoroughly cleansed, rub a little of the mixture on the soiled places, and the result will be satisfactory. -- Mrs. Dr. E." Or, you could try this one: "Castile soap, ounce; aqua ammonia (34), a quarter-pound; sulphur ether, one ounce; glycerine, one ounce; spirits wine, one ounce. Shave the soap into thin pieces, dissolve it in two quarts rain (or any other soft water). Then add the other ingredients. Rub the soiled spots with a sponge or piece of flannel and expose to the air. -- Mrs. B." In 1874 William Blackstone of Bluffton, Indiana built a birthday present for his wife. It was a machine which removed and washed away dirt from clothes. The machine consisted of a wooden tub in which there was a flat piece of wood containing six small wooden pegs. The inner mechanism looked something like a small milking stool. It was moved back and forth by means of a handle and an arrangement of gears. Dirty clothes were snagged on the wooden pegs and swished about in hot soapy water. Mr. Blackstone began to build and sell his washers for $2.50 each. Competitors moved in quickly, which helped to keep prices down. Many early washing machines cost less than $10. Other early washers were hand powered by means of a wheel, pump handle or similar device. One was driven by twisted ropes which powered the washer by "unwinding" somewhat like the use of a rubber band to power model airplanes. Another washer contained rollers which were pushed back and forth by hand to squeeze out dirt. Several featured "stomping" devices and one - called a "Locamotive" was moved rapidly back and forth on a track washing the clothes by slamming them against the walls of the tub. Later a wringer, invented in 1861, was added to the washer. Metal tubs replaced wooden types around 1900. Drive belts made possible use of steam or gasoline engines in the early 1900s and electric motor power for the first time in 1906. In 1922 a system of forcing water through the clothes by means of an agitator rather than dragging the clothes through the water was introduced. This system is most commonly used now. In the mid 1930s, a device invented by John W. Chamberlain washed, rinsed, and extracted water from clothes in a single operation. It was the mother to today's washer. Great grandmother should see us now! A job that took her up to two days to complete, takes us a matter of hours now. Today's Coffee presented you with another facet of genealogy ~ an insight into to one aspect of the lives of our great grandmothers. Did you enjoy it? Would you like to see more pieces like this? Let me know your opinion <ladyaudris@earthlink.net>. Family ... it's what we're all about. Thank you for allowing me to spend this time with you. I hope your week is filled with health, productivity, fun, and above all, filled with love. ) ( ) _.-~~-. (@\'--'/. Colleen ('``.__.'`) `..____.'
Sorry for the long subject line! I'm just roll calling...looking for my missing Browers. You'd think with so many boys it wouldn't be so difficult? My Browers were in Canada for a time...but they relocated to IOWA or NEBRASKA in the 1850s. Anyone have any links to thBrowers in those states or recognize a name? They appear to be Wesleyan Mothodist. More info follows, from the Kitley Township, Ontario census of 1851 Thanks, Bonnie In 1851 found a DANIEL BROWER age 42 bCan, farmer, Weslyan Methodist, wife MATILDA 42 bIreland with children MARY 20, OZEAS 17, JOHN 12, LOFTUS HENRY 10 and OBEDIAH 4--all children born Canada. There is a MARGARET BROWER age 20 living with a Robert Johnston family in Kitley, she is bCanada. Robert Johnston and wife Elizabeth both b Ireland, Jonathan Johnston 22, b Can. The Johnstons are Weslyan Methodist, as is Margaret. A CAROLINE BROWER, age 18 and bCanada (and it says Bower also in one book!) lived with the William Johnston family in Kitley.
