This Frank might be L-158. I just can't be certain. Donna L-3 The Portsmouth Times-May 14, 1887 Portsmouth, Scioto co., OH --Yhe Weber House was strewn with orange blossoms Thursday night. It was the event of the marriage of Frank Beatty, of Cleveland, to Miss Mollie Waugaman, of Rushtown, Rev. Westervelt officiating. The groom is interested in a stave factory at Rushtown, and the bride is the niece of Pro. Thomas, the Rushtown musician. They returned to that place the following morning. (another version in the same paper, same day, different page.) A very quiet wedding took place at Rushtown, last week, the contracting parties being, Mr. Frank Beatty, of Rushtown, and Miss Mollie Mangaman, of this vicinity. We wish the young couple unlimited success in their matrimonial voyage down the stream of life. ------------------------------------------------------ This might be George of L-158? Frank may be the son of this Geo. GEORGE F. BEATTY MARTHA A. PATTERSON 21 NOV 1860 , Carroll co., OH 1830 Stark co., Ohio (Carroll co. is formed from it in 1833) Harrison twp. pg. 174 (next to Samuel Baty) Mahlon Baty 1 m 20-30 1 f 20-30 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 1840Carroll Co., OH Centre twp. pg. 204 Mahlon Beatty 1 m und 5 1 m 30-40 1 f 30-40 2 f und 5 1850-CARROLL COUNTY Centre twp. L-158 Pg.2 14-15 Saml. Beatty 75 farmer VA 15-16 Mahlon Beatty 44 farmer Ohio Elizabeth 42 OH Susan 18 Oh Kissiah 15 OH George 13 OH Sarah 9 OH Femiah 6 OH Woodrow Beatty 2 OH 1860 Carroll co., Ohio Centre twp. pg. 285 Image 2 Mahlon Long (this is Beatty!!) 53 5000-700 OH Elizabeth 51 OH Susannah 26 OH George 23 OH Sarah 19 OH Phiniah 16 OH Woodrow 12 OH Samuel Beatty 87 gentleman PA 1870 United States Federal Census about Frank R Beatty Name: Frank R Beatty Estimated birth year: abt 1863 Age in 1870: 7 Birthplace: Ohio Home in 1870: Carrollton, Carroll, Ohio Race: White Gender: Male Value of real estate: View image Post Office: Carrollton George W. Beatty 34 farm -500 OH Martha A. 33 OH Frank R. 7 OH Lelia L. 5 OH Ora M. 1 OH 1880-Monroe, Carroll, Ohio Source: FHL Film 1254997 National Archives Film T9-0997 Page 122A Relation Sex Marr Race Age Birthplace George BEATTY Self M W W 43 OH Occ: Section Boss R.R. Fa: NJ Mo: NJ Frank R. BEATTY Son M S W 17 OH Occ: Farming Fa: OH Mo: OH Lelia L. BEATTY Dau F S W 15 OH Occ: Keeping House Fa: OH Mo: OH Ora M. BEATTY Dau F S W 11 OH Fa: OH Mo: OH Maggie D. BEATTY Dau F S W 8 OH Fa: OH Mo: OH LELIA BEATTY -THOMAS H. WHITE -05 DEC 1893 , Carroll, Ohio 1900 United States Federal Census about Frank Beatty Name: Frank Beatty Home in 1900: Clay, Scioto, Ohio Age: 37 Estimated birth year: abt 1863 Birthplace: Ohio Relationship to head-of-house: Head Spouse's name: Manley Race: White Occupation: View image Neighbors: View others on page Household Members: Name Age Frank Beatty 37 head JU 1862 mar 12 ys OH OH OH teamster Manley Beatty 35 wife Oct 1864 mar 12 ys 2 ch 2 ch OH OH OH George W Beatty 8 son Jul 1891 OH OH OH 1910 United States Federal Census Name: Frank Beatley [Frank Beatty] Age in 1910: 47 or [41] Estimated birth year: abt 1863 or [abt 1869] Birthplace: Ohio Relation to Head of House: Head Father's Birth Place: Ohio Mother's Birth Place: Ohio Spouse's name: Mollie Home in 1910: Hamilton, Lawrence, Ohio Marital Status: Married Race: White Gender: Male Household Members: Name Age Frank Beatley 47 head married once for 23 ys OH OH OH farm Mollie Beatley 46 wife 2 ch 1 lvg OH PA OH George W Beatley 18 son OH 1920 United States Federal Census about Frank R Beatty Name: Frank R Beatty Home in 1920: Portsmouth Ward 4, Scioto, Ohio Age: 65 years Estimated birth year: abt 1855 Birthplace: Ohio Relation to Head of House: Head Spouse's name: Margaret Father's Birth Place: Ohio Mother's Birth Place: Ohio Marital Status: Married Race: White Sex: Male Home owned: Own Able to read: Yes Able to Write: Yes Image: 556 Household Members: Name Age Frank R Beatty 65 head OH OH OH watchman at a bank Margaret Beatty 54 wife OH OH OH George W Beatty 31 son truck driver lumber plant 1930 United States Federal Census about Frank R Beatty Name: Frank R Beatty Home in 1930: Bloom, Scioto, Ohio Age: 67 Estimated birth year: abt 1863 Birthplace: Ohio Relation to Head of House: Head Spouse's name: Mollie Race: White Household Members: Name Age Frank R Beatty 67 head married at 25 OH OH OH farm Mollie Beatty 50 wife married at 16 OH PA OH 1930 United States Federal Census about George W Beatty Name: George W Beatty Home in 1930: Portsmouth, Scioto, Ohio Age: 38 Estimated birth year: abt 1892 Birthplace: Ohio Relation to Head of House: Head Spouse's name: Lavella Race: White Household Members: Name Age George W Beatty 38 head mar at 29 OH ??? OH repairer? construction co. Lavella Beatty 37 wife mar at 28 OH OH OH Scioto county queries Bill Waugamon Searching for information on Henry Waugaman (b 1837/PA; lived near McDermott) m. Charity Thomas (d/o Henry Thomas/Melvina Pyle). Children: William (1862 m Lucy Leopold),Molly (1864 m Frank Beatty), Safina (1867 m Jacob Massa), Emma (1871), Albert (1879), George (1882 m Helen Witt) and Edgar (1888 m Ollie Underwood). William and Lucy were my grandparents (children: Eva (m. Wise) and William [1916]). 1870 United States Federal Census about Mary H Waugaman Name: Mary H Waugaman Estimated birth year: abt 1864 Age in 1870: 6 Birthplace: Ohio Home in 1870: Rush, Scioto, Ohio Family and neighbors: View Results Race: White Gender: Female Value of real estate: View image Post Office: Lucasville Henry Wagaman 33 farm PA Charity 25 OH William H. 8 OH Mary H. 6 OH Sabrina E. 3 OH Melvina Thomas 52 OH Jessy A. Thomas 11 OH John H. 22 OH 1880 United States Federal Census about Charity Wagerman Name: Charity Wagerman Home in 1880: Rush, Scioto, Ohio Age: 34 Estimated birth year: abt 1846 Birthplace: Ohio Relation to head-of-household: Wife Spouse's name: Henry Father's birthplace: OH Mother's name: Melvina Mother's birthplace: OH Occupation: Keeps House Marital Status: Married Race: White Gender: Female Household Members: Name Age Melvina Thomas 62 John Thomas 32 Jesse Thomas 26 Henry Wagerman 43 Charity Wagerman 34 Mary M. Wagerman 15 William H. Wagerman 18 Sabina B. Wagerman 12 Sarah E. Wagerman 9 Albert C. Wagerman 8M
Thanks, Les This is L-1. Donna L-3 >From deeds etc. Otho Holland Williams was quite a land speculator-there were so many Otho Holland Williams I could never quite figure them out. This might be correct. The Grosh family is probably the same family -Elie Beatty's mother was Mary Dorthea Grosh. Otho Holland Williams Sex: M Birth: 27 SEP 1776 Death: 11 JUL 1852 in Hagerstown, Washington, Maryland Military Service: General Note: 1850 - Hagerstown, Washington, Maryland Gen. O. H. Williams - 74 - non - $10,000 all b. Maryland Eliza C. " - 60 Cora H. " - 21 O. H. Williams owns 5 slaves Father: Elie Williams b: 1750 in Washington Co., MD Mother: Anna Barbara Grosh b: 28 APR 1752 **************** Marriage 1 Elizabeth Bowie Hall b: ABT 1782 Married: 7 OCT 1800 in Washington Co., Maryland Note: Name: Otho H. Williams Gender: Male Marriage Date: 07 Oct 1800 Spouse: Elizabeth Bowie Hall Spouse Gender: Male State: Maryland County: Washington marriage license record: Children Catherine L. Williams b: 1808 in Maryland Laura Sophia Williams b: 18 SEP 1814 Maria A. Williams b: ABT 1812 in Maryland Marriage 2 Elizabeth England Vanlear b: 2 MAR 