RootsWeb.com Mailing Lists
Previous Page      Next Page
Total: 5780/10000
    1. [InMontgo] Sina Williams
    2. Lena C.
    3. Crawfordsville Journal Review, Wednesday, December 31, 1980, page 2 Sina A. Williams Sina A. Williams, 83, of Troy, Mich., a former Crawfordsville resident, died Tuesday morning. Services will be Saturday morning at the A. J. Desmond & Sons Funeral Home, 2600 Crooks Road, Troy. Time of the service has not yet been determined. Burial will be in White Chapel Cemetery at Troy. Friends may call at the funeral home noon to 9:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday. Mrs. Williams is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Earl (Valvertta) Mitchel of Florida, Mrs. Johnnie (Vivian) Miller of Crawfordsville and Mrs. William (Betty) Steusloff of Troy; and several grand and great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by a son, Luther Williams.

    01/07/2009 02:24:43
    1. [InMontgo] Grover Humphreys
    2. Lena C.
    3. Crawfordsville Journal Review, Friday, April 18, 1969, page 10 Grover Humphreys Dies At His Home; Native of County Grover Humphreys, 76, a native of Montgomery County, died at 12:30 p.m. Thursday at his home on Rt. 7, Danville, Ill. He was 76 years old. He was a farmer most of his adult life in the Potomac area. Born Dec. 31, 1892, near Elmdale, he was a son of Samuel and Sarah Griffin Humphreys. His first marriage was to Minnie Potter who preceded him in death. He later was married to Maude Potter. Surviving are the widow; a son, Thomas L. of Potomac; five brothers, Wilbur of Rt. 8, Frank of Hollywood, Calif.; Asa and Charles, both of Hillsboro, and Carl of Waveland; two sisters, Mrs. Zella Potter of Rossville, Ill., and Mrs. Harry A. Fruits of Rt. 4, and two grandchildren. He was preceded in death by six brothers and two [nothing here, but it could be either sisters or grandchildren]. Funeral services will be conducted at 1:30 p.m. CST Sunday at Lanham Funeral Home at Potomac with interment following in Grundy Cemetery near there. Friends may call at the funeral home.

    01/07/2009 02:17:10
    1. [InMontgo] Sam Henry Carey
    2. Lena C.
    3. Crawfordsville Journal Review, Friday, April 18, 1969, page 10 Sam Henry Carey, New Market Area Farmer, Is Dead NEW MARKET- Sam Henry Carey, 69, of Rt. 7, Crawfordsville, died at 4:57 p.m. Thursday in Culver Hospital at Crawfordsville. Mr. Carey, a member of the Christian Church, was a farmer. He was born Jan. 13, 1900, in Cumberland County, Kentucky, a son of James and Mary Brown Carey. He was married Dec. 25, 1924, to Lucy Anderson, who survives. Also surviving are four sons, Henry F. of Louisville, Rollin of Waveland, and Sam and Donnie at home; five daughters, Mrs. Ruby Border of Park City, Ky., Mrs. Regina Simmons of Rt. 3 Crawfordsville, Mrs. Dora Vincent and Mrs. Sally Vincent, both of Louisville, and Mrs. Linda Walker of Indianapolis; a brother, Emmett of Austin, Ky.; two sisters, Mrs. Sallie Garmon of Franklin, Tenn., and Mrs. Vergie Head of Forest, Ill.; 27 grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a daughter. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday at Reeves Funeral Home here with Rev. William Schalk officiating. Interment will be in Indian Creek Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home.

