This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/RIh.2ACIB/441.2 Message Board Post: Hi, As Jim said in his reply, there are a lot of us out there. I am Hiram Moses Hadley's great great granddaughter. Hiram Moses Hadley was my great grandfather. Freelon Artemis Hadley was my grandfather. He was a brother of Commodore. I have a lot of genealogy and would love to share. Judy
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/RIh.2ACIB/441.1 Message Board Post: There are actually quite a few of us on the Genealogy boards that are related to this line. I tie in to your line at Hiram Moses HADLEY. Feel free to e-mail me if you have further interest. Jim
Tim I have gotten things from HADLEY-L@rootsweb.com for some time!I have not seen anything I was interested in. I have tried to get unsribed! Our ancester Simon came to Arimeria from Ireland about 1710. People who have resercesed cannot find connecton with Hadleys in England. Look at Hadley Society on net. Howard Glad to hear from you ----- Original Message ----- From: <HADLEYTC@aol.com> To: <HADLEY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, August 04, 2002 1:17 PM Subject: Re: [HADLEY-L] Fwd: welsh irish > Did you try to find him on thehadleysociety web site? > A couple other resources are hadley.com and hadley.org > good luck. let me know if you find them listed. > > Tim Hadley > Farmersville OH > > > ==== HADLEY Mailing List ==== > HADLEY Message Board: > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=board&r=rw&p=surnames.hadley > HADLEY List Archives: > http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/HADLEY/ > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 >
Did you try to find him on thehadleysociety web site? A couple other resources are hadley.com and hadley.org good luck. let me know if you find them listed. Tim Hadley Farmersville OH
--part1_41.2123e50e.2a7c97b2_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit --part1_41.2123e50e.2a7c97b2_boundary Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Disposition: inline Return-Path: <listadmin-bounces@rootsweb.com> Received: from rly-xb03.mx.aol.com (rly-xb03.mail.aol.com [172.20.105.104]) by air-xb03.mail.aol.com (v86_r1.16) with ESMTP id MAILINXB32-0802181942; Fri, 02 Aug 2002 18:19:42 -0400 Received: from lists2.rootsweb.com (lists7.rootsweb.com [207.40.200.39]) by rly-xb03.mx.aol.com (v86_r1.15) with ESMTP id MAILRELAYINXB39-0802181923; Fri, 02 Aug 2002 18:19:23 -0400 Received: (from slist@localhost) by lists2.rootsweb.com (8.12.4/8.12.4) id g72MJCdq008940 for HADLEY-admin@lists2.rootsweb.com; Fri, 2 Aug 2002 16:19:12 -0600 Date: Fri, 2 Aug 2002 16:19:12 -0600 X-From_: HWTHADLEY@aol.com Fri Aug 2 16:19:12 2002 Received: from mail.rootsweb.com (mail.rootsweb.com [192.168.16.34]) by lists2.rootsweb.com (8.12.4/8.12.4) with ESMTP id g72MJBWG008921 for <HADLEY-L-request@lists7.rootsweb.com>; Fri, 2 Aug 2002 16:19:11 -0600 Received: from imo-r06.mx.aol.com (imo-r06.mx.aol.com [152.163.225.102]) by mail.rootsweb.com (8.12.4/8.12.4) with ESMTP id g72MJBFM008360 for <hadley-l-request@rootsweb.com>; Fri, 2 Aug 2002 16:19:11 -0600 Received: from HWTHADLEY@aol.com by imo-r06.mx.aol.com (mail_out_v33.5.) id e.105.19a77aad (18558) for <hadley-l-request@rootsweb.com>; Fri, 2 Aug 2002 18:19:13 -0400 (EDT) From: HWTHADLEY@aol.com Message-ID: <105.19a77aad.2a7c5f60@aol.com> Old-Date: Fri, 2 Aug 2002 18:19:12 EDT Subject: welsh irish To: hadley-l-request@rootsweb.com MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" X-Mailer: AOL 7.0 for Windows UK sub 10502 X-Diagnostic: Unprocessed X-Envelope-To: HADLEY-L-request i believe my great grandfather came from ireland his name was charlie or charles hadley his wifes name was maud ,and they lived in coventry and wales --part1_41.2123e50e.2a7c97b2_boundary--
Becky You sure did a great job with our List Thanks and have a great trip ALicia in FL ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/web/.
