Hi: I mentioned a few weeks back that google does not find mail list messages but does search the message boards. Taint' so. It did find a query of mine on a CA county message board but that is about all. I had ASSUMED that since my message to a county message board was found - it meant that all messages boards are searched by google.com I did find my messages to various county query boards so be sure and send your info to them. I also sometimes get too busy to read my Ancestry newsletter so I was surprised to find the Quick Tip below that I had sent in. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com ==================================== Ancestry Quick Tip 7/11/2003 - Archive --------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- Clues in Receipts In the July 7 ADN, Carol Houghton reminded us to look for pertinent information in our elders' greeting cards. (www.ancestry.com/rd/prodredir.asp?sourceid=831&key=A732802 ) I have also been able to determine when my parents went on trips and where they went by looking through the tissue copies of their old credit card bills. My sister and I were going to dump them all when I spotted some receipts from Kenya and Calcutta and realized they could tell us more than we thought. Just by thumbing through some of the bills, we were able to pinpoint when they traveled and where they traveled. I have made a timeline for them from this information. I plan to print it out for our next family gathering because we are always guessing about when they went and where. Now, there will be no guessing. My mother also took a piece of stationery from each hotel room where they stayed. She kept them in a drawer at home and referred to them whenever discussing their trips. So now we also know where they stayed, not just when. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- Thanks to Nan Wolf for today's Quick Tip! If you have a tip you would like to share with researchers, you can send it to: ADNeditor@ancestry.com Quick Tips may be reprinted, with credit to the submitter, in other Ancestry publications, so if you do not want your tip included in a publication other than the Ancestry Daily News and Ancestry Weekly Digest, please state so clearly in your message.
Hi: I know we have some Australian Hinds researchers on this list so thought I would paste this message below that was on the Hines list today. If you want to reply you have to go to the URL listed above the message. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com ================================= This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: HINES Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/TKj.2ACIB/1856 Message Board Post: Thomas Hines/HINDS was born in Melbourne Vic. c1842 and his parents were James and Rose (nee TALBOT). Thomas married Elizabeth Clarke in Sydney NSW in 1865. Their children were Caroline Rosetta, William C., Charles Henry,Thomas Joseph,John A.,Annie Elizabeth,Mary E.,James Walter. George Washington, Florence M., Harriet E., and Mary Elizabeth. Any info?
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/EKj.2ACIB/342.1.1 Message Board Post: I don't know what you mean by "done the censuses"--if it costs money, then no. If it's on the web someplace, can you tell me how to find them? Tulare is farther south than I think my Dad's family was from. He was born in Alameda in the Bay Area. But, you never know, they might have relocated. When I was a little girl I read some mimeographed copy of a diary of some Hinds family that came across the West in a covered wagon. Daddy said that we were related to the man that wrote the diary. That man was a Reverend of some kind. But, unfortunately, I can't find that paper, and don't remember the name of the man. I don't even know how we were related to him. Thanks for your help! My Dad's family is a total mystery to me--he never talked about them. I only met my grandmother once, when I was 5 years old. She was very sick and died shortly afterwards. He never once mentioned his father in my whole life, and he was the kind of man that you just didn't pry into things about him. I didn't know he had a brother until both my parents had passed--and I found some of my dad's childhood pictures with names on the back!
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/EKj.2ACIB/344 Message Board Post: Laura (Hinds) Wallace married my Great Great Uncle Joseph Myers Wallace in Missouri in 1879 and she later died in 1928 in Roosevelt, Utah. Laura was born in @ 1854 in Kentucky. Her parents unknown first names but last name of Hinds were also from Kentucky. Can anyone please give me any info. concerning this Hinds family linkage as I have friends with the last name of Hinds and we are trying to find out if we may be related. Thank you in advance for any info. that can be found.
