Gene Hutson wrote: > To all who would want to look into it, > > The IGI does have an extracted christening record for > Grace WHEELER chr 24 Feb 1610 in Devonshire. It is the > right time frame to be the mother of Caleb b. 1632 at > Concord. Gene, to fill you in, I posted the following back on May 1st: > A lot is happening genealogically. My DNA test results arrived yesterday, me being the fourth participant in our test project. Independently of that, I've been talking with John Brooks Threlfall, author of the seminal article on Capt. Thomas Brooks of Watertown and Concord which ran in TAG in 1973. He believes he has proved through traditional research the theory that Capt. Thomas and Henry Brooks shared a common ancestor. Mr. Threlfall (who makes them 1st cousins once removed) has generously shared relevant portions of his 40 years' of research and is sending more. I had a quick look at his arguments, not only as to the Henry/Thomas relationship, but his belief that he has identified Thomas's English ancestry and the identity of his wife Grace. It's a complex case, and one that I wouldn't be comfortable promoting or passing on secondhand on Mr. Threlfall's behalf without having confirmed it myself. But as soon as I can absorb, analyze and understand the DNA and Threlfall data, I will share it with the list, with its author's permission. Since then, Debbye Lansing has heard from Christopher Hunwick, archivist of Manchester Cathedral, Manchester England, from whom I quote: >I have looked in the original registers of baptisms, marriages, and burials, which are housed in the Cathedral's own Archives, and I can confirm that the marriage entry for the 2nd February 1618 (in modern dating) is as follows: >Thomas Bruckes and Grace Cundelyve huius [Latin for 'of this parish'] Threlfall believes these two to be the Thomas and Grace of Concord, MA. Grace's surname would today be rendered as Cundliffe. I've never found any evidence to support Shattuck or Torrey in naming her ?Wheeler. Mr. Threlfall is not a computer user and not online. Once we get this worked out by telephone and written letter, I will post his findings verbatim, and upload appropriate revisions to the Tributaries website. Finally, Caleb could not have been born at Concord in 1632, as the town was not settled by whites until 1635. Chris |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| Christopher Brooks BROOKS Families of New England www.tributaries.us ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
To all who would want to look into it, The IGI does have an extracted christening record for Grace WHEELER chr 24 Feb 1610 in Devonshire. It is the right time frame to be the mother of Caleb b. 1632 at Concord. Gene Genealogy; "a stirring of the memories"
WOW!!! and here I'd thought I'd found the three brothers that originally came over from Nantwich, Cheshire. I found a LONG line from there, from Brooke to Brooks, if I have this right, Caleb would be my 8X Great Granddad. Zeetha Emma BROOKS 1894 - 1968 is my Great Grandmother, just to give you an idea of where I fit in. Thanx, Gene Genealogy; "a stirring of the memories" ----- Original Message ----- From: "Christopher Brooks" <trib@tributaries.us> To: "Gene Hutson" <FishRus@CableOne.net> Sent: Wednesday, June 14, 2006 10:21 AM Subject: Re: [BNE] Administrative update: Back online Gene Hutson wrote: > I see you mentioned BROOKS from Massachusetts bay. > > What do you know of a Caleb BROOKS b. 1632 at Concord?? > he married a Hannah ATKINSON abt 1668. He's my umpteenth great-uncle (I descend from his brother Joshua), and my son Caleb is named for him. Go to www.tributaries.us, click the Genealogies link, and then in the founders table click on Capt. Thomas Brooks in the Massachusetts block. That will take you to his son Caleb. You'll find other Brooks resources at the site, principally the BROOKS-NE list at RootsWeb, to which a number of descendants of Caleb are subscribed. And note the DNA news popdown - results are back from the lab, confirming that Henry/1 and Capt. Thomas/1 Brooks, both of Massachusetts Bay, shared a common male ancestor. Finally, the author John Brooks Threlfall has recently been in touch with what he believes is the English origin of this line - in