http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/data/fl+ind ex+65238834347+F Nassau County, Florida Civil War Pension Records Index Record Unit or # Last Name First Name State Served Widow County Year Pages ====== "D22261 DOVER Elisha Georgia Melinda Nassau Co 1905 25 Lafayette (Randolph) pgs "
http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/data/fl+ind ex+65138716005+F Groom Index to Nassau County Florida Marriages, 1867-1887 Cdx, William Dover, Amy Thursday, June 15, 1882
http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/data/fl+ind ex+60835867719+F EVERGREEN CEMETERY, Greenville, Madison County, Florida OLA FRAZIER/WIFE OF DOVER A. EARP/1895 - 1926/AT REST
http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/data/fl+ind ex+28603236+F Misc. (1825-1998) Obituary Index, Pensacola News Journal), Escambia Co., FL LINDSAY Mary Lucille (Dover) 79 04 Nov 1997
http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/data/al+ind ex+2144502083+F Blount Co. Marriages -- Gunter Family, 1828 - 1856. Jesse E. Gunter and Dover Miller, 5 Oct 1891
Arley Congregational Christian Church - Winston Co., AL Cemetery DOVER, Albert 11/10/1922 - 6/30/1973 Ala. Pvt. US Army WWII DOVER, Lorene 3/6/1926 - Living
St. Clair County, Alabama - CHANDLER MOUNTAIN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH CEMETERY Located in Steele, AL. From Interstate 59 exit 174 go west on Steele Station Rd. 0.6 mi to US Hwy 11, the left (south) on Hwy 11 0.2 mi to Co. Rd. 42 (Chandler Mtn. Rd). Then aprox. 4.8 mi on Co. Rd. 42 to Bearden Road. Go right on Bearden Rd. aprox. 0.8 mi. to cemetery. Dover, John Carter 14 Dec 1906-(ndd) ss Reba Rogers Dover Dover, Reba Rogers 28 Sep 1908-(ndd) ss John Carter Dover
Subject: Fairview Baptist Church Cem #2, Addison, Winston Co, AL DOVER, Beulah E. 12 Aug 1902 6 Feb 1963 Wife of Junior G. DOVER, Dovie L. 7 Nov 1924 ONLY DATE Dau of Mr. And Mrs. J. G. DOVER, Junior G. 11 Aug 1897 14 Oct 1981 DOVER, Wiley W. 3 May 1923 3 Jan 1995
Source: http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/data/al+ind ex+55812906293+F Mt. Hope Cemetery, Arley, Winston Co., Al. Dover, Ben F. 7/9/1927-12/17/1979 Dover, Mary L. 4/19/1862-3/22/1930 Dover, N 9/7/1868-12/10/1936 Dover, Pearline 4/9/1935-Living
Might have posted this one before. Went to the mail list archives and didn't come up with anything though. Sharon Dover Romanek ============ SKIRUM METHODIST CEMETERY, DEKALB COUNTY, ALABAMA LOCATION: From Albertville take State Highway 75 N to Geraldine, take right on Hwy 227 for some 2 or 3 miles to intersection of Hwy 20 - take left on Hwy 20 and follow to Skirum Methodist Church on left hand side of road. This cemetery is actually operated jointly by Skirum Methodist Church and the nearby Skirum Baptist Church. Numbering system is used to locate grave sites and is not indicative of actual grave locations within the cemetery. This list is actually an update of the survey done 24 Jul 1965 by Gadsden Branch, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Gadsden, Al. Updated survey done 02 Dec1998 by Dixie & Jim Wyers. 655 Dover, Kelly 26Jan1926-25Dec1994 SS Essie Dover 656 Dover, Essie 20Jul1902-07Nov1993 SS Doyle Dover 657 Dover, Doyle D. 19May1902-04Sep1970
Rosemary sent me this location showing Jane M. Dover: ftp://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/ga/gilmer/cemeteries/mtn ebocm.txt Jane was Jane Maria JAMES the dau of Ahighai JAMES and Martha HIPP who married Bailey James DOVER the son of Frederick & Margaret DOVER of Buncombe. Ahighai is buried at Mt. Nebo. Margaret Louise CARROLL, wife of William Ervin CARROLL, is Margaret L. DOVER dau of Bailey James DOVER and Jane Maria JAMES. William E. CARROLL is the son of Phidillia Patton CARROLL and Caroline PENCE.
