http://www.rootsweb.com/~ilschuyl/1862militaryBainbridge.html
Braidwood Gaol Admissions Register 1856-1899 http://www.pcug.org.au/~ppmay/cgi-bin/Database_search/db_search.cgi?setup_file=gaol.setup HODGE, JOHN Alias:Complexion:DARK Gaol No:1616Height:5.7 Ship:BORN COLONYOccupation:FARMER Arrived:B/CMake:STOUT State:FREEHair:BROWN Age:30Educ:R&W Birth Place:NSWEyes:BLUE Sex:MRemarks: Creed:PROTPeriod: Braidwood Gaol Admissions Register 1856-1899 1880-83 HODGE, ALFRED Alias:Complexion:FRESH Gaol No:37Height:5.6 Ship:ENTERPRISEOccupation:PLASTERER Arrived:1848Make:STOUT State:FREEHair:GREY Age:43Educ:R&W Birth Place:LONDONEyes:GREY Sex:MRemarks: Creed:PROTPeriod:1860
http://www-catalog.cpl.org/CLENIX
ADDISON J. HODGES: Rank and organization: Private, Company B, 47th Ohio Infantry. Place and date: At Vicksburg, Miss., 3 May 1863. Entered service at: Adrian, Mich. Born: 1841, Hillsdale, Mich. Date of issue: 13 December 1907. Citation: Was one of a party that volunteered and attempted to run the enemy's batteries with a steam tug and 2 barges loaded with subsistence stores.
>This site may be of help to someone. > >Dog Tags Found In Viet Nam > >On a recent "Today Show" there was a story about two men who went >to Hanoi on a business trip. The men encountered a guy selling old GI >dog tags from US servicemen who were killed during the Viet Nam War. >They were disgusted by the thought of this man profiting from the sale >of >these tags. Upon returning to the U.S., they decided to go back to >Viet Nam and purchase ALL the dog tags. They did so, paying 19 cents >per tag! They brought home several hundred tags. The plan is to return >the tags to surviving family members, when they can find them. The >process has already begun with one set being turned over to a grieving >Mom on July 4th, (coincidentally, it was on her birthday)! > >These two men have set up a website, "http://www.founddogtags.com" >listing the names of all those whose tags they purchased. > >If you lost friends, family, or know of someone who lost a loved one >in Viet Nam, I suggest you check out this website. If you recognize a >name, there's an e-mail address to contact these two men and to help >in their efforts to return the dogtag to it's rightful survivor. I'm >sure a >family member would be eternally grateful to have such an important >item returned. Please help by checking this website. And please send >the website address to everyone you know. The more people who >see the lists, the greater the chance of returning ALL the tags to those > >who lost loved ones in Viet Nam! >
Looking for my wife's great grandmother Bier Hodges. She was born about 1855, location unknown. She married John William Saul from Illinois. Bier died May 1, 1932 in Washington state. Thanks, Dennis and Betty Gaston, Oregon [email protected] -- DENNIS JOHNSON - Customer Support Representative Credence Systems Corp. Tel: 503-466-7302 Toll Free: 800-328-7045
>> Lest we forget - North Korean naval vessels opened fire on the USS Pueblo. Three crewman were seriously wounded and the one soldier killed was Fireman Duane D. HODGES of Cresswell, Oregon. Gerry HODGES Hackley of Houston << Indeed, Gerry, I do remember that - on my own, not from Mom telling me about it. It stands out in my memory because I remember asking her if we were related, and she said not as far as she knew. Researching these 8 greats: Pickering-Snyder-Roach-Teegardin-Hodges-Evans-Kantner-Shifflet + these contributing Hodges/Evans lines: Loveless-Dunham-Siner-Sparks-Neal-Maladay And, of course, many more! Peruse our entire GEDCOM at http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/~kpickering ONWARD AND BACKWARD! Kurt Pickering, IBSSG La Vergne, TN _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp
Kurt, This is not Hodges genealogy, but I wonder if you have a W.S. Pickering relative married Betty Carter sometime around 1900...probably in Erath or Palo Pinto County Texas? Thanks, Fran Hodges reply to: [email protected] ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.
