A few days ago someone was enquiring about a Canada Marsh. I can't remember what this person was wanting to know about him, but I have some 1880's Jay County, IN court papers signed by him. He was an attorney. I'm sure whoever was enquiring about him already knows this, but just in case they don't, I thought I would mention it. Michael Ross Matherly > >
Hello List, This is the correct url for the Economy cemetery page. http://www.rootsweb.com/~inrandol/economy.htm I will try and have the link corrected on the cemetery page by this weekend, if all goes well. but until then please keep this url handy. Also there has been several people confused over the cemetery pages. I built a main page that lists all the cemeteries, in alphabetical order by township. Each link for the cemetery will take you to THAT township page. You will then have to scroll down to the cemetery you are looking for. Again on the Township page the cemeteries are in alphabetical order. I am trying to get records and photos for all the cemeteries. If you see a cemetery without a photo, or if you have records to contribute please send me an email. Thanks, Gina Richardson INGenWeb Volunteer Coordinator Randolph County IN http://www.rootsweb.com/~inrandol/
Hi Listers, I promised to keep all of you informed of the progress we're making on the Delaware County GenFest plans for 2005. Mike, Gina and I met today with Ginny Nilles and Mary Lou Gentis (of the Muncie Public Library). The meeting was productive and the MPL is willing to be involved in ways for which I'd only hoped. This is what we have so far: The GenFest will take place the second weekend in June, 2005, AT THE LIBRARY. The MPL has everything we need to make this successful, mainly restrooms (*smile*), power (for laptops), a cafe for our carry in or catered (undetermined as yet) needs, and lots of resources. Plenty of parking is also available. Friday night we are going to have a mixer but plans are still in the works for that. Library hours will be extended and extra help available for researchers. Saturday will be an all day affair: food, research, lots of pamphlets, maps and we're hoping to have representatives from surrounding historical and genealogical agencies and a program as well as some demo tables. Ginny came up with a great idea - a Genealogy Marketplace where these agencies, etc can peddle their resources. Details for this will be decided later. We've scheduled another meeting in two weeks in which we hope to have more people involved representing Minnetrista, Bracken Library (Ball State), Delaware County Historical Society, LDS Family History Center and more. So there you have it...a date to mark on your calendar and a lot for which to look forward. So many good ideas have come up that I just can't relate all in a single email. I'm still wide open to ideas and suggestions and will be checking now and again for attendance. We need your input. I'll keep you posted as we progress. Be sure to contact me off list with your comments, suggestions, etc. unicorn1945@sbcglobal.net Shirley Pearson GenFest Coordinator PS Start saving dimes for the copy machines and brings lots of blank CDs. PSS Gina - if I've forgotten anything, speak up.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: SCHLEIGER / WEST Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Bk.2ADE/1539 Message Board Post: SEEKING INFO--- CHARLES EDWIN SCHLEIGER ---BORN UNION CITY RANDOLPH COUNTY,INDIANA ON 14 SEPT.1866 MARRIED TO LUCY ADELINE WEST. THANKS
Thanks, Phil. Seems like I get Green Township Cemeteries under both links. Nancy
Gina, I cannot get the Economy Cemetery link to work on the Randolph County Cemetery web page. The link takes me to Green Twsp and I find nothing about Economy Cemetery.(Unless I am overlooking it) My gg Granfather Elijah Arnold and his wife Rhoda are buried in Economy, along with her family. (Fife). So I am interested in an Information on Economy Cemetery. Phil Arnold --------------------------------- Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail SpamGuard - Read only the mail you want.
