Looking for the W. W. Wade family. Mrs. Wade was the daughter of Wm. R. Callison who was killed in a auto/streetcar accident in 1916. Any information about her would be much appreciated. Dottie in Cal.
Looking for W. W. Wade family. Mrs. Wade was the daughter of Wm. R. Callison who was killed in a auto-streetcar accident in 1916. Any information about her would be much appreciated. Dottie in Cal.
Hello List: Finally got back online about a week ago. My new email is cristyculp@netzero.com. Old addy was cculp2@juno.com. RESEARCHING FAMILIES OF: JOHN G.SCHULZE/SCHULTZ/SCHULZ, WILLIAM H. MESSERSCHMIDT/MESSERSMITH, JOHN C. NEIDHARDT/NIGHTART/NEEDHART, DALPKE
YOU MIGHT HAVE THIS ALREADY, BUT OTA PLUMMER MARRIED WILLIAM STULL IN SANGAMON COUNTY 10-3-1900. ACCORDING TO THE ILLINOIS STATE MARRIAGE INDEX WHICH ONLY GOES UP TO 1900. MFB ----- Original Message ----- From: Jackie Sent: Sunday, February 09, 2003 9:50 AM To: ILPEORIA-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [ILPEORIA-L] Out-of-state marriages for Illinois couples Hi Jane, was wondering if you could help me with how to contact surrounding area States for the marriage info. I am looking for. My grandparents were James and Ota Mae Plummer Mackey. Ota Mae probably went by Mae/May. They were in Sangamon Co., IL. on the 1910 census and it states that they had been married for 2 years. I just don't know where to start. The county clerk says there are no records of a marriage for them. Grandma was married at the age of 16 to a William Stull, age 32 and I don't know how long the marriage lasted, can't find a divorce record. They possibly had a son named Herschel born around 1903. Can you direct me where I should look? Thanks. Jackie ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carla and Jeff Leber" <lebrpack@dpc.net> To: <ILPEORIA-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, November 11, 2002 9:17 AM Subject: Re: [ILPEORIA-L] Out-of-state marriages for Illinois couples > Jane - > > Thank you for that wonderful piece of information. My great-grandmother was > last found living in Peoria in 1909 with her father. Her future husband is > nowhere to be found in the Peoria directories, but their first son was born > in Burlington in 1910. You just never know how this may help me find a > piece of the puzzle. No one knows where Eva Edna Liggett and William Moses > Moore was married, but my guess has always been Burlington. I'm going to > have to write some letters today to find out! > > Thanks again - > > Carla > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Jane Kuck" <jkuck@elmnet.net> > To: <ILPEORIA-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Sunday, November 10, 2002 11:02 PM > Subject: [ILPEORIA-L] Out-of-state marriages for Illinois couples > > > > Although this item appeared in the Peoria, IL, Journal Star on 4 Nov 2002, > > I feel that it contains information that may be important to all Illinois > > researchers who have looked in vain for a particular ancestral > > marriage. The item appeared in Bill Adams column, for which he combs old > > newspapers to scout out interesting, unusual and unique stories. This one > > carried a date of November 4, 1939. > > > > "Nearly half the couples to whom marriage licenses were issued at > > Burlington, Iowa, during October were from Peoria and vicinity, it was > > reported. > > > > There were 78 licenses issued, and 35 of the number went to persons living > > near Peoria. During the same month, only 69 were issued in Peoria > > County. Desire to avoid the eight-day waiting period and the pure > marriage > > law is given as the reason for marriages of many Illinois couples in > Iowa." > > > > NOTE: As the marriage laws were statewide, I am sure that these > > circumstances existed in many counties. If a couple lived not to far from > > the state line other states might also have hosted many Illinois > > marriages. So, depending upon the place of residence, one might look in > > border counties in Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri and Wisconsin as well as > Iowa. > > > > Hope that this will help many researchers knock down a few brick walls. > > > > Jane Kuck > > > > > > > > ==== ILPEORIA Mailing List ==== > > Search this list's archived messages! > > http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/listsearch.pl > > > > > ==== ILPEORIA Mailing List ==== > List problems? First, read the Welcome Message that you received > when you subscribed. Feel free to contact the list administrator, Cheryl Rothwell, LoganCty@mindspring.com. > > ==== ILPEORIA Mailing List ==== Visit the Peoria County ILGenWeb Home Page! http://www.usgennet.org/~ilpeoria/index.html