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: [BAUER] Re: Bklyn, NY BAUER Resent-Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2001 10:27:27 -0600 Resent-From: BAUER-L@rootsweb.com Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2001 12:27:22 EDT From: Caffecupz@aol.com Reply-To: BAUER-L@rootsweb.com To: BAUER-L@rootsweb.com Anything familiar? BAUER living at 173 Harrison Avenue. My gggmother, Katharina was a saloon keeper at that address, +, the family may have lived above, in the same bldg. Frederick 52 carpenter Katharina 44 Karolina 19 Anna17 17 Frederick 16 carpenter Heinrich 68 Elizabeth 62 Thanx for any help, Barbara : )
in the meantime I put some family history in the quarterly family newsletter we send to all the adult known descendants. (Yes, I'm footing the bill.) But I figure when I'm ready to do my book, I can start with the history parts from the old newsletters, and if I die first, well, some of it made it into print..... Jan
Hi Sally and others, I had to reply and ask: How do you NOT bounce from one line to another? I want to get my parents lines done. I would also like to see my husbands lines done (especially since there are no one apparently interested it doing their lines anyway). I find my lines more interesting, but I have hit major brick walls with them. Plus I find that if I got somewhere to look up, say Civil War information, I seem to come across a name of an different line I am working on and then I find myself following that route. I have the unfortunate situation where the grandparents and great-grandparents who I can get information from are getting older, so I worry that I will run out of time if I don't try to work on them all at once. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Lisa ----- Original Message ----- From: <ssaucer@juno.com> To: <BOWER-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2001 3:43 PM Subject: [BOWER] Finishing books > Genealogy is my primary hobby right now, and my husband fusses at how > much time I spend on it, when I could be cleaning the house. Of course, > cleaning my house has never been a priority, even when I wasn't doing > genealogy. > > I have the same problem with organizing my research. It is much easier to > see what's new on-line or take another trip to the library, rather than > organize my files enough to see if I've made any real progress. In > addition, I tend to bounce from one line to the next, and have to > re-acquaint myself with what I've already done each time. > > I believe that the secret that allows authors to complete books, is that > writing is how they support themselves, and therefore has higher priority > than a hobby. If you make writing a priority and set aside a specific > time slot each week to work on your book, you will have better luck. > However, you must be able to enforce your commitment and say, "I have a > prior commitment." to anything other than a *real* emergency that > threatens to take you from your task. It is very easy to put something > off, if you don't have an "appointment" to keep, and rely on getting it > done when you have the time. It is also very important to solicit > understanding and cooperation from your family in respecting your > commitment. > > Tolkien took twenty years or more to do his writing, because he was a > professor and his collegiate duties had priority. However, he did finish > the Hobbit and the Trilogy of the Ring, eventually. > > Sally > > Colleen & All, > It's nice to know I have lots of company not able to complete thier > family histories. I started writing several years back and thought this > project would be easy. Ha! Life has a way of constantly getting in the > way. It seems easier to squeeze in a little more research, but then the > writing and incorporating it is another