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    1. [KORNEGAY] Emailing - 4850094117552
    2. Emma Critchley
    3. Hi Vicky has asked me to forward you the finance documents (Please see attached) Many Thanks

    08/15/2016 12:20:12
    1. [KORNEGAY] Order Confirmation-2805-6928450-20160815-018748
    2. _________________________________________________________________ This communication and any files transmitted with it contain information which is confidential and which may also be privileged. It is for the exclusive use of the intended recipient(s). If you are not the intended recipient(s), please note that any disclosure, copying, printing or use whatsoever of this communication or the information contained in it is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us by e-mail or by telephone as above and then delete the e-mail together with any copies of it.  ESAB does not accept liability for the integrity of this message or for any changes, which may occur in transmission due to network, machine or software failure or manufacture or operator error. Although this communication and any files transmitted with it are believed to be free of any virus or any other defect which might affect any computer or IT system into which they are received and opened, it is the responsibility of the recipient to ensure that they are virus free and no responsibility will be accepted by ESAB for any loss or damage arising in any way from receipt or use thereof.

    08/15/2016 11:51:16
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] 1810 Duplin Co., Kornegay Census
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: loudawson76 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.kornegay/165.1.1.1.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Do you have this Bible. Would it be possible for me to see a copy of this obit? 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. <br>

    02/17/2015 09:00:13
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig=ChangedToKornegay/StricklandConnectionInBibbCoAL
    2. Kathlynn3 via
    3. Hi everyone, Thanks Patty, IF you do find the email addy for the lady in Oregon, will you please send to me. Let me explain [hopeful you, or someone, can help]: Felix Barney Kornegay [brother of my ancestor Miller] in Bibb Co AL had a g-daughter Martha C Murray 1856-1930 m: John Strickland [I have no other info for him]; Martha is d.o. Margaret M Kornegay & James Turner Murphy; Margaret is d.o. Felix Barney Kornegay. Bottom line: I'm trying to find more info and who the parents/ancestors are of John Strickland. Why is this important to me, since it's not my direct lineage? First, my mother descended from Strickland 's and my father from Kornegay's. Years ago when I was reviewing my FTM kinship report I noticed, beside showing the different degrees of kinship [for all descendants of Miller Kornegay & Nancy Ward], that it was now showing for the first time [never showed up before] that my father and mother were also some very distant kin!? And it blew me away. At first I thought how in the heck can this be possible ......it must be some type of erroneous calculation of the kinship report. However, when I set about analyzing my data base I found it must be from the above said Kornegay/Strickland marriage. I must add that when I updated my FTM program last year, I soon discovered they changed the kinship report...to one that does NOT give multiple types of kin due to 2 the two consecutive generations of 1st cousins marriages [that I have in my Kornegay lineage] that the old report did give. Needless to say I have gone round and round with FTM reps and the programmer's, voicing my disapproval that they would have the audacity to change the kinship report to a supposed updated newer version that is definitely far inferior/inaccurate to the older version...did it do any good? NO! LOL! ...so I remain angry about it. My argument was: it seems to it me it would be evident to anyone that someone who has 1st cousin marriage in their line would certainly have more degrees of kinship than one who doesn't. Patty, hope it's okay with you that I'm sending this to others. Kathlynn In a message dated 1/27/2015 2:03:39 P.M. Central Standard Time, pattyca103@aol.com writes: Kathylynn, If my memory serves me, Hazel died a few years ago. I could send you the e-mail of the Lady in Oregon if I have it on my computer. She was working on a KORNEGAY who married Mary Ann RAINES or RAINS . As you may remember James Martin KORNEGAY's brother John married the sister of my ancestor who was dau of Wyatt Y. KORNEGAY. Pat -----Original Message----- From: Kathlynn3 <Kathlynn3@aol.com> To: pattyca103 <pattyca103@aol.com> Sent: Tue, Jan 27, 2015 1:46 pm Subject: Re: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig Thanks Patty, good to hear from you again......will you please send me Hazel's email address, the one I have obviously is no longer good. Or if you have reservations about giving me her's will you please give her my addy and ask her to email me. Thanks Kathlynn In a message dated 1/27/2015 10:40:06 A.M. Central Standard Time, _pattyca103@aol.com_ (mailto:pattyca103@aol.com) writes: I was recently trying to help a lady in Oregon who was working on the James Martin KORNEGAY line. This was Hazel Anthony's line so I was able to help her a little. I think this is also the Bibb Co Al KORNEGAYs, that is Kathlyn and Matt's. Nice to hear from the KORNEGAY descendants again.

