E.R. Broyles, aged 17, birthplace Tennessee, is found in the 1860 census of Winston Co., MS. He is living with Geo. W. Richardson (24) and presumed wife Elizabeth (18). Richardson was born in NC, Elizabeth in MS. Often a family configuration of this type is explained by E.R. being Elizabeth's brother, but the closeness of age and differing birthplaces makes this unlikely. The name Erasmus is rare in the family. However, Erasmus Seneca Broyles, son of Cain Broyles, is found in the 1850 and 1860 census of Monroe Co., MS. Two Erasmuses in the same state at the same time suggests a possible familial link. Note that E.S. Broyles had a brother John Milton Broyles about whom I have little information. *Perhaps* E.R. Broyles is a son of this John Milton Broyles. John Milton Broyles married in Greene Co., TN, 24 Jun 1841 to Martha M. Richardson. Note she is a Richardson. Marriage in 1841 would allow E.R.'s birth in 1842 or 1843 which matches with the census of 1860. John M. and family are not found in the TN census of 1850. Does anyone have info on John Milton Broyles's descendants? [email protected] on 07/05/97 11:05:49 PM Please respond to [email protected] To: [email protected] cc: (bcc: Steve Broyles/Bos/Teradyne) Subject: Broyles in Texas I am the great-grandson of Erasmus R. Broyles of Henderson Co. Texas. All I know is that family stories say he came to Texas from Mississippi sometime after the Civil War. He married Artimissa Ingram of Navarro Co. Texas in 1876 and had five children, two boys and three girls. There are other Broyles in Anderson Co. Texas (Gordon Barrett), but no family connection has been established. Can anyone help me find a connection to the Broyles family line? Thanks very much. Michael Pickel Falmouth, Maine [email protected]
Just thought I would pass this along to all my subscribers. It was posted to the List for us Listowners and I think it is a good idea. If you enjoy your Lists and are able to help out a little, Brian and Karen (the Listmasters at RootsWeb) would be sure to appreciate it. ******************Start of Copied Message******************** Another way that we can all say Thank You to Brian and Karen is to send in our own sponsorship to RootsWeb. The money that RootsWeb gets from it's sponsors goes towards paying for the equipment, hardware and software that Brian & Karen use to keep things running for all of us. Let's all do our part to keep the RootsWeb Genealogical Data Cooperative moving forward and getting better with each and every upgrade! Let the members of your mailing list know about the wonderful service that Karen & Brian provide for us as well. How to Subscribe to RootsWeb http://www.rootsweb.com/rootsweb/how-to-subscribe.html Cyndi Howells Puyallup, Washington [email protected] PSRoots-L List Pooh-Bah and Evan's Mommy! http://www.oz.net/~cyndihow/baby.gif PSRoots-L Mailing List http://www.rootsweb.com/~watpcgs/psroots.htm Cyndi's List http://www.oz.net/~cyndihow/sites.htm *****************End of Copied Message********************* I know that many of you have already sent in contributions. This message is mainly for you new users who have sub- scribed in the past 6 weeks or so. When MAISER crashed and we all lost our Lists, Brian and Karen at RootsWeb graciously accepted transfer of the Lists to RootsWeb, and waived the usual costs for Listowners. They had to purchase an entire new computer system to handle the increased mail and since have had to add even more hardware and software. Most of us Listowners mailed in our subscriptions in spite of the fact that we didn't have to do so. Some of us even sent in two or more subscriptions. RootsWeb is the home of ROOTS-L, probably the "premier" genealogy Newsgroup and List on the Net/Web. RootsWeb is not a profit-making enterprise -- it exists because Brian and Karen believe in what they do, and because of their charitable nature. Both have full-time jobs and handle all the necessary chores of keeping RootsWeb working in their spare time. (I, for one, don't believe they really have any "spare time".) So, if YOU feel charitable, please go to the