>From Terry's message, the 1800 Spartanburg County, South Carolina census index following possibly shows several of the names mentioned. Look who Samuel Stewart is living near. Don't see any FRAZER. Looks like Stewart County, Tennessee in 1820 is a possible location too. COLLINS, John 23101 21010-08 168 COLLINS, Joseph 00110-00010-04 168 JOHNSON, Abel 1010 -00001-00 168 ** FONDREN, Richard 21010-21010-00 169 FONDREN, William 20010 32011-00 170 TURNER, Hannah 42000 10010-00 170 TURNER, John 10301 11101-03 170 TURNER, Mathias 30010 20100-00 170 VANDIVER, John 14101-11110-00 171 PARIS, David 00100-10100-00 175 PARRIS, John 01200-10100-00 175 DIVERS, George 31010-10010-00 181 STEWART, Samuel 00411 21101-01 182 ** POSEY, Thomas 10110-20100-01 184 SHERLEY, Aron 00010-00121-00 184 SHERLEY, Thomas 41101-10110-00 184 POSEY, John 00121-00001-01 185 POSEY, John 10010-10100-00 185 CASTLEBERRY, Paul 22011-20110-02 187 CASTLEBERRY, William 22110-21110-00 187 PAGE, Anderson 30010-00010-00 187 PAGE, John 10100-10010-00 187 CROSS, Thomas 10010-30010-00 188 PAGE, Robert 11201-22101-00 188 RICE, James 20010-11100-00 188 HARDIN, Henry 12020-31001-04 193 MOSS, Ebinezar 10201-01001-0,11 194 MOSS, Jarred 00100-01000-00 194 MOSS, Obediah 00100-20100-02 194 MOSS, William 10100-30100-00 194 GUNTER, William 00010-20100-00 195 MULLENAX, John 00010 00100-00 195 LAMB, Longsheat 31101-12010-00 197 MULLINAX, Manuel 00001 00001-00 198 MULLINAX, John 30010 10100-00 199 MULLINAX, Johnson 00100 10100-00 199 MULLINAX, William 10110 10100-00 199 GILLILAND, James 11200-10100-02 209 -----Original Message----- From: Terry Jackson [mailto:jacksont@nacell.net] Sent: Saturday, February 06, 1999 9:49 AM To: DOVER-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [DOVER-L] Dicy Dover (SC > TN) FRAZER-STEWART-DOVER-RHODES. O.L. Drazer (1821 Leon St., Belton, TX 76513) desires information on William Frazer of S.C. ca 1785. Was his first wife Dicy Dover and second wife Polly Rhodes? Known children: Harmon; William; Sally and Curtis Frazer. All migrated to Tenn. ca 1815-1820. Curtis Frazer m. Abel Johnson. Family tradition says Sally Frazer m. Jessie Elliott. Also desire information on Samuel Stewart d. ca 1818 Spartanburg Co. S.C. Will share on any of these lines. ==== DOVER Mailing List ==== Dover Family Geneology Forum http://www.genforum.com/dover/ http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/FamilyAssoc/Dover
FRAZER-STEWART-DOVER-RHODES. O.L. Drazer (1821 Leon St., Belton, TX 76513) desires information on William Frazer of S.C. ca 1785. Was his first wife Dicy Dover and second wife Polly Rhodes? Known children: Harmon; William; Sally and Curtis Frazer. All migrated to Tenn. ca 1815-1820. Curtis Frazer m. Abel Johnson. Family tradition says Sally Frazer m. Jessie Elliott. Also desire information on Samuel Stewart d. ca 1818 Spartanburg Co. S.C. Will share on any of these lines.
Just ran across a term I wasn't familiar with .... grange/granger. It's a term that apparently began about 1876. A grange is a farm and a granger is a farmer. There's another term about a Master of the Grange so I get the feeling there's tenant farmers in the process.