Mexican War Veterans Database Search NAME OF VETERAN RANK COMPANY REGIMENT PLACE OF ENLISTMENT ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ HODGES, JAMES D PVT A 2 IL INF ALTON NAME OF VETERAN RANK COMPANY REGIMENT PLACE OF ENLISTMENT ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ HODGE, ANDREW J PVT B 4 IL INF HODGE, GEORGE D PVT K 3 IL INF HODGE, JAMES PVT H 1 IL INF ALTON HODGE, WILLIAM PVT B 1 IL INF ALTON HODGE, WILLIAM S SGT K 3 IL INF HODGES, JAMES D PVT A 2 IL INF ALTON http://www.ilsos.net/cgi-bin/archives/mwvd.s
Lest we forget - North Korean naval vessels opened fire on the USS Pueblo. Three crewman were seriously wounded and the one soldier killed was Fireman Duane D. HODGES of Cresswell, Oregon. Gerry HODGES Hackley of Houston At 12:58 PM 7/31/2001 -0500, you wrote: >Hey, April ... > >Thanks - I've been meaning to do that. > >My late mother told me when I was just an outboard that she had a cousin >who died on the Arizona. Now I know she was talking about Garris Vada Hodges. > >Unless she was talkiing about a Kantner, her mother's maiden name. Guess >I'd better go look anyway. But thanks for the motivation! > > >Researching these 8 greats: >Pickering-Snyder-Roach-Teegardin-Hodges-Evans-Kantner-Shifflet >+ these contributing Hodges/Evans lines: >Loveless-Dunham-Siner-Sparks-Neal-Maladay >And, of course, many more! > >Peruse our entire GEDCOM at http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/~kpickering > >ONWARD AND BACKWARD! >Kurt Pickering, IBSSG >La Vergne, TN > > > >----Original Message Follows---- >From: [email protected] >Reply-To: [email protected] >To: [email protected] >Subject: HODGES-D Digest V01 #160 >Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2001 07:01:33 -0600 > ><< message2.txt >> ><< message4.txt >> ><< message6.txt >> ><< message8.txt >> > > >_________________________________________________________________ >Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp > > >==== HODGES Mailing List ==== >Faye Dyess [email protected] Listmanager >VOLUNTEER TO TRANSCRIBE CENSUS FOR THE USGENWEB PROJECT >http://www.usgenweb.org/census >Thou shalt read thine own message thrice before thou sendest it. "Gerry" Hodges Hackley 11714 S. Kirkwood Stafford, TX 77477-1308 281/495-6680 Fax:281/495-9395 http://www.hackley.com [email protected] Researching: HODGES, Gill, Walker, McClain, Ewing, McNutt, DeBenon, Price, Lack, Ferguson, Howard, Hackley
Hey, April ... Thanks - I've been meaning to do that. My late mother told me when I was just an outboard that she had a cousin who died on the Arizona. Now I know she was talking about Garris Vada Hodges. Unless she was talkiing about a Kantner, her mother's maiden name. Guess I'd better go look anyway. But thanks for the motivation! Researching these 8 greats: Pickering-Snyder-Roach-Teegardin-Hodges-Evans-Kantner-Shifflet + these contributing Hodges/Evans lines: Loveless-Dunham-Siner-Sparks-Neal-Maladay And, of course, many more! Peruse our entire GEDCOM at http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/~kpickering ONWARD AND BACKWARD! Kurt Pickering, IBSSG La Vergne, TN ----Original Message Follows---- From: [email protected] Reply-To: [email protected] To: [email protected] Subject: HODGES-D Digest V01 #160 Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2001 07:01:33 -0600 << message2.txt >> << message4.txt >> << message6.txt >> << message8.txt >> _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------CC636AE206036CD5F5B8779C Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Jim Powell, Jr. has provided this detailed information from Pulaski County, GA. We are searching for the father of 4 brothers from Pulaski and Dooley Counties that relocated to the Alachua County, FL area in the late 1850s. The 4 brothers are Peter, Thomas, John and William Hodge. Their mother was Milly Hodge Garrett (Garritt). Hope this information is helpful to others as well. Thanks goes to Jim and Debbie Powell for making the trip and sharing the information. --------------CC636AE206036CD5F5B8779C Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Disposition: inline Return-Path: <[email protected]> Received: from ndmls01.mediaone.net ([24.128.8.198]) by stjohns.se.mediaone.net (Netscape Messaging Server 4.15) with ESMTP id GHBDWZ00.BZU for <[email protected]>; Mon, 30 Jul 2001 21:38:59 -0400 Received: from