--part1_43.1271a9c.25dea1a0_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit In a message dated 02/17/2000 10:47:08 AM Central Standard Time, [email protected] writes: << Subj: {not a subscriber} Re: [FLESCAMB] ACCESS THE SUTTON COLLECTION IN PENSACOLA Date: 02/17/2000 10:47:08 AM Central Standard Time From: [email protected] (Robert H. Waldrop) To: [email protected] -----Original Message----- From: Seanice Austin <[email protected]> To: [email protected] <[email protected]> Date: Thursday, February 17, 2000 10:35 AM Subject: [FLESCAMB] ACCESS THE SUTTON COLLECTION IN PENSACOLA >If one does not have access to any of the places where the Sutton Collection >is held, are the volumes loaned to local libraries or can a copy can be >obtained through purchase. I am interested in the following volume: > >Blacks and Slavery - a storehouse of antebellum slave holders. > >Thanks, > >Seanice Austin >New London, CT Seanice: If you are talking about the books that Leora M. (Lee) Sutton has written about historical events and persons here in Escambia Co., FL, they can be bought very reasonably at the Pensacola Historical Society Library and Resource Center here in Pensacola. I am sure the Pensacola Public Library and the University of West Florida Special Collections Library on campus would have them available for research. She is a very prolific writer and her books on persons such as Mariana Bonifay are very thoroughly researched and an excellent read. Regards, Robert Waldrop Pensacola, FL >> --part1_43.1271a9c.25dea1a0_boundary Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Disposition: inline Return-Path: <[email protected]> Received: from rly-za02.mx.aol.com (rly-za02.mail.aol.com [172.31.36.98]) by air-za05.mail.aol.com (v67_b1.24) with ESMTP; Thu, 17 Feb 2000 11:47:07 -0500 Received: from bl-11.rootsweb.com (bl-11.rootsweb.com [204.212.38.27]) by rly-za02.mx.aol.com (v67_b1.24) with ESMTP; Thu, 17 Feb 2000 11:46:56 -0500 Received: (from [email protected]) by bl-11.rootsweb.com (8.9.3/8.9.3) id IAA21228 for [email protected]; Thu, 17 Feb 2000 08:46:50 -0800 (PST) Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 08:46:50 -0800 (PST) X-From_: [email protected] Thu Feb 17 08:46:49 2000 Received: from bl-3.rootsweb.com (bl-3.rootsweb.com [204.212.38.19]) by bl-11.rootsweb.com (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id IAA21170 for <[email protected]>; Thu, 17 Feb 2000 08:46:49 -0800 (PST) Received: from pompano.pcola.gulf.net (gulf.net [198.69.72.14]) by bl-3.rootsweb.com (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id IAA07270 for <[email protected]>; Thu, 17 Feb 2000 08:46:47 -0800 (PST) Received: from robert ([205.160.71.192]) by pompano.pcola.gulf.net (8.9.3/8.9.3) with SMTP id KAA27424 for <[email protected]>; Thu, 17 Feb 2000 10:47:41 -0600 (CST) Message-ID: <[email protected]> From: "Robert H. Waldrop" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Old-Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 10:46:23 -0600 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Priority: 3 X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 4.72.3612.1700 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V4.72.3612.1700 X-Diagnostic: Not on the accept list Subject: {not a subscriber} Re: [FLESCAMB] ACCESS THE SUTTON COLLECTION IN PENSACOLA X-Envelope-To: FLESCAMB-L -----Original Message----- From: Seanice Austin <[email protected]> To: [email protected] <[email protected]> Date: Thursday, February 17, 2000 10:35 AM Subject: [FLESCAMB] ACCESS THE SUTTON COLLECTION IN PENSACOLA >If one does not have access to any of the places where the Sutton Collection >is held, are the volumes loaned to local libraries or can a copy can be >obtained through purchase. I am interested in the following volume: > >Blacks and Slavery - a storehouse of antebellum slave holders. > >Thanks, > >Seanice Austin >New London, CT Seanice: If you are talking about the books that Leora M. (Lee) Sutton has written about historical events and persons here in Escambia Co., FL, they can be bought very reasonably at the Pensacola Historical Society Library and Resource Center here in Pensacola. I am sure the Pensacola Public Library and the University of West Florida Special Collections Library on campus would have them available for research. She is a very prolific writer and her books on persons such as Mariana Bonifay are very thoroughly researched and an excellent read. Regards, Robert Waldrop Pensacola, FL --part1_43.1271a9c.25dea1a0_boundary--
In a message dated 02/17/2000 10:20:25 PM Central Standard Time, [email protected] writes: << 3 Joseph Commyns b: October 23, 1834 in Pensacola, Florida d: August 01, 1905 in Pensacola, Florida ................. +Annette Suchet b: 1831 in Pensacola, Florida >> Hi Marilyn, Annette (Anita) Suchet was born Dec/31/1832. later, mona
