Hello, Fellow Coble Researchers, I think I have established for certain that my ggGrandfather was HENRY CLAY COBLE, son of ADAM 'ANTHONY' COBLE and MARIA BARBARA SUMMERS, daughter of Capt. Peter Summers of GUILFORD CO. N.C. There is much controversy on the COBLE digest about the parents of ADAM "ANTHONY" COBLE. From my research I have come to believe that he was NOT the son of ANTHONY 'ANTONIUS' COBLE, b. l7l7, but was probably the son of ADAM GEORGE COBLE, b.1727 in Ger. d.in Tenn. m. ANNA MARGARETHA LOFFEL 'SPOON' IN Pa. Can anyone assure me that this is correct? Mary E. (Coble Granddaughter)
These standards are recommended by the National Genealogical Society. Copyright in 1997 by the National Genealogical Society, permission is granted. Jean Kobel and Coble list manager Remembering always that they are engaged in a quest for truth, family history researchers consistently....... 1. record the source for each item of information they collect. 2. test every hypothesis or theory against credible evidence, and reject those that are not supported by the evidence. 3. seek original records, or reproduced images of them when there is reasonable assurance they have not been altered, as the basis for their research conclusions. 4. use compilations, communications and published works, whether paper or electronic, primarily for their values as guides to locating the original records. 5. state something as a fact only when it is supported by convincing evidence, and identify the evidence when communicating the fact to others. 6. limit with words like "probable" or "possible" any statement that is based on less then convincing evidence, and state the reasons for concluding that it is probable or possible. 7. avoid misleading other researchers by either intentionally or carelessly distributing or publishing inaccurate information. 8. state carefully and honestly the results of their own research, and acknowledge all use of other researchers' work. 9. recognize the collegial nature of genealogical research by making their work available to others through publication, or by placing in appropriate libraries or repositories, and by welcoming critical comment. 10. consider with open minds new evidence or the comments of others on their work and the conclusions they have reached.
Welcome to our group! My goodness, you say it and you mean it! The following records are from the books _York County Church Records of the 18th Century_ by Bates and Wright, Volumes 1-3 This is wonderful stuff and I am most grateful. I hope I can pass along the help . Now if you'll excuse me, I have some names to enter in my database! (Thanks again) Ben
Charles wrote me the following-- ... Antonius Anthony Coble b. aug 24, 1717, son of Johann George and Maria Barbara Geisler, I have his Children as Barbara Glass Elazabith Smith Eve Glass Molly Shatterly Torley Graves Mary Graves Catren Coble George Ludwig David His will was 1794 and he list theese as his children. According to this there was no ANTHONY from Antonius-- at least not living when then will was made. I have a question however. If his will was written (or was that a probate date?) in 1794. When did he die? I have May 24, 1790. Diana ddavis@logicsouth.com My Genealogy site updated 9/10/2000: http://www.my-ged.com/davis/
Does anyone know who this Anthony is or any dates about this family? Diana ddavis@logicsouth.com My Genealogy site updated 9/10/2000: http://www.my-ged.com/davis/
Israel Holt & Barbara Coble Administrators of Anthony Coble Junior Deceased of Orange to Peter Waggoner of Guilofrd, one thousand dollars paid to Anthony Coble Deceased, 174 acres, Anthony Coble had given Waggoner a bond to make a deed, begin at a hicory stump and forked sourwood on bank of Haw R., S 31 ch. to a white oak, black jack & red oak, S76E 40 ch. 17 lk. to a red oak on bank of branch, down branch 80 ch. to a post oak, E21 ch. 75 lk. to a post aok, S 2 ch to a stake, E6 1/2 ch to hicory, N 9ch. to an ash on bank of river, up same to beginning, signed: Israel Holt, Barbara Coble wit: Kaniel Hofhine & Jno Gibson, Achknwledged Ausust Term 1811 So there was a Anthony Sr. and there is a Anthony Coble in Rockcastle, KY in the 1820 census but this can not be this Anthony Coble. Jannine Coble Gregory