Hi Jane, was wondering if you could help me with how to contact surrounding area States for the marriage info. I am looking for. My grandparents were James and Ota Mae Plummer Mackey. Ota Mae probably went by Mae/May. They were in Sangamon Co., IL. on the 1910 census and it states that they had been married for 2 years. I just don't know where to start. The county clerk says there are no records of a marriage for them. Grandma was married at the age of 16 to a William Stull, age 32 and I don't know how long the marriage lasted, can't find a divorce record. They possibly had a son named Herschel born around 1903. Can you direct me where I should look? Thanks. Jackie ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carla and Jeff Leber" <lebrpack@dpc.net> To: <ILPEORIA-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, November 11, 2002 9:17 AM Subject: Re: [ILPEORIA-L] Out-of-state marriages for Illinois couples > Jane - > > Thank you for that wonderful piece of information. My great-grandmother was > last found living in Peoria in 1909 with her father. Her future husband is > nowhere to be found in the Peoria directories, but their first son was born > in Burlington in 1910. You just never know how this may help me find a > piece of the puzzle. No one knows where Eva Edna Liggett and William Moses > Moore was married, but my guess has always been Burlington. I'm going to > have to write some letters today to find out! > > Thanks again - > > Carla > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Jane Kuck" <jkuck@elmnet.net> > To: <ILPEORIA-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Sunday, November 10, 2002 11:02 PM > Subject: [ILPEORIA-L] Out-of-state marriages for Illinois couples > > > > Although this item appeared in the Peoria, IL, Journal Star on 4 Nov 2002, > > I feel that it contains information that may be important to all Illinois > > researchers who have looked in vain for a particular ancestral > > marriage. The item appeared in Bill Adams column, for which he combs old > > newspapers to scout out interesting, unusual and unique stories. This one > > carried a date of November 4, 1939. > > > > "Nearly half the couples to whom marriage licenses were issued at > > Burlington, Iowa, during October were from Peoria and vicinity, it was > > reported. > > > > There were 78 licenses issued, and 35 of the number went to persons living > > near Peoria. During the same month, only 69 were issued in Peoria > > County. Desire to avoid the eight-day waiting period and the pure > marriage > > law is given as the reason for marriages of many Illinois couples in > Iowa." > > > > NOTE: As the marriage laws were statewide, I am sure that these > > circumstances existed in many counties. If a couple lived not to far from > > the state line other states might also have hosted many Illinois > > marriages. So, depending upon the place of residence, one might look in > > border counties in Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri and Wisconsin as well as > Iowa. > > > > Hope that this will help many researchers knock down a few brick walls. > > > > Jane Kuck > > > > > > > > ==== ILPEORIA Mailing List ==== > > Search this list's archived messages! > > http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/listsearch.pl > > > > > ==== ILPEORIA Mailing List ==== > List problems? First, read the Welcome Message that you received > when you subscribed. Feel free to contact the list administrator, Cheryl Rothwell, LoganCty@mindspring.com. > >
I would check with IRAD first. (Although I did a quick look for Peoria and they don't list any marriage records.) Then, the county courthouse - unfortunately. Carla ----- Original Message ----- From: <KPhill2906@aol.com> To: <ILPEORIA-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, February 02, 2003 7:32 AM Subject: [ILPEORIA-L] Marriage Records > Dear Listers: > > Can anyone tell me if there is a source for looking up marriage records > between 1900 & 1920? > > Karen > > > ==== ILPEORIA Mailing List ==== > Visit the Peoria County ILGenWeb Home Page! > http://www.usgennet.org/~ilpeoria/index.html >
