No Dolores, I'm having problems here as well as other genealogy websites, I think it's the whole web tonight that has been slowed down by something. I was on the Marriage site and it was working fine and all of a sudden it really slowed down, and then would not recover a page. Peg Crain Luthy ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dolores" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, March 02, 2003 9:51 PM Subject: [ILJACKSON] IL Marriage and Death sites Am I the only one to have problems getting through to these sites tonight? Thanks, Dolores ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, March 02, 2003 8:40 PM Subject: [ILJACKSON] WINCHESTER, CROWELL > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > > Surnames: WINCHESTER, CROWELL, ANDREWS, CASSY, RILEY, INGALL/INGLES > Classification: Query > > Message Board URL: > > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Gg.2ADI/217 > > Message Board Post: > > Sara Jane CROWELL b. Mecklenburg NC 1806 m. Thomas WINCHESTER b. Mecklenburg, NC and later William Matthews WINCHESTER b. Mecklenburg NC. > Sara Jane d.Jackson Co. IL. 1880 > > Benjamin Allen CROWELL b. Mecklenburg, NC. b. 1806 m. Jane Helms, Catherine Goodwin, Elizabeth WINCHESTER. d. 1874 Jackson Co. IL. > > Miles CROWELL b. 1818 m. Martha Milstead, Emily Deen > d. 1896 Jackson Co. IL. > > MY family of WINCHESTER siblings are in Calhoun Co. 1850. > > Mary V., Thomas, Elizabeth Jane, Harriett Ann, Angeline, with possible mother- Elizabeth b. 1810 NC. > not proven as WINCHESTERS but in the family are: Frank and Phoebe. > Not living with the family at the time of the 1850 census is Sara Winchester m. John Brazel.Brazzell, Calhoun Co.1853 > > If you can connect to these families, please contact me. > > > ==== ILJACKSO Mailing List ==== > **PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU HAVE UP TO DATE ANTI-VIRUS PROTECTION** > Karima, List Administrator mailto:[email protected] > List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 > ==== ILJACKSO Mailing List ==== Do you have a resource you could share with the list members? Would you be willing to do some "lookups" for a limited time period? If you would, please let the members know. Thank you! ============================== To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: WINCHESTER, CROWELL, ANDREWS, CASSY, RILEY, INGALL/INGLES Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Gg.2ADI/217 Message Board Post: Sara Jane CROWELL b. Mecklenburg NC 1806 m. Thomas WINCHESTER b. Mecklenburg, NC and later William Matthews WINCHESTER b. Mecklenburg NC. Sara Jane d.Jackson Co. IL. 1880 Benjamin Allen CROWELL b. Mecklenburg, NC. b. 1806 m. Jane Helms, Catherine Goodwin, Elizabeth WINCHESTER. d. 1874 Jackson Co. IL. Miles CROWELL b. 1818 m. Martha Milstead, Emily Deen d. 1896 Jackson Co. IL. MY family of WINCHESTER siblings are in Calhoun Co. 1850. Mary V., Thomas, Elizabeth Jane, Harriett Ann, Angeline, with possible mother- Elizabeth b. 1810 NC. not proven as WINCHESTERS but in the family are: Frank and Phoebe. Not living with the family at the time of the 1850 census is Sara Winchester m. John Brazel.Brazzell, Calhoun Co.1853 If you can connect to these families, please contact me.