    01/29/2015 07:22:45
    1. [KORNEGAY] Albert Graham Kornegay father of Kevin David Kornegay of N.C,
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: carolkornegay66 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.kornegay/184/mb.ashx Message Board Post: My name Carol Kornegay. Daughter of Kevin David Kornegay. Grand daughter of Albert Graham Kornegay. I would love to know about the family I come from and if any of them know anything they could share like : How did we come to be in America? How many of us are there? Did we used to be a close family? Did we have any traditions and are there any family recipes ? Did I get any traits? Ect. 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. <br>

    01/28/2015 11:30:48
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig
    2. Barbara Justice via
    3. Thanks to you all for this new info. My mama always called them Conagee's. I thought that was just the way they talk in Georgia and Alabama. The pictures in her album was spelled the same way. Barbara Justice ----- Original Message ----- From: "Pat via" <kornegay@rootsweb.com> To: AndrewBWard@aol.com, kornegay@rootsweb.com, mward39@bellsouth.net, Kathlynn3@aol.com Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2015 11:40:06 AM Subject: Re: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig It seems to me Kathlynn that that list of immigrants who were in England may have been cited in one of the books written on the family that I never found who wrote it. I knew that Konig meant king because I once worked with a James Konig and he said his name meant King. Thanks, Matt for the interesting information on the German language, which I know nothing about. I have not worked on the KORNEGAY for some time but I am always interested. I remember how people always remarked on the way the family pronounced their name which appeared different from Carnagie and etc. It was more like Car-na-gee. I take that back about not working on the Kornegay family in some time, I was recently trying to help a lady in Oregon who was working on the James Martin KORNEGAY line. This was Hazel Anthony's line so I was able to help her a little. I think this is also the Bibb Co Al KORNEGAYs, that is Kathlyn and Matt's. Nice to hear from the KORNEGAY descendants again. Pat Hoffman -----Original Message----- From: AndrewBWard via <kornegay@rootsweb.com> To: mward39 <mward39@bellsouth.net>; Kathlynn3 <Kathlynn3@aol.com>; kornegay <kornegay@rootsweb.com> Sent: Mon, Jan 26, 2015 10:34 pm Subject: Re: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig Web search of the name Koenig suggests a Jewish connection Andy In a message dated 1/26/2015 2:53:47 P.M. Central Standard Time, kornegay@rootsweb.com writes: What I am about to write in the next paragraph may not appear on your screen as I have written it unless you have your email program set to reproduce rich text. I preface by saying I am not a professor of German, but I have studied it. On that note: the word (Koenig) in German is typically spelled with an umlaut over the "o" and affects how a German would pronounce the "o". The closest we English speakers can come is to try to say "e" while holding the mouth and lips pursed as though we are trying to say "o". Therefore, since we have no umlaut on our keyboard or diacritical marking that would mean anything to us, we have traditionally transliterated the umlauted "o" as "oe". Nearly all words that are from German that are written by us with an "oe" were originally written in German as "ö". Thus, the name we write as "Koenig" would have been written by the Germans as "König". So, if you are looking in German texts for the name, look for the spelling König. The closest example I can think of to approximate the sound of the first syllable in "König" is to compare it to the sound of the first syllable in our American-English word "Colonel." I have mentioned before in this forum that the name might have been "König" or "Könige." The German language pluralizes the word "König" by adding the letter "e" at the end. So, "Könige" would translate "Kings". This could have meant the last name was "Kings" or it could have meant the family was the "Kings" just as I would say "We are the Wards" if asked what family are you? I think this is the most likely name that a head of the family might have said when asked who they were: "Wir sind die Könige." (We are the Kings.) The final "e" in the name would be pronounced as a long "a" as in the word "hay" (or "gay"). This theory has the added support that the German pronunciation of Könige is (as close as I can write it in English) would be "Ko-nee-gay" (with the first syllable sounding like a guttural start of the word "Colonel." This would explain why an English-speaking scribe might have heard "Kornegay." I rest my case. Matt Ward -----Original Message----- From: kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Kathlynn3 via Sent: Monday, January 26, 2015 1:41 PM To: kornegay@rootsweb.com Subject: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig Hi everyone, Re: on 3-16-2008 I posted email informing you that I found: John Krenig....[Jacob Meuller, Peter Fischer, George Kurtz and others]... on the 11 June 1709 Arrivals of German's from the Palatinate: "List of poor Palatines taken 15 June 1709 at St. Catherine's and Debtford." Several agreed, at the time, John Krenig family is a possible, if not probably, candidate for the family of our George Kornegay [based on circumstantial evidence only]. I, at the time and again today, did a google search: surname Krenig ~meaning & origin =nothing found.....however abundant info found for surname Koenig / Konig - meaning=king [found here: http://german.about.com/library/blsurname01.htm NOTE: THERE IS ONLY 1 LETTER DIFFERENCE: K(r)enig ...vs...K(o)enig I've always wondered: 1. Is it possible these German Registrant's only spoke and spelled in German, and the Registrar only spoke and spell in English and thereby spelled it according to the how they heard it said, thence, the surname Krenig on the Registry [list] is a morphed spelling that should be Koenig? 