Hi! I am not sure if this has been posted to our list or not. So I am sending it on:) ASSOCIATED PRESS A polished new headstone stands by two worn markers in a tiny private cemetery in Tennessee, a tribute to the man whose gravesite it marks and a federal program that tries to ensure that no veteran's grave goes unmarked. John Alford was a Revolutionary War veteran from Virginia who died in Nashville on April.24,1837. Though he served in the military more than 200 years ago, his family still was eligible for a government headstone through the National Cernetery System, the section of the Department of Veterans Affairs that maintains 115 national cemeteries. Steven Westerfeld, a spokesman for the system, said a gravestone can be the most significant benefit a veteran receives. "These are people who fought for our country and we owe a great debt of gratitude for that and it behooves us to make sure that they are not forgotten." Westerfeld said. The VA provided about 270,000 headstones last year. Though most of the markers go to recently deceased veterans, the tombstone and marker project also provides stones to replace those that have been lost, damaged or destroyed. Jane Alford found John Al ford's stone was crumbling when her genealogy research led her to the tiny cemetery on the lawn of a historic home on the outskirts of Nashville. John Alford, her husband's great-great-great-great-greatgrandfather, joined the Army in Virginia and guarded British prisoners of war. While researching his background, Jane Alford learned about the headstone program,.which requires documentation of a veteran's service. It takes about a year for a headstone, valued at about $350, to be carved and shipped. Families may choose either granite or marbIe headstones, or a brass marker. And the headstone or marker may be upright or flat. To apply for a headstone, contact Memorial Programs Services at (800) 697-6947. NORTH COUNTY TIMES JANUARY 10, 1999 -- Happy Hunting:) Patricia Manson ~*~*~*~*~*~*Capture and Arraignments, Brings a Tragic Joy~*~*~*~*~*~*~ In memories of Brain Aselton, Slain East Hartford Police Officer
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --part0_918261781_boundary Content-ID: <0_918261781@inet_out.mail.aol.com.1> Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII --part0_918261781_boundary Content-ID: <0_918261781@inet_out.mail.excel.net.2> Content-type: message/rfc822 Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit Content-disposition: inline Return-Path: <ZIMMERMAN-L-request@rootsweb.com> Received: from rly-yc03.mx.aol.com (rly-yc03.mail.aol.com [172.18.149.35]) by air-yc02.mail.aol.com (v56.24) with SMTP; Fri, 05 Feb 1999 19:31:49 -0500 Received: from bl-14.rootsweb.com (bl-14.rootsweb.com [204.212.38.30]) by rly-yc03.mx.aol.com (8.8.8/8.8.5/AOL-4.0.0) with ESMTP id SAA25571; Fri, 5 Feb 1999 18:12:50 -0500 (EST) Received: (from slist@localhost) by bl-14.rootsweb.com (8.8.5/8.8.5) id OAA13256; Fri, 5 Feb 1999 14:59:47 -0800 (PST) Resent-Date: Fri, 5 Feb 1999 14:59:47 -0800 (PST) Message-Id: <3.0.6.32.19990205171112.007c9380@excel.net> X-Sender: sebring@excel.net X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Light Version 3.0.6 (32) Date: Fri, 05 Feb 1999 17:11:12 -0600 Old-To: BUCHMAN-L@rootsweb.com From: Debie <sebring@excel.net> Old-Cc: WICALUME-L@rootsweb.com, HORN-L@rootsweb.com, WI-MITCHELL-TOWN-L@rootsweb.com, WISHEBOY-L@rootsweb.com, UHL-L@rootsweb.com, ZIMMERMAN-L@rootsweb.com, oron@key-net.net, CSchr84651@aol.com, dslau@bytehead.com, zimzip@yahoo.com, teech@concentric.net, rlk@iquest.net, sharim@dataplusnet.com, wigen-l@rootsweb.com Subject: [ZIMMERMAN-L] Ellis Island Records to go on-line Resent-Message-ID: <"DC1vR.A.dOD.gf3u2"@bl-14.rootsweb.com> To: ZIMMERMAN-L@rootsweb.com Resent-From: ZIMMERMAN-L@rootsweb.com Reply-To: ZIMMERMAN-L@rootsweb.com X-Mailing-List: <ZIMMERMAN-L@rootsweb.com> archive/latest/526 X-Loop: ZIMMERMAN-L@rootsweb.com Precedence: list Resent-Sender: ZIMMERMAN-L-request@rootsweb.com Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit Hi All, I received this in the afternoon e-mail and wanted to share it with all of you. Can't wait for this to come to life. If this doesn't quite fit a surname mailing list, I appologize, but it does pertain to genealogy. Debie ARCHIVE PUTS HUDDLED MASSES ON-LINE - Volunteers scanning Ellis Island Records. (SF Examiner 2/2/99) Climbing the family tree will take a lot less clawing as soon as a nonprofit foundation finishes a more than $15 million project to post Ellis Island immigration records on the internet. By helping people to access information instantly that previously was buried in a bureaucratic quagmire, the project will revolutionize genealogical research for many of the more than 113 million Americans who already actively pursue their family histories. Officials at the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation in NY, the