Here is my ancestry for the Pensacola area families. Would like to hear from any other descendants. I have more ancestry and descendants on Commyns, Rocheblave, Serra, O'Conor, Suchet Take care Marilyn Direct Descendants of Thomas Commyns 1 Thomas Commyns b: 1755 in London, England d: 1819 in Pensacola, Florida .. +Maria Lafon b: Abt. 1758 in Louisiana d: Abt. September 27, 1823 in Pensacola, Florida ..... 2 Francisco Commyns b: April 02, 1800 in Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida d: June 13, 1853 in Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida ......... +Maria Josepha Serra b: 1800 in Pensacola, Florida m: April 02, 1826 in Pensacola, Florida St. Michael's Church d: Bef. 1838 in Pensacola, Florida Father: Ignacio Serra Mother: Marie Magdalene Ladner ............. 3 Joseph Commyns b: October 23, 1834 in Pensacola, Florida d: August 01, 1905 in Pensacola, Florida ................. +Annette Suchet b: 1831 in Pensacola, Florida m: February 17, 1855 in Pensacola, Florida d: December 02, 1907 in Pensacola, Florida Father: Pierre Suchet Mother: Josephine Colla .................... 4 Francis Eugene Commyns b: July 14, 1862 in Greenville, Alabama d: January 16, 1933 in Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida ........................ +Theresa Rocheblave b: December 21, 1869 in Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida m: May 23, 1888 in Pensacola, Florida St. Michael's Church d: April 26, 1955 in Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida Father: Drausin de Rocheblave Mother: Florencia Lavalle ............................ 5 Louise Annette Commyns b: April 04, 1891 in Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida d: December 30, 1967 in Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida ................................ +John Dooley O'Conor b: November 23, 1889 in Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida m: November 17, 1907 in Pensacola, Florida d: Unknown Father: John W. O'Conor Mother: Mary Frances Arbona
If one does not have access to any of the places where the Sutton Collection is held, are the volumes loaned to local libraries or can a copy can be obtained through purchase. I am interested in the following volume: Blacks and Slavery - a storehouse of antebellum slave holders. Thanks, Seanice Austin New London, CT
ImmigrationRec's:Ref:"EmigrantsFromEngToTheAmericanColonies1773-1776," byPeterWilsonColdham,p75,Ship'sListFor"SUCCESS'S INCREASE" 7-14Aug,1774, >From Port Of LONDON,ENG>PENSACOLA,FL: ONLY 3 psgrs listed--1.Murray McLINZEY of SCT,Cartwright,28y; 2.Wm.STEPHENS of SCT,Carpenter,23y; 3. GERARD(as spelled)BYRNE of KENT(that's what it says)Carpenter&Joiner,22y. *Also-"TheCompleteBkOfEmigrants"alsoByPeterWilsonColdham,pg227,same info
**REPLY TO: Bonnie McVoy Treon mailto:[email protected] http://www.rootsweb.com/~flescamb/sutton.htm Pensacola Personalities,Vol. 5 Family of Carlos LeBaron, through four generations, William McVoy, Thomas, Francisco and Florencio Commyns and Josephine Rocheblave. == THE SUTTON COLLECTION The Sutton Collection consists of books which have been written from the primary source documents found at the court house. copies of these books can be found at the West Florida Regional Library,the Pensacola Historical Society, and the University of West Florida... thanks for any help. **REPLY TO: Bonnie McVoy Treon mailto:[email protected]
From: Bonnie & Jeff Treon <[email protected]> CAN ANYONE ACCESS THIS ARTICLE and share a synopsis of what it is about? My ancestor was GERALD BYRNE who died in 1814. I found census records of "a" GERALD BYRNE in CHEROKEE CO AL in 1810. And know my ancestor died in BALDWIN CO AL in 1814 during an Indian massacre. Thanks in advance for any help. Bonnie McVoy Treon ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ REPLY TO: mailto:[email protected] mailto:[email protected] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ BYRNS(*As spelled!), GERALD 1803, JACKSON CO, MS Periodical by JACKSON CO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY PO BOX 984 PASCAGOULA MS 39567 PERSI CODE; MSJK
CAN ANYONE ACCESS THIS ARTICLE and share a synopsis of what it is about? My ancestor was GERALD BYRNE who died in 1814. I found census records of "a" GERALD BYRNE in CHEROKEE CO AL in 1810. And know my ancestor died in BALDWIN CO AL in 1814 during an Indian massacre. Thanks in advance for any help. Bonnie McVoy Treon ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ REPLY TO: mailto:[email protected] mailto:[email protected] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ BYRNS(*As spelled!), GERALD 1803, JACKSON CO, MS Periodical by JACKSON CO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY PO BOX 984 PASCAGOULA MS 39567 PERSI CODE; MSJK
