I would like to correspond with anyone researching Dutch or German HART families in the 1700's in any of the following places in New York: Albany Schenectady St. Johnsville Ballston Spa Halfmoon Regards, Margaret [email protected]
Looking for information on Caroline HART. In 1814, in Canadiaguia NY, she married Charles UNDERHILL. If anyone has any further information on her and her HART family, I would appreciate hearing from you. Thanks. ___________________________________________________________________ You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com/getjuno.html or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866]
unsubscribe [email protected] wrote: > Subject: > > HART-D Digest Volume 99 : Issue 31 > > Today's Topics: > #1 [HART-L] Lewis Hart ["D L Austin" <[email protected]] > #2 [HART-L] Donating to lg libraries ["Mary Jo C. Martin" <[email protected]] > > Administrivia: > To unsubscribe from HART-D, send a message to > > [email protected] > > that contains in the body of the message the command > > unsubscribe > > and no other text. No subject line is necessary, but if your software > requires one, just use unsubscribe in the subject, too. > > ______________________________ > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > Subject: [HART-L] Lewis Hart > Date: Thu, 11 Mar 1999 11:01:06 -0800 > From: "D L Austin" <[email protected]> > To: [email protected] > > "The Descendants of Lewis Hart & Anne Elliott" by Jared Sidney Torrance, > published in 1923. Concerning the families of Hart-Warner; Hart- Curtiss; > Hart- McColley; Curtiss- Thompson; Curtiss- Torrance; Curtiss- Vosburgh. > Index, 361 pages > $60 postage paid in US & Canada. (WA residents add 8.1% sales tax) > Lookups available until I no longer have the book. > If you are interested in the book, please e-mail me. > > ______________________________ > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > Subject: [HART-L] Donating to lg libraries > Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 18:06:42 +1100 > From: "Mary Jo C. Martin" <[email protected]> > To: [email protected] > > Dear Rootswebbers: > > A gentleman on another list asked about donating a copy of a family history > manuscript to the Library of Congress. I replied, and thought that > cousins/fellow researchers on other lists might also benefit from my answer. > Hope this helps someone out there. I wish you all good luck. (I wish I was > ready to publish!) > > %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% > > Dear Abe, and anyone else thinking about donating copies of family research > to large libraries and research institutions: > > I used to work for the Library of Congress, and I wanted to give you some > advice about donating a copy of your in-laws' family history manuscript to > them, so as to avoid disappointment. > > As you may know, the Library of Congress is the physical and organizational > site for the US Copyright Office. Copyright requirements stipulate that the > Copyright Office receive two copies of any book that the author wishes to > register. One copy automatically goes into the Library's collections. > > As such, the Library gets copies of all sorts of different things each year. > When I left them in 1989, they had more than 8 million items in their > collections. I'm sure that number has grown exponentially since then. > > My point is that a great deal of what the Library receives is discarded, > either right away, or eventually. There just isn't enough room to store it > all! The three Library of Congress buildings that you can visit behind the > Capitol in Washington, DC are just the tip of the iceberg. They also have > warehouses in Maryland that cover acres. > > The Library will keep things that fall within their mandate -- stuff that > will advance Congressional research, or rare and valuable items. They > assume (or hope) that items of lesser value to the nation will be available > elsewhere in other libraries or research institutions. > > So give them a call before donating a precious copy of your family history. > They most probably would politely decline to keep it, and would counsel you > instead to give it to local libraries or county historical societies, where > it might be enjoyed and used by people researching in the family's locality. > > Best wishes, and please congratulate your in-laws for having put together an > account of their escape. I'm sure that it is intriguing story that will be > appreciated by many people. > > Mary Jo C. Martin > Melbourne, Australia > [email protected]
A lot of people donate their family histories to the LDS Family History Center in Salt Lake, given permission to microfilm, the history will be available all over the world. If you want your copy back, they will film it (at no cost to you) and send it back to you. ---------- From: Mary Jo C. Martin[SMTP:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, March 12, 1999 12:06 AM To: [email protected] Subject: [HART-L] Donating to lg libraries Dear Rootswebbers: A gentleman on another list asked about donating a copy of a family history manuscript to the Library of Congress. I replied, and thought that cousins/fellow researchers on other lists might also benefit from my answer. Hope this helps someone out there. I wish you all good luck. (I wish I was ready to publish!) %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% Dear Abe, and anyone else thinking about donating copies of family research to large libraries and research institutions: I used to work for the Library of Congress, and I wanted to give you