Dear Listers: Can anyone tell me if there is a source for looking up marriage records between 1900 & 1920? Karen
This is the information on the IL-Central mailing list. It contains general information which applies to all mailing lists so you might want to read it. Anyone researching in Bond, Cass, Christian, Clinton, DeWitt, Fayette, Logan, Macon, Marion, Marshall, Mason, McLean, Menard, Montgomery, Peoria, Sangamon, Stark, Tazewell, Washington, Woodford is welcome to join the mailing list. It is NOT a substitute for the individual county mailing lists which are much more likely to provide useful information for any one county. It is a useful tool for persons who are researching across county lines. You must be a subscriber to post to the list. There are also mailing lists for the other regions of ILGenWeb: IL-Eastern, IL-Western, IL-Southern, IL-Northern. For details on the various regions and the counties in each go to http://www.rootsweb.com/~ilrreg/ Postings to all the mailing lists, regional and county. are archived. You can browse the archives or search by keyword. While only subscribers may post to a list ANYONE can read the archives. This is why we strongly discourage posting your address, phone or any other personal information on any list or message board. If you have a need to share such information with another researcher you can do it by private email. Please be advised that the mailing list and its archives, although administered by ILGenWeb, are owned by RootsWeb. RootsWeb's Acceptable Use Policy gives them the right to ARCHIVE AND REDISTRIBUTE. "So we can provide current and future users with access to your posts, by posting here you do give RootsWeb a permanent license to archive and redistribute those posts. This policy may be superseded in specific circumstances by other commitments made by RootsWeb." Further, YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR POSTS. If you post anything that results in RootsWeb being sued, you are responsible for any costs you incur. RootsWeb may also hold you responsible for any costs they incur defending themselves. To subscribe to the mail list, send an e-mail message with the word "subscribe" (without the quotation marks) as the only text in the body of the message to IL-CENTRAL-L-request@rootsweb.com. If you wish to subscribe in digest mode send the same subscribe message to IL-CENTRAL-D-request@rootsweb.com. If at any point you wish to cancel your subscription, send a message with only the word "unsubscribe" (without the quotation marks) in the body of the message to the same address you used to subscribe. To post a message to the list, after subscribing, send it to IL-CENTRAL-L@rootsweb.com. Cheryl Rothwell logancty@mindspring.com Logan County, IL, Coordinator, ILGenWeb www.rootsweb.com/~illogan Central IL Regional Coordinator, ILGenWeb Clark, Downing, Harding, Lucas et al
Could somebody please let me know where I find the IL -and SPRINGFIELD,IL population from 1900 -til now? Thank you very much. Do appreciate your help. Doris Binger Walz,Philippi,OST, Spies on Wiedenham,PEORIA,IL 1920 -30. Boger,Frick,
I am wondering if anyone on the list would be familiar with the following family that might be able to offer some help: George Millard Anderson b. abt 1890 in IL married Flossie Mae about 1906. She was born 8 Jan 1894 and died March 1986. I am trying to locate the parents of each. Also trying to find out when George died and where they are buried. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Karen
I am wondering if anyone on the list has access to marriage records between 1900 and 1910 that would be willing to do a couple of lookups for me? Thanks very much! Karen
Do you have an online link to the Illinois Death Index? Thanks jawohl, habe ich! http://www2.sos.state.il.us/departments/archives/idphdeathindex.html Es gilt nur vom 1.1.1916 bis zum 31.12.1950 Bill in Denver
