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    1. [HINDS] Laurinda Hinds/Cede Poole Haile, Burnett Co. TX
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hi: I ran across this query from the Burnett, TX message board while browsing. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com ---------------------------------------------------------- Burnet Messages posted to this board also appear in the "TXBURNET-L@rootsweb.com" mailing list. List Messages | Post New Message | Add Board To Favorites | Add Board To Notifications | Links & Announcements Re: FARIS,FARRIS Author: Karylon Russell Date: 13 Feb 2002 10:25 PM GMT Classification: Query In Reply to: FARIS,FARRIS by: William Sims This William Jasper Faris was a twin son of Solomon Boone Faris and Laurinda Hinds who married Cede Poole Haile, daughter of Isaac Sampson Haile and Nancy Garner. Solomon brought his family to the Colorado River area of Central Texas before 1855. The family remained, and William Jasper & wife are buried in the city cemetery, Llano, TX. He died in 1929. Kaylon Russell krussell@moment.net

    03/12/2004 10:18:38
    1. Re: [HINDS] Re: info on William Singleton Hinds
    2. Barbara Finney
    3. We are delighted that you have found us. Without including any living people, we would love to see your Hinds family tree. Any source information that you have would also be helpful. Finally, I would like to invite you to join in our DNA project. You will find it at: http://www.familytreedna.com/surname_join.asp?code=E95069&special=true We have found that we are a diverse group. Ken has set out our findings on his web site which is linked to the above URL. You, Ken and I should be exact matches. If not, it would send us all back to the drawing board. Please do join! Barbara

    03/12/2004 07:16:00
    1. [HINDS] Re: info on William Singleton Hinds
    2. 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/38.76 Message Board Post: i just ran across this board, a late but if info is wanted on w.s. hinds, he was my great, great grandfather.

    03/12/2004 06:42:49
    1. [HINDS] Harl J "Blackie" Hinds obit
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Hinds, Ryan, Irvin, Grey, Purvis, Summers, Gilmore, Henley Classification: Obituary Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/EKj.2ACIB/323 Message Board Post: not related. Found in the San Bernardino, CA, Sun, Oct 6, 1971

    03/03/2004 11:14:41
    1. [HINDS] Lillie Mae Hinds obit
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Hinds, Ryan, Irvin, Gray, Blissmer, Sanders, Pearson, McKenzie, Diamond Classification: Obituary Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/EKj.2ACIB/322 Message Board Post: Not related. Found in the San Bernardino, CA, Sun, July 9 (or 10), 1979

    03/03/2004 11:11:34
    1. [HINDS] Family History at E-bay
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hi: I'm passing along a message sent today to the Hines list - just in case some of you have these names in your lines. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com ================================= http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Bmi.2ACEB/224 Message Board Post: There is a 1916 family history on ebay that has the following HINE names shown on the page to be in the genealogy book. I emailed the seller for some additional information on places and dates so you could make sure it was your family line. HINE FAMILY INDEX: Albert C. Almira Anan b. 1789 in New Milford, Ct. Caroline L. Carrie Charles Sutton b. 1818, resided in Stamford, Ct. Charles F. Charlotte Clark, b. 1821, resided in New Milford, Ct. Daniel Edward Eleanor F. Emma Francis L. Hattie N. Henry Marsh b. 1816 , lived in NYC James, M.D. b. 1822 New Milford, CT Julia Laura Laura Lyman Magdalen Merwin Robert C. Sarah Sophia M. Stephen b. 1825 William E. The url is: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2991008467 Hope it helps someone find their family! Jim

