does anyone have any info on a Minnie Hall?? My grandpa told me that she was left on a doorstep as a baby She was married to James Sloan. There children included Lloyd and Stuart and two daughters. Another son of theirs left the family, never to be heard from again. I will include more specific information later. please help.. Sarah (dreamy521@aol.com)
PANTAGRAPH Tuesday, March 20, 200 Central Illinois RALPH HALL FAIRBURY -- The funeral of Ralph Daniel Hall, 96, of Illinois Knights Templar Home, Paxton, formerly of the Fairbury and Cropsey area, will be at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Duffy-Pils Memorial Home, Fairbury. The Rev. Stanley Rapp will officiate. Burial will be in Fairview Cemetery, rural Cropsey. Visitation will be from 5 to 7 p.m. today at the memorial home, with a Masonic service at 7 p.m. He died at 4:35 p.m. Sunday (March 19, 2000) at Illinois Knights Templar Home, Paxton. Memorials may be made to Fairview Cemetery Association or to a charity of the donor's choice --<--<({@ DEBBIE @})>-->-- http://community.webtv.net/jmhall1/COULDTHISBEMYHALL
I am looking for info on John Hall who married Phoebe Webster, the date I have is 8/26/1807 in Guernsey, OH. I have no further info on either one of them. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! Lori ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
I am looking for info on Benjamin Harding Hall, my info says he is from Calico Rock, AR. He married Clarinda Jane Stephens. My husband descends from their son Benjamin Nelson Hall b. 01/11/1901 Calico Rock, AR. I would appreciate any help. Thanks~ Lori ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
I am looking for information on my Hall family. This is the information passed on by my grandmother. I am not sure this is correct because the dates would make David and Sarah close or over 100 when they died. Amos HALL, b. Sept. 9, 1839 in Morrow Co. Ohio; d. Dec. 21, 1932 in Atlanta, MO. he married Dec. 7 1865 to Mary W. PLATT, b. Aug 12, 1843 in Morrow Co. Ohio; d. May 8, 1917 in Atlanta, MO, daughter of Alanson PLATT and Rachel WHITE Amos and Mary children: Frank Alanson HALL and adopted daughter Mrs. Nellie PERKINS. Amos HALL, parents: David A. HALL, b. 1789 in Surry, England; d. 1893 married Sarah SUTTON, b. 1797 in England; d. 1896 David and Sarah had 2 boys and 1 girl. If anyone has any information please let me know. Thanks ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
I am look for information on my Hall family. The information I have is passed down from my Grandmother. I am not sure if the information is correct because David and Sarah would be close or over 100 when they died: Amos HALL, b. 1939 Morrow Co. Ohio; d. 1932 Atlanta, MO he married 1865 to Mary W. PLATT, b. 1984 Morrow Co. Ohio; d. 1917 Atlanta, MO; daughter of Alason PLATT and Rachel WHITE. Amos HALL, father is listed as: David A. HALL, b. 1789 Surry, England; d. 1893 married Sarah SUTTON, b. 1797; d. 1896. If anyone has any information on this family please let me know. Thanks ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
I am look for information on my Hall family. The information I have is passed down from my Grandmother. I am not sure if the information is correct because David and Sarah would be close or over 100 when they died: Amos HALL, b. 1939 Morrow Co. Ohio; d. 1932 Atlanta, MO he married 1865 to Mary W. PLATT, b. 1984 Morrow Co. Ohio; d. 1917 Atlanta, MO; daughter of Alason PLATT and Rachel WHITE. Amos HALL, father is listed as: David A. HALL, b. 1789 Surry, England; d. 1893 married Sarah SUTTON, b. 1797; d. 1896 If anyone has any information on this family please let me know. Thanks ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
Robert Hall (born 1837 in Renfrewshire), a blacksmith came to New Zealand from Paisley/Glasgow, Scotland as a Remittance man prior to 1869. Robert had a brother called Bill and a younger brother who had fits. Bill was good at sport so the gentry took him up and trained him. He became a famous shot putter and there is said to be a sculpture or statue of him in Paisley, Scotland. The Hall family had a blacksmith business making wrought iron products on the border of Glasgow & Paisley. Can anyone help me with information about this family or their business. Terry Logan
Debbie Redmond: Yes, Debbie, I think that it would be a good idea for you to add the James Hall info. to your web page. I suggest that you give credit to the ones involved. I hope that some one might use this information and research the two churches mentioned as well as Princeton University and surely will come up with names of children and other useful information. Keep us informed and I'll be watching your web pages. Cuz, Harley Rush
