This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: kclaudia55 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/2097.1.2.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Elmer, Nellie and Lillian were born in Indiana. Francis Mosely was my grandmother and Golden Abbott was my mother. I am interested in who all of you are and what relation to me. Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: gaaldrich01 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/123.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I know this reply is to a very old inquiry but thought I'd take a chance. I am related to Nancy Linville through Robert smith. My g grandfather was William James Smith son of Nancy and Robert. Do you have any inf on William James? Judy Smith Aldrich daughter of Levi Edward Smith Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: BBlimm Surnames: Beck, Madden, Hooker Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/2117/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I am looking for any information on the family of Sarah Ann Madden Beck who married Emsley Hooker 28 Nov 1841 in Clark Co., IN I believe Sarah passed away abt 1859 In Vienna Twp., Scott Co. and Emsley passed away abt 1862 in Vienna Twp.,Scott Co. I would like to find out the parents of Sarah and where she is buried. Any information you could help me with would be greatly appreciated. Thank you, Barbara Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: howserc82 Surnames: Williams, Smith, Kahl, LaMaster Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/109.142.292.2.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Joseph A. Williams and Mary Jane Williams had 3 children, Thomas who was born 1892 and died overseas during WWI of the flu. Rosa Jane (my great-grandmother) and Mary Elizabeth Williams. These children lived with their mother's brother Samuel and his wife Lavisa after their mother's death until he remarried, Effie Wood. Joseph and Effie lived in Greenwood, Indiana where they are buried. I have a picture of the above mentioned Thomas who died during WWI, he never married. I have a couple of pictures of Mary Elizabeth Williams who married Harry Enteman. I have another picture of Samuel Williams and Lavisa "Vice" LaMaster, I do not have a list of their children, would like to have if anyone knows. I have a picture, on the back it says Merv. Williams and wife, Uncle John's oldest son. This is in my grandmother's handwriting, I do not have a John listed, would this be the brother of Joseph A. Williams or Mary Jane Williams?????I have a picture of the tombstone, the obit and funeral card of Granville Lee Williams, He lived in Indianapolis, buried at Memorial Park Cemetery and had sisters Dorthy VanDyke, Jean Kirkman, Lois Sinn, brothers...Robert and Lawrence Williams, I do not know how they tie in. To make this a little more confusing, Mary Jane Williams who was married to Joseph A. Williams first (Effie Wood second) was the d/o James A. Williams and Mary Elizabeth Smith. Mary Elizabeth Smith was also married to George W. Williams. Both of these men are buried side by side at Bridgewater Cemetery. Both fought in the civil war. Are these two related in some way???? This info. was sent to me by Frances Stroffregen: Joseph A. Williams and Effie Wood had two sons Walter J. Williams and Lawrence. Mary Elizabeth Smith was married to George W. Williams first, he was born 1840, died April 23, 1870, Civil War Co. B. Ind. Inf. 93rd his father Hezekiah Williams. They had the followin children: Magnolia, born 1862, Margaret Ellen b. 1865 and William W. She married second, James A. Williams on May 24, 1871, he died in 1877, Civil War Co. H 58th Ind. Inf. They had the following children: Samuel (who married Lavisa), Mary Jane (my gggrandmother)who married Joseph A. Williams, James M. and Martha. Mary Elizabeth Smith Williams wife of James, applied for a government pension Aug., 18, 1882. APP 289150, 223100 or 227100 Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: Lsugrad1995 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/109.142.292.2/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I'm 99% sure that Effie Mae Wood is Maudie Wood's daughter. I think whoever wrote "Aunt Maudie Kahl" was just referencing their relationship with Maudie. Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: Lsugrad1995 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/109.142.292.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Thank you! I will pass these along to my Grandma Kahl (husband of Robert L. Kahl Sr). Maudie Wood was my Grandpa Kahl's mother. Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: howserc82 Surnames: Williams, LaMaster, Wood Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/109.142.292/mb.ashx Message Board Post: This is the above mentioned picture. Woman on the left is Lavisa LaMaster Williams, wife of Samuel Williams (man on the left). Samuel was the brother of Mary Jane Williams first wife of Joseph A. Williams (the man on the right) The woman on the right is Effie Mae Wood Williams second wife of Joseph. Samuel Williams and his wife "Vice" helped to raise the children of Joseph and Mary Jane Williams after her death. Joseph and Mary Jane's daughter Rosa, married Lewis Cass LaMaster, nephew of Lavisa LaMaster Williams. WHEW....I am slowly unraveling this family! Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: howserc82 Surnames: Williams, LaMaster, Kahl Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/109.142.291.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Randy, I posted this quite a while ago, I don't have the picture that is mentioned in my file, probably stored somewhere. I do believe that it is the same picture that I am going to post here, this one is marked with only my great-grandmother's name on the back. The woman in the white blouse is Rosa Jane Williams LaMaster. Her father, Joseph A. Williams married second Effie Wood. I believe that the other women in this picture are her daughters. If you can confirm this, that would be awesome! Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: Lsugrad1995 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/109.142.291/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Aunt Maudie Kahl is Maudie (Wood) Kahl. She is/was my great grandma. She married Albert T. Kahl. I would love to see this picture. Thanks, Randy Kahl rkahl@austin.rr.com Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
I have reference to 19th Century Personalities in Scott Co. I have no idea what form this is in . . book, article, etc. Does anyone know where I can see a copy of this? It seems I'm related to some of the early Scott Co people. Thanks Kay in CA
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: Jan Beasley Surnames: DeBerry, Peacock Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/813.2.1.1.2/mb.ashx Message Board Post: George, Relating to your posts in 2003 to the Ancestry.com message boards for Scott County, Indiana, do you still have the photos of the classes at the Wiggam School in 1898 and about 4 or 5 years later? Could you either email them to me or post them as a reply to this message on the message boards? My great-grand father, William Whitsitt DeBerry, known as Will DeBerry or W. W. DeBerry, was the teacher there. And the children of the Peacock family who attended the school are also related. Due to computer problems and moving I no longer have what you sent in 2003. I would really appreciate having the pictures. Jan Beasley Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
I am a descendant of John Richey through both Dr. John Richey, who married Sichy Collings, daughter of William Elston Collings, founder of the Pigeon Roost settlement, and Dr. John¹s brother, Joseph Richey who married Lydia Wells. By the way, Dr. John was a botanist who come to Indiana to study the plant life, not a medical doctor. My great grandmother was Clarisa Richey and great grandfather, Gorge Phegley, was the son of Mary Richey and Richard Phegley. When I was in high school in 1950, my great uncle, Thomas Phegley, was still living and as a young man knew Sichy. She came over to their house often and told how they had escaped the Pigeon Roost massacre. Uncle Tom told it to me and I wrote it down and sometime back put it in our Genealogy Newsletter. Not an eye witness account but as close as I was going to get by then.
My OOPS. Margaret Herberger was my dad¹s sister which makes her my aunt, not cousin.
John Richey, the father of Dr. John Richey, fought in the Revolutionary War. If I remember right he was married to Hattie Cook. Dr. John Richey would have been too young. I believe someone has already filed with DAR on John Richey as his widow filed for a pension when he died in 1822 and had to prove his service record. Hope this helps. I too, am descended from Dr. John and his father John through Martha and Polly Ann Richey. Judith Jones ---
Your grandmother Margaret is apparently my first cousin Margaret Herberger. I have some things that you may or may not have. One from the Matthias Sitler Society of Baltimore, two articles that appeared in The Greensburg Standard of minutes of meetings held by the Society, and a transcript of the Last Will and Testament of Matthias Sitler. Let me know if you are interested. On 1/22/11 7:00 PM, "gc-gateway@rootsweb.com" <gc-gateway@rootsweb.com> wrote: > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > > Author: jeewilarkr > Surnames: Sitler > Classification: queries > > Message Board URL: > > http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scot > t/11.473.1.1.1.3.2.4/mb.ashx > > Message Board Post: > > Hi, My grandmother, Margaret did extensive research into the Sitler family in > order to gain access to this fortune. From her research (which I have but > will only give general dates here) two Von Sitler son's (mathias and Simon/or > Jacob) came over in the 1500's and had farms in the Baltimore area. There is > a Von Sitler Castle on the Rhine. In her research and contact with the German > government, she would have to provide birth and death documents AND gather > rubbings of tomb stones if the death certificates were not available. Since > each of these brothers had many children..the task by the 1950's was just > impossible to do. I am a decendant of Mathias Sitler. Might this help? > > Important Note: > The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would > like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and > respond on the board. > > > > __________________________________ > Please no spam, chain letters, virus notices, current religous or political > discussions on the list. If in doubt, check it out with the list > administrator > first. Violations of these few prohibitions may result in removal from the > list. > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > INSCOTT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in > the subject and the body of the message
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: hazycosmos1 Surnames: Richey/Clough/Tresize Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/1061.1.1.1.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: thanks for the prompt reply....I was given this membership by my daughters so I would finally be the main genealogist for our family while still totally "with my faculties" ha ha ..seems too many of my relatives did this and no one finished and let the branches fall so to speak....anyway, I am Hazel Richey (Colosimo) Reid...granddaughter of Hazel Clough Richey married to Frederick David Richey whose father is Frank Everett Richey (spouse Fannie Lippman) and then his father is David F. Richey (1828-1917) and that is the end of the branch until I found John L. Richey and Dr. John Richey and John is the Revolutionary hero...but these branches wont connect....and it is driving me nuts....so anything you can do to connect them is such a relief....found all kinds of good research in Hopewell Illinois thru a letter in family Bible and now to tie these together will be wonderful!! and if I can do anything for you just say the word...God bless Hazel Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: hazycosmos1 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/1061.1.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Iam of the Richey lineage...documents state that a John Richey was a Mason and as such was attached to General Washington's staff....having hard time taking it back to link to my great great grandfather David Richey ....any help? Need this so we can finally be members of DAR since no one on female side ever asked to join Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: jeewilarkr Surnames: Sitler Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/11.473.1.1.1.3.2.4/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Hi, My grandmother, Margaret did extensive research into the Sitler family in order to gain access to this fortune. From her research (which I have but will only give general dates here) two Von Sitler son's (mathias and Simon/or Jacob) came over in the 1500's and had farms in the Baltimore area. There is a Von Sitler Castle on the Rhine. In her research and contact with the German government, she would have to provide birth and death documents AND gather rubbings of tomb stones if the death certificates were not available. Since each of these brothers had many children..the task by the 1950's was just impossible to do. I am a decendant of Mathias Sitler. Might this help? Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: r_a_green Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/2116/mb.ashx Message Board Post: The Indiana Gazetteer or Topographical Dictionary of the State of Indiana 1850, Third Edition, 440 pages E. Chamberlain, Indianapolis, Indiana http://www.historic-atlas-series.com/1850_IN_Gaz_index.html This is a digitally reproduced version of the 1850 Indiana Gazetteer or Topographical Dictionary of the State of Indiana. Historians, genealogists and researchers of mid 19th century Indiana will find the vast amount of information in this book invaluable. This book contains topographical and historical profiles of the cities, towns and villages of 1850 Indiana. Indiana places and place names, many of which no longer exist in contemporary literature or on current maps are identified and discussed in this excellent early Indiana resource. The book is organized in two parts: Part First - General View of the State: * Boundaries, Extent and Area * Natural Divisions * Face and Peculiarities of the country * Natural History * Lakes and Rivers * Public Lands * Internal Improvements * Agricultural Productions * Manufactures and Commerce * Climate and Health * Education * Political Institutions - Civil Divisions * Population * Religious Denominations * Antiquities * History * State Institutions Part Second - Topography and Statistics: This is an extensive 290 page section of the book containing