1790 Married: 14 JUL 1823 in Washington Co., Maryland Note: Name: Otho Holland Williams Gender: Male Marriage Date: 14 Jul 1823 Spouse: Elizabeth E. Vanlear Spouse Gender: Male State: Maryland County: Washington Marriage license record: Children Cora H. Williams b: ABT 1829 ----- Original Message ----- From: <lbeaty@higherspeed.net> To: "BP2000" <BP2000@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, May 11, 2007 12:00 AM Subject: [BP2000] Bible Record I have a photocopy of several pages of an old bible I found in the Albuquerque, NM Special Collections Library several years ago. This was a Bowie family bible. One of the Bowie's married a Beatty. Pasted below are some notes from this bible. Both Thomas Bowie and his wife, Elizabeth Beatty Bowie, are buried in Union Cemetery, Rockville, MD. John Bowie, Thomas's father, came from Scotland in 1705 and settled in MD. Presumably the Beattys lived in MD also. It is curious that they joined the Confederate Army. Anyway, I don't know what lineage Eli and Edward Beatty might be. But, I would be happy to scan and email these pages to anyone interested. Les Beaty, L-20 Thomas Bowie, son of John Bowie, Sr. B. 1722, married Hannah Lee d. 1755. Issue: Barbara Bowie, b. 1750 d. 1805, m. James Hall, Issue: Elizabeth Bowie Hall who married General Otis Holland Williams, Issue: Catharine L. Williams, Laura Williams, Covala Williams, & Maria Williams who married Edward Beatty, son of Eli Beatty who emmigrated to this country. Edward Beatty joined the Confederate Army & was killed in the battle of ____________ Va in 1863. Issue: Elizabeth Chero Beatty who married Thomas John Davis Bowie, Kate Beatty b. 1859, Edward Beatty who joined the Confederate Army with his father, was captured & put in prison on Johnson's Island, Lake Erie, where he died in 1864. He was buried in Union Cemetery, Rockville, MD, & Laura Beatty who married Mr. Bradley Magruder.
I have a photocopy of several pages of an old bible I found in the Albuquerque, NM Special Collections Library several years ago. This was a Bowie family bible. One of the Bowie's married a Beatty. Pasted below are some notes from this bible. Both Thomas Bowie and his wife, Elizabeth Beatty Bowie, are buried in Union Cemetery, Rockville, MD. John Bowie, Thomas's father, came from Scotland in 1705 and settled in MD. Presumably the Beattys lived in MD also. It is curious that they joined the Confederate Army. Anyway, I don't know what lineage Eli and Edward Beatty might be. But, I would be happy to scan and email these pages to anyone interested. Les Beaty, L-20 Thomas Bowie, son of John Bowie, Sr. B. 1722, married Hannah Lee d. 1755. Issue: Barbara Bowie, b. 1750 d. 1805, m. James Hall, Issue: Elizabeth Bowie Hall who married General Otis Holland Williams, Issue: Catharine L. Williams, Laura Williams, Covala Williams, & Maria Williams who married Edward Beatty, son of Eli Beatty who emmigrated to this country. Edward Beatty joined the Confederate Army & was killed in the battle of ____________ Va in 1863. Issue: Elizabeth Chero Beatty who married Thomas John Davis Bowie, Kate Beatty b. 1859, Edward Beatty who joined the Confederate Army with his father, was captured & put in prison on Johnson's Island, Lake Erie, where he died in 1864. He was buried in Union Cemetery, Rockville, MD, & Laura Beatty who married Mr. Bradley Magruder.
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It has to be fate. The paper stops in 1882 and starts again in 1884. They may add more later. One of best gossipy papers for that time period I have ever read and lots of obits for the area which was unusual for that period. Here is what I have on John. I can't tie him to the riverboat Capt. Samuel who operated under Beatty and Thompson. Too many Samuels in that area at that time. Wish I knew if the Northumberland co., PA referenced was the present boundaries or the 1790's boundaries (1/4 of the state of PA) Donna L-3 Descendants of John Beatty Generation No. 1 1. JOHN1 BEATTY was born Bef. 1774, and died 1806 in Scioto Co., OH. He married UNKNOWN. Notes for JOHN BEATTY: BEATTY, John, died prior to 1808; guardianship case filed 12 December 1808. ECR1:75/ Scioto Co., Ohio XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXxx A HISTORY OF SCIOTO COUNTY, OHIO - Together With A PIONEER RECORD of SOUTHERN OHIO by Nelson W. Evans, A.M. pg. 584 1903 Porter Township This township has the honor of being the first settled in Scioto County. In the month of February, 1796, Samuel Marshall came from Manchester, Adams County, and built a small cabin just above where New Boston now stands and within the present limits of Porter Township. In the following month John Lindsey also moved from Manchester, to a point on the Ohio near the mouth of the Little Scioto River. ....In the previous year, 1795, came Isaac Bonser, who had been sent out by a number of persons living in Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, to select a site for a home in the North-west Territory. The next spring, five families, those of Isaac Bonser, Uriah Barber, John Beatty, William Ward and Ephraim Thomas set out to settle on the site selected by Mr. Bonser, the year before. It is claimed by some to be the first attempt at settlement in Porter Township for the reason that Mr. Bonser selected his place of settlement before Marshall and Lindsey came from Manchester in Adams County. XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX The Portsmouth Times (Portsmouth, OH)-2 August 1873 THE EARLY SETTLEMENT OF SCIOTO COUNTY. (Prepared to be read before the Pioneer Association of Scioto county, by James Keyes) ....................beginning of article omitted............... THE SECOND ARRIVAL Of settlers in Scioto county, who came to stay, consisted of five families, who came from Northumberland county, Pennsylvania, they built a boat at Redstone, on the Monongahela and floated down the Ohio and landed in the mouth of Little Scioto on the 10th day of August, 1796. The names of these were Isaac Bonser, Uriah Barber, John Beatty, William Ware, and Ephraim M'Adams. This last did not stay long, but went on down to Cinncinatti. Of the other four families, some of their desendants are scattered through the county to this day. Mr. Barber went down to what was called Old Town, west of the Scioto, and lived near where George Davis' distillery is. Mr. Bonser built a house on the east side of the Little Scioto, which was the third house built in the county. He also cleared and fenced a small field that fall and winter, and the next year being 1797, raised THE FIRST CROP OF CORN IN SCIOTO COUNTY. That crop of corn must have been a welcome harvest to those few isolated families, who were cut off from all intercourse with the outside world, and had no other provisions but such as the woods afforded and their trusty rifles procured for them. Mr. Ward went up the creek and located on Ward's run, a tributary of the Little Scioto. It was not called Ward's Run until he went there. It was the custom of that day, where a creek had no name to give it the name of the first man who went to live on it. Mr. Ward lived there long enough to give his name to the creek, but, unfortunately, got drowned, and was the first man buried in Scioto county. They buried him in the graveyard where the bridge crosses the creek, near the mouth, and it was consequently, the first graveyard in