Je, thanks for the notification. I for one appreciate you letting the list know. Lotsa stuff lurking out there. Also, does anyone have any knowledge of John B. Hall born in Harlan Co. KY in 1861??? He was my great grandfather and I know nothing about him. Any connections out there????? Carol Broom
Hello All, I received one of those "Pretty Park" emails today. I DID NOT OPEN IT, but just to be on the safe side, I wanted to warn everyone in my address book. If you get something from ME that has "pretty park" or "frogs", especially in the subject line, IT DID NOT COME FROM ME. BE SURE TO DELETE WITHOUT OPENING IT. I know that we're not supposed to post this kind of thing to the mailing lists, but just wanted to warn everyone. This is the first time that this virus has shown up in my email, so I'm going to holler and let everyone know. JE Leonard Lenardo@bellsouth.net
Hi Cousins, as requested, I am sending the file on Dr. James Hall, it's quite interesting. I am sorry that I can not furnish more information on this Hall family, but this is all the information I have on Dr. James Hall. My line is from John Payton Hall, b 1808 in Macon Co. NC. He migrated in 1844 to McDonald County, MO., where he started a long line of descendants. I would like to show a connection from James Hall to my John Payten Hall but I do not have that information, however, I am working on it. from Harley Rush ===== Notes for James D.D. HALL Reverend James Hall - from notes by Agnes Cleveland Sandifer of Spartanburg, S.C. - given to Wilmina Rowland Smith in 1974 - and to Billie Rowland Smith in 1976, then to Durward Hall then to his daughter, Linda L Hall Ellison who gave them to Harley Rush. -------------------------------------- James Hall, D.D. was the third son of James and Prudence Hall. He was born near Carlisle, Pennsylvania, August 22, 1744. When he was between eight and nine years of age he came with his parents to North Carolina. He spent most of his early life assisting his father on the farm. He was an inventive genius and was especially good in math. He constructed a quadrant with which he a mused himself and his friends by measuring the heights of trees and the distance of objects. Dr. Archibald Henderson, professor of math at the University of North Carolina, has every reason to believe that Dr. Hall made with his own hands a steam engine which pulled a five foot steam boat on an artificial lake near his house. Doctor Henderson, also, believes that this was several years before the successful demonstration of the steamboat on the Hudson River, probably in 1807. Mrs. Mary C. Dalton wrote Mr. E.A. Hall some years before her death that Dr. James Hall always spent a night with them on his trips to Philadelphia to attend the General Assembly. She remembered on one of these visits as he was leaving to resume his trip north, he told her father Col. Placebo Houston to go out with him to his gig. Mrs. Dallton then, a little child, accompanied her father and Dr. Hall to the gig and there Dr. Hall showed them an instrument he had invented and attached to the wheel of his gig (no doubt this was the first speedometer used in this country.) Dr. Hall told Col. Houston it registered six hundred miles on the trip from his home in Bethany to Philadelphia. Little is known of Dr. Hall's early education except he mastered rest of his studies without a teacher until he was twenty six when he entered Crowfield Academy. There he took up his Latin in preparation for college. When he finished at Crowfield, he entered Nassau Hall, (now Princeton). When he graduated in 1774, he was so good in mathematics that after his graduation he was offered the position of teacher of math at Princeton, but he declined the honors as he had dedicated his life to the ministry. At the time he went to Crowfield Academy, Dr. Hall was engaged to Eliza Sloan; but when his father decided to prepare him for the ministry he broke the engagement because he did not want to marry her and then leave her alone in a frontier cabin. Doctor Hall possessed all the attributes necessary for a military commander. He was over six feet tall and he had great muscular strength. He was decided in action. Too, he had great moral and spiritual courage. In 1759 he marched at the head of a volunteer company of cavalry raised principally if not wholly from his charge. He was both captain and chaplain of the company that marched to South Carolina when that state was overrun by the British. When General Davidson was killed at Cowans Ford, Dr. Hall was selected as Brigadier General but declined the honor, still feeling his place to be in