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    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] Evans children
    2. Carol Garbo
    3. Thank you, Tom. I had some e-mail problems with my ISP recently but the problem is supposedly fixed, at least that is what they say. Carol Our life may not always be the party we would have chosen, but while we are here, we may as well dance!

    11/06/2006 04:36:03
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] Boucher Cemetery
    2. BOUSCHER and BOUCHER are spelling variations of the same family name. The older spelling was BOUSCHER, and there was yet another spelling even earlier than that, when the family still lived in Germany (prior to moving to PA and then to IL). > > From: "Karima" <karima@insightbb.com> > Date: 2006/11/06 Mon AM 09:58:58 EST > To: <iljackso@rootsweb.com> > Subject: Re: [ILJACKSO] Boucher Cemetery > > Tonia, > > There is a Bouscher (note different spelling) Cemetery listed in "Cemeteries > of Jackson County, IL, Volume III DeSoto and Elk Townships." It is a very > small cemetery with only a dozen or so marked graves. The surnames listed > are: KILMER and CUTRELL > > ~Karima > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: <toni_gen@juno.com> > To: <iljackso@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Monday, November 06, 2006 3:04 AM > Subject: [ILJACKSO] Boucher Cemetery > > > > Would someone please tell me if I can see a list > > of the families in this cemetery to find someone ? > > Thanks in advance for any help on this. Or direct > > me as to where I could go look. > > Tonia > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    11/06/2006 04:01:20
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] Union Cemetery
    2. Karima
    3. There is a Union Hills Cemetery listed in "Cemeteries of Jackson County, IL, Volume I Makanda Township." There are about 28 marked stones. What surnames are you seeking? ~Karima ----- Original Message ----- From: "Bill Adams" <billadams06@cox.net> To: <iljackso@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, November 06, 2006 6:59 AM Subject: [ILJACKSO] Union Cemetery > Does anyone have any info on Union Cemetery? > > Bill without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    11/06/2006 02:03:23
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] Boucher Cemetery
    2. Karima
    3. Tonia, There is a Bouscher (note different spelling) Cemetery listed in "Cemeteries of Jackson County, IL, Volume III DeSoto and Elk Townships." It is a very small cemetery with only a dozen or so marked graves. The surnames listed are: KILMER and CUTRELL ~Karima ----- Original Message ----- From: <toni_gen@juno.com> To: <iljackso@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, November 06, 2006 3:04 AM Subject: [ILJACKSO] Boucher Cemetery > Would someone please tell me if I can see a list > of the families in this cemetery to find someone ? > Thanks in advance for any help on this. Or direct > me as to where I could go look. > Tonia

    11/06/2006 01:58:58
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] Evans children
    2. Tom Shawcross
    3. Carol, John EVANS, his wife Ethel Mae, and their children June and Jack are listed in the Apr 1930 census for 7-Ward, Chicago, Cook, IL family 64. He was a clerk in a coal company. By the way, I have tried to reply to you directly, but your ISP rejects my messages to you. http://www.tomshawcross.blogspot.com http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=shawcross&id=I53 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carol Garbo" <cagarbo@webtv.net> To: <ILJACKSO-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, November 06, 2006 2:11 AM Subject: [ILJACKSO] Evans children >I am still looking for some of my lost little lambs and hope that > someone on this list can help. I am seeking any information on: Leah > Evans, b. 1882, known to still be alive in 1900; John b. 1884, known to > still be alive in 1930; Edward, b. 1886, known to still be alive in > 1930. I have come across a Grace Evans b. 1895 d. 1903, buried at Tower > Grove in Murphysboro but cannot find her in 1900 census. And, I am > still looking for Susan "Susie" Trobaugh Evans who is presumed to have > died prior to 1900; she was the mother of the children. Any > help;information/etc. would be really appreciated. Carol > > Our life may not always be the party we would have chosen, but while we > are here, we may as well dance! > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    11/06/2006 12:55:57