our county. We hear no more of Mr. Ward's family since that time. John Beaty went up towards Wheelersburg and located, but he soon fell a victim to the malaria of the county, and was the first man to die a natural death in Scioto county. His widow was left with four small children in a destitute condition, but, as is always the case in every new country, men are much more numerous than women, and much more necessity existing for entering the state of matrimony. Therefore, she soon married a man by the name of Alexander Burnside, a man who came a short time afterward. Mr. Burnside had some means, and had been distilling on the Monongahela river, and had brought a small copper still down with him. He bought the land where Wheelersburg has since been located. He built THE FIRST HORSE MILL. And the first distillery, on the ground at present occupied by Cranston's woolen factory. He raised his step-children, and one of the girl's married a man by the name of Leary, and one, Susan Beaty, married Joseph Thompson. Alexander Beaty married Ruth Drury for his first wife, and Cecilia Lecroix, by whom he had three children, who are living near Haverhill at this time. Mr. Burnside had three children, Jane, John and Martin. Jane married Pontius Wheeler. Mr. Bonser, seeing the necessity for a mill, in 1798, after being in the county two years, discovered a seat for a mill on a small tributary of the Little Scioto, which he named Bonser's Run, being the first man to settle upon that stream. ----------- >From "Ohio Wills and Estates To 1850: An Index" by Carol Willsey Bell, C. G., Columbus, Ohio, 1981 John-hrs G-1808 Scioto c3262 Notes for UNKNOWN: Married (2nd) Alexander Burnside. Children of JOHN BEATTY and UNKNOWN are: 2. i. ALEXANDER2 BEATTY, b. 01 Aug 1794, Pennsylvania; d. 20 Jul 1862. ii. SUSANNA BEATTY, m. JOSEPH LEWIS THOMPSON, 04 Sep 1817, Scioto Co., Ohio. Notes for SUSANNA BEATTY: Beatty, Susannah-Joseph Lewis Thompson 4 Sept. 1817 Notes for JOSEPH LEWIS THOMPSON: This one? 1820 United States Federal Census about Jos Thompson Name: Jos Thompson Township: Decatur County: Lawrence State: Ohio 1001-101 this one? 1840 United States Federal Census about Joseph L Thompson Name: Joseph L Thompson Township: Bloom County: Scioto State: Ohio Sorry, I have very little information on the Beatty family. Susannah Beatty married Joseph Thompson, Scioto County, early 1820's. Their dau. is my gggrandmother. They were also in Lawrence County, Ohio. iii. REBECCA BEATTY, m. WILLIAM LEROY LOREY LEARY, 07 Apr 1810, Scioto Co., Ohio. Notes for REBECCA BEATTY: Beatty, Rebeckah-William Leroy 7Apr. 1810 Notes for WILLIAM LEROY LOREY LEARY: I've seen this marriage record as all 3 surnames at various times. LeRoy, Leary, Lorey iv. UNKNOWN BEATTY. Notes for UNKNOWN BEATTY: His widow was left with four small children in a destitute condition Generation No. 2 2. ALEXANDER2 BEATTY (JOHN1) was born 01 Aug 1794 in Pennsylvania, and died 20 Jul 1862. He married (1) RUTH ANN DRURY 21 Mar 1821 in Scioto Co., Ohio, daughter of LAWSON DRURY. He married (2) EMILY LACROIX Aft. 1830, daughter of ANDRE LACROIX and MARIE AVALIGNE. She was born 1801 in Ohio, and died 06 Sep 1854 in Scioto County, Ohio. Notes for ALEXANDER BEATTY: Scioto Chattel list 1826, 1828-Green twp. 1830 Scioto Co., OH Green twp. Image 3 Alexander Beaty 1 m 30-40 (Next to Lawson Drury.) 1840 Scioto Co., Ohio Green twp. pg. 81 Alexander Beatty 1 m und 5 1 m 5-10 1 m 40-50 1 f und 5 1 f 30-40 1850 Scioto Co., OH Green twp pg. 129 (image connection incorrectly-go to Green twp.) Alexander Beaty (indexed Baily)57 farm 2500 PA Emaline 43 OH Alexander 15 farm OH Eliza 13 OH Henry 11 OH 1860 Scioto Co., Ohio Green twp. pg. 386 Alexander Beatty 57 farm 3200-600 PA Alexander S. 24 farm labor OH Eliza J. 22 OH William H. 20 OH Rachel Stygall 20 OH 1870 United States Federal Census Name: Alex L Beaty Estimated birth year: abt 1837 Age in 1870: 33 Birthplace: Ohio Home in 1870: Green, Scioto, Ohio Race: White Gender: Male Post Office: Wheelersburg XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Isaac Bonser was a noted character among the pioneers of Scioto County. He prospected the county in 1795, and Aug. 10 of that year selected his claim and notched trees to mark it. He then went East, and returned the following year, landing on the spot he had selected Aug. 10, 1796. Uriah Barber, a half-brother, John Beatty, William Ward and Ephraim Adams came with him. All became permanent settlers of the county, and Uriah Barber prominent in official life after the county was organized. ----------------------------- Alexander Baty, Act of 55-120; Wt 42,592, Private in Capt. Morgan's Ohio Militia, War of 1812; filed from Lawrence County, Ohio in 1855; resident of Haverhill, Scioto Co., Ohio, aged 60; drafted from Scioto Co., Ohio in 1814. ------------------------------- ABSTRACTS OF OBITUARIES, DEATH NOTICES, ETC. OF LAWRENCE COUNTY (OHIO) PEOPLE AND SURROUNDING COUNTIES COMPILED BY SHARON MILICH KOUNS I.R. = IRONTON REGISTER SWI = SEMI WEEKLY IRONTONIAN IDR = IRONTON DAILY REGISTER IT =IRONTON TRIBUNE MI = MORNING IRONTONIAN IET = IRONTON EVENING TRIBUNE IJRN = IRONTON JOURNAL BEATTY, Alexander Aug 15, 1862 Ironton Register aged 69 yrs, died Jul 20, 1862 More About ALEXANDER BEATTY: Burial: Duduit (Lacroix) Cemetery, Green twp. Scioto Co., Ohio Notes for RUTH ANN DRURY: BEATTY, Ruth Ann, daughter of Lawson Drury; died early; res Garvais tract, Green twp; husb Alexander Beatty. She was aged over 14 when James Abbott, Sr., was appointed her guardian 7 April 1814. [Alexander Beatty appears in Gallia County tax lists 1826, 1828; Lawson Drury, Jr., appears in Scioto County tax lists 1823, 1826, 1828]. ECR1:80; IS:110; MR A:59 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Kay L. Mason kkmason@shianet.org September 23, 2000 ***************************************************************** SCIOTO COUNTY-Chapter VI. Lawson Drury, the other purchaser of the Garvais tract, had four sons and two daughters. The eldest, Ann, married Alexander Beatty and died soon after. Betsey became the second wife of Carter Haley, settled in Kentucky, and is represented by a numerous family of sons and daughters. Lawson married Ann Smith, and in 1831 sold his farm to E. H. Oakes, moved to Illinois and settled in Morgan County. Charles, the second son, went away with Dr. Bivins in 1819, and settled in Missouri. George married Miss Cartney, and he and the Cartney family moved to Indiana and settled. Harvey, the youngest, married and settled in Burlington, Lawrence County, Ohio, and was killed by lightening while sitting in his porch a few years since. The elder Lawson Drury was the first Postmaster in French Grant; kept the first ferry across the Ohio to Greenup; held the office of Associate Judge and Justice of the Peace. He sold his part of the land to Phineas Oaks, having previously sold the ferry property to William Thomas, and went to his son Charles in Missouri, as he had been living without any of his family for years. His wife died soon after he came to Ohio. Notes for EMILY LACROIX: BEATTY, Emely, born 1801, daughter of Andre Lacroix and Marie Cathirine Avaligne; died 6 September 1854 in her 54th year; bur Duduit (Lacroix) Cem, Green twp [Last name spelled Baty and Beaty on separate headstones]; husb Alexander Beatty. C5:15 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Who is this? 