Carole,FYI Andrew Jackson Williams was son of Theoplois and Rebecca Hunter Williams. Grandson of Robert Williams, Sr.. Robert Washington Williams was son of Robert Williams,Jr. and also grandson of Robert,Sr.He also had two other grandsons in the CSA. Theoplois ,Jr. and Jesse W Kent.
Savannah Morning News September 2, 2000 Alva D. Green SCREVEN -- Mrs. Alva Davis Green, 92, died Sept. 1, 2000 at the Sun Bridge Care & Rehabilitation Center of Jesup. The Wayne County native had lived in Screven all her life and was a member of Screven First Baptist Church. She was the widow of Lester R. Green of Screven. SURVIVORS: seven daughters, Ouida Drury and Connie Green, both of Jesup, Jeanette Griffis of Stockbridge, Martha Wasdin of Screven, Catherine Altman, Carol Webster and Joyce Jones, all of Brunswick; a son, Brantley Green of Nevada; a sister, Gertrude B. Walker of Brunswick; a brother, Everette Davis of Brunswick; 34 grandchildren and several great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren. VISITATION: 6-8 p.m. today at Gordon-Harrison Funeral Home in Jesup. FUNERAL: 3 p.m. Sunday at Screven First Baptist Church, burial in Screven City Cemetery.
ROCKY FORD -- Mrs. Mamie Frawley Kent, 96 died Aug. 31 at East Georgia Regional Medical Center in Statesboro. The Screven County native was a homemaker and a member of Bay Branch Baptist Church in Sylvania. She was the widow of Horace D. Kent. SURVIVORS: Six grandchildren, Barbara Whitten of Roswell, Bob Berry of Alpharetta, David Berry of Cairo, Benji Kent of Kansas City, Mo. and Brad Kent and Kelly K. Bazemore, both of Savannah, 10 great-grandchildren and two nieces and a nephew. SERVICES: 2 p.m. today at Thompson -Strickland-Waters Funeral Home, Sylvania, burial in Bay Branch Baptist Church Cemetery.
Savannah Morning News September 2, 2000 Alva D. Green SCREVEN -- Mrs. Alva Davis Green, 92, died Sept. 1, 2000 at the Sun Bridge Care & Rehabilitation Center of Jesup. The Wayne County native had lived in Screven all her life and was a member of Screven First Baptist Church. She was the widow of Lester R. Green of Screven. SURVIVORS: seven daughters, Ouida Drury and Connie Green, both of Jesup, Jeanette Griffis of Stockbridge, Martha Wasdin of Screven, Catherine Altman, Carol Webster and Joyce Jones, all of Brunswick; a son, Brantley Green of Nevada; a sister, Gertrude B. Walker of Brunswick; a brother, Everette Davis of Brunswick; 34 grandchildren and several great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren. VISITATION: 6-8 p.m. today at Gordon-Harrison Funeral Home in Jesup. FUNERAL: 3 p.m. Sunday at Screven First Baptist Church, burial in Screven City Cemetery.
Hi there! I'll put a check in the mail tomorrow! Another question...have you ever (did I ask you this?) read Dixon Hollingsworth's book, "The History of Screven County, Georgia"? I was rereading some passages that Dee Thompson had so graciously sent me about Civil War units and those who didn't make it home again. From the sketch..."The Men Who Wore The Gray", T40,...there is a Simeon Brinson listed. "The bloodiest day of the war for the 25th was Sept. 19, 1863, at Chickamauga in northern Georgia. On the morning of that day the opposing armies were deployed along the road leading from Atlanta to Chattanooga with the Union army on the west and the Confederates to the east across a north-flowing creek called Chickamauga. General George H. Thomas of the Union army heard a report that there was a stray Confederate brigade at a place called Jay's Mill. He sent Brannen's division to capture this brigade. What Brannen's men actually found was not a lost unit, but the northern end of Braxton Bragg's Confederate army. Men of Croxton's brigade, part of Brannen's division, sent a facetious message back to General Thomas' headquarters asking which of the many Confederate brigades they found at Jay's Mill they were supposed to capture. A map of the deployment of forces at Chickamauga at this time shows that Wilson's rebel brigade was at Jay's Mill, face to face with Croxton's