story. Seems like every time I > get going on it again, something pops it's ugly head up and the family > history has to take a back burner. By the time I get back to it, I've > forgotten where I left off! I'd like to know the secret that allows > authors to complete books. Maybe we all need to find a little hideaway > where we can focus completely on our books; might help to add in someone > to cook, clean, run errands, and take care of life's other crises. If > anyone has any suggestions that have worked for them, I'd like to hear > them. > > -------------------------------- > > > ==== BOWER Mailing List ==== > To post messages to the Bower discussion list, send them to > BOWER-L@rootsweb.com >
Genealogy is my primary hobby right now, and my husband fusses at how much time I spend on it, when I could be cleaning the house. Of course, cleaning my house has never been a priority, even when I wasn't doing genealogy. I have the same problem with organizing my research. It is much easier to see what's new on-line or take another trip to the library, rather than organize my files enough to see if I've made any real progress. In addition, I tend to bounce from one line to the next, and have to re-acquaint myself with what I've already done each time. I believe that the secret that allows authors to complete books, is that writing is how they support themselves, and therefore has higher priority than a hobby. If you make writing a priority and set aside a specific time slot each week to work on your book, you will have better luck. However, you must be able to enforce your commitment and say, "I have a prior commitment." to anything other than a *real* emergency that threatens to take you from your task. It is very easy to put something off, if you don't have an "appointment" to keep, and rely on getting it done when you have the time. It is also very important to solicit understanding and cooperation from your family in respecting your commitment. Tolkien took twenty years or more to do his writing, because he was a professor and his collegiate duties had priority. However, he did finish the Hobbit and the Trilogy of the Ring, eventually. Sally Colleen & All, It's nice to know I have lots of company not able to complete thier family histories. I started writing several years back and thought this project would be easy. Ha! Life has a way of constantly getting in the way. It seems easier to squeeze in a little more research, but then the writing and incorporating it is another story. Seems like every time I get going on it again, something pops it's ugly head up and the family history has to take a back burner. By the time I get back to it, I've forgotten where I left off! I'd like to know the secret that allows authors to complete books. Maybe we all need to find a little hideaway where we can focus completely on our books; might help to add in someone to cook, clean, run errands, and take care of life's other crises. If anyone has any suggestions that have worked for them, I'd like to hear them. --------------------------------
Colleen & All, It's nice to know I have lots of company not able to complete thier family histories. I started writing several years back and thought this project would be easy. Ha! Life has a way of constantly getting in the way. It seems easier to squeeze in a little more research, but then the writing and incorporating it is another story. Seems like every time I get going on it again, something pops it's ugly head up and the family history has to take a back burner. By the time I get back to it, I've forgotten where I left off! I'd like to know the secret that allows authors to complete books. Maybe we all need to find a little hideaway where we can focus completely on our books; might help to add in someone to cook, clean, run errands, and take care of life's other crises. If anyone has any suggestions that have worked for them, I'd like to hear them.