1870 Scioto Co., OH Green twp. Image 39 & 41 Alex. LaCroix 60 farm 2300-2800 OH (parents foreign born) Elona? W. 5 VT Cecelia 26 OH Herron?Henson? Ida 30 OH Hattie 1 OH James Beatty or Bently 23 farm hand KY --------------------------- ABSTRACTS OF OBITUARIES, DEATH NOTICES, ETC. OF LAWRENCE COUNTY (OHIO) PEOPLE AND SURROUNDING COUNTIES COMPILED BY SHARON MILICH KOUNS I.R. = IRONTON REGISTER SWI = SEMI WEEKLY IRONTONIAN IDR = IRONTON DAILY REGISTER IT =IRONTON TRIBUNE MI = MORNING IRONTONIAN IET = IRONTON EVENING TRIBUNE IJRN = IRONTON JOURNAL BEATY, Emily Sep 21, 1854 Ironton Register aged 54 yrs, died Sep 6, 1854 More About EMILY LACROIX: Burial: Duduit (Lacroix) Cemetery, Green twp. Scioto Co., Ohio Children of ALEXANDER BEATTY and EMILY LACROIX are: 3. i. ALEXANDER LECROIX3 BEATTY, b. Jan 1836, Haverhill, Scioto co., Ohio; d. 27 Jan 1915. ii. ELIZA BEATTY, b. Abt. 1837. iii. WILLIAM HENRY BEATTY, b. Abt. 1839. Generation No. 3 3. ALEXANDER LECROIX3 BEATTY (ALEXANDER2, JOHN1) was born Jan 1836 in Haverhill, Scioto co., Ohio, and died 27 Jan 1915. He married MARY MELVINA SKELTON 31 Dec 1871 in Scioto Co., Ohio. She was born Jan 1852 in Ohio, and died Bet. 1920 - 1930. Notes for ALEXANDER LECROIX BEATTY: 1870 Scioto Co., OH Green twp. Image 37 Beaty, Alex. L. 33 farmer 3000-200 OH 1880-Portsmouth, Scioto, Ohio Page 286A Alaxander BEATY Self M M W 44 OH Occ: Wagon Maker Fa: OH Mo: OH Mary BEATY Wife F M W 27 OH Occ: Keeping House Fa: OH Mo: OH Emley BEATY Dau F S W 4 OH Occ: At School Fa: OH Mo: OH Carrie BEATY Dau F S W 3 OH Occ: At Home Fa: OH Mo: OH 1900 United States Federal Census Name: Alexander L Beatty Home in 1900: Portsmouth Ward 6, Scioto, Ohio Age: 64 Estimated birth year: abt 1836 Birthplace: Ohio Relationship to head-of-house: Head Spouse's name: Mary M Race: White Household Members: Name Age Alexander L Beatty 64 head Jan 1836-mar 28 ys-OH PA OH carpenter Mary M Beatty 48 wife Jan 1852 mar 28 ys 4 ch 4 ch OH OH OH Emma F Beatty 27 dau Oct 1872 single OH OH OH shoe worker Carrie Beatty 23 dau Jan 1877 single OH OH OH dry goods saleslady Jennie Beatty 19 dau Apr 1881 single OH OH OH Ethel M Beatty 13 dau May 1887 single OH OH OH school 1910 United States Federal Census about Alexander L Beatty Name: Alexander L Beatty Age in 1910: 74 Estimated birth year: abt 1836 Birthplace: Ohio Relation to Head of House: Head Father's Birth Place: Pennsylvania Mother's Birth Place: Ohio Spouse's name: Mary M Home in 1910: Portsmouth Ward 2, Scioto, Ohio Marital Status: Married Race: White Gender: Male Household Members: Name Age Alexander L Beatty 74 mar once 40 ys OH PA OH Mary M Beatty 59 wife mar once 40 ys 4 ch 4 ch Emily F Beatty 38 dau single OH OH OH shoe sticker shoe fact Jennie E Beatty 28 dau single OH OH OH bookkeeper sewing machine factory Ethel M Beatty 22 dau single OH OH OH Carie S Balmert 33 dau widowed OH OH OH 1920 United States Federal Census about Mary Beatty Name: Mary Beatty Home in 1920: Portsmouth Ward 3, Scioto, Ohio Age: 68 years Estimated birth year: abt 1852 Birthplace: Ohio Relation to Head of House: Head Father's Birth Place: Ohio Mother's Birth Place: Ohio Marital Status: Widow Race: White Sex: Female Home owned: Own Able to read: Yes Able to Write: Yes Image: 657 Neighbors: View others on page Household Members: Name Age Mary Beatty 68 head widowed OH OH OH canvasser -toilet articles Emily F Beatty 47 dau single Jenny E Beatty 37 dau bookkeeper 1930 United States Federal Census about Emily F Beatty Name: Emily F Beatty Home in 1930: Portsmouth, Scioto, Ohio Age: 57 Estimated birth year: abt 1873 Birthplace: Ohio Relation to Head of House: Sister-in-law Race: White Household Members: Name Age Henry H Kaps 50 head married first at 28 Russia Germ Eng brick mason-contractor Carrie B Kaps 52 wife married first at 25 clerk in clothing store Martha E Kaps 33 dau bookkeeper in milk fact Emily F Beatty 57 sister in law housekeeper Jennie E Beatty 49 sister in law bookkeeper sewing mach co. Children of ALEXANDER BEATTY and MARY SKELTON are: i. EMILY4 BEATTY, b. Oct 1872. ii. CARRIE BEATTY, b. Jan 1877. iii. JENNIE BEATTY, b. Apr 1881. iv. ETHEL M. BEATTY, b. May 1887. ----- Original Message ----- From: <WGille1756@aol.com> To: <bp2000@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2007 6:58 PM Subject: Re: [BP2000] Beattyville, Greenup co., KY Donna, While researching in Portsmouth, Scioto, OH. Have you happened to find anything obit on Elizabeth Beatty DOD Nov 15, 1883 Madison Twnsp. DOB Nov 27, 1827 Jackson Co OH Wayne
Hi Donna, I just forwarded a message from you to the list.. It said you needed to subscribe?? Did you email from a new? or different email address then your subscription is from? Did you bounce off?? If your going to use this other addy ( donavan@netwtc.net) you'll need to let me know.. I can add it into the acceptable addys.. Nelda Nelda's websites - http://freepages.folklore.rootsweb.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/ ----Original Message Follows---- From: "Donna VanZandt" <donavan@netwtc.net> To: nelda_percival@hotmail.com Subject: PML Search Result matching Beatty Date: Tue, 8 May 2007 14:03:10 -0600 ===================================================================== A result of your requested PML search. To refine or cancel this search, please visit http://pml.rootsweb.com/ ===================================================================== Source: Subject: [BP2000] Bureau co., IL Bio L-462 I was noticing the other day that BP2000 is eleven years old this year. I would like to say a big thanks to those volunteers who have donated their time, talents and I am certain money to keep our site one of the best family sites on the web and our group churning along. Thank you for many years of being able to enjoy the fellowship of other Beatty researchers and have a sympathetic ear to listen when L-3 John seems more elusive than ever or smile with when we make a breakthrough on a lineage. Thanks for a lot of years of fun and <grin> frustration. Happy birthday BP2000. Donna L-3 Past and Present of Bureau co., Illinois -1906 (L-462) PHILIP HENSEL When Bureau county was a frontier district Philip Hensel was brought to Illinois and has since been an eye witness of the changes which have occurred here and of the work that has been wrought in transforming this region from a tract of wild, uncultivated prairie into rich fields dotted with good homes, while in their midst here and there stand enterprising towns, villages and cities. Mr. Hensel was born in New York township, Tuscarawas county, Ohio, August 28, 1833, and is a a son of James and Lydia (Fackler) Hensel. The father was born in Milford township, Somerset county, Pennsylvania, June 24, 1807, and after residing for some years in Ohio, from 1814 to October, 1853, he came to Illinois. He brought with him seven thousand dollars in gold and with this he made purchase of a tract of land, ultimately becoming one of the large landowners of the county, his possessions aggregating more than nine hundred acres. For a long period he was actively engaged in farming until 1886 when he removed to Princeton. He was married three times. His first wife died in Ohio and he afterward wedded Mary Frease. For his third wife he chose Mrs. Katherine Whitney, the widow of Joseph Whitney and a sister of his second wife. His first presidential vote was cast for Andrew Jackson, but he never