Do you have an online link to the Illinois Death Index? Thanks. Roxie Huffman -----Original Message----- From: Dr.Rudolf.Geser@t-online.de <Dr.Rudolf.Geser@t-online.de> To: ILPEORIA-L@rootsweb.com <ILPEORIA-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Sunday, January 26, 2003 8:24 AM Subject: [ILPEORIA-L] Gasser in Peoria / 1870-1900 >Hello, > >I am looking for traces of my relative Benedict Geser (also written >Gasser or Geeser), born 1819 in southern Germany, landed New York 1849, >in Milwaukee 1852 till 1863/4, in Chicago 1864 till 1867. >His wife name was Barbetta Geser/Gasser/Geeser maiden name Prior. >His son name was Carl/Charles/Karl, born 1854/5. >His daughter name was Carolin/Caroline/Karoline/Carly, born 1855/6. > >I found a Barbetta Gasser in the Illinois Death Index, died shortly >after 1900. > >Does somebody have a or several Peoria City Directories for the time >range 1870 till 1900 and would do a check up for the above mentioned >names? > >Any help would be greatly appreciated. > >Greetings from Germany > >Rudolf >(Chemnitz/Saxony) > > >==== ILPEORIA Mailing List ==== >2,500 Discussion Lists!!! USGenWeb and The USGenWeb Archives! >Special thanks go to RootsWeb. Your generous donations to >RootsWeb makes this all possible. Find out more! >http://www.rootsweb.com/rootsweb/how-to-subscribe.html >RootsWeb Gen. Data Coop. Box 6798 Frazier Park, CA 93222 >
Hello, I am looking for traces of my relative Benedict Geser (also written Gasser or Geeser), born 1819 in southern Germany, landed New York 1849, in Milwaukee 1852 till 1863/4, in Chicago 1864 till 1867. His wife name was Barbetta Geser/Gasser/Geeser maiden name Prior. His son name was Carl/Charles/Karl, born 1854/5. His daughter name was Carolin/Caroline/Karoline/Carly, born 1855/6. I found a Barbetta Gasser in the Illinois Death Index, died shortly after 1900. Does somebody have a or several Peoria City Directories for the time range 1870 till 1900 and would do a check up for the above mentioned names? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Greetings from Germany Rudolf (Chemnitz/Saxony)
The following was posted to the Cook County List earlier this month. I got permission from Ms. Dundon to re-post to the Peoria list since Peoria and Tazewell County are mentioned. The letters are delightful and a wonderful story about the immigrant experience in the 1880's.. Janet ----- Original Message ----- From: "Emma Dundon" <emma.dundon@sympatico.ca> To: <COOK-CO-IL-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, January 17, 2003 12:49 AM Subject: : NON GEN? Excerpts from letters Illinois/England Good evening. I typed up some excerpts from the letters I have. I hope you find it as enjoyable as I did. (the spelling and language is exactly as written). ** indicates MY comment** Apologies for the length, Best regards to all. Emma Dundon/Ontario/Canada. Oct 3, 1886 Dear Father & Mother, I write a few lines to you to let you know how I am getting along. I am getting a little more settled now and liking the place more everyday ..... ......we have all of us a Mustang pony left us for our own use for we have a good deal of prairie land to ride over.......there is no ploughing here only meadows they buy all there corn for the stock it costs tenpence a bushel and we can get as much straw as we want for carting it. We are both going up to the Fat Stock Show at Chicago next month. ..... It is very muddy here in the winter there is no stones on the roads not even in the town it gets a foot deep in mud ....we have a very comfortable room in the stable and we have a few pictures we share with Old Honest Tom and Chance ....... **presumably horses!** Mar 20,1886 from mother.... ...Dear Son, Yours to hand, I should have written sooner .... ...I am very glad to see you are able to save something their very few that has but you know you have every chance their is very few that has not to do something towards helping their Parents. You had a good beginning and had good places and had your health to keep them and I hope good sence enough not to spend your times in the Public House. If you had you would not have had the money you have. I am very glad to hear you take care of it their always is a time when it wanted.... I hope you will get to the top of the tree before you begin housekeeping if that what you allude to don't begin too soon.... ...just a few lines to see how the world is using you. Maa braight me such a grand tie; all covered with horse shoes and when I went up to the stables on Sunday the horses started dancing they were so glad to see me......... 21/9/1886 Dear Bros. ....Ma & Da got home quite safe but I think not very sound for they limped hard.. **visited him in America** I think