From: Ggcable@aol.com The Caspar (Cable) Goebell mentioned was born 1755 in Rodenhausen, Germany, m. 1780 in Randolph Co., NC to Elizabeth Baker, b. 1761 in Maryland. Casper Cable died 1827 in Carter Co., TN, buried in Johnson Co., TN. Elizabeth died 1850, in Carter Co., TN, buried in Johnson Co., TN. Their children: Jacob Cable, b. 1781; John Baker Cable, b. 1783; Elizabeth Cable, b. 1785; Conrad Cable, b. 1787; Benjamin C. Cable, b. 1789; Joseph Cable, b. 1791; Peter Cable b. 1792; Sarah Cable, b. 1795; Casper "Hooker" Cable, Jr., b. 1798; Samuel C. Cable, b. 1800; Daniel Cable, b. 1803. C. Cable
Jannine. Do you have a Maria Barbara COBLE, daughter of Antonius and Anna Maria AMICK, who was also born abt 1841? She married Philip GLASS. Diana ddavis@logicsouth.com My Genealogy site updated 9/10/2000: http://www.my-ged.com/davis/
Yes, I have a Barbara Coble b abt 1756 d/o Anthony and Anna Maria Emig that Married Phillip Glass. Jannine Coble Gregory ----- Original Message ----- From: Diana Davis <ddavis@logicsouth.com> To: <COBLE-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, October 21, 2000 5:29 PM Subject: Re: [COBLE] Re: COBLE-D Digest V00 #34 > Jannine. Do you have a Maria Barbara COBLE, daughter of Antonius and > Anna Maria AMICK, who was also born abt 1841? She married Philip > GLASS. > > Diana ddavis@logicsouth.com > My Genealogy site updated 9/10/2000: http://www.my-ged.com/davis/ > > > > > ============================== > Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the #1 > Source for Family History Online. Go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11HB >
Mary, you stated that Henry Clay Coble was your gggrandfather and he was the son of this Adam, Anthony Coble. Henry Clay Coble was the son of Adam Coble and Maria Belle Summers. Please let me know what you have about this we may be onto something here Jannine Coble Gregory ----- Original Message ----- From: <mrojscw@juno.com> To: <COBLE-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, October 20, 2000 8:19 AM Subject: [COBLE] Re: COBLE-D Digest V00 #34 > I would like confirmation that GEORGE ADAM COBLE who married > ANNA MARGARETHA LOFFEL were the parents of Adam (anthony) COBLE who > married MARIA BARBARA SUMMERS May 31, 1803. MARIA BARBARA was the > daughter of CAPT. PETER SUMMERS and ROSINA CLAPP. HENRY CLAY COBLE, > the son of ADAM and MARIA BARBARA, WAS MY GG GRANDFATHER. I am trying > to link all of these people iinto a family tree, but I need help. Thank > you. Mary E. > > > ============================== > Visit Ancestry's Library - The best collection of family history > learning and how-to articles on the Internet. > http://www.ancestry.com/learn/library >
Mary, I have that Anthony (Antonius)Coble b 1717 had a son Anthony b 1741, this Anthony had a son b 1776 Anthony that married Maria Barbara Summers daughter of Peter Summers, I have from census records this couple had 9 children and the only one I know is Elias. Jannine Coble Gregory ----- Original Message ----- From: <mrojscw@juno.com> To: <COBLE-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, October 20, 2000 8:19 AM Subject: [COBLE] Re: COBLE-D Digest V00 #34 > I would like confirmation that GEORGE ADAM COBLE who married > ANNA MARGARETHA LOFFEL were the parents of Adam (anthony) COBLE who > married MARIA BARBARA SUMMERS May 31, 1803. MARIA BARBARA was the > daughter of CAPT. PETER SUMMERS and ROSINA CLAPP. HENRY CLAY COBLE, > the son of ADAM and MARIA BARBARA, WAS MY GG GRANDFATHER. I am trying > to link all of these people iinto a family tree, but I need help. Thank > you. Mary E. > > > ============================== > Visit Ancestry's Library - The best collection of family history > learning and how-to articles on the Internet. > http://www.ancestry.com/learn/library >
This is from another list, good reading. Enjoy! Jean http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/surnames/c/a/CABLE/biographies TODAY IN THE BICENTENNIAL YEAR R.M. Cable, Emeritus Professor of Biology, Purdue University Two hundred years ago this morning, the Battle of Trenton was fought. As battles go, it was short, but as a total victory after many setbacks, it was a glorious ending for that difficult first year of the American War for Independence. Without doubt, it gave to Washington's discouraged rag-tag army a tremendous lift that would be remembered, yes, sorely needed a year later in the snows of Valley Forge. Before the battle, General Washington had retreated west from New York across New Jersey, pursued by crack British regulars and three