gave his support to the democracy after that time. He died in his ninety-seventh year. Philip Hensel, whose name introduces this record, was a young lad at the time the family came to Bureau county. Here he was reared amid the environments of frontier life, acquiring a public school education and receiving ample training at farm labor as he assisted in the work of the fields from early youth. On the 28th of September, 1865, he secured a companion and helpmate for life's journey by his marriage to Miss Margaret McKirahan, who was born in Belmont county, Ohio, January 7, 1832. This marriage has been blessed with six children. James Grant, who was educated in Dover Academy and in the Northwestern University at Evanston, Illinois, from which he was graduated, is now a bookkeeper in the gas office in Chicago. Eva is the wife of Dr. W. E. Howard and for a long time was a teacher in Bureau county. George P. is engaged in farming on the home place. Jennie is the wife of F. E. Beatty, a resident farmer of Bureau county. John is on the Chicago Board of Trade. In the year of his marriage Mr. Hensel located upon his present farm, where he has resided continuously since, having bought the place in 1856. This land, for which he paid eighteen dollars per acre, is today worth. one hundred and seventy-five dollars per acre. He has here two hundred and eighty acres, constituting a very valuable farm, and his place is well improved with all modern conveniences and equipments. He cultivates the fields and also raises horses, cattle and hogs, and his intense and well directed activity, as manifest in his business career, has made him a prosperous agriculturist. Mr. Hensel exercises his right of franchise in support of the men and measures of the republican party, which he has continuously supported since casting his first presidential ballot for Fremont in 1856. He belongs to the Methodist Protestant church and is a man of many good traits of character, a fact which is indicated when it is known that the circle of his friends is almost co-extensive with the circle of his acquaintances. ROBERT S. BEATTY. Robert S. Beatty, pleasantly situated upon a fine farm in La Moille township, manifests in his bUsiness career a spirit of enterprise and progress that has made him a leading agriculturist and he now owns a valuable place comprising one hundred and ninety-one acres of land. He was born August 10, 1865, in the township which is still his home his parents being Frank and Catherine (Smith) Beatty, the former a native or Canada and the latter of Massachusetts. They became residents of Bureau county about 1855 and were married here. Unto them were born nine children, of whom Robert S. was the fourth in order of birth. Three of the numberare now deceased. Reared UpOn the old homestead farm, Robert S. Beatty acquired his early education in the public schools of Bureau county and continued his studies In Fulton, Illinois. He has always followed farming and his advancement in business circles is largely attributable to his unfaltering diligence and keen business discermnent. He is now the oWner of one hundred and ninety-one acres of valuable land, on which he carries on the raisng Of grain and stock. This farm was settled by a man of the name of Perkins and. was purchased by Mr. Beatty four years ago at a cost of ninety-two dollars per acre. Today the place is worth from one hundred and seventy-five to two hundred dollars per acre by reason of the natural appreciation of land values and the improvements which he has placed upon the property. There are excellent buildings on this farm and the home is supplied with many of the comforts and luxuries of life. It is surrounded by broad fields of waving grain, giving promise of abundant harvests, and all of the equipments and accessories of the model farm of the twentieth century are here found. Mr. Beatty was married November 10, 1887, to Miss Lizzie Cheesman, who was born in Arlington, this county, April 27, 1868, her parents being John T. and Elizabeth Oheesman, who were natives of England. On coming to Bureau county in 1855 they settled in Arlington, Westfield township, and their daughter, Mrs. Beatty, was the fifth of their children. By her marriage she has become the mother of seven children: Charles, born November 2, 1888; Alta, December 3, 1889; Frank, June 10, 1892; Robert D., March 20, 1894; Alice, February 26, 1899; Viola, October 25, 1902; and Henry L., June 7, 1905. Mr. Beatty is a stanch republican, unfaltering in his allegiance to the party and yet without ambition for public office. He and his family attend the United Brethren church, of which his wife and children are members. In the community they are held in high esteem, occupying an enviable position in the social circles in which they move. Mr. Beatty has long been recognized as a stalwart friend of the cause or education and has done effective service in behalf of the schools during twenty years' connection with the school board. He owes his prosperity to his own efforts and the assistance of his estimable wife, who has indeed been a helpmate to him. They are both people of many excellent traits of character and the consensus of public opinion regarding them is altogether favorable. 1870 U.S. Census, IL - Bureau Co, Lamoille Twp Frank Beaty Age in 1870: 43 Estimated Birth Year: 1826 Birthplace: Canada Home in 1870: La Moille, Bureau, Illinois Race: White Gender: Male Value of real estate: View Image Post Office: La Moille Roll: M593_190 Page: 337 Frank Beaty, 43, Canada, farmer, $6000, $800 Catherine 35, MA Eliza A. 9 IL Mary L. 5 Robert 4 Charley 10 mos. Flora Cranson, 16, servant June 10, 1870 Household Record 1880 United States Census Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace Frank BEATY Self M Male W 54 UPPER CANADA Farmer IRE IRE Catherine BEATY Wife M Female W 40 MA Keeping House MA MA Eliza BEATY Dau S Female W 19 IL At Home CAN MA Mary BEATY Dau S Female W 17 IL At Home CAN MA Robert BEATY Son S Male W 15 IL At Home CAN MA Charles BEATY Son S Male W 12 IL At Home CAN MA Albert BEATY Son S Male W 10 IL At Home CAN MA Elmer BEATY Son S Male W 5 IL CAN MA Catherine BEATY Dau S Female W 3 IL CAN MA Lewis PHILLIPS Other S Male W 27 OH Laborer --- --- Source Information: Census Place Lamoille, Bureau, Illinois Family History Library Film 1254177 NA Film Number T9-0177 Page Number 150B 1900 U.S. Census, IL Bureau Co, Lamoille Twp Beatty, Frank Lived in: La Moille Township, Bureau County, Illinois Series: T623 Microfilm: 238 Book: 2 Page: 80 Frank Beatty, April 1822, IRE IRE IRE, immigrated in 1832, landlord Catharine, wife, Dec 1834, MA MA MA, 9 children, 7 living 1910 U.S. Census, IL - Bureau Co Beatty, Robert Age: 45 Gender: M Race: W Birthplace: IL State: Illinois County: BUREAU Locale: LA MOILLE TWP Series: T624 Roll: 231 Part: 2 Page: 263B Robert 45, md 22 yrs, IL CAN MA Lizzie 42, md 22 yrs, IL ENG, ENG Charles 21, son, IL IL IL Atta, 20, dau, Frank 17, son Robt. D.son, 16 Alice, dau, 11 Henry, son, 4 1900 U.S. Census, IL - Bureau Co Beatty, Elmer Lived in: La Moille Township, Bureau County, Illinois Series: T623 Microfilm: 238 Book: 2 Page: 90 Elmer Beatty, April 1875 md at 25, IL IR MA farmer Jennie, wife, May 1872, IL OH OH _________________________________________________________________ Now you can see troubleĀ before he arrives http://newlivehotmail.com/?ocid=TXT_TAGHM_migration_HM_viral_protection_0507