    03/01/2004 07:22:08
    1. Re: [HINDS] James Hinds Ashton-U-Line and/or Stockport
    2. Jim Hinds
    3. This is off-subject but is something about which I've wondered for some time. Has anyone ever absolutely, positively pinned-down just where the "Hind" name originated? Was it English, Scottish, or Irish? There seem to be a lot of conflicting opinions. - Jim Hinds Columbus, Indiana --- dahyde@ukonline.co.uk wrote: > 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/320 > > Message Board Post: > > Does anyone have a lead on a James Hinds. I have traced him as one of my > G-G-G Grandfathers. He was the father of Elizabeth Ardern, who was born in > about 1837 at Ashton-U-Lyne, Lancashire, England. Elizabeth married in 1859 > and at the time was resident at Bosden, Stockport, Cheshire. James Hinds is > shown as her father, occupation bricklayer. > > I cannot find any trace of this man in the registers or the census. > > Would be glad to hear from anyone with a connection. > > David Hyde > > > ============================== > 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!? Get better spam protection with Yahoo! Mail. http://antispam.yahoo.com/tools

    03/01/2004 02:28:46
    1. [HINDS] Fwd: [TXLAMAR] Fw: [KY] Kentucky Vital Records Project
    2. Barbara Finney
    3. --- Leslie Moore <lmoore@ecsis.net> wrote: > From: "Leslie Moore" <lmoore@ecsis.net> > Date: Sat, 28 Feb 2004 13:09:58 -0600 > Subject: [TXLAMAR] Fw: [KY] Kentucky Vital Records Project > To: TXLAMAR-L@rootsweb.com > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Sherri Hall" <ldrbelties@earthlink.net> > To: <KENTUCKY-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Saturday, February 28, 2004 8:13 AM > Subject: [KY] Kentucky Vital Records Project > > > > The KYGenWeb Project is very proud to announce the latest addition to our > > "Special Collections" of research references for those with Kentucky > roots, > > the Kentucky Vital Records Project. > > (http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kvrp) > > > > What began as a "dream" of 3 of us involved with the KYGenWeb Project and > > the KYGenWeb Archives, a centralized collection of Kentucky birth, > marriage > > and death records, is now available in the first stages for Kentucky > > researchers. Currently, the browsable index lists all of the deaths in > the > > KY Death Index (1911-1999). > > > > We are in the process of adding digital images and transcriptions of > actual > > death certificates. These digital images and transcriptions will be > linked > > to the browsable index as they are added to the collection. Records for > > this project will be a combination of researcher-contributed records and a > > coordinated extraction program so we can get them up as quickly as > possible. > > We will begin adding birth records about 15 April 2004 and marriage > records > > about 1 June 2004. As these records are added, they will also be linked > to > > the index. (NOTE: Birth records will only be added for persons born > before > > the year 1854, unless proof of death is provided. We want to ensure that > > the privacy and safety of living individuals is not compromised.) > > > > The browsable index will be a great help to KY researchers by itself, as > > you'll be able to search for those "creative" spellings that all of us > have > > been blessed (or cursed) with. Tens of thousands of corrections have > > already been made to the original index. Corrections from site visitors > are > > encouraged. As corrected or additional information is received on any of > > the records, it will be incorporated into the index for the benefit of > > future site visitors. In addition to the browsable index, be sure to > check > > out the site search engine, as it will pick up additional information in > the > > transcriptions (most importantly, parents' and spouse's names, if given). > > > > We invite everyone to stop in and check out this newest addition. Our > hope > > is that you'll find some "treasures" here and that you'll then share your > > collections so that others can find theirs too. > > > > Feel free to forward this message to other mail lists. > > > > > > > > > > > > ==== KENTUCKY Mailing List ==== > > The Registry -- NEW -- > > http://www.rootsweb.com/~archreg/ > > The easy way to keep your email address updated > > > > ============================== > > 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 > > > > > > > > ==== TXLAMAR Mailing List ==== > Lamar Co., TX Message Boards: > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=board&r=rw&p=localities.northam.usa.states.texas.counties.lamar > > ============================== > 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 >