INRANDOL-L@rootsweb.com Especially: Dave capfree@bright.net Gary Lane Las Vegas, NV B4GLANE@aol.com marmeelib@hotmail.com The Freemans I would like to know more about are: 1. Joseph E. Freeman 1901-1974, buried 25 Feb 1974, Maxville, LO Joseph & Grace Weeks. 2. George M. Freeman (husband) buried 13 Feb 1964, Maxville George was first married to Mirtie B.; he was second married to Pearl; he was third married to Martha Wiley. Are Joseph and George brothers? Anyone with information on either of these families, please respond. Thanks! Nancy jupearl@aol.com
Salutations fellow Genealogy Divas and Buffs, Can you help? Wiliam Albert Goodwin Born abt 1861 in IN or ILL. and lived mainly in Bates and Stone county area had a father David that was killed in the war. Anything will help me very much. Did he have more children, where did they move, I will take any info on these people : Irene Jane Modlin - Maudlin ; Born March 1840 St. Joseph County, IN Died:April 08, 1909 in Adrian, Bates Co. MO who married David Goodwin: Born in ? , Milford , Ioquois County, Ill Married Bef:1860 at: Milford, Iroquois Co., Il. Died Bef: 1864 In Union Missing in Action then: Married in 1867 to Paris Mendenhall Lane B: Oct. 18 1843 ; Wayne Twp. Tippecanoe, IN Died Jult 7 1900: Spruce, MO Bates County Then: Joseph Musgrove; Married: 26 NOV 1901 at: Adrian, Bates Co., Mo. I think the following info is him but not sure, can someone help me. In the 1920 Twp, Stone Co. MO Census William Albert Goodwin b: ABT. 1861 Milford, Iroquois Co., Il. or in IN Married 1879 at: Bates Co., Mo. Died: 1950 at: Berryville, Carroll Co., Ar. Married Bridget Ann "Annie" Lawson b: ABT. 1859 in IN Child : Albert Warren Goodwin B: 15 SEP 1884 in Butler, Bates, MO, Death: 11 MAR 1950 in Stone, MO, married :19 JUL 1904 in Stone, MO, Frances Isabel Horn : b: 12 JUL 1887 in Baxter, Stone, MO, married :19 JUL 1904 in Stone, MO, Moved 1907 Moved 1922 Irene Jane Modlin / Maudlin Goodwin Lane Musgrove father was: Barnabas Modlin - Maudlin Mother: Martha HODGE Other children of Irene Jane are Ida May Lane B; 1867 Born: 1867 at: Il Married: 19 MAY 1886 at: Deepwater Twp., Bates Co., Mo. Died: ? at: ? Spouses: William R. KELLER >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>became missing B: abt 1860 Indiana ( There is a William Keller that died on Cherokee st in ST Louis, need help on this) Samuel Burtley LANE Born: 21 JAN 1869 at: Milford, Iroquois Co., Il. Married: 12 JUN 1888 at: Deepwater Twp., Butler, Bates Co., Mo. Died: 17 JUN 1929 at: Bastrop, La. Spouses: Sara A. BARNETT / Ora Mae COX Children of Ida May Keller are: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>Became missing Name: Irene Jane KELLER >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Became missing Born: FEB 1887 at: Spruce, Bates Co., Mo. Married: 19 FEB 1903 at: Adrian, Bates Co., Mo. Died: ? at: ? Spouses: William SATTERLEE >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Became missing The missing were to gether in an accident or killed by a raid at the same time according to the stories told by 2 different survivors a daughter of Ida May Lane Keller and the granddaughter Stella Mae Satterlee. I found the home Stella Mae Satterlee was adopted by in KS. But no other info on the missing. The missing "EVENT" may have happened in KS. Thank you all Betty Jo
Hello List, I have had a few complaints and suggestions about the email list and wanted to remind everyone of a few things when sending emails to the list. When you reply to sender, it sends the messages back to the list. Please snip just the portion of the email that pertains to what you are replying to, not the complete email. This is a nice thing to do for all of our digest mode listers, so their emails don't get bogged down with the same thing repeatedly. Make sure your subject line includes the topic of your email. If the topic is clear and precise, those not interested can delete them. Try to keep personal messages off-list. I know sometimes accidents do happen, I have done this myself on a few occasions, but try to send messages that are off topic, off the list. I am glad to see activity on the list. And I am happy to say that we have several new subscribers. But try to keep it related to genealogy and history. Send the personal messages privately. If you have complaints or suggestions please send them to me personally, not to the list. richardson69@comcast.net And if you are trying to unsubscribe, an email must be sent to the following email address NOT the list email. If you are subscribed to mail mode use the following email. INRANDOL-L-request@rootsweb.com If you are subscribed to digest mode use the following email. INRANDOL-D-request@rootsweb.com You only need to put the word unsubscribe in the body of the message. Do not put it in the subject line. Ok I am done scolding! Now on to the praise... Thank you for being so great and supportive of me, while I have been learning how to do all this coordinator stuff and during all the changes to the website! <G> You have all been Wonderful! Gina Richardson INGenWeb Volunteer Coordinator Randolph County IN http://www.rootsweb.com/~inrandol/