grucom2.gru.net (grucom2.gru.net [209.251.129.7]) by ndmls01.mediaone.net (8.11.4/8.11.4) with ESMTP id f6V1d0712136 for <[email protected]>; Mon, 30 Jul 2001 21:39:00 -0400 (EDT) Received: from [209.251.150.192] by grucom2.gru.net (NTMail 6.03.0009/NU4112.00.db1c8a4b) with ESMTP id bmnugaaa for [email protected]; Mon, 30 Jul 2001 21:38:59 -0400 Message-ID: <[email protected]> Date: Mon, 30 Jul 2001 21:39:03 -0400 From: Jim Powell Jr <[email protected]> User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Win 9x 4.90; en-US; m18) Gecko/20010131 Netscape6/6.01 X-Accept-Language: en MIME-Version: 1.0 To: "Marilyn E. Tarpley" <[email protected]>, "Betty J. Smith" <[email protected]>, Chuck Arnold <[email protected]> Subject: HODGE References: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mozilla-Status2: 00000000 Marilyn, Betty and Chuck... my wife, Debbie, and I went to Hawkinsville and spent most of today searching through books. I took a day off from wwork at our court house and went to another court house. We did not find anything conclusive about anything. Well, I guess we do know that our Hodge(s) that did leave, did not leave until very close to 1860, not 1845 as the paper said. There was a Joshua Hodges in Pulaski Co in 1814. Deed Book D page 292: He sold 202 1/2 acres drawn by Joshua Hodges of Bullock Co to John Sherrod for $600. The land was described on the plan of the 24th district of Wilkin(er)son Co (now and in 1814 Pulaski Co) as lot number 258. The deed is dated 17th February 1814. It was enetered into the deed book on May 29th 1816. Witnesses were Benjamin Hodges, Ann B. Cowart and Jarvis Jackson. There was John Hodges in 1818. Deed Book G page 88: John Hodges sells 101 1/4 acres to William Henington for $1200. This was part of lot 273, also in the 24th district of Wilker(in)son. Deed was dated 20th february 1818 and entered into the deed book Oct 5th 1821. Witnesses were Benjamin Hodges and Elizabeth Hodges (Elizabeth made her mark). John is seen again in 1821. He has power of attorney for John Moses of Henry Co, AL to sell a negor woman named Rachel. This is dated 6 January 1821 and is entered into the deed book on 12 August 1824. Witnesses were Ben Chaires and William Mayo. In 1829 I found Elisha Hodges. Deed Book I page 29: He sells land drawn by himself on the 4th day of February 1833, lying and being in the county of Cherokee, 17th District, first section, better known by the number 31 containing 160 acres. It was sold to John Rawls, James Jelks and Robert W. Halsted. It was dated 27th February 1833 and entered into the deed book 22 May 1835. Elisha made his mark in presence of J.J. Bracewell and john J. Taylor. Book I page 415: Francis I Hobby sells to Milly Garritt lot number 332 in the 21st district of Wilkerson 202 1/2 acres for $50. Dated 24 February 1833 and entered into the deed book 14 January 1839. Witneses Washington Lancaster and Asa Pipkin. Book I page 584: Milly Garritt sells to Samuel Garritt in consideration of $1 and "the natural love and affection which I have and bear to him the said Samuel Garritt. ..... "Provided that nothing in this instrument contained shall be construed as authorizing the said Samuel to take charge and possession of any of the aforesaid property until he arrives to the age of twenty one years"... No date... entered into deed book April 24th 1840. Deed Book I page 542: Arrington Phillips sells to James W. Mercer a lot of land in the 22 district of Old Wilkerson, now Pulaski C., known as the Burrell Phillips Land where John I. Hodges now lives. Dated 21 January 1835. Then page 543: James Mercer for "the good will and affection I have to Edmund Hodges, the son of John I. Hodges and my sister Charlotte Hodges, do give relinquish.... Land in the 22 district of Old Wilkerson known as Burrell Phillips Land. an exception is made that John I. Hodges can sell the land. Which he does... Dated 22 April 1837 and entered into the deed book on 4 February 1840. Then Briefly from the Minutes Book. Robert Hodges is the Administrator of Axum Phillips. Robert dies and John I Hodges is made the executor of both estates in 1827. Bondsmen for bond on Robert Hodges estate were Matthew Hodges, Samuel Nobles, Edmund Mercer and Darling Jones. January 3rd 1831... Matthew Hodges, one of the distributees of the Axum Phillips and Robert Hodges Estates pettions