Speaking as a contemporary Australian, 36 years old is not old enough to have had female contemporaries denied equal pay for equal work, or to be able to remember such inequalities. I can not speak for other nations. . Perhaps one is too easily offended, or unaware of some of the issues, and could benefit from a little more research, or should engage in dialogue with the author of the previous message to better understand his point of view. Your rage is misplaced. Anyway, it would appear that the critical divide is now coming down to matters of materially dominated cultures being reined in, for the sake of all.. It makes no difference who is in charge of a tip. A tip is still a tip. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Matthew J. Hunt" <matt@hunttech.net> To: <hunt@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 7:16 PM Subject: Re: [HUNT] My Hunt Line....and some of topic stuff. > Since when did a mailing list dedicated to GENEALOGY turn into a soapbox > for > political idealogy? > > You said, "The political climate today, wants to rewrite history and fails > to point out what women really did..." Oh, really? It seems to me that the > "the political environment today" is (for the first time in history) > providing the first female candidate in a serious bid for President of the > United States of America. Of what "rewriting" are you talking about? I > seem > to recall the names of prominent female leaders throughout history. I > don't > believe they have been rewritten from *my* memory.... And I am 36 years > old. > > "If it wasn't for women, us men, would still be running around in the > forest. Happy, but still wild and free." Are you kidding me? Go to > continents that actually have a matriarchal society and see how "advanced" > they are. It doesn't matter what "sex" is in a leadership role... All > societies have their flaws. To place the blame on males for obscuring the > role of females is ridiculous. (I believe the Queen of England might take > contention with your statement, as would Margaret Thatcher or Condoleeza > Rice.) You should cite examples as to why "if it wasn't for women... still > be running around in the forest." AND FOR THAT MATTER, what's wrong with > "HAPPY, but still wild and FREE?" > > "Take the case of Huntsville. Four men came together and started the > town. > All four were married to sisters." - How did being married to fours > sisters > contribute anything to the foundation of the town? Were the four sisters > in > collusion to force these men to do "the right thing"? Empty statement > linking facts not related to the end result. Families in the early stages > of > our country intermarried constantly. > > "Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts will go on and on, as long as the women > there are treated as property and not as equals." - This particular > "political environment" has influenced the changes taking place in those > countries... Including women voting. Has that change made a real impact? > Is > our system "correct" and was their pre-existing one "incorrect"? I put it > to > you that all human-borne systems are flawed, and looking to one you do not > live in nor understand fully (yet want to change) is deeply misguided. > > "After WWII, Mac Arthur gave the vote to the Japanese Women. That one > act > civilized Japan (not trying to insult anyone)." - Are you freakin' nuts? > How > long were the Japanese people "civilized" before this country even began? > You may not have been trying to insult anyone, but I'm sure that you did > just that to the whole of Japan with that statement. I suppose that all > the > way up until the point that women in Japan were able to vote, the men were > just running around in the forest, free and happy... > > "My point is, the women in Genealogy are often overlooked and I for one > wish > to thank all of them for putting up with us." - Men need to be men. We > don't > need apologists for being men. We furthermore do not need ethics, > political, > nor idealogical lessons in a mailing list dedicated to GENEALOGY. > > Off-topic, to say the least. When you contribute to a mailing list, your > email acts as an ambassador who is welcomed into email inboxes around the > globe. When it it as off-topic and as preachy as yours, that ambassador is > asked to leave and never come back. > > > Goodbye, HUNT LIST. Unsubscribing immediately. > ... > Matthew J. Hunt > Hunt Technical Services, Inc. > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: hunt-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:hunt-bounces@rootsweb.com] On > Behalf > Of JRB6886@aol.com > Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 3:16 AM > To: HUNT@rootsweb.com > Subject: [HUNT] My Hunt Line....and some of topic stuff. > > My Hunt line is from Daniel Hunt and Susannah Lowrence Green (not sure > if > the surname is correct) to Jonathan Hunt and Aisley Berry to Susanna Hunt > and Charles Johnston Bailey (Charles is the brother of Agnes Bailey, she > marries Daniel Hunt (Huntsville, Randolph County, Missouri), a brother of > Susanna) to William Hunt Bailey and Elizabeth Emerson to Simpson Newton > Bailey and Thomas (female) Alison Jennings to Walter Hunt Bailey and > Rosetta Pearman to Fern Rufus Bailey, Sr. and Anna Belle Colwell to F. R. > Bailey, Jr. and Velda Jo Christy.......to Me. > > I have lots of information from William Hunt Bailey on down. I would > like > to add any good information to my files that connects in any way. > > I have noticed over the years that it is increasingly difficult to find > the > surnames of our women ancestry. This is a same as women have built the > civilizations we live in. The political climate today, wants to rewrite > history and fails to point out what women really did. They founded the > cities and towns. Take the case of Huntsville. Four men came together > and > started the town. All four were married to sisters. If it wasn't for > women, us men, would > still be running around in the forest. Happy, but still wild and free. > > In Northern Ireland the Troubles were ended (or at least improved) by two > women coming together and saying enough is enough. After WWII, Mac Arthur > gave the vote to the Japanese Women. That one act civilized Japan (not > trying to insult anyone). Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts will go on and > on, as long as the women there are treated as property and not as equals. > > My point is, the women in Genealogy are often overlooked and I for one > wish to thank all of them for putting up with us. > > > <BR><BR><BR>**************************************<BR> AOL now offers free > email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at > http://www.aol.com. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in > the subject and the body of the message > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message
Gee I have to pay $154.00 for Ancestry.com You must have a better deal than I got. I do wish you could got to the census year by state and year and do the look up like Genealogy.com had . Shirley <BR><BR><BR>**************************************<BR> AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at http://www.aol.com.