Manchester, of all places. (East Anglia, most often Suffolk, has generally been the prior supposition.) All in all, a propitious time to hear from you. :-) Chris |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| Christopher Brooks BROOKS Families of New England www.tributaries.us ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chris: Congratulations on your new life. I went through the same thing when I retired a couple years ago. Actually, I have more to do now than I did when I was working. Oh well, guess that's life. Above all else, one must do what makes one happy. It's not the end result that makes one happy---it's taking the journey. Take care. Ron Hughes
Christopher, I see you mentioned BROOKS from Massachusetts bay. What do you know of a Caleb BROOKS b. 1632 at Concord?? he married a Hannah ATKINSON abt 1668. Thanx, Curiously, Gene Hutson Norfolk, Nebraska Genealogy; "a stirring of the memories" ----- Original Message ----- From: "Christopher Brooks" <trib@tributaries.us> To: <BROOKS-NE-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2006 2:29 PM Subject: [BNE] Administrative update: Back online > Hello all, > > I am back online and on duty as your peripatetic list > administrator. I have a new career, residence, address, phone > number, and life. (Actually, that's no exaggeration.) > > First things first. For those who record such things: > Christopher Brooks > 427 South St. #1 > Littleton NH 03561 > 603-444-1537 > trib@tributaries.us > > I have been monitoring email via a webmail account accessed > infrequently at the local library. So I may have missed it, but I > haven't seen any list traffic in many weeks. This might be a good > time for those of you still trying to nail down a Brooks > connection to re-post a query. > > My new employment is such that I will have a great deal more time > to devote to things genealogical from this point forward. With > that in mind, this is my immediate personal workplan: > > 1) Catch up on, analyze and share the DNA findings from the > testing we did this spring. > > 2) Long-delayed second issue of the publication Tributaries. > Foci: Founder William Brooks of Springfield, (King) Philip's > War, and the new research on Thomas and Henry Brooks of > Massachusetts Bay. > > 3) Long-overdue compilation of an index of all the material, > manuscripts, correspondence, books, etc. which I have collected. > The database for this was built years back, but I never had the > time to enter each item so that I could ascertain what I had, and > where it was stored, nor did I have space to get everything > unpacked, inventoried and accessible. Now I do. > > 4) Long-overdue upload of generations 3-4 of the Henry and Capt. > Thomas Brooks lines to the Tributaries website. (As a stopgap, > within a few days I should be doing a "maintenance" upload, > meaning new data for the same individuals who were already there, > plus addition of some additional individuals. I'll post to > announce when this happens.) > > I will now be able to work uninterrupted for hours at a stretch > for days in a row, so I'm hoping to stay on task and get these > major needs out of the way before I get distracted again, as is > my predilection. Slap my hand if you see me begin to stray gain. > :-) > > Chris > > Christopher Brooks, List Administrator: > ============================================ > BROOKS-NE-L (Brooks Families of New England) > at RootsWeb.com > ============================================ > > > > > > ==== BROOKS-NE Mailing List ==== > Changing email addresses? Preparing ahead of > time can save both you and your listowner a > headache. Write brooks-ne-admin@rootsweb.com. > >