Hi Cousins, I have added more cousins to the Indiana pages Hope you will take a look. There is a lot of other info contained in some of the letters that show cousins moved back and forth a lot and some just kept going west. Remember to go there often as new info is added twice a week most of the time. http://www.crosswinds.net/~indbow/index.html or http://www.crosswinds.net/~indbow/cousinfinder.html If you have trouble with the site just click 'refresh' until it comes up. We have not had a lot of trouble lately but once in a while you have to play around with it. Thank you and if you have more info, just send it along. Wanda wmrobert@nalu.net
Colleen, I, for one, have greatly missed your Sunday afternoon coffee/tea time and am delighted that you are "returning " to us. Getting around to writing that family history in book form is something we all want to do at some point, but rarely find the time. I'm glad you are taking the time to do it for your mother and your family. Welcome back!!! Molly Skeen -----Original Message----- From: BOWER-D-request@rootsweb.com <BOWER-D-request@rootsweb.com> To: BOWER-D@rootsweb.com <BOWER-D@rootsweb.com> Date: Sunday, August 05, 2001 6:10 PM Subject: BOWER-D Digest V01 #166
Colleen don't push the book so hard, even at this late date. Just promise your mother and yourself, it will be done. Remember, we are on God's time. This is an old lady talking so it probably doesn't mean much. I ramble, I am sorry. To the point, my Mother is 84, just had quadruple by-pass surgery May 25 and has not returned home yet and I had tried several times to get her to tell us about her family. She still hasn't but when we had to clean her apartment and I was the power of attorney, I found info about my father's family I did not know. The point is: You are and have tried to do the impossible and will keep trying and as long as Mother knows that, you are a real blessing to her and to us. That is the point. Thank you and welcome back. Each day, God sends us a new day with a new sun to light the way and Today you are my ray of sunshine and I promise to work harder on my family. Wanda wmrobert@nalu.net
Hi Colleen: So glad to know you are back (to al intents and purposes) and I can sympathize with you about the book. I began working on a booklet for my grandmother almost four years ago and so far, I have eight pages done, not counting the family charting, which will go faster. It does seem as though daily living takes its toll, but what is the alternative? I am going to sort out one day a week and use that for continuing on my book until I finish it. Sunday seems to work out well (until a neighbor drops by, etc) but maybe I will just stay up really, really late on that night and go like heck! Cheers - Roberta in CA P.S. Still looking for Hannah Bower who married a Mr. Frank and then George Shade. Ring any bells with anyone? - R
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: [BAUER] http://istg.rootsweb.com/ Resent-Date: Sun, 5 Aug 2001 15:32:46 -0600 Resent-From: BAUER-L@rootsweb.com Date: Sun, 5 Aug 2001 17:32:40 EDT From: Caffecupz@aol.com Reply-To: BAUER-L@rootsweb.com To: BAUER-L@rootsweb.com SS Mosel Bremen via Northampton to New York 21 Nov 1881 Cabin Passengers and Steerage Passengers #1-11 10 Carl Miller 26 m merchant Germany U.S.A. First cabin fore saloon Steerage passengers #12 - 56 40* Heinrich Muller 18 m labourer Germany Unit.St.of Am. Steerage Steerage passengers #371-459 405 Franz Muller * 25 m labourer Germany United St. of Am. Steerage 406 Barbara Muller * 46 f none Germany United St. of Am. Steerage Steerage passengers #460 - 548 462 Jacob Schneider 23 m tailor Germany Unit.St.of