you had better come here and spend a week or two because Ma said you looked badley and some new milk would do you good .......I wrote home last in February and never heard anything since. I shall not write anymore until they write. I do not know the reason why they should not write.... ....we have had a sweater this last three weeks from 84 to 97 in the shade every day - today it is almost unbearable outside. We are suffering much for want of rain...... ....You want to know how we live here. Well quite different to England. We have potatoes three times a day and flesh meat of some kind and fruit every kind you can name any kind that is in season. Strawberrys are only 5 cents a quart - we get beer to some meals, cofee and tea but there is not much tea used for all it is very cheap. We live very well and people are obliged to do on account of the weather one does not feel the heat the same here as at home. The air is lighter and purer & we do not get any fogs nor damp drisling rains. County Cook is immense now. I am going next Sunday to a City called Peoria about 12 miles from here to have a look round. There is many a thousand acres uncultivated yet all covered with fine timber. We have over 600 acres on this farm some of never had human foot set on it. I should like you to see America it would rather surprise you..... Melbourne Stock Farm, Washington, Taywell Co Illinois Jan 30 1887 ...I am getting a pound a week and Board and I cant get that in England. America is a very fine Country as you might expect but it is so large , it would take anyone a long time to see it all over. The State of Illinoise is as large as England and not so many population in as London so you may fancy people is not so thick here. The people here are very well educated they go to school until they are 18 to 21 You do not here them speak rough language They are all a dark cast ....... ....we have had to cart water 2 miles for our horses all winter and that is not a nice job when the thermometer stands 35 below zero......it is very cold since November ....no man can work round the stables without gloves.....there is no gardening around here they seem to be very few vegetables grown - there is plenty of grapes but they cheaply grow wild . Found any amount of nuts such as hazel and walnuts, hickory and many other sorts. Apples in abundance but not many pears. I dare say you have heard of Maple Sugar - they are just beginning to tap the trees then put taps into the trees and draw the syrup out and then boil it into sugar.. ....The houses are all built of wood and very pretty some of them are. I have never seen any in England to compare to these but you know if one takes fire they have only to clear out - last night one of the largest Hotels in town burnt down - there have been 4 houses burnt down since I have been here. ... ...a christmas I had, well I never knew it was the time of pleasure until I saw the 25 on the Almanack. They do not keep it up much here. They think more of the fourth ofJuly it is a great day, the day the United States was proclared........ ... we get weather here to the extremes, in summer it gets as high as 100 in the shade. I thought when I came here first I never saw so many flies in my life. There is enough to carry one away and the grasshoppers are here by millions They eat everything that is green.... 19.12.87 Dear Brother, Just a few lines to wish you many happy returns of the day. I am sorry I have nothing but a card to send to you. Ma says that when we send you anything it always gets spoiled. I wish you was coming I think we shall be very quiet This xmas. Loving sister Edith Dalton P.S. Ma was very sorry that your hare(?) got so spoiled She thought she had packed it so safe that it might go any distance. > Dec 20, 1882 **From The Grange to Joe in America** ... thank you for your Christmas cards and I hope you have found that bright half penny - they are very scarce here and you must not forget to bring it... We have had a very quiet Christmas, we have had no company yet Aunt Pollie could hae come but it ws too wet perhaps she will come for her newyear. We hope your cold is better before now they are very fashionable here, there is scarce any one without... ..Jersey, Oct 8,1882 **to Joe** You will be tired of waiting for my letter . I have been putting it of from day to day. I was surprised to