    01/07/2009 02:11:54
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to Montgomery Co
    2. Kathleen Lynch
    3. Me, too, Pegeen -- Bannons did that, but with a sojourn in Darke Co OH and Randolph Co IN on the way! > From: PLS218@aol.com > Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 23:06:16 -0500 > To: inmontgo@rootsweb.com > Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to Montgomery Co > > I have some who moved from PA to Hamilton Co. to Montgomery Co.: Ward, > Nichols, Linn. > > Pegeen > > > In a message dated 1/6/2009 8:22:57 P.M. Central Standard Time, > Limequilla@aol.com writes: > > Are there any people on here who have a migration pattern of New Jersey to > Colerain Township, Hamilton Co Ohio (Near Cincinnati) to Fountain or > Montgomery > Counties? > > OR do you know of any surnames that would be in such a migration? > > > > **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making > headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026) > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 09:50:02
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohioto Montgomery Co
    2. Kathleen Lynch
    3. No, no -- 7/7 was my clue to German (PA Dutch) ancestry! Grandpa Shelley was 100 % German, even though they emigrated in the 1730-40 period. Grandma Shelley was the Erskine! Sorry to confuse you, Suzy. And I'd love to see the inside of your refrigerator, so long as you didn't ask to see the inside of mine. Periodically I clean it and find seven open jars of mustard, all different, etc. Suzy, you really want to read Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America, by David Hackett Fischer. It's sociology, but really fascinating and useful to a genealogist. He for example talks about how families with a family background from one part of Britain will boil or simmer most foods -- while those from another area will use a skillet and fry everything! He has sections of his book about New England, about the Scotch-Irish in the American South/Midwest, about the Quakers of the Middle Atlantic, and about the leisured gentlefolk of the coastal US Maryland/VA south. Too true! Kathy > From: Limequilla@aol.com > Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 22:50:27 -0500 > To: inmontgo@rootsweb.com > Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohioto Montgomery Co > > > Really? Its Scottish? I do that , too, although not 7 and 7. Maybe 3 and > 3. :)) My grandmother was 100% Scottish and my grandfather was 100% Penna > Dutch. (Speaking of Hostetlers and Bontragers, et al from your last few posts, > Karen). Tonight (most nights) we had sweet pickles, grapefruit segments from > a jar, leftover cranberry sauce, little peppers, and hotter peppers (for me), > some sort of special cracker, and a shaving of cheese. Just a tablespoon of > each and maybe 4 grapefruit segments just to "decorate the plate". We > always have pickles..every meal, and usually some sort of chutney. I would hate > for any of you to see the inside of my refrigerator because there is nothing > to actually EAT. It is just jars and jars and jars of sauces, mustards, > chutneys, pickles, peppers and jarred fruit. > > I had always assumed it was from the Penna Dutch side, but you're saying it > was Scottish? I know it came from my dad's side because my mom was 100% > Irish and it was Meat. Potatoes and iceberg lettuce Salad with green peppers. > Every single meal. Her chili, not that anybody cares but I've always found it > amusing, was what we would all call hamburger soup. Ground beef, onion, carrot > and a can of tomatoes. There was maybe a dash of chili power in it, but > nothing like you would think of when you thought of chili. She was a terrible cook > because the food she served was so bland and boring. No seasoning. No herbs. > My dad had been brought up on salt cured meats and smoked everything. He > started cooking when I was really little. I think it was for pure survival. > > Suzy > > Seriously? 7 sweets and 7 sours. That'd take some big time > thinking/planning. > I have enough trouble with one meat, one salad, one veggie and one dessert > :) > > **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making > headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026) > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 09:48:43
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohioto Montgomery Co
    2. Kathleen Lynch
    3. No planning at all, Karen. The refrigerator (no, the Frigidaire) was loaded with little glass dishes, each with its glass plate cover, or elastic shower cap, whatever they were called. The little dishes held apple butter, tomato marmalade, jellies of all colors, cinnamon-spiced figs, pickled peaches, bread and butter pickles, pickled beets, pickled onions... heavens, I don't think I can list anymore without more thought. But for every meal, they came out, were arranged on the table, and after the meal they were covered and replaced in the fridge. And -- nobody counted to seven. There were probably more! LOL Kathy PS I specialize now in one-dish meals! My husband's pretty used to it. > From: karen.zach@sbcglobal.net > To: inmontgo@rootsweb.com > Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 22:22:05 -0500 > Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohioto Montgomery Co > > Seriously? 