Is anyone working on the family of IRA F. HUNT, b. 1782, Vermont, d. 1845, Shelby County, OH, and his son IRA F. HUNT, b. 1810, Butler County, OH, d. before 1866, Shelby County, OH? If so, have you come across the FLEMING or GREELEY families in your research? They belonged to the same church as the HUNTS and seem to have traveled with them from Butler County, Ohio, to Shelby County, Ohio. I hope to find clues leading to the parents of sisters: MARY ANN FLEMING, b. Abt. 1819; m. February 09, 1840, Shelby County, Ohio, to John P. Greeley, d. December 24, 1890, Bedford, Taylor County, Iowa. ELIZA FLEMING, b. 1821, Butler County, Ohio; m. February 15, 1846, Shelby County, Ohio, to John P. Bothel, d. March 30, 1884, Clayton Township, Taylor County. Or information about CATHERINE FLEMING who married William H. Sloan on September 10, 1840, in Shelby County, Ohio. Thanks for your help, Margaret St. John Wheaton --------------------------------- Don't be flakey. Get Yahoo! Mail for Mobile and always stay connected to friends.
Richard, I am interested in your Jeremiah Hunt, son of Abel Hunt. Do you have any further information on him? I am looking for a Jeremiah Hunt, b. abt. 1803, possibly VA, but could be NC. He married a Sarah "Sallie" Sloan Taylor in Rutherford Co., TN in 1829, and both he and Sallie supposedly died after 1854 in Rutherford Co., TN, although we haven't been able to confirm that as of yet. I know that I am probably grasping at straws here, but I haven't been able to find a family as of yet that "my" Jeremiah belongs to, so just thought I'd ask. As far as to where my Jeremiah was born, it was taken from the 1850 Census of Rutherford Co., TN, but we all know how that can be an error very easily. Thanks, Jackie rlfoster@grandecom.net wrote: This is the Hunt family I am searching: 1. Abel HUNT. Born in 1768 in Salisbury, Rowan Co., NC. Abel died in Oct 1842; he was 74. Abel first married Johanna BAIRD, daughter of Andrew BAIRD & Hannah GREEN. Born in 1771. Johanna died bef 1810; she was 39. They had the following children: 2 i. Oliver (1789-) 3 ii. Noah (1790-1833) 4 iii. Daniel (1791-) 5 iv. Hannah (1793-) 6 v. Joanna (1794-) 7 vi. Sarah (1795-) 8 vii. Azubeth (1797-) 9 viii. Jeremiah (1798-) 10 ix. Francis Marion (1800-) 11 x. Alexander (1801-) 12 xi. Elizabeth (1803-) 13 xii. Alemeth (1805-) 14 xiii. Wilson (1808-) Abel second married Elizabeth BELL. Richard ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message Mom and Dad - If tears could build a stairway, and memories a lane, I'd walk right up to Heaven and bring you home again. I miss you. --------------------------------- Don't pick lemons. See all the new 2007 cars at Yahoo! Autos.
hey! Christine, I have a Tilley in my tree too. It could just be a coincidence having a Hunt as its a relatively common name. However Tilley is not common! Thomas Tilley of Mitcham, Adelaide had a very large family...16 children all up. To 3 different women, though his wife bore 14 of them.. My g-grandmother was a Tilley and her mother was a Brooks. The only Thomas Hunt I can find in my tree is this one. See if this lot mean anything to you... George and Selina are said to have married in Broken HIll. I have not yet verified this. Cheers Deb Thomas Charles Hunt b 6th September 1858 Brighton, Adelaide, South Australia d ?; par. Sarah Maria O'Brien Calton/Georgie Hunt Thomas married Emma Elizabeth Crow(n) b ? ; par. ? First SA born Son: George Malcolm Hunt b 28th September 1885 d ; par. Emma Elizabeth Crow(n)/Thomas Charles Hunt Son's wife: Florence Selina Brooks Tilley b 16th January 1883 d ?; par Elizabeth Ellen Brooks/Thomas Tilley Second SA born son: Eustace Charles Hunt b 11th October 1888 d (31) 25th March 1920; par. Emma Elizabeth Crow(n)/Thomas Charles Hunt Second SA born son's wife: Alice Masters b ? ; par. ? Eustace Charles Hunt 2nd b 17th June 1920 d ? ; par. Alice Masters/Eustace Charles Hunt ----- Original Message ----- From: "Chris Tilley" <christilley@ozemail.com.au> To: <hunt@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 1:31 PM Subject: Re: [HUNT] South Australian Hunt > Hi Deb > I live in South Australia and my mothers maiden name is Hunt. I have been > trying without success to find her father's (Edward Anthony Hunt,) mothers > name. He says he was born in Moonee Ponds Vic around 1884? and his > marriage > cert in SA says his father was a Thomas Hunt. > After all the messages relating to the US it was a surprise and delight to > find a Hunt here... I shall do a bit of searching on your side > too...wonder > if there could be a connection?My mothers parents Elsie Jane nee Good and > Edward Anthony Hunt, a carpenter lived in Prospect SA > Regards Christine Tilley > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Deb Guildner" <bocor@bigbutton.com.au> > To: <hunt@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 3:27 PM > Subject: [HUNT] South Australian Hunt > > >> Hi all, >> >> Just wondering if there is anyone on the list with an interest in South >> Australian Hunt families. >> Georgie Hunt, b C 1828 (?) married Sarah Calton in Adelaide South >> Australia, >> very early in the history of that colony. >> >> South Australia was colonised in 1834. >> >> Georgie Hunt b C ? ; par. ?; mar. Sarah Calton 17th June 1847 Adelaide >> South >> Australia >> >> Sarah Maria O'Brien Calton b C 1828, d (75) 6th September 1904 Exeter, >> Port >> Adelaide; par. ? >> >> It is not known where Georgie Hunt was born. >> >> Cheers >> >> Deb >> >> (Hunt descendant) >> >> >> >> ----- Original Message ----- >> From: "Bob & Sherry Phillips" <sherbob@olypen.com> >> To: <hunt@rootsweb.com> >> Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 11:02 AM >> Subject: Re: [HUNT] Roll Call >> >> >>> Well, I see that the HUNT list has come alive again. Unfortunately none >>> of the information presented so far relates to my HUNTs so I will once >>> again put out my information in hopes that there is somebody out there >>> researching the same family. >>> Aurin Lee HUNT b. abt. 1824, NY; m. Julia A. Meeker b. abt. 1832, NY. >>> Children: Clarence B. b. abt. 1852, NY; Sarah