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] Boucher Cemetery
    2. Juli Claussen
    3. The Jackson County Historical Society has compiled this cemetery listing in their volume of Murphysboro Township cemeteries. They have books of all known cemeteries in the county except Degognia tsp I believe, which they are working on. Write or call them for a lookup, or request the book through interlibrary loan to your public library. Email is jchs@verizon.net, phone 618-687-6989. Juli On 11/6/2006 3:04:07 AM, toni_gen@juno.com wrote: > Would someone please tell me if I can see a list > of the families in this cemetery to find someone ? > Thanks in advance for any help on this. Or direct > me as to where I could go look. > Tonia > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ILJACKSO- > request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the > subject and the body of the message

    11/06/2006 12:29:28
    1. [ILJACKSO] Union Cemetery
    2. Bill Adams
    3. Does anyone have any info on Union Cemetery? Bill -----Original Message----- From: iljackso-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:iljackso-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Tom Shawcross Sent: Monday, November 06, 2006 6:56 AM To: iljackso@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [ILJACKSO] Evans children Carol, John EVANS, his wife Ethel Mae, and their children June and Jack are listed in the Apr 1930 census for 7-Ward, Chicago, Cook, IL family 64. He was a clerk in a coal company. By the way, I have tried to reply to you directly, but your ISP rejects my messages to you. http://www.tomshawcross.blogspot.com http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=shawcross&id=I53 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carol Garbo" <cagarbo@webtv.net> To: <ILJACKSO-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, November 06, 2006 2:11 AM Subject: [ILJACKSO] Evans children >I am still looking for some of my lost little lambs and hope that > someone on this list can help. I am seeking any information on: Leah > Evans, b. 1882, known to still be alive in 1900; John b. 1884, known to > still be alive in 1930; Edward, b. 1886, known to still be alive in > 1930. I have come across a Grace Evans b. 1895 d. 1903, buried at Tower > Grove in Murphysboro but cannot find her in 1900 census. And, I am > still looking for Susan "Susie" Trobaugh Evans who is presumed to have > died prior to 1900; she was the mother of the children. Any > help;information/etc. would be really appreciated. Carol > > Our life may not always be the party we would have chosen, but while we > are here, we may as well dance! > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    11/05/2006 11:59:50
    1. [ILJACKSO] Boucher Cemetery
    2. Would someone please tell me if I can see a list of the families in this cemetery to find someone ? Thanks in advance for any help on this. Or direct me as to where I could go look. Tonia

    11/05/2006 07:04:07
    1. [ILJACKSO] Evans children
    2. Carol Garbo
    3. I am still looking for some of my lost little lambs and hope that someone on this list can help. I am seeking any information on: Leah Evans, b. 1882, known to still be alive in 1900; John b. 1884, known to still be alive in 1930; Edward, b. 1886, known to still be alive in 1930. I have come across a Grace Evans b. 1895 d. 1903, buried at Tower Grove in Murphysboro but cannot find her in 1900 census. And, I am still looking for Susan "Susie" Trobaugh Evans who is presumed to have died prior to 1900; she was the mother of the children. Any help;information/etc. would be really appreciated. Carol Our life may not always be the party we would have chosen, but while we are here, we may as well dance!

    11/05/2006 06:11:54
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] walter smith born in jackson co. il.