the description of many county, city, villages, places and place names too numerous to list here. The following is a partial list of cities and towns profiled in this part: Adams County - Allen County - Anderson - Angola - Attica - Auburn - Aurora - Bartholomew County - Bedford - Benton County - Blackford County - Bloomington - Bluffton - Blue River - Boone County - Brookville - Brown County - Brownstown - Brownsville - Cambridge City - Cannelton - Carlisle - Carroll County - Cass County - Centreville - Charlestown - Clark County - Clay County - Clinton County - Columbus - Corydon - Covington - Crawford County - Crawfordsville - Danville - Daviess County - Dearborn County - Dekalb County - Delaware County - Delphi - Driftwood - Dubois County - Dunlapsville - Edinburgh - Eel River - Elkhart County - Evansville - Fayette - Connersville - Flat Rock - Floyd County - Fort Wayne - Fountain County - Frankfort - Franklin County - French Lick - Fulton County - Gibson County - Goshen - Gosport - Grant County - Greene County - Greencastle - Hamilton County - Hancock County - Hanover - Harrison County - Hendricks County - Henry County - Howard County - Huntington County - Indianapolis - Jackson County - Jasper County - Jay County - Jefferson County - Jeffersonville - Johnson County - Knox County - Kosciusko County - Lafayette - LaGrange County - Lake County - LaPorte County - LaPorte - Lawrence County - Lawrenceburgh - Lebanon - Levenworth - Liberty, Union County - Logansport - Madison County - Madison, Jefferson County - Marion County! - Marshall County - Martin County - Martinsville - Miami County - Michigan City - Mishawaka - Monroe County - Montgomery County - Monticello - Morgan County - Muncie - New Albany - New Harmony - Noble County - Noblesville - Ohio County - Orange County - Owen County - Parke County - Pendleton - Perry County - Peru - Petersburgh - Pike County - Porter County - Posey County - Princeton - Pulaski County - Randolph County - Richmond - Ripley County - Rising Sun - Rochester, Fulton County - Rockford - Rockport - Rockville - Rush County - Rushville - Scott County - Shelby County - South Bend - Spencer County - Spencer - Starke County - Steuben County - St Joseph County - Sullivan County - Switzerland County - Terre Haute - Thorntown - Tippecanoe County - Tippecanoe River - Tipton County - Union County - Vanderburgh County - Vermillion County - Vernon - Vevay - Vincennes - Wabash River - Wabash County - Warren County - Warrrick County - Washington County - Salem - Wayne County - W! ells County - White County - White Water - Whitley County - Winamack Engravings found throughout: * State House, Indianapolis * State Bank, Indianapolis * Deaf and Dumb Asylum, near Indianapolis * Asylum for the Blind, Indianapolis * Insane Hospital, near Indianapolis * State University, Bloomington * Wabash College, Crawfordsville * Court House, Connersville * Franklin College, Franklin * Asbury University, Greencastle * Hanover College, Hanover * First Presbyterian Church, Indianapolis * Wesley Chapel, Indianapolis * Hon. O.H. Smith's residence, Indianapolis * Branch Bank, Madison * Christ Church, Madison * Residence of A W Morris, Esq., Indianapolis * State Sentinel Building, Indianapolis * State Journal Buildings, Indianapolis * Masonic Hall, Indianapolis * Map of Cannelton, Cannelton * Cotton Mill, Cannelton * Hon A.T. Ellis's residence, Vincennes * Market House, Vincennes * Market Street, Vincennes ------------------------------------------------------------------ Indiana: in Relation to its Geography, Statistics, Institutions, County Topography, Etc.; with a Reference Index to and Colton's Maps of Indiana (included) Fisher, Richard S. M.D., J.H. Colton, New York, 1852 http://www.historic-atlas-series.com/1852_IN_index.html This is a digitally reproduced version of Indiana: in Relation to its Geography, Statistics, Institutions, County Topography Etc.; with a Reference Index to Colton's Maps of Indiana, 1852. Historians, genealogists and researchers of mid 19th century Indiana will find the vast amount of research material in this book and its accompanying maps invaluable. The 144 page book is a companion to the 6 segment series of Colton's Maps of Indiana included on this CD. The book contains topographical and historical profiles of the cities, towns and villages of Indiana in 1852. Indiana places and place names, many of which no longer exist in contemporary literature or on current maps, are identified and discussed in this early Indiana resource. Excerpts from the book advertisement: This little book has been prepared to accompany COLTON'S MAPS OF THE STATE OF INDIANA, and to illustrate the geography, statistics, and institutions of that important portion of the American Union. The descriptions, though brief and concise, embrace nevertheless a great mass of information useful not only to the immigrant settler, but also to those who, from long residence in the state, may be entitled to the distinguished title of "citizen." The