The query from 1981 by the title of Brooks, King, German was from by my father, George M. Jenkins. He died in 1986. I posted a query based on my father's on this board in 2002. I still have not made the link from Ohio to New York. By looking at census data, I am zeroing in on Cayuga County, NY. In 2002 we visited the cemetery in Seneca County, Ohio and photographed most of the Brooks stones. We did not find anything helpful at the courthouse. We hope to make a trip to New York. Mary Martin On Monday, June 12, 2006, at 11:06 AM, BROOKS-NE-D-request@rootsweb.com wrote: > > Brooks Family Query Exchange, 2:1, May 1981, Queries: > > Page 13: > > BROOKS, KING, GERMAN > My maternal g-gpars were Jonathan BROOKS b ca 1807 and Rebecca KING > BROOKS b ca 1813. They, with their 3 oldest ch, were b in NY state acc > to the 1850 cen. They mov to Clinton Twp, Seneca Co., OH between 1833 > and 1837. Their ch were: Theron b 1829, William b 1831, Samuel G. b > NY 7 Apr 1833, Mary Elizabeth b OH 1837, Henry H., Sarah Maria (my > gmor, m Silas K. GERMAN), Jane, Sophronia, and Rebecca. Jonathan and > his w, Rebecca, Theron and his w, Samuel G. and his w, are all bur in > the Rock Creek Cem on State Rd. #15 in Seneca Co., OH. Near their > graves is that of a Rebecca BROOKS, b 1776, d 1849. I believe she was > Jonathan's mor. I do not know just where the fam liv in NY state, but > I do recall my gmor mentioning Elmira. If anyone can help, I would > appreciate it, particularly determining the name of Jonathan's f and > those of any bros and sis. I shall be happy to corres with any > readers. > George M. Jenkins, 733 East Main St., Rockwood, PA 15557 > > ______________________________ > >
Penny Brisson wrote: > I'm excited! The Brooks mentioned on page 21 are from my > line, and this is the first documentation I have seen on > the marriage of Daniel Brooks and Olive Smith. How can I > follow up on this? Nineteen eighty-one was a long time > ago. I located John Brooks Threlfall two months ago at the same address he used in 1973. Granted, the odds are against you after 25 years, but I'd first write the last known address. If the person who sent the query is deceased, perhaps you can run down an obit through a county list at RootsWeb (death date from SSDI) and then try the phone book for living relatives mentioned in the obit. I found a second cousin in almost this exact way who hadn't been heard from since the 1940s. If you can find a living relative, they may well know who the "family historian" is and be able to put you in touch. Glad to hear there was something useful in those transcriptions. Only a small number of the publication's issues have been transcribed. I also looked up Daniel and Olive in my database and find Ramona Curtis as a source along with yourself. Chris
I'm excited! The Brooks mentioned on page 21 are from my line, and this is the first documentation I have seen on the marriage of Daniel Brooks and Olive Smith. How can I follow up on this? Nineteen eighty-one was a long time ago. Christopher Brooks wrote: >Brooks Family Query Exchange, 2:1, May 1981, Queries: > >Page 16: > >BROOKS, WHEELER, WRIGHT >POTTER I am a desc of two BROOKS lines. I do not know if the earlier line are ancestors of my "Thomas BROOKS of Watertown and Concord" line or not. My descent is Thomas1, Joshua2, Noah3, Benjamin4, Persis5 b 1720 m Jonas WHEELER. I have only one difference to the line in Vol. I, Issue 2. I have Noah3 m Dorothy WRIGHT instead of Dorothy POTTER. > (Ed. - Can any readers help to verify which is correct?) >BROOKS, FOOTE My other line is: (1) Robert b ca 1487, bur 28 Jun 1551 in London. He m Katherine ____ b ca 1501; (2) John b 1530 Royston, Cambridgeshire, ENG, d 1588, WP 28 Jul 1599 in London; (3) Joane b 11 May 1555 Eastcheap, London, ENG, d after Feb 1608 in Shalford, ENG. She m. 18 Jun 1576 Robert FOOTE of Shalford. Does anyone have any info on this line? > Mrs. Robert G. Whaley, 655 S. Auburn St., Grass Valley, CA 95945 > >Page 21: > >HOTCHKISS, HACKETT >Daniel BROOKS, Jr. b 1765 CT d 1839 Lincoln, MA, m Olive SMITH b 1763/4, bur Tyner, NY. Ch: Harmon b 1802 d 1874 bur Lower Tyner, NY; William b 1806 NH?; Abigail b 1804 d 18 Nov 1875 m Alexander CUMMINGS; Nancy b 1794 d?, m Sherman HOTCHKISS b 1789; Horace b 1803 d?, m Sally HACKETT b 1808 or 1829; Sally b 1797 d?, m Charles RACE; Harvey b 1796, d 1850. I believe all ch b in NY. >HOLDRIDGE, HARRISON, HAWKINS >Ch of Nancy (BROOKS) and Sherman HOTCHKISS: Charles b 1818 NY; George b 1825 NY d?, m Mary E. HOLDRIDGE b 1827 NY; Julia b 1826 NY m James (or John) DRISKILL (DRISCALL), she d 1890 MI; William b 1827 d?, m Jenet __?__; Spencer b 1828, d?, m Mary HARRISON; Mary b 1830. > Ch of Abigail (BROOKS) and Alexander CUMMINGS which are known to me: Jane b 1842; Olive b 1845. > Daniel BROOKS, Sr. b ca 1740/5, m Abigail HAWKINS. > Marjorie H. Rheney, RFD #1, Box 91A3, Harlem, GA 30814 > >======================= > >That concludes both Issue 2:1 and all the material of New England interest. > >Chris > > > >==== BROOKS-NE Mailing List ==== >When posting, please use a relevant, not recycled, subject line. This is a key to successful searching of the message archive. > > >