I need some help from anyone who lives in the Pensacola area. I have a copy of a book written by Brother Jerome on the family of Ignatio Serra. There is a gentleman in New Jersey who descends from this line and wants a copy of the book also. I thought possibly the Museum at the Historical Society might have a copy. It was privately printed so not much luck on getting copies. Soooo if anyone could call the Museum for me, that would be wonderful. Thanks a bunch Marilyn
Sheila Martin asked me to send out a notice about the upcoming conference hosted by the Tallahassee Genealogical Society. It will be Saturday, March 25th featuring Bill Dollarhide. Cost is $25.00. Morning session will be: "British Origins of American Colonists 1629 - 1775 with special emphasis on Cavaliers of SW England to Virginia and Maryland 1641 - 1675, plus British and Scotch Irish 1717 - 1773." Afternoon session will be: Maps, names and places, Gazetteers, Atlases and Maps' Also "Forgotten Public Land Records." Registration form can be found at the Tallahassee Gen. Soc. Web page: http://www.freenet.tlh.fl.us/~tgs567/ - or contact Sheila Martin [email protected] -- Ginny Deagan - Pensacola, FL Tom & Ginny Deagan's Home Page: http://www.pcola.gulf.net/~gdeagan An Index to the Genealogical Web Pages that I have Online: http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~vgdeagan/index.htm My New England, New York and Pennsylvania Families Escambia Co. FLGenWeb page http://www.rootsweb.com/~flescamb/index.htm
Here is some more good genealogy websites. Kindred Konnections http://www.kindredkonnections.com/ You can also download free gedcom software that is LDS compatible. Family Tree Maker http://www.familytreemaker.com/ Social Security Death Index http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi Vanessa Pat Connors wrote: > I sent this out right after New Year's so if you already have it, > nothing is changed or added. This is for our new listers. > > The Top Ten Genealogical Web Sites > (c) 1999 by R. Cole Goodwin > > If you were looking for an ancestor, on which ten Internet > sites would you most likely find him or her? Which sites can > help an individual, a family, or a group research family > history? > > With over 1,500,000,000 names on over 60,000 genealogical web > sites on the Internet, finding the best sites is no easy task. > > Eighteen months ago, I started evaluating over 60,000 web > sites which provide information of genealogical interest in > order to determine the Top Ten. Using Encyclopaedia > Britannica's Alexa service, independent reviews, and personal > [observations], I evaluated each site's freshness, speed, > links in, links out, subjective ratings by reviewers, site > size, and other criteria. I have tested my findings along the > way, having found over 16,000 ancestors during the past > twenty-two months, mostly with the help of the computer. Below > are my top ten sites: > > FamilySearch ( http://www.familysearch.org ) > Owned and operated by The Church of Jesus Christ of > Latter-day Saints in Salt Lake City, Utah, > FamilySearch.org has a little (or more) of genealogical > interest for everyone and it is growing quickly. In its > third full month, it has become one of the most popular > sites on the Internet. Using FamilySearch, you can do the > following: > > * Search for your ancestors using the International > Genealogical Index (I.G.I.) with over 360,000,000 > names, at present, online; Ancestral File (A.F.) with > about 36 million names in linked pedigree charts; and > with hyperlinks to other genealogical web sites. Over > the next month, the site will grow to 600 million > online names, then to 1,000,000 by next spring; > > * Collaborate with others who are searching for the same > ancestor, surname, or place as you. At present, there > are over 60,000 collaboration lists and the number is > growing by over 1000 per day; > > * Access the Family History Library of The Church of > Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which has over two > million rolls of microfilm with the names of over two > billion people. Once you have identified a microfilm > which interests you, you can order it online and it > will be delivered to an Latter-day Saint Family History > Center of your choosing near you; > > * Learn from online Research Guides. For almost any place > or ethnic group for which you wish to do genealogical > investigation, there are online guides that will allow > you to learn how to do the research you seek; > > * Access over 60,000 genealogical web sites by > categories, such as those which specialize in census, > land, migration, military, royalty, surnames, and