Am Steerage 463 Rosine Schneider 16 f none Germany Unit.St.of Am Steerage 501* Wilhelm Muller 35 m labourer Germany Unit.St.of Am Steerage 537* Carl Herm. Reinmuller 39 m labourer Germany Unit.St.of Am Steerage 538* Maria Reinmuller 10 f child Germany Unit.St.of Am Steerage Steerage passengers #549-637 554 Marg e Wagner 42 f wife U.S.A. U.S.A. Steerage 555 Lene Wagner 11 f child U.S.A. U.S.A. Steerage 556 Hinrich Wagner 10 m child U.S.A. U.S.A. Steerage 637 Josef Schneider 19 m brewer Bohemia U.S.A. Steerage Steerage passengers #818 - 903 819 Nicolaus Riemenschneider 50 m labourer Germany U.S.Am. Steerage SS Moses Taylor Harve, France to New Orleans, Louisiana 25 May 1854 2 Kohl Johan Gg. 34 M Bade 38 Muller Helene 26 F U States *** 42 Muller Johann * 29 M Nassau 43 Muller Christian * 25 M Nassau 131 Muller * Joh. Gg. 18 M Nassau 132 Kohler * Heinrich 40 M Nassau 154 Muller Georg * 48 M Bade 224 Schneider Peter 30 M Belgium 251 Bauer Joseph 42 M Wurtenberg 252 Bauer Brigitte 26 F Wurtenberg 253 Bauer Joseph 7 M Wurtenberg 254 Bauer Lorenz 5 M Wurtenberg 330 Muller francois 16 M france 440 Muller * Catharina 24 F Hesse ** 441 Muller * Appolonia 21 F Hesse ** SS New York Bremen to New York 25 June 1866 55 Christiane Wiegand 34 f Philadelphia First Cabin Lower Salon 95 Carl Bauer 50 m merchant Harford First Cabin Lower Salon 130 Heinr Schneider 17 m turner Pa First Cabin Lower Salon 140 Theodor Miller 19 m turner Kalm First Cabin Lower Salon 153 Cecilie Schneider 19 f Krojanke Deckhouses 181 Mathilda Bauer 17 f Hellerfeld Steerage 186 Carl. Ferd. Wei?e?muller* 32 m ?ansa Steerage 355 Mathilda Bauer 22 f Ulm Steerage 393 Eva Kuhl* 23 f New York Steerage 394 Adus Kuhl 5 m New York Steerage 395 Anna Kuhl 10m f New York Steerage 426 Maria Muller* 23 f Reckenhausen Steerage 427 Margar. Muller 19 f Reckenhausen Steerage 460 Andreas Kuhl 27 m weaver Asch Steerage 514 Ernst Schmieder 28 m shoemaker Wetter Steerage 535 Wilh. Buchmiller 34 m farmer Durmersheim Steerage 558 Heinr. Muller* 46 m farmer Birklar Steerage 559 Margar. Muller 44 f Birklar Steerage 560 Margar Muller 18 f Birklar Steerage 561 Elise Muller 13 f Birklar Steerage 562 Johanne Muller 9y 6m f Birklar Steerage 563 Heinrich Muller 8 m Birklar Steerage 564 Ludwig Muller 5 m Birklar Steerage 619 Cathar. Bauer 24 f Warms Steerage 620 Gnuda Bauer 2 f Warms Steerage 621 Carl Bauer 16 m farmer Hessen Steerage SS Oder Bremen, Germany and Southampton, England to New York 26 June 1875 196 Anna Bauer 21 f Steerage Germany 379 Wilhelm Muller 10mo m Steerage United States SS Pavonia Liverpool, England & Queenstown, Ireland to New York 30 May 1883 56 Stephen Burke 23 m Laborer Ireland 241 Carl Bauer 25 m Tailor Germany SS Ohio North German Lloyd Ship Line of Bremen Bremen, Germany to Baltimore, MD 5 April 1873 17 Maria Bauer 21 female 229 Anna Bauer 26 female 231 Joseph Mueller 17 male robmaker 264 Franz Muller 26 364 Ludwig Muller 31 461 Conrad Moller 59 farmer Ship Rimutaka London and Plymouth to Unspecified New Zealand Arrival Port November 17, 1894 114 Bauer Mrs. N. Steerage Ship St Andrew Germany, Unspecified Port to Philadelphia 2 October 1741 19 Hans Jacob Miller 22 32 Hans Georg Miller 40 66 Hans Peter Miller 22 67 Hans Lodwk Miller 21 72 Hans Peter Miller 20 96 Andrew Wisemiller 29 SS Rotterdam Passenger List of S.S. Rotterdam from Rotterdam 19 October 1899 to New York Second Cabin 20. Mr. J. Bauer Steerage from Rotterdam 276. L 21/25 J. Kohl and 4 children Steerage from Rotterdam 348. A 16 G. Miller 355. F 1 J. Miller 356. G 28 R. Miller 377. V 14 H. Muller Steerage from Rotterdam 545. L 17 J. Schneider 552. O 1 S. Schneider Ship Samuel Rotterdam to Philadelphia 17 August 1731 22 Johann Christoph Bauer 46 Conrad Muller 71 Christopher Bour 90 Motley Muller 108 Charlis Muller 136 Elizabeth