for division of the estates. March 7th 1831 Matthew Hodges petitions to be dismissed from J.I. Hodges bond on estate of Robert Hodges and Foreman Hodges petitions to be dismissed from J.I. Hodges bond on Axum Phillips estate. And a writ of partition is granted on the estate of Axum Phillips of North Carolina now in this state. Novemeber 14th 1831 petition of legatees to revoke the letters of administration to J.I. Hodges on the estate of Robert Hodges. January 9th 1832 Matthew Hodges appointed administrator of Robert Hodges and Axum Phillips. Sept 4th 1837 Henry Hodges appointed administrator of William Hodges. Well that is the majority of it. Please don't tell me if you already had that much. Does this give anyone any clues, or ideas on what next. BTW... Deed Book J seems to be missing. The people there knew nothing about it. Deed Book M, which would be the one that covers our Hodges leaving Pulaski Co. is in bad shape and can't be touched. No one has even made an index of it, or so they said. The LDS does not seem to have a microfilm of any of the Pulaski Co Deed Books. Jim --------------CC636AE206036CD5F5B8779C--
http://www.kimbell.org/butts/census1860.htmHodges, William State : GA County : Butts Co. Location : Iron Springs Dist Year : 1860 Page # : 254 Census type code : Slave Schedule Hodges, William B. State : GA County : Butts Co. Location : Iron Spring Dist. Year : 1860 Page # : 054
Pearl Harbor Casualty List DECEMBER 7, 1941 HODGES, Garris Vada F2c USN USS ARIZONA HODGES, Howard David F1c USN USS WEST VIRGINIA http://www.ancestralfindings.com/surnames/pearlharbor/pearlharbor.htm April [email protected]
I received this message tonight from Misty at the Index-Journal...I'm afraid that our cemetery is probably going to be lost in there somewhere. Mary Date: Fri, 27 Jul 2001 21:27:03 -0400 From: Misty Ebel <[email protected]> Subject: Re: Hodges Family Cemetery To: Mary <[email protected]> X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.50.4133.2400 Original-recipient: rfc822;[email protected] Mary, The articles have not run yet. They are finished (it's a series of 6 articles), but my editors want to do a little promotion for it beforehand. Since my news editor is on vacation, they are waiting for him to return to establish a definite publication schedule. I will definitely email you as soon as I know when they will run. While the first one may run online, I doubt the whole series will, since they only post one news story per day on the site. But I can definitely send you copies of the articles after they run. Thanks again for your help. Misty
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------4A4226FF59A8017C71B85EC1 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Misty Ebel is writing an article for the Index-Journal in Greenwood, SC. GREAT!! Gwen --------------4A4226FF59A8017C71B85EC1 Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Disposition: inline X-Mozilla-Status2: 00000000 Message-ID: <[email protected]> Date: Thu, 26 Jul 2001 19:29:39 -0500 From: Gwen Rosamond Forrester <[email protected]> X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.5 [en]C-CCK-MCD {TLC;RETAIL} (Win98; U) X-Accept-Language: en MIME-Version: 1.0 To: Misty Ebel <[email protected]> Subject: Re: Hodges Cemetery, Hodges, SC References: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Hi Misty, The photo of John Hodges' broken tombstone was taken September 29, 2000. It is a shame and disgrace what has happened to The Hodges Cemetery in Hodges, SC. Thank you so much for the interest in writing a story about cemetery destruction. All of us Hodges descendants really appreciate it! Thank You, Gwen Rosamond Forrester Henderson, Arkansas Misty Ebel wrote: > My name is Misty Ebel, and I am a reporter for the Index-Journal in > Greenwood, SC. I am working on a story about cemetery destruction, and > Albert Metts sent me a picture you took of the broken gravestone of John > Hodges, and I was wondering if you could give me an approximate date when > the photos were taken. Thanks for your help. > > Misty Ebel > 864-223-1411, ext. 3313 > Fax - 864-223-7331 > [email protected] > The Index-Journal > P.O. Box 1018 > Greenwood, SC 29648 --------------4A4226FF59A8017C71B85EC1--