more; > > * Preserve your family history by downloading one of the > most popular genealogical software programs in the > world today, Personal Ancestral File (P.A.F.) 4.0 for > Windows, as well as upload your own genealogical > information to FamilySearch to be preserved and to be > shared with others in Pedigree Resource files. > > * Coming Up: Australian, British and North American Vital > Records Indexes will be incorporated into FamilySearch > as will the complete 1851 and 1881 British Censuses, > the complete 1880 U.S. Census, the Ellis Island Index > of 17,000,000 immigrants, and more source guides. Also > coming up: Pedigree Resource Files, containing the > online submissions of FamilySearch users (12,000,000 > names already received); > > Ancestry.com ( http://www.ancestry.com ) > With over 274,000,000 U.S. names in over 1700 databases, > Ancestry.com can help you find and put flesh onto the > bones of your ancestors. It offers the following > features: > > * Census Indexes, 1790-1870, for the entire U.S., as well > as the complete 1790 U.S. Census and assorted later > censuses for sundry states and counties; > > * Social Security Death Index (S.S.D.I.): updated through > June 1999, it is the most current index on the Internet > and can help you locate the disposition of a relative > or friend as well as their parentage; > > * World Family Tree: like FamilySearch's Ancestral File, > this contains millions of names linked in pedigrees; > > * Periodical Source Index, which references over 5,000 > genealogical periodicals for the past 200 years. For > the most part, once you have the index entry, you can > view the articles at the Library of Congress; > > * American Genealogical and Biographical Index (Ryder's > Index): the contents of 200 volumes of genealogical > references to individuals in the U.S. throughout the > seventeenth through nineteenth centuries; > > * The Daughters of the American Revolution Lineage Books > (125 Volumes) > > * Ancestry News-Daily and weekly newsletter providing > news and features of genealogical interest. > > Although Ancestry.com is a paid, subscription service, > major portions of its holdings are made available freely > to the general public. In addition, right now they are > offering a free, 14-day subscription to those who sign-up > through the following link (sponsored by ThirdAge): > > https://www.ancestry.com/ancestry/signup/SignupUser.asp?SignupType=TRIALFR > > EE&SignupCode=g99af > > Cyndislist ( http://www.cyndislist.com ) > Cyndislist catalogues and indexes over 43,000 genealogy > web sites and is in the process of adding 10,000 more. If > you are looking for genealogical web sites from different > countries to different surnames, you will find them > listed and indexed here. Online since 1996, it is > operated by Cyndi Howells of Puyallup, Washington. > > RootsWeb ( http://www.rootsweb.com ) > RootsWeb has over 150,000,000 million U.S. names online > and is operated by the non-profit RootsWeb Data > Cooperative of Pine Mountain Club, California and is a > project of the Rand Corporation. RootsWeb has the > following helpful features: > > * Surname Resources on RootsWeb allow you to search > submissions on surnames by other researchers; > > * County Resource tie you into genealogical discussion > forums organized by state and by county. > > * USGENWEB ( http://www.usgenweb.com ) covers the United > States by state and by county, organizing cemetery, > census, obituary, historical, and biographical > resources by locality. Can be very helpful; for an > excellent example of USGENWEB, go to the Bradford > County, Pennsylvania web site > ( http://www.rootsweb.com/~pabradfo/bradweb.htm ); > > * Mailing Lists for over 16,000 genealogical areas are > sponsored by RootsWeb.com > > * The Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild, an online > project to transcribe the passenger lists of all > passenger ships which have entered America. Currently, > 400 ships are online; > > * Social Security Death Index (SSDI), similar to > Ancestry.com's database; > > The Library of Congress ( http://lcweb.loc.gov/rr/genealogy/ ) > Through The Library of Congress' Local History and > Genealogy Reading Room, you can access the holdings of > the largest library in the world, which has a collection > of over 250,000 local history and genealogy books > available for researchers, as well as a large repository > of microfilm holdings from The Family History Library of > The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Salt > Lake City. Through the site, you can search or browse the > catalogs, access special holdings of various ethnic and > historic reading rooms, and enjoy the American Memories > Collection, an extensive, visual database