2. OR the original Registrar made a sloppy unclear entry for the 2nd letter and later a transcriber, entered the name as Krenig instead of Koenig.....clear as mud? Anyway, with all that said: I AM currently inclined to believe the correct surname is KOENIG [not Krenig] and IF it is....that could mean we may have better luck searching and finding more information about our ancestors if we search for the Koenig.....in Germany and USA.....Opinions requested. BTW has anyone found anymore or different information in the interim? Is anyone subscribed to Ancestry that knows how to search for records in Germany? I *think* [which is daily getting more difficult in my elderly years, LOL! ] that I have seen more than one Koenig family that went from Germany to England and then to PA? NY? NJ? USA. Obviously I'm not very good at browsing & finding stuff on the web, based on just recently during one of our daily instant message chats a cousin from a different surname lineage ask what I was doing, and I responded: spent hours trying to find such and such with no success...and in a New York minute, she found and sent it to me. DUH! .....blows my mind. [But, to console my wounded ego I remind myself that I'm better with discernment that she is, tee hee!). And this brings me to say: I can't even take full credit for finding the above said Palatines from the Palatinates document, because I "just happened" to run across it when I was actually searching for something else, and because this scenario often happens.....it leaves me believing it is my guardian angel, not me, that often finds what I need......and this angel is probably getting tired and weary. LOL! Kuz'n Kathlynn ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/27/2015 10:18:00
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig
    2. Pat via
    3. It seems to me Kathlynn that that list of immigrants who were in England may have been cited in one of the books written on the family that I never found who wrote it. I knew that Konig meant king because I once worked with a James Konig and he said his name meant King. Thanks, Matt for the interesting information on the German language, which I know nothing about. I have not worked on the KORNEGAY for some time but I am always interested. I remember how people always remarked on the way the family pronounced their name which appeared different from Carnagie and etc. It was more like Car-na-gee. I take that back about not working on the Kornegay family in some time, I was recently trying to help a lady in Oregon who was working on the James Martin KORNEGAY line. This was Hazel Anthony's line so I was able to help her a little. I think this is also the Bibb Co Al KORNEGAYs, that is Kathlyn and Matt's. Nice to hear from the KORNEGAY descendants again. Pat Hoffman -----Original Message----- From: AndrewBWard via <kornegay@rootsweb.com> To: mward39 <mward39@bellsouth.net>; Kathlynn3 <Kathlynn3@aol.com>; kornegay <kornegay@rootsweb.com> Sent: Mon, Jan 26, 2015 10:34 pm Subject: Re: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig Web search of the name Koenig suggests a Jewish connection Andy In a message dated 1/26/2015 2:53:47 P.M. Central Standard Time, kornegay@rootsweb.com writes: What I am about to write in the next paragraph may not appear on your screen as I have written it unless you have your email program set to reproduce rich text. I preface by saying I am not a professor of German, but I have studied it. On that note: the word (Koenig) in German is typically spelled with an umlaut over the "o" and affects how a German would pronounce the "o". The closest we English speakers can come is to try to say "e" while holding the mouth and lips pursed as though we are trying to say "o". Therefore, since we have no umlaut on our keyboard or diacritical marking that would mean anything to us, we have traditionally transliterated the umlauted "o" as "oe". Nearly all words that are from German that are written by us with an "oe" were originally written in German as "ö". Thus, the name we write as "Koenig" would have been written by the Germans as "König". So, if you are looking in German texts for the name, look for the spelling König. The closest example I can think of to approximate the sound of the first syllable in "König" is to compare it to the sound of the first syllable in our American-English word "Colonel." I have mentioned before in this forum that the name might have been "König" or "Könige." The German language pluralizes the word "König" by adding the letter "e" at the end. So, "Könige" would translate "Kings". This could have meant the last name was "Kings" or it could have meant the family was the "Kings" just as I would say "We are the Wards" if asked what family are you? I think this is the most likely name that a head of the family might have said when asked who they were: "Wir sind die Könige." (We are the Kings.) The final "e" in the name would be pronounced as a long "a" as in the word "hay" (or "gay"). This theory has the added support that the German pronunciation of Könige is (as close as I can write it in English) would be "Ko-nee-gay" (with the first syllable sounding like a guttural start of the word "Colonel." This would explain why an English-speaking scribe might have heard "Kornegay." I rest my case. Matt Ward -----Original Message----- From: kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Kathlynn3 via Sent: Monday, January 26, 2015 1:41 PM To: kornegay@rootsweb.com Subject: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig Hi everyone, Re: on 3-16-2008 I posted email informing you that I found: John Krenig....