7 sweets and 7 sours. That'd take some big time > thinking/planning. > I have enough trouble with one meat, one salad, one veggie and one dessert > :) > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Kathleen Lynch" <kslynch62@hotmail.com> > To: "Montgomery County" <inmontgo@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 10:13 PM > Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohioto > Montgomery Co > > > > > > Suzy, United Brethren are like German Methodists. Church of the Brethren > > is a modern church which descends from the Dunkers ; they were German > > Baptists, to oversimplify the case. > > My father had cousins in Jasonville, a very German town until quite late. > > They stopped having church services in German because of social pressure > > during WWI, but German was still the home-language for many when he lived > > and worked there in the 1930's. Don't know about the 40's. His/my Dunker > > descended family living in Montgomery County so squeezed out the > > German-ness that I asked once if Shelleys were English, a question greeted > > by such hilarity that I was seriously offended (I was about twelve, and a > > sensitive blossom.) I only figured out why it was funny after I had done > > quite a bit of genealogical research. Finding the bits was tough, and > > doggone it, those relatives who laughed knew it all and just kept their > > mouths shut! > > The social pressure NOT to be German seems to have affected them deeply. > > Then, too, my grandmother was all Scottish. But putting seven sweets and > > seven sours on the table for every meal was a good clue involving no > > language at all, I guess! It just took me an extra 50 years to understand > > it. > > Kathy > >> From: Limequilla@aol.com > >> Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 21:28:07 -0500 > >> To: inmontgo@rootsweb.com > >> Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to > >> Montgomery Co > >> > >> > >> Were there any special churches there? I always meant to ask. It > >> appears a > >> lot of the early obits I typed had to do with United Brethren Church. > >> Was > >> there an enclave of UB people? Were they the Brethren which are > >> sometimes > >> called the Dunkers? > >> > >> I had another question on if anybody recalls their ancestors spoke German > >> at > >> home, even though they were born in the US. I had a report from a > >> cousin > >> that they did. > >> > >> Suzy > >> > >> Many migrated here because of good land, good education, good water and > >> good > >> > >> people :) Take your choice :) > >> > >> **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making > >> headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026) > >> > >> http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > >> > >> List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > >> ------------------------------- > >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > >> INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > > ------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > > INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 08:43:32
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Kentucky
    2. Kathleen Lynch
    3. Yes -- many families in Browns Valley were related by marriages which happened in Kentucky. I like to look at old highway maps (as old as highway maps can get, anyway) to see the likely travel routes between here and there. Monroe County (GenWeb) has a migrations section, listing family names, place (or places) where they previously lived, and places they moved to. It looks like a lot of work to maintain. Fulwiders in Rockbridge and Botetourt Counties in Virginia moved to Putnam, Fountain, Parke, Boone and Montgomery counties, locating near cousins or brothers first, then moving a little farther afield. Following the web of Fulwider relationships, especially if you include connections like having the Rev. Cornelius Airhart (his mother was a Fulwider cousin) perform important services, can produce a fascinating web. My grandfather's generation (he was born in 1870) still were aware of the cousin-connections in the Fulwider families. They've gotten harder and harder to follow. And I can't leave out the next Fulwider migrations, to Illinois and to South Dakota (the Dakota territory, really, before statehood). Shelleys like Noah (married to Sarah Stewart of Montgomery County) moved to Nebraska, and were followed by their younger brothers, like my gr-grandfather George. His wife, Martha Hudson Shelley, was followed by at least one Hudson brother. There was quite a cluster of old friends, family members, and former neighbors in Bennet, NE, in Palmyra, in Otoe CountyNE. Some, like George and Martha, returned to Montgomery County (to Waynetown, right, Karen?) and others are still there with their descendants. The migrations are a lovely tapestry of threads connecting people in different states to those who stayed behind, and to those who moved on. Kathy > From: iwagoner@htb.net > To: inmontgo@rootsweb.com > Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 20:48:01 -0600 > Subject: [InMontgo] Kentucky > > Several also migrated from KY and on to Iowa. > They seemed to travel in families. > > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 08:36:34
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to Montgomery Co
    2. Kathleen Lynch