Hessian regiments under the command of Col. Johann Gottlieb Rall. Reaching the Delaware River, Washington crossed above Philadelphia to the Pennsylvania side, taking with him all of the boats that could be found to deny their use to the enemy. However, winter was beginning and already ice was in the river. At any time, it could freeze over and the enemy walk across dry-shod. That danger had Philadelphia in a panic, and threatened disaster to the American cause. In Trenton, the enemy, confident of victory soon, settled into winter quarters and celebrated Christmas in high spirits. As dusk fell that Christmas day, loaded boats pushed out from the Pennsylvania shore as Washington's celebrated crossing of the Delaware got underway to continue most of the night. Ashore in New Jersey, he moved on Trenton with knowledge of the enemy's strength and deployment from a spy posing as Rall's butcher. The attack at daybreak was a complete surprise. In no longer than two hours B some later said less than one B the battle was over. Many of the enemy escaped by running away but most resisted until one by one, the three Hessian regiments were cornered and threw down their arms. Col. Rall was twice wounded and died the next day after Washington visited him and promised humane treatment of the prisoners. Captured enemy officers were sent to Dumfries in Virginia for interment. Enlisted men were taken across the Delaware into Pennsylvania and imprisoned at Lancaster where many German immigrants had settled. Speaking their language, captives were permitted to work for local farmers or as apprentices to trades. Some mingled with the people and lost their identity as prisoners of way; others chose to join the Americans in their struggle for independence, and had a promise of receiving a grant of land for beginning a new life when the war was over. However, more than half of the German troops captured at Trenton were exchanged with the British for American prisoners. As a result, men who left their homeland as comrades in arms came to be on opposing sides of the conflict. But that situation was to be temporary for two men, at least, both grenadiers in Rall's own regiment before their capture: one, Henrich Fines, returned to the British in a prisoner exchange; the other, Caspar Goebell who was not in the list of prisoners exchanged, presumably because he had volunteered in the Continental army. This story is about them, primarily because a Caspar Goebell was the great-great-great grandfather of the writer and another West Lafayette resident, Virginia Becker, trustee of Wabash township. At least two soldiers of that name were among the German mercenaries. Capture of the one at Trenton is recorded on the attached copy of a page from the official list in Hessisches Staatsarchiv, Marburg. No. 37 on that page, he is among the grenadiers taken to Lancaster. No. 1 is their company commander, Obristleutnant (Lt. Col.) Bretthauer, who died later at Dumfries. Less than two years after the Battle of Trenton, Fines and Goebell were together again. No record of the circumstances has been found, but more than likely, Goebell was recaptured by the British. At any rate, he and Fines found themselves in the same company of a Hessian regiment with a British expeditionary force that sailed south from New York in November, 1778. Its orders were to capture Savannah and Charleston to deny their use as seaports for supplying the Americans, and then move inland to subdue them with the help of loyalists and Indians, especially the Cherokees. Savannah was taken in December, and in the spring the enemy marched up the coast to capture Charleston. The city resisted until reinforcements arrived. Then badly outnumbered, the enemy fell back to Savannah, forced by pressure from the Americans to cross Stono River, now part of the inland waterway, to a chain of islands and to retreat along them. The Battle of Stono River was fought during the month that ! The enemy was encamped on Johns Island, the second in the chain. The regimental Monatische Liste (monthly report) for June, 1779, in the Marburg archives included the following entry in the report for the company of Major Endemann (in translation): 1 private Caspar Goebell, born at Rodenhausen, jurisdiction of Rodenberg, 24 2 years old, 5 feet 4 inches tall; [handwritten notation: possibly near present day Hannover, Germany] 1 private Henrich Fines, born at