[Jacob Meuller, Peter Fischer, George Kurtz and others]... on the 11 June 1709 Arrivals of German's from the Palatinate: "List of poor Palatines taken 15 June 1709 at St. Catherine's and Debtford." Several agreed, at the time, John Krenig family is a possible, if not probably, candidate for the family of our George Kornegay [based on circumstantial evidence only]. I, at the time and again today, did a google search: surname Krenig ~meaning & origin =nothing found.....however abundant info found for surname Koenig / Konig - meaning=king [found here: http://german.about.com/library/blsurname01.htm NOTE: THERE IS ONLY 1 LETTER DIFFERENCE: K(r)enig ...vs...K(o)enig I've always wondered: 1. Is it possible these German Registrant's only spoke and spelled in German, and the Registrar only spoke and spell in English and thereby spelled it according to the how they heard it said, thence, the surname Krenig on the Registry [list] is a morphed spelling that should be Koenig? 2. OR the original Registrar made a sloppy unclear entry for the 2nd letter and later a transcriber, entered the name as Krenig instead of Koenig.....clear as mud? Anyway, with all that said: I AM currently inclined to believe the correct surname is KOENIG [not Krenig] and IF it is....that could mean we may have better luck searching and finding more information about our ancestors if we search for the Koenig.....in Germany and USA.....Opinions requested. BTW has anyone found anymore or different information in the interim? Is anyone subscribed to Ancestry that knows how to search for records in Germany? I *think* [which is daily getting more difficult in my elderly years, LOL! ] that I have seen more than one Koenig family that went from Germany to England and then to PA? NY? NJ? USA. Obviously I'm not very good at browsing & finding stuff on the web, based on just recently during one of our daily instant message chats a cousin from a different surname lineage ask what I was doing, and I responded: spent hours trying to find such and such with no success...and in a New York minute, she found and sent it to me. DUH! .....blows my mind. [But, to console my wounded ego I remind myself that I'm better with discernment that she is, tee hee!). And this brings me to say: I can't even take full credit for finding the above said Palatines from the Palatinates document, because I "just happened" to run across it when I was actually searching for something else, and because this scenario often happens.....it leaves me believing it is my guardian angel, not me, that often finds what I need......and this angel is probably getting tired and weary. LOL! Kuz'n Kathlynn ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/27/2015 04:40:06
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig
    2. AndrewBWard via
    3. Web search of the name Koenig suggests a Jewish connection Andy In a message dated 1/26/2015 2:53:47 P.M. Central Standard Time, kornegay@rootsweb.com writes: What I am about to write in the next paragraph may not appear on your screen as I have written it unless you have your email program set to reproduce rich text. I preface by saying I am not a professor of German, but I have studied it. On that note: the word (Koenig) in German is typically spelled with an umlaut over the "o" and affects how a German would pronounce the "o". The closest we English speakers can come is to try to say "e" while holding the mouth and lips pursed as though we are trying to say "o". Therefore, since we have no umlaut on our keyboard or diacritical marking that would mean anything to us, we have traditionally transliterated the umlauted "o" as "oe". Nearly all words that are from German that are written by us with an "oe" were originally written in German as "ö". Thus, the name we write as "Koenig" would have been written by the Germans as "König". So, if you are looking in German texts for the name, look for the spelling König. The closest example I can think of to approximate the sound of the first syllable in "König" is to compare it to the sound of the first syllable in our American-English word "Colonel." I have mentioned before in this forum that the name might have been "König" or "Könige." The German language pluralizes the word "König" by adding the letter "e" at the end. So, "Könige" would translate "Kings". This could have meant the last name was "Kings" or it could have meant the family was the "Kings" just as I would say "We are the Wards" if asked what family are you? I think this is the most likely name that a head of the family might have said when asked who they were: "Wir sind die Könige." (We are the Kings.) The final "e" in the name would be pronounced as a long "a" as in the word "hay" (or "gay"). This theory has the added support that the German pronunciation of Könige is (as close as I can write it in English) would be "Ko-nee-gay" (with the first syllable sounding like a guttural start of the word "Colonel." This would explain why an English-speaking scribe might have heard "Kornegay." I rest my case. Matt Ward -----Original Message----- From: kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Kathlynn3 via Sent: Monday, January 26, 2015 1:41 PM To: kornegay@rootsweb.com Subject: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig Hi everyone, Re: on 3-16-2008 I posted email informing you that I found: John Krenig....[Jacob Meuller, Peter Fischer, George Kurtz and others]... on the 11 June 1709 Arrivals of German's from the Palatinate: "List of poor Palatines taken 15 June 1709 at St. Catherine's and Debtford." Several agreed, at the time, John Krenig family is a possible, if not probably, candidate for the family of our George Kornegay [based on circumstantial evidence only]. I, at the time and again today, did a google search: surname Krenig ~meaning & origin =nothing found.....however abundant info found for surname Koenig / Konig - meaning=king [found here: http://german.about.com/library/blsurname01.htm NOTE: THERE IS ONLY 1 LETTER DIFFERENCE: K(r)enig ...vs...K(o)enig I've always wondered: 1. Is it possible these German Registrant's only spoke and spelled in German, and the Registrar only spoke and spell in English and thereby spelled it according to the how they heard it said, thence, the surname Krenig on the Registry [list] is a morphed spelling that should be Koenig? 