    3. Suzy, United Brethren are like German Methodists. Church of the Brethren is a modern church which descends from the Dunkers ; they were German Baptists, to oversimplify the case. My father had cousins in Jasonville, a very German town until quite late. They stopped having church services in German because of social pressure during WWI, but German was still the home-language for many when he lived and worked there in the 1930's. Don't know about the 40's. His/my Dunker descended family living in Montgomery County so squeezed out the German-ness that I asked once if Shelleys were English, a question greeted by such hilarity that I was seriously offended (I was about twelve, and a sensitive blossom.) I only figured out why it was funny after I had done quite a bit of genealogical research. Finding the bits was tough, and doggone it, those relatives who laughed knew it all and just kept their mouths shut! The social pressure NOT to be German seems to have affected them deeply. Then, too, my grandmother was all Scottish. But putting seven sweets and seven sours on the table for every meal was a good clue involving no language at all, I guess! It just took me an extra 50 years to understand it. Kathy > From: Limequilla@aol.com > Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 21:28:07 -0500 > To: inmontgo@rootsweb.com > Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to Montgomery Co > > > Were there any special churches there? I always meant to ask. It appears a > lot of the early obits I typed had to do with United Brethren Church. Was > there an enclave of UB people? Were they the Brethren which are sometimes > called the Dunkers? > > I had another question on if anybody recalls their ancestors spoke German at > home, even though they were born in the US. I had a report from a cousin > that they did. > > Suzy > > Many migrated here because of good land, good education, good water and good > > people :) Take your choice :) > > **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making > headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026) > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 08:13:00
    1. [InMontgo] reading and Amish
    2. You do love mysteries, don't you?  There are two Jacobs in 1930 in LaGrange, married to women age appropriate.  No Jonas anywhere then or 20 years earlier. I would think a prudent author would change the names more or get in a little difficulty.  Sharon ----- Original Message ----- From: "Karen Zach" <karen.zach@sbcglobal.net> To: INMONTGO-L@rootsweb.com Cc: infounta@rootsweb.com, inputnam@rootsweb.com Sent: Tuesday, January 6, 2009 7:46:32 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern Subject: [InMontgo] Just FYI -- reading -- genealogical wise Any of you real readers via genealogy?  I love to read fiction based on the real thing or the real thing that reads like fiction.  Just FYI -- I was helping my daughter weed her library here in little Waveland, Indiana and found an "Indiana" author book which we never throw away which I'd never read.  It's called Wolcott's Mills by Wayne B. Fisher.  What an amazing story.  I think it's tagged as fiction but the names are either real or close to it.  The name of the main character (an Amish girl who "bundles," gets pregnant, her betrothed is blown-up in a 4th of July accident) is Rachel Bontrager.  Her bethrothed was Amos Hostetler and her husband (an older man who was about to die of stomach cancer - she was forced to marry him to give the baby a name) Jonas Lambright.  They are ALL big LaGrange names. This story takes place in 1928 -- according to the 1920 census  I think Jacob a man living alone named Jacob Lambright might be the character - wish I had access to the 1930 c!  ensus to see if he's gone or there's a lone woman Bontrager there. Oh, well, it's FICTIOn anyway however there are actual speeches given that were done that 4th of july and I wonder if there really was an accident that day or that part was made up.  Anyway, if any of you get a chance to read thisor anything like it, share those with me, I'd love to read 'em too :) We have so many Amish families in our area right now who just moved here about 6 years ago so this has been a fab look at what their life is similar / like.   http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 06:31:38
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Just FYI -- reading -- genealogical wise
    2. Marilyn Walker
    3. There are several Lambright families in the Indiana 1930 census.one being a Jacob, however he is 40 years old and wife is 35, with several children. Most are in Elkhart County. Also several in LaGrange county, Jacob is 50 wife is 49, another Jacob is 33, wife 29.  

    01/06/2009 06:10:14
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain TwpHam.Co Ohioto Montgomery Co
    2. Karen Zach
    3. What a hoot ----- Original Message ----- From: "Kathleen Lynch" <kslynch62@hotmail.com> To: "Montgomery County" <inmontgo@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 10:43 PM Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain TwpHam.Co Ohioto Montgomery Co > > No planning at all, Karen. The refrigerator (no, the Frigidaire) was > loaded with little glass dishes, each with its glass plate cover, or > elastic shower cap, whatever they were called. The little dishes held > apple butter, tomato marmalade, jellies of all colors, cinnamon-spiced > figs, pickled peaches, bread and butter pickles, pickled beets, pickled > onions... heavens, I don't think I can list anymore without more thought. > But for every meal, they came out, were arranged on the table, and after > the meal they were covered and replaced in the fridge. And -- nobody > counted to seven. There were probably more! LOL > Kathy > PS I specialize now in one-dish meals! My husband's pretty used to it. > > >> From: karen.zach@sbcglobal.net >> To: inmontgo@rootsweb.com >> Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 22:22:05 -0500 >> Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohioto >> Montgomery Co >> >> Seriously? 