Hi: In helping a fellow researcher on the Hines message board, I was hoping that a Hugh Howe Hinds born in CA was connected to my line that came into CA in 1852/53. So, I "did" the censuses on him working from 1930 backwards only to find out that he is not connected to my line that came from Crawford co. AR . But, since I did the work I thought I would send it along for the Hinds archives. If any of you are connected to this line - let me know and I'll connect you with his descendant. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com ===================== (We are following Hugh the son in this 1880 census) 1880 census, C St. Sacramento City, Sacramento Co, CA HINDS, Wm J. white male, age 31, carpenter, b Ind, father b England, mother b England Wife, Mary, white female, age 25, Keeping house, b CA, father b Maine, mother b New Brunswick Son Guy W. age 7, b CA, father b Ind, mother b NB (should be CA? Son Hugh age 6, b CA, father b Ind, mother b NB (should be CA?) Son Wm. E. age 2, b CA, father b Ind, mother b NB (should be CA?) Dau Annie age 9/12, Oct. b CA, father b Ind, mother b NB (should be CA?) Note: either the mother was not born in CA but in New Brunswick or the info on the children's mother is incorrect. Either the famiy or the census taker was mixed up. ====================== (This is the son Hugh from census above, who is now married, also with wife named Mary but note the T. E. after her name so she may have been called "T E" 1900 census, Park Ave. Alameda, Alameda Co. CA, Enum dist # 310,sheet #12 (page number is hidden) HINDS, Hugh (head) b.Apr 1874, 26 yrs, married 1 yr; CA CA CA carpenter, reads, writes, speaks English. rents home Mary T. E. ,wife, b. June 1879, 20 yrs, CA IL IL no occup. reads, writes, speaks English Edgar H. , son b Aug 1899, 9/12 yr. CA CA CA ========================= 1910 census, Weber St. Alameda, Alameda Co. CA, enum dist #14, page number doesn't show on page, enumerated April 22, 1910 HINDS, Hugh H.(head) male,white,36 yrs.12 yrs married to 1st wife, b CA, father b unknown, mother b unknown, speaks English; occup-general contractor; reads & writes, rents home Mary (wife) white female, 12 yr married to 1st spouse, 2 children, all living. CA IL VA , housewife, reads and writes. Edgar(son) 10 yr, CA CA CA; reads and writes Hugh, H. Jr. 5 yr. CA CA CA not in school (note: no mention of T.E. after mother's name and Hugh evidently did not give the info. He most likely would have known where his parents were born. ) ========================== 1920 census, So. Hoover St., Los Angeles, Los Angeles Co. CA, Precinct 367, Enum dist # 149, pg.4 B HINDS, Hugh H. (head),Owns home w mortgage; 46 yrs; reads & writes; CA USA USA Mary 38 yrs; reads & writes: CA IL Wisc. Marybelle(dau) 9 yrs; in school CA CA CA Hugh C. (not Hugh H. Jr as in 1910) 15 yrs; attended school in yr; reads & writes CA CA CA Edgar (single) 20 yrs.attended school in yr; reads & writes CA CA CA ================================ 1930 census, Regal Apartments, San Marino Ave., Los Angeles City, Los Angeles, Co. CA Sheet No. 21-B HINDS, Mary T. (or I.) head of house, 49 yrs, rents home for $40 a mo; no radio set; does not live on a farm; she was 18 at first marriage; reads & writes; she is born CA; father b IL; & mother born Missouri !!!!!, speaks English; Hugh C. (son) 25 yrs.; single; reads & writes; CA CA CA; deliveryman for a hardware store, not a veteran Note that the wife Mary mother's bplace of IL in the 1900 census, VA in the 1910; Wisc. in the 1920 census and Missouri in the 1930 - big difference. Strange. Note that altho she is head of house, she is marked as married, not divorced or widowed. I went to the CA Death Index at: http://vitals.rootsweb.com/ca/death/search.cgi and found that Hugh Howe Hinds b: Apr 21, 1873 died 1943 in Los Angeles. So, he lived 13 years after the 1930 census when Mary was head of house. Were they separated- divorced? His mother's name was unknown but the maiden name of his wife (Nickolson) is on the death cert. of Hugh C. Hinds, his son, who died in 1980 in Del Norte Co. So, it is Mary Nickolson that has the four different birthplaces for her mother. Last Name First Name Middle Birth Date Mother Maiden Father Last Sex Birth Place Death Place Residence Death Date SSN Age Post-ems Order Record HINDS HUGH CLARENCE 07/18/1904 NICKOLSON M CALIFORNIA DEL NORTE 03/16/1980 563-07-3535 75 yrs Add HINDS HUGH HOWE 04/21/1873 M CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES(19) 10/09/1943 535-05-2126 Unknown Add
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: HINDS BUCKMAN TEAGUE PENNEBAKER Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/EKj.2ACIB/342.2 Message Board Post: Hi: I just visited the CA Death Index and there are two Hugh Howe Hinds - hmmmm. I am pasting them below. I have also found your two Hughs on the censuses so please contact me so I can mail them to you. To view what I found - I have extracted and posted them on the Hinds-L mail list. You can find them by going to the Hinds-L archives at rootsweb.com Your Hugh Hinds' names did not turn out to be connected to my CA Hinds - drat - but I thought I should put the results of the census search in the Hinds-L archives for future researchers. Hinds-L can be searched at: http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/listsearch.pl?list=HINDS-L Search for Hugh Howe Reminder: I posted some entries from the CA Death index below. Regards, Nan Wolf 71532.734@compuserve.com ====================== Last Name First Name Middle Birth Date Mother Maiden Father Last Sex Birth Place Death Place Residence Death Date SSN Age Post-ems Order Record HINDS HUGH CLARENCE 07/18/1904 NICKOLSON M CALIFORNIA DEL NORTE 03/16/1980 563-07-3535 75 yrs HINDS HUGH HOWE 04/21/1873 M CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES(19) 10/09/1943 535-05-2126 Unknown HINDS HUGH HOWE 04/21/1884 FOX M CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES(19) 10/09/1943 535-05-2126 59 yrs HINDS MARTIN HUGH 08/23/1922 MCCORT M CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES(19) 03/21/1985 569-07-2704 62 yrs