Hi! It's my understanding that there will be a HADLEY reunion July 20th in Middlebourne, WV. Does anyone have specific details, and a contact for the reunion? Some of my family plans to attend the reunion. Thanks! Mary __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Autos - Get free new car price quotes http://autos.yahoo.com
Hello, Hadley list members, It's been a fun and easy couple of years serving as listowner. This has got to be one of the most courteous and congenial lists sponsored by Rootsweb. In recent months, though, I have not had the time to give the list the attention it deserves. I think it's time to pass the reins on to someone else. So, this list is up for grabs. I am also going out of the country for several weeks and will need to pass the list on to a substitute, anyway. For anyone who might be interested, the responsibilities of listowner can be as involved as you wish to make them, or involve not much more than an hour or so per week. This list numbers just under 200 members. It's a pretty stable group; not many subscribing or un-subscribing very often. Listowners must read all posts, assist members with subscribing/unsubscribing, and deal with bounces (return messages from members who have changed email addresses and forgot to tell the listowner, or whose inboxes are full, etc.) If you would like more information about list ownership, or would like to take on the management of the Hadley list, please email me privately at the address below. More information about what's involved with list ownership can be found on this page at rootsweb: http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/listadmins/ Regards, Becky Teague Listowner: Hadley-L, Yaudes-L hadleylist@hotmail.com _________________________________________________________________ MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos: http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx
Have you seen this site by the National Parks Service? You can search for names in Civil War Records. http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/soldiers.htm Here are the Hadleys from Alabama. No. Soldier Name Side Function Regiment Name 1 Hadley, F. Confederate Infantry 63rd Regiment, Alabama Infantry (2nd Alabama Reserves) 2 Hadley, George L. Confederate Infantry 3rd Regiment, Alabama Infantry 3 Hadley, J.E. Confederate Infantry 8th Regiment, Alabama Infantry 4 Hadley, J.S. Confederate Infantry 5th Battalion, Alabama Infantry Volunteers 5 Hadley, O.F. Confederate Infantry 5th Regiment, Alabama Infantry 6 Hadley, Oscar F. Confederate 3rd Battalion, Alabama 7 Hadley, Sidney Confederate Infantry 38th Regiment, Alabama Infantry 8 Hadley, T. Confederate Cavalry Barlow's Company, Alabama Cavalry (Company C, 15th Confederate Cavalry) 9 Hadley, Thomas Confederate Infantry 63rd Regiment, Alabama Infantry (2nd Alabama Reserves) _________________________________________________________________ Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device: http://mobile.msn.com
Hello, list members, Rootsweb administration has announced that as of today, they are changing over to new servers. This means some servers will be unavailable during this time unavailable and they are asking for your patience. For up-to-date information about the different resources, you can visit http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/ as the move progresses. If you have a web page hosted by Rootsweb: o Web Pages: FTP will be down so that changes can't be made to pages until everything is working correctly on the new servers. There will be a short time that the pages will not be available as the transfer takes place. Service to mailing lists might be delayed while the changes are completed. If you think you're not getting list mail, that is probably why. Please wait a day or so and it should pick up again. Hadley has been pretty slow lately, and we probably won't even notice!! Regards, Becky Teague Listowner Hadley-l _________________________________________________________________ Join the worlds largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail. http://www.hotmail.com
RUSSELL LEVI HIATT b. 15 May 1889 Clinton Co., Oh. and d. 29 Jan 1959 Clinton Co., Oh. married on 18 Mar 1920 Clinton Co., Oh. to DELLA HADLEY b. 16 Jan 1887. Source; LDS Ancestral File Colleen Kitch GuyCol@webtv.net
The Hadley message board is available for adoption. If interested please email me. Kristie Setser --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.368 / Virus Database: 204 - Release Date: 5/29/02
I have no answers for you Karim, but I wanted to wish you Luck on this search of yours. I am researching from the other side of the fence, myself. My line is from TN O'neal Slave- holders , and I was hoping to find descendents of the enslaved persons from that farm to see if there were any "Kin" who are of the O'neal line that I also come from. I realize that for some this is a touchy subject still, because slavery in the US is only just over 137 years in the past, which of course means that great grandparents could relate personal experiences of Enslavement and Freedom to children, grand children and great grand children who are still alive today. I have been, in the past few days, searching for query sites that include the question of Slave/Slave holder and the desire to connect with anyone of my lines that may either be related by blood or chose to keep the ex-owners surname for what ever reasons, because I think my family would be proud to be connected to people who endured so much and came away strong from the bond that held them. My problem is, of course that I do not know what type of people my lines of slave holders were, and can't know if any persons of slave ancestry would even want to claim kinship with me and mine, even if they were 'blood" relatives. I need to try all avenues of research, though, because I want as complete a historical record as possible, and I would like to "Know" my ancestors somewhat , also. I hope that others who see your Post to the list will come forward and name either and or slave holders /slave in their lines so that we can put the bitterness and fear of that time in the past where it rightly belongs and realize that we can be helping each other to make OUR family histories much more complete. gloria lange ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/web/.