URL mentioned above and check out the various subscription plans. You will surely find one that fits your budget. If I have any millionaire subscribers on any of my Lists, you can send in fifty thousand or so and we'll all appreciate it. (Just kidding -- GRIN!) Happy Hunting and Enjoy the Lists, SgtGeorge mailto:[email protected] George W. Durman 925 Kevin Rd. Knoxville, TN 37923-2540 (423)470-4853 BROYLES-L ListOwner CULLOP-L ListOwner CROCKETT-L ListOwner DURMAN-L ListOwner GAROUTTE-L ListOwner LOVETTE-L ListOwner WILHITE-L ListOwner WILKINSON-L ListOwner GERMANNA_COLONIES (Temporary) ListOwner CFT-WIN-L ListOwner HOMESPUN-L ListOwner RESEARCH-HOWTO-L ListOwner SURNAME-QUERY-L ListOwner BROYLES Newsgroup Moderator (alt.family-names.broyles) CULLOP Newsgroup Moderator (alt.family-names.cullop) DURMAN Newsgroup Moderator (alt.family-names.durman) WILHITE Newsgroup Moderator (alt.family-names.wilhite) BROYLES/BRILES Family History Web Page: http://www.concentric.net/~sgtgeorg/index.shtml
I am the great-grandson of Erasmus R. Broyles of Henderson Co. Texas. All I know is that family stories say he came to Texas from Mississippi sometime after the Civil War. He married Artimissa Ingram of Navarro Co. Texas in 1876 and had five children, two boys and three girls. There are other Broyles in Anderson Co. Texas (Gordon Barrett), but no family connection has been established. Can anyone help me find a connection to the Broyles family line? Thanks very much. Michael Pickel Falmouth, Maine [email protected]
From: Alice Ellingsberg \ PRODIGY: (CHCF07A) To: Wayne Hicks \ PRODIGY: (DPSK27A) Hi Wayne, I don't know if you have it, but here is the actual info for Robert Broyles from the 1870 census, Anderson Co. SC, Broadaway Twp. p. 420, ln 8, dw. 55, fm 55 Broyles Robert 45 male black all b. SC Malinda 37 Adeline 15 Julia A 14 Paul 13 Zachariah 11 Samuel 10 Ann 8 Major 6 Robert 4 Ida 2 also on page 421, line 7. fam. 59 dw. 59 Jenkins Ned 46 male black b. VA Mary 36 SC Broyles Mary 75 VA Thinkin' Mary was Mary's daughter and Robert's sister. Whaddya think? Also, all the other Broyles names you have in Broadway Co. are teenagers , working as farm laborers or house servants. One more thing...the Kays and the Mattisons were there...in the same twp . Now I am going to go light fireworks..... Alice......ttyl..... ------- FORWARD, End of original message ------- -=[Wayne]=- "The successful man will profit from his mistakes and try again in a different way."
Here is tonights evaluation of EUDORA LITE from the popular site, TUCOWS. Check it out. =========== Eudora Light Version Number: 3.0.2 Beta 5 Revision Date: June 21, 1997 File Name: el302b5.exe Byte Size: 4,229,150 License: Postcardware. Also Available: Windows 95 Version Homepage: http://www.eudora.com/winlight301b.html Description: Probably the most popular email applications on the net, Eudora Light is the trimmed down version of Eudora Pro. With it's powerful and easy to use interface, it's no surprise. Rated at 5 Cows ================ SgtGeorge
We received the following from Karen Isaacson, one of the ListMasters at RootsWeb, about problems at JUNO.COM. If you receive this, belatedly, are a JUNO user, and wonder why you have not received email from the Lists, this is the reason. ============= All Juno members to all RootsWeb lists have been temporarily unsubscribed. Please don't add them back to your lists, at least, not if you want the non-Juno subscribers to reliably receive messages. Juno has their inbound mail so badly broken right now that it essentially grabs and holds onto any site that tries to deliver mail to them. If we end up with too many ports open to Juno, we simply have to kill the mail job, and anyone on the list after the Juno subscriber doesn't receive their e-mail. We're monitoring the situation, and as soon as Juno is fixed, we'll add all those subscribers back. Thank you for your cooperation in this matter... Karen =============== This may seem self-serving and un-sympathetic, BUT it seems that certain servers that offer "free" or "very cheap" service, are constantly having