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: HINDS BUCKMAN TEAGUE PENNEBAKER Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/EKj.2ACIB/342.1 Message Board Post: Darlene: Have you "done" the censuses on Hugh Howe Hinds? I have Hinds that arrived in Tulare,CA in 1852/53 and am trying to find more of their descendants. Nan Wolf 71532.734@compuserve.com
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Hinds Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/EKj.2ACIB/342 Message Board Post: My father was Hugh Clarence Hinds born 7/18/1904 in Alameda, California (died 1980). He married my mother, Irene in 1948, but it was rumored that he had been married before that. He had an older brother named Edgar who might have married a lady named Marybelle (I never met them). Hugh Clarence's father's name was Hugh Howe Hinds (my gfather). I think my gmother's name was Mary?? (unknown when my gfather died, but gmother died circa 1959). I am looking for any information about my uncle Edgar and his descendents. Or information about my father's parentage or his previous marriage. Can anyone help me? Thanks!
Hi: Use your Find feature to find the several mentions of Haines in the article below. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com ============================ Found at: http://www.roadtomonmouth.com/mthollyarticle.html RETREAT OF THE BRITISH ARMY THROUGH THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY Some Of The Data In This Authentic Story Was Taken From An Order Book Found On the Field After The Battle of Monmouth. (From the Mount Holly Herald dated July 19, 1924) Beginning this week and continuing for the next few issues, the Herald will print the full story of the Retreat of the British Army across Burlington county in June 1778, as prepared and read by Judge William A. Slaughter at a meeting of the Fortnightly Club, of Mount Holly, on March 3, 1924. The story has not been presented to our readers without considerable time and attention being devoted to it by the author and should prove interesting reading to all Jerseymen who are interested in the history of their state and the part its residents played in the Revolutionary War. Owing to the length of the paper it is impossible for us to print it in its entirety in one edition so it has been divided into sections and will appear in serial form for the next three and four weeks. Readers desiring extra copies of the paper may secure same by promptly notifying us. Foreward After the battle of Monmouth an order book, belonging to the British Army, was found on the battlefield and afterwards presented to the State Library at Trenton. In the following notes the parts which are printed in bold face are copied verbatim for the order book and give the parole, countersign, equipment, time of march and order of march of the British Army while in Philadelphia and while on the march through Burlington county before the battle near Freehold. May 29th, 1778 The men to bring with them their Camp Kettles, Cantines, Tommyhawks and every necessary article they are to carry on the march. May 30th, 1778 No officer is to quit camp without leave from the Commanding Officer nor is any servant or soldiers to be sent to town without a written pass from the commanding officer. The rolls are to be called frequent at such times as the Captain of Subaltern of the day may direct. The soldiers are not to straggle into the wood, nor go beyond the sentrys. As the Regiment may be subject to sudden alarms particularly at night. The mens accoutrements must be hung up conveniently so that they may be able to turn out instantly and form in front of their huts. On the 8th of May, 1778, and expedition commanded by Captain Henry, of the British Navy, with about seven hundred troops under the command of Major Maitland, ascended the Delaware River. After destroying much shipping they landed at Bordentown, burned the houses of Judge Joseph Borden and of Colonel Joseph Kirkbride on the Pennsylvania shore opposite. [This action was in retaliation for an attempt to damage the British Fleet docked at Philadelphia the previous fall, known as The Battle of the Kegs. A poem by Francis Hopkinson, signer of the Declaration, parodied this event.] Soon after this expedition, Sir Henry Clinton succeded Sir William Howe in command of the British army. The determination of the French to succor the colonies with a fleet rendered it unsafe for the enemy to longer hold Philadelphia, lest their shipping might be blockaded in the Delaware River. To move by water might give Washington an opportunity of reaching New York by forced marches ahead of them. Therefore it was decided to march through the Jerseys. That Washington was aware of their intention is shown by the following notice, inserted over three weeks in advance of the movement in the New Jersey Gazette of May 27th: The militia of this state are desired to be particularly attentive to signals, as movement of the enemy is soon expected. A little before dawn on the morning of the 18th of June, 1778, they evacuated the city, and before night the motley crew of British regulars, loyalists and Hessians and a vast crowd of camp followers had crossed the Delaware and were encamped in Jersey. General Maxwell, with the Jersey Brigade of Continental Troops had been sent prior to this to take position of the difficult pass near Mount Holly. General Dickinson was assembling the militia with great energy, and had already commenced the destruction of the bridges, the felling of trees across the roads and other impediments to delay their march. General Clinton moved with great deliberation, passing through Haddonfield, Mount