the pulpit. It has been said of Dr. Hall, that he "prayed like an angel on Sunday and fought like the devil through the week." It was his fortune to be in several skirmishes but not in any large battles. Besides the political welfare of the country, Dr. Hall was also, interested in the education of the young people of his country. He founded Clio's Nursery, about ten miles north of Statesville on Snow Creek. This school was known in that neighborhood as the Latin School house. this school he has superintended, and it ran for years. Many youths were educated there who filled afterwards, important posts of honor and usefulness. After the burning of Clio's N ursery, he built a frame building in the corner of his yard which was eighteen by twenty five feet and was two stories high. This he named "The Academy of the Sciences." Here he gave the southern youth an education equal to what they could obtain in a college. This Academy of the Sciences was a forerunner of the University of North Carolina. It was, also previous to the establishment of the University. It was said to be the best school in the state. This school had the best scientific equipment in the state and, Also, the south. One of the earliest textbooks written in North Carolina was an English Grammar written by Dr. Hall. He gathered the youths of the neighborhood together every Saturday and taught them grammar. He kept copies circulated among members of the class, but after wards the grammar was published and extensively used. Doctor Hall, also devoted a great deal of time to the teaching of theology to the young men that resided in his home and on the second floor of the Academy of the Sciences. He was never married so his widowed sister made her home with him. He was one of the organizers of the Seminary at Princeton. He wanted it located in the South; but when Princeton was selected as the place he gave freely to it of his time. He at one time turned over one thousand dollars he had collected for it. At his death he gave two hundred and fifty acres of valuable land in Tennespee to it. At his Institutions about twenty devoted ministers received a considerable part of their education and a still greater number of young men who engaged in a number of other employments were in a greatdegree educated by Dr. Hall. The D.D. was conferred on him by bothPrinceton and the University of North Carolina. It was in Dr. Hall's own chosen sphere of preacher and pastor he excelled. He was always full of tenderness and sympathy wherever he went. When his course was completed at Princeton, he returned to North Carolina. He was soon after licensed by the Presbytery of Orange and was installed as pastor of the United Congregations of Fourth Creek, Concord, and Bethany, April 8, 1778, and served these churches for a number of years but wishing to devote more time to mission work he resigned as pastor of Fourth Creek and Concord but preached on at Bethany for a period of twenty six years until he was forced by infirmities of to give it up. Doctor Hall attended the General Assembly sixteen times, which was held in Philadelphia. He attended this as a commissioner and was one time chosen moderator. No minister, it is believed, has ever been present so many years in the General Assembly. Dr. Hall, also went on fourteen missions under the direction of the General Assembly and the Synod of the Carolinas. Of these missions one was to the Mississippi territory and one was to Kentucky. So multiplied were the labors, so paternal were the affections of Dr. Hall that he had often been called, "The Apostle of North Carolina." At the formation of the American Bible Society of New Jersey he made himself a life member by the payment of thirty dollars. At his death he gave to the Concord Bible Society one hundred dollars and to the Mississippi two hundred. But in 1819 his efforts in the cause of his Divine Master ceased. In that year he returned from attending the meeting of the American Bible Society and the General Assembly for the last time, and also preached his last sermon. The remainder of his life was a period of great depression. This he spent with his nephew Davidson Hall and on July 25, 1826 he passed from his earthly toils. He died in an upstairs room on what is called the Howard place. The shelves where he kept his books are in the room in which he died. He was buried in the cemetery at Bethany Church on July 26, 1926. In this life it will never be known what the influence of such a life would mean to the country. There have been many men influenced through his preaching, teaching, and his pastoral visits. He has meant more to this state and other states than any one can tell.