Hi Maxine, Sorry, but no, I don't have any of the books I mentioned. Those are all books that I want to get to read and study. I'm going to try and get some of them through my local library on loan, if my local library can get them on loan. I'll see. Mike W. Wilton wrote: >Michael; > Do you have any of these books you are listed here in your message??? > I also have Smithson/ Thornburg's /Clevenger's / Rooks/ Holloway/ and other's who were in late 1700's andi n and till even now Randolph and Delaware and other Co's of ind. > I think that some of the Moravian's as thye moved on were some from Bisop Spangenburg's bunch by way of descenants. > It was also said that Chief Haigler of Catawba's had given a dua name Jar Fly Jarmasn to Jonathon Barett as a wife but can't prove this. They had Abel and Bathsheba who I am descen from. She mar Samuel Oxford Jr of Catawba County in N C and had a dau name Bathsheba Oxford who mar Jacob Byler who was of d escending of Menonites or thr other ones that use buggys and no electricity even some places today. I can't think of Religeon name. mant still live in Penn and mo. > >Maxine Wilton >willma@sprynet.com > > > >==== INRANDOL Mailing List ==== >How old would you be if you didn't know how old you were? --Sachel Paige >Contributed By: Billy J. Baker > >============================== >Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration >Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. >http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 > > > > >
To unsubscribe from the email list, go to the following page and follow the directions on how to unsubscribe. http://www.rootsweb.com/~inrandol/Randolph_Count/EmailListx.html The list is automated, there is a link there for you to send an email to with just the word unsubscribe. If you have trouble unsubscribing let me know. Thanks, Gina Richardson INGenWeb Volunteer Coordinator Randolph County IN http://www.rootsweb.com/~inrandol/ ----- Original Message ----- From: <Sweetenuf56@aol.com> To: <INRANDOL-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2004 3:44 PM Subject: Re: [INRANDOL] Redpath > Please remove me from email list. Thank you > > > ==== INRANDOL Mailing List ==== > Don't count the years,...count the memories. > Contributed By: Austin Cox > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 >
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Michael, The Ritenour Reitenour name is so confusing! I also had a discussion with Monisa last year and she indicated that these were two different families. According to the 1990 History of Randolph County compiled by the Randolph County Historical Society page 620 "During the 1730-50 time period there were more than a dozen named Reitenauer who came from the Alsace-Lorraine area, bringing families with them." Probably the spelling got changed over the years. The Robert Ritenour you listed in the 1880 census as the son of David and Susan Ross Ritenour was the second husband of my great grandfather's sister. Robert married Clara Snider 30 Nov 1889 in Randolph County. I am guessing that Clara died by 1900 because Robert is listed as a widower with 3 daughters living with his parents in the 1900 census. I haven't been able to determine their marriage date, but by the 1910 census Robert was married to my great grandfather's sister (a widow) Annie Ramsey Mullin living in White River Township, Randolph County. I have both Robert and Annie living there during the 1920 and 1930 censuses. Annie died in July 1949 and is buried in Fountain Park Cemetery, Winchester. I don't have any death or burial information for Robert. Hope this helps. Lynne Ramsey Durocher __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail SpamGuard - Read only the mail you want. http://antispam.yahoo.com/tools
Please remove me from email list. Thank you
I noticed someone researching Redpath. I belong to another messageboard and these just came to me in an email and I thought you might be interested in them.....Mike http://www.genealogy.com/users/r/e/d/Irene-M-Redpath-1/TREE/0002tree.html http://www.myroots.co.uk/redpath/ > >