Westuffeln, jurisdiction of Zigrenberg, 20 years old, 5 feet 5 2 inches tall. Both deserted June 4 from camp on Johns Island, with full arms and equipment. Besides Goebell and Fines, five other privates and a drummer in Major Endemann's company deserted that month. As the tide began to turn against the British, the desertion rate accelerated. Before Cornwallis left North Carolina for the Virginia campaign that ended at Yorktown, he reported to the Crown that German-speaking strangers, loose in the countryside, were more responsible than combat losses and disease for the dwindling size of his forces. If the records just cited are of the same Caspar Goebell, they reconcile family legends which disagree in that one version gives capture and the other desertion as the circumstances leading to his joining the American cause. The legend handed down to the writer was one of desertion, told over 40 years ago by his grandfather whose memory and knowledge of family history were prodigious in scope and accuracy as records later would testify. He had been told that Goebell had a companion, but not his name or where they deserted, and that they escaped by setting a boat adrift, lying on the bottom, and letting the current carry them away from camp without making any noise. In 1969, the writer had a search of German records started, expecting that the surname would prove to be Kabel because south German immigrants of that name, including a Caspar Kabel, had settled in Pennsylvania a generation before the Revolutionary War. When no one named Kabel was found, the only other likely surname was Goebell, closer phonetically in German to Cable in English than is Kabel, pronounced Cobble. Also, Goebell was a common Hessian name. Because induction records are more informative as a rule than others, they were searched first but only one Caspar Goebell was found, in the regiment from Hanau, near Frankfurt a. Main. However, those records had been lost for some units, the most important of which later proved to be the companies in Rall's regiment that came to America. Found next was the record of a Caspar Goebell in the list of captives at Trenton, but because it did not agree with the legend of desertion, the search continued until one that did was found. As the translation above shows, that record more than agreed: it confirmed the legend by naming Goebell's companion in desertion and the place which explains why a boat was used. Stono River could be crossed by wading at low tide only at two places guarded by a picket boat. With the belief that the full story had been revealed, the search was called off until Norma Duff, in Ohio, sent the writer a story of capture rather than desertion that she had obtained in western North Carolina. It was stoutly maintained there to be the true account, even though a history of the county stated that Goebell deserted at the first opportunity. Mrs. Duff wondered whether both legends could be true of the same man; still unidentified was the Caspar Goebell captured at Trenton. Further inquiry proved that he could not have been the one in the Hanau regiment for who, instead, a record almost as improbable as the possibility raised by Mrs. Duff was disclosed. He deserted the British, but in 1781 and at Winchester, Virginia. After working briefly in Reading, Pennsylvania, he joined the American navy and was on the frigate South Carolina when the British captured it. He was returned to his German unit and sailed home with it after the war. ended in 1783. From his record, the possibility that another of the same name could have both been captured and deserted gained considerable credibility which was vastly increased by learning that Fines, too, was captured at Trenton and handed back to the British in a prisoner exchange that did not include Goebell. Without even induction records for Rall's regiment, the matter would be settled if the capture record were as informative as the one of desertion, or gave no more than the place of birth. As contribution to the Bicentennial Year, the Institut fur Archivwissenschaft in Marburg recently published a work entitled Hessischen Truppen im Amerikanischen Unabhängickeitskrieq (HETRINA) (Hessian Troops in the American War for Independence). The work is divided into volumes, each covering certain regiments, records of which are in the Staatsarchiv in Marburg. Of the few units not included, one is the Hanau regiment