problems with this sort of thing. Don't get me wrong, you are free to use whatever service you choose; however, from experience, I have found that "you get what you pay for" is not just a truism. It accurately describes the level of service that you will receive as far as your email business is concerned. I tried JUNO. Didn't like the interface or the service. Had been a Concentric Net user, almost from the inception of that service. Went back to it, of course. AOL has, of late, become almost as bad as far as email satisfaction. Why not "bite the bullet" and pay for an ISP connection, independent of AOL, CompuServe, Prodigy, JUNO, etc., etc., and ENJOY doing your email, without all the hassle? You can access a list of ISP (Internet Service Providers) at this URL: http://thelist.internet.com/ I will recommend Concentric Net as one of the most trouble- free providers on the Net/Web. Not because it happens to be the one I use, but because of recent ratings of ISP's by PC Magazine and other sources. Concentric has consistently been rated in the tot 5 of all ISP's in the country. Please check out ALL the ISP's that you find at the above URL, check the prices, what is offered, etc. There are many out there that will give you virtually trouble free service: IX.NET, SPRY.COM, COMSTAR.NET, DELPHI.COM, EARTHLINK.NET, MCI.NET, NETCOM.COM, USEMAIL.NET, etc. The above list is, in no way, an endorsement of the various ISP's, nor means that these are the only ones that are available. They are just some that subscribers to my Lists use and seem to have to have no problems with. Go to the URL above and check out ALL of them. This email is provided as a public service for those of you who are having problems with your email server. If you are not satisfied with the one you now use, check out others. SgtGeorge mailto:[email protected] George W. Durman 925 Kevin Rd. Knoxville, TN 37923-2540 (423)470-4853 BROYLES-L ListOwner CULLOP-L ListOwner CROCKETT-L ListOwner DURMAN-L ListOwner GAROUTTE-L ListOwner LOVETTE-L ListOwner WILHITE-L ListOwner WILKINSON-L ListOwner GERMANNA_COLONIES (Temporary) ListOwner CFT-WIN-L ListOwner HOMESPUN-L ListOwner RESEARCH-HOWTO-L ListOwner SURNAME-QUERY-L ListOwner BROYLES Newsgroup Moderator (alt.family-names.broyles) CULLOP Newsgroup Moderator (alt.family-names.cullop) DURMAN Newsgroup Moderator (alt.family-names.durman) WILHITE Newsgroup Moderator (alt.family-names.wilhite) BROYLES/BRILES Family History Web Page: http://www.concentric.net/~sgtgeorg/index.shtml
Cynthia Crigler posted this today on the GERMANNA_COLONIES-L List and I thought you might be interested. It does indeed explain why names have different spellings and sometimes why we have problems in our research. Can you imagine that one of your ancestors was named RACHMANINOFF? Would this person perhaps have written it down as ROCKMEOFF? ROCKETMANOFF? ROCKMANANDOFF? The possibilities are endless. SgtGeorge =========== >>Listowner Note: The following is a real note sent from a census >>taker in the 1800s to the government. This may explain why a >>lot of us have variations in the spellings of our names. LOL >> >>centsus rekurds "I am a cencus taker for the city of Bufflow. Our >>city has groan very fast in resent years and now, in 1865, it has >>becum a hard and time consooming job to count all the peephill. >>Thare is not meny that can do this werk, as it is necesarie to >>have a ejucashun, which a lot of pursons still do not have. Another >>atribeart needed for this job is good speling, for meny of the >>peephill to be caounted can hardle speek inglish, let alone spel >>there name." =========== George W. Durman [email protected]
Someone asked if Mayflower, AR still exists. Indeed it does. This type of question can be easily answered via the web. To find out if a town exists, where a stream or creek or hollow is located, the location of a church or cemetery, try the following link: http://www-nmd.usgs.gov/www/gnis/gnisform.html Plug in "Mayflower" and "AR" and you'll get map showing the location of the village. It's located half way between Conway and Little Rock.