Notes for James HALL Individual note: This history of James Hall was given to Billie Rowland Smith by Agnes Cleveland Sandifer of Spartanburg, S.C., in the spring of 1976. (Original source unknown). Next, a copy was sent to Durward Hall who in turn sent a copy to his daughter, Linda L. Hall Ellison at PO Box 708, Albany, OR. 97321 <mushroom@proaxis.com> Cousin, Linda sent me this copy. I hope that some one can add to this information. Harley Rush, gggrandson of John Payten Hall Sr. born 1808 in Macon County, NC. =============== The period of time from 1745 to 1800 is very interesting to a lover of history. What is now North Carolina was a wilderness then, which was no doubt untouched by human hands except by the savage. About that time many white men who came from Pennsylvania, "Virginia and Maryland began to settle here. These people of Scotch-Irish descent were led by the same guiding star - the hope of civil and religious liberties. For this they were willing to endure hardships and conquer the wilderness of America. They erected their rude cabins and these families and their descendants have for more than a hundred and fifty years been leaders in the country, the church, the society and are some of the highest types of Christian citizens. Among these settlers were James Hall and his wife Prudence Hall and their nine children. One son, Alexander, was born after they located in North Carolina. With the following church certificate (note the spelling) in their possession they sought a new home. "That James Hall and his wife Prudence Hall hath lived in this congregation ever since it was erected and heave behaved themselves cristionly and scherly without aney publicke scandel known to us and heave been pertacken of sealing ordernancas amonghst us and may be received into aney cristion society wherever God in his providence shall order their lett is certified this 20th day of Augast 1751 by the Session att Conewage." Little is known of the early life of James Hall and his wife. He and his widowed mother left their native Ireland for America in 1720. James Hall's mother died on the journey and was buried at sea. The youth landed "a stranger in a strange land." So far as is known his first work in America was in Philadelphia; later he moved to the country, there met and married Prudence Roddy. In 1751 they emigrated north and built their home in North Carolina in the northern part of Rowen Country (which is now Iredell.) They built their home on the northern bank of Fifth Creek about one mile south east of where Betghany Church now stands. Mr. and Mrs. Hall helped to plaut the Conewago Church, in Pennsylvania, and, also, assisted in the founding of Bethany Church in 1775. Mr. Hall was an Irish Presbyterian and possessed in a marked degree those strong points of character that distinguished that class of the Irish population. Mr. Hall's land was granted to him by the Earl of Granville in 1751. This deed is still in possession of the Hall family and part of the original tract of land has been in possession of some of the Halls ever since it was granted. "the old roads leading to the original Hall home are easily traveled. There is a walnut tree that marks the old place. =========== Notes for Thomas HALL The following hand written notes by Agnes Cleveland Sandifer of Spartanburg, S.C., accompanied the above document. -------------------------------------------- James Hall, the first ancestor we know anything about, was born in the North of Ireland. In 1720, young James Hall and his widowed mother started for America and while on the voyage, his mother died and was buried at sea. After a three months trip, the boy landed in Philadelphia where he remained for only a short time, going from there to Carlisle, Pa., where other Halls, kinsmen were living. There he married Prudence Roddy. He and his wife were Charter Members of the Presbyterian Church at Carlisle. In 1751 he moved to Iredell County N.C., and settled on a farm eight miles from Statesville. At this time he had seven children and was a man of some means, as he owned in addition to his home place, a farm on the Yadkin River. He had ten children in all, all married except Dr. James Hall of Revolutionary fame. James and Prudence Hall are buried in the old Church graveyard (Presbyterian) at Statesville, N.C. James Hall's son Thomas was our ancestor. He lived and died in Bethany Congregation near the old home place in Iredell and raised eleven children. =============== Note -- The above documents contain several pages of history on Dr. (Doctor of Divinity) James Hall which I will be glad to send to any interested party. Harley Rush