with its records in Frankfurt. Names of soldiers are listed alphabetically, and with a data line for each record pertaining to an individual. A line includes the date and place of birth if in the record, the rank, unit, type of record, its date, and a reference locating the record at Marburg. In the attached excerpts from Vol. 3, data lines 6202 and 6203 are the only ones for records of a Caspar Goebell (Kaspar Goebel) in the entire work. Both lines are for records already known to the writer: that of capture (11 in the record-type code) at Trenton; and the record of desertion (12) later at Johns Island. Giving Rodenhausen as the place of birth in the first line must have been on the assumption that both lines concern the same man, because the capture record does not mention a place of birth. Although nothing new was learned from Goebell's data lines in HETRINA, those of Henrich Fines (lines 5300 and 5301) were something else. Besides being based on the same records as were those of Goebell, they give Vinus as an alternate spelling for Fines, both pronounced Fee ' nus in German. Looking again at the capture record in which Goebell is no. 37, it is seen that no. 16 is none other than Henrich Vinus! Without a doubt, the same Henrich Fines and Caspar Goebell were captured at Trenton in 1776 and deserted at Johns Island in 1779. Hence, legends that have divided opinion among Goebell's descendants are not contradictory but complementary. Each is part of the whole truth which, with retelling, became different and incomplete accounts. Returning to Goebell and Fines, left riding the tide across Stono River, what happened when they reached the mainland is not known. Presumably, they quickly made contact with the Americans there, keeping pressure on the enemy. They may have joined the continental army then. According to family legend, Goebell was in Gen. Greene's army, and he may well have been later, after Freene was sent south the following year to replace Gates on whom rout of the Americans at the Battle of Camden was blamed. Goebell probably was still soldiering in eastern North Carolina when he met and married Elizabeth Bakr, and lost no time in starting a family. The first (1790) U.S. Census shows him as Casper Cabel with a wife and five children. He had moved from the Uwharrie River Valley in the piedmont of North Carolina to near Boone at the western end of the state. In 1800, he purchased 150 acres of land in two tracts over the border in Tennessee, and settled there. In 1826, an adjoining 100 acres! came to him in a land grant signed by the Governor of Tennessee, presumably as a belated reward for his service in the war. His will, filed in 1807, and the inventory of his estate, dated November 3, 1826, are extant. Casper and Elizabeth had nine sons and three daughters who lived to adulthood. Best knows is Peter because of his homestead in Cades Cove, Great Smoky Mt. National Park. Said to be one of the first three settlers in the cove, Peter was followed there after the Civil War by a nephew, John P. Cable, who settled at the lower end of the cove and built the water mill which has been restored and grinds cornmeal for sale to visitors to the park. Nearby is the house of his daughter, Becky, and the family cemetery in which, among other descendants of Hessian Goebell, two of his namesakes are buried. Cades Cove reminds the writer of the lush bluegrass region of his native Kentucky, the difference being that the cove is a picture complete with a frame of the surrounding mountains. In contract to the documentation known for Hessian Caspar, search has revealed nothing concerning Henrich Fines after the record of their desertion in 1779. If alive in 1790, he would have been 31, probably head of a family, and thus named in the first U.S. Census. If there, his name was changed and not recognized in the search. What may have become of him was learned by pure chance while returning from a visit to Johns Island a year ago. On Interstate 40 west of Asheville, N.C., we were startled to see an exit sign to Fines creek! Leaving the highway to make inquires, we were directed to the county library in Waynesville, expecting to learn, if anything, that the creek was named for a pioneer settler who died before the first census was taken. Instead, a history of the county stated that the creek was named for a man with a group from Tennessee, pursuing Indians who had