of American > History. Also available through the Library of Congress > is the National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collection > (N.U.C.M.C.) ( http://lcweb.loc.gov/coll/nucmc/nucmc.html ) > which indexes millions of unpublished documents and > contains valuable genealogical information. > > GenForum ( http://genforum.genealogy.com/ ) > The largest online area for people to share surname and > local history information, with over three million > messages posted. It allows researchers to collaborate one > with another in researching family and local history. > > ProFusion ( http://www.profusion.com/ ) > Rather than a site for genealogical research, ProFusion > is a Microsoft-sponsored meta-search engine, which can > use up to nine Internet search engines (such as > AltaVista, Google, InfoSeek, etc.) simultaneously to find > that ancestor, or relative of yours on that obscure web > page. Unlike typical search engines which, at most, index > only 16% of the web pages on the Internet, meta-search > engines such as ProFusion, Dogpile > ( http://www.dogpile.com/ ), Fast Corporation's AllTheWeb > ( http://www.alltheweb.com ) and MAMMA, The Mother of All > Web Sites ( http://www.mamma.com/ ) use individual search > engines to collectively scale the web. > > The Ultimates ( http://www.theultimates.com/ ) > Like ProFusion (above) rather than a single web site with > genealogical information, The Ultimates is a search > engine for multiple online telephone white pages and e- > mail directories. It can help you find people with the > same surname you are seeking. This is especially useful > when you are seeking an unusual surname. > > MyFamily.com ( http://www.MyFamily.com ) > MyFamily.com is a place where you can post your family > tree, family news, family photos, recipes, and chapter- > by-chapter history for your family to show and to share > with others. It can help a geographically dispersed > family collaborate on its history. > > The U.S. National Archives > ( http://www.nara.gov/nara/nail.html ) Using the new U.S. > National Archives and Records Administration's Archival > Information Locator, you can locate information about the > microfilm, archival holdings, and digital copies > available. Also useful is The National Archives Research > Room ( http://www.nara.gov/genealogy/ ) > > Bonus Web Sites > In addition to the Top Ten, above, following are some > excellent, specialized genealogical web sites. Please > bear in mind that much of this specialized information is > available through the using the Top Ten genealogical web > sites above; indeed, some Top Ten sites have more > specialized data than their more limited counterparts, > below, but the following are always worth checking: > > Biographies > From the Arts & Entertainment Network's "Biography" > series, you can search 22,000 online biographies at the > following link: ( http://www.biography.com/ ) > > Cemeteries and Graveyards > Find A Grave ( http://www.findagrave.com/ ) > Censuses on the Internet > Censuslinks ( http://www.censuslinks.com/directory/ ) > Educational Resources for Online Genealogy > PBS' Ancestors Series > ( http://www.pbs.org/kbyu/ancestors/ ) > Ethnic Genealogy Resources > The Balch Institute for Ethnic Studies Online > ( http://www.libertynet.org/balch/body_index.html ) > Family History for Kids > Disney's Family Tree > ( http://disney.go.com/ads/sponsors/ancestry/index.html ) > Family Reunions > Family-Reunion.com ( http://www.family-reunion.com ) > Geography > The U.S. Geological Service's Geographic Names > Information Service (GNIS) > ( http://mapping.usgs.gov/www/gnis/ ) > Heraldry > Heraldry on the Internet > ( http://www.digiserve.com/heraldry/index.htm ) > Land Records > The Bureau of Land Management has placed all federal > land patent records online, including millions of 19th > Century Homestead Act records. > ( http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/ ) > Medical Genealogy > The Disease Chart (19th century medical terminology) > ( > http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Valley/1030/diseasecharttable.htm ) > Military Records > Military records databases at Ancestry.com > ( > http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Valley/1030/diseasecharttable.htm ) > Newsletters-Online Genealogy > Ancestry.com's Daily News (free sign-up from home page, > with alerts to new, limited-time access to databases, > tips of the day, features, and specials) > ( http://www.ancestry.com/ ) > Newspapers > The United States Newspaper Program links you to > hundreds of online newspapers, some of which have put > back issues up to 200 years old online; excellent for > births, marriages and deaths. > ( http://www.neh.gov/html/usnp.html#NEW%20YORK ) > Photographs > With over 250,000,000 prints, Corbis Corporation has > the largest inventory of historic and newsworthy > photographs in the world, and has put many online-for > free. ( http://www.corbis.com ) > Vital Records > Vital Records Information for the United States > ( http://vitalrec.com/index.html ) > WebCasts on Genealogy > Generations is a live, interactive television show > focusing on family history research and is broadcast > over the Internet. It is sponsored by Sierra Software > and carried by TalkSpot, an Internet broadcasting > company. > ( > http://www.sierra.com/sierrahome/familytree/community/webcast/ ) > World and International Genealogy Resources > WorldGenWeb ( http://www.worldgenweb.com ) will take you > to resources for almost any country in the world. > > ==== IRL-CLARE Mailing List ==== > County Clare News: http://www.clarenet.ie > Guide to County Clare: http://www.iol.ie/~moynihan/clare/ > Assorted Clare records/directories: http://home.att.net/~labaths/clare.htm > Co. Clare Library: http://www.clarelibrary.ie/
Pat, welcome to the club of brain dead genealogist, the library down town has both 1910 & 1920 census. I have not seen it on line anywhere. If anyone knows different, please post it. I would love to see it also. Doris
I am brain dead these days.......can't remember is the 1910 and 1920 census for escambia co FL and AL on line anywhere or does anyone here have it? Need a look up for John Watson in both counties.could be John W Watson .or W. John Watson appreciate any help I can get thanks pat
I am trying to find information on the family of my maternal grandfather. Louis Rivers Jones (6-9-1892 - 11/1967) was the son of George William Jones from Escambia County, Florida and Bettie Martin from Girard, Alabama. Louis's siblings were Lurlene, Hortense, and Floy. George's father was Lazarus Alpheus Jones who was born in Escambia County, Florida and was married to Delilah Morgan. George and Lazarus were both Methodist ministers in northwestern Florida. George William Jones eventually starting preaching in Alabama at several different churches.
A researcher in Wales has been in touch with me as I am researching Colleys in PA. He wants to find an Elizabeth Young, born England, probably Cumberland early in this century, date unknown. She came to the US sometime between W.W.I and W.W.II. In 1953 she was known to live in Florida. Her sister was Ellen and she had a niece Renee. She married to a Mr. Colley. Any clues out there?? You can forward to me or to [email protected] He tells me also that in England there is a new site called www.192.com. with a British post code you can find people. You do need a user name and password. So, I guess you have to subscribe.
Thanks, you are very kind to do that. I am researching Kersey, Carroll, Kimmon, Gates, Powell, and Carr. Godwin is on my half sister's side, and I have gotten most of her Godwins who also married into the Goodwin Line. My Stepfather was a Goodwin. Thanks Doris
I am looking for information on Martin Milburn James born in NC, died Mar 1936, married to Elender Jane Burkhalter, born 31 Mar 1868 near McCray, GA. They lived in Escambia County and had the following children: David Jeptha, 1891, Newton, GA - married Minnie DUBOSE Mary Lillian, 1909, married John Walter HENDRIX Olive Annora, 1886, married Grover Cleveland KINGRY Rocksey Ann Elizabeth - died at age 2 Clarence Eugene, 1894-1931, married Eva NIX Geneva Violet, 1896 Milburn Martin, married Brooksie GODWIN Etta Mae, 1905, married William Augustus BARNETT Richard Melvin, 1912 Thanks! Melissa Franks Gantt Texas
Thanks very much for checking! Have you contacted Brenda Duff? She is on one of the email lists and has a lot of information! If you don't have her contact, let me know and I'll forward it to you. If I find anything on Godwins in Esc Co who are not "ours" I'll let you know - Johnnie died in 1915 or 16 and Marion then married a Register. JG -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] <[email protected]> To: [email protected] <[email protected]> Date: Monday, January 31, 2000 9:20 PM Subject: Re: [FLESCAMB] Godwin - McArthur >Jeannie, >I went through all of the Godwin Files that I have, and didn't find anything >on your Godwins. >So guess that we are researching different groups. > >Sorry, >Doris > >
yes i would be interested that [email protected] *** JANET****
We are searching for a portrait (a painting) from the turn of the 18th century. (1790's into early 1800). This has been a problem, as most of Florida was settled in the mid-1800's. Add to the problem the fact that we want this portrait to be a woman. Most folks have offered their 1860-1900 photographs, but we're hoping to find something older. Thanks. Nancy Harcourt School Publishers