    2. Tom Shawcross
    3. William M. FENN, Jr. (1841-1921) and Elmira SORRELS (1842-1874) were the parents of Cassandra FENN (1868-1936). Cassandra married William Henry SMITH on 9 Apr 1885. http://www.tomshawcross.blogspot.com http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=shawcross&id=I53 ----- Original Message ----- From: "ALBERT TUBBS" <joydoyle@prodigy.net> To: <iljackso@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, November 05, 2006 9:29 PM Subject: Re: [ILJACKSO] walter smith born in jackson co. il. > Do you know who the parents of your Cassandra Fenn > where? > I have William Fenn who first married Elmira Sorrels, > 2 OCT 1862 in Jackson Co., IL. His 2nd wife was Elnora > Rapert who he married 12 NOV 1874 in Randolph Co., > ARK., and lived in Ripley Co., MO. His 3rd wife was > Addie Carey who he married 1 JAN 1889, in Jackson Co., > IL. > Joy Luttrell Tubbs > Fort Worth, Texas > > --- Bob Johnston <mentor99@charter.net> wrote: > >> I don't want to confuse the matter but hope to >> eliminate one Walter Smith. >> He was Walter Lee Smith born in Ava, Ora township, >> Jackson County, IL on 29 >> Aug 1888 and died in East St. Louis, St. Clair >> County, IL on 13 April 1954. >> His father was William Henry Smith and his mother >> was Cassandra Fenn. His >> wife was Pearl Flora Wagner. >> He was my grandfather's brother. Bob Johnston >> mentor99@charter.net >> >> >> ----- Original Message ----- >> From: <jsruss@mindspring.com> >> To: <ILJACKSO-L@rootsweb.com> >> Sent: Thursday, November 02, 2006 9:03 AM >> Subject: Re: [ILJACKSO] walter smith born in jackson >> co. il. >> >> >> > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to >> this mailing list. >> > >> > Surnames: SMITH >> > Classification: Query >> > >> > Message Board URL: >> > >> > >> > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/Gg.2ADI/459.1.1 >> > >> > Message Board Post: >> > >> > Per 1910 Census Walter R. Smith was the son of >> Samuel and Susan A. Smith. >> > They lived in Desoto and this is most likely the >> Walter Robert Smith found >> > in the WWI draft registration. >> > >> > Per 1910 Census Walter Smith the son of William H. >> and Kattie Smith were >> > living in Sato in Ora Twp. This is the same >> family as I listed in the >> > 1900 Census in the previous post. >> > >> > The two Walters were born with a couple of years >> of other and both around >> > 1890. >> > >> > >> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> > List Guidelines: >> > http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html >> > >> > ------------------------------- >> > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email >> to >> > ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word >> 'unsubscribe' without the >> > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> > >> >> >> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> List Guidelines: >> > http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email >> to ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word >> 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and >> the body of the message >> > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    11/05/2006 03:47:36
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] walter smith born in jackson co. il.
    2. ALBERT TUBBS
    3. Do you know who the parents of your Cassandra Fenn where? I have William Fenn who first married Elmira Sorrels, 2 OCT 1862 in Jackson Co., IL. His 2nd wife was Elnora Rapert who he married 12 NOV 1874 in Randolph Co., ARK., and lived in Ripley Co., MO. His 3rd wife was Addie Carey who he married 1 JAN 1889, in Jackson Co., IL. Joy Luttrell Tubbs Fort Worth, Texas --- Bob Johnston <mentor99@charter.net> wrote: > I don't want to confuse the matter but hope to > eliminate one Walter Smith. > He was Walter Lee Smith born in Ava, Ora township, > Jackson County, IL on 29 > Aug 1888 and died in East St. Louis, St. Clair > County, IL on 13 April 1954. > His father was William Henry Smith and his mother > was Cassandra Fenn. His > wife was Pearl Flora Wagner. > He was my grandfather's brother. Bob Johnston > mentor99@charter.net > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: <jsruss@mindspring.com> > To: <ILJACKSO-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Thursday, November 02, 2006 9:03 AM > Subject: Re: [ILJACKSO] walter smith born in jackson > co. il. > > > > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to > this mailing list. > > > > Surnames: SMITH > > Classification: Query > > > > Message Board URL: > > > > > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/Gg.2ADI/459.1.1 > > > > Message Board Post: > > > > Per 1910 Census Walter R. Smith was