some advice about donating a copy of your in-laws' family history manuscript to them, so as to avoid disappointment. As you may know, the Library of Congress is the physical and organizational site for the US Copyright Office. Copyright requirements stipulate that the Copyright Office receive two copies of any book that the author wishes to register. One copy automatically goes into the Library's collections. As such, the Library gets copies of all sorts of different things each year. When I left them in 1989, they had more than 8 million items in their collections. I'm sure that number has grown exponentially since then. My point is that a great deal of what the Library receives is discarded, either right away, or eventually. There just isn't enough room to store it all! The three Library of Congress buildings that you can visit behind the Capitol in Washington, DC are just the tip of the iceberg. They also have warehouses in Maryland that cover acres. The Library will keep things that fall within their mandate -- stuff that will advance Congressional research, or rare and valuable items. They assume (or hope) that items of lesser value to the nation will be available elsewhere in other libraries or research institutions. So give them a call before donating a precious copy of your family history. They most probably would politely decline to keep it, and would counsel you instead to give it to local libraries or county historical societies, where it might be enjoyed and used by people researching in the family's locality. Best wishes, and please congratulate your in-laws for having put together an account of their escape. I'm sure that it is intriguing story that will be appreciated by many people. Mary Jo C. Martin Melbourne, Australia [email protected]
Dear Rootswebbers: A gentleman on another list asked about donating a copy of a family history manuscript to the Library of Congress. I replied, and thought that cousins/fellow researchers on other lists might also benefit from my answer. Hope this helps someone out there. I wish you all good luck. (I wish I was ready to publish!) %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% Dear Abe, and anyone else thinking about donating copies of family research to large libraries and research institutions: I used to work for the Library of Congress, and I wanted to give you some advice about donating a copy of your in-laws' family history manuscript to them, so as to avoid disappointment. As you may know, the Library of Congress is the physical and organizational site for the US Copyright Office. Copyright requirements stipulate that the Copyright Office receive two copies of any book that the author wishes to register. One copy automatically goes into the Library's collections. As such, the Library gets copies of all sorts of different things each year. When I left them in 1989, they had more than 8 million items in their collections. I'm sure that number has grown exponentially since then. My point is that a great deal of what the Library receives is discarded, either right away, or eventually. There just isn't enough room to store it all! The three Library of Congress buildings that you can visit behind the Capitol in Washington, DC are just the tip of the iceberg. They also have warehouses in Maryland that cover acres. The Library will keep things that fall within their mandate -- stuff that will advance Congressional research, or rare and valuable items. They assume (or hope) that items of lesser value to the nation will be available elsewhere in other libraries or research institutions. So give them a call before donating a precious copy of your family history. They most probably would politely decline to keep it, and would counsel you instead to give it to local libraries or county historical societies, where it might be enjoyed and used by people researching in the family's locality. Best wishes, and please congratulate your in-laws for having put together an account of their escape. I'm sure that it is intriguing story that will be appreciated by many people. Mary Jo C. Martin Melbourne, Australia [email protected]
"The Descendants of Lewis Hart & Anne Elliott" by Jared Sidney Torrance, published in 1923. Concerning the families of Hart-Warner; Hart- Curtiss; Hart- McColley; Curtiss- Thompson; Curtiss- Torrance; Curtiss- Vosburgh. Index, 361 pages $60 postage paid in US & Canada. (WA residents add 8.1% sales tax) Lookups available until I no longer have the book. If you are interested in the book, please e-mail me.
Seeking the children of John B. HART of Bryan Mills, Jefferson CO FL about 1845 ___________________________________________________________________ You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com/getjuno.html or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866]
Hello: I would like to contact any descendent of William Hart who came to Maryland in 1774 on the ship Diamond. He settled in Baltimore Co, MD and married Mary Currier, they had 8 known children. William died in 1822 in Baltimore Co and wife Mary and all children emigrated to(W)VA at one time or another. John W. Hart
My great great grandmother's married name was Mary Virginia Hart. She supposedly was born in Kentucky in 1833. I do not know who her parents were nor her husband's name. She had a daughter named Henrietta (my great grandmother) who was married to Wiley G. Forson. According to the 1900 census, Mary was living in Texas with her daughter and Wiley. Any information anyone has will be appreciated. I have had no luck ascertaining who her parents were.