7 sweets and 7 sours. That'd take some big time >> thinking/planning. >> I have enough trouble with one meat, one salad, one veggie and one >> dessert >> :) >> >> ----- Original Message ----- >> From: "Kathleen Lynch" <kslynch62@hotmail.com> >> To: "Montgomery County" <inmontgo@rootsweb.com> >> Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 10:13 PM >> Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohioto >> Montgomery Co >> >> >> > >> > Suzy, United Brethren are like German Methodists. Church of the >> > Brethren >> > is a modern church which descends from the Dunkers ; they were German >> > Baptists, to oversimplify the case. >> > My father had cousins in Jasonville, a very German town until quite >> > late. >> > They stopped having church services in German because of social >> > pressure >> > during WWI, but German was still the home-language for many when he >> > lived >> > and worked there in the 1930's. Don't know about the 40's. His/my >> > Dunker >> > descended family living in Montgomery County so squeezed out the >> > German-ness that I asked once if Shelleys were English, a question >> > greeted >> > by such hilarity that I was seriously offended (I was about twelve, and >> > a >> > sensitive blossom.) I only figured out why it was funny after I had >> > done >> > quite a bit of genealogical research. Finding the bits was tough, and >> > doggone it, those relatives who laughed knew it all and just kept their >> > mouths shut! >> > The social pressure NOT to be German seems to have affected them >> > deeply. >> > Then, too, my grandmother was all Scottish. But putting seven sweets >> > and >> > seven sours on the table for every meal was a good clue involving no >> > language at all, I guess! It just took me an extra 50 years to >> > understand >> > it. >> > Kathy >> >> From: Limequilla@aol.com >> >> Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 21:28:07 -0500 >> >> To: inmontgo@rootsweb.com >> >> Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to >> >> Montgomery Co >> >> >> >> >> >> Were there any special churches there? I always meant to ask. It >> >> appears a >> >> lot of the early obits I typed had to do with United Brethren Church. >> >> Was >> >> there an enclave of UB people? Were they the Brethren which are >> >> sometimes >> >> called the Dunkers? >> >> >> >> I had another question on if anybody recalls their ancestors spoke >> >> German >> >> at >> >> home, even though they were born in the US. I had a report from a >> >> cousin >> >> that they did. >> >> >> >> Suzy >> >> >> >> Many migrated here because of good land, good education, good water >> >> and >> >> good >> >> >> >> people :) Take your choice :) >> >> >> >> **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is >> >> making >> >> headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026) >> >> >> >> http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ >> >> >> >> List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com >> >> ------------------------------- >> >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> >> INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> > >> > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ >> > >> > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com >> > ------------------------------- >> > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> > INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> >> >> http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ >> >> List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 04:15:24
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co OhiotoMontgomery Co
    2. Karen Zach
    3. Or, was it momma's plan ? ----- Original Message ----- From: <Limequilla@aol.com> To: <inmontgo@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 10:50 PM Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co OhiotoMontgomery Co > > Really? Its Scottish? I do that , too, although not 7 and 7. Maybe 3 > and > 3. :)) My grandmother was 100% Scottish and my grandfather was 100% > Penna > Dutch. (Speaking of Hostetlers and Bontragers, et al from your last few > posts, > Karen). Tonight (most nights) we had sweet pickles, grapefruit segments > from > a jar, leftover cranberry sauce, little peppers, and hotter peppers (for > me), > some sort of special cracker, and a shaving of cheese. Just a tablespoon > of > each and maybe 4 grapefruit segments just to "decorate the plate". We > always have pickles..every meal, and usually some sort of chutney. I > would hate > for any of you to see the inside of my refrigerator because there is > nothing > to actually EAT. It is just jars and jars and jars of sauces, mustards, > chutneys, pickles, peppers and jarred fruit. > > I had always assumed it was from the Penna Dutch side, but you're saying > it > was Scottish? I know it came from my dad's side because my mom was 100% > Irish and it was Meat. Potatoes and iceberg lettuce Salad with green > peppers. > Every single meal. Her chili, not that anybody cares but I've always found > it > amusing, was what we would all call hamburger soup. Ground beef, onion, > carrot > and a can of tomatoes. There was maybe a dash of chili power in it, but > nothing like you would think of when you thought of chili. She was a > terrible cook > because the food she served was so bland and boring. No seasoning. No > herbs. > My dad had been brought up on salt cured meats and smoked everything. He > started cooking when I was really little. I think it was for pure > survival. > > Suzy > > Seriously? 7 sweets and 7 sours. That'd take some big time > thinking/planning. > I have enough trouble with one meat, one salad, one veggie and one > dessert > :) > > **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making > headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026) > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 04:14:56