brigade of Yankees. So it was the boys from Screven County, along with their brigade mates, who bore the brunt of the very first collision as two huge armies clashed in battle at Chickamauga. The battle was a Confederate victory bought at a high price. The Screven County units lost at least thirteen men killed in action that day. The Ogeechee Rifles lost Lt. Col. Andrew J. WILLIAMS, their original captain, along with SIMEON J. BRINSON, George W. JENKINS, Marion McBRIDE, John M. ROGERS, James L. SCOTT, John H. THOMPSON, and Miles T. WATERS. For the Black Creek Volunteers, those who died at Chickamauga were Lieut. Warren OVERSTREET and Edward CONNELLY. Losses for Brown's Light Infantry were Absolom BEST, John R. MOORE, and Thomas J. MORGAN. Screven men of the 25th wounded at Chickamauga were JOSEPH B. JARRELL of the Black Creek Volunteers, Abram BURKE, John H. GILL, and Robert W. WILLIAMS of the Ogeechee Rifles, and Levi HOWARD, William LANE and John M. ROBERTS of Brown's Light Infantry..." Carole Drexel gdrexel1@airmail.net
POYTHRESS There are none. BRYANT pg. 356 "On the 26th ult., Maj. William G. BRYANT of Virginia to Mrs. Polly FLOURNOY of Putnam County, March 6, 1811." THE SOUTHERN RECORDER, 1824-1844. pg. 358 On the 10th inst., at the home of Rev. Samuel J. BRYANT, by Rev. GLENN, Dr. Eansom TUTTLE of McDonough, Henry Co., to Miss Harriett M. STEELE of Milledgeville, May 31, 1825." THE SOUTHERN RECORDER, 1824-1844. pg. 370 "In Twiggs County, on the 30th ult. by Rev. SMITH, Mr. Lewis J. RAMSEY of Cool Springs, Wilkinson County to Miss Nancy BRYANT of Twiggs, Aug. 7, 1833." THE SOUTHERN RECORDER, 1824-1844. pg. 381 "On the 16th ult., Mr. Littleberry FORREST to Miss Nancy BRYANT, dau. of Thomas BRYANT, all of Laurens County, Nov. 8, 1836. THE SOUTHERN RECORDER, 1824-1844. That's it. Nancy
Here are all the BOYDS. pg. 117 "In Savannah Wednesday evening, Mr. Alexander BOYD of the house of BAGGS & BOYD, merchants of Savannah. Oct. 12, 1803." THE COLUMBIAN MUSEUM & SAVANNAH ADVERTISER, 1796-1812. pg. 134 "On the 11th, Thomas BOYD, native of Scotland. Sept. 13, 1808." THE COLUMBIAN MUSEUM & SAVANNAH ADVERTISER, 1796-1812 pg. 363 "In Telfair County on the 6th inst. by Rev. William STEGALL, James J. SCARBOROUGH, Esq., Atty-at-law, to Miss Ann E. BOYD, Jul 17, 1830." THE SOUTHERN RECORDER, 1824-1844 pg. 404 "In Savannah on the 11th inst. by REV. F. R. Sweat, Gen. John W. Rabun to Miss. Eugenia Elvira BOYD, youngest dau. of the late Rev. H. A. Boyd of South Carolina. july 15, 1843." THE SOUTHERN RECORDER, 1824-1844. pg. 437 "Sunday evening by Rev. HOLCOMBE, Andrew Knox, merchant, to Mrs. Rebecca PRAY, both of Savannah, May 28, 1803. Also: John ASHBERRY and Mrs. SHERHERD; Charles BOYD and Mrs. Susannah B. CHILD; Daniel GROVES and Mrs. Mary FLEETWOOD; Mr. ____ MCCLELLAN to Mrs. Mary KINGSLEY; Nicholas CORIENT to Mrs. Margaret CLARKE. May 28, 1803." THE COLUMBIA MUSEUM & SAVANNAH ADVERTISER, 1796-1820. pg. 445 "Thursday, Mr. William HEWLETT to Miss Mary Wylly, Apr. 29, 1808. The same eveing at White Bluff by Thomas BOX, Esq., Mr. James BOYD to Miss Eliza FULLER, Apr. 29, 1808." THE COLUMBIA MUSEUM & SAVANNAH ADVERTISER, 1796-1820. THE END
Bill, I'm working on the Boyets/Boyettes. My Roxanne (b. March 17, 1837) married my James H. Brown. :-) I have never found a marriage license. Roxanne is the daughter of Seth. Seth is the son of James. I found info on James in the Screven County section of "Historical Collections of GA." - page 631. The are also estate papers in Screven County and a folder in the Statesboro Library. James married Sabra Sasser. I believe James is the son of Edward Boyte (Boyet). He was married to Abigail. I got this info from a folder at the Statesboro Library a long time ago. There was a lady trying to connect the Boyet line to the Huguenots. I contacted the National Huguenot Society a number of years ago. They were never satisfied that this line connected, but did not rule it out, either. They were hoping more work would be done. If you know more than this, I would love to know it! :-) Joey