This is the second time i have gotten this warning in the last 24 hours (from seprate lists) seems the old scam is going around again, so for the benifit of newer members I felt I should post this warning. ~Dolly http://pages.prodigy.net/dbeecher/beecher/index.htm http://mountmoriah.topcities.com > List - > I've gotten two emails from this site and they do require a credit card for > the free trial. I didn't give them mine, and am glad of the warning. > Karin > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Hi Everyone: > > The old genealogy scam is back. www.genseekers.com > > Behind the password protection are links to the free genealogy on-line. There > is no content of their own. > > In order to get the "5-day free trial" you have to surrender a credit card or > bank account number. You have to cancel within 5 days or you get dinged. > Guess what? The cancellation e-mail bounces. Does this surprise you? > > One person who recently fell for the come-on had his/her account dinged not > once, but twice. > > It is time to remind folks on your state and county mailing lists about these > scoundrels. It has been a couple of years since we have mentioned this. > > Permission is granted to pass this on. > > Don Silvius > Database Production Administrator > The Library Corporation > > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237
Hello :) Logan school was one of the schools hard hit in the Tri-state Tornado outbreak of 1925...9 students died there on March 18. In the newly released book about the tragedy by Wallace Akin, THE FORGOTTEN STORM, (Lyons Press, 2002), a caption to the picture of the school says: "Logan school of Murphysboro was slated for rebuilding when it was almost completely demolished by the tornado. A new building replaced it...part of the building also housed an elementary school". Also in the text of the book, pg. 61, states: "Logan school, already slated for destruction and replacement on account of its substandard soft bricks, suffered worse storm damage than did Longfellow (school)....Some speculated that the lower death toll there (nine) could be attributed in part to those inferior brinks that easily disintegrated on impact". Just a little more history on the school for you... :) ----Kathryn
it was on north 14th street ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carol Garbo" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, February 25, 2003 1:26 AM Subject: Re: [ILJACKSON] Logan School in Murphysboro? > I'm pretty sure Logan School was in Murphysboro, but I'm not sure > exactly where it was. > > > ==== ILJACKSO Mailing List ==== > How long has it been since you posted to the list? A "quiet" list will never help anyone! > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 >
I'm pretty sure Logan School was in Murphysboro, but I'm not sure exactly where it was.
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/Gg.2ADI/216.1 Message Board Post: Logan School is located between North 14th and North 15th streets in Murphysboro.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Williams, Emery, Brasel/Braswell/Brazel Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Gg.2ADI/216 Message Board Post: I have a school picture with a board which says Logan School Second Grade. On the back it says Murphysboro, about 1912. This picture belonged to my mother-in-law, Gladys Williams. Does anyone know for sure if Logan School was in Murphysboro? This family also lived in Sparta.
Little Egypt Heritage Articles Stories of Southern Illinois Bill Oliver 23 February 2003 Vol 2 Issue: #8 ISBN: pending Good Evening Ladies and Gentlemen of Little Egypt, I absolutely love "tall tales". In a small town in Wood county, Ohio there is a town named Cygnet [a young swan]. This area at one time was an oil drilling region. In a local newspaper, for "filler" I guess, was the mention of a man named Blue, who had a cow so large he had to milk it from the top of an [oil] derrick. [Shades of Paul Bunyan's Ox Blue] The winter has been colder and wetter than any for the past decade. At this writing have recently had a snow deposit of several inches and are experiencing rain with falling temperatures. So, we are expecting icy conditions compounded with several more inches of snow in the next 24 hours. The eastern states had large dumps of snow recently, so they measured their deposits in feet rather than inches. Also, did my Nebraska friends. Winter is exciting or very dull. Just a while back we had a tornado system pass through, with funnels touching down pretty much all around us. Northwestern Ohio received heavy damage. I learned something new this week because