J. b. abt. 1858, NY; >>> Aurin >>> Benjamin (my great grandfather) b. 1863, Orwell PA, d. 1930 Red Cloud >>> NE; >>> m. first wife Phoebe (Phebe) Dillinger (Dellinger) b. 1863, PA; d. 1890, >>> North Bend, NE. Children: Mabel Olive b. 1884, Early, Iowa, d. 1964, >>> Alma, NE; Clarence Blaine b. 1887, Early, Iowa, d. 1913, Denver CO; >>> Ruthie >>> b. 1889, North Bend, NE d.1889, North Bend, NE. Married second wife >>> Lillian Watrous 1891, North Bend, NE, b. 1864, NY, d. 1949, Alma, NE. >>> Children: Leland Carey (my grandfather) b. 1893, North Bend, NE, d. >>> 1963, >>> Renton, WA; Lowell Doan b. 1894, North Bend, NE, d. abt. 1979, CO. I >>> would be glad to share information with anybody out there researching >>> this >>> family. >>> >>> Just as a note regarding Ancestry. I have subscribed for many years and >>> have felt that I get my money's worth each year. For the yearly >>> subscription I don't think I am being over charged for information that >>> I >>> would be searching for all over the internet. >>> >>> ------------------------------- >>> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >>> HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes >>> in the subject and the body of the message >> >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes >> in the subject and the body of the message > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message
Hi Deb I live in South Australia and my mothers maiden name is Hunt. I have been trying without success to find her father's (Edward Anthony Hunt,) mothers name. He says he was born in Moonee Ponds Vic around 1884? and his marriage cert in SA says his father was a Thomas Hunt. After all the messages relating to the US it was a surprise and delight to find a Hunt here... I shall do a bit of searching on your side too...wonder if there could be a connection?My mothers parents Elsie Jane nee Good and Edward Anthony Hunt, a carpenter lived in Prospect SA Regards Christine Tilley ----- Original Message ----- From: "Deb Guildner" <bocor@bigbutton.com.au> To: <hunt@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 3:27 PM Subject: [HUNT] South Australian Hunt > Hi all, > > Just wondering if there is anyone on the list with an interest in South > Australian Hunt families. > Georgie Hunt, b C 1828 (?) married Sarah Calton in Adelaide South > Australia, > very early in the history of that colony. > > South Australia was colonised in 1834. > > Georgie Hunt b C ? ; par. ?; mar. Sarah Calton 17th June 1847 Adelaide > South > Australia > > Sarah Maria O'Brien Calton b C 1828, d (75) 6th September 1904 Exeter, > Port > Adelaide; par. ? > > It is not known where Georgie Hunt was born. > > Cheers > > Deb > > (Hunt descendant) > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Bob & Sherry Phillips" <sherbob@olypen.com> > To: <hunt@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 11:02 AM > Subject: Re: [HUNT] Roll Call > > >> Well, I see that the HUNT list has come alive again. Unfortunately none >> of the information presented so far relates to my HUNTs so I will once >> again put out my information in hopes that there is somebody out there >> researching the same family. >> Aurin Lee HUNT b. abt. 1824, NY; m. Julia A. Meeker b. abt. 1832, NY. >> Children: Clarence B. b. abt. 1852, NY; Sarah J. b. abt. 1858, NY; Aurin >> Benjamin (my great grandfather) b. 1863, Orwell PA, d. 1930 Red Cloud NE; >> m. first wife Phoebe (Phebe) Dillinger (Dellinger) b. 1863, PA; d. 1890, >> North Bend, NE. Children: Mabel Olive b. 1884, Early, Iowa, d. 1964, >> Alma, NE; Clarence Blaine b. 1887, Early, Iowa, d. 1913, Denver CO; >> Ruthie >> b. 1889, North Bend, NE d.1889, North Bend, NE. Married second wife >> Lillian Watrous 1891, North Bend, NE, b. 1864, NY, d. 1949, Alma, NE. >> Children: Leland Carey (my grandfather) b. 1893, North Bend, NE, d. >> 1963, >> Renton, WA; Lowell Doan b. 1894, North Bend, NE, d. abt. 1979, CO. I >> would be glad to share information with anybody out there researching >> this >> family. >> >> Just as a note regarding Ancestry. I have subscribed for many years and >> have felt that I get my money's worth each year. For the yearly >> subscription I don't think I am being over charged for information that I >> would be searching for all over the internet. >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes >> in the subject and the body of the message > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message
This is a genealogy forum not a political blog. Please save this stuff for somewhere else. MB Slane -----Original Message----- From: hunt-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:hunt-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Deb Guildner Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 4:06 AM To: matt@hunttech.net; hunt@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [HUNT] My Hunt Line....and some of topic stuff. Speaking as a contemporary Australian, 36 years old is not old enough to have had female contemporaries denied equal pay for equal work, or to be able to remember such inequalities. I can not speak for other nations. . Perhaps one is too easily offended, or unaware of some of the issues, and could benefit from a little more research, or should engage in dialogue with the author of the previous message to better understand his point of view. Your rage is misplaced. Anyway, it would appear that the critical divide is now coming down to matters of materially dominated cultures being reined in, for the sake of all.. It makes no difference who is in charge of a tip. A tip is still a tip. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Matthew J. Hunt" <matt@hunttech.net> To: <hunt@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 7:16 PM Subject: Re: [HUNT] My Hunt Line....and some of topic stuff. > Since when did a mailing list dedicated to GENEALOGY turn into a soapbox > for > political idealogy? > > You said, "The political climate today, wants to rewrite history and fails > to point out what women really did..." Oh, really? It seems to me that the > "the political environment today" is (for the first time in history) > providing the first female candidate in a serious bid for President of the > United States of America. Of what "rewriting" are you talking about? I > seem > to recall the names of prominent female leaders throughout history. I > don't > believe they have been rewritten from *my* memory.... And I am 36 years > old. > > "If it wasn't for women, us men, would still be running around in the > forest. Happy, but still wild and free." Are you kidding me? Go to > continents that actually have a matriarchal society and see how "advanced" > they are. It doesn't matter what "sex" is in a leadership role... All > societies have their flaws. To place the blame on males for obscuring the > role of females is ridiculous. (I believe the Queen of England might take > contention with your statement, as would Margaret Thatcher or Condoleeza > Rice.) You should cite examples as to why "if it wasn't for women... still > be running around in the forest." AND FOR THAT MATTER, what's wrong with > "HAPPY, but still wild and FREE?" > > "Take the case of Huntsville. Four men came together and started the > town. > All four were married to sisters." - How did being married to fours > sisters > contribute anything to the foundation of the town? Were the four sisters > in > collusion to force these men to do "the right thing"? Empty statement > linking facts not related to the end result. Families in the early stages > of > our country intermarried constantly. > > "Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts will go on and on, as long as the women > there are treated as property and not as equals." - This particular > "political environment" has influenced the changes taking place in those > countries... Including women voting. Has that change made a real impact? > Is > our system "correct" and was their pre-existing one "incorrect"? I put it > to > you that all human-borne systems are flawed, and looking to one you do not > live in nor understand fully (yet want to change) is deeply misguided. > > "After WWII, Mac Arthur gave the vote to the Japanese Women. That one > act > civilized Japan (not trying to insult anyone)." - Are you freakin' nuts? > How > long were the Japanese people "civilized" before this country even began? > You may not have been trying to insult anyone, but I'm sure that you did > just that to the whole of Japan with that statement. I suppose that all > the > way up until the point that women in Japan were able to vote, the men were > just running around in the forest, free and happy... > > "My point is, the women in Genealogy are often overlooked and I for one > wish > to thank all of them for putting up with us." - Men need to be men. We > don't > need apologists for being men. We furthermore do not need ethics, > political, > nor idealogical lessons in a mailing list dedicated to GENEALOGY. > > Off-topic, to say the least. When you contribute to a mailing list, your > email acts as an ambassador who is welcomed into email inboxes around the > globe. When it it as off-topic and as preachy as yours, that ambassador is > asked to leave and never come back. > > > Goodbye, HUNT LIST. Unsubscribing immediately. > ... > Matthew J. Hunt > Hunt Technical Services, Inc. > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: hunt-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:hunt-bounces@rootsweb.com] On > Behalf > Of JRB6886@aol.com > Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 3:16 AM > To: HUNT@rootsweb.com > Subject: [HUNT] My Hunt Line....and some of topic stuff. > > My Hunt line is from Daniel Hunt and Susannah Lowrence Green (not sure > if > the surname is correct) to Jonathan Hunt and Aisley Berry to Susanna Hunt > and Charles Johnston Bailey (Charles is the brother of Agnes Bailey, she > marries Daniel Hunt (Huntsville, Randolph County, Missouri), a brother of > Susanna) to William Hunt Bailey and Elizabeth Emerson to Simpson Newton > Bailey and Thomas (female) Alison Jennings to Walter Hunt Bailey and > Rosetta Pearman to Fern Rufus Bailey, Sr. and Anna Belle Colwell to F. R. > Bailey, Jr. and Velda Jo Christy.......to Me. > > I have lots of information from William Hunt Bailey on down. I would > like > to add any good information to my files that connects in any way. > > I have noticed over the years that it is increasingly difficult to find > the > surnames of our women ancestry. This is a same as women have built the > civilizations we live in. The political climate today, wants to rewrite > history and fails to point out what women really did. They founded the > cities and towns. Take the case of Huntsville. Four men came together > and > started the town. All four were married to sisters. If it wasn't for > women, us men, would > still be running around in the forest. Happy, but still wild and free. > > In Northern Ireland the Troubles were ended (or at least improved) by two > women coming together and saying enough is enough. After WWII, Mac Arthur > gave the vote to the Japanese Women. That one act civilized Japan (not > trying to insult anyone). Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts will go on and > on, as long as the women there are treated as property and not as equals. > > My point is, the women in Genealogy are often overlooked and I for one > wish to thank all of them for putting up with us. > > > <BR><BR><BR>**************************************<BR> AOL now offers free > email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at > http://www.aol.com. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in > the subject and the body of the message > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hello Me , I would like to have some of your family data !! , My data bank stops at Charles Bailey , or the son William , Could you be enticed to send a bit of ' stuff ' my way ? , like who is spouse etc , Phil ----- Original Message ----- From: <JRB6886@aol.com> To: <HUNT@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 23:16 Subject: [HUNT] My Hunt Line....and some of topic stuff. > My Hunt line is from Daniel Hunt and Susannah Lowrence Green (not sure if > the surname is correct) to Jonathan Hunt and Aisley Berry to Susanna Hunt and > Charles Johnston Bailey (Charles is the brother of Agnes Bailey, she marries > Daniel Hunt (Huntsville, Randolph County, Missouri), a brother of Susanna) to > William Hunt Bailey and Elizabeth Emerson to Simpson Newton Bailey and > Thomas (female) Alison Jennings to Walter Hunt Bailey and Rosetta Pearman to Fern > Rufus Bailey, Sr. and Anna Belle Colwell to F. R. Bailey, Jr. and Velda Jo > Christy.......to Me. > > I have lots of information from William Hunt Bailey on down. I would like > to add any good information to my files that connects in any way. >