This is really the best information I have seen on what this country stands for, as perceived by the Founding Fathers' intent...as shown by the one dollar bill. Carole ----- Original Message ----- From: <Farns10th@aol.com> To: <AMERICAN-REVOLUTION-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, August 31, 2000 7:35 PM Subject: [A-REV] Our History in the Dollar Bill and, you think No. 13 is unlucky? Read on! > Sent by Lynde Stewart aka MainFlor@aol.com > > Subject: THE AMERICAN DOLLAR BILL > > > Subject: A lesson for our citizens in the United States of America > as our country gets ready to select two individuals; one that will > become our next President. > > Take out a one dollar bill and look at it. > > > > > > The one dollar bill you're looking at first came off the presses in > > > 1957 in its present design. This so-called paper money is in fact a > > > cotton and linen blend, with red and blue minute silk fibers running > > > through it. It is actually material. > > > > > > We've all washed it without it falling apart. > > > > > > A special blend of ink is used, the contents we will never know. > > > > > > It is overprinted with symbols and then it is starched to make it > > > water > > > resistant and pressed to give it that nice crisp look. If you look on > > > the > > > front of the bill, you will see the United States Treasury Seal. On the > > > top > > > you will see the scales for the balance-a balanced budget. > > > > > > In the center you have a carpenter's T-square, a tool used for an > > > even > > > cut. > > > > > > Underneath is the Key to the United States Treasury. That's all > > > pretty > > > easy to figure out, but what is on the back of that dollar bill is > > > something > > > we should all know. > > > > > > If you turn the bill over, you will see two circles. Both circles, > > > together, comprise the Great Seal of the United States. The First > > > Continental Congress requested that Benjamin Franklin and a group > > > of men come up with a Seal. It took them four years to accomplish > > > this task and another two years to get it approved. If you look at the > > > left hand circle, you will see a Pyramid. Notice the face is lighted > > > and the western side is dark. This country was just beginning. > > > We had not begun to explore the West or decided what we could do > > > for Western Civilization. The Pyramid is uncapped, again signifying > > > that we were not even close to being finished. Inside the capstone > > > you have the all-seeing eye, and ancient symbol for divinity. It was > > > Franklin's belief that one man couldn't do it alone, but a group of men, > > > with the help of God, could do anything. > > > > > > "IN GOD WE TRUST" is on this currency. The Latin above the > > > pyramid, ANNUIT COEPTIS, means "God has favored our undertaking." > > > The Latin below the pyramid, NOVUS ORDO SECLORUM, means > > > "a new order has begun." At the base of the pyramid is the Roman > > > Numeral for 1776. > > > > > > If you look at the right-hand circle, and check it carefully, you > > > will > > > learn that it is on every National Cemetery in the United States. It > > > is > > > also on the Parade of Flags Walkway at the Bushnell, Florida National > > > Cemetery and is the centerpiece of most hero's monuments. Slightly > > > modified, it is the seal of the President of the United States and it is > > > always visible whenever he speaks, yet no one knows what the symbols > > > mean. The Bald Eagle was selected as a symbol for victory for two > > > reasons: first, he is not afraid of a storm; he is strong and he is > > > smart enough to soar above it. Secondly, he wears no material crown. > > > > > > We had just broken from the King of England. > > > > > > Also, notice the shield is unsupported. This country can now > > > stand on its own. At the top of that shield you have a white bar > signifying > > > congress, a unifying factor. We were coming together as one nation. > > > In the Eagle's beak you will read, "E PLURIBUS UNUM", meaning > > > "one nation from many people." > > > Above the Eagle you have thirteen stars representing the thirteen > > > original colonies, and any clouds of misunderstanding rolling away. > > > Again, we were coming together as one. Notice what the Eagle holds > > > in his talons. He holds an olive branch and arrows. This country > > > wants peace, but we will never be afraid to fight to preserve peace. > > > > > > The Eagle always wants to face the olive branch, but in time of > > > war, his gaze turns toward the arrows. > > > > > > They say that the number 13 is an unlucky number. This is almost > > > a worldwide belief. You will usually never see a room numbered 13, or > > > any hotels or motels with a 13th floor. But, think about this: 13 > > > original colonies, 13 signers of the Declaration of Independence, 13 > stripes on > > > our flag, 13 steps on the Pyramid, 13 letters in the Latin above, 13 > > > letters> in "E PLURIBUS UNUM", 13 stars above the Eagle, 13 plumes of > feathers on each span of the Eagle's wing, 13 bars on that shield, 13 leaves > on the > > > olive branch, 13 fruits, and if you look closely, 13 arrows. And for > minorities: the 13th Amendment. > > > > > > Why don't we know this?" > > > > > > Your children don't know this and their history teachers don't know > > > this. > > > Too many veterans have given up too much to ever let the meaning fade. > > > Many veterans remember coming home to an America that didn't care. Too > > > many veterans never came home at all. > > > > > > Tell everyone what is on the back of the one dollar bill and what > > > it stands for, because nobody else will. > > ______________________________
I was getting the same response to my postings also, that is why about three showed up. I'll try again. Is anyone researching the Boyt/e-Boyet/t/e's of Screven county?-Bill
Nancy, I had the same thing happen and here is mine, they have in common Tommy Newton address, could be a change of address mailfunction. I was sending to the list, Not to Tommy how his address got in there I do not know. See belowSubj: Undeliverable: Re: [GASCREVE] I Will Do Look-ups ! Date: 8/29/2000 9:43:25 PM Eastern Daylight Time From: postmaster@EUHUB.ZENECA.com (System Administrator) To: K8888yle@aol.com Your message To: GASCREVE-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [GASCREVE] I Will Do Look-ups ! Sent: Wed, 30 Aug 2000 02:40:16 +0100 did not reach the following recipient(s): c=GB;a=TMAILUK;p=ZENECA;ou1=NAHUB;dda:SMTP=Tommy.Newton@astrazeneca.com; on Wed, 30 Aug 2000 02:42:30 +0100 The recipient name is not recognized The MTS-ID of the original message is: c=GB;a=TMAILUK;p=ZENECA;l=USUWZCMSXHUB010008300142RWBY8Y81 MSEXCH:IMS:ZENECA:NAHUB:USUWZCMSXHUB01 0 (000C05A6) Unknown Recipient -------------------- Message-ID: <8525694B.00095F93.00@amhqmxln01.astramerck.com> From: K8888yle@aol.com Reply-To: GASCREVE-L@rootsweb.com To: GASCREVE-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [GASCREVE] I Will Do Look-ups ! Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2000 02:40:16 +0100 MIME-Version: 1.0 X-Mailer: Internet Mail Service (5.5.2650.21) X-MS-Embedded-Report: Content-Type: text/plain Nancy Hi, I would greatly appreciate you printing to the list any information you give on these marriages, I, for one always keep them. It is genealogy and this is a genealogy list. Would you check for BOLTON? Thank you for your time and efforts. Dot Smith ============================== Search ALL of RootsWeb's mailing lists in real time. RootsWeb's Personalized Mailing Lists: http://pml.rootsweb.com/ ----------------------- Headers -------------------------------- Return-Path: <> Received: from rly-yh04.mx.aol.com (rly-yh04.mail.aol.com [172.18.147.36]) by air-yh01.mail.aol.com (v75_b3.11) with ESMTP; Tue, 29 Aug 2000 21:43:25 -0400 Received: from zcsn04.astrazeneca.com (35.32.1.128.193.in-addr.arpa [193.128.1.35]) by rly-yh04.mx.aol.com (v75_b3.9) with ESMTP; Tue, 29 Aug 2000 21:43:04 2000 Received: from zcsn14.ukhx.astrazeneca.net (zcsn14.ukhx.astrazeneca.net [192.168.199.14]) by zcsn04.astrazeneca.com (8.9.3/8.9.3.DEF) with ESMTP id CAA10515 for <K8888yle@aol.com>; Wed, 30 Aug 2000 02:43:03 +0100 (BST) Received: from zcsn24.ukhx.astrazeneca.net (zcsn24.ukhx.astrazeneca.net [156.71.11.98]) by zcsn14.ukhx.astrazeneca.net (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id CAA19334 for <K8888yle@aol.com>; Wed, 30 Aug 2000 02:42:34 +0100 (BST) Received: from ukapzcmsxhub01.ukap.astrazeneca.net (ukapzcmsxhub01.ukap.astrazeneca.net [156.71.158.135]) by zcsn24.ukhx.astrazeneca.net (8.10.1/8.10.1) with ESMTP id e7U1gYi08013 for <K8888yle@aol.com>; Wed, 30 Aug 2000 02:42:34 +0100 (BST) Received: by ukapzcmsxhub01.wins.zeneca.com with Internet Mail Service (5.5.2650.21) id <RWB73H0F>; Wed, 30 Aug 2000 02:42:33 +0100 Message-ID: <0D9D1413DA70D2118FC30008C7B130DF0513EB72@usuwzcmsxhub01.usuwb.astrazeneca.net > From: System Administrator <postmaster@EUHUB.ZENECA.com> To: K8888yle@aol.com Subject: Undeliverable: Re: [GASCREVE] I Will Do Look-ups ! Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2000 02:42:33 +0100 MIME-Version: 1.0 X-Mailer: Internet Mail Service (5.5.2650.21) X-MS-Embedded-Report: Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="----_=_NextPart_000_01C01223.91293A8C" Dot
Thanks Nancy for the look-ups on the Cowarts. Should we give you a break for a while? I know everyone appreciates your help but we don't want to take advantage.
Claudia, There are NO COWARTS, COWERTS. \Sorry, Nancy
These are the FAIRIES, FARIES, FARISS, FARRIS, FERRIS Surnames. pg. 117 "At Port Royal, Jamaica, Capt. Solomon FERRIS, Commander of L'Hercule of 74 guns of the British Navy; age 55 years. Oct. 12, 1803." THE COLUMBIAN MUSEUM & SAVANNAH ADVERTISER, 1796-1812 pg. 103 "Last Wednesday, George FARIES Jan. 11, 1799." THE COLUMBIAN MUSEUM & SAVANNAH ADVERTISER, 1796-1812 pg. 192 "Last Monday, Miss Margaret FARIES, widow of Mr. George FARIES. Mar. 20, 1800." THE GEORGIA GAZETTE, 1790-1802. pg. 303 "Oct. 8, 1881 The funeral service of Mrs. Mary A. SCOTT will be preached in the Methodist Church at this place next Sunday at 11 A. M. by Rev. W. A. FARISS." THE SUN- Hartwell, Georgia, 1881-1884. pg. 296 "Married on 23 Dec. 1881 by Rev. W. A. FARRIS, Mr. L. S. MCWHORTER and Miss Alice WIN." THE SUN- Hartwell, Georgia, 1881-1884. pg. 189 "Yesterday in Savannah, George FAIRIES, house carpenter, Jan. 10, 1799." THE GEORGIA GAZETTE, 1790-1802. THE END
Hello folks, I don't know whether this material has ever appeared on the list. But, I was running a search on the surname REDDICK and this page popped up with the list of cemetaries located in Screven County. It is obviously not exhaustive and complete - it wholly misses the Lawton cemetary lying off of US 301 near the two Reddick cemetaries and the White cemetary that is located at Whitehill. But, it is useful. Thanks to Carole Drexel for pointing me to the www.schistory.org site that took me to this list, eventually. Dale E. Reddick ________________________________ Screven Co. GA - List of cemeteries from GNIS _________________________________________________________________ Geographic Names Information System Query Results SCREVEN COUNTY, GEORGIA -- CEMETERY _________________________________________________________________ 36 Feature records have been selected from GNIS.* _________________________________________________________________ USGS Feature Name St County Type Latitude Longitude 7.5' x 7.5' Map ------------------- -- -------------- ------ -------- --------- --------------- Bascom Cemetery GA Screven cemete 325135N 0813821W Sylvania North Bethel Cemetery GA Screven cemete 325756N 0813235W Burtons Ferry L Black Creek GA Screven cemete 323952N 0813110W Hunters Cemetery Black Creek GA Screven cemete 324103N 0813323W Hunters Cemetery Braggs Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324728N 0814458W Sylvania North Bryan Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324152N 0812840W Blue Springs La Buck Creek GA Screven cemete 324512N 0813127W Jacksonboro Bri Cemetery Cameron Cemetery GA Screven