    02/28/2004 04:55:23
    1. [HINDS] Betty Bell Hinds/ John T. Ward, Green Co. KY
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hi: Ran across this query while browsing. I copied just the part that contains Hinds. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com ====================================== Green Messages posted to this board also appear in the "KYGREEN-L@rootsweb.com" mailing list. List Messages | Post New Message | Add Board To Favorites | Add Board To Notifications | Links & Announcements Marcum, Ward, Elmore, Durrett Author: Sarah Parker Date: 4 Sep 2000 12:00 PM GMT Surnames: Marcum, Russell, Walker, Belcher, Sidebottom, Hinds, Lewis, Hay, Durrett Classification: Query In Reply to: Durrett's from Green Co by: Ed Durrett Dear Ed: The Ward family name: Clarence Jesse Ward m. Sarah Frances Ann Elizabeth "Lizzie" Russell; John T. Ward m. Betty Bell Hinds; and Elizabeth Ward m. Beverly Marcum 08 Oct 1792. Sarah Parker snbntsu@aol.com

    02/27/2004 06:57:40
    1. [HINDS] Joseph Hinds, Greenville, SC 1820
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hi: Spotted while browsing. Use your Find feature to locate Hinds. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com =================================== Found at: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~cramsey/samnotes.html 1820 GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA (Microfilm 33, Roll 120, Sheet 87) Earle ROBINSON Isaac WEST SENR. Thomas GREEN Levy TIMMONS Nancy PAYNE John BURNS John BOWEN SENR. John WIRSTFIELD JNR. Patrick PEASE Robert TARRANT Thomas CRAWFORD William E. SAMMON Stephon PATTON Reuben HOLLIS John WILLISON Benj. TOWNSEND William HILLER(?) Lemuel BOSWELL Lennerd TARRANT William EVINS Benj. BOSWELL James EVENS Young (ESQUIRE?) Frances PACE Solomon DATTON Wyett TARRANT Joseph HINDS Samuel TARRANT John REESE Jacob BLACK(?) Susannah WYNNE Lewis BATSON William LINCH JUNR. Lewis BIRMS(?) David BURNS Henry RAY Isaac TAYLOR Martha TARRANT John TARRANT

    02/27/2004 06:57:37
    1. [HINDS] Gerald Hinds from Illinois and California
    2. 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/321 Message Board Post: My aunt, Guila Malana of Illinois married a Gerald Hinds in 1921. Not sure if he was from Illinois too. They moved to southern Calif. and had 2 children, Richard and Robert. The boys were still young when they divorced and Gerald also died young. I would really like to get some information on Gerald Hinds. I found a Gerald Hinds in Tazewell Co., IL but have no idea if it's the right one. Any information on this man would be appreciated.

    02/27/2004 07:22:50
    1. [HINDS] James Hinds Ashton-U-Line and/or Stockport
    2. 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/320 Message Board Post: Does anyone have a lead on a James Hinds. I have traced him as one of my G-G-G Grandfathers. He was the father of Elizabeth Ardern, who was born in about 1837 at Ashton-U-Lyne, Lancashire, England. Elizabeth married in 1859 and at the time was resident at Bosden, Stockport, Cheshire. James Hinds is shown as her father, occupation bricklayer. I cannot find any trace of this man in the registers or the census. Would be glad to hear from anyone with a connection. David Hyde

    02/27/2004 02:16:33
    1. [HINDS] Re: HINDS-D Digest V04 #32
    2. Robert & Joyce Porter
    3. unsubscribe ----- Original Message ----- From: <HINDS-D-request@rootsweb.com> To: <HINDS-D@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, February 25, 2004 10:03 AM Subject: HINDS-D Digest V04 #32

    02/25/2004 08:48:16
    1. [HINDS] Mary Hinds b. C1833 Ireland?
    2. Debra Bouwer
    3. Hi I am looking for anyone with connections or information about a Mary Hinds who married a William Quigley. We believe Mary was probably born and married in Ireland but cannot be sure. They probably married about 1850 and later had a daughter called Mary Ann Quigley who married a Michael Murphy in 188, June 6th at St Francis Chapel, Cumberland Street, Glasgow Thanks Debra