Thank you Maxine for your very interesting information and family history. Was Bishop Spnagenburgh who worked with the Catawbas in NC connected in any way to the Moravian missions on the White River in Randolph, Delaware, Madison and other nearby counties in Indiana, who worked with the Delawares, and other tribes in those mission villages ? I think some of my ancestors were at some of these missions, even back to the ones in Ohio and Pennsylvania including Gnadenhutten. The Moravians kept very detailed diaries and journals of everyday accounts and they also kept records of names of those born there, babtized, who died there, married and many other records. I am hoping to get copies of some of the diaries and journals that the missionaries had that were working at the White River Mission. The Indiana Historical Society has some of them. Below is a list of things I want to get copies of. Luckenbach, Abraham, "Biography of Brother Luckenbach, written by Himself and Left for his Dear Children." [c. 1850] Trans. Harry Emelius Stocker. in Stocker, A History of the Moravian Mission Among the Indians on the White River in Indiana, pp. 131-180, Bethlehem: Times Publishing Co., 1917. (Weslager: "...provide[s] information about Delaware customs, names of chiefs of the three subdivisions, witchcraft, and notes on the social and economic development of the tribe.") Gipson, Lawrence Henry, ed. The Moravian Mission on White River [Indiana]: Diaries and letters, May 5, 1799 to November 12, 1806. Indiana Historical Collections 23. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Bureau, 1938. *Indiana Historical Society. Walam Olum or Red Score: The Migration Legend of the Lenni Lenape or Delaware Indians--A New Translation, Interpreted by Linguistic, Historical, Archaeological, Ethnological, and Physical Anthropological Studies. Chicago: The Lakeside Press, 1954. Thompson, Charles N. Sons of the Wilderness, John and William Conner. Indiana Historical Society Publications 12, Indianapolis, 1937. Second Edition, Conner Prairie Press: Noblesville, IN, 1988. ISBN 0-9617367-6-3. Available from Amazon.com or by U.S. mail to Amazon.com, P.O. Box 15550, New Castle, DE 19720-5550 for $11.01 plus $3.99 shipping, total $15.00. Credit cards O.K. Timothy Crumrin, Historian for Conner Prairie, in the publication A Living History Museum, had this to say --in part--about the book. "By tracing the experiences of William Conner, his parents, and his brother John and his other siblings in this book, and by learning more of William's Delaware Indian Family, one can see much of the United States' early history unfold. By learning about the Conners, the reader learns about Native American/White interaction, the creation of middle America, and the insistent movement westward into new frontiers--no matter who had to be pushed out, or how." (Weslager: "Despite a misleading title, is an authentic account of the Delawares in Indiana and their role in the War of 1812. Thompson, however, made an error that Ferguson and others perpetuated. He mistakenly identified Mekinges (mother of the Delaware chiefs John and James Conner) as the daughter of Chief William Anderson.") Thornbrough, Gayle, ed. Letter Book of the Indian Agency at Fort Wayne 1809-1815. Indiana Historical Society Publications 21. Indianapolis. 1961. (Weslager comment: "Contains letters about the Delawares written by two United States Indian agents, Benjamin F. Stickney and John Johnston. Johnston supervised the Delawares for many years and was well regarded by the tribe.") *Voegelin, Erminie W. "Culture Parallels to the Delaware Walam Olum." "Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science 49:29-31. 1939. (This chapter was expanded into a full chapter entitled "Parallels to the Delaware Walam Olum," and published in 1954 in Walam Olum, or Red Score: The Migration Legend of the Lenni Lenape or Delaware Indians. (Weslager comment: "Introduces evidence... that other eastern tribes preserved the story of their past by pictographs painted on sticks and that there is little reason to doubt the authenticity of the Wala Olum.") *Walam Olum, or Red Score: The Migration Legend of the Lenni Lenape or Delaware Indians. Charles F. Voeglin, trans: Contributions by Eli Lilly, Erminie W. Voegelin, Joe E. Pierce, Glenn A. Black, Georg K. Newmann, 2nd, Paul Weer,. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. 1954. (Weslager comment: "According to the interpretations made..., the Delawares came to Alaska from Asia across the Bering Strait..., and then went south to the Mississippi River. There they engaged in a war with the Taligewi tribe, after which they continued their journey to the East.") Weer, Paul. "Thomas Dean and the Delaware Towns." Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science 56:26-32. 1947. (Weslager: "A reliable and extremely valuable description ... of Delaware village locations, customs, and the names of their leaders during the period when the main body occupied Indiana.") ________. The Delaware Indians, A History. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1972. (Reprinted Feb. 1990 by Rutgers University Press. ISBN: 0813514940.) Available from the Delaware Tribal Gift Shop, 220 N.W. Virginia Avenue, Bartlesville, OK 74003 for $20 plus $4 shipping, total $24. This may not be available currently. (Weslager comments: When White settlers overran Indiana, the United States government moved the Delawares across the Mississippi to new homes in Missouri Territory. Eight years later the government moved them from Missouri to Kansas Territory, and in 1867 the Delawares [except for the Kansas Delaware--Editor] finally migrated to Indian Territory, now Oklahoma. Weslager discusses these movements...and amplifies the details in The Delaware Indian Westward Migration.") The American Historical Review says: "One of the best tribal histories...decades of research...a rich blend of archeology, anthropology, and Indian oral traditions." Barnes and Noble has used paperbacks @$32-40 and used hard covers $65-87 plus shipping, but also new paperbacks @$17.95 plus shipping. On 29 August 2002 Amazon.com offered the December 1990 paperback edition retail $23,00 at $16.10 plus shipping. They also offered the second edition of the original hardback of 1972 for $51.75 plus shipping. *Barlow, William, and David O. Powell. "The Late Dr. Ward of Indiana: Rafinesque's Source of the Walum Olum". Indiana Magazine of History 82 (2):185-193. 1986. *_________. The Walum Olum and Dr. Ward, Again. Indiana Magazine of History 83 (4) 4:344-349. 1987. Dean, John Candee. "Journal of Thomas Dean, a Voyage to Indiana in 1817," Indiana Historical Collections No. 6, pp. 273-345. Indianapolis: Indian Historical Bureau. 1918. (Weslager, "...reliable and extremely valuable descriptions of Delaware village locations, customs, and the names of their leaders during the period when the main body occupied Indiana.") Ferguson, Roger James. The White River Indiana Delawares: An Ethnohistoric Synthesis, 1795-1867. Ed. D. dissertation, Ball State University, Muncie, IN, 1972. (W) *Lilly, Eli. "Tentative Speculations on the Chronology of the Walum Olum and the Migration Route of the Lenape. "Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science 54:33 [Check this.-Ed]. 1944. W. Wilton wrote: > I have a set of 9 of the Bishop Spnagenburgh's diaries that were printed >in books. (8 are original copies and the 9th is a copy of the original 9th >book.) when he took the Moravian's into NC in 1700's. Unfortuneatly there >isn't any index to any of them. >I did find my 5th granfa listed there as he lived close and helped the >Catawba's then. He has a MT. named after him. "Barrett's Mountain " >there. Name was Jonathon Barrett. I also have some imfo abt the Chief or >King Haigler ( Hagler ) there. >Maxine Wilton >W Wilton >willma@sprynet.com > > >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Michael Matherly" <michael@michaelmatherly.com> >To: <INRANDOL-L@rootsweb.com> >Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2004 10:11 AM >Subject: [INRANDOL] Dr. Ward > > > > >>Can anyone tell me for sure if Randolph county's Dr. Ward was really a >>Moravian United Brethren missionary or not, as some say he was ? Even >>though he did heal the Delaware indians on the White River there, from a >>sickness, I can't see the Delawares giving him such a valuable and >>sherished tribal item as the Wallum Ollum. I just can't see them, >>giving this to anyone at all, that it would be kept within the tribe by >>the legend keeper, being that it would have been a sacred object to >>them. I do know that many of the Moravian missionaries married native >>american women and I was wondering if anyone has heard anything about >>maybe Dr. Ward's mother might have been native american ? >> >>Mike >> >> >> >> >>> >>> >>==== INRANDOL Mailing List ==== >>Don't count the years,...count the memories. >>Contributed By: Austin Cox >> >>============================== >>Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration >>Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. >>http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 >> >> >> > > >==== INRANDOL Mailing List ==== >"Love is the only thing that multiplies when you divide it." >Contributed By: Doris L. Wolfe > >============================== >Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration >Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. >http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 > > > > >