At 06:22 PM 6/30/97 -0500, you wrote: > >All, > Rec'd death certificate for my great-grandfather's sister, Lillie >Ella Broyles Collins. She married a Sam Collins. They lived in AR >Faulkner County. Lillie Ella was 87 years old when she passed away >from pneumonia on 10/23/1972. I don't have much information about her >. Her parents were Robert & Malinda Broyles. No maiden name given >on her mother. I thought she was buried in town called Conway, AR, >however, the death certificate says that she lived and died in Mayflower >, AR. Does anyone know if Mayflower, AR is still around? >peace.... > -=[Wayne]=- >"There is no right way to do the wrong thing." > Yes. Mayflower still exists pop. 1,500 or so, and has become a bedroom community of Little Rock and Conway. It is located between the two, about 10 miles S. of Conway and 15 miles N. of Little Rock just off of I-40.> Steve Bryles
Several subscribers have asked me how to Search the Archives for messages with specific content. Below is what I copied from the RootsWeb web site. PLEASE, read all of it before you attempt to do it yourself. Keep in mind that this message was directed to us Listowners; however, the same procedures apply to you as a subscriber. Just follow the instructions EXACTLY AS GIVEN. PLEASE, note that all the instructions are sent to the address with the "-request". If you leave out that element, your mail will just come to the List and nothing will happen To make it absolutely clear, here is an example: Send your request to: [email protected] NOT to: [email protected] (Replace WHATEVER with the name of the List you are searching.) Your Listowner, SgtGeorge ========================== Search Features for a RootsWeb Mailing List From a message posted on 8 April to the RootsWeb listowners mailing list... Searching your archives: It can be done. We've not made a lot of noise about it before because the implications for the lists with large archives, such as ROOTS-L, are a bit scary: the "search engine" that SmartList uses is the Unix grep command. So if your list has had more than 3000 messages posted, we'd rather your users did not use the SmartList search feature. But if your list has had that many messages, let us know and we'll get a WWW search up as soon as we can. See: http://searches.rootsweb.com/roots-l.search.html to see what we did for ROOTS-L and its archive of nearly 200,000 messages.) And time allowing, we'll put up WWW searches of all the public lists, no matter whether they've had 3000 messages or not. Meanwhile, most of our lists here at RootsWeb have had substantially fewer than 3000 messages posted to them. So, how do you search the archives of your list? I'm a great believer in examples. Here's the sequence for KEITHLEY-L, a non-digested mailing list. (Margaret, GEN-MARKET, being a digest, will work a bit differently. I'll try to point out the differences as I go...) Search requests are sent to the -request for the mailing list. The subject line should say archive. If I wanted to search for the name Rowland, the command I'd use would be: search Rowland latest/* Put all together, it would look like this: To: [email protected] Subject: archive -------- search Rowland latest/* The search Rowland part is probably clear. What's that latest/* on the end? Your archived messages (up to 8000 of them) are stored in an area associated with your mailing list called latest. The * is a wildcard -- it says to search all the messages for Rowland. If you had said instead search Rowland latest/1* then the search would be confined to messages whose numbers start with 1 (such as 10, 15, 111, 1254, etc.) I don't think you can specify a range -- if you wrote 23-27 it wouldn't search messages 23 through 27, it would look for a message numbered 23-27, not find it, and give up. That is, this search is kind of simple minded. But that makes it easier to use? (If the list is instead a digested list, the command instead would be: search Rowland volume97/* to search all the digests in volume97, which is where the 1997 digests are stored.) What