same organization that gave Lady Liberty a face lift in 1986 without any public funding, estimate that more than 40% of Americans can trace their European ancestry back to Ellis Island. "This is going to be a reference point", said Vern Deubler, Pres. of the Calif. Genealogical Society, which was based in San Francisco for a century before moving to Oakland this year. "It's going to provide people with very important leads". By the end of next year, the foundation hopes, people will be able to enter any information they know about a progenitor and the program will search more than 20 million records for a match. The software will even be able to tolerate misspellings. If a match is found, the researcher can choose to print out a photo of the ship and a copy of the original manifesto that marked the immigrant's arrival. At Fisherman's Wharf on Monday, Stephen Briganti, Chairman of the foundation, said the new database would especially help Bay Area researchers. He said the Bay Area remains one of the major hubs for Eliis Island immigrants and their descendants. Tens of thousands of immigrants came here after arriving through the port, first to fuel the Industrial revolution and later to farm wine grapes. He said first generation travelers from the main Ellis Island years - 1892 to 1924 - still live in the area. Briganti added that Californians' interest in Ellis Island immigration research, based on requests for the foundation's resources, is outstripped only by New yorkers'. The database - which organizers say could be ready by the end of 2000 - will catalog records of almost 20 million immigrants who flooded the tiny NY Harbor island. Until now, those documents have been stored at the National Archives and Immigration and Naturalization Service in the clunky microfilm format. The first phase of the project was to collect and digitize records and install computers at the museum. Now, Briganti said, putting the information on the Internet has become a top goal as well. "We're pretty confident this is going to work," Briganti said. "It's not perfect, but it's light years ahead of going to the Archives." A demonstration of the system showed that a reseacher can enter information in any or all of 11 fields, which ask for personal information such as the subject's name and country of birth, and immigration, like the subject's port of entry. Foundation spokeswoman Peg Zitko said the project got off the ground when a nationwide network of Mormon volunteers agreed to digitize the microfilm information for free. Thousands of volunteers have logged more than 2 million hours; they've entered 3/5's of the data so far. A spokesman for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Salt Lake City said the project was important to the church's mission. "We've always been involved in genealogy," said Dan Rascon, "because linking to our family helps us understand who we are and what we may become." Information on the project may be found at www.ellisisland.org on the internet. (And I just want you all to know that I typed this, not scanned, so I hope I get some appreciation out there!!!!!!!! Best, and good night! Terry in Calif.) PS, Please feel free to pass this along to other genealogy lists. ==== ZIMMERMAN Mailing List ==== Were your Zimmerman's in Germanna? Be sure to visit the Culpeper County, VA USGenWeb Home page! http://www.rootsweb.com/~vaculpep/culp.htm --part0_918261781_boundary--
Hi Just a reminder that, Posting of virus warnings, test messages, chain letters, political announcements, current events, flames, etc. (in other words - spam) is NOT ALLOWED and will be grounds for removal and exclusion from this mailing list. Please take the time to check out the following sites. http://kumite.com/myths/ http://www.nonprofit.net/hoax/hoax.html Dover listmanager Patricia Manson
I started out on the internet with AOL and graduated to the internet using Netscape but decided to keep my AOL account because of their message boards. Anytime I come across one I send the subscribe instructions with an invitation. Way I look at it, the more of us out there looking, soon or later somebody will connect up something. Terry GAYLE CALABRESE wrote: > Terry, How are you getting all of these Dover querries?.....I was curious > how they aren't on our list.......gaelcee > -----Original Message----- > From: Terry Jackson <jacksont@nacell.net> > To: DOVER-L@rootsweb.com <DOVER-L@rootsweb.com> > Date: Thursday, February 04, 1999 3:37 AM > Subject: [DOVER-L] Dillard Dover > > >ubject: Re: Dover > >Date: 2/3/99 4:10 PM Central Standard Time > >From: FDOVER111 > >Message-id: <19990203171018.01181.00000076@ng-cr1.aol.com> > > > >I am Eldon Dover,my father was Dillard Dover and my grandfather was > >Tolbert Dover and his father was John A.Dover (1843) lots of info.they > >was from N.C-S.C.-Tn-Ga-ALA. if you think there might be a conection > >email me at Griz000@aol.com > > > > > > > >==== DOVER Mailing List ==== > >http://pages.cthome.net/familytree/ > >Subscribe instructions > > > >