Laurel, Eayrestown, Lumberton, Mount Holly, Jacksonville (Slabtown), Columbus (Black Horse), Mansfield, Bordentown and Crosswicks. Just before dawn of June 18th, 1778, the British began their evacuation of Philadelphia; they crossed the Delaware to Gloucester Point and that evening camped around Haddonfield a few miles southeast from Camden, N. J. The news of this evacuation reached Washington at Valley Forge before morning. He immediately sent General Maxwell with his brigade to cooperate with the New Jersey militia under General Dickinson in retarding the march of the British, who when they crossed the river were 17,000 strong in effective men. The remainder of the army, under the immediate command of Washington crossed the Delaware and pursued in a parallel line at first, prepared to strike whenever an opportunity should offer, while Clinton wished to avoid a battle for he was encumbered with baggage-wagons and a host of camp followers, making his line 12 miles in length. The British lost 1,000 men by desertion while crossing New Jersey. 59 died of terrible heat at Monmouth and more than 50 Americans died from the same cause. (Harpers Encyclopedia of United States History). Another account says: The heat was terrible, the mosquitoes bad beyond description many of the mens faces were swollen beyond recognition many of the Hessians deserted. Calendar 1778 June 18 Haddonfield June 19 Evesham, (Mount Laurel) June 20th and 21st ....Mount Holly June 22 Black Horse and Mansfield June 23 ..Crosswicks [June 24 ..Allentown] June 28 ..Monmouth A hot Sabbath day. Headquarters Evesham, 19th June, 1778 Parole Jersey C. S. Brunswick The Troops to be in readiness to march tomorrow at 3 oclock in the following order: Hessian Chasseurs, Queens Rangers, 63rd Regiment with 2 six pounders, Hogdens Troops and trenching tools and baggage, 26th Regiment, 7th Regiment and two 3 pounders. The wagons to be loaded and to haul into the road according to the line of march at half past two oclock. William R. Lippincott in his delightful Traditions of Old Evesham Township says: A road is mentioned in some papers of an early date called the Great Road from Haddonfield to Mount Holly, it passed over the north side of the Mount (Laurel); it was very crooked to avoid hills, streams and swamps and the soil generally sandy which made it better to travel in wet weather. There is no doubt but that this road was an old Indian trail cleared out and used by the public as there does not seem to be any official record of it. Traces of the old road may still (1911) be seen in the woods on the hill sides. (Page 5.) Both the British troops and the Colonial militia are said to have occupied the Meeting House different times during the Revolutionary War. It is said that the wing which has been torn away was used by the British as a commissary department for a short time. Mem: Some years ago in underdraining a meadow in this neighborhood, the workmen uncovered an old corduroy road built by the British. Mem: The Meeting House at Evesham, Mount Laurel, was built in 1760. From inquiries I have made of very reliable people, in reference to these traditions, I have every reason to believe them true. There is no doubt that when the British left Philadelphia and marched to Monmouth that a detachment of troops came by way of Haddonfield to Mount Holly, and recalling incidents I remember to have heard some of the old people relate, troops visited the houses then standing near their route of march and plundered the inhabitants. There is an incident connected with an old brick house on the White Horse Road, about one mile southeast of Fellowship, just over the Mount Laurel Township line in Camden county. The kitchen part of this old mansion is not far from the road as it now runs, while the larger part of the house, built more than a hundred years ago in the Colonial style fronts what is now the back yard. It is said it fronted the road when it was built. Whether or not the Great Road passed in front of this dwelling I cannot tell, but the old part first spoken of was standing at the time of the Revolution. The British troops came there to plunder; an officer ordered a colored man, belonging to the place to hold his horse while he went into the house, the colored man hated the British and refused to obey the command, upon which the officer drew his sword and would have run it through the negro if another officer had not protected him. The Historical Collections of New Jersey, published in 1844 give an account of Jonathan Beesley, a Captain in the Cumberland County Militia who was mortally wounded by the British in the march across New Jersey in June 1778. The Historian writes as follows: Arduous in the cause and guided by a sense of duty he paid little regard for his personal safety. He was in the neighborhood of Haddonfield, reconnoitering with two other officers, when they where fired upon by a party of British secreted in a rye field. He fell mortally wounded into their hands. He was conducted to the enemys camp and questioned respecting the situation and probable movements of Washingtons Army, but peremptorily refused to give them any information. Finding that neither entreaties or threats would prevail in extorting anything from him, and take proper care of him, remarking that so brave a man should not be treated with indignity. The British took him with them on their march and left him at a house, owned by Hinchman Haines, about a mile southeast of Mount Laurel; this house was torn down about 1881. There is a legend that after the officers death occurred at the old house, a phantom horseman was seen to emerge from it, whose appearance always meant death to some of the British; if any where in the neighborhood, but this phantom apparently disappeared at the close of the Revolution, feeling its mission was ended after the countrys freedom was gained. Not very far above