do you get back? Something like this: From: [email protected] Date: Tue, 8 Apr 1997 10:07:01 -0700 Message-Id: <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Reply-To: [email protected] Subject: archive retrieval: search Rowland latest/* search Rowland latest/* BEGIN---------------cut here------------------ latest/12:24: Rowland family and the German Baptist Brethren church latest/16:23: My Great-grandfather, Baptist Rev. Homer Rowland of the Flatonia, Texas latest/16:24: area, was the son of Judge Robert A. Rowland and Olive Ann (Keithley) latest/16:25: Rowland of Howard County, Missouri. (Married 7 April 1846, probably in Boone latest/46:26: Thomas Rowland, Hary Grigsby and A. Grigsby, attended his funeral. After latest/47:22: His brothers and his nephews, Thomas Rowland, Harry Grigsby and A. latest/47:25: Note on this sentence: Thomas Rowland was a son of Olive Keithley Rowland, latest/47:26: wife of Robert A. Rowland. Harry and A. Grigsby were sons of Sarah Keithley What do you do with that? Well, first, note that odd "Reply-to:" line. It's bound to alarm some of your subscribers, but is actually innocuous. It's either to prevent mail loops or perhaps to make sure that the subject line, when they order the messages, isn't "Subject: Re: archive retrieval." (SmartList doesn't process messages with subject lines like that, it sends 'em straight to you.) The rest of the report is a listing of lines in which it found Rowland. (I think if you want ROWLAND you should ask for ROWLAND, though those of you who know grep might try something like search -i Rowland latest/* to see what happens). Consider this line: latest/47:26: wife of Robert A. Rowland. Harry and A. Grigsby were sons of Sarah Keithley The first bit, before the first colon, is latest/47. That says that this line is from message 47. The next bit, between the two colons, is 26 -- the line shown is the 26th line of that messages. And the rest of it is the line from the message itself. If you want to see the whole message, you can. You again write to the list's -request address, using a subject line that says: archive The command is: get latest/47 to get the 47th message (or get volume97/23 to get the 23rd digest from 1997.) SmartList is very finicky about case: get Latest/47 Will not work. Extra spaces confuse it, too -- note that there are no spaces in latest/47. Put together, the message looks something like this: To: [email protected] Subject: archive -------- get latest/47 What do I get back? See below... From: [email protected] To: [email protected] Reply-To: [email protected] Subject: archive retrieval: latest/47 >From [email protected] Wed Mar 26 11:21:08 1997 Received: from bl-4.rootsweb.com ([email protected] [204.212.38.29]) by bl-12.rootsweb.com (8.7.5/8.7.3) with SMTP id LAA09218 for ; Wed, 26 Mar 1997 11:21:08 -0800 Received: from mailrvao1.er.usgs.GOV (mailrvao1.er.usgs.gov [130.11.62.8]) by bl-4.rootsweb.com (8.6.12/8.6.9) with ESMTP id LAA23614 for ; Wed, 26 Mar 1997 11:24:47 -0800 Received: from cnethaway.usgs.gov ([130.11.63.31]) by mailrvao1.er.usgs.GOV (EMAIL 1.2.1) with SMTP id OAA07353 for ; Wed, 26 Mar 1997 14:23:47 -0500 Message-Id: <[email protected]> X-Sender: [email protected] X-Mailer: Windows Eudora Light Version 1.5.4 (32) Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Wed, 26 Mar 1997 14:24:40 -0500 To: [email protected] From: Charles Nethaway Subject: Joseph H. Keithley b 1823 -- cont. From the Booneville Weekly Advertiser, 16 May 1890 (Missouri) Obituary: Joseph H. Keithley, 1823-1890, Howard County, Missouri Joseph H. Keithley was born November 11, 1823, in Bourbon County, Kentucky, and died in Booneville, Missouri, May 12, 1890. ... His brothers and his nephews, Thomas Rowland, Harry Grigsby and A. Grigsby, attended his funeral. ... Note on this sentence: Thomas Rowland was a son of Olive Keithley Rowland, wife of Robert A. Rowland. Harry and A. Grigsby were sons of Sarah Keithley Grigsby, wife of A.H. Grigsby of Fayette, Howard, Missouri. Olive and Sarah were sisters of Joseph.