2. OR the original Registrar made a sloppy unclear entry for the 2nd letter and later a transcriber, entered the name as Krenig instead of Koenig.....clear as mud? Anyway, with all that said: I AM currently inclined to believe the correct surname is KOENIG [not Krenig] and IF it is....that could mean we may have better luck searching and finding more information about our ancestors if we search for the Koenig.....in Germany and USA.....Opinions requested. BTW has anyone found anymore or different information in the interim? Is anyone subscribed to Ancestry that knows how to search for records in Germany? I *think* [which is daily getting more difficult in my elderly years, LOL! ] that I have seen more than one Koenig family that went from Germany to England and then to PA? NY? NJ? USA. Obviously I'm not very good at browsing & finding stuff on the web, based on just recently during one of our daily instant message chats a cousin from a different surname lineage ask what I was doing, and I responded: spent hours trying to find such and such with no success...and in a New York minute, she found and sent it to me. DUH! .....blows my mind. [But, to console my wounded ego I remind myself that I'm better with discernment that she is, tee hee!). And this brings me to say: I can't even take full credit for finding the above said Palatines from the Palatinates document, because I "just happened" to run across it when I was actually searching for something else, and because this scenario often happens.....it leaves me believing it is my guardian angel, not me, that often finds what I need......and this angel is probably getting tired and weary. LOL! Kuz'n Kathlynn ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/26/2015 03:33:18
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig
    2. Kathlynn3 via
    3. Thanks Matt, I well remember & still have your expert & thorough explanation that you sent to years ago. But, what I'm trying to find out now is.....Does anyone knows where the original "List of poor Palatines from The Palatinate in Germany who arrived in England on June 11, 1709, taken at St Catherine's and Debtford, June 15." is currently housed and how to go about obtaining a copy of the image to see if the 2nd letter in the surname is a small case R - or if it is a small case O. Currently all we have is a transcription [and I assume it was probably transcribed from the original list by someone in the USA]. Kathlynn

    01/26/2015 12:34:45
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig
    2. Matt Ward via
    3. What I am about to write in the next paragraph may not appear on your screen as I have written it unless you have your email program set to reproduce rich text. I preface by saying I am not a professor of German, but I have studied it. On that note: the word (Koenig) in German is typically spelled with an umlaut over the "o" and affects how a German would pronounce the "o". The closest we English speakers can come is to try to say "e" while holding the mouth and lips pursed as though we are trying to say "o". Therefore, since we have no umlaut on our keyboard or diacritical marking that would mean anything to us, we have traditionally transliterated the umlauted "o" as "oe". Nearly all words that are from German that are written by us with an "oe" were originally written in German as "ö". Thus, the name we write as "Koenig" would have been written by the Germans as "König". So, if you are looking in German texts for the name, look for the spelling König. The closest example I can think of to approximate the sound of the first syllable in "König" is to compare it to the sound of the first syllable in our American-English word "Colonel." I have mentioned before in this forum that the name might have been "König" or "Könige." The German language pluralizes the word "König" by adding the letter "e" at the end. So, "Könige" would translate "Kings". This could have meant the last name was "Kings" or it could have meant the family was the "Kings" just as I would say "We are the Wards" if asked what family are you? I think this is the most likely name that a head of the family might have said when asked who they were: "Wir sind die Könige." (We are the Kings.) The final "e" in the name would be pronounced as a long "a" as in the word "hay" (or "gay"). This theory has the added support that the German pronunciation of Könige is (as close as I can write it in English) would be "Ko-nee-gay" (with the first syllable sounding like a guttural start of the word "Colonel." This would explain why an English-speaking scribe might have heard "Kornegay." I rest my case. Matt Ward -----Original Message----- From: kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Kathlynn3 via Sent: Monday, January 26, 2015 1:41 PM To: kornegay@rootsweb.com Subject: [KORNEGAY] John Krenig Hi everyone, Re: on 3-16-2008 I posted email informing you that I found: John Krenig....[Jacob Meuller, Peter Fischer, George Kurtz and others]... on the 11 June 1709 Arrivals of German's from the Palatinate: "List of poor Palatines taken 15 June 1709 at St. Catherine's and Debtford." Several agreed, at the time, John Krenig family is a possible, if not probably, candidate for the family of our George Kornegay [based on circumstantial evidence only]. I, at the time and again today, did a google search: surname Krenig ~meaning & origin =nothing found.....however abundant info found for surname Koenig / Konig - meaning=king [found here: http://german.about.com/library/blsurname01.htm NOTE: THERE IS ONLY 1 LETTER DIFFERENCE: K(r)enig ...vs...K(o)enig I've always wondered: 1. Is it possible these German Registrant's only spoke and spelled in German, and the Registrar only spoke and spell in English and thereby spelled it according to the how they heard it said, thence, the surname Krenig on the Registry [list] is a morphed spelling that should be Koenig? 