Well this is getting to be fun! I have not had anything to go on other than written information handed down through family over the years. So this is quite the adventure for me with this. I look forward to making sense of it all! Susen ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
According to a book I have --"Mother Cumberland - Tracing Your Ancestors in South-Central Pennsylvania" by Raymond M. Bell, Cumberland Co. was created from Lancaster Co. in 1750. However, the reference year, for John Amos Beatty, was 1842. Perhaps, this town is now referred to as Silver Spring,which is in present-day Lancaster Co. Sue Knost L-39 -----Original Message----- From: bp2000-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:bp2000-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of NLIGH10NDSOUL@aol.com Sent: Monday, May 07, 2007 8:25 PM To: bp2000@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [BP2000] Fw: Lancaster Co., I have been trying to do some reading about Lancaster today....I do believe that at one time Silver Springs was a part of Lancaster county, then it was split into smaller counties and then Silver Springs became part of Cumberland County. I am still trying to track down confirmation of my theory but if anyone can help that would be great. Susen ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com. When replying to a digest message, quote only the specific message to which you are replying, removing the rest of the digest from your reply. Also, remember to change the subject of your reply so that it coincides with the message subject to which you are replying. ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to BP2000-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Julie, My AniMap SiteFind has Silver Springs and Silver Spring as being the same place. But, SiteFind only contains names listed in the GNIS (Geographic Names Information System) of USGS. So, if the Silver Springs you are looking for is a long-abandoned town, it might not be in the same location as the present day Silver Spring. Les L-20
I have been trying to do some reading about Lancaster today....I do believe that at one time Silver Springs was a part of Lancaster county, then it was split into smaller counties and then Silver Springs became part of Cumberland County. I am still trying to track down confirmation of my theory but if anyone can help that would be great. Susen ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
Hi Beatty Cousins and BP2000 members, Joe just asked me to take the list for a while...I agreed because all list admins need a break once in a while. THere will be no major changes... But I would ask that all complaints be sent to me privately not addressed on the list...That just messes up good archives... Also any comments about my taking over is not a list topic so if you need we can discuss it off list. Now most important, Joe, I want to thank you for a job well done... I know first hand how troublesome a list can be at times... Take care and when you want just hollar at me and you can have it back!! I'll just be a substitute for a while! Nelda Nelda's websites - http://freepages.folklore.rootsweb.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/ _________________________________________________________________ Exercise your brain! Try Flexicon. http://games.msn.com/en/flexicon/default.htm?icid=flexicon_hmemailtaglineapril07
Julie, I have a Silver Spring on Hwy 23 a few miles west of the town of Lancaster, PA. Les L-20
Thanks Les. According to my 1883 Lancaster Co. Map this may be the township of Lancaster? Julie, L.39 ----- Original Message ----- From: <lbeaty@higherspeed.net> To: <bp2000@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, May 07, 2007 4:31 PM Subject: Re: [BP2000] Fw: Lancaster Co., > Julie, > > I have a Silver Spring on Hwy 23 a few miles west of the town of > Lancaster, > PA. > > Les L-20 > > > When replying to a digest message, quote only the specific message to > which you are replying, removing the rest of the digest from your reply. > Also, remember to change the subject of your reply so that it coincides > with the message subject to which you are replying. > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > BP2000-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message >
Joe, I just saw a message where you had commented about the AOL announcement attached to messages going to bp2000. . . Joe, I may be wrong, but I think those messages are attached automatically by AOL, and not attached by the users. . I have received messages from various sources who use AOL, and that same message is always attached to the bottom of their emails. If I am wrong about this, I stand to be corrected, and if it is deemed necessary, I can be "booted off" bp2000. . While I would miss the posts and all the information I glean from it, I will understand why it must be done. Sharon, Lineage 7
I was noticing the other day that BP2000 is eleven years old this year. I would like to say a big thanks to those volunteers who have donated their time, talents and I am certain money to keep our site one of the best family sites on the web and our group churning along. Thank you for many years of being able to enjoy the fellowship of other Beatty researchers and have a sympathetic ear to listen when L-3 John seems more elusive than ever or smile with when we make a breakthrough on a lineage. Thanks for a lot of years of fun and <grin> frustration. Happy birthday BP2000. Donna L-3 Past and Present of Bureau co., Illinois -1906 (L-462) PHILIP HENSEL When Bureau county was a frontier district Philip Hensel was brought to Illinois and has since been an eye witness of the changes which have occurred here and of the work that has been wrought in transforming this region from a tract of wild, uncultivated prairie into rich fields dotted with good homes, while in their midst here and there stand enterprising towns, villages and cities. Mr. Hensel was born in New York township, Tuscarawas county, Ohio, August 28, 1833, and is a a son of James and Lydia (Fackler) Hensel. The father was born in Milford township, Somerset county, Pennsylvania, June 24, 1807, and after residing for some years in Ohio, from 1814 to October, 1853, he came to Illinois. He brought with him seven thousand dollars in gold and with this he made purchase of a tract of land, ultimately becoming one of the large landowners of the county, his possessions aggregating more than nine hundred acres. For a long period he was actively engaged in farming until 1886 when he removed to Princeton. He was married three times. His first wife died in Ohio and he afterward wedded Mary Frease. For his third wife he chose Mrs. Katherine Whitney, the widow of Joseph Whitney and a sister of his second wife. His first presidential vote was cast for Andrew Jackson, but he never gave his support to the democracy after that time. He died in his ninety-seventh year. Philip Hensel, whose name introduces this record, was a young lad at the time the family came to Bureau county. Here he was reared amid the environments of frontier life, acquiring a public school education and receiving ample training at farm labor as he assisted in the work of the fields from early youth. On the 28th of September, 1865, he secured a companion and helpmate for life's journey by his marriage