    02/24/2004 12:19:06
    1. [HINDS] Richard Hinds Albemarle Co. VA
    2. Latresa Colbert
    3. Found this on Roll of Capt. David Bell's Company, 13 Jul 1756. Roll gave name, enlistment date, place, age, size, trade, country and description. Richard Hinds, Oct 1755, Albemarle Co., VA; age 22; 6'01/2"; Carpenter; dark and swarthy with very black hair. Latresa

    02/24/2004 01:40:25
    1. [HINDS] William A. Hinds, communist
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hi: This William A. Hinds was a dedicated communist in a form different from the Russian version. I found this online and am sending to the Hinds-L archives. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com =================================== Found at: http://libwww.syr.edu/digital/collections/w/WilliamAHindsAmericanCommunitie sCollection/ The William A. Hinds American Communities Collection BY MARK F. WEIMER . [Reprinted from the Syracuse University Library Associates Courier, Vol XXII, No. 1, Spring 1987] --------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- Men will not be content to live every man for himself. In work, in art, in study, in trade-in all life, indeed-the children of God, called by a Savior's voice, will wish to live in the common cause. They will live for the common wealth, -this is the modem phrase. They will bear each other's burdens,-this is the phrase of Paul. They will live in the life of Love. - EDWARD EVERETT HALE. William A. Hinds lived for more than sixty years in the Oneida Community. His choice of this quotation for the title page of the 1908 edition of his American Communities well expressed his own commitment to communistic and cooperative living. Born in 1833 and apprenticed to John Humphrey Noyes' brother-in-law, John Miller, at age fourteen in Putney, Vermont, Hinds became a part of the Perfectionist Putney Community in its earliest years. He remained associated with the Oneida Community, the successor community, through its entire existence as a communistic society. When the Community was reorganized as a joint-stock company in 1881, Hinds was chosen to be a member of the first board of directors. He afterwards filled the offices of secretary and treasurer, and president of Oneida Community Ltd., a position he held from 1903 until his death in 1910. A member of the Oneida Community, Hinds played a prominent role as contributor to and editor of the Oneida Circular, as frequent superintendent of the Community's principal industries, and, throughout, as a leading member of the governing committees. At the advanced (for that time) age of thirty-four, he entered the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale and graduated with honors in 1870. A lifelong disciple of John Humphrey Noyes, Hinds was said to have committed to memory, on a wager for one dollar, the whole of Noyes' argument for "Salvation from Sin in this World", as printed on about forty octavo pages. His remarkable energy, inquisitiveness, and memory were cited often by his contemporaries. The study of the history of American communistic societies was largely initiated in the Oneida Community as a result of Noyes' interest in communicating with other groups through the exchange of visitors and by the publication of reports in the Community's newspapers. In 1870 Noyes published his History of American Socialisms (Philadelphia: Lippincott), a survey of forty-seven communities deriving from the researches of A. J. MacDonald. MacDonald's manuscripts,1 the result of extensive travel to communities and correspondence with founders and members of numerous groups between 1842 and 1854, had passed into Noyes' hands and provided him with rich primary sources for his study. Journalist Charles Nordhoff issued in 1875 his Communistic Societies of the United States (New York: Harper & Brothers). That work was based on the author's visits to communities and offered a more current and somewhat more detached view of communal societies than Noyes' work. Nordhoff was generally sympathetic toward these communal undertakings, seeing in them alternatives to the labor-oriented socialism that was gaining strength in his native Germany. The year after the appearance of Nordhoff's work, Hinds was dispatched by the Oneida Community to visit many of the same communistic and socialistic societies and report his findings in the American Socialist, the Community's last serial publication. These findings were collected in 1878 and issued under the title American Communities (Oneida: Office of the American Socialist). Hinds' work was not intended to compete with the work of Noyes and Nordhoff; rather, he suggested that "thousands who might be glad to acquaint them-selves with the results of practical Communism in this country cannot afford to purchase these large and comparatively expensive works" and that the availability of his book would possibly stimulate demand for those more comprehensive studies. While not