in my reading, reporters used two terms interchangeably tornadoes and cyclones. Cyclones have a calm center. A smaller hurricane, which is a smaller monsoon, if you will. A tornado is not so defined. Rather, it is defined as a whirlwind advancing in a narrow path and it is a Spanish word. The storm cells which allow tornadoes drop their funnels, it seems, randomly over large areas one here, one there. Twice I've seen them in the distance, but never close up. [Whew!] Once camping in eastern Colorado near the Kansas border and once traveling through Nebraska along I-80. Both experiences were in late daylight so that most of the experience was in the dark except for lightning flashes. Well, while the east was shoveling out from their white stuff and e-mail reports were coming from friends across Nebraska, I was reading about "killer winds". High winds and storms do strange things. During one storm of my youth I marveled at a length of straw embedded perpendicular in a telephone pole following a particularly violent storm. And, a retired reporter for a newspaper wrote that he had grass seed embedded in the brick of his house following a tornado which passed quite close to his home. For any doubters among us, take a paper straw, cover one end with your thumb, then jam it into an orange. It will embed through the skin to the pulp area of the fruit. Then enjoy the "fruits" of your "labor" by squeezing the orange and sucking on the straw. Walla, fresh squeezed orange juice! In southern Illinois the winds of tornadoes are called swirling-death winds. The March storms in 1925 ravaged through the Midwest taking the lives of 891 people and injuring near 2900 more in 26 Illinois towns. In Murphysboro the count was 400 dead and 700 injured. Southern Illinois became dubbed "Tornado Alley". In the East St Louis Journal of 20 March 1925, an article describes the experience of a St Louis traveling salesman in Carbondale being lifted up and through the roof of a store by the winds of the tornado passing through there. He said it propelled him head first through the roof and setting him down outside and in front of the store he was in. He also claimed to having his pants ripped off leaving only his belt. His personal injuries were reported as amounting to an injured ankle, fractured shoulder and a couple of scalp wounds. Tornadoes are variously described as sausage shaped or snake like, ranging in color from dark gray to greenish. The sound of a tornado is always the same the sound of a steam locomotive roaring down the tracks in a dead calm. How it will be described in the future will be interesting, for who today hears the sound of a roaring train except in their memory? Well, maybe in the movies. :) In the Illinois report there was a shortage of undertakers and crews of volunteers came to dig the necessary graves. In August 1892, a disastrous cyclone hit Nelson, Nebraska in Nuckolls county. The new school house lost its tower and roof. The Presbyterian Church was blown from its foundation and totally destroyed. Twenty or so houses and barns were completely destroyed. Coal houses and outhouses blown "clear out of sight". Wagons and carriages were turned to debris and along with planks and barrels, were strewn in a path for miles across the prairie. Miraculously, only three people were seriously hurt. Most folk found refuge in cellars or caves. It was reported afterward that a lady, ill in bed, was found after the storm still in her bed, but that there was no longer a house around her. I can remember a church in southeast Michigan that was moved off its foundation and lost some of its roof as the result of tornado winds. But, to long time residents of northwestern Ohio, the storm that was nicknamed the "Palm Sunday Tornado" will live in their memories. On Sunday, April 11, 1965, the day was a beautiful, warm spring day until late afternoon when things became deathly still. You would have thought that the atmosphere around you took a vacation somewhere and it became "heavy". Then during the early night the atmosphere became heavy enough to make breathing difficult and as the barometer dropped sharply ears would pop like descending in an airplane or coming down to a valley from a high mountain pass. The rain traveled horizontally with great force and then it was over. It couldn't have been more than a three minute experience. We learned that a large oak where my Aunt and Uncle always bowled ended up on the roof of a neighboring business. The narrow path that it followed caused much damage. The storm passed a block away from them and about two blocks away from my parents- in-laws. In one of my favorite places to eat, the Green Derby Gill, the walls were standing but there wasn't a plate glass left. It is difficult to imagine the shock of sitting in a room and seeing the windows shatter or the walls suddenly collapse. That storm system fostered tornados in six states ... Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Ohio. I mentioned earlier that gray to greenish was the color of tornados, however, I remember the Life magazine picture where the twin funnels were ghostly white. I will part tonight with a very human story about a couple who had a spat earlier and they were still smouldering. As they were driving down a country rode they passed a barnyard which contained mules, jackass', and pigs. The husband asked sarcastically, "Relatives of yours??" "Yep," the wife replied, "in-laws." Wado, Bill -=- http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/SOIL http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/ILMASSAC http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ne/state/BillsArticles/LittleEgypt/intro.html
Hi! I'm still searching for an obit & hope someone out there can help. Looking for the obit for: Anna T.Moody, d. Oct. 1943, buried at Oakland Cemetery in Carbondale. She doesn't appear in the State of Illinois death index; the sexton at Oakland told me that her burial was about 10 days after her death, so both of these clues lead me to believe that she perhaps died out of State. As she was born & raised in Carbondale & lived there most of her life, & had relatives still in Carbondale when she died, I'm hoping that there is an obit for her. Thanks for any help. Carol
Benjamin and Catherine Gill HENDERSON are not in the Sep/Oct 1850 census for Jackson County. Catherine died of Winter Fever and is listed in the 1850 Mortality Index. I don't know what happened to Benjamin. Some of their children are listed in the 1850 census for Jackson County, but none of the other Hendersons listed in your query are in the 1850 Jackson County census. ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, February 22, 2003 9:44 PM Subject: [ILJACKSON] 1850s Look Up Request--PLEASE > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > > Surnames: HENDERSON > Classification: Query > > Message Board URL: > > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Gg.2ADI/215 > > Message Board Post: > > If some kind soul with access to the 1850 Illinois census could assist with these look ups I would be forever grateful: > > Benjamin & Gill HENDERSON > Cornelius & Mary HENDERSON > James & Rachael HENDERSON > John & Lydia HENDERSON > John & Polly HENDERSON > Samuel & Ann HENDERSON > > I am in need of the family listing of names in these households in Southern Illinois. > > Jo Ann Avery Henderson Higdon > [email protected] > (Please respond directly to this e-mail address) > > > ==== ILJACKSO Mailing List ==== > Do you have a resource you could share with the list members? Would you be willing to do some "lookups" for a limited time period? If you would, please let the members know. Thank you! > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 >
Carol, Thanks. The only known piece of furniture that is supposed to have survived (that we know of) is in the possession of some of my cousins in Montana. Mary ----- Original Message ----- From: Carol Garbo <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, February 22, 2003 9:24 PM Subject: Re: [ILJACKSON] help with a chair > Mary; thanks for the info. I am supposed to call a woman on Mon. who is > supposed to know a lot re the Silas Tuthill chairs. Now--you say there > were Reisling chairs in Murphysboro. Some of my ancestors did live in > Murphysboro. We are in the process of having this chair restored to its > original state (as much as is umanly possible), as it is in very sad > shape. So far, it doesn't appear that this chair is marked in any way, > unless the carved decorations are a clue. If I can ever identify this > chair with any reasonable certainty, I'll be sure to let you know. > Carol > > > ==== ILJACKSO Mailing List ==== > **PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU HAVE UP TO DATE ANTI-VIRUS PROTECTION** > Karima, List Administrator mailto:[email protected] > List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 > >
Mary; thanks for the info. I am supposed to call a woman on Mon. who is supposed to know a lot re the Silas Tuthill chairs. Now--you say there were Reisling chairs in Murphysboro. Some of my ancestors did live in Murphysboro. We are in the process of having this chair restored to its original state (as much as is umanly possible), as it is in very sad shape. So far, it doesn't appear that this chair is marked in any way, unless the carved decorations are a clue. If I can ever identify this chair with any reasonable certainty, I'll be sure to let you know. Carol