Thought you might be interested in the following URL: http://members.aol.com/TRoyalty/Royalty.html It is entitled "Vicki Royalty's Million Genealogy Links". I doubt that she has a "million" links (grin), but having checked it out, I can say that she has a bunch !!!!! SgtGeorge
Do you have any information as to this persons parentage. I am an Engleman by birth and have worked hard on the Augusta VA to Floyd CO IN Engleman but know nothing of the early KY Englemans of which there seem to be few. The first in Floyd CO was Philip Engleman, children and grandchildren. He was born about 1752 so Latetia could be a granddaughter or great granddaughter if she ties into that branch. I have a lot of VA-IN ties. Clarice Snyder [email protected] Latetia ENGLEMAN MARRIAGE LICENSE: 10 Jun 1830, KY, Lincoln [189] To Morgan BROYLES , son of Zacharias BROYLES and Elizabeth CHRISTOPHER Notes Generation 5 U.S. Census Records Year Name Loc Age BP Occ Roll E.D. Page 1850 Broils, Littitia IL, Edgar 41 KY 105 116
All, Rec'd death certificate for my great-grandfather's sister, Lillie Ella Broyles Collins. She married a Sam Collins. They lived in AR Faulkner County. Lillie Ella was 87 years old when she passed away from pneumonia on 10/23/1972. I don't have much information about her . Her parents were Robert & Malinda Broyles. No maiden name given on her mother. I thought she was buried in town called Conway, AR, however, the death certificate says that she lived and died in Mayflower , AR. Does anyone know if Mayflower, AR is still around? peace.... -=[Wayne]=- "There is no right way to do the wrong thing."
Hi everyone - I want to invite everyone to stop by my site: Cyndi's List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet http://www.oz.net/~cyndihow/sites.htm This site has over 21,300 categorized & cross-referenced links in over 70 different categories on over 195 separate web pages! I update the site daily and work diligently to keep the links as current as possible. Several categories have been recently re-organized a bit and there are a few new categories as well. The latest are "Hit a Brick Wall?", "Biographies", "Family Bibles", "Occupations" and "Railroads." Acadian, Cajun & Creole Adoption African-American Asia & The Pacific Australia & New Zealand Austria Belgium Biographies Books, Microfilm & Microfiche Calendars & Dates Canada General Canada Sites Alberta British Columbia Manitoba New Brunswick Newfoundland and Labrador Northwest Territories & The Yukon Nova Scotia Ontario Prince Edward Island Quebec Saskatchewan Cemeteries, Funeral Homes & Obituaries Census Related Sites Worldwide Databases, Search Sites, Surname Lists Eastern Europe Events & Activities Family Bibles Finding People Phone Numbers, E-Mail Addresses, Mailing Addresses, Places, Etc. France Germans From Russia Germany Handy Online Starting Points Heraldry Hispanic, Central & South America, & The West Indies Including Mexico, Latin America and the Caribbean Historical Events & People Hit a Brick Wall? How To Huguenot Humor & Prose Italy Jewish Land Records, Deeds, Homesteads, Etc. LDS & Family History Centers Libraries, Archives & Museums Magazines, Journals, Columns, Newsletters & Pamphlets Maps, Gazetteers & Geographical Information Medieval Mennonite Military Resources Worldwide Native American The Netherlands Newsgroups & Mailing Lists Newspapers Occupations Odds & Ends Personal Home Pages Photographs & Memories Poland Professional Researchers, Volunteers & Other Research Services Quaker Queries Railroads Recipes, Cookbooks & Family Traditions Religion & Churches ROOTS-L & RootsWeb Royalty & Nobility Scandinavia & The Nordic Countries General Scan. & Nordic Sites Denmark Finland Iceland Norway Sweden Search Engines Ships, Passenger