2. OR the original Registrar made a sloppy unclear entry for the 2nd letter and later a transcriber, entered the name as Krenig instead of Koenig.....clear as mud? Anyway, with all that said: I AM currently inclined to believe the correct surname is KOENIG [not Krenig] and IF it is....that could mean we may have better luck searching and finding more information about our ancestors if we search for the Koenig.....in Germany and USA.....Opinions requested. BTW has anyone found anymore or different information in the interim? Is anyone subscribed to Ancestry that knows how to search for records in Germany? I *think* [which is daily getting more difficult in my elderly years, LOL! ] that I have seen more than one Koenig family that went from Germany to England and then to PA? NY? NJ? USA. Obviously I'm not very good at browsing & finding stuff on the web, based on just recently during one of our daily instant message chats a cousin from a different surname lineage ask what I was doing, and I responded: spent hours trying to find such and such with no success...and in a New York minute, she found and sent it to me. DUH! .....blows my mind. [But, to console my wounded ego I remind myself that I'm better with discernment that she is, tee hee!). And this brings me to say: I can't even take full credit for finding the above said Palatines from the Palatinates document, because I "just happened" to run across it when I was actually searching for something else, and because this scenario often happens.....it leaves me believing it is my guardian angel, not me, that often finds what I need......and this angel is probably getting tired and weary. LOL! Kuz'n Kathlynn ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/26/2015 07:54:11
    1. [KORNEGAY] John Krenig
    2. Kathlynn3 via
    3. Hi everyone, Re: on 3-16-2008 I posted email informing you that I found: John Krenig....[Jacob Meuller, Peter Fischer, George Kurtz and others]... on the 11 June 1709 Arrivals of German's from the Palatinate: "List of poor Palatines taken 15 June 1709 at St. Catherine's and Debtford." Several agreed, at the time, John Krenig family is a possible, if not probably, candidate for the family of our George Kornegay [based on circumstantial evidence only]. I, at the time and again today, did a google search: surname Krenig ~meaning & origin =nothing found.....however abundant info found for surname Koenig / Konig - meaning=king [found here: http://german.about.com/library/blsurname01.htm NOTE: THERE IS ONLY 1 LETTER DIFFERENCE: K(r)enig ...vs...K(o)enig I've always wondered: 1. Is it possible these German Registrant's only spoke and spelled in German, and the Registrar only spoke and spell in English and thereby spelled it according to the how they heard it said, thence, the surname Krenig on the Registry [list] is a morphed spelling that should be Koenig? 2. OR the original Registrar made a sloppy unclear entry for the 2nd letter and later a transcriber, entered the name as Krenig instead of Koenig.....clear as mud? Anyway, with all that said: I AM currently inclined to believe the correct surname is KOENIG [not Krenig] and IF it is....that could mean we may have better luck searching and finding more information about our ancestors if we search for the Koenig.....in Germany and USA.....Opinions requested. BTW has anyone found anymore or different information in the interim? Is anyone subscribed to Ancestry that knows how to search for records in Germany? I *think* [which is daily getting more difficult in my elderly years, LOL! ] that I have seen more than one Koenig family that went from Germany to England and then to PA? NY? NJ? USA. Obviously I'm not very good at browsing & finding stuff on the web, based on just recently during one of our daily instant message chats a cousin from a different surname lineage ask what I was doing, and I responded: spent hours trying to find such and such with no success...and in a New York minute, she found and sent it to me. DUH! .....blows my mind. [But, to console my wounded ego I remind myself that I'm better with discernment that she is, tee hee!). And this brings me to say: I can't even take full credit for finding the above said Palatines from the Palatinates document, because I "just happened" to run across it when I was actually searching for something else, and because this scenario often happens.....it leaves me believing it is my guardian angel, not me, that often finds what I need......and this angel is probably getting tired and weary. LOL! Kuz'n Kathlynn

    01/26/2015 07:40:46
    1. [KORNEGAY] Jerry B Quinn Obituary
    2. Sandra Kornegay Rhodes via
    3.  HAMPTON - Jerry B Quinn, 62, passed away on December 25, 2013 after a brief illness. Born in Mount Olive North Carolina, he was the oldest son of Thomas and Alice Quinn of Smithfield, VA. After numerous moves as the son of an Air Force Dad, Jerry remained in Hampton through his teen years, graduating from Kecoughtan High School in 1969. A few years later Jerry joined the Army making a career in Army intelligence where he received numerous awards and accommodations. He retired from his Army career in 1996, moved his career to General Dynamics, and was currently working for the Department of Defense. Jerry enjoyed life and work pursuing both at full speed. He was talented in numerous crafts and was always working on some new challenge. He especially enjoyed spending time with his granddaughter Katherine and the long time companionship of his dog Blackie. Jerry is survived by his mother, Alice K. Quinn; his daughter Cassidy Esbrandt (Jon); and his granddaughter, Katherine Esbrandt, whom Jerry absolutely adored. He is also survived by brothers, Nick Quinn (Kimberly), Mike Quinn (Heather), and sister, Ann Maninga (John). A memorial service with full Army honors for Jerry will be held on January 4,2014 at 11:00 A.M. at First United Methodist Church of Foxhill at 1 Salt Ponds Road Hampton, VA. A celebration of his life will follow. (Found this today while looking for the Kornegay Family pages. The Kornegay Family website has been shut down because it needs to be renewed. Guess it will be deleted.)