JoAnn, The only Hendersons I have in my 1850 Jackson County census is a P.P. Henderson (age 30), Napolean B., (age 24), Mary S. (age 25), Mary E. (age 6), Granville M. (age 2), Frances J. (age 21), Emeline (age 14), Eliza (age 9), Edwin (age 7). Any of these ring a bell? Mary ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, February 22, 2003 8:44 PM Subject: [ILJACKSON] 1850s Look Up Request--PLEASE > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > > Surnames: HENDERSON > Classification: Query > > Message Board URL: > > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Gg.2ADI/215 > > Message Board Post: > > If some kind soul with access to the 1850 Illinois census could assist with these look ups I would be forever grateful: > > Benjamin & Gill HENDERSON > Cornelius & Mary HENDERSON > James & Rachael HENDERSON > John & Lydia HENDERSON > John & Polly HENDERSON > Samuel & Ann HENDERSON > > I am in need of the family listing of names in these households in Southern Illinois. > > Jo Ann Avery Henderson Higdon > [email protected] > (Please respond directly to this e-mail address) > > > ==== ILJACKSO Mailing List ==== > Do you have a resource you could share with the list members? Would you be willing to do some "lookups" for a limited time period? If you would, please let the members know. Thank you! > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 > >
Carol, I don't know if this is any help or not but my great grandfather Anderson Jackson Riseling and his brother Cornelius "Neal" Riseling operated a furniture company during the 1860s and 70s in Murphysboro. The business was at the corner of the 9th and Walnut Streets in Murphysboro and they made a gereral line of furniture including tables, chairs, bedstands, doors and window frames. They closed the business in 1876. I don't know that they ever marked their furniture in any way to identify it as made by the Riseling brothers. If you can ever identify the maker and attribute it to them in any way, I would love to have a picture of it. Mary Riseling Springfield, IL ----- Original Message ----- From: Carol Garbo <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2003 3:08 PM Subject: [ILJACKSON] help with a chair > This may not be a true genealogy question butI thought I would turn to > the list members for assistance. I inherited a family "heirloom"; it's > a platform rocking chair that belonged to one of my Jackson Co. > ancestors. Problem is, I don't know which one & no one is alive that > remembers the original owner. All my Jackson Co ancestors were in > Jackson CO. around the time I think this chair was made (circa 1870 or > so). Were there any furniture makers in Jackson Co. around that time > (or earlier or later)? I haven't been able to identify the wood but it > has been stained with pokeberries. Any help/info/assistance would be > most appreciated. Thank you. Carol > > > ==== ILJACKSO Mailing List ==== > **PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU HAVE UP TO DATE ANTI-VIRUS PROTECTION** > Karima, List Administrator mailto:[email protected] > List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 > > >
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: HENDERSON Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Gg.2ADI/215 Message Board Post: If some kind soul with access to the 1850 Illinois census could assist with these look ups I would be forever grateful: Benjamin & Gill HENDERSON Cornelius & Mary HENDERSON James & Rachael HENDERSON John & Lydia HENDERSON John & Polly HENDERSON Samuel & Ann HENDERSON I am in need of the family listing of names in these households in Southern Illinois. Jo Ann Avery Henderson Higdon [email protected] (Please respond directly to this e-mail address)
Perry & Randolph counties (Illinois) have been updated! Many thanks to Mike, Brian, Cheryl, Wilma, Stella and others for your contributions! CHECK IT OUT! www.perrycountyillinois.net 1914 phone book listings..........NEW! (these names will NOT show up in the search engine!) 1894 Cutler School w/ names....NEW!!! Mystery Photos............................NEW!!! "Nine Mile" Letter........................NEW!!! Messages, Queries, Links, & photo album....UPDATED! LOTS of pics this time! www.randolphcountyillinois.net Messages & Surnames .....UPDATED! Please let me know if there are any broken links... Jean [email protected] Webmaster for Illinois Perry and Randolph Counties www.perrycountyillinois.net www.randolphcountyillinois.net [email protected] --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.456 / Virus Database: 256 - Release Date: 2/18/03