I probably should have added, in reference to much of this material, caveat emptor. The Tuttle-Tuthill extractions, in particular, I remember as being somewhat shaky when cross-checked against those primary sources I had. I do specifically recall that the Tuttle-Tuthill work is not sourced in the sense that we use the word today, other than to cite the contributors/family members who submitted their (undocumented) family trees for inclusion in the book. Chris |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| Christopher Brooks BROOKS Families of New England http://www.tributaries.us ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Back in April I completed a "background" task of transcribing a couple of issues of the Brooks Family Query Exchange, which later became the Brooks Historian, and is now defunct. I've sent the transcriptions on to Bill Brooks, who maintains the Brooks Historian site at http://brookshistorian.org/bbrooks/public_html/bhback.htm, but it may take him a while to format the text I sent into HTML and get it uploaded. In the meantime, I'll share here those portions of the test pertaining to New England lines. This first installment lacks the hand-drawn map included with the original. I expect Bill will include a scan of it when he uploads the issue to his site. Chris ============================ Brooks Family Query Exchange, v. 2 issue 1, May 1981, p. 3: DAVID BROOKS SELLS THE FARM Geo. Brooks, 5223 Balzer, Lansing MI 48910 On November 29, 1768, Esquire Thomas Chandler of Chester, Vermont, deeded a 100 acre plot of land to 19 year old David Brooks, Yeoman, acknowledging payments totaling 20 lbs. Sterling, in compliance with the terms of a one year contract. This deed was recorded by Town Clerk John Chandler, son of Thomas, on June 18, 1770. Said deed can be found at Volume I, pages 124 & 125, Cumberland County deeds of New York. This deed describes David Brooks' farm as having true East-West boundaries of 160 rods in length and true North-South boundaries of 100 rods (starting 120 rods South of the Middle Branch of Williams River), with all corners being right angles, thus forming a perfect rectangle. Young David Brooks' farm is shown at left, drawn to exact scale with corners designated as A, B, C and D. [HAND-DRAWN MAP GOES HERE] Nearly four decades later, on June 6, 1804, David Brooks sold this farm for $1200 to John P. Williams. The deed for this sale was recorded by Minister Aaron Leland, Town Clerk, and can be found at Book F, Pages 541 & 542 at the Chester Town Clerk's Office. In this deed Brooks described his property as having fifteen sides and corners, zigzagging, helter-skelter, around in acute and obtuse angles, and somehow showing a growth from 100 to 110 acres. See bird-like figure on scale drawing above. It would appear that this real estate deal must have resulted from a long day of bartering held at the local Town Pub! The shape of Brooks' farm, originally a rectangle, now looks like too many swigs from a jug of "Old Crow" or "Wild Turkey"! Or is it an American Eagle? Obviously, David Brooks encroached or borrowed some of his neighbor's land in order to create his? Wild bird estate - and one begins to wonder how he got himself out of this gerrymandering mischief? But this wasn't difficult for David. He had observed first-hand, many of the tricks of Thomas Chandler, Chester's First Real Estate Manipulator. Three months after selling his high-flying bird farm to John P. Williams - Brooks bought back the same Bird for the same price. Unlike Esquire Chandler, David had not developed Chandler's ill-famed "Fast Buck" techniques. This re-purchase deed was recorded by Reverend Aaron Leland on September 12, 1804 and can be found at Book G, page 80 in the records of Chester's Town Clerk. CONCLUSION My great-great-great Grandfather, David Brooks, was quite a real estate "Sharpie," but - HE CERTAINLY WAS NOT A TEA-TOTALER!