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio toMontgomery Co
    2. Karen Zach
    3. Bet there are others in the Walnut Twp area, too ----- Original Message ----- From: <PLS218@aol.com> To: <inmontgo@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 11:06 PM Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio toMontgomery Co >I have some who moved from PA to Hamilton Co. to Montgomery Co.: Ward, > Nichols, Linn. > > Pegeen > > > In a message dated 1/6/2009 8:22:57 P.M. Central Standard Time, > Limequilla@aol.com writes: > > Are there any people on here who have a migration pattern of New Jersey > to > Colerain Township, Hamilton Co Ohio (Near Cincinnati) to Fountain or > Montgomery > Counties? > > OR do you know of any surnames that would be in such a migration? > > > > **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making > headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026) > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 04:13:05
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to Montgomery Co
    2. I have some who moved from PA to Hamilton Co. to Montgomery Co.: Ward, Nichols, Linn. Pegeen In a message dated 1/6/2009 8:22:57 P.M. Central Standard Time, Limequilla@aol.com writes: Are there any people on here who have a migration pattern of New Jersey to Colerain Township, Hamilton Co Ohio (Near Cincinnati) to Fountain or Montgomery Counties? OR do you know of any surnames that would be in such a migration? **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026)

    01/06/2009 04:06:16
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohioto Montgomery Co
    2. Really? Its Scottish? I do that , too, although not 7 and 7. Maybe 3 and 3. :)) My grandmother was 100% Scottish and my grandfather was 100% Penna Dutch. (Speaking of Hostetlers and Bontragers, et al from your last few posts, Karen). Tonight (most nights) we had sweet pickles, grapefruit segments from a jar, leftover cranberry sauce, little peppers, and hotter peppers (for me), some sort of special cracker, and a shaving of cheese. Just a tablespoon of each and maybe 4 grapefruit segments just to "decorate the plate". We always have pickles..every meal, and usually some sort of chutney. I would hate for any of you to see the inside of my refrigerator because there is nothing to actually EAT. It is just jars and jars and jars of sauces, mustards, chutneys, pickles, peppers and jarred fruit. I had always assumed it was from the Penna Dutch side, but you're saying it was Scottish? I know it came from my dad's side because my mom was 100% Irish and it was Meat. Potatoes and iceberg lettuce Salad with green peppers. Every single meal. Her chili, not that anybody cares but I've always found it amusing, was what we would all call hamburger soup. Ground beef, onion, carrot and a can of tomatoes. There was maybe a dash of chili power in it, but nothing like you would think of when you thought of chili. She was a terrible cook because the food she served was so bland and boring. No seasoning. No herbs. My dad had been brought up on salt cured meats and smoked everything. He started cooking when I was really little. I think it was for pure survival. Suzy Seriously? 7 sweets and 7 sours. That'd take some big time thinking/planning. I have enough trouble with one meat, one salad, one veggie and one dessert :) **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026)

    01/06/2009 03:50:27
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohioto Montgomery Co
    2. Karen Zach
    3. Seriously? 7 sweets and 7 sours. That'd take some big time thinking/planning. I have enough trouble with one meat, one salad, one veggie and one dessert :) ----- Original Message ----- From: "Kathleen Lynch" <kslynch62@hotmail.com> To: "Montgomery County" <inmontgo@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 10:13 PM Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohioto Montgomery Co > > Suzy, United Brethren are like German Methodists. Church of the Brethren > is a modern church which descends from the Dunkers ; they were German > Baptists, to oversimplify the case. > My father had cousins in Jasonville, a very German town until quite late. > They stopped having church services in German because of social pressure > during WWI, but German was still the home-language for many when he lived > and worked there in the 1930's. Don't know about the 40's. His/my Dunker > descended family living in Montgomery County so squeezed out the > German-ness that I asked once if Shelleys were English, a question greeted > by such hilarity that I was seriously offended (I was about twelve, and a > sensitive blossom.) I only figured out why it was funny after I had done > quite a bit of