Do you happen to know of nay brothers of this John Hodges? And maybe the father's name. Thanks Peggy [email protected] ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dennis Blackmon" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, July 06, 2001 8:49 PM Subject: Re: [HODGES-L] the hodges family papers > I am in the Hodges line with a John Hodges as my ancestor.. I was reading > some of the info you sent me here, and I couldn't help but to be taken by > all the things I found similar.. But I know the John you speak of isn't the > same John I've studied... fact;;; John Hodges settled near Abbeville SC,,, > fact;;; he was in the revolution,,, fact;;; the log cabin where he > lived is still standing,,,,, fact;;; the name of the SC plantation is > WILDWOOD.... all of this about knocked me out of my seat... I don't > know where you got this info, but I'd like for you to check on the name > George Washington Hodges ... he was one of the many children of John > Hodges... The small town of Hodges SC was named for him.... with all the > similarities between your John and my John, I can't help but believe there > is a connection somewhere... > Thanks for any help you can give.. > Dennis Blackmon > > > >From: "Jerry Sr. Brandel" <[email protected]> > >Reply-To: [email protected] > >To: [email protected] > >Subject: [HODGES-L] the hodges family papers > >Date: Mon, 2 Jul 2001 18:21:00 -0500 > > > > > >Home Manuscripts Univ. Archives Guides Books & Print Digital Exhibits > >Internet Resources Contact Special Collections > > > >THE HODGES FAMILY PAPERS > >BIOGRAPHY > >The Hodges family arrived in America in the first half of the seventeenth > >century. Although early records of the family have been lost, it is evident > >that they settled in the Tidewater region almost from the beginning. The > >history of the Hodges family and the history of Portsmouth are closely > >intertwined. > >The oldest available document is the will of William Hodges, which was > >written March 19, 1754. The will indicates that William Hodges was a > >successful planter who owned slaves. His will provides the only valid > >information on his life. Of his three sons and four daughters, the only one > >to be mentioned in another family document is Captain John Hodges. He > >married Lydia Thomas July 4, 2760 and died May 12, 1802. One of his sons, > >William Hodges, married Sally Deans, and one of their children was John > >Hodges, the first member of the family of whom any considerable record > >remains. > >John Hodges was born December 31, 1786 and died July 31, 1855. During the > >War of 1812 he rose to the rank of Brigadier General of the 9th Brigade of > >the Virginia Militia. He served as a member of the Virginia House of > >Delegates in 1826, and was a supervisor in Norfolk County for the election > >of presidential and vice-presidential electors in 1832. In addition to > >these activities, he served an undetermined number of years as Postmaster > >of Portsmouth until his resignation in 1840. > >General Hodges bought a tract of land on the Western Branch of the > >Elizabeth River, which he called Wildwood. From his farm, he operated a > >ferry, from which the Hodges Ferry section of Portsmouth derives its name. > >He also bought land in downtown Portsmouth upon which he built a house that > >still stands on North Street. Hodges married three times. His first two > >wives, Ann Carney (d. 1814) and Louise Harrison (d. 1826) both died, Ann > >childless, and Louise leaving two sons, John H. Hodges and William Henry > >Harrison Hodges. General Hodges' third marriage, to Jane Adelaide Gregory > >in 1828, resulted in three children, James Gregory Hodges, Emma Adelaide > >Hodges, and Margaret Jane Hodges. > >No references remain concerning the life of the younger John Hodges, except > >that he married Eliza F. C. Benn in 1842, a marriage that produced three > >children. It is rather strange that there is no official notice of his > >death April 27, 1863, since a greater number of letters and other materials > >survive from that period. The other two sons, William Henry Harrison and > >James Gregory, are more fully documented. Their lives speak of both the > >gallantry and the tragedy of the Civil War. > >James Gregory Hodges (1828-1863) married Sarah A. F. Wilson August 11, > >1852, and had two sons, William Wilson Hodges and John Nelson Hodges. At > >the age of twenty-nine he served as Portsmouth's first mayor when the city > >was incorporated