Hello all, I am back online and on duty as your peripatetic list administrator. I have a new career, residence, address, phone number, and life. (Actually, that's no exaggeration.) First things first. For those who record such things: Christopher Brooks 427 South St. #1 Littleton NH 03561 603-444-1537 trib@tributaries.us I have been monitoring email via a webmail account accessed infrequently at the local library. So I may have missed it, but I haven't seen any list traffic in many weeks. This might be a good time for those of you still trying to nail down a Brooks connection to re-post a query. My new employment is such that I will have a great deal more time to devote to things genealogical from this point forward. With that in mind, this is my immediate personal workplan: 1) Catch up on, analyze and share the DNA findings from the testing we did this spring. 2) Long-delayed second issue of the publication Tributaries. Foci: Founder William Brooks of Springfield, (King) Philip's War, and the new research on Thomas and Henry Brooks of Massachusetts Bay. 3) Long-overdue compilation of an index of all the material, manuscripts, correspondence, books, etc. which I have collected. The database for this was built years back, but I never had the time to enter each item so that I could ascertain what I had, and where it was stored, nor did I have space to get everything unpacked, inventoried and accessible. Now I do. 4) Long-overdue upload of generations 3-4 of the Henry and Capt. Thomas Brooks lines to the Tributaries website. (As a stopgap, within a few days I should be doing a "maintenance" upload, meaning new data for the same individuals who were already there, plus addition of some additional individuals. I'll post to announce when this happens.) I will now be able to work uninterrupted for hours at a stretch for days in a row, so I'm hoping to stay on task and get these major needs out of the way before I get distracted again, as is my predilection. Slap my hand if you see me begin to stray gain. :-) Chris Christopher Brooks, List Administrator: ============================================ BROOKS-NE-L (Brooks Families of New England) at RootsWeb.com ============================================
Forwarded for Christopher Brooks Irene Dunham <kandid@pivot.net> wrote: >Has anyone heard from Chris Brooks in the last few weeks? Hello, all, I am temporarily offline and unavailable. I would expect this to be the case for at least another month, but perhaps substantially longer. This is the first time I've been able to check my mail since going offline, so please forgive the fact that I'm answering individual messages with a blanket response. There is a temporary address to which you can send mail: cbrooks@tributaries.us I'll try to check for mail once a week, but if you had something lengthy to share or send to me, it would be best to wait until I get things settled here. A lot is happening genealogically. My DNA test results arrived yesterday, me being the fourth participant in our test project. Independently of that, I've been talking with John Brooks Threlfall, author of the seminal article on Capt. Thomas Brooks of Watertown and Concord which ran in TAG in 1973. He believes he has proved through traditional research the theory that Capt. Thomas and Henry Brooks shared a common ancestor. Mr. Threlfall (who makes them 1st cousins once removed) has generously shared relevant portions of his 40 years' of research and is sending more. I had a quick look at his arguments, not only as to the Henry/Thomas relationship, but his belief that he has identified Thomas's English ancestry and the identity of his wife Grace. It's a complex case, and one that I wouldn't be comfortable promoting are passing on secondhand on Mr. Threlfall's behalf without having confirmed it myself. But as soon as I can absorb, analyze and understand the DNA and Threlfall data, I will share it with the list, with its author's permission. Will respond to the other DNA testing participants individually. Thanks, Chris
Forwarded for Christopher Brooks Irene Dunham <kandid@pivot.net> wrote: >Has anyone heard from Chris Brooks in the last few weeks? Hello, all, I am temporarily offline and unavailable. I would expect this to be the case for at least another month, but perhaps substantially longer. This is the first time I've been able to check my mail since going offline, so please forgive the fact that I'm answering individual messages with a blanket response. There is a temporary address to which you can send mail: cbrooks@tributaries.us I'll try to check for mail once a week, but if you had something lengthy to share or send to me, it would be best to wait until I get things settled here. A lot is happening genealogically. My DNA test results arrived yesterday, me being the fourth participant in our test project. Independently of that, I've been talking with John Brooks Threlfall, author of the seminal article on Capt. Thomas Brooks of Watertown and Concord which ran in TAG in 1973. He believes he has proved through traditional research the theory that Capt. Thomas and Henry Brooks shared a common ancestor. Mr. Threlfall (who makes them 1st cousins once removed) has generously shared relevant portions of his 40 years' of research and is sending more. I had a quick look at his arguments, not only as to the Henry/Thomas relationship, but his belief that he has identified Thomas's English ancestry and the identity of his wife Grace. It's a complex case, and one that I wouldn't be comfortable promoting are passing on secondhand on Mr. Threlfall's behalf without having confirmed it myself. But as soon as I can absorb, analyze and understand the DNA and Threlfall data, I will share it with the list, with its author's permission. Will respond to the other DNA testing participants individually. Thanks, Chris