the son of > Samuel and Susan A. Smith. > > They lived in Desoto and this is most likely the > Walter Robert Smith found > > in the WWI draft registration. > > > > Per 1910 Census Walter Smith the son of William H. > and Kattie Smith were > > living in Sato in Ora Twp. This is the same > family as I listed in the > > 1900 Census in the previous post. > > > > The two Walters were born with a couple of years > of other and both around > > 1890. > > > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > List Guidelines: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > > > ------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email > to > > ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word > 'unsubscribe' without the > > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Guidelines: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email > to ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word > 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and > the body of the message >

    11/05/2006 11:29:52
    1. [ILJACKSO] Little Egypt Heritage, "More Traditions", 5 November 2006, Vol 5 #35
    2. Bill
    3. Little Egypt Heritage Articles eduda tsunogisdi © Bill Oliver 5 November 2006 Vol 5 Issue: #35 ISBN: pending Osiyo, Good Evening Ladies and Gentlemen of Little Egypt, More Traditions Well, I left off last with “The Night of the Dead” is approaching and now “Dia de los Muertos” has passed for another year. Though we celebrate Halloween in one night of “trick or treat”-ing for children and galla parties for adults for one evening, those who celebrate “Dia de los Muertos” [Night of the Dead] might do so for two or three days. When one culture attempts to or does replace another there usually is some blending of traditions and culture. In this case Christianity was replacing Mexico’s Aztec culture, where ancient beliefs hold that the dearly departed will return to visit those not yet departed. In this return the dearly departed eat, drink and enjoy music. Listening to the PBS radio last week I heard that, in the United States, Halloween has superceded Christmas in consumer spending. The more I thought about this, the more I thought, “I could believe this”. Dia de los Muertos is a celebration of the lives of departed loved ones and is observed in several countries, and is on the rise [increase] in the USA. Americans love parties and love to party – from “tail-gate” to Mardi Gras. Americans love Mardi Gras, French for Fat Tuesday, so much that in New Orleans, Louisiana, they extend the one day religious celebration into several days. Back to Dia de los Muertos ... “it all began” in the Lake Patzcuaro area in the Mexican state of Michoacan when the citizens clean the grave sites of family members. If the grave is an earth mound, marked with a wooden cross or not, it is reshaped and covered with carnation petals [orange color, I believe]. Many candles decorate the re-sculpted grave site and families make or purchase candies fashioned into skeletons and skulls along with specialty baked breads. When the sun sets the festivities begin with music and dance in the piazzas. Children go about the main roads scouting for “treats”. [Maybe this was the beginning of “trick or treat”!] At about the witching hour [midnight] the dead relatives are “brought” their favorite foods as an “ofrenda” [offering]. Following the ofrenda the candles are lit and folks settle down for a night long somber vigil and remembrance of those who have passed on before. When dawn breaks, often in the November fog, as part of the blended cultural celebration, prayers and Bible readings are made. The candy-decorated offerings and baskets of “dead-bread” are taken home and eaten. Tradition says that the breads have been rendered flavorless by the spirits consuming the flavor during the night. In our Halloween celebration streets fill with little ones [and some not so little] dressed in all kinds of ghosts, witches, goblins, fairies, demons, princesses, superheroes and “the walking dead”. We all eagerly await this stream of tykes who parade to our doors for candy, happily demanding “Trick or Treat?” Sadly, the Halloween night has lost some of its luster due to real demons lurking in our neighborhoods, thus “trick or treat” gets transformed into large controlled Halloween parties. Our Halloween was originally known as Samhain, which blended with the Christianized version known as All Saints Day, and later termed Halloween as a non-secular title. The Celtic festival began the new year. The end of summer was the 31st of October. Bonfires were set on the hillsides of Ancient Britain, Scotland and Ireland to keep out “evil” spirits, for all the souls of the