broadly distributed, Hinds' work was, nonetheless, well received. Following the breakup of the Oneida Community, Hinds devoted his energies toward the business concerns of Oneida Community Ltd. However, he remained committed to the principles of communistic living and was most active in developing community organizations and structures to supplant those lost by the dissolution of the old Community. He also continued to gather information to revise and expand American Communities. Using the structured survey approach of a twentieth-century social scientist, Hinds contacted as many colonies as he could identify to bring his work "down to date". Fortunately, a copy of this questionnaire survives in the Collection and is presented below. While most of the respondents were not systematic in providing answers to each question, the document is both revealing of Hinds' own orientation and special interests and suggestive of the type of material that he received in reply. American Communities Questionnaire 1. Name of the communistic or cooperative society described. 2. When and where was this society started? 3. How many members are there of each sex; also how many children under 15 years of age? 4. What was the nature of the site chosen? 5. What property does the society own, and what is its valuation? 6. Is the society in debt? If so, to what extent? 7. Has the society received help from outside sources? 8. Is the society incorporated? 9. What are the requirements for admission into the society? 10. What nationalities are represented in the society? 11. What are the industries of the society? 12. What are the hours of work? 13. Do they employ outside help? 14. What are the regulations respecting the distribution of the products? 15. What comprises the executive head of the community, and what is the form of government? 16. Do all members, male and female, have equal rights and privileges? 17. What are the rules of discipline? 18. Is the society on a religious basis? If so, what is the form of their belief? 19. If they are not on a religious basis, what is their attitude toward religion? 20. What is their attitude toward the relation of the sexes? 21. Has the society met with any losses, either from dishonesty in management, or from any other causes? 22. Can I obtain a copy of the constitution or of any other document which will help me to understand the principles of the society? 23. If the society has disbanded, please state as fully as possible the reasons for the action. Was there disagreement, or lack of funds? 24. Further remarks may be made on the other side of this sheet. In 1902 Hinds published a new edition (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr), which he again expanded as the "second revision" in 1908. These extensions of his work, based on the results of his correspondence and survey of communities, enlarged its coverage to more than 140 communistic enterprises and secured its place as an authoritative primary source for information on American communistic societies before 1908. Other surveys have been prepared in this century carrying on the tradition established through the seminal work of Mac-Donald, Noyes, Nordhoff, and Hinds.2 In 1982 the Oneida Community Historical Committee transferred to the Syracuse University Libraries the extant records of the Oneida Community including thirteen archival boxes of original research files developed by William Hinds for the revised editions of his American Communities. These files include his correspondence with individuals and communities, together with those documents which he received in connection with his questionnaire. A list of communities for which there is material is appended. This collection is an important and largely untapped resource available to those interested in the history of nineteenth-century communistic societies in America. (Nan ommited that names of the communities because it makes this message too long. But, there was an astonishing amount of them.) Use the URL above to view their names. -------- 1. A. J. MacDonald, "Communities in the United States", Manuscript collection in Beinecke Library, Yale University (microfilm copy in the George Arents Research Library) . 2. From the important survey and census literature can be mentioned: Alexander Kent, "Cooperative Communities in the United States", Bulletin of the Department of Isihor 35 (July 1901): 563-646; F. A. Bushee, "Communistic Societies in the United States", Political Science Quarterly 20 (December 1905): 625-64; Ralph Albertson, "A Survey of Mutualistic Communities in America", Iowa journal of History and Politics 3 (October 1936): 375-444; and Robert S. Fogarry, Dictionary of American Communal and Utopian History (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1980). Mark F. Weimer is Rare Book Librarian in the George Arents Research Library for Special Collections at Syracuse University, and Editor of the Oneida Community Papers

    02/23/2004 10:05:00
    1. [HINDS] looking for information
    2. 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/319 Message Board Post: need help unknown where she was born but her name is Franc Maude Hinds she was born Jan.26,1868 I know she was Married to William Kalman abt.1888 and they are buried at fairlawn cemetry in Walkerville and they raised their Children there the Children's names are Archie, William, Fredric and Lottie

    02/22/2004 02:19:57
    1. [HINDS] George Joseph Wesley Hinds 1901-1990
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hi: I found this while browsing and thought it should go into our archives - lots of names. This is from the site of Oliver Hinds, his son, who gave permission to send it to the list. Regards Nan 71532.734@compuserve.com ============================ Found at: http://users.bscn.com/ohinds/joehinds.htm George Joseph Wesley Hinds 1901-1990 Joe Hinds, son of the late George V. and Sarah E. Green Hinds, was born in Helena, AR. He had lived in the NE Arkansas area since 1902. He was a landowner and a retired sawmill operator. For many years he served as a Church of Christ minister. He and his wife, Eula, donated the land for the Walnut Grove Church of Christ and School. He was a member of the Walnut Grove School Board. Joe Hinds, as he was known throughout northeast Arkansas, was a friend to many who had less than he. He never forgot the period of 1906-1916 which was so rough on his family. His brother Sam and he fished many times with their stepdad, Doc Brown all night long in those years. Subsequently Dad never fished after those years. I can hear him remark, "If I want any fish, I will catch them with a silver hook!" He meant that he would rather buy them than fish for them. He and his wife, Eula, owned more than thirty rental properties during the thiry-odd years preceding his death. He was a man that often paid the water, light, or gas deposits for those that "just didn't have the money" for a "new start." His humane advice to more than one of his children was, 'If all you want to do in this life, is to make a million dollars, well, just hit the cash register a few licks and get out of Trumann! We have too many money-grabbers here already and we don't need any more! Be a help to someone! Don't try to make all the profit and "gut" things so nobody else can make a living!" Joe was raised up in a time when a man's word was his bond! He was saddened to see the values of the nation brought down to the level of the "belly-achers" and complainers. His sage advice of, "Don't you owe society a little better than that?" sometimes went unheeded by at least one of his children. Joe's relatives include (at the time of his death) three daughters: Mrs. Vivian Presley and Mrs. Maxine Haun, both of Jonesboro and Mrs. Lorene Gardner of Trumann; eight sons; George Hinds of Jonesboro, John Hinds of Harrisburg, Terrell Hinds and Ferrell Hinds, both of Memphis, Tenn., Ira Hinds, Wayne Hinds and Oliver Hinds, all of Trumann, and Raymond Hinds of Charleston, Mo.; one half-sister, Mrs. Gladys Slatton of South Bend, Ind., 30 grand children; and 41 great-grand children. He was preceded in death: by his wife, Eula Hinds, who died in 1964, and by one daughter, Helen Hinds, who died in 1944, by a son who died in 1930, a half-brother, Paul Brown of Michigan. Joe Hinds is missed in this community, not only by his family, but a host of friends.

    02/19/2004 07:58:11
    1. Re: [HINDS] Sarah Hinds + Joseph Marsh
    2. Barbara Finney
    3. The Sarah Hinds of Elizabeth Town, New Jersey, who married Joseph Marsh was probably the daughter of James Hinds of Elizabeth Town who died in 1709 and his wife Anne (Spinning?). If so, she was probably the sister of the James Hinds of Elizabeth Town who died in 1731. These members of the Hinds family were not connected in any way to James Hinds of Salem, insofar as I have been able to determine. Barbara

    02/19/2004 03:46:35
    1. [HINDS] Re: Hinds and Holder family
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Marriage Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/EKj.2ACIB/295.1 Message Board Post: My Grandfather William Thomas Hinds married Algie Jane Holder in Waldron, Scott County Ark. in late 1890's

    02/18/2004 09:56:03