stolen horses. At the creek, which was frozen over, they ambushed the group and killed Fines. To continu! e the chase, Fines' companions put his body under the ice for burial on the way back, but when they returned, the ice had moved out and the body could not be found. The absence of official records of Fines, the locality of this account, and other circumstances make a strong case for the names of Fines Creek being the last rite for Caspar's companion in arms, captivity, and desertion. As pertinent as the sign to Fines Creek may be to this story , but certainly not intentionally so, is another seen on that trip. At the Johns Island end of the bridge to the mainland, that sign reads: CABLE CROSSING [Please note that this article was received by the contributor around 1984 from a relative of the author. I have none of the attachments mentioned in the article and have determined that Casper Cable was not my ancestor, nor do I have any additional information on this family. My sole purpose in contributing the above is that it may be beneficial to others researching the Cable surname.] Shirley Cable Adler
Mary, Ben and others researching this line. Ben-I think that you are "speaking" to me when you asked for the source for the marriage record and birth record for Anna Margaretha LOFFEL and her siblings. The source is included in my message, the volume and page number. If I have not answered your question, please let me know. Mary-There are several people on this list that also descend from this line. Can anyone help here? I suggest that you check the archives at RootsWeb. This is where all the messages to the list are stored. The address is: http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/listsearch.pl type in KOBEL, then you can be specific using a name. For example, Barbara SUMMERS. It will bring up all the previous messages that contain the words Barbara Summers. Please continue to send your replies to the list so that we can follow this thread. Jean Kobel and Coble list manager
I would like confirmation that GEORGE ADAM COBLE who married ANNA MARGARETHA LOFFEL were the parents of Adam (anthony) COBLE who married MARIA BARBARA SUMMERS May 31, 1803. MARIA BARBARA was the daughter of CAPT. PETER SUMMERS and ROSINA CLAPP. HENRY CLAY COBLE, the son of ADAM and MARIA BARBARA, WAS MY GG GRANDFATHER. I am trying to link all of these people iinto a family tree, but I need help. Thank you. Mary E.
Here are various news items from RootsWeb that may be of interest to you. Jean Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the No. 1 Source for Family History Online. Search more than 600 MILLION NAMES and trace your family tree today. Go to: www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11GC One of my favorites........keep up with all the new archive submissions to USGENWeb. They include census records, cemeteries online and other important research aides that volunteers have transcribed. This list is announce only, no discussion here. USGW-ARCHIVES-ANNOUNCE-L is a read-only mailing list for weekly announcements of new updates and submissions to the USGenWeb Archives. To subscribe, send e-mail that says only SUBSCRIBE in the body of the message to this address: usgw-archives-announce-L-request@rootsweb.com RESPONSE TO COMMENTS ON FamilyDiscovery.com. Many of our readers have expressed concern, outrage, and frustration at the FamilyDiscovery.com site. MyFamily.com, including RootsWeb and Ancestry, is currently investigating these concerns, and will respond as appropriate under current Fair Use Copyright and Truth in Advertising laws. In the meantime, users who have their own concerns or conflicts with this site can file their own complaint directly with the Federal Trade Commission's (FTC) Bureau of Consumer Protection by visiting https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/complaint.htm The FTC has the power to investigate your concerns regarding FamilyDiscovery.com, and to take appropriate action.