The following notes come from a "Lineage of Susan Campbell" compiled by James D. Worthington along with notes from Alice Youngblood, both great grandchildren of Susan's. Susan Campbell b. 1802, in SC. Based on 1850 Gwinnett Co. Ga. Census and 1860 Murray Co. Census. According to uncle Tom Bolton, Susan died in Ozark County Evening Shade Ark. having gone there because her oldest son, Samuel Zachary Dover lived there. She was buried there. Her son, Hardaway Youngblood was b. ca. 1819. Died 1899 buried Mt. Carmel Churchyard. He married Elizabeth Duncan in 1846. According to Alice Youngblood he was in the Civil war. He had 5 sons and 2 daughters. 1. Robert Anderson Youngblood, [married to Mary Palmer Haynie in 1873] born Feb.14,1848, Gwinnett Co. d. 12/28/1928. Age 80. 2.John Youngblood 3. Dave Youngblood 4. Frank Youngblood 5. William Youngblood 6. Catherine 7. a girl ? Alice Youngblood is a daughter of Robert Anderson Youngblood. The genealogy of Susan's goes on to include reference to Samuel being buried in Murray Co. Ga., and list their 9 children. With Eliza Dover Bolton, b. 7/17/1829 died 5/9/1900 buried Milner, Ga. and the years of the other children's births attributed to the ages given in the census of Gwinnett Co. for 1850. " Samuel Dover resided in Gwinnett County for at least 21 years from 1828 until the 1850's when he moved to Murray County Ga." Considering that the family of Susan Campbell is unknown, as was the family of Hardaway Youngblood, it is notable to see the names of his children as being common "Dover" names. Afterall, this probably is the family he related to, and it was a common pracitice to name children after family.
>From the biography of John Marion Bolton, grandfather of JD Worthington. [he preached at ten known churches in Ga.] The heading is " 406th Dist. Ga. Militia. PICKNEYVILLE SETTLEMENT. Gwinnett County, Ga. " In 1830 a stagecoach ran through Lawrenceville, Pinckneyville, and to Bennington, Alabama. Pinckneyville was a village with a post office. It was a trading post and a stagecoach stop, it also had a Inferior Courthouse located there. In 1870 this courthouse was moved to Norcross, Ga. In 1813-1818, the first settlement established near what is now Lawrenceville, was Hog Mountain, There was a fort there called Fort Daniel in 1812. Hog Mountain gave way to was is now know as Lawrenceville, near by." "Samuel Dover married Susan Campbell Youngblood about 1828, for my grandmother their oldest child was born 7/17/1829, some where near Lawrenceville. According to my uncle Tom Bolton, Samuel Dover drove a stagecoach about 1820, between Augusta, Gainesville, and Dalton, Ga. when Dalton was in Murray County. Perhaps that is why Samuel Dove moved from Gwinnett County in 1850 to Murray County, where the 1860 census reveals that he had reside there for 10 years. He died and is buried there. There can be no doubt that Samuel Dover was in Pinckneyville many times, because it to was a stagecoach stop. John Marion Bolton was appointed Captain of the 406 District, Pinckneyville, 11/25/1848, by Governor George W. Towns of Milledgeville, at age 23 1/2. This indicates he was a man of good character. This was 2 months and 7 days before he married grandma, Eliza E. Dover, 2/11/1849. The 1850 census of Gwinnett County Ga. list John Marion Bolton as a school master, age 25, born in SC. His wife, Eliza E. Dover is listed as age 22. They had one child James Samuel Bolton, age 9 monts. Their marriage license is on file in Book 4, pg. 106, Court of the Ordinary, Lawrenceville, Ga. Marriage records for Gwinnett County begin with 1844, due to a fire about 1871, many records were destroyed, hence my failure to find tghe marriage record, if there, of Samuel Dover. My Maternal GGrandparents, Samuel and Susan Campbell Youngblood Dover, were both born in SC, according to the 1850 census of Gwinnett County, and the 1860 census of Murray Co. These censuses supply their ags from which their birth years can be determined. Today Pinckneyville is a cross-roads settlement including Mt. Carmel Methodis Churchyard where Hardawya Youngblood lies buried, only child of Susan Campbell Youngblood Dover by her lst marriage to a Youngblood. His identity was first made know to me over 40 years ago by uncle Tom Bolton. Hardaway Youngblood was a half brother of Eliza E. Dover Bolton and upon his mother's marriage to Samuel Dover, grew up with the Dover family for some years. So close were they that grandma Bolton named her 2nd son, William Hardaway Bolton for him. [Church and cemetery established 1826] " A few lines follow regarding Kate Bolton's Bible, copies , and Alice Youngblood great granddaughter of Susan, being the only direct descendant living near Pinckneyville. This was compiled by J.D. Worthington in 1967. Part C to follow.............