Greetings to ALL: I'm new to this list, and I pray that all is well with you and yours. Since "beating around the bush" is not my style, I come to you forthrightly. I'm an African American presently involved in slave ancestry research. My mission is simple. I'm attempting to piece together kinships of certain ancestors and relatives. My great, great uncle, Hilliard HADLEY (b. 1820, d. 1891) and his half brother, Wash ALDRIDGE (b. 1845, d. 1905), were enslaved persons on the plantation of James HADLEY (b. ca 1805, b. ca 1859) in Ashley Co., AR., though he (James) was originally from Cumberland Co., NC. His father was a Thomas HADLEY who was connected to the Simon HADLEY line. If I'm not mistaken, this particular Thomas HADLEY was dismissed from the Society of Quakers because of his involvement in the war. In that save vein, one of his sons', his namesake, Thomas HADLEY, was also a confederate soldier in Arkansas (Ashley Co). I have a copy of the Last Will and Testament of James HADLEY--"HILLIARD" is, in fact, the first enslaved person mentioned in his will. And, according to 1860 Slave schedule (Ashley Co, AR), he owned 32 enslaved persons, but only eight or nine are actually mentioned in his will. I'm wondering if anyone on the list may have any other records that could help me: Bill of Sales, bibles records, wills, manumissions, tax rolls, deeds, mortages etc that list names of enslaved persons. I would really appreciate your assistance in this endeavor. I would also like to clarify that I have NO INTEREST or NO CLAIMS to determine any "blood" relationships with James HADLEY. My goal is to piece together scattered/separated (NC, TN, AR) kin as a consequence of the enslavement experience. Any assistance you can provide will be greatly appreciated. I thank you for taking the time to read this brief note. Sincerely, Karim Rand Houston, Texas
Please can anyone help? My Hadleys are from Dudley / Rowley. I have gone as far back as John, b about 1809 in Rowley, son of James, a miner. Does this sound familiar to anyone? John married Mary Robinson, daughter of Benjamin, a farmer, in 1838. They had at least three children, Philip, Mary and Timothy. Also, my great grandfather, George Edward Hadley was, I believe deported from America some time between 1901 - 1903. Can anyone point me in the right direction so that I can find out what he got up to? I know he went to Pittsburg to visit a friend. Thanks, Gill Barratt
I am interested in John Hadley, son of Simon Hadley 1. I have a John Hadley b.abt. 1676 married to a Ann unknown.. children...they were in MD and Ky?? Thomas 1708 d. Nov. 10, 1766 married Alice Agnes Sarah Elizabeth 1710 Samuel b. 1712 Edward b. 1714 In my searchings for the son of Simon.. I found this listed online.. As his son...Does anyone have more info on either one of these Johns?? I found where John Hadley b. married a Margaret Rigley Children 1. Elizabeth HADLEY b: Abt 1700 in of Dublin,,,Ireland 2. Benjamin HADLEY b: Abt 1700/1715 in of,,,Ireland 3. Thomas HADLEY b: Abt 1700/1715 in of,,,Ireland 4. Catherine HADLEY b: Abt 1700/1715 in of,,,Ireland 5. Ann HADLEY b: Abt 1700/1715 in of,,,Ireland 6. Ruth HADLEY b: Abt 1715 in of,,,Ireland Thank you, Linda
I ran across the following obituary, and am posting it to the list in case it helps someone. http://www.rootsweb.com/~nytompki/vitals/tobit007.htm#22 HADLEY, Mrs. Hester MEKEEL Mrs. Hester MEKEEL HADLEY, 77, died Friday, Jan. 24, 1947, at her home in Trumansburg. She is survived by her husband, Fred E. HADLEY; 2 daughters, Mrs. E. Curry WEATEHRBY, Ithaca, and Mrs. Willard WIXOM, Trumansburg; a son, Arthur E. HADLEY of Syracuse; a brother, DeWitt BOWER of Trumansburg; 8 grandchildren; 8 great-grandchildren, and several nephews. Mrs. HADLEY was a member of Trumansburg Chapter, Order of Eastern Star, for 20 years and a past matron of the organization; was associated with Grange work for more than 50 years, and was a lifetime member of the Methodist Churches of Trumansburg and Jacksonville. Services will be held at 3 p.m. Monday in the Trumansburg Methodist Church with the pastor, the Rev. Charles Arthur Smith and the Rev. Arthur Moody, pastor of Jacksonville Methodist Church officiating. Interment will be in Grove Cemetery, Trumansburg. Friends may call at the Stewart Rhode Funeral Home between 3 and 5 p.m. Sunday. Becky Teague Listowner _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp.