Lists & Immigration Societies & Groups Software & Computers South Africa Spain, Portugal & The Basques Supplies, Charts, Forms, Etc. Surnames, Family Associations & Family Newsletters Switzerland Terms, Phrases, Dictionaries & Glossaries United Kingdom & Ireland Index General UK Sites Channel Islands England Ireland & Northern Ireland Isle of Man Scotland Wales United States An individual page for each U.S. state plus General U.S. Sites Library of Congress National Archives Social Security Territories & Possessions U.S. - Census U.S. - Civil War ~ ~ War for Southern Independence U.S. - Military USGenWeb & WorldGenWeb Projects Western Europe Please use the site as your own personal set of genealogy bookmarks! Successful surfing, Cyndi Howells [email protected] Cyndi's List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet http://www.oz.net/~cyndihow/sites.htm Cyndi's Genealogy Home Page Construction Kit http://www.oz.net/~cyndihow/construc.htm Tacoma-Pierce County Genealogical Society http://www.rootsweb.com/~watpcgs/tpcgs.htm Cyndi Howells <[email protected]>
MR WAYNE HICKS wrote: > > > Dear Wayne and Alice: I saw your recent post and wanted to contact > both of > > you. I am a descendant of the Adam Broyles line down thru his dau who > married > > Jos Brown down thru Mackey Brown and his dau who married John Boston, > etc I > > have several DAR Apps which were mentioned on Adam B...Also on the Jos > > Brown Sr and Jr....Will be happy to exchange info on this most > interesting > > Family. Regards, Lowrey McNeel in Atlanta [email protected] > > > > Hi Lowrey, > Thanx for taking the time to share this information with us. I > beleive that Alice wrote you already. She is my mentor/coach on the > research of my BROYLES lineage...so, I'll defer to her judgement. I > hope that we are able to find something about the African American link > to Adam, Aaron and others in the Broyles clan! > > -=[Wayne]=- > "There is no right way to do the wrong thing." On the Adam Broyles you mentioned I didn't find any African American connection. But I do have their line Adam Broyles and wife Mary ? Jemima (Mima) Broyles md 1782 Washington Co.,?Tn to Joseph Brown, who was b. 28,Oct.1760, d.28, Oc.t 1800 in Franklin Co.,GA He served as a private in the Rev. from NC serving under Capt. Moore and Col. Sevier. time of service 18 months. They had 8 ch.Their son Mackey Brown,b. 11,Feb.1797 Habersham Co.,GA,d.24,Mar.1874 Canton, GA,md. 23,Feb.1816 near Shelbyville,TN,to Sally Rice,b.12,Deb. 1797,d. Marietta,Ga 10,May1874, the dau. of Daingerfield and Margaret Loony Rice.13 ch. Sally Melissa Brown the 11th child. was b. 7,May 1837,d.30,May 1911 at Marietta,GA, md. 11,July 1861 to John Houser Boston,who was b. 10,Mar.1837,d.14,Jan.1915. Lived all his live in Marietta,GA 8 children. If you need their children let me. know. I had told you about a week ago I would send you this. Ken Broyles [email protected]
> Dear Wayne and Alice: I saw your recent post and wanted to contact both of > you. I am a descendant of the Adam Broyles line down thru his dau who married > Jos Brown down thru Mackey Brown and his dau who married John Boston, etc I > have several DAR Apps which were mentioned on Adam B...Also on the Jos > Brown Sr and Jr....Will be happy to exchange info on this most interesting > Family. Regards, Lowrey McNeel in Atlanta [email protected] > Hi Lowrey, Thanx for taking the time to share this information with us. I beleive that Alice wrote you already. She is my mentor/coach on the research of my BROYLES lineage...so, I'll defer to her judgement. I hope that we are able to find something about the African American link to Adam, Aaron and others in the Broyles clan! -=[Wayne]=- "There is no right way to do the wrong thing."