Since when did a mailing list dedicated to GENEALOGY turn into a soapbox for political idealogy? You said, "The political climate today, wants to rewrite history and fails to point out what women really did..." Oh, really? It seems to me that the "the political environment today" is (for the first time in history) providing the first female candidate in a serious bid for President of the United States of America. Of what "rewriting" are you talking about? I seem to recall the names of prominent female leaders throughout history. I don't believe they have been rewritten from *my* memory.... And I am 36 years old. "If it wasn't for women, us men, would still be running around in the forest. Happy, but still wild and free." Are you kidding me? Go to continents that actually have a matriarchal society and see how "advanced" they are. It doesn't matter what "sex" is in a leadership role... All societies have their flaws. To place the blame on males for obscuring the role of females is ridiculous. (I believe the Queen of England might take contention with your statement, as would Margaret Thatcher or Condoleeza Rice.) You should cite examples as to why "if it wasn't for women... still be running around in the forest." AND FOR THAT MATTER, what's wrong with "HAPPY, but still wild and FREE?" "Take the case of Huntsville. Four men came together and started the town. All four were married to sisters." - How did being married to fours sisters contribute anything to the foundation of the town? Were the four sisters in collusion to force these men to do "the right thing"? Empty statement linking facts not related to the end result. Families in the early stages of our country intermarried constantly. "Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts will go on and on, as long as the women there are treated as property and not as equals." - This particular "political environment" has influenced the changes taking place in those countries... Including women voting. Has that change made a real impact? Is our system "correct" and was their pre-existing one "incorrect"? I put it to you that all human-borne systems are flawed, and looking to one you do not live in nor understand fully (yet want to change) is deeply misguided. "After WWII, Mac Arthur gave the vote to the Japanese Women. That one act civilized Japan (not trying to insult anyone)." - Are you freakin' nuts? How long were the Japanese people "civilized" before this country even began? You may not have been trying to insult anyone, but I'm sure that you did just that to the whole of Japan with that statement. I suppose that all the way up until the point that women in Japan were able to vote, the men were just running around in the forest, free and happy... "My point is, the women in Genealogy are often overlooked and I for one wish to thank all of them for putting up with us." - Men need to be men. We don't need apologists for being men. We furthermore do not need ethics, political, nor idealogical lessons in a mailing list dedicated to GENEALOGY. Off-topic, to say the least. When you contribute to a mailing list, your email acts as an ambassador who is welcomed into email inboxes around the globe. When it it as off-topic and as preachy as yours, that ambassador is asked to leave and never come back. Goodbye, HUNT LIST. Unsubscribing immediately. ... Matthew J. Hunt Hunt Technical Services, Inc. -----Original Message----- From: hunt-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:hunt-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of JRB6886@aol.com Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 3:16 AM To: HUNT@rootsweb.com Subject: [HUNT] My Hunt Line....and some of topic stuff. My Hunt line is from Daniel Hunt and Susannah Lowrence Green (not sure if the surname is correct) to Jonathan Hunt and Aisley Berry to Susanna Hunt and Charles Johnston Bailey (Charles is the brother of Agnes Bailey, she marries Daniel Hunt (Huntsville, Randolph County, Missouri), a brother of Susanna) to William Hunt Bailey and Elizabeth Emerson to Simpson Newton Bailey and Thomas (female) Alison Jennings to Walter Hunt Bailey and Rosetta Pearman to Fern Rufus Bailey, Sr. and Anna Belle Colwell to F. R. Bailey, Jr. and Velda Jo Christy.......to Me. I have lots of information from William Hunt Bailey on down. I would like to add any good information to my files that connects in any way. I have noticed over the years that it is increasingly difficult to find the surnames of our women ancestry. This is a same as women have built the civilizations we live in. The political climate today, wants to rewrite history and fails to point out what women really did. They founded the cities and towns. Take the case of Huntsville. Four men came together and started the town. All four were married to sisters. If it wasn't for women, us men, would still be running around in the forest. Happy, but still wild and free. In Northern Ireland the Troubles were ended (or at least improved) by two women coming together and saying enough is enough. After WWII, Mac Arthur gave the vote to the Japanese Women. That one act civilized Japan (not trying to insult anyone). Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts will go on and on, as long as the women there are treated as property and not as equals. My point is, the women in Genealogy are often overlooked and I for one wish to thank all of them for putting up with us. <BR><BR><BR>**************************************<BR> AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at http://www.aol.com. ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Is anyone else in this line...??? This is as far back as I have been able to get.... Archibald was born abt.1789...in NC...probably in Chatham Co. married..Mary Gilmore born abt. 1790...in Chatham Co. NC I only have 5 children for them Thomas..born 1807...in Chatham Co. NC Mary Polly...born 1810...in Chatham Co. NC...married Phernatty ? Sally..born 1812...in Chatham Co. NC...married John Floyd Hardy..born 1814...in Chatham Co. NC Delia..born 1816..in Chatham Co NC...died bef. 1858..married Allen ? My line is through Thomas Hunt.... ...he married..Mary Lawrence in 1828 in TN...she was born abt.1808 in NC I have 9 children for them....and I have a lot of info on them...and up to present day... Archibald married a second time to Elizabeth ? they had one child... Church Ellen...born 1848...in Wilson Co. TN she married Isaac N. Johnson on Jan. 15, 1873 in DeKalb Co. TN Barb TL
My Hunt line is from Daniel Hunt and Susannah Lowrence Green (not sure if the surname is correct) to Jonathan Hunt and Aisley Berry to Susanna Hunt and Charles Johnston Bailey (Charles is the brother of Agnes Bailey, she marries Daniel Hunt (Huntsville, Randolph County, Missouri), a brother of Susanna) to William Hunt Bailey and Elizabeth Emerson to Simpson Newton Bailey and Thomas (female) Alison Jennings to Walter Hunt Bailey and Rosetta Pearman to Fern Rufus Bailey, Sr. and Anna Belle Colwell to F. R. Bailey, Jr. and Velda Jo Christy.......to Me. I have lots of information from William Hunt Bailey on down. I would like to add any good information to my files that connects in any way. I have noticed over the years that it is increasingly difficult to find the surnames of our women ancestry. This is a same as women have built the civilizations we live in. The political climate today, wants to rewrite history and fails to point out what women really did. They founded the cities and towns. Take the case of Huntsville. Four men came together and started the town. All four were married to sisters. If it wasn't for women, us men, would still be running around in the forest. Happy, but still wild and free. In Northern Ireland the Troubles were ended (or at least improved) by two women coming together and saying enough is enough. After WWII, Mac Arthur gave the vote to the Japanese Women. That one act civilized Japan (not trying to insult anyone). Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts will go on and on, as long as the women there are treated as property and not as equals. My point is, the women in Genealogy are often overlooked and I for one wish to thank all of them for putting up with us. <BR><BR><BR>**************************************<BR> AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at http://www.aol.com.
The below topic is now ended. Please do not post any replies to the non-genealogy part. Re: [HUNT] My Hunt Line....and some of topic stuff. Thanks you Courtney sitnah@cox.net HUNT list moderator
Hi all, Just wondering if there is anyone on the list with an interest in South Australian Hunt families. Georgie Hunt, b C 1828 (?) married Sarah Calton in Adelaide South Australia, very early in the history of that colony. South Australia was colonised in 1834. Georgie Hunt b C ? ; par. ?; mar. Sarah Calton 17th June 1847 Adelaide South Australia Sarah Maria O'Brien Calton b C 1828, d (75) 6th September 1904 Exeter, Port Adelaide; par. ? It is not known where Georgie Hunt was born. Cheers Deb (Hunt descendant) ----- Original Message ----- From: "Bob & Sherry Phillips" <sherbob@olypen.com> To: <hunt@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 11:02 AM Subject: Re: [HUNT] Roll Call > Well, I see that the HUNT list has come alive again. Unfortunately none > of the information presented so far relates to my HUNTs so I will once > again put out my information in hopes that there is somebody out there > researching the same family. > Aurin Lee HUNT b. abt. 1824, NY; m. Julia A. Meeker b. abt. 1832, NY. > Children: Clarence B. b. abt. 1852, NY; Sarah J. b. abt. 1858, NY; Aurin > Benjamin (my great grandfather) b. 1863, Orwell PA, d. 1930 Red Cloud NE; > m. first wife Phoebe (Phebe) Dillinger (Dellinger) b. 1863, PA; d. 1890, > North Bend, NE. Children: Mabel Olive b. 1884, Early, Iowa, d. 1964, > Alma, NE; Clarence Blaine b. 1887, Early, Iowa, d. 1913, Denver CO; Ruthie > b. 1889, North Bend, NE d.1889, North Bend, NE. Married second wife > Lillian Watrous 1891, North Bend, NE, b. 1864, NY, d. 1949, Alma, NE. > Children: Leland Carey (my grandfather) b. 1893, North Bend, NE, d. 1963, > Renton, WA; Lowell Doan b. 1894, North Bend, NE, d. abt. 1979, CO. I > would be glad to share information with anybody out there researching this > family. > > Just as a note regarding Ancestry. I have subscribed for many years and > have felt that I get my money's worth each year. For the yearly > subscription I don't think I am being over charged for information that I > would be searching for all over the internet. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message
----- Original Message ----- From: Renay Hunt Sent: Friday, March 09, 2007 9:16 PM Subject: your Hunt Family I read your post with interest.I am researching my Hunt Family, with the oldest being Samuel David Hunt b 1789 in Union SC. He died in Florida. You indicate you had Hunt relatives in Florida, with Pearce ties. It wouldn't happen to be Eunice Eva Pearce who married Tomas Filson Hunt. Eunice b1896 d.1976. I also have an Olivia Pearce married to a Bethea. Renay Hunt I will have to look into this further or rather your line as this is in the backyard of where my Hunts are from. They're also from NC originally and migrated back and forth. With Hunts in both Bradley & Polk County and on the border of both and only 20 minutes away from McMinn Co line, it's quite possible there's a connection. I will see if I can find out. But on the other hand, you never know if it's just a coincidence. :) Also Smith is one of our primary surnames and our Smiths lived right near the Hunts. My grandmother, who was a Hunt, married my grandfather, who was a Smith. I did a quick search on ancestry but was unable to find anything other than a Smith on that page as well as a Pearce. Pearce's are also a family name and married into the Hunt line of our family. They have a Hunt reunion in that area every June I believe. Unfortunately I'm never able to get up to TN at that time of the year, and grew up not knowing the Hunt side despite them being in our backyard so to speak. Not to mention never knowing my grandfather because he was always somewhere else whether it be Florida, NC, SC, etc. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Anson and Bernice" <abraymond@earthlink.net> To: <hunt@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, March 09, 2007 5:09 PM Subject: Re: [HUNT] Jessie Hunt-son of Grandison >I will have to look into this further or rather your line as this is in the >backyard of where my Hunts are from. They're also from NC originally and >migrated back and forth. With Hunts in both Bradley & Polk County and on >the border of both and only 20 minutes away from McMinn Co line, it's quite >possible there's a connection. I will see if I can find out. > But on the other hand, you never know if it's just a coincidence. :) > Also Smith is one of our primary surnames and our Smiths lived right near > the Hunts. My grandmother, who was a Hunt, married my grandfather, who was > a Smith. > I did a quick search on ancestry but was unable to find anything other > than a Smith on that page as well as a Pearce. Pearce's are also a family > name and married into the Hunt line of our family. > They have a Hunt reunion in that area every June I believe. Unfortunately > I'm never able to get up to TN at that time of the year, and grew up not > knowing the Hunt side despite them being in our backyard so to speak. Not > to mention never knowing my grandfather because he was always somewhere > else whether it be Florida, NC, SC, etc. > > Bernice > > -----Original Message----- >>From: debrem@aol.com >>Sent: Mar 8, 2007 6:19 AM >>To: hunt@rootsweb.com >>Subject: [HUNT] Jessie Hunt-son of Grandison >> >>I saw that Felicia and Joy were wondering about Jesse Hunt, son of >>Grandison. I descend from Grandison through his son John H >William >>Francis>Albert Dowe>Lawrence Ross>myself. I just recently found a piece >>of information on Jesse and have been doing a little research on this. >>Jesse and Salina Jane (Smith) Hunt were in Tennessee until at least 1859 >>and in Arkansas by 1862 according to the births of their children. Jesse >>probably died between Dec 1869 and Aug of 1870. He was a civil war >>soldier. I have not found them in the 1860 census yet. Salina and >>children appear in the 1870 Sebastin Co, Ark census as well as the Cedar >>Co, MO census. >> > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message >
I will have to look into this further or rather your line as this is in the backyard of where my Hunts are from. They're also from NC originally and migrated back and forth. With Hunts in both Bradley & Polk County and on the border of both and only 20 minutes away from McMinn Co line, it's quite possible there's a connection. I will see if I can find out. But on the other hand, you never know if it's just a coincidence. :) Also Smith is one of our primary surnames and our Smiths lived right near the Hunts. My grandmother, who was a Hunt, married my grandfather, who was a Smith. I did a quick search on ancestry but was unable to find anything other than a Smith on that page as well as a Pearce. Pearce's are also a family name and married into the Hunt line of our family. They have a Hunt reunion in that area every June I believe. Unfortunately I'm never able to get up to TN at that time of the year, and grew up not knowing the Hunt side despite them being in our backyard so to speak. Not to mention never knowing my grandfather because he was always somewhere else whether it be Florida, NC, SC, etc. Bernice -----Original Message----- >From: debrem@aol.com >Sent: Mar 8, 2007 6:19 AM >To: hunt@rootsweb.com >Subject: [HUNT] Jessie Hunt-son of Grandison > >I saw that Felicia and Joy were wondering about Jesse Hunt, son of Grandison. I descend from Grandison through his son John H >William Francis>Albert Dowe>Lawrence Ross>myself. I just recently found a piece of information on Jesse and have been doing a little research on this. Jesse and Salina Jane (Smith) Hunt were in Tennessee until at least 1859 and in Arkansas by 1862 according to the births of their children. Jesse probably died between Dec 1869 and Aug of 1870. He was a civil war soldier. I have not found them in the 1860 census yet. Salina and children appear in the 1870 Sebastin Co, Ark census as well as the Cedar Co, MO census. >
Well, I see that the HUNT list has come alive again. Unfortunately none of the information presented so far relates to my HUNTs so I will once again put out my information in hopes that there is somebody out there researching the same family. Aurin Lee HUNT b. abt. 1824, NY; m. Julia A. Meeker b. abt. 1832, NY. Children: Clarence B. b. abt. 1852, NY; Sarah J. b. abt. 1858, NY; Aurin Benjamin (my great grandfather) b. 1863, Orwell PA, d. 1930 Red Cloud NE; m. first wife Phoebe (Phebe) Dillinger (Dellinger) b. 1863, PA; d. 1890, North Bend, NE. Children: Mabel Olive b. 1884, Early, Iowa, d. 1964, Alma, NE; Clarence Blaine b. 1887, Early, Iowa, d. 1913, Denver CO; Ruthie b. 1889, North Bend, NE d.1889, North Bend, NE. Married second wife Lillian Watrous 1891, North Bend, NE, b. 1864, NY, d. 1949, Alma, NE. Children: Leland Carey (my grandfather) b. 1893, North Bend, NE, d. 1963, Renton, WA; Lowell Doan b. 1894, North Bend, NE, d. abt. 1979, CO. I would be glad to share information with anybody out there researching this family. Just as a note regarding Ancestry. I have subscribed for many years and have felt that I get my money's worth each year. For the yearly subscription I don't think I am being over charged for information that I would be searching for all over the internet.