I found this recently and thought it might help someone on the list: MO State Archives Confederate Records MF Box S727 service cards for Missouri Confederate Soldiers Bilderback, W.S. age 22 private Co F, 2nd MO Vol CSA, under Capt. Lanning Enlisted 2 Feb 1862 at Hornersville, MO Transferred from Co D 01 Sep 1863. Served in MSF under Jeff. Thompson. Battles: Jeff. Thompson Camp in southeast MO, Siege of Corinth, Boonville, Iuka, Corinth, Waterford, Holly Springs, Salem, 1st & 2nd Collierville, Wyatt Ferry, Moscow, Harrisburg, Abbeyville, Memphis, Chickasawha. Nativity: Randolph County, IL Residence: Dunklin County, MO
Good grief I need to PROOF READ!!! I have a WINCHESTER family with parents born in NC. Daddy W is out of the picture by 1840. Widow Elizabeth WINCHESTER has remarried to William Burdine. They set up house keeping in Calhoun Co. Gillead twp. IL and are on the 1850 census. The children in the Burdine household are Thomas 20yrs, MO., Angeline 16yrs. MO., Harriet 15yrs, MO. I know that these children are WINCHESTER. My grandmother (Elizabeth Jane) living in her household is just several households down from the BURDINES. An older sister/aunt Mary Violet Winchester is living several households down from the Burdines in her own home. Elizabeth and her husband Edward Carey is living with Benjamin Brazel 26yrs IL. He is found married to Sarah Winchester 1853, in Calhoun Co. There is also a John Brazelle 58 NC, Margaret 48 KY, Allen 20 IL, Jane 12 IL. in the same twp. Hope this helps someone and hopefully there is a WINCHESTER somewhere!! D ----- Original Message ----- From: "PerriAngela Wickham" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Thursday, February 20, 2003 7:28 PM Subject: Re: [ILJACKSON] Re: 1860 Jackson census Williams and Brazel (Braswell) families > D, > > Who are your Winchester families? I have a lot of information on the > Winchesters from Jackson Co. > > PerriAngela Wickham > Austin, Texas > ----- Original Message ----- > From: <[email protected]> > To: <[email protected]> > Sent: Wednesday, February 19, 2003 9:41 AM > Subject: [ILJACKSON] Re: 1860 Jackson census Williams and Brazel (Braswell) > families > > > > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > > > > Surnames: WINCHESTER, Andrews, Tucker, Morgan, Riley > > Classification: Query > > > > Message Board URL: > > > > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Gg.2ADI/213.1 > > > > Message Board Post: > > > > Mary where were your 2 families (the men) born. I am trying really hard > to find a WINCHESTER in families that are in the same twp, county, my > WINCHESTER family in that same community. > > Thanks > > D > > > > > > ==== ILJACKSO Mailing List ==== > > PLEASE NOTE: Posting of items of RELIGIOUS/POLITICAL CONTENT, VIRUSES > WARNINGS, CHAIN LETTERS, or SPAM will result in being removed from the list. > If you have any questions regarding this, contact the list administrator, > Karima mailto:[email protected] > > > > ============================== > > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, > go to: > > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 > > > > > ==== ILJACKSO Mailing List ==== > Do you have a resource you could share with the list members? Would you be willing to do some "lookups" for a limited time period? If you would, please let the members know. Thank you! > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 >
D, Who are your Winchester families? I have a lot of information on the Winchesters from Jackson Co. PerriAngela Wickham Austin, Texas ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Wednesday, February 19, 2003 9:41 AM Subject: [ILJACKSON] Re: 1860 Jackson census Williams and Brazel (Braswell) families > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > > Surnames: WINCHESTER, Andrews, Tucker, Morgan, Riley > Classification: Query > > Message Board URL: > > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Gg.2ADI/213.1 > > Message Board Post: > > Mary where were your 2 families (the men) born. I am trying really hard to find a WINCHESTER in families that are in the same twp, county, my WINCHESTER family in that same community. > Thanks > D > > > ==== ILJACKSO Mailing List ==== > PLEASE NOTE: Posting of items of RELIGIOUS/POLITICAL CONTENT, VIRUSES WARNINGS, CHAIN LETTERS, or SPAM will result in being removed from the list. If you have any questions regarding this, contact the list administrator, Karima mailto:[email protected] > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 >