cemete 323329N 0813947W Dover Ellis Chapel GA Screven cemete 325326N 0814513W Sardis Cemetery Eneck Cemetery GA Screven cemete 323604N 0812542W Kildare Friendship GA Screven cemete 324655N 0813624W Jacksonboro Bri Memorial Cemetery Howard Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324007N 0813933W Sylvania South Hurst Cemetery GA Screven cemete 325437N 0814217W Hilltonia Lee Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324634N 0812826W Brier Creek Lan Lewis Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324851N 0813956W Sylvania North Little Horse Creek GA Screven cemete 324336N 0814720W Rocky Ford Cemetery Lovetts Cemetery GA Screven cemete 325528N 0814207W Hilltonia Meek Cemetery GA Screven cemete 325342N 0813517W Burtons Ferry L Middle Ground GA Screven cemete 323825N 0813134W Hunters Cemetery Mount Pleasant GA Screven cemete 324435N 0814246W Sylvania South Cemetery Mount Pleasant GA Screven cemete 325319N 0814318W Hilltonia Cemetery Oak Grove Cemetery GA Screven cemete 323656N 0814457W Dover Oak Grove Cemetery GA Screven cemete 325102N 0813050W Jacksonboro Bri Parker Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324117N 0814746W Rocky Ford Parker Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324239N 0814716W Rocky Ford Reddick Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324842N 0813702W Jacksonboro Bri Reddick Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324842N 0813704W Jacksonboro Bri Rocky Ford GA Screven cemete 324101N 0815013W Rocky Ford Cemetery Simmons Branch GA Screven cemete 323657N 0814230W Dover Cemetery Springhead GA Screven cemete 323840N 0814316W Sylvania South Cemetery Sylvania Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324448N 0813815W Sylvania South Thompson Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324235N 0813733W Sylvania South Union Cemetery GA Screven cemete 323617N 0813255W Oliver Wades Cemetery GA Screven cemete 323605N 0814341W Dover Waters Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324707N 0814230W Sylvania North Zeigler Cemetery GA Screven cemete 324300N 0814346W Sylvania South _________________________________________________________________ | GNIS Query Form | Mapping Information | _________________________________________________________________ URL: http://mapping.usgs.gov/www/gnis/gnisprod Maintainer: gnis_manager@usgs.gov Last modified: 15:09:38 Wed 24 Sep 1997 dlg
Any Moore's or Broughton's? Thanks, Barbara God Bless, Barbara
Any Moore's or Broughton's? Thanks, -----Original Message----- From: CannadyGirl@aol.com <CannadyGirl@aol.com> To: GASCREVE-L@rootsweb.com <GASCREVE-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Thursday, August 31, 2000 4:30 PM Subject: [GASCREVE] Look-Ups >Any Cowart's? > >Thanks > >Your friend and surely a distant cousin, > >claudia > > >============================== >Personalized Mailing Lists: never miss a connection again. >http://pml.rootsweb.com/ >Brought to you by RootsWeb.com. > >
Here is BROUGHTON: pg. 144 "In Savannah on 14th inst., Miss Mary Elizabeth BROUGHTON, dau. of Elijah BROUGHTON, age 13 years. Sept. 19, 1811." THE COLUMBIAN MUSEUM & SAVANNAH ADVERTISER, 1796-1812 One one of those.
Here are the WATERS Surnames: pg. 122 "In Savannah, on the 25th, Thos. B. WATERS, age 14 years, son of Mr. John WATERS. Dec 29, 1804." THE SOUTHERN RECORDER, 1823-1844. pg. 132 "In Savannah, on 17th inst. Mrs. Elsy WATERS, wife of John WATERS, age 26 years. March 25, 1808. THE COLUMBIAN MUSEUM & SAVANNAH ADVERTISER, 1796-1812. pg. 352 "In Bryan Co., on 1st inst., at the seat of William CLARKE, Esq., Mr. George M. WATERS to Miss Catherine FIFE. Jan 9, 1800." THE GEORGIA GAZETTE, 1790-1802 pg. 441 "In Bryan Co., on the 12th inst., Alexander NETHERCLIFT to Miss Mary WATERS, June 28, 1806." THE COLUMBIA MUSEUM & SAVANNAH ADVERTISER, 1796-1820. That's it folks.
Does anyone know which family OSBORNE HARRY HENDERSON, b. 22 Dec 1915, d. 30 June 1967, buried in row 18, no. 9, Little Horse Creek, connects to? That is all the information that I have. Carole