Dear Hart List Followers, Hello to all and it is very nice to have another place to explore genealogical information. I am seeking information on the family affiliations of Hart - Tanner - Price - Sauls - Barrett - Davis. I am very much interested in the areas of Monticello, Jefferon Co FL and Thomasville, Thomas Co GA. Complete family abstract is available, but in short; William R. Tanner b. 1831 m. MAry Hart. Children (1) James Brinson Tanner b. 1855, (2) Lonie Tanner m. Jake Barrett, (3) Willie Tanner (female) m. Henry Sauls. Should any of this fit your story, please drop me a line. Thanks. Steve Tanner ___________________________________________________________________ You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com/getjuno.html or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866]
Hello Hart Researchers, I am attempting to locate information on at least on Hart family who had settled in Orange County, NC, now Alamance County, NC. They intermarried with a King family which is one of my ancestral lineages. James Hart who acted as guardian for the children of John King, Jr. in 1806. James R. Hart Married 8 June 1812 to Sarah King, bm. Ede King. (Orange County Marriage Bonds) Elizabeth Hart who married Edward King, Jr. 1 May 1815. Ellen Hart who married as his second wife to Empson Bird 31 August 1835, security William Heartt(sic) I will greatly appreciate any information that anyone may have on these Harts in the above information. Best regards, John Fox Winston-Salem, NC
I am looking for the family of Ellen HART have no dates of birth or death she was married to a John William Stoops(b.1851 d.1939) think he was a farmer around Vermont (Fulton County )IL.they had a daughter Edna Margaret Stoops(b.12/5/1895 d 11/29/1985) this was my grandmother.She had a son Marshall A.Stoops(b.1/23/1914d.9/6/1966)before she was married and this would be my father.She later married Lewis Vaughn.John William Stoops was married before Ellen to a Anna Johnson and after Ellen to Sarah Ann Miller or so I am told. Would like to know anything about this HART family. Thanks, SJL
Found the below website good for 1895 cities/towns (info and maps) http://www.livgenmi.com/1895.htm Charles
I am trying to locate John Hart (1870 Hart, John, Laborer, h. 123 Lafayette (age 14) What Ward?) Can anyone help me with a WARD for this street. I spent yesterday at the National Archives going through the 1880 Soundex and could not find a match. Is anyone else researching this family? See below for the information that I have. Cornelius Hart married Norry Holmes in 1838 in Aghada Parish, Cork County, Ireland. Notice the Hart & Holmes business venture. A son, John Hart, was born in NY in June 1856. (John Howard Hart) Thanks for your help! Sandy Hart, RootsWeb Donor, Palm Bay, FL http://www.geocities.com/Wellesley/5372/ Hart soundex code - H630 Glendale Cemetery, 28 Hoover Avenue, Bloomfield, New Jersey 07003, 973-748-1253 Evergreen Section, Lot #7. Grave 1- John Hart (DOI 12-19-1916); Grave 2-Lydia Hart, owner of Lot; Grave 3- Mary E. Rogers (5-29-69); Grave 4- Fred Rogers, Sr. (10-13-1969); Grave 5- empty; Grave 6- George H. Garbaden (April 7, 1971-DOD) Information from the person at the Cemetery. I talked with him (9-19/1998). He will take photos of the headstones and xerox what records he has. 1900 Federal Census, Vol 20, Ed 111,Sheet 3, Line 72, Essex, Newark 105 Roseville Ave Hart,Sr. John Howard, June 1856, 43, married 22 years, New York, Ireland, Ireland, wholesale milk dealer, owned 6 homes +..Lydia (Kinney), July 1858, 41, 8 children, 3 living, NJ, NJ, NJ ..Mary E., July 1880, 19, NJ, NJ, NJ ..Howard, June 1883, 16, NJ, NJ, NJ ..Charles F., Feb. 1887, 13, NJ, NJ, NJ 1920 Federal Census, Essex, City of East Orange, SD 8, ED 45, Sheet 3B, #2929, Jan 5, 1920, Roll 1029 Soundex 106, NJ, Vol. 30, ED 45, Sheet 3, Line 74 132 So. Munn Ave., 4th Ward, 4th District 132, 52, 75 John Hart,(1858 DOB) mother in law, 62, widow, NJ, PA, NJ, living with Fred F. Rogers (Head) Who is this John Hart? He has to be a "cousin" but who is his father? and mother? City Dircetory, Newark, New Jersey - John Hart 1870 Hart, John, Laborer, h. 123 Lafayette (age 14) What Ward? 1875 Laborer, h. 123 Lafayette 1880 Laborer, h. 123 Lafayette 1885 Holmes, Matthew F., Milkman, h. 278 Fifth Ave 1887 Holmes, Matthew F., Milkman, h. 278 Fifth Ave 1888 Holmes, Matthew F., (Hart & Holmes), h. 278 Fifth Ave 1890 Holmes, Matthew F., (Hart & Holmes), h. 271 N. Seventh 1890 John H. Hart, h. 58 Elizabeth Ave 1890 Hart, John, (Hart & Holmes), h. 278 Fifth Ave. 1890 Hart, John, milkman, h. 123 Lafayette 1890 Hart & Holmes (John Hart & Matthew F. Holmes), milk, cream, 278 Fifth Ave 1895 Hart, John, h. 278 5th Ave. 1895 Hart, John, Milkman, h. 123 Lafayette 1900 Hart, John, col, h. 105 Roseville Ave 1905 Hart, John, Milk Peddler, h. 105 Roseville Ave 1910 Hart, John, mfr paper, h. 105 Roseville Ave 1915 Hart, John, h. 105 Roseville Ave Sandy Hart, RootsWeb Donor http://www.geocities.com/Wellesley/5372/ http://www.familytreemaker.com/users/h/a/r/Sandra-R-Hart/index.html/ PA-ENGLE,COVERT,DEVENS,MACK,KNERR/KANARR,FISK, NJ/NY-HART,KEEHNER,KINNEY,HOLMES,MORRISON,PECK