in 1858. The outbreak of the Civil War saw him active in > >the first Tidewater skirmish, which resulted in the burning of the Gosport > >Navy Yard in Portsmouth. Placed in command of the 14th Virginia Regiment, > >James Gregory Hodges found himself at Gettysburg in July, 1863. During the > >famed "Pickett's Charge," in which his regiment participated, he was killed > >when a cannon exploded at his side. The remains of his body were never > >found. > >William Henry Harrison Hodges (1824-1880) married Mary A. Griswold May 13, > >1856, and had two daughters, Mary Louisa Hodges and Susan Green Hodges. He > >built a house on Middle Street across from his father's, still standing > >today. William survived the war, but he did not escape the tragedy of it. > >As cashier of the Merchants and Mechanics Savings Bank of Portsmouth, he > >was supposed to comply with the orders of the Union occupation troops under > >Major General Benjamin Butler. William was only one of five men in the town > >who refused to take the loyalty oath to the North, and when he did not obey > >the order to turn over the bank's money to union control, he was arrested > >and imprisoned from February, 1864 until after the war's end. Through his > >ordeal he remained steadfast in his conviction that obedience to that order > >would not have been consistent with honor. > >William had no sons, James' two sons died childless, and from the lack of > >evidence it appears that the one son of John Hodges also left no > >descendants. Therefore, at the death of William Wilson Hodges in 1893, the > >Hodges' line died out. But the memory of their importance to the Portsmouth > >community survives. > >SCOPE AND CONTENTS > >The Hodges Family Papers include documentation of generations from 1754 to > >1981. Although the Hodges line of male descendants ended in 1893, marriages > >of female descendants have brought the Ainsworth, Armistead, Lindsay, Hook, > >and Korty families into direct line with the Hodges. Consequently, some of > >the correspondence, newspaper clippings, genealogical information, > >scrapbook materials, and photographs have reference to these other > >families. Most of the collection, however, centers on General John Hodges > >and two of his sons, Colonel James Gregory Hodges and William Henry > >Harrison Hodges. > >The papers are divided into twelve series: correspondence, legal documents, > >financial records, newspaper clippings, military papers, publications, > >genealogical notes, certificates, scrapbook, cards, photographs, and > >miscellany. > >Series I - Correspondence > >In the correspondence series, separate folders are maintained for General > >John Hodges, Colonel James Gregory Hodges, William Henry Harrison Hodges (2 > >folders), and Captain Andrew Ainsworth. Captain Ainsworth was an Englishman > >who joined the Union forces and served as captain of the port at Hampton > >Roads during the Union occupation. After the Civil War he remained in the > >area and one of his descendants married into the Hodges line. There is also > >one folder of miscellaneous correspondence. Especially interesting is a > >letter from James Gregory Hodges to his father, requesting marital advice. > >Also, William Henry Harrison Hodges' letters to his wife, Mary Abigail > >Griswold Hodges, and his requests for release from imprisonment provide a > >direct insight into the trials of war for one man. One of the letters to > >Captain Ainsworth from O. E. Babcock is addressed "Executive Mansion.' > >Babcock served in the Grant administration. > >Series II - Legal Documents > >Included in this series are deeds of sale showing how General John Hodges > >acquired Wildwood and other property. Also included are wills, statements, > >a legal claim, and an 1809 land survey of the Western Branch land that > >Hodges eventually acquired. Items of special interest include a bill of > >sale for slaves and the 1754 will of William Hodges. > >Series III - Financial Records > >This is a small series consisting of receipts, a bill and a promissory > >note. It should be noted that the Mary Louisa Hodges mentioned on two > >receipts could not be the daughter of William Henry Harrison Hodges, since > >the dates are before her birth. How Mary Louisa Hodges was related to the > >family is unknown. > >Series IV - Newspaper Clippings > >The newspaper clippings include