Muller SS St. Laurent Havre, France to New York 19 May 1880 39 Wagner Carl 24 M Bade Etats-Unis Steerage 1 53 Haller ??in?n * 59 M butcher Alsace Etats-Unis Steerage 7 54 Haller Ernestine 53 F husbandman Alsace Etats-Unis Steerage 55 Haller Barbe 20 F Alsace Etats-Unis Steerage 56 Haller Michel 18 M Alsace Etats-Unis Steerage 57 Haller Mathias 1y6m M Alsace Etats-Unis Steerage 58 Haller Re??? * 39 M Alsace Etats-Unis Steerage 59 Haller Madeleine 44 F Alsace Etats-Unis Steerage 60 Haller Basile 19 M Alsace Etats-Unis Steerage 61 Haller Victor 4 M Alsace Etats-Unis Steerage 62 Haller Victoria 1 F Alsace Etats-Unis Steerage 78 Muller Franz J 58 M Bade Chicago Steerage 79 Muller Agathe 62 F Bade Chicago Steerage 86 Muller Jean 25 M Suisse Etats-Unis Steerage 231 Bauer C. Fred. 34 M Bade Etats-Unis Steerage 2 232 Bauer Caroline 28 F Bade Etats-Unis Steerage 233 Bauer Carl 6 M Bade Etats-Unis Steerage 234 Bauer ?ima * 5 F Bade Etats-Unis Steerage 256 Schneider Al?s. * 66 M baker Suisse Etats-Unis Steerage 257 Schneider Henri 20 M Suisse Etats-Unis Steerage State of Indiana Glasgow and Larne to New York January 16, 1882 2 Edward Burkhart 15 M Germany Steerage 8 Oswald Bauer 29 M Tailor Germany Steerage ==== BAUER Mailing List ==== Please do not send messages with attachments, HTML, MIME, or any other enhanced text to the list. RootsWeb does not allow messages with those settings through their servers and will only return them to you. ============================== Join the RootsWeb WorldConnect Project: Linking the world, one GEDCOM at a time. http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: [BAUER] http://istg.rootsweb.com/ Resent-Date: Sun, 5 Aug 2001 15:46:21 -0600 Resent-From: BAUER-L@rootsweb.com Date: Sun, 5 Aug 2001 17:46:12 EDT From: Caffecupz@aol.com Reply-To: BAUER-L@rootsweb.com To: BAUER-L@rootsweb.com Silvie de Grasse Havre, France to New York 20 April 1842 19 Franc Miller 50 Male Poland United States Farmer 20 Tulie Miller 18 Female Poland United States 21 Elisab Miller * 39 Female Poland United States 30 Jean Baur 18 Male France United States Farmer Ship Manhattan Liverpool, England to New York May 8 1855 29 George Quinn 27 male Carpenter England 30 Mrs Quinn 35 female Wife England 78 F A Muller 24* male Miller Germany 136 John Barret 30 male Carpt Ireland 151 Andrew Burke 22 male Labourer Ireland 152 Eliza Burke 20 female Servant Ireland 153 Peter Burke 20 male Labourer Ireland 261 Gottfried Muller 30 male Dyer Germany 347 Ellen Quinn 26 female Dress Maker Ireland 362 Bridget Barrett 28 female Servt Ireland 409 Biddy Bauer 20 female Servt England 411 Cath Bauer 20 female Servt England 435 John Burke 35 male Labourer Ireland 436 Catherine Burke 32 female Servt Ireland 590 Margt Quinn 20 female Servt Ireland SS Havre Le Havre, France to New York 4 October 1854 19 Schneider Georg 44 m Bavaria 20 Eva 46 f Bavaria 21 Christine 10 f Bavaria 22 Eva 6 f Bavaria 37 Kohl Joseph 23 m Bavaria 54 Kohler* Elisabeth 19 f Hesse 86 Wagner Jacob 26 m Bavaria 87 Charlotte 25 f Bavaria 88 Juliane 4 f Bavaria 89 Jacob 2 m Bavaria 92 Muller* Elisabeth 26 f Bavaria 121 Muller* Adam 24 m Bavaria 193 Schneider Joh. Bapt. 30 m Wurttemberg 254 Bauer Margare* 48 f Prussia 257 Baur Baptist 32 m Prussia 280 Wagner Jacob 23 m Hesse 281 Maria 26 f Hesse ~ Carl 3 m Hesse 305 Muller* Jacob 20 m Wurttemberg 361 Muller* Conrad 44 m Wurttemberg Galliot Johanna Elizabeth Bremen, Germany to Baltimore, Maryland 6 June 1834 17 Bauer Caspar shoemaker Poppenlauer 1 male, 1 female, total 2 18 Bauer John shoemaker Poppenlauer 1 male, 2 females, 4 child 5+ years, 2- 5 years, 20 Ba??r Valentin mason Volkertshausen 1 male, 1 female- 5 years, total 4 ==== BAUER Mailing List ==== Need to reach Colleen, the discussion coordinator? Send her an email at <ladyaudris@earthlink.net>.