> From: "Shelley Murphy" <smurphy@cybertrails.com> > > Hi Peggy, What area of TX. are you referring to? I have some HALL's in > TX. too. > They are Jacob Lital Hall, b. 25 Sep.1832 in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan. He > married Eliza L. Sachs on 16 Jul. 1856 in Cincinnati, Hamilton, OH. Eliza > was b. 21 Sep. 1836 in Allegheny, PA. > Jacob died on 12 Nov. 1867 in Monroe, Jasper, IA. I really will get to the > TX. part soon! :>) > Children were: > 1. Sarah Jane Hall, b. 07 Jul. 1857 in Monroe, IA. (my second great > grandmother) > 2. George Lewis Hall, b. 10 Dec. 1861 in Galveston, TX. m. Mary E. Mull Nov. > 15, 1879 in Cotesfield, NE. > died May 07, 1935 in Yakima, WN. > 3. & 4. were twins: William Henry Hall & John Richard Hall b. 21 Sep. 1863 > in Fort Bend Co. TX. no other > inf. available on them. > 5. Edmond Morris Hall b. 11 Aug. 1865 in San Jacinto Co. TX. died 10 Jul. > 1867 San Jacinto, TX. > > I know that this family does not seem to tie into yours, but you never > know!! Would you do me a favor and post this to the Hall list. I have > been subscribed to the list for several months and get all of the queries > but this is the first time in the 4 years that I have been doing family > research on the net that I could not get my query sent through. I went back > to rootsweb and tried to unsubscribe and planned to subscribe again, and > they said I was not on the list! Yet I have been getting all of the Hall > Q's for months!! I don't understand why my q's don't get through, but I > seem to be stuck in the middle somewhere???? At any rate, I would really > appreciate your help on this matter! As you can see my Hall's moved so much > it has been hard to get any records on them! > Thanks, > Shelley
Hi Everyone, Thought I would pass this on. I'm looking forward to the PBS series on Ancestors. And, since the story I wrote about discovering the last surviving child of my wife's grandfather's brother and the subsequent unplanned, but wonderful, visit of her Italian relatives is one of the 101 stories in the book. Ken xxxxx Dear Book Contributors, I wanted to tell you the latest and greatest on the show and the book. The PBS series, Ancestors, has been delayed slightly to a launch date of June 1st. It will be 13 half-hour episodes, most likely one a week, so the series should run all the way to early Fall. I say "most likely" only because the local PBS stations make their own decisions about airing dates and times. I'm part of the team working on the Ancestors website and once it's up, one of the features will be a search function that allows you to look up when the show is airing in your area. I don't think the site will be launched until May, though. Probably a safe way to be able to link into the new site when it does appear would be to go to http://www.kbyu.org and click in the left margin on Ancestors. There's already a brief overview of the 13 episodes there and I would think that it will provide a pass-through to the final site when it's ready. BTW, I'm obviously biased(!), but I've seen rough cuts of 11 of the 13 episodes and I think this is going to be a wonderful series. Please do try to watch at least a few episodes. They're a combination of personal stories, how to, experts, and man on the street -- and the filming was done all over the country and in England, Ireland, France, Russia, and Hong Kong. A few of you receiving this are actually in the series and I'm sure you'll all be pleased with your episodes. I know I'm very happy with the one I'm in. Those editors are very kind! Concerning the book, there's a little confusion. They decided not to delay its release for the series, so the official release date is April 10th. Having said that, I already have reports of it showing up in bookstores (mostly large ones) from Denver to Virginia Beach and of amazon.com already shipping it. I just received the copies that I ordered and have started sending out a courtesy copy to each of you. Unfortunately, I'm a one-man show in this regard, so it may take a couple of weeks to get them all out, but I know at least one of you has already received her copy. Keep an eye on your mail box! It's coming soon. I wanted to tell you also that I have created a personal website to go along with the book. Because of the book trickling out earlier than expected, I've had to launch it prematurely with some kinks still in it, but it's not too far off from what I hope it will be. If you're interested, please have a look at: honoringourancestors.com Among other things, the site has my book tour schedule (although I still need to add my newly set Utah dates). So far, I'm going to be in VA, MD, NY, RI, and UT -- and I'd love to meet you if I'm in your neighborhood. Please consider coming and possibly participating. If there are no objections, I will probably follow this up with another message with some small measures you could take if you're willing to help get the word out about the book. For now, if you like it when you get it, I just ask that you tell others about it and/or consider going to amazon.com (search under "In Search of Our Ancestors" or "Smolenyak") and ranking it. Thanks once again for your help, your willingness to share, and your patience. I'm sure this has seemed like a long process, but it's finally producing some fruit! Take care, Megan Megan Smolenyak <Megan_Smolenyak@compuserve.com> ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~* Author of In Search of Our Ancestors 101 Stories of Serendipity and Connection in Rediscovering Our Family History Companion book to PBS Ancestors series book available now/series in June 2000 ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