obituaries, weddings, anniversaries, and > >varied articles primarily concerning Portsmouth and the Civil War. The > >articles most pertinent to the Hodges family are: an account of the life of > >James Greqory Hodges by his brother-in-law, Judge James F. Crocker, a > >recounting of Portsmouth's incorporation during its 75th anniversary, and a > >1979 article about the discovered gravestones of the Hodges family. Also in > >this series is a copy of the Union occupation force's newspaper, New Regime > >5/30/1864, and maps of the Union campaign against Richmond from the > >Philadelphia Enquirer 6/28/1862 and the New York Herald 7/16/1862. > >Series V - Military Papers > >This series consists of a few military communications. The most important > >items are a notice for William Henry Harrison Hodges to report to the > >Provost Marshall's Office, and his official prison sentence. > >Series VI - Publications > >Five separate books comprise this series. The Outline of Scripture > >Geography and The Scripture Atlas are the oldest publications, both dated > >1828. The Communicants' Manual and the prayer book were both possessions of > >Sarah A. F. Wilson Hodges, the wife of James Gregory. The Holy Trinity > >Church describes the activities of the church that each generation of the > >Hodges family regularly attended. > >Series VII - Genealogical Notes > >This series is a collection of various notes written by family members that > >give insight into family history. In some instances, personal information > >is revealed that cannot be found in any of the other documents. > >Series VIII - Certificates > >Three certificates comprise this series: a marriage certificate for William > >Henry Harrison Hodges and Mary Abigail Griswold, and the baptismal > >certificates for their daughters. > >Series IX - Scrapbook > >The original scrapbook remains in the hands of the donor, but a photocopy > >of each page is present in this series. Most of the photocopied items are > >newspaper obituaries and articles. The obituaries in this series provide > >details on less prominent members of the Hodges family, as well as a solid > >core of information on the Ainsworths, Armisteads, and Lindsays. > >Series X - Cards > >The majority of the items in this series are undated and not addressed, > >although Mary A. Griswold and Susan Hodges are noted. Valentines dominate > >the series. > >Series XI - Photographs > >Most of the items in this series are photographic prints of earlier prints, > >paintings, and daguerreotypes. Included are pictures of James Gregory > >Hodges, William Henry Harrison Hodges, Mary Abigail Griswold Hodges, Mary > >Louisa Hodges Armistead, and many other members of the > >Hodges-Ainsworth-Armistead-Lindsay line up to the year 1981. > >Turn-of-the-century photographs of Portsmouth's Confederate Monument and > >Trinity Episcopal Church and a later photograph of the house William Henry > >Harrison Hodges built are also included. A photograph of an 1832 letter > >from Governor John Floyd to General John Hodges, informing him of his > >appointment as a superintendent of the election of Presidential electors, > >and one of a ring made by William Henry Harrison while he was imprisoned > >are unique features of this series. > >Series XII - Miscellaneous > >Invitations, fragments of letters and envelopes. > >PROVENANCE > >Gift of Mary Ainsworth Hook March 12, 1981 > >ACCESS > >Collection is open to researchers without restrictions. Questions on > >literary property rights should be directed to the Special Collections > >Coordinator. > >SIZE > >One hollinger documents case; one oversized box > >COLLECTION NUMBER > >MG - 49 > >CONTAINER LISTING > >Box 1 SERIES I - Correspondence > >Folder 1 General John Hodges > >Folder 2 Colonel James Gregory Hodges > >Folder 3 William Henry Harrison Hodges to Mary Abigail Hodges > >Folder 4 Other correspondence concerning William Henry Harrison Hodges > >Folder 5 Captain Andrew Ainsworth > >Folder 6 Miscellaneous > >SERIES II - Legal Documents > >Folder 7 Deeds of Sale, 1825-1894 (One deed of sale stored in oversized > >box) > >Folder 8 Wills, 1754-1832 > >Folder 9 Notes concerning legal matters > >Folder 10 Land Survey, 1809 > >Folder 11 Claim, 1839 > >SERIES III - Financial Records > >Folder 12 Receipts, 1815-1858 > >Folder 13 Bill, 1843 & Promissory Note, 1846 > >SERIES IV - Newspaper