hear from you I did not think of hearing from you any more. Well, I suppose you want to know what I left home for. All that I can say is that my uncle wrote for me to come to Jersey. Well I came away and I stayed in Manchester two nights and then I came stragt on to Jersey, I only stayed with my Uncle 9 months andthen I was out of work a month and then I went to France and stayed there 5 months and came back here in July and I have done nothing till about three weeks ago. I think they had a good sale in Singleton **sounds like the home farm was sold** I should like to see the old place again very much. I suppose it is about the same. I have consantly had letters from Jim Hope and he has told me how you are getting on. At Singleton I should think tht a lot of the young people are married since I left. I expect if all is well I should have a trip over for a month next summer to see you. I should think my Father and Mother would be very cross about me leaving but I have not regret it for I have seen a good deal of life since I came here. I have been to all the Chanel Islands they are very pretty places much nicer than you see in England. The weather is much wrmer here and have no frost much - much fruit grows here such as figs and gapes and tomatoes. All grow wild and plentiful - I could not decribe this place to you. When I went to France I was down in the south at Brest and Nantes and Mandera and I came back by Paris. I can speak a good deal of French now as they are about half French here. I should like you and Jenny Hope to come over next summer it is well worth a visit I will send you a lof of views of jersey soon and then you can see for yourself if you think the paper from here is any use to you I will send it every week sta rting next week........I daresay you would find it very hard when you left home. I am sorry you cant settle down I expect you angered yourself at the Guild I see in the papers that it was a fine affair when you was at home you would see how they are all at stories...... 9/7/1881 Winona, Illinois .....this town is very rough, it is not so large as Washington nor not such a nice place. There is a coal fit right on the edge of town and there is **derogatory**......and Polish ......and all Breeds under the sun here. You can see more different Breeds here in one day than anywhere else..... ...never heard anything from home for a long time. guess they have forgot me. ..,... ..we had a terrile smash up on the Baibury near here on the 10th of Aug. 120 killed and 225 wounded. There was two engines and 16 coaches , six of them heavy sleepers on behind . They was going down a hill at the rate of fifty five miles an hour and ran into a small bridge that had burnt out and left nothing but the metals. It was an excursion to Niagara falls.... believe me your affectionate brother Geo. Dalton, Winona, "Marshall Co." Illinois U.S.A.
Dear Subscribers to the Peoria County, Illinois Mailing List, I am requesting help, regarding George Rem(m)ington, who was enumerated in the 1850 Census of Peoria, Peoria County, Illinois, page 160, in dwellinghouse 535. Can anyone help me trace this man after the 1850 Census? In 1850, George Rem(m)ington was recorded as a carpenter, age thirty, born in Connecticut. He was living in the home of B.L.F. Bourland, who was a land agent who owned $2000 in assets, was 28 years old and a native of Kentucky. "Peoria" George Remington might have been the George Nichols Remington who was born May 15, 1819 at Suffield, Hartford County, Connecticut, a son of George Remington and Betsey Nichols. George N. Remington married Charlotte Lavinia Halsey, September 24, 1838 at Windsor, Connecticut. George N. Remington's son Philip Halsey Remington received his appointment to West Point Military Academy out of Illinois in 1857, which suggests that George N. Remington moved to Illinois by 1857. I have found George N. Remington in Suffield in 1842, but not beyond. Thank you for any details regarding the George Rem(m)ington who appeared in the records of Peoria, Illinois in 1850. I do appreciate it! Sincerely, Randal W. Cooper