--part1_3b.28b360e.260ad135_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit --part1_3b.28b360e.260ad135_boundary Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Disposition: inline Return-Path: <smurphy@cybertrails.com> Received: from rly-zc01.mx.aol.com (rly-zc01.mail.aol.com [172.31.33.1]) by air-zc01.mail.aol.com (v70.20) with ESMTP; Wed, 22 Mar 2000 19:22:27 -0500 Received: from presley.cybertrails.com (presley.cybertrails.com [162.42.150.35]) by rly-zc01.mx.aol.com (v70.21) with ESMTP; Wed, 22 Mar 2000 19:21:37 -0500 Received: (qmail 31398 invoked from network); 23 Mar 2000 00:23:19 -0000 Received: from spr-usr-2-p27.cybertrails.com (HELO e4v0h4) (162.42.16.91) by presley.cybertrails.com with SMTP; 23 Mar 2000 00:23:19 -0000 Message-ID: <002901bf9461$09c1d620$5b102aa2@e4v0h4> From: "Shelley Murphy" <smurphy@cybertrails.com> To: <Tpdees1@aol.com> Subject: re: HALL's In TX Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2000 17:45:05 -0700 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 5.00.2919.6600 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.00.2919.6600 Hi Peggy, What area of TX. are you referring to? I have some HALL's in TX. too. They are Jacob Lital Hall, b. 25 Sep.1832 in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan. He married Eliza L. Sachs on 16 Jul. 1856 in Cincinnati, Hamilton, OH. Eliza was b. 21 Sep. 1836 in Allegheny, PA. Jacob died on 12 Nov. 1867 in Monroe, Jasper, IA. I really will get to the TX. part soon! :>) Children were: 1. Sarah Jane Hall, b. 07 Jul. 1857 in Monroe, IA. (my second great grandmother) 2. George Lewis Hall, b. 10 Dec. 1861 in Galveston, TX. m. Mary E. Mull Nov. 15, 1879 in Cotesfield, NE. died May 07, 1935 in Yakima, WN. 3. & 4. were twins: William Henry Hall & John Richard Hall b. 21 Sep. 1863 in Fort Bend Co. TX. no other inf. available on them. 5. Edmond Morris Hall b. 11 Aug. 1865 in San Jacinto Co. TX. died 10 Jul. 1867 San Jacinto, TX. I know that this family does not seem to tie into yours, but you never know!! Would you do me a favor and post this to the Hall list. I have been subscribed to the list for several months and get all of the queries but this is the first time in the 4 years that I have been doing family research on the net that I could not get my query sent through. I went back to rootsweb and tried to unsubscribe and planned to subscribe again, and they said I was not on the list! Yet I have been getting all of the Hall Q's for months!! I don't understand why my q's don't get through, but I seem to be stuck in the middle somewhere???? At any rate, I would really appreciate your help on this matter! As you can see my Hall's moved so much it has been hard to get any records on them! Thanks, Shelley --part1_3b.28b360e.260ad135_boundary--
In a message dated 00-03-22 14:08:42 EST, ETHELTYWHITE@aol.com writes: << I am new to the Hall, mailing list & am wondering if i may find some family belonging to Hezekiah Hall, & Sarah Porter, I don't have correct dates for their births, or marriage. I would love to find parents, & children. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Ethel >> Hi Ethel, You don't give any location or estimate dates. I have a Hezekiah Hall, b. 1710 at Crosswicks, Burlington County, New Jersey. He married in 1750 Elizabeth Bemaund at Old Swedes Church. He could have been married before?? He lived in Chester County, Pennsylvania until he died. Bob McKeon
I failed to put dates or counties on my request for help on Hezekiah Hall, born 1758 in Wilkes Co.North Carolina, & Sarah Porter, born 1790 in Wilkes Co.North Carolina, she was the daughter of Joseph Porter,& Sarah Jane Reynolds, of Wilkes Co.North Carolina. There dates seem too far apart, but, this information was found on the family tree maker c.d.'s. Thanks,Ethel
Hi, to everyone, I am new to the Hall, mailing list & am wondering if i may find some family belonging to Hezekiah Hall, & Sarah Porter, I don't have correct dates for their births, or marriage. I would love to find parents, & children. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Ethel
Hello, Does anyone have ANY Halls that was in Chester county,South Carolina before 1825 that came to TENNESSEE??? Any help would be appreciated. Also does anyone know anything about a John and Sarah Hall that was in Carroll county Tennessee? Bessie turley@usit.net