genealogical research. Finding the bits was tough, and > doggone it, those relatives who laughed knew it all and just kept their > mouths shut! > The social pressure NOT to be German seems to have affected them deeply. > Then, too, my grandmother was all Scottish. But putting seven sweets and > seven sours on the table for every meal was a good clue involving no > language at all, I guess! It just took me an extra 50 years to understand > it. > Kathy >> From: Limequilla@aol.com >> Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 21:28:07 -0500 >> To: inmontgo@rootsweb.com >> Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to >> Montgomery Co >> >> >> Were there any special churches there? I always meant to ask. It >> appears a >> lot of the early obits I typed had to do with United Brethren Church. >> Was >> there an enclave of UB people? Were they the Brethren which are >> sometimes >> called the Dunkers? >> >> I had another question on if anybody recalls their ancestors spoke German >> at >> home, even though they were born in the US. I had a report from a >> cousin >> that they did. >> >> Suzy >> >> Many migrated here because of good land, good education, good water and >> good >> >> people :) Take your choice :) >> >> **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making >> headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026) >> >> http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ >> >> List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 03:22:05
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio toMontgomery Co
    2. Karen Zach
    3. There were a few early German-speaking ones in pockets (Darlington) but mostly not or at least to my knowledge. ----- Original Message ----- From: <Limequilla@aol.com> To: <inmontgo@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 9:28 PM Subject: Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio toMontgomery Co > > Were there any special churches there? I always meant to ask. It appears > a > lot of the early obits I typed had to do with United Brethren Church. > Was > there an enclave of UB people? Were they the Brethren which are > sometimes > called the Dunkers? > > I had another question on if anybody recalls their ancestors spoke German > at > home, even though they were born in the US. I had a report from a cousin > that they did. > > Suzy > > Many migrated here because of good land, good education, good water and > good > > people :) Take your choice :) > > **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making > headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026) > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 02:32:38
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to Montgomery Co
    2. Were there any special churches there? I always meant to ask. It appears a lot of the early obits I typed had to do with United Brethren Church. Was there an enclave of UB people? Were they the Brethren which are sometimes called the Dunkers? I had another question on if anybody recalls their ancestors spoke German at home, even though they were born in the US. I had a report from a cousin that they did. Suzy Many migrated here because of good land, good education, good water and good people :) Take your choice :) **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026)

    01/06/2009 02:28:07
    1. [InMontgo] Braxton Cash information
    2. Kim & Roger Hancock
    3. Here is the information from Oak Hill former Masonic cemetery AS FOR WHO IS BURIED IN North West Grand Div 177 IT IS OF COURSE BRAXTON CASH, LAURA CASH, JOHN CASH, BABY CASH, EMMA CHAMBERS THAT IS ALL. SO HIS SECOND WIFE IS BURIED NEXT TO HIM. and Emma Chambers is his daughter Death certificate lists his father as Leroy Cash born VA and mother Mary Patterson born VA Exact birth and death date can be found on www.findagrave.com as well as his obituary Kim On Sun, Jan 4, 2009 at 8:54 PM, Karen Zach <karen.zach@sbcglobal.net> wrote: > Not much at all on Braxton Cash (Love that name) -- might give you > something > to go on > > > Descendants of Braxton Cash > > > > > > Generation No. 1 > > > > 1. BRAXTON1 CASH was born Abt. 1843 in VA, and died Jun 1899. He married > (1) LAURA WOLVERTON, daughter of JOHN WOLVERTON. She was born Oct 1846 in > Indiana. He married (2) MARY ANN SIMPSON, daughter of SAMUEL SIMPSON and > MARY E.. She was born 06 Apr 1846 in Kentucky, and died 27 Feb 1873. > > > > Notes for BRAXTON CASH: > > obits in Crawfordsville Weekly Journal 6-16-1899 p 5 c 3; p 9 c 5 - marr #1 > ? Simpson; #2 Laura Wolverton > > == > > p. 42 CC Twp, MOnt Co IN 1870 census #322 > > Simpson, Sam 53 Farmer 16000/2000 KY > > Mary E. 44 keeps house KY > > Emma 21 > > Wm. 19 > > Sarah 22 all b. Ky > > Cash, Braxton 30 Farm Lab E. Va > > Mary A 24 Keeps house KY > > Wallace, Ann 76 Retired Housekeeper Ky > > Foster, THomas 19 Farm Lab Ind > > Kincade Franklin 7 Ind > > > > > > Notes for LAURA WOLVERTON: > > 1900 Union Twp Mont Co IN census#318 > > Laura Oct 1840 wid age 53 4 ch 3 living iN NJ OH > > John L. son July 1883 IN VA IN > > Emma dau June 1887 same > > Edwin son Aug 1889 same > > > > Notes for MARY ANN SIMPSON: > > she is buried New richmond Cem, CC Twp, Mont Co IN - he is not listed - > wonder if they moved out of area > > > > Children of BRAXTON CASH and LAURA WOLVERTON are: > > 2. i. EDWIN2 CASH, b. Aug 1889, Montgomery Co IN. > > ii. EMMA CASH, b. Jun 1887, Montgomery County, Indiana. > > iii. JOHN L. CASH, b. Jul 1883, Montgomery