descriptive portions of the work have been chiefly compiled from the publications of the most recent writers; but a large mass of information has also been derived from the labors and inquiries of the publisher's agents, and from numerous private sources, all of which has been incorporated. The statistical matter is chiefly based on the census of 1850, the official returns of the several departments of the federal and state governments, and from the reports of companies incorporated within the state. Every available source of accurate information, indeed, has been consulted, and the publisher has no hesitation in saying that there is no other work on the same subject, and within the same compass, that furnishes so much valuable information as is contained herein... ...maps are engraved in the best style of art, and are colored in a handsome manner. A REFERENCE INDEX, by the aid of which any place on the maps may be readily found, is appended to this work. New York, April 15, 1852 Table of Contents (40K PDF) pages are available for download: http://www.historic-atlas-series.com/1852_IN_TOC.pdf Colton's Maps of Indiana: The original full size map was engraved on six plates, and when assembled was 66 x 48-inches in size. It contains the full surveys in sections, the general topography of the state, the internal improvements, and all the information usually found on the most elaborate maps. Insets: Michigan City * LaFayette * Logansport & West Logan * Terre Haute * Indianapolis * Madison* Fort Wayne * New Albany * Jeffersonville, Louisville and the Falls of the Ohio * Evansville and Lamasco City * Lawrenceburgh * Vincennes * Richmond * South Bend. To facilitate viewing and printing, this series of maps have been digitized in a single image and reduced in size to approximately 33 x 24-inches at 300 dpi. The high resolution image has been converted to Adobe PDF and included on this CD. The REFERENCE INDEX pages (105-123) may be utilized to locate Indiana places and place names found on Colton's Maps of Indiana. Sample map section (224K JPG) near Vincennes, Knox County: http://www.historic-atlas-series.com/site_images/1852_sample_1.jpg ------------------------------------------------------------------ Historic Atlas Of Indiana Counties (Zones 1-11 complete set) http://www.historic-atlas-series.com/in_map/in_index.html The Zone 1-11 Atlas is a complete set of 1876 Indiana county maps on one CD. Each Zone consists of a series of 8 or more bordering county maps making up all 92 Indiana counties. Each Zone Atlas contains high resolution scanned images of vintage 19th century county maps that are presented in Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF). All (11) individual Indiana Zones are available separately. Each county map includes the following 19th century features: * roads, railroads and canals * cities, towns and villages * post offices and government sites * one-room schoolhouses, churches and cemeteries * rivers, streams and ferries * racetracks, fairgrounds and picnic groves * industrial sites, furnaces and mills * early homesteads and farms -and much more The Historic Atlas of Indiana series may be an invaluable aid to Genealogists, Historians and researchers in search of 19th century Indiana places and place names. Many 19th century sites no longer appear on contemporary maps and or have been obscured with time. The Historic Atlas Series CD's provide researchers with the means to quickly search 19th century maps when searching for extinct Indiana places. Details on early maps are often difficult to read and these are no exception; however, by virtue of the Adobe PDF formatting, these documents may be inspected at high levels of magnification without additional digital distortion; something that simply cannot be accomplished with paper reproductions and photocopies. ------------------------------------------------------------------ The Adobe Acrobat Reader is needed to view, zoom, pan and print from the PDF images contained in this book; and is included free on each CD. No other software is necessary. The data has been created and configured using Adobe Acrobat for MS Windows (98, 98SE, XP, NT and 2000). The pages may be viewed in earlier versions of the software as well; and with current versions of the Adobe Reader on recent model Mac systems. Good luck with your research! Rich Green Historic Archaeological Research http://www.har-indy.com Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: jeannienoe63 Surnames: Noe, Amos, Houghland, Berry Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.scott/615.660.1.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Do you know anything about a Berry gentleman marrying a Noe lady or possibly a Shepherd? The Scott County Genealogical Society, Inc., PO Box 23, Scottsburg, IN 47170-0023 (www.scgsi.com)scgsi@c3bb.com has research facilities and there are a lot of info in there on the Houghlands and Amos'. Jeannie Noe Carlisle Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.