The following article is from Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter and is copyright 2003 by Richard W. Eastman. It is re-published here with the permission of the author. Information about the newsletter is available at http://www.RootsForum.com. CHAMPAIGN, IL - January 13, 2003 - FamilyToolbox.net, Inc. (http://www.familytoolbox.net), a pioneer in online genealogical research, today announced the release of a new genealogy site featuring a variety of digitized original records at http://www.Sources2go.com. Sources2Go.com, the newest addition to the family of FamilyToolbox.net sites, contains over twenty-thousand digitized images of primary United States records including census, military, immigration, and postal records dating back over 100 years. Users of the site can pan and zoom into the grayscale images, as well as see negative views of images. "Sources2Go.com fills a void in the current offerings of digitized images online by commercial genealogical sites," said April Leigh Helm, President of FamilyToolbox.net, "Most commercial genealogical sites focus on large collections of records such as Federal census records. While Sources2Go.com includes Federal census records, it also contains underrepresented record sets, such as postal, immigration and naturalization, and state and territorial census records." Images on the Sources2Go.com site can be viewed with a Javascript-enabled World Wide Web browser or with a browser containing the Macromedia flash plug-in. Site users are able to browse through images and order high quality, non-watermarked images on CD-ROM through the FamilyToolbox.net, Inc. online store, GenealogyDirect.com (http://www.genealogydirect.com). Upon its launch, Sources2Go.com will include viewable records of the 1810 Illinois territorial census, District of Columbia naturalization index, record cards of letter carriers, substitute postal clerk appointments, and portions of the 1790 Federal census population schedules. The collection also contains images of over 29,000 War of 1812 military bounty land warrants. About FamilyToolbox.net, Inc. FamilyToolbox.net, Inc. is a pioneer in providing online resources for genealogists and family historians founded by Matthew and April Leigh Helm (co-authors of several books, including Genealogy Online For Dummies). Its flagship site, Helm's Genealogy Toolbox (http://www.genealogytoolbox.com) which was launched in 1994, is the oldest comprehensive genealogical Web site. Online research services provided by FamilyToolbox.net, Inc. include genealogically-focused search engines, link indexes, and digitized records. For additional information, see http://www.familytoolbox.net
--part1_a9.3697eb76.2b588970_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit In a message dated 1/16/03 1:17:36 PM Eastern Standard Time, ldawns1@hocking.net writes: << Subj: [OHROOTS] Cedar Grove, Sept. 1899 Date: 1/16/03 1:17:36 PM Eastern Standard Time From: ldawns1@hocking.net To: OHROOTS-L@rootsweb.com " Journal Gazette", Sept 7, 1899, Local News: Cedar Grove Mr. Theodore Spangler of Peoria Il. and Miss Nellie Linn, daughter of A.C. Linn of this place were married at the home of the bride Sunday, Sept. 3rd. This happy event occasioned a great surprise among the many friends of the bride. The newly wed couple have the best wishes of all their acquaintances here who hope nothing will occur in their married life to mar the happiness they now enjoy. Rev. Griffin will preach his farewell sermon at Chapel Hill next Sunday. Mrs. Mary E. Sims and son Will of West Cairo visited H. A. Gordon and family a few days last week. Mrs. Lydia Rose is visiting her daughter Hattie Unger at Kingston this week. Mrs. Lizzie Kitchen is visiting her parents on Black Jack this week. Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Spun of South Bloomingville and H. A. Gordon and family were the pleasant guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Linn last Sunday. Mrs. Smith of Napoleon O., is visiting her son Nute at this place at present. >> --part1_a9.3697eb76.2b588970_boundary Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Disposition: inline Return-Path: <OHROOTS-L-request@rootsweb.com> Received: from rly-xm02.mx.aol.com (rly-xm02.mail.aol.com [172.20.83.103]) by air-xm01.mail.aol.com (v90.10) with ESMTP id MAILINXM13-0116131735; Thu, 16 Jan 2003 13:17:35 -0500 Received: from lists2.rootsweb.com (lists2.rootsweb.com [207.40.200.39]) by rly-xm02.mx.aol.com (v90_r1.1) with ESMTP id MAILRELAYINXM23-0116131707; Thu, 16 Jan 2003 13:17:07 -0500 Received: (from slist@localhost) by lists2.rootsweb.com (8.12.4/8.12.4) id h0GIGVZ6027118; Thu, 16 Jan 2003 11:16:31 -0700 Resent-Date: Thu, 16 Jan 2003 11:16:31 -0700 X-Original-Sender: ldawns1@hocking.net Thu Jan 16 11:16:31 2003 Message-ID: <001501c2bd89$af1d56e0$adcb33d1@computer> From: <ldawns1@hocking.net> Old-To: <OHROOTS-L@rootsweb.com>, "Hocking County" <OHHOCKIN-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Thu, 16 Jan 2003 13:04:15 -0500 Organization: None MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" X-Priority: 3 X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2600.0000 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2600.0000 X-Antirelay: Good relay from local net2 209.51.203.128/25 Subject: [OHROOTS] Cedar Grove, Sept. 1899 Resent-Message-ID: <A0ezJC.A.QnG._bvJ-@lists2.rootsweb.com> To: OHROOTS-L@rootsweb.com Resent-From: OHROOTS-L@rootsweb.com X-Mailing-List: <OHROOTS-L@rootsweb.com> archive/latest/6773 X-Loop: OHROOTS-L@rootsweb.com Precedence: list Resent-Sender: OHROOTS-L-request@rootsweb.com " Journal Gazette", Sept 7, 1899, Local News: Cedar Grove Mr. Theodore Spangler of Peoria Il. and Miss Nellie Linn, daughter of A.C. Linn of this place were married at the home of the bride Sunday, Sept. 3rd. This happy event occasioned a great surprise among the many friends of the bride. The newly wed couple have the best wishes of all their acquaintances here who hope nothing will occur in their married life to mar the happiness they now enjoy. Rev. Griffin will preach his farewell sermon at Chapel Hill next Sunday. Mrs. Mary E. Sims and son Will of West Cairo visited H. A. Gordon and family a few days last week. Mrs. Lydia Rose is visiting her daughter Hattie Unger at Kingston this week. Mrs. Lizzie Kitchen is visiting her parents on Black Jack this week. Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Spun of South Bloomingville and H. A. Gordon and family were the pleasant guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Linn last Sunday. Mrs. Smith of Napoleon O., is visiting her son Nute at this place at present. ==== OHROOTS Mailing List ==== This list is designed to provide a discussion forum for anyone who has an interest in Genealogy in the State of Ohio. This list will also be my way to contact you directly with any updates, changes, and other news about my page. To search this list go to http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/listsearch.pl and enter OHROOTS for the list name. ============================== 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 --part1_a9.3697eb76.2b588970_boundary--
Can you tell me if the following surnames appear in the St. John's Lutheran Cemetery list? HERGET RIDLBAUER Thanks! Kevin
I found this Dimond in St. John Luthern Cemetery... DIMOND Harry Alfred 14 Oct 1883-12 Jan 1964 IL 1st Lt. Medical Corps WWI Viola K. 8 Aug 1887- no date Also in Oct 1840 a Sam'l DIMON was shown in a listing of a mass meeting of the Democracy of Peoria Co (to celebrate the victorey of man over money in passage of Independent Treasury Law). In the census of 1860 there was shown Samuel Dimond, 49, born CT and his wife Nancy,46, with children Dewitt, 21, Jacob, 16, Emma, 13, Fannie, 11, Elizabeth, 9, Eugene, 7. A Betty Edwards Anderson was researching Henry E. Edwards and his wife Frances P. DIMON. The address given was in ND (1991) Diana <ddavis59@sc.rr.com> Website: http://www.my-ged.com/davis/ NOTE: ddavis@logicsouth.com is no longer valid ----- Original Message ----- From: "Kathryn Jennings"c To: <ILPEORIA-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 14, 2003 5:33 PM Subject: [ILPEORIA-L] DIMON AND RELATED NAMES > > I hope to find descendants of Samuel and Nancy DIMON who > were at Peoria Co. before 1850. Following is a list of > their family: > > DIMON > Helen b. 1835 m. Henry O. YOUNG 1854 d. 1893 > Dewit b. 1838 m. Melissa GHEEN/GHENE 1861 d. 1921 > Jonathan b. 1841 m. Amelia EYRE 1841 d. 1914 > Jacob b. 1843 d. 1899 > Emma b. 1846 m. ( ) WILSON d. Bef 1893 > Frances b. 1849 m. Henry E. EDWARDS Bef 1893 d. Bef 1893 > Eugene b. 1851 m. Mary BONET 1873 > Isabell b. 1853 m. David H. PARKS Aft 1880 > Lafayette b. 1855 m. Annie S. FRY 1878 > > I will appreciate any and all information and referrals. > > Kathryn Jennings > > > ==== ILPEORIA Mailing List ==== > Visit the Peoria County ILGenWeb Home Page! > http://www.usgennet.org/~ilpeoria/index.html >