dead, supposedly, revisited their homes. In Scotland they decorated turnips which translated into Jack-o-Lanterns in the United States. In Scotland children played games to get a hint of who would marry them. In the American tradition we played Spin-the-Bottle and bobbed for apples. Ah, yes, lots of teasing about couples in these games. The “mean” spirits, or as sometimes called, pranksters, have used Halloween as an excuse, err occasion, for tipping outhouses, or even to setting empty or abandoned structures a-fire. However, in Scotland, Samhain or Samhuinn is literaly translated as “summer’s end” or the beginning of a whole new cycle, for in the Celtic tradition day began at night. Listen in the darkness and you will understand that in the dark comes whisperings of new beginnings. The Celts would say, “... the stirring of the seed beneath the soil.” Thus, on November Eve, the night of the 31st of October, began Samhain. You can see how throughout the centuries pagan and Christian beliefs intertwined in a “gallimaufry” or hodgepodge of celebrations to bring us Halloween. Holidays have their representations – Christmas, of course, represents goodwill toward others, as well as, sharing; Thanksgiving, is a time of feasting and family and giving thanks, and, Halloween is a celebration of the coming of new life and hope and family and fun, as well as, raising awareness of death walking among us. Passing childhood and moving into youth, fall, Halloween and Thanksgiving was a time of hayrides and keeping warm with “special” friends; a time of bonfires with the roasting of hotdogs and marshmallows. It was the time of parties and games and haunted houses and fright. Then passing into adulthood the grotesqueness of Halloween becomes the focus. Folks wear masks and costumes, deformed and gory to portray death, symbolizing twisted conditions and fear. As a society we are less agrarian and lifestyles are different; thus during this time few of us think that the hard work of summer is done and the crops have been harvested and stored. Bonfires are not built to chase away specters of death. Yet, Halloween can still reflect things that were and the time for renewal for the future. e-la-Di-e-das-Di ha-wi nv-wa-do-hi-ya nv-wa-to-hi-ya-da. (May you walk in peace and harmony) Wado, Bill -=- 933 PostScript:

    11/05/2006 10:14:08
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] Cemetery Information
    2. Tom Shawcross
    3. That is the gravemarker for Luvisa WALLER, daughter of William Joseph WALLER and Mary Ann CRAWSHAW. Luvisa, b. 14 Mar 1868 and d. 31 Dec 1891, was the first wife of Dr. Frank E. TROBAUGH (1868-1898). Frank was the son of John Wesley TROBAUGH (1835-1907) and Mary Ann HALE (1834-1926). http://www.tomshawcross.blogspot.com http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=shawcross&id=I53 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve" <bpd901@yahoo.com> To: <iljackso@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, November 04, 2006 7:40 PM Subject: Re: [ILJACKSO] Cemetery Information > Carol ... > > This is from Cemeteries of Jackson County Illinois, > Vol VI, Pomona Township: > > Etherton Cemetery, row 10 > TROBAUGH, Luvisa, d. Dec 31, 1891, age 23y, 9m, 17d, > wife of Dr. E. E. Trobaugh > > No Evans listed. > > Hope this helps. > > Steve > > > --- Carol Garbo <cagarbo@webtv.net> wrote: > >> PS: The reason that I ask for a list of the >> Trobaughs buried there is >> the fact that David's wife was a Trobaugh and also >> the fact that I have >> also lost some of my Trobaugh relatives; this is the >> first I have heard >> of any Trobaughs being buried at this cemetery; >> maybe I was looking in >> the wrong cemeteries. Carol >> >> Our life may not always be the party we would have >> chosen, but while we >> are here, we may as well dance! >> >> >> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> List Guidelines: >> > http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email >> to ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word >> 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and >> the body of the message >> > > > > > __________________________________________________________________________________________ > Check out the New Yahoo! Mail - Fire up a more powerful email and get > things done faster. > (http://advision.webevents.yahoo.com/mailbeta) > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    11/04/2006 01:04:57
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] Cemetery Information
    2. Carol Garbo
    3. Steve; thanks; every bit of information helps. Carol Our life may not always be the party we would have chosen, but while we are here, we may as well dance!