Forwarded for Christopher Brooks Irene Dunham <kandid@pivot.net> wrote: >Has anyone heard from Chris Brooks in the last few weeks? Hello, all, I am temporarily offline and unavailable. I would expect this to be the case for at least another month, but perhaps substantially longer. This is the first time I've been able to check my mail since going offline, so please forgive the fact that I'm answering individual messages with a blanket response. There is a temporary address to which you can send mail: cbrooks@tributaries.us I'll try to check for mail once a week, but if you had something lengthy to share or send to me, it would be best to wait until I get things settled here. A lot is happening genealogically. My DNA test results arrived yesterday, me being the fourth participant in our test project. Independently of that, I've been talking with John Brooks Threlfall, author of the seminal article on Capt. Thomas Brooks of Watertown and Concord which ran in TAG in 1973. He believes he has proved through traditional research the theory that Capt. Thomas and Henry Brooks shared a common ancestor. Mr. Threlfall (who makes them 1st cousins once removed) has generously shared relevant portions of his 40 years' of research and is sending more. I had a quick look at his arguments, not only as to the Henry/Thomas relationship, but his belief that he has identified Thomas's English ancestry and the identity of his wife Grace. It's a complex case, and one that I wouldn't be comfortable promoting are passing on secondhand on Mr. Threlfall's behalf without having confirmed it myself. But as soon as I can absorb, analyze and understand the DNA and Threlfall data, I will share it with the list, with its author's permission. Will respond to the other DNA testing participants individually. Thanks, Chris
Forwarded for Christopher Brooks Irene Dunham <kandid@pivot.net> wrote: >Has anyone heard from Chris Brooks in the last few weeks? Hello, all, I am temporarily offline and unavailable. I would expect this to be the case for at least another month, but perhaps substantially longer. This is the first time I've been able to check my mail since going offline, so please forgive the fact that I'm answering individual messages with a blanket response. There is a temporary address to which you can send mail: cbrooks@tributaries.us I'll try to check for mail once a week, but if you had something lengthy to share or send to me, it would be best to wait until I get things settled here. A lot is happening genealogically. My DNA test results arrived yesterday, me being the fourth participant in our test project. Independently of that, I've been talking with John Brooks Threlfall, author of the seminal article on Capt. Thomas Brooks of Watertown and Concord which ran in TAG in 1973. He believes he has proved through traditional research the theory that Capt. Thomas and Henry Brooks shared a common ancestor. Mr. Threlfall (who makes them 1st cousins once removed) has generously shared relevant portions of his 40 years' of research and is sending more. I had a quick look at his arguments, not only as to the Henry/Thomas relationship, but his belief that he has identified Thomas's English ancestry and the identity of his wife Grace. It's a complex case, and one that I wouldn't be comfortable promoting are passing on secondhand on Mr. Threlfall's behalf without having confirmed it myself. But as soon as I can absorb, analyze and understand the DNA and Threlfall data, I will share it with the list, with its author's permission. Will respond to the other DNA testing participants individually. Thanks, Chris
Have not heard in quite awhile. I sent an email about a month ago to him and have had no response. Lynn Brooks ----- Original Message ----- From: IRENE DUNHAM To: BROOKS-NE-L@rootsweb.com Sent: Thursday, April 27, 2006 8:52 AM Subject: [BNE] Chris Brooks Has anyone heard from Chris Brooks in the last few weeks? ==== BROOKS-NE Mailing List ==== To send a message to all subscribers, use the address BROOKS-NE-L@rootsweb.com
Has anyone heard from Chris Brooks in the last few weeks?
Has anyone heard from Chris Brooks in the last few weeks?
Hi, I was in touch with him last month and he was working on some of his own lines. He did mention at that time he might have to move. I would guess he is possibly relocating. I am sure he will be back doing his great job of researching soon. Trudy J. Brooks
This is another searchable NY newspaper site. The site itself is not the best, but it works. Papers are from Auburn, Oswego, Ithaca, Watertown and several others. Also several city directories from Auburn. http://www.fultonhistory.com/Fulton.html Search on "Casper Brooks" for an entertaining "Investigative Report" About the 5th hit: Newspaper Oswego Daily Times April-June 1884 - 0191.pdf