Steffani Kennedy wrote: > > Hi Glorianne; nice to meet you. I don't know if the Zion Church is the > same Mt. Zion Church. The description of the cemetery (which is directly > behind and some beside the Church) is as follows: > > "MT. ZION CEMETERY, Washington Township, Clay County, Sec.28. Located > one eight of mile south of State Road #46 in the center of the section." > > My ancestors, Delila Price died l0-3-l833 and Jacob Price died 6-6-l896. > Daughter, Mary Jane Price died 2-8-l855, Son, William W. Price died > ll-2l-l878, Daughter, Laura Alice Price (Jordan) died 8-2l-l945. > > Thanks so much for the information - can you connect these two Churches > or are they one and the same? Could you let me know what you might be > able to come up with. > > Nancee at iggy29@scican.net > > Gfahs@aol.com wrote: > > > > In a message dated 99-11-26 11:01:42 EST, you write: > > > > << Is there anyone out there that knows about the history of Mt. Zion Church, > > >> > > > > My father, Roy Seymour, was one of nine young men who helped saved Zion > > Church (not Mt. Zion), south of Cory, during the 1920's. As told to me by > > Dillon Gard, the church was built about 1881. But it is a couple of sections > > south of SR 46. Is there also a Mt. Zion Church in the county? > > > > I have a picture taken 3 Nov 1929 at a Zion Church Sunday School party: in > > the picture are Adrian Gard, Wayne Gilbert, Gladys Coble, Marjorie > > McCullough, Tressie Ungder, Massie Unger. Edna Shotmire, Edith Bernhardt, > > Dillon Gard, and Sylvia Bloomfield. Probably all these people attended Cory > > school; in a picture of the teachers are: Homer Foulke, Edgar Liston, > > Clarence Trout, Hope Sweringen, and Grace Congleton. > > > > I can scan in these pictures and send them to anyone by e-mail if I am > > contacted directly, not through the list. > > > > I am almost sure a history was written by Zion Church a few years ago, but I > > cannot find a copy in my files. Perhaps the genealogical society has a copy. > > > > Glorianne