Hello, After I read the two articles about Joshua Hadley in the Fayetteville Observer, I wrote to the author, Roy Parker, and shared some of the information we have collected. He has now written a third article about Joshua Hadley, using some of this information. I copy his email to me below for your enjoyment. John Hadley Hello, Here is a column that appeared in the Fayetteville Observer on April 28 best wishes roy parker jr Captain Joshua Hadley In Tennessee By Roy Parker Jr april25 2002 In 1787 when we last saw Capt. Joshua Hadley, one of Cumberland County's fightingest soldiers of the American War of Independence, he was again in uniform. The Revolution had been over for five years, but the 33-year-old Hadley heard the bugle call again. He was one of eight volunteer militia captains of companies that the North Carolina government proposed to raise "for the defense of western counties" in a time of lawlessness in that part of the state west of the Appalachians that would become the state of Tennessee. In January, when I first wrote about Joshua Hadley, I knew little about his life after he left Cumberland County. I wrote that it was "obscure," and I even surmised that a Revolutionary War veteran named Joshua Hadley who died at 76 in 1830 in Sumner County, Tennessee, was "another generation" from the dashing young Continental officer who grew up in on the family farm across the Cape Fear River from the colonial village of Cross Creek, now Fayetteville. But descendants of Joshua Hadley quickly out me straight. "Obscure?" Not at all. Here is the "rest of the story." In that summer of 1787, Hadley led his small company on a march that took them across the Appalachians to the Cumberland Settlements of what is now east Tennessee. For more than a year, according to Tennessee history, Hadley's militiamen battled marauding Indians even as a stream of new settlers,. including many veterans of the Revolution, came to the rugged but fertile valleys of the rivers west of the Blue Ridge. His small command was part of a battalion known as Evans' Battalion, named for Major Richard Evans. A history of the state says: "This battalion remained in the settlements about two years andrendered good service in guarding the various forts and in pursuing the enemy when the latter had committed murders or stolen horses." Joshua Hadley was impressed with the Cumberland settlements. When he got his first glimpse of Nashville, later the capital of the state, he described it as "a half dozen frame and log houses and twenty or thirty log cabins." At the time, Nashville was the county seat of Davidson County, in the part of North Carolina that in 1790 would be ceded to the federal government. In the autumn of 1787, Hadley returned to Fayetteville and married 18-year-old Hannah Holmes, whose father would become a governor of Virginia. At the same time, as a veteran of the Continental Line, Hadley was eligible and became a longtime member of the Society of he Cincinnati, an organization open only to Continental officers. His name is listed among the first members of the Society's North Carolina unit. But the Cape Fear would not hold Hadley for long. By 1789, he was a citizen of trans-mountain Davidson County, appearing in the 1790 census as "Captain Joshua Hadley." And so for the remainder of his long life,, the young captain of the Revolution from Cumberland County would be a wellknown citizen of the state of Tennessee. Hadley's military service led to his status as a major landholder in the new state of Tennessee. Even as he arrived west of the Appalachians, he was granted 7,500 acres of public land in recognition of his military services, which he chose to take in Williamson and Sumner counties After permanently moving to Tennessee to take up the grant that was his because of his war