Carol, Thank you very much. I appreciate your information and will check it out! sandshunt Carol Sircoulomb <csircoulomb@cox.net> wrote: Have you noticed names travel.My mothers cousin is a Harry Hunt lives in Phoenix and is almost 90. Carol Sircoulomb ----- Original Message ----- From: "Stephen Hunt" To: Sent: Tuesday, March 06, 2007 8:07 PM Subject: [HUNT] Roll Call > Hello, > > My "brickwall"= My grandfather "Harry" (could be Henry, Harold, etc.!), > b. 26 Dec 1872 > "in Illinois." Harry Hope Hunt ordained Methodist-Episcopal Minister > around year 1900 and joined US Forest Service c. 1905. Harry Hope Hunt m. > Julia Helen Spencer in Fairmont, Los Angeles County, CA in 1904. Harry > Hunt had one son, Edw. Spencer Hunt, my fa., b. 1906 in Elsinore, CA. My > fa. d. 1978 and mom gone also. Harry Hunt was killed in a traffic > accident 1930 in San Bernardino CA. Death Cert. and Marriage Cert. say b. > "in Illinois." > > I subscribe to Ancestry.com and Genealogy.com and there are several > possible Harry H. Hunt's; but none listed in censuses fit his stats, so > far. > > I would LOVE to know the name of my gr. grandfa. and whether Harry Hope > Hunt had any siblings, especially because HUNT is my surname--please, if > you have any ideas. > > Thank you > > Steve & Susan Hunt, > www.sandshunt@sbcglobal.net > > > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message > ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Has anyone mentioned US Genweb? They're a free site. Lots of great volunteers. _The USGenWeb Project - Home Page_ (http://www.usgenweb.net/) Susan Hunt Williams Gggrandaughter of Charles A. Hunt Captain, Co. K, 25th Regiment Wisconsin Volunteers (I thought I sent this already but it never showed) <BR><BR><BR>**************************************<BR> AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at http://www.aol.com.
Have you noticed names travel.My mothers cousin is a Harry Hunt lives in Phoenix and is almost 90. Carol Sircoulomb ----- Original Message ----- From: "Stephen Hunt" <sandshunt@sbcglobal.net> To: <HUNT-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, March 06, 2007 8:07 PM Subject: [HUNT] Roll Call > Hello, > > My "brickwall"= My grandfather "Harry" (could be Henry, Harold, etc.!), > b. 26 Dec 1872 > "in Illinois." Harry Hope Hunt ordained Methodist-Episcopal Minister > around year 1900 and joined US Forest Service c. 1905. Harry Hope Hunt m. > Julia Helen Spencer in Fairmont, Los Angeles County, CA in 1904. Harry > Hunt had one son, Edw. Spencer Hunt, my fa., b. 1906 in Elsinore, CA. My > fa. d. 1978 and mom gone also. Harry Hunt was killed in a traffic > accident 1930 in San Bernardino CA. Death Cert. and Marriage Cert. say b. > "in Illinois." > > I subscribe to Ancestry.com and Genealogy.com and there are several > possible Harry H. Hunt's; but none listed in censuses fit his stats, so > far. > > I would LOVE to know the name of my gr. grandfa. and whether Harry Hope > Hunt had any siblings, especially because HUNT is my surname--please, if > you have any ideas. > > Thank you > > Steve & Susan Hunt, > www.sandshunt@sbcglobal.net > > > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message >
Joy: See my previous post for Jesse, son of Grandison. Grandison was married to Bideth (Biddy) Hames/Haymes. I have John H. Hunt's (son of Grandison) death certificate that gives her maiden name. I believe her to be the daughter of Joshua Hames that married Mary/Polly Robinson. I have no solid proof that Joshua and Mary were her parents but they did appear next to them in the 1830 McMinn Co, TN census if I remember right. I have Joshua's family being in the Richmond and Pittsylvania, Va areas prior to McMinn Co. Grandison is given as being born in VA. I am trying to make a tie with any Hunts in that area. Any help is appreciated. I don't know if Bideth and Grandison were married in VA, TN or where. I feel that it is very likely that her name was Bideth Caroline Hayme/Hames as the Bideth Caroline has been passed down through several of the children's families. -----Original Message----- From: chuckjoygene@ca.rr.com To: hunt@rootsweb.com Sent: Tue, 6 Mar 2007 3:51 PM Subject: Re: [HUNT] Thomas Hunt O.K. I should read ahead before answering. Yes, we do have B.Grandison Hunt as one of the sons of Jesse Hunt and Mary C. Wagstaff. B. Grandison Hunt was born 1802/1804 in VA. He married "Biddy" b. 1805 VA. One of his six children was a Jesse Hunt. We have no data for these children -- only their names. NOTE TO ALLEN: In our records/notes, Clara Hunt Miller said that the B. Grandison Hunt "might be Brittian." But she never found conclusive evidence. Where does your information come from that it is Brittian and he might have dropped the Brittian name? Again, I do not know what happened to this Jesse son of B. Grandison. Joy ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to HUNT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ________________________________________________________________________ AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at AOL.com.