    11/04/2006 11:48:17
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] Cemetery Information
    2. Steve
    3. Carol ... This is from Cemeteries of Jackson County Illinois, Vol VI, Pomona Township: Etherton Cemetery, row 10 TROBAUGH, Luvisa, d. Dec 31, 1891, age 23y, 9m, 17d, wife of Dr. E. E. Trobaugh No Evans listed. Hope this helps. Steve --- Carol Garbo <cagarbo@webtv.net> wrote: > PS: The reason that I ask for a list of the > Trobaughs buried there is > the fact that David's wife was a Trobaugh and also > the fact that I have > also lost some of my Trobaugh relatives; this is the > first I have heard > of any Trobaughs being buried at this cemetery; > maybe I was looking in > the wrong cemeteries. Carol > > Our life may not always be the party we would have > chosen, but while we > are here, we may as well dance! > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Guidelines: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email > to ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word > 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and > the body of the message > __________________________________________________________________________________________ Check out the New Yahoo! Mail - Fire up a more powerful email and get things done faster. (http://advision.webevents.yahoo.com/mailbeta)

    11/04/2006 09:40:07
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] TROUBAUGH Burials - Cemetery Information
    2. Tom Shawcross
    3. Regarding: Lot 9 TROUBAUGH, Jessie A. Palmer, Aug. 22, 1870 - Mar. 7, 1904 TROUBAUGH, Emma M. Nettles, Oct 19, 1869 - June1, 1880 (Two PALMERs buried in same lot.) The cemetery transcription book for City cemetery does list TROBAUGH, Emma M. Nettles as you described. However, I think the transcription is incorrect. Emma is listed in the 1910 and 1930 census records. Emma was born 19 Oct 1869 and died 12 Jul 1930 in Carbondale. She was the second wife of William Hale TROBAUGH. Jessie A. PALMER was the first wife of William Hale TROBAUGH. The other two PALMERs who are buried in the same lot with Emma and Jessie were Jessie PALMER's parents - John R. PALMER and Mary E. BANDY. http://www.tomshawcross.blogspot.com http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=shawcross&id=I53 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Karima" <karima@insightbb.com> To: <iljackso@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, November 04, 2006 9:59 AM Subject: Re: [ILJACKSO] TROUBAUGH Burials - Cemetery Information > Hi Carol, > > Hope the following will be of help to you. > > Karima > > ============================================= > Tower Grove Cemetery, Murphysboro, Jackson Co., IL > Row 15 North to South > > TROUBAUGH, Dr. F. E., Sep. 4 1868 - Feb 13, 1898 > TROUBAUGH, Adda, M., Jan 25, 1874 - Jan 27, 1948 > TROUBAUGH, Bain, 1897 - 1917 > TROUBAUGH, John W. July 28, 1835 - Mar 4, 1907 > TROUBAUGH, Mary J., Jan 30, 1834 - Mar 14, 1926 > TROUBAUGH, Edwin P., Son of Ed. P. & M. E. Trobaugh, Aug 21, 1893 - Nov > 27, > 1898 > > Row 16 South to North > > TROUBAUGH, Frank E., Oct 26, 1895 - July 1979 > TROUBAUGH, Lee Margaret, May 14, 1897 - (no death date given) > > Buried in City Cemetery, Jackson Co., Murphysboro, IL > (City Cemetery is a very old cemetery located in the city proper. It is > located on North 14th Street > > Lot 9 > TROUBAUGH, Jessie A. Palmer, Aug. 22, 1870 - Mar. 7, 1904 > TROUBAUGH, Emma M. Nettles, Oct 19, 1869 - June1, 1880 > (Two PALMERs buried in same lot.) > > I also found the following in "Death Records for Carbondale, IL > 1877-1952." > Compiled by Louise Morehouse, Carbondale, IL. printed by the Jackson > County > Historical Society, Murphysboro, IL 1981. Page 210: > > TROBAUGH, Infant Male (stillborn); b and d 15 Oct 1928, Carbondale; son > Gordon Trobaugh, b Murphysboro Twp & Margaret (Cramer) Trobaugh, b St. > Louis > MO; bur Mt. Pleasant Cem, Murphysboro Twp. > > TROBAUGH, Alva (single); b 12 Dec 1874, Jackson Co; son Henry & Rebecca > (Morrison) Trobaugh, both b TN; d 22 Jul 1927, Carbondale; bur Mt. > Pleasant > Cem, Murphysboro Twp > > TROBAUGH, Augustus (married); b 3 Jul 1879, Murphysboro; son Henry & > Rebecca, (Morrison) Trobaugh; d 23 Apr 1951, Carbondale; bur Pleasant > Grove > Memorial Cem, Murphysboro Twp; spouse, Aurora Trobaugh > > TROBAUGH, Emma (single); b TN; dau Henry & Anna (Mitchell) Trobaugh, both > b > TN; d 12 Jul 1930, Carbondale; bur Pleasant Grove Cem; age 72y > > TROBAUGH, Mary J. (widow); b 21 Oct 1844, West Plains MO; dau John Perry; > d > 28 Aug 1929, Carbondale; bur Mt. Pleasant Cem, Murphysboro Twp > > TROBAUGH, Mina M. (married); b 25 Apr 1882, Murphysboro; dau Fletcher & > Dora > (McCoskey) Cowling; d 19 May 1951, Carbondale; bur Mt. Pleasant Cem, > Murphysboro Twp; spouse, W. W. Trobaugh > > TROBAUGH, Raymond Edgar (single); b Carbondale; son W. W. Trobaugh; d 11 > Jan > 1908, Carbondale; bur Mt. Pleasant Cem, Murphysboro Twp; age 2m, 6d > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Carol Garbo" <cagarbo@webtv.net> > To: <iljackso@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Saturday, November 04, 2006 1:04 AM > Subject: Re: [ILJACKSO] Cemetery Information > > >> PS: The reason that I ask for a list of the Trobaughs buried there is >> the fact that David's wife was a Trobaugh and also the fact that I have >> also lost some of my Trobaugh relatives; this is the first I have heard >> of any Trobaughs being buried at this cemetery; maybe I was looking in >> the wrong cemeteries. Carol > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Guidelines: http://www.rootsweb.com/~illinois/JacksonCoWelcome.html > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ILJACKSO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    11/04/2006 04:36:33
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] TROUBAUGH Burials - Cemetery Information
    2. Carol Garbo
    3. Yes, thank you; I have been to their graves and also the graves in Pleasant Grove. Henry W. & Rebecca Trobaugh were my great great-grandparents. Carol Our life may not always be the party we would have chosen, but while we are here, we may as well dance!

    11/04/2006 02:31:02
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] TROUBAUGH Burials - Cemetery Information
    2. Carol Garbo
    3. Thank you so much. When I am home tomorrow, I am going to go through some of these as I feel sure some of them fit. I did have some; Alva is mine (buried at Oakland; NOT Pleasant Grove; several books list his grave in the wrong cemetery for some reason) and Augustus was my great grandfather. All of the Trobaugh's connect; it is just makking the connections that is so frustrating. Again, thanks for all your help. Carol Our life may not always be the party we would have chosen, but while we are here, we may as well dance!