----- Original Message ----- From: "James Pederson" <jhpeder@soback.kornet.nm.kr> ===================================================================== > Source: GC- Shelby Co. Oh Queries > URL: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/Oh/Shelby/277 > Subject: James Riley Cox-Shelby County > > > Surname: COX, COBLE, CARTMILL, COON > ------------------------- > > Looking for confirmation on the parents of James Riley COX (1821-1902). > He married Nancy CARTMILL (1838-1920) on 26 october 1876 in Grundy County, > MO. Nancy and James R. are buried in the Spickard Masonic Cemetery in Grundy > County. Buried next to James and Nancy is Abram (Abraham) COX (1823-1915). > Abram was born in Miami County, Ohio and is a son of Joshua COX (1783-1847) > and Hannah COBLE (1789-1876). Joshua was a War of 1812 veteran and is buried > in the Thompson Cemetery in Shelby County. Is James Riley Cox also a son > or some other relative of Joshua and Hannah? Since he (James) was 55 years > old when he married Nancy CARTMILL, was he previously married to another > woman? Please e-mail me at jhpeder@soback.kornet.nm.kr if you have any > information on this family. > > Regards, > > James Pederson
Ben-I am sending this reply to the COBLE list as I know that you are a new member. Welcome to our group! The following records are from the books _York County Church Records of the 18th Century_ by Bates and Wright, Volumes 1-3 Volume 1 Page 225 Marriages St Matthew's Lutheran Church Hanover Twsp. York 13 May 1753 George Adam GABEL with Anna Margareth LOFFEL Volume 2 Page 130 Births/Baptisms Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church, City of York Anna Margaret born 23 Feb 1738, baptized 26 May 1738; of John Christian LOFFEL and wife. John Peter born 2 Jan 1741, baptized 5 Apr 1741; of John Christian LOFFEL and wife John Christian (no dates) of John Christian LOFFEL and wife Volume 3 Page 197 Records of Rev. John Stoever Conewago Township Anna Margaretha LOEFFEL of Christian LOEFFEL, born 28 Feb 1738, baptized 22 May 1738. Baptismal sponsor is Catarina Baumann. John Peter of Christian LOEFFEL, born 2 Jan 1741, baptized 5 Apr 1741. Baptismal sponsor John Peter Schultz and wife Anna Catarina. End York County was formed in 1749 from Lancaster County so some of the birth and baptisms records overlap the two counties. Rev. John Stoever was a Lutheran preacher who in 1735 moved to the Conestoga settlement of Lancaster County and carried his ministry into what is now known as York County. As for the dog's name, I believe it was Max, but I will have to check my records. Jean Kobel and Coble list manager
I believe Henry Coble (1764-1860) was s/o Adam Georg COBLE (1727 Germany -1774 Orange (now Guilford) Co., NC. Buried St. Martin's Cemetery and Anna 'Margaretha' LOFFELIN-SPOON (born 1737/38 Lancaster Co. PA) They married May 17, 1754 Hanover, York Co., PA OR St. Mathew's Lutheran Church, Lancaster Co., PA. ----- Original Message ----- From: <MrCassel@aol.com> ===================================================================== > Source: HOLT-L@rootsweb.com > Subject: [HOLT-L] HOLT-COBLE 1763 North Carolina > > > Hello, HOLT folk! > > This is my first post on this list. Here's my HOLT: > > Mary HOLT > [no b/d info] > m. Henry COBLE (b. Orange (now Alamance) Co., NC 1763; d. 19 Apr 1860 Dade > Co., MO) > Children born in Montgomery Co., NC: Daniel (1792), William (1794), Peter > (1797), > Christopher (1801) > Child b. location/year unknown: John > Children b. Lincoln Co., TN: Eli (1812) & Henry (1816) > > > Seeking the usual info: parents, dates, favorite color, name of childhood > dog. Hope to communicate with HOLT cousins. > > Ben >
. JACOB JOHN1 COBLE was born Abt. 1769, and died Apr-20-1846 in Madison Twp., Franklin County, Ohio. He married ELIZABETH Abt. 1797. She was born Abt. 1770, and died Apr-20-1846 in Franklin County, Ohio. Notes for JACOB JOHN COBLE: In the Revolutionary War Pension Application Index: Jacob Cable, Pvt, Pa., BLWt. 9113 Issued 1/20/97 to Jacob Cable. More About JACOB JOHN COBLE: Burial: Asbury Methodist Episcopal Cem. Madison Twp, Franklin Co. Ohio Children of JACOB COBLE and ELIZABETH are: 2. i. SARAH SALLY2 COBLE, b. Sep-16-1807, Pa.; m James Tallman PIERCY Oct 16, 1828 Franklin Co., OH; d. Dec-08-1891, Madison Twp., Franklin County, Ohio. 3. ii. JOHN COBLE, b. May-16-1804, Franklin County, Ohio; m 1) Jane, 2) Sarah ROWER, Nov 24, 1846; d. Jul-09-1887, Madison Twp., Franklin County, Ohio. For more information write: Don Reynolds drassoc@attglobal.net
Jannine, The reason I wonder about Anthony b. 1741 being Antonius son is Antonius b. 1717 never mentioned him in his will, he mentioned George, Ludwig, David, and John. He also mentioned his 6 married daughters and his youngest Cataren. Do you know when Anthony b. 1741 died, this will was written in 1794. Zelma