I'm trying to locate the person who submitted a WFT file on Susan or Susanna Hart, daughter of Jacob and Jerrusia Hart of Crawford Co., IL. I requested the submitter info from FTW twice. The first time they sent the info, they sent me the wrong name. The second time, I mailed a postal letter to the submitter, but never received a reply. There are some discrepancies, but I KNOW we're researching the same line and I'd really like to make contact with this person or anyone else familiar with this line. (I'm fairly certain Jerrusia is a misreading of Jemima, because so many of the other names and dates match with the info I have for Jacob and Jemima Hart, and I've never HEARD of a Jerrusia Hart in Crawford Co.) Joyce Smith
Found my ancestor, William T Hart 1824-1907 listed twice in the TN 1860 census in Coffee co and Franklin co. Wife Hannah, children Missouri C, John A, Daniel P, Mary A, and Benjamin Boyd - an apprentice tanner. Believe William was married first to Sentha Bowers and the first 3 kids born in GA. Have been unable to locate the family in 1850. Sound familiar to anyone? They stayed in the Franklin Co TN area and by the 1900s the grown children were in Bedford, Grundy and Coffee Cos. Donna Hart North Bend, WA
unsubscribe ---------- > From: [email protected] > To: [email protected] > Subject: HART-D Digest V99 #22 > Date: Monday, February 15, 1999 2:23 AM >
Looking for the parents and siblings of Rodas Hart who was supposedly born in Ky ca 1801. She married John Milligan and was shown living in Anderson County TN in the 1830 and 1840 Census. In 1850 she is found living in St. Francois County, MO; 1860 whereabouts unknown; 1870 she is shown living in Hardin County, IL. She must have died sometime between 1870 and 1880 because she is not shown on the 1880 Hardin County IL census with the rest of her children and her husband. Any information will be greatly appreciated. Willing to share information with connected researchers. Carol Krajnik
I am looking for information on Odbur Hartt b.1851, Tarrytown, New York. He died in 1918. He was the founder of Hartt Boot and Shoe in Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada in 1898. He married Loretta Kilburn of Kingsclear, near Fredericton. His early years were spent in the Boston area as an apprentice shoemaker. He also lived in Huntington, Indiana, and Battle Creek, Michigan. I think he is related to the Hartts from New England who settled in Maugerville, New Brunswick. Any information would be enormously appreciated. Diana Cowland
I wish I knew anything about the Harts of Livingston Co.,KY., but I don't. I first have John Hart and a Robert Hart in the 1806 tax list for Livingston Co. My Mary/Polly Hart married July 1809 in Livingston Co.,Ky. to John Hayle. It seems she was most likely the daughter of the John Hart, but he is deceased before Mary marries. Johns wife was Elizabeth, and she is in the 1810 census. So I don't know of any other connection for my Hart line. Mamie -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] <[email protected]> To: [email protected] <[email protected]>; [email protected] <[email protected]> Date: Sunday, February 14, 1999 8:52 PM Subject: Re: Re: [HART-L] KENTUCKY HARTS > >In a message dated 2/14/99 11:35:22 AM, [email protected] wrote: > ><<I have Harts in Livingston and Caldwell Counties in KY. > >Mamie>> > >Hi Mamie, > >I have a cousin relationship with some of the Hart family through my Rice >lineage. Thomas Hart who settled in NC was married to Susannah Rice, sister >to my ancestor, John Rice of Hanover County, VA. Thomas and Susannah's >daughter Ann Hart, married James Gooch. When the Gooch couple met an untimely >death, their daughter, Ann Gooch, was raised by her grandparents, Thomas and >Susannah. Ann married Jesse Benton, who was a young lawyer in Orange County, >NC during the Revolutionary Period. Ann Gooch and Jesse Benton had several >children, among whom was Thomas Hart Benton, the well-known orator and lawyer >who often went head to head in physical and oratorial combat with Andrew >Jackson. Nathaniel Hart was also an offspring of Thomas Hart and Susannah >Rice. Nathaniel Hart was married to another cousin, Sarah Simpson of Caswell >County, NC; Nathaniel was a member of the Transylvania Company who helped >organize the settlement of the Tennessee territories, which included Kentucky. > >I am also a descendant of some of the Tate clan who settled in Guilford County >and Caswell County, NC. Do you think that we may have some connections there >as well. > >Best regards, > >John Fox >Winston-Salem, NC