>From: Beverly kngsldy@cableone.net >I can't speak for anyone else but I've found the term "intermarried >with" in the wills of several of my ancestors living in southwestern >Pennsylvania in the late 1800's. Research into these lines has not >revealed any biological relationship of bride and groom so I just >assumed it was used in place of "married into" which was used later. I agree. To intermarry is to marry, period. But it is, from what I have seen, a commonly used term to indicate that someone was "married into" a group, like a family. Kimber For a listing of obituaries I have on hand for St. Joseph Cty, IN, visit: http://hometown.aol.com/k727h/index.html k727h@aol.com (Kimber)