to Miss Margaret McKirahan, who was born in Belmont county, Ohio, January 7, 1832. This marriage has been blessed with six children. James Grant, who was educated in Dover Academy and in the Northwestern University at Evanston, Illinois, from which he was graduated, is now a bookkeeper in the gas office in Chicago. Eva is the wife of Dr. W. E. Howard and for a long time was a teacher in Bureau county. George P. is engaged in farming on the home place. Jennie is the wife of F. E. Beatty, a resident farmer of Bureau county. John is on the Chicago Board of Trade. In the year of his marriage Mr. Hensel located upon his present farm, where he has resided continuously since, having bought the place in 1856. This land, for which he paid eighteen dollars per acre, is today worth. one hundred and seventy-five dollars per acre. He has here two hundred and eighty acres, constituting a very valuable farm, and his place is well improved with all modern conveniences and equipments. He cultivates the fields and also raises horses, cattle and hogs, and his intense and well directed activity, as manifest in his business career, has made him a prosperous agriculturist. Mr. Hensel exercises his right of franchise in support of the men and measures of the republican party, which he has continuously supported since casting his first presidential ballot for Fremont in 1856. He belongs to the Methodist Protestant church and is a man of many good traits of character, a fact which is indicated when it is known that the circle of his friends is almost co-extensive with the circle of his acquaintances. ROBERT S. BEATTY. Robert S. Beatty, pleasantly situated upon a fine farm in La Moille township, manifests in his bUsiness career a spirit of enterprise and progress that has made him a leading agriculturist and he now owns a valuable place comprising one hundred and ninety-one acres of land. He was born August 10, 1865, in the township which is still his home his parents being Frank and Catherine (Smith) Beatty, the former a native or Canada and the latter of Massachusetts. They became residents of Bureau county about 1855 and were married here. Unto them were born nine children, of whom Robert S. was the fourth in order of birth. Three of the numberare now deceased. Reared UpOn the old homestead farm, Robert S. Beatty acquired his early education in the public schools of Bureau county and continued his studies In Fulton, Illinois. He has always followed farming and his advancement in business circles is largely attributable to his unfaltering diligence and keen business discermnent. He is now the oWner of one hundred and ninety-one acres of valuable land, on which he carries on the raisng Of grain and stock. This farm was settled by a man of the name of Perkins and. was purchased by Mr. Beatty four years ago at a cost of ninety-two dollars per acre. Today the place is worth from one hundred and seventy-five to two hundred dollars per acre by reason of the natural appreciation of land values and the improvements which he has placed upon the property. There are excellent buildings on this farm and the home is supplied with many of the comforts and luxuries of life. It is surrounded by broad fields of waving grain, giving promise of abundant harvests, and all of the equipments and accessories of the model farm of the twentieth century are here found. Mr. Beatty was married November 10, 1887, to Miss Lizzie Cheesman, who was born in Arlington, this county, April 27, 1868, her parents being John T. and Elizabeth Oheesman, who were natives of England. On coming to Bureau county in 1855 they settled in Arlington, Westfield township, and their daughter, Mrs. Beatty, was the fifth of their children. By her marriage she has become the mother of seven children: Charles, born November 2, 1888; Alta, December 3, 1889; Frank, June 10, 1892; Robert D., March 20, 1894; Alice, February 26, 1899; Viola, October 25, 1902; and Henry L., June 7, 1905. Mr. Beatty is a stanch republican, unfaltering in his allegiance to the party and yet without ambition for public office. He and his family attend the United Brethren church, of which his wife and children are members. In the community they are held in high esteem, occupying an enviable position in the social circles in which they move. Mr. Beatty has long been recognized as a stalwart friend of the cause or education and has done effective service in behalf of the schools during twenty years' connection with the school board. He owes his prosperity to his own efforts and the assistance of his estimable wife, who has indeed been a helpmate to him. They are both people of many excellent traits of character and the consensus of public opinion regarding them is altogether favorable. 1870 U.S. Census, IL - Bureau Co, Lamoille Twp Frank Beaty Age in 1870: 43 Estimated Birth Year: 1826 Birthplace: Canada Home in 1870: La Moille, Bureau, Illinois Race: White Gender: Male Value of real estate: View Image Post Office: La Moille Roll: M593_190 Page: 337 Frank Beaty, 43, Canada, farmer, $6000, $800 Catherine 35, MA Eliza A. 9 IL Mary L. 5 Robert 4 Charley 10 mos. Flora Cranson, 16, servant June 10, 1870 Household Record 1880 United States Census Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace Frank BEATY Self M Male W 54 UPPER CANADA Farmer IRE IRE Catherine BEATY Wife M Female W 40 MA Keeping House MA MA Eliza BEATY Dau S Female W 19 IL At Home CAN MA Mary BEATY Dau S Female W 17 IL At Home CAN MA Robert BEATY Son S Male W 15 IL At Home CAN MA Charles BEATY Son S Male W 12 IL At Home CAN MA Albert BEATY Son S Male W 10 IL At Home CAN MA Elmer BEATY Son S Male W 5 IL CAN MA Catherine BEATY Dau S Female W 3 IL CAN MA Lewis PHILLIPS Other S Male W 27 OH Laborer --- --- Source Information: Census Place Lamoille, Bureau, Illinois Family History Library Film 1254177 NA Film Number T9-0177 Page Number 150B 1900 U.S. Census, IL Bureau Co, Lamoille Twp Beatty, Frank Lived in: La Moille Township, Bureau County, Illinois Series: T623 Microfilm: 238 Book: 2 Page: 80 Frank Beatty, April 1822, IRE IRE IRE, immigrated in 1832, landlord Catharine, wife, Dec 1834, MA MA MA, 9 children, 7 living 1910 U.S. Census, IL - Bureau Co Beatty, Robert Age: 45 Gender: M Race: W Birthplace: IL State: Illinois County: BUREAU Locale: LA MOILLE TWP Series: T624 Roll: 231 Part: 2 Page: 263B Robert 45, md 22 yrs, IL CAN MA Lizzie 42, md 22 yrs, IL ENG, ENG Charles 21, son, IL IL IL Atta, 20, dau, Frank 17, son Robt. D.son, 16 Alice, dau, 11 Henry, son, 4 1900 U.S. Census, IL - Bureau Co Beatty, Elmer Lived in: La Moille Township, Bureau County, Illinois Series: T623 Microfilm: 238 Book: 2 Page: 90 Elmer Beatty, April 1875 md at 25, IL IR MA farmer Jennie, wife, May 1872, IL OH OH