Coxs Corner, on the road to Medford and close to the old brick house now (1911) owned by William Jones, a man was killed by the British and buried in the yard, but few of the farm houses on the line of march escaped a visit. On the farm now (1911) owned by Charles D. Jones many different scenes have been enacted. This place was owned at the time of the Revolution by a plain Friend, Nathan Haines, of Evesham. His tombstone is south of where old Coles church stood in the old ground of Colestown cemetery. There is no military prefix to the name on the tombstone, although Nathan raised a company of soldiers for the Revolution. Nathan was opposed to war, and convinced that it was at variance with his Quaker principles, no doubt would have lived up to his convictions had he been a bachelor, but he was not a bachelor. In fact, he had a second wife he had his second wife, who was formerly Dorcas Pendegrast, she came from the West Indies, and at the breaking out of the Revolution she had the conviction that a man with the wealth and influence of her husband should be patriotic enough to use his influence for the benefit of his country. The conviction Dorcas prevailed, Nathan raised a company and marched with it to Amboy. Uniforms in those days were not plenty among the militia and Nathan wore his Quaker garb. There is an old story that they passed by a place where a parrot was in a cage, hanging by the roadside. The parrot noticing Nathans dress called out Quaker, Quaker a fighting Quaker. But Nathan was not a fighting Quaker. He differed in that respect from some who went to the Army to declared: That in the cause of Freedoms Day There is time to fight and pray. Nathan got back home as soon as possible where he was captured by the British, and taken by them to Haddonfield, but finding that there was not much harm in him, it is said that they soon let him go but they took good care to plunder his place of everything that was, in any way valuable to them, driving off the cattle and horses. None of the stock was recovered, excepting one fine spirited horse that broke away from its captors, and was found the next morning after the British took their departure, standing at the farm gate. About the year 1861, there was a piece of timber standing on land adjoining the Nathan Haines farm, where it is said the Haines family buried their silverware and other valuables before their place was visited by the British. There was an old farm house standing on the west side of Church Road, some distance from the woods at that time, to which the British paid a visit. Marks of their visit were still visible on the framework when the house was torn down many years ago. It was probably in this neighborhood that an incident occurred which has been handed down to us by way of tradition: A well to do Quakers has only just about time to bury his valuables when the vanguard of the British appeared. The freshly turned earth was sure to betray the secret hiding place. He was in a great quandary. Running to the corn crib he quickly shelled some corn and threw the loose grain in generous abundance over the newly turned ground. He then called up all his poultry and turned his pigs loose on the spot. The chickens scratched and the pigs rooted like all possessed and when the troops arrived the ground appeared to have their innocent exertions and the troops never suspected anything to the contrary. Tradition says that at least some of the British troops passed through Eayrestown and Lumberton, they arrived at Mount Holly two days after leaving Mount Laurel, distance readily covered now in thirty minutes in an automobile. While at Mount Holly the British destroyed the Iron Works near the bridge on Pine street, upon learning that the cannon balls and sheet iron for army kettles had been made there for the Army; they also destroyed the mill on the Millbrook-Mather farm on Rancocas Road and destroyed the Presbyterian church of the Reverend John Brainerd, being incensed at him for a patriotic sermon which he had preached urging the Americans to enlist and fight for their country and using for his text: Blessed be the Lord my God, who teacheth my fingers to fight and my hands to war. This church stood on Brainerd street and tradition says that the British first used it as a stable before setting fire to it. It was at this time that the Hazelhurst family buried their silver to conceal it from the British and it was so well concealed that no one has yet found it. While here some of the British Officers took a meal at the Hazelhurst place and during the meal proposed the toast To the King. To refuse to drink that toast was to be considered a rebel. Nothing daunted a little boy of the Hazelhurst family gave them the counter toast To General Washington, to the great amusement of the officers. Another local tradition is to effect that here at Hazelhursts was held an Office Conference, the result of which was the British changed their original plans and that this change of plans deceived the Americans and delayed their attack until Monmouth was reached. In the woods at Smithville are some earthenworks which were probably thrown up by the Americans at the time to prevent the crossing of the creek at that point. At Hainesport occurred an exploit worthy of being ranked with the defense of Thermopylae by the Spartans; the bridge over the Rancocas Creek at that point had been destroyed and a small band of American riflemen took their station in a house on the east bank of the creek and disputed the crossing to the last extremity. When the British finally crossed the creek they refused to surrender and kept up their defense to the last, being burnt with the house by the British, according to the diary kept by General Clintons secretary at the time which is the only account we have of it. These heroes of Hainesport deserve to have their brave deed better known.