Michael; Do you have any of these books you are listed here in your message??? I also have Smithson/ Thornburg's /Clevenger's / Rooks/ Holloway/ and other's who were in late 1700's andi n and till even now Randolph and Delaware and other Co's of ind. I think that some of the Moravian's as thye moved on were some from Bisop Spangenburg's bunch by way of descenants. It was also said that Chief Haigler of Catawba's had given a dua name Jar Fly Jarmasn to Jonathon Barett as a wife but can't prove this. They had Abel and Bathsheba who I am descen from. She mar Samuel Oxford Jr of Catawba County in N C and had a dau name Bathsheba Oxford who mar Jacob Byler who was of d escending of Menonites or thr other ones that use buggys and no electricity even some places today. I can't think of Religeon name. mant still live in Penn and mo. Maxine Wilton willma@sprynet.com
Some people have a very straight-line idea of "related". I have a cousin (3rd) who thinks our ggg grandfather's brother's lines aren't ours. Go figure but I guess I should feel lucky to have her think of me as a cousin. *grin* ----- Original Message ----- From: Michael Matherly To: INRANDOL-L@rootsweb.com Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2004 11:38 AM Subject: Re: [INRANDOL] Photographer Hi Susan. I have already spoken with Monisa Wiesner and she says her Reitenours are not related to my Ritenours although I've had others tell me they thought they were connected. It always made me wonder why my Ritenours are buried in her Rietenours cemetery, but who knows....not I. Thanks again. Mike > > > >> >> > > > > > ==== INRANDOL Mailing List ==== To Forget One's Ancestors Is To Be a Brook Without A Source, A Tree Without a Root. - Chinese Proverb ============================== Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237
You're quite welcome! ----- Original Message ----- From: Lampshire, Cathy To: INRANDOL-L@rootsweb.com Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2004 11:20 AM Subject: RE: [INRANDOL] Portrait & Bio Records of Delware&Randolph Co- book Shirley, Thank you so much for checking. Cathy -----Original Message----- From: Shirley [mailto:unicorn1945@sbcglobal.net] Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2004 10:19 AM To: INRANDOL-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [INRANDOL] Portrait & Bio Records of Delware&Randolph Co- book Cathy, Nothing on Redpath. Shirley ----- Original Message ----- From: Lampshire, Cathy To: INRANDOL-L@rootsweb.com Sent: Tuesday, February 17, 2004 12:16 PM Subject: [INRANDOL] Portrait & Bio Records of Delware&Randolph Co- book Does any one have the book: Portrait & Biographical Records of Delaware and Randolph Counties, 1894 & 1992. If so, could I ask you to look up the surname REDPATH ? Thank you, Cathy Lampshire ==== INRANDOL Mailing List ==== Would anyone like to submit a phrase or thought for the day for the tagline, send an Email to Gina Richardson richardson69@comcast.net ============================== Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 ==== INRANDOL Mailing List ==== "Love is the only thing that multiplies when you divide it." Contributed By: Doris L. Wolfe ============================== Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 ==== INRANDOL Mailing List ==== To Forget One's Ancestors Is To Be a Brook Without A Source, A Tree Without a Root. - Chinese Proverb ============================== Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237
Darn, I was hoping that you might find something there. Yes it does seem odd they wouldn't be related. Susan -----Original Message----- From: Michael Matherly [mailto:michael@michaelmatherly.com] Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2004 12:39 PM To: INRANDOL-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [INRANDOL] Photographer Hi Susan. I have already spoken with Monisa Wiesner and she says her Reitenours are not related to my Ritenours although I've had others tell me they thought they were connected. It always made me wonder why my Ritenours are buried in her Rietenours cemetery, but who knows....not I. Thanks again. Mike > > > >> >> > > > > > ==== INRANDOL Mailing List ==== To Forget One's Ancestors Is To Be a Brook Without A Source, A Tree Without a Root. - Chinese Proverb ============================== Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237