Listers, and in particular: Julie Miller, Sue Knost, Susen Bryant, and anyone I might have contacted: > In a message dated 5/6/2007 8:25:41 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, > jjmill@peoplepc.com writes: > > Looking for fellow researchers that have any ties to > Lancaster Co., PA. around Sadbury, Caervnarvon, > Leacock, Columbia, West Donegal, in and around 1840. Julie Miller, L.39 Then, Susen Bryant chimed in: > I have a great great great grandfather that was born in Silver Springs, > Lancaster County in 1842, his name was Amos John Beat(t)y his father was > listed as Hiram. Amos John had an older brother Peter. I don't know how > much help that is but, I wish I had more information myself. Susen ===== Before this happened to ruin a perfectly beautiful Sunday for me and rob me of any self-esteem I have gathered in my 73 years of life, I was excited about posting the following message, and if this gets me kicked off the BP2000 by the new Gestapo after subscribing since 2000, then, so be it. I will unsubscribe to ALL mailing lists and wonder just which country this is of which I am a natural-born and proud citizen! In defense there are people who also wonder why I was categorized as a "Moderated List Member!" If the new list administrator were a teacher, I would pull all of my children out of that school! ===== Lois, the moderation status was put on by ME after your post about the AOL tag line. I have now removed your moderated status.... so posts will go through automatically. Please keep posts to the list to genealogy. Grips to the list admin!! Thanks JOe (Patterson) ===== Now, on with the posting which was important to me and I tried more than once to post it, thinking I had a virus in my computer! ----- Original Message ----- From: "Lois Kortering" <lekort@comcast.net> To: <bp2000@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2007 5:02 PM Subject: Re: [BP2000] Lancaster Co., Julie Miller and Susen Bryant, and BP2000 Listers, I just have to join this conversation! Susen, coincidentally, I had just looked into my "Beatty Unknown" folder, in the last couple of days. and I read the e-mails that we shared back in 2001. This might refresh your memory about our contact with each other, and it appears as though I had posted this on the BP2000 but made a copy on a word document. Julie Miller and Sue Knost, I think this all happened before I met up with you two and before we merged into L-39, which was my Lineage number, originally. As most of you know, when lineages merge, they always merge down to the lowest number. Susen Bryant, I am even more interested, now that I read this again. The Beatty family is my mom's mother's side, and the McDonald family is my mom's father's side. Yes, it was the McDonalds who lived in Copemish, Manistee County, Michigan, but after all, some of the Beatty family lived up there, because that is where my grandfather McDonald met my grandmother (Beatty) McDonald. These last two postings caught my eye, because I have been "neck-deep" in my McDONALD family (From King Twp., York Co., Ontario, Canada) and my WEBB family (from Uxbridge/Whitchurch area, which became Aurora, York Co., Ontario, Canada. How have you been, Susen? Yes, I think we need to compare notes, again, in case either of us has had any new information or break-throughs! Lois Kortering, L-39 ========================================================= 04 October 2001 Minutes after I shared a 1993 letter with the BP 2000 last night (October 3), I received an e-mail from Susen Bryant, another member. The John H. (Or A.) Beatty, born 1889 and died 1956, as well as his wife, Selma L. (Krupps) Beatty, born 1894 and died 1965, who were buried in the Lakeside Cemetery here in Muskegon are in Susen's lineage. The little note had been on my bulletin board in my computer room for 12 years! I had found John H. Beatty's name in a City Directory while doing a title search on a 100-year-old house our daughter bought in Lakeside. That house is only two minutes from our house. Susen gave me this information: Amos John Beatty was married to Marguerite Miller first and they had five children: Wilson, Casper, Jacob, Lizzie, and Charles. Jacob is Susen's direct link. Then, Amos John Beatty married Mattie Method and they had four children: Claude C., Maude E., Roy J., and John H. For a time they lived in Manistee county, 1900 census. In 1920 census they had relocated to Muskegon on Yuba street. Amos John Beatty died in 1924 in that house, so did Mattie Method Beatty. (I found this in our local library on microfiche back in 2000- Lois K.) OBITUARY Muskegon Chronicle Saturday, June 21, 1924 Muskegon, Muskegon County, Michigan Amos J. Beatty Amos j. Beatty, 49 Sumner Street, died Friday morning at his home, after a short illness, age 81 years. Mr. Beatty was born in Silver Springs, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, and came to Muskegon 13 years ago from Copemish, Michigan. For thirteen years Mr. Beatty has been in the employ of the Pere Marquette Railway, and for four years past, has been flagman at the Ottawa Street crossing. He leaves, besides his wife, seven children: Mrs. Elmer Randall of Cadillac, Michigan; Mrs. James Bearrault of Seattle, Washington; Charles Beatty of Manistee, Michigan; and Casper, Jacob, Claude, and John Beatty, all of Muskegon; thirty-two grandchildren and thirty-five great-grandchildren. The funeral service will be held at 3:30 o'clock Monday afternoon in the chapel at the Balbirnie Mortuary. Friends will omit flowers. What I found out this morning (Back on Oct. 4, 2001): The house on Sumner is still standing, and I took some pictures of it for Susen. The house number had changed from 49 to 299 Sumner. In a 1924 City Directory, a John H. (a Watchman) and Mattie lived at 49 Sumner, as well as, John H., Jr. (a Machine Hand) and Zella. Most likely, the first John H. is Amos John and is the father of John H., Jr. Most likely, everyone called the father "John" instead of Amos, unless the "H" stands for "Hamos" and was pronounced "Amos." Yuba Street is one block west of the corner of the 299 Sumner address, and it crosses Sumner. I will try to find the Yuba Street address in the 1920 City Directory. Copemish, Michigan is mentioned, and, both, my mother's family, and my dad's family lived up there. Also, several of the given names are similar to our Beatty given names, so I need to find out if this Beatty family is connected to ours (L-39). The area around Sumner Street, which is just north of downtown Muskegon was at one time called "Jackson Hill" and was a very beautiful neighborhood with lovely homes. Today, the neighborhood is coming back after many years of being "Run-down." We can thank the "Neighborhood Associations," that have been forming in recent years, for encouraging a lot of areas to help eliminate crime and to take pride in their neighborhoods. I will be working with Susen Bryant to find out more about this "Limb" of Beatty families. Lois E. Kortering (L-39) (End of Oct. 4, 2001 posting)
Help. Where exactly was/is Silver Springs in Lancaster Co. I can't find it on my Lancaster map. Julie L.39 >> I have a great great great grandfather that was born in Silver Springs, >> Lancaster County in 1842, his name was Amos John Beat(t)y his father was >> listed as Hiram. Amos John had an older brother Peter. I don't know >> how >> much help that is but, I wish I had more information myself. > > >
Please delete Nelda's websites - http://freepages.folklore.rootsweb.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/ _________________________________________________________________ Get a FREE Web site, company branded e-mail and more from Microsoft Office Live! http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/mcrssaub0050001411mrt/direct/01/
Donna, While researching in Portsmouth, Scioto, OH. Have you happened to find anything obit on Elizabeth Beatty DOD Nov 15, 1883 Madison Twnsp. DOB Nov 27, 1827 Jackson Co OH Wayne ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.