Hi: Found while browsing the MO archives at USGenWeb. Regards, Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com ================================== Found at: http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/data/mo+index+841111172848 1+F Houstonia Cemetery, Pettis County Missouri Take Highway 65 North to D. Go west (left) on D to M. North on M to Houstonia. Then take a gravel road east of town to cemetery. Burials from 1968 (Jan 1) to July 19 1986 are listed here. Older ones will be found in the original cemetery listing. Hinds, Odessa June 16 1881 - Nov 3 1969 Hinds, Chester A., (Wife Odessa) Jan 23 1875 - May 16 1964
Ken - Haven't you ever heard the term "interstate flight"? :) - Jim Hinds Columbus, Indiana --- hindskw@cts.com wrote: > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > > Surnames: Hinds, Clinkingbeard, Burnett, Baker, Harper, Seaton, Baldwin > Classification: Query > > Message Board URL: > > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/EKj.2ACIB/341 > > Message Board Post: > > > My Hinds line: > > Joseph Hinds c1705 died 1772 Guilford Co NC > + Rutha (unknown, maybe Baldwin) 1718 Guilford Co NC > > John Henry Hinds 1745-06-09 Mendham NJ died c1811 Knox Co TN > + Abigail (unknown, maybe Seaton) 1744-06-26 > > Levi Hinds 1775 Guilford Co NC died c1847 Madison Co AR > + Nancy (unknown, maybe Harper) 1784 NC died 1861 Franklin Co AR > > William M Hinds 1803-08-28 Jackson Co TN died 1879-09-11 Hindsville AR > + Matilda Baker 1807 TN died 1889-07-25 Hindsville AR > > John Baker Hinds 1837-05-30 Madison Co AR d 1927-08-03 N Burns OK > + Nancy Burnett 1838-01-23 TN died 1904-01-04 Bethpage MO > > Walter Franklin Hinds 1879-05-30 Bethpage MO d 1961-08-22 Guymon OK > + Ida Ellen Clinkingbeard 1881-03-31 Ava MO died 1961-08-13 Guymon OK > > YYYY-MM-DD > > We've moved west every generation, and nobody has died in the > state where he was born. > > Ken > > > > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 > > __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail - 50x more storage than other providers! http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Hinds, Clinkingbeard, Burnett, Baker, Harper, Seaton, Baldwin Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/EKj.2ACIB/341 Message Board Post: My Hinds line: Joseph Hinds c1705 died 1772 Guilford Co NC + Rutha (unknown, maybe Baldwin) 1718 Guilford Co NC John Henry Hinds 1745-06-09 Mendham NJ died c1811 Knox Co TN + Abigail (unknown, maybe Seaton) 1744-06-26 Levi Hinds 1775 Guilford Co NC died c1847 Madison Co AR + Nancy (unknown, maybe Harper) 1784 NC died 1861 Franklin Co AR William M Hinds 1803-08-28 Jackson Co TN died 1879-09-11 Hindsville AR + Matilda Baker 1807 TN died 1889-07-25 Hindsville AR John Baker Hinds 1837-05-30 Madison Co AR d 1927-08-03 N Burns OK + Nancy Burnett 1838-01-23 TN died 1904-01-04 Bethpage MO Walter Franklin Hinds 1879-05-30 Bethpage MO d 1961-08-22 Guymon OK + Ida Ellen Clinkingbeard 1881-03-31 Ava MO died 1961-08-13 Guymon OK YYYY-MM-DD We've moved west every generation, and nobody has died in the state where he was born. Ken
Hi: There is a Texas death index online at: http://vitals.rootsweb.com/tx/death/search.cgi It goes only from 1964-1998. It has 338 of the exact spelling of Hinds. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: HINDS Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/EKj.2ACIB/340 Message Board Post: I'm not researching HINDS but photocopied a document by accident that might interest someone. This is a record from South Carolina, Charleston County, Probate Office, Miscellaneous Records Volume 91-B, page 938. It is a one-page item dated 11 May 1771 that notes that Hugh HINDS was indicted for a felony on 15 April and convicted and sentenced to hang May 15, but this document postpones his execution until May 29. I'll keep the photocopy for a while if someone wants it, or you can write to the Probate Office for it.