service, he began to acquire grants from other Continental soldiers who failed declined to come to the state. A 20th-century state official familiar with such grants said that Hadley at one time owned half of what is today Williamson, Sumner and Davidson counties. Descendants think that is a stretch, but not too far. Hadley's children and other members of his family scattered throughout the South and Southwest, with one notable member becoming an early notable of the Texas Republic. The Hadleys have a widespread family organization, with many busy family- tree experts. There is a Hadley Society, and a web site. A portrait of Hadley in his later yesars, handsome with a full mane of white hair, is on the web site. While Tennessee claims his mature years, Cumberland County, North Carolina ranks him among its Revolutionary War heroes. As an officer in the Continental Army, Hadley fought under George Washington at the Battle of Germantown, Pa., in 1777, and under Nathanael Greene at the Battle of Eutaw Springs, S.C., in 1781. Hadley paid a price in both of these fierce engagements, He was listed among the wounded at both Germantown and Eutaw Springs. Hadley was certainly no sunshine Patriot. He was in on the beginning of the War of Independence 1775. And he was still in uniform months after most others had gone home as the war wound down in 1782. Hadley is among the 58 signers of "the association," the defiant anti-British statement circulated in the village of Cross in the summer of 1775, soon after the war had erupted in New England. As such, his name appears on the stone listing those early Patriots which stands in a little park at the intersection of Old and Person Streets in downtown Fayetteville. Hadley's war record didn't end with his service at Eutaw Springs. For although General Cornwallis surrendered his British forces at Yorktown in October of 1781, the war of Independence had its own momentum in North Carolina, and especially in the Cape Fear area, where a British force held the port town of Wilmington, not evacuating until November of 1781. Spurred by the British presence, Loyalists, so-called Tories, rose up in arms in large numbers, their hard-riding bands overwhelming Patriot militia forces, taking virtual control of whole counties along the Cape Fear River. . Among victims of this bloody civil war was Joshua Hadley's own father, Thomas Hadley, at the time sheriff of Cumberland County. The Hadleys had been in Cumberland County since the 1750s. Thomas Hadley established one of the first merchant stores in the village of Cross Creek as early as 1761. He was slain, probably in July of 1781, at his home near Carvers Creek in northeastern Cumberland, by night-riding Tories. .Despite the departure of the British, the area seethed with civil war right on into 1782. And Capt. Joshua Hadley was still busy. He held a commission to round up Tories, as well as deserters and delinquents from the Patriot forces, throughout the river area. And because of that service, we have history's only contemporary assessment of Hadley's young personal and military character. A Major McRae, writing to General Sumner from Wilmington in February of 1782 reported: "Capt Hadley is invested with orders for this district. There is still a great prospect of success if he is active, which I believe is much his character." The zeal that so impressed McRae was apparently the distinguishing attribute of Joshua Hadley as soldier, settler, and citizen, in his home state, and in his adopted state.
You asked: Brad Hadley had a website for the George Hadley descendants (George of Ipswich I believe). I tried recently to go on and found a different site. So then I e-mailed him at the address I had and it came back undeliverable. Does anyone know anything about him? Lucy You can find the site at http://hadley.8m.com Hope this helps Judy
Brad Hadley had a website for the George Hadley descendants (George of Ipswich I believe). I tried recently to go on and found a different site. So then I e-mailed him at the address I had and it came back undeliverable. Does anyone know anything about him? Lucy