Hi Gem. There hasn't been any traffic lately. Guess no one has any questions about their BROYLES line. SgtGeorge At 18:52 06/28/97 -0400, you wrote: >Have not received a letter saying I've been removed from list, but get no >mail from it? Why? Gem
Have not received a letter saying I've been removed from list, but get no mail from it? Why? Gem
A note to subscribers of all my RootsWeb Lists: It has been brought to my attention that some of you have been removed from the subscribers list, and think that I personally removed you. This needs clarification. 1) If your mailbox fills up at your ISP, the ISP will not accept any more mail. Then, a message goes back to RootsWeb, stating that your mailbox is full. This is called a "bounce". When the "robot" at the RootsWeb server receives a pre- determined number of "bounces", usually 4 or 5, you are AUTOMATICALLY removed from the subscriber list. We seem to have the most problems with AOL users, CompuServe users, Juno users, and other ISP's where the mailbox limit is rather low. My advice to you is if you have a limit on your mailbox which is low, make sure you download often. If you are going to be away for a couple of days, please have the courtesy of unsubscribing BEFORE you leave. When you return you can subscribe again. 2) All of us, from time to time, have problems with our ISP due to its being down for repairs, re-programming, installation of new hardware or software, or having other problems which cause it to be unavailable for receiving email. When this happens, of course all messages to any user of that particular ISP will be "bounced". This causes the same automatic response by the "robot" at RootsWeb. After 4 or 5 "bounces", you WILL be removed from mailing lists at RootsWeb. 3) All error messages concerning "bounces" are sent to me as Listowner. Usually, if I see these errors for two days in a row, and the cause is a full mailbox, I WILL go ahead and manually remove the user, before the "robot" does it. This is to prevent overload on the RootsWeb server, AND on my own system. 4) Just because you have been removed from a subscription list, don't assume you have done something wrong. If there is a question, send me a private email. Heck, it has been known for a Listowner to be removed from his/her own List !!!!! 5) If I EVER remove someone for cause, e.g., unacceptable behavior on a List, unacceptable language, etc., I WILL send a private message to the user, explaining why he/she was removed. If you are removed AND don't receive a message from me telling you why, then you haven't done anything wrong. The removal was due to a full mailbox, or because of technical problems with your ISP. 6) If you are removed for any reason other than violating the rules of the List, and you want to retrieve messages that you missed while not subscribed, you can always retrieve the archives for the List. You will find instructions for this in a separate email from me to this List. 7) If you have ANY questions on this subject, send me a private email and we will discuss it. SgtGeorge Listowner
Here are the instructions for retrieving archives of past messages on this List: (Please read ALL of this message !!!!!) ************************************ Send a message to [email protected] In the subject, type: archive In the body, type: ls volume97 (The above is "el" "ess", not "one" "ess", and the "97" tells the RootsWeb server that you want a list of archives for the year 1997.) You get back a message that looks something like this: From [email protected] Jun 21 11:50:36 1997 Date: Sat, 21 Jun 1997 08:47:22 -0700 From: [email protected] Reply to: [email protected] To: [email protected] Subject: archive retrieval: ls volume97 ls -l volume97 BEGIN---------------cut here------------------ volume97: total 107 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 6509 May 27 09:40 1 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 4631 Jun 8 18:11 10 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 6091 Jun 11 07:31 11 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 2465 Jun 14 18:17 12 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 3336 Jun 16 03:52 13 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 5078 Jun 17 12:55 14 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 2200 Jun 18 09:53 15 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 1243 Jun 19 09:53 16 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 6697 May 28 11:49 2 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 12819 May 29 08:19 3 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 4464 May 30 04:29 4 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 4422 May 31 06:07 5 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 7293 Jun 3 09:20 6 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 12527 Jun 4 04:35 7 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 8894 Jun 5 04:08 8 -rw-rw---- 1 slist slist 9516 Jun 7 16:46 9 END-----------------cut here------------------ (You can ignore everything in the headers and in the first three columns in the body. The information you are interested in is in the last column. There are three pieces of information in this 4th column: 1) the file size; 2) the date of the archive file; 3) the file number.) (Example: For the archive file of all messages received by the List on the 3rd of June, it is 7,293 bytes in size and its number is 6.) Looking at the dates of the digest, you determine that you want messages 8 through 16 (June 5 through June 19). The file number is the last entry on each line. Send another message to: [email protected] In the subject, type: archive In the body, type: get volume97/8 volume97/9 volume97/1? where "?" is a UNIX wild-card meaning "any character"; "1?" will expand to 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19. You should get back all of those files as individual messages. For another List, substitute its name for "BROYLES". ************************************ Please NOTE: Messages to retrieve archives are sent to: [email protected] not to: [email protected] or [email protected] or [email protected] Also note that the line: get volume97/8 volume97/9 volume97/1? Is typed with no space between "volume" and "97/X", but with a space between each "volume97/X". If you have any problems with retrieving archives, please send me a private post; DO NOT send your requests for help to the List. Hope this helps, SgtGeorge