Hi: From time to time all the members of this list should search the archives. The URL is http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/listsearch.pl?list=HINDS-L If you leave the list for a couple of months and then want to see the messages that you missed for a certain period then you want to use the search at: http://archiver.rootsweb.com/HINDS-L/ Thanks agains, Cathy, for overseeing the list while I was out of touch. There are 43 subscribers to HINDS-L and 12 subscribers to HINDS-D. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com
Hi: I found this 1997 query below while browsing. I thought it should go into the Hinds-L archives. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com ==================================== Found at: http://www.rootsweb.com/~msattala/p_5.htm Bert Boutwell Sun Aug 3 1997 I am looking for any information on the following individualls that were married in Attala County: J. R. BOUTWELL m. Betty WALLACE 12-18-1898 Earl MOORE m. Alberta BOUTWELL 12-25-1899 John DEW m. Estelle BOUTWELL 08-21-1918 George DELOACH m. Mary BOUTWELL 11-25-1919 J. S. BOUTWELL m. Sarah HINDS 12-08-1899
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: HINDS-COLBURN Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/EKj.2ACIB/338 Message Board Post: Hi: Melissa Green just sent her HINDS family line to the Hinds-L mail list which will go into the Hinds-L archives. I recommend that all of us on this list do the same. I am posting mine below. Some of our Hinds researchers may make a connection years from now by searching our Hinds-L archives. I have found only two other researchers on this John Hinds descendancy that I am posting below. Any others? David had another son named Edward who had male descendants. I would love to touch bases with some Hinds on that line. The last I heard they were in Mendocino Co. CA. I am posting this on the Hinds message board because I just learned that google.com will find it and will NOT find messages in the Rootsweb mail list archives. One has to go straight to the Hinds-L archives to search them. Google is not allowed in rootsweb archives. That means one has to go to the archives of each mail list and search them individually. Messages to the Hinds message board also go into the Hinds-L archives but not vice versa. Regards Nan Wolf, Administrator Hinds-L mail list at Rootsweb 71532.734@compuserve.com ======================================== Nan (Colburn) Wolf's HINDS family line: Descendant of John Hinds (1775-77 prob KY-c. 1838, Crawford Co. AR) and Esther b 1777/78 TN( lost after the 1850 census) through their son, David Hinds (b. 3 Feb 1803, d 5 Dec 1843 Crawford Co. AR) m. 22 Feb 1827 in Lawrence Co. AR to Margaret Ann Mattix (b 30 Oct 1808, d 1861, Cook Co?. TX) through their son, Archibald Yell Hinds ( b 8 Nov 1837 Crawford Co. AR,d May 1911,Tulare Co. CA);, m. 4 Jul 1866, Tulare Co. CA to Sarah Buckman (b 6 Apr 1850, Union Co. KY,d 1929, Tulare Co. CA) through their son, Clement Emery (Pete) Hinds (b 18 Jul 1869, Tulare Co. CA, d 2 Nov. 1953, Atwater, Merced Co. CA) m. 22 Dec 1898 St. Mary's Church, Visalia, Tulare Co. CA to Anna Clark(e) (b 18 Mar 1873 San Jose, CA, d 15 Sep 1938, Atwater, Merced, CA through their daughter, Marie Hinds (b 10 May 1905, Visalia, Tulare, CA, d 31 May 1995, Plymouth, Amador Co. CA) m. 2 Sep 1930, Ashland, Jackson Co. OR to Harold Earl Colburn,Sr.( b 2 May 1907, Poland Center, Chautauqua Co. NY, d 13 Jan 1988, Placerville, El Dorado Co. CA) parents of Nan (Colburn) Wolf ( 71532.734@compuserve.com., 3401 Stanley Ave. Turlock, CA 95382) Some people have the above John Hinds (1775-77- 1838) as the son of Levi Hinds, who is son of Joseph HInds, Sr. whose will was probated Aug 1777 in Rowan Co. NC. I still have to prove the connection. I do know that a John Hinds and wife Esther sold land in Wayne Co. KY in 1805 which is where his supposed father Levi died and where his sister married. He is next found in 1810 & 1811 signing petitions to Congress from Louisiana Territory & MO Territory from what is later Lawrence Co. AR where his son David married Margaret Mattix in 1827. Don't let the marriage place of Harold & Marie throw you off. Harold and Marie (Hinds) Colburn went to OR to marry and to honeymoon. He was raised in Turlock and she in Atwater, CA. They first settled in Mariposa, CA before spending the rest of their life in Plymouth, CA. They were married in a double marriage ceremony with her sister Aileen Hinds to John Colburn, no relation to Harold. Both men were Protestants and since they could not get married in the Catholic church (at that time) they traveled to OR to marry and to honeymoon. They sent a coded telegram to the brides' parents letting them know when the marriages took place. The town telegrapher figured out the code and spread the word before the family even rec'd the telegram. Nothing is secret or sacred in a little town.