County, Indiana. > > > > > > Generation No. 2 > > > > 2. EDWIN2 CASH (BRAXTON1) was born Aug 1889 in Montgomery Co IN. He > married BETTIE STUMP 06 Feb 1913 in Crawfordsville, iN by BE Antrobus > Montgomery Co IN Marr Bk 6 p 9, daughter of GILBERT STUMP and MARY > BLACKETER. She was born Abt. 1897 in Montgomery Co IN. > > > > Notes for EDWIN CASH: > > Record of Marriages Montogmery Co IN 1913 p 29 -- Edwin Cash 24 Farmer b. > Mont Co resides Mont Co single Father; Baxton Cash Mother; Laura WOlverton > married C'ville by BE Antrobus > > Bettie Stump 22 b Mont Co resides MOnt Co single Father; Gilbert stump > Mother; Mary Blacketer 2-6-1913 > > > > Children of EDWIN CASH and BETTIE STUMP are: > > 3. i. MABEL M.3 CASH, b. Abt. 1915, New Market, Montgomery Co IN. > > ii. LLOYD CASH, b. Abt. 1918. > > 4. iii. MALCOLM E. CASH, b. 08 Jan 1935; d. 29 Oct 2008, st. Clare > Medical Ceneter, Crawfordsville, Montgomery Co IN. > > iv. WALLACE CASH, b. Abt. 1922. > > v. LOUISE CASH, b. Abt. 1922. > > vi. ROBERT CASH, b. Abt. 1921. > > > > > > Generation No. 3 > > > > 3. MABEL M.3 CASH (EDWIN2, BRAXTON1) was born Abt. 1915 in New Market, > Montgomery Co IN. She married NED A. BOWERS 20 Oct 1940 in Turkey Run > State > Park Rev. BE Elliott Lloyd witness Marr Bk 1940 p 23, son of CARL BOWERS > and > ICY BOOTS. He was born Abt. 1916 in Darlington IN. > > > > Children of MABEL CASH and NED BOWERS are: > > i. GWEN4 BOWERS, b. Abt. 1942. > > ii. ROXIE BOWERS, b. Abt. 1945. > > > > > > 4. MALCOLM E.3 CASH (EDWIN2, BRAXTON1) was born 08 Jan 1935, and died 29 > Oct 2008 in st. Clare Medical Ceneter, Crawfordsville, Montgomery Co IN. > He > married JUDITH C. DEBARD. She was born Abt. 1935, and died Aft. 2008. > > > > Notes for MALCOLM E. CASH: > > Crawfordsville Jouranl Review Oct 31, 2008 -- Malcolm E. Cash 73 of C'ville > died Wed at 5:56 p.m. at St. Clare MEdical Center. He was born Jan 8, 1935 > to Edwin and Betty Cash. He was a graduate of New Market HS in 1953. He > married Judith C. DeBard Nov 8, 1958. She survives. He was a paratrooper > in > the US Army. He retired from RR Donnelley & Burns Security. He was a membr > of the America Legion. Other survivors include daughters, Cathi Cash of > C'ville and Carla Petrulionis of Linden; two brothers, Wallace Cash and > Robert Cash; sister Louise Cash and one grandch. he was prec in death by a > son, James E. Cash, three brothers and a sister. Funeral services will be > Tuesday at 3 p.m. at Hunt & Son Funeral HOme. Burial in Oak Hill Mausoleum. > visitors will beone-hour prior to services. Online condolences may be made > at www.huntandson.com > > > > > > > > > > Children of MALCOLM CASH and JUDITH DEBARD are: > > i. CATHI4 CASH, b. Abt. 1965. > > ii. CARLA CASH, b. Abt. 1965. > > iii. JAMES E. CASH, b. Abt. 1965; d. Bef. 2008. > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Kim & Roger Hancock" <hancock@link2000.net> > To: <inmontgo@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Sunday, January 04, 2009 8:48 PM > Subject: [InMontgo] Help with Veterans in masonic > > > >> Before I research the rest of the veterans I am working on, I am > going > >> to > >> give you guys a list, and then it will save me some time > >> > > The Veterans I am working on this week are as follows and if anybody can > > help with information it would be appreciate it. This is gonna take > > awhile > > and the more help the better and quicker we can get the veteran stones > for > > the unmarked ones at Masonic. Headlee has his own stone as some do, some > > do > > not. > > I still have to map out the cemetery and get with Suzie and compare my > lot > > info wiht her plot information, so if any of these are your family let me > > know and I can get all buried in that particular lot with no monuments. > > > > Peter Barnhart > > John C. Maxwell > > William L. Galey > > James Martin Simpson > > Braxton Cash > > John M. Macy > > > > William H. McIntosh > > James M. Simpson > > William S. Masterson > > Jackson Newkirk > > \G. D. Roderick > > > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > > ------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > > INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    01/06/2009 02:25:41
    1. Re: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to Montgomery Co
    2. Karen Zach
    3. Many migrated here because of good land, good education, good water and good people :) Take your choice :) ----- Original Message ----- From: <Limequilla@aol.com> To: <INMONTGO@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 9:22 PM Subject: [InMontgo] Migration NJ to Colerain Twp Ham.Co Ohio to Montgomery Co > Hi all -- > > Are there any people on here who have a migration pattern of New Jersey to > Colerain Township, Hamilton Co Ohio (Near Cincinnati) to Fountain or > Montgomery > Counties? > > OR do you know of any surnames that would be in such a migration? > > Here are some I found on One World Tree, but I wondered if there was some > sort of mass migration, and then I wondered why. And why Montgomery Co. > > Tate > Stout > Wert > Tumey > Compton > Corson > Maybe Titus, Barnes and Wilkinson > > **************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making > headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026) > > http://ingenweb.org/inmontgomery/ > > List Manager - inmontgo-admin@rootsweb.com > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > INMONTGO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/06/2009 02:24:22