    11/04/2006 02:26:03
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] TROUBAUGH Burials - Cemetery Information
    2. Karima
    3. Carol, There are also TROBAUGHs buried in Oakland Cemetery in Carbondale: Henry W., Grant, James, H. W., Rebecca A., & Alva Do you have these? Karima

    11/04/2006 02:25:43
    1. Re: [ILJACKSO] TROUBAUGH Burials - Cemetery Information
    2. Karima
    3. Hi Carol, Hope the following will be of help to you. Karima ============================================= Tower Grove Cemetery, Murphysboro, Jackson Co., IL Row 15 North to South TROUBAUGH, Dr. F. E., Sep. 4 1868 - Feb 13, 1898 TROUBAUGH, Adda, M., Jan 25, 1874 - Jan 27, 1948 TROUBAUGH, Bain, 1897 - 1917 TROUBAUGH, John W. July 28, 1835 - Mar 4, 1907 TROUBAUGH, Mary J., Jan 30, 1834 - Mar 14, 1926 TROUBAUGH, Edwin P., Son of Ed. P. & M. E. Trobaugh, Aug 21, 1893 - Nov 27, 1898 Row 16 South to North TROUBAUGH, Frank E., Oct 26, 1895 - July 1979 TROUBAUGH, Lee Margaret, May 14, 1897 - (no death date given) Buried in City Cemetery, Jackson Co., Murphysboro, IL (City Cemetery is a very old cemetery located in the city proper. It is located on North 14th Street Lot 9 TROUBAUGH, Jessie A. Palmer, Aug. 22, 1870 - Mar. 7, 1904 TROUBAUGH, Emma M. Nettles, Oct 19, 1869 - June1, 1880 (Two PALMERs buried in same lot.) I also found the following in "Death Records for Carbondale, IL 1877-1952." Compiled by Louise Morehouse, Carbondale, IL. printed by the Jackson County Historical Society, Murphysboro, IL 1981. Page 210: TROBAUGH, Infant Male (stillborn); b and d 15 Oct 1928, Carbondale; son Gordon Trobaugh, b Murphysboro Twp & Margaret (Cramer) Trobaugh, b St. Louis MO; bur Mt. Pleasant Cem, Murphysboro Twp. TROBAUGH, Alva (single); b 12 Dec 1874, Jackson Co; son Henry & Rebecca (Morrison) Trobaugh, both b TN; d 22 Jul 1927, Carbondale; bur Mt. Pleasant Cem, Murphysboro Twp TROBAUGH, Augustus (married); b 3 Jul 1879, Murphysboro; son Henry & Rebecca, (Morrison) Trobaugh; d 23 Apr 1951, Carbondale; bur Pleasant Grove Memorial Cem, Murphysboro Twp; spouse, Aurora Trobaugh TROBAUGH, Emma (single); b TN; dau Henry & Anna (Mitchell) Trobaugh, both b TN; d 12 Jul 1930, Carbondale; bur Pleasant Grove Cem; age 72y TROBAUGH, Mary J. (widow); b 21 Oct 1844, West Plains MO; dau John Perry; d 28 Aug 1929, Carbondale; bur Mt. Pleasant Cem, Murphysboro Twp TROBAUGH, Mina M. (married); b 25 Apr 1882, Murphysboro; dau Fletcher & Dora (McCoskey) Cowling; d 19 May 1951, Carbondale; bur Mt. Pleasant Cem, Murphysboro Twp; spouse, W. W. Trobaugh TROBAUGH, Raymond Edgar (single); b Carbondale; son W. W. Trobaugh; d 11 Jan 1908, Carbondale; bur Mt. Pleasant Cem, Murphysboro Twp; age 2m, 6d ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carol Garbo" <cagarbo@webtv.net> To: <iljackso@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, November 04, 2006 1:04 AM Subject: Re: [ILJACKSO] Cemetery Information > PS: The reason that I ask for a list of the Trobaughs buried there is > the fact that David's wife was a Trobaugh and also the fact that I have > also lost some of my Trobaugh relatives; this is the first I have heard > of any Trobaughs being buried at this cemetery; maybe I was looking in > the wrong cemeteries. Carol

    11/04/2006 01:59:26