Nan Wolf wrote: >I am posting this on the Hinds message board because I just learned that google.com will find it and will NOT find messages in the Rootsweb mail list archives. One has to go straight to the Hinds-L archives to search them. Google is not allowed in rootsweb archives. That means one has to go to the archives of each mail list and search them individually. Messages to the Hinds message board also go into the Hinds-L archives but not vice versa. > It's unfortunate that many of the surname message boards on Rootsweb _don't_ gateway automatically to the associated surname email list (if there is one). I'm really glad the HINDS message board and list do this. It's a bit confusing though. Obviously, a lot of info that appears in an email list doesn't appear in the board; and if someone posts to the board but is _not_ a member of the list, any answer posted on the email list won't reach them unless the person answering goes to the trouble of entering the querent's email address. "Reply-all" won't automatically enter that person's email address, just the list address (I just tried). So if you ever reply to something that was gatewayed from the message boards -- double-check to make sure that the person you're replying to gets your message! Then there's also the issue that when a message board _doesn't_ gateway to an associated email list, sometimes the content of the message board will be completely different than the content of the list for the same surname. For example, one of my surnames is Presley: there's a Presley message board, a Presley mailing list, but the two are completely separate, and a message posted in one won't appear in the other unless the writer goes to the effort of posting it in both places. Some other surnames of interest to me have message boards but no lists, or lists but no message boards. I learned this by trial and error, having wrongly assumed that all surname boards/lists were set up like the HINDS board/list were. I wish there was more consistency; or at the last that this info was included in the Rootsweb help files. So I am going to right to the Rootsweb people to ask about this. Meanwhile, I guess I just want to tell people to be doubly thorough when you are using surname boards and lists at Rootsweb to check _all_ of them! And if you're providing information, to provide to all of them! Let me add that I've been thoroughly impressed by your handling of this list, Nan, and also of how members use it. In particular, I'm impressed by how people frequently post information that they come across about people with the surname Hinds even if it's not relevant to their own family history, just in case it might be related to _other_ researchers present and future. That's great service to others. That practice has been an example to me, & you can count on me to follow it both here & in any other community of family researchers I'm part of. Great big kudos to all of you. -- Mel --------------- Melissa S. Green < serkku@henkimaa.nu > ---------------- My HINDS line: Joseph Hinds (1705-1772) > John Henry Hinds (1745-1811) > Asa Hinds (1786-1850) > Susannah (Hinds) Renneker (1833-1918)
Just an FYI to let you all know that I'm not really a new subscriber -- I've unsubbed under my old email address, & resubbed under a new one that I'm going to use specifically for genealogical/family research. -- Melissa S. Green Anchorage, Alaska MY HINDS FAMILY LINE: Descendant of Joseph Hinds (1705-1772); m. Rutha Baldwin or Higgins through their son Capt. John Henry Hinds (1745-1811); m. Abigail ? through their son Asa Hinds (1786-1850); m. Nancy Cooke through their daughter Susannah Hinds (1833-1918); m. Garrett Henry Renneker (my great-great-grandparents)
Hi All: I want to thank Cathy DiPietro for watching over the list while I was off gallivanting in New England with my husband, daughter and two grandsons ages 11 and 13. We visited six states and saw a lot of ancestral towns, a few houses, and lots of cemeteries. We also toured the Nautilus submarine at Groton, CT, Mystic Seaport, Plimoth Village, Sturbridge Village, Lexington Green ,the Concord Bridge, Walden Pond, the Freedom Trail in Boston, etc. We tried to have one interesting place every other day for the two lads and one day for visiting ancestral lands. They were stalward lads the entire trip. They both play the violin and we found a great place for them to practice - in cemeteries. It was lovely - listening to the music while searching among the gravestones. My husband was the best at finding ancestors' graves. Some of the cemetery markers are just too weathered to read - hope they are documented somewhere in the local archives. Hadley, MA has the oldest maintained cemetery in the country and we were amazed to find some of our ancestors from the 1600s with markers that were still legible. Thank you Cathy for watching over the list while we were gone. Regards Nan Wolf Administrator Hinds-L mail list at rootsweb. 71532.734@compuserve.com