    08/24/2014 03:03:14
    1. [KORNEGAY] KORNEGAY Lyda ESTES 1901 1924 at rest
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: t42OldUnion_WashCoAR Surnames: KORNEGAY Classification: cemetery Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.kornegay/183/mb.ashx Message Board Post: KORNEGAY Lyda ESTES 1901 1924 at rest David Strickland photographed this gravestone in the Old Union Cemetery, Cincinnati, Washington County, Arkansas. Feel free to use the picture for your personal records. See this Photo, one of the 234,011 cemetery photos, free at http://teafor2.com If you know more about this person please reply here,instead of contacting me because this is most likely not my 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. <br>

    02/13/2014 08:44:36
    1. [KORNEGAY] Willie Nathan Kornegay - Youngstown, Ohio
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: Contribution Surnames: Classification: obituary Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.kornegay/182/mb.ashx Message Board Post: YOUNGSTOWN - A memorial service for Willie Nathan Kornegay will be held at 3 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 9, 2014 at the Washington Funeral Home on Glenwood Avenue, Youngstown, OH. Mr. Kornegay, 62, departed this life after complications from surgery on Saturday, Dec. 14, 2013, at Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio. Known as "Buddy" to his family and friends, he was born Aug. 12, 1951, in Youngstown, Ohio (Mahoning County) a son of Nathaniel Sr. and Katherine (Jordan-Clay) Kornegay. Buddy was educated in the Youngstown Public School system. At some point, he did receive his GED and a barbers license. He had a lot of part-time jobs during his life, such as North Star Steel Mill, Allied Forces, BFI Landfill, Holiday Inn, Labor Ready, and Negley Nursing Home in Pittsburgh. He also worked as a handyman, doing painting, yard work, and etc. He enjoyed reading, fishing, playing cards, pool, bowling, and going to Mountaineer Casino. He loved watching westerns, action, and "old school" movies, football, the Steelers, basketball, and wrestling. He enjoyed gospel jazz, blues, and soul music from the 60s and 70s. He is survived by two daughters, Adriane Perez of Cleveland, Ohio and Natalie Tyler of Virginia Beach, Va.; one son, Nathan "Dude" Tyler of Pittsburgh, PA; 10 grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren with one on the way; one sister, Nancy (Emmitt) Jackson of Youngstown, OH; a sister-in-law, Evelyn Clay of Youngstown; three brothers, Wellington, Harold, and Joseph Kornegay, all of Youngstown; and a host of other family and friends. He was preceded in death by his parents; grandparents; four sisters, Dessie L. Davidson, Katherine Dill, Christine Clemons, and Burena Clay; and four brothers, Ernest Clay, Solomon Clay, Nathaniel Kornegay Jr. and Michael Kornegay. Ministry of comfort provided by the J.E. Washington Funeral Services Inc. Youngstown, OH 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. <br>

    01/08/2014 09:08:31
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] 1810 Duplin Co., Kornegay Census ? J. W. Kornegay Bible
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: JSchwoebel31907 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.kornegay/165.1.1.2/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I have susanna Simmons died June 7, 1881 from the Bible of John W. ---Clipping - Obituary for Susanna Kornegay, wife of Harget Kornegay, Sr. Died June 7, 1881, age 82, leaving 14 children and 86 grandchildren. (from Bible records see J.W.) -- From Ruth Westbrook (2002)Hope she dioes not mind me posting this The John Washington Kornegay Bible NOTICE Duplin Co. Page Looking for Data Transcribed by William L. Thaxton, Major, UASF (ret) The Kornegay Bible is currently in the possession of Elizabeth Ann Dail Craft of Kenansville, NC. Mrs. Craft is a direct descendant of George Kornegay, a German PAl.tine immigrant and the first of his name to arrive in this country. Some researchers speculate that all Kornegays in this area, and possibly in the United States, are descended from George Kornegay. Transcription of the informationcontained in the Kornegay Bible is by permission of Mrs. Craft and was accomplished by William L. Thaxton, Major, UASF (ret). The transcriber has attempted to be true to the actual document and spellings, grammar, etc. reflect the original. It must be understood that, when reading flowery script written in 150 year old ink or pencil, occasional mistakes in transcription will occur.Every effort was made to confirm questionable characters, especially initials and names, with complimentary sources. Any remaining mistakes are solely those of the transcriber. The Kornegay Bible is a leather bound book, approximately 9" X 11", consisting of about 850 pages. When new, there may have been 10 or so additional pages of index but these have become detached over the years. The Bible consists of fairly standard renderings of the Old and New Testaments plus a center section of about 100 pages which contains 13 books of the Apocrypha. There is no frontspiece or title page as such at the beginning of the Bible, but there is a title page for the New Testament which lists a publication date of 1842 and the publisher as H. & E. Phinney, Cooperstown, NY. Transcriber's note: Where letters or words are in question, I have used the following notation - (?) indicates that the proceeding word is questionable, a "best guess"; -?- indicates an unknown word in the indicated place, no reasonable guess; one or more ?? within a word indicate letters which could not be deciphered. INSIDE FRONT COVER: several notes which seem to constitute a short journal. "December 23, 1867 warm & the next morning rainy & warm the next few & warmer 28 clear & warm" "May the 18 day 1875 a large frost & very cold. J. W. Kornegay" "August the 31, 1886 a shakeen of the Earth about 10 o'clock at knight cause a grate deal of excitement." " Sept the 19 day, 1886 C. W. Kornegay fell & broake her arme at the spring (?)" "Snow the 26 of April, 1858" BLANK FIRST PAGE: "John W. Kornegay's Bible bought of Jeremiah Pearsall the 14th of March, the 1846. Price $2.2?" On the reverse of that page: "April the 26 day, 1858 it snowed a large." ON THE ILLUSTRATION Abraham and Three Angels: "J. W. Kornegay Born January 13th day 1818. This April the 15th day 1866." BETWEEN PAGES 422 & 423: There is a short tract titled Esau or The Ruinous Bargin with the inscription - "Ashley S. Kornegay his pamphlet a gift by Harget Kornegay his Grand father the 20th of Jany (?) 1856". Inside the pamphlet is a scrap of paper with the signature "Ashley S. Kornegay". At the bottom of the last page of the pamphlet are the initials "A. S. H." AT THE END OF THE OLD TESTAMENT: Between the end of the Old Testament and the beginning of the Apocrypha are several documents including: 1.an article from the Mt. Olive Tribune (March 18, 1975) which references Polly Kornegay and Stephen Gilmore Watkins. 2.a handwritten notice, apparently original, of the estate sale of Harget Kornegay (Sept 25, 1875) 3.several newspaper clippings, apparently letters to the editor, dating from about 1875. 4.a small clipping about Harget Kornegay in the Civil War. 5.a handwritten list, apparently a copy of census records, showing several Kornegays. 6.a one page tract with the lyrics to the song Dedicated to the Wild Men of Borneo. 7.an obituary for Council Wooten. 8.an account bill from John Bennett to Oliver -?- dated Feb 24, 1854. and several other documents. (Last Entry) FAMILY RECORDS SECTION (located between the Old Testament and the Apocrypha): Marriages: "John Washington Kornegay & Clarisa Wadsworth Loftin married the 14 of April 1842" "Annie W. Kornegay & Henry Dail was married February the 5th 1874. The daughter of J. W. Kornegay & C. W. Kornegay & the son of Bryant Dail & and Bettie Dail." "Joseph P. Whitfield & Clarissa C. Kornegay married the 25 day of July 1866." "John L. Kornegay and Saphronia Grimes was married the 10th day of December 1874. the son J. W. Kornegay and C. W. Kornegay and the daughter of David Grimes & Mary Grimes." "J. P. Whitfield and Mary Kornegay was married the 8th day of Dec 1878." "Peter Harget Kornegay and Elsa Ann Swinson was married Jan the 27th 1881." "Peter H. Kornegay & Cora M. Nethercut was married 3th of Oct 1883." (Last Entry) Births: "John Washington Kornegay born the 13 of January 1818." "Clarissa Wadsworth Loftin was born the 22 of May 1819." "Ashley Simmons Kornegay born the 17 of Oct. 1844." "Benjamin Franklin Kornegay born