Cllppings > >Folder 14 Obituaries, 1855-1888 > >Folder 15 Weddings, Anniversaries, 1885-1905 > >Folder 16 Articles, 1876-1979 > >Folder 17 Military Matters > >Folder 18 Battle Map, Philadelphia Enquirer, June 28, 1862 > >Folder 19 Battle Map, New York Herald, July 16, 1862 > >SERIES V - Military Papers > >Folder 20 General Orders, Notices, Passes > >Folder 21 Prison Sentence for William Henry Harrison Hodges; List of > >Prisoners at Camp Hamilton > >SERIES VI - Publications > >Folder 22 Outline of Scripture Geography & accompanying Atlas by J. E. > >Worcester, 1828 > >Folder 23 The Communicants' Manual owned by Sarah A. F. Wilson Hodges, 1849 > >Folder 24 Prayer book owned by Sarah A. F. Wilson Hodges, ca. 1850 (Refer > >to oversized box) > >Folder 25 History of Holy Trinity Church by C. Charles Vache, 1962 (Refer > >to oversized box) > >SERIES VII - Genealogical Notes > >Folder 26 Genealogical Information > >SERIES VIII - Certificates > >Folder 27 Baptismal Certificates > >Folder 28 Marriage Certificate for William Henry Harrison Hodges & Mary > >Abigail Griswold, 1856 > >SERIES IX - Scrapbook > >Folder 29 Photocopied pages of newspaper obituaries & articles > >SERIES X - Cards > >Folder 30 New Years' Cards > >Folder 31 Valentines > >Folder 32 Miscellaneous > >SERIES XI - Photographs > >Folder 33 Letter from Governor John Floyd to General John Hodges, 1832 > >Folder 34 Children of General John Hodges - William Henry Harrison, James > >Gregory, and Margaret Jane > >Folder 35 Mary Abigail Griswold Hodges and ring made for her by William > >Henry Harrison Hodges > >Folder 36 Mary Louisa Hodges Armistead > >Folder 37 Green-Griswold Family > >Folder 38 Margaret Wall Ainsworth > >Folder 39 Robert Jefferson Armistead and the Armistead Cost of Arms > >Folder 40 Ambrose Harvey and Adelaide Charles Lindsay and the Lindsay Coat > >of Arms > >Folder 41 Descendants of the Hodges-Ainsworth-Armistead-Lindsay Families > >Folder 42 Downtown Portsmouth > >Folder 43 Unidentified Man > >Folder 44 Lithograph > >SERIES XII - Miscellaneous > >Folder 45 Invitation, Fragments > > > > > >==== HODGES Mailing List ==== > >Faye Dyess [email protected] Listmanager > >Thou shalt edit any quoted text down to the minimum thou needest. > >DO YOU OWN A COPY OF A CENSUS?? THEN VOLUNTEER TO DO LOOKUPS!!! > >http://www.rootsweb.com/~uslookup > > > > _________________________________________________________________ > Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com > > > ==== HODGES Mailing List ==== > Faye Dyess [email protected] Listmanager > DO YOU OWN A COPY OF A CENSUS?? THEN VOLUNTEER TO DO LOOKUPS!!! > http://www.rootsweb.com/~uslookup > Thou shalt not rely on the privacy of e-mail, especially from work. >
<!--StartFragment--> ABEDNEGO HODGES FRANKLIN COUNTY PRIVATE VIRGINIA LINE $96.00 ANNUAL ALLOWANCE $525.27 AMOUNT RECEIVED MARCH 31, 1828 PENSION STARTED AGE 76 http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/va/vapensio.htm
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/Heritage/NGB/Parish/index.html dont know how to do this
I suppose you are asking for the indentity of the Hodges you listed. These are from two separate lines but they attended the same church in Piney Flats, New Bethel Presbyterian. At 10:58 AM 07/20/2001 EDT, you wrote: >1860 Sullivan County, Tennessee census >14 14 HODGES John C. 24 M Farmer 300 TN > Priscilia I. 20 F Housekeeper TN > Marion I. 2 M TN [[1.1.5.11 John Christopher Columbus Hodges b. 8/7/1833 d. 7/15/1903 New Bethel Ch. (photo of Headstone) >18 18 HODGES James G. 27 M Farmer 3000 500 TN > Louisa 24 F Housekeeper TN x > Maria E. 6 F Housekeeper TN > William A. 4 M TN > Melissa 3 F TN > Nancy 1 F TN 1.1.11.2 James G. Hodges b. 4/11/1832 d. 2/24/1862 m. 5/20/1852 Washington Co. lived in Sullivan Co. sp. Louisa Chase b. 12/3/1836 d. 3/2/1924 CW Pen. #524 >19 19 HODGES Harriet 44 F Seamstress TN > Leah 19 F Seamstress TN > Amy 15 F Seamstress TN > Lucinda 13 F TN > Auson L. 11 M TN sp. Harriett Grey b. 3/4/1812 d. 3/9/1891 bur Meredith Farm [mother of James G.] >35 33 HODGES Josiah 59 M Farmer 1000 600 TN > Luncinda 55 F Housekeeper TN > Susan P. 22 F Housekeeper TN > Mary 19 F Housekeeper TN > Robt C. 14 M TN x 1.2.4 Josiah b. 5/9/1801 d. 2/12/1876 md. sp. Lucinda Torbett b. 1805 d. 8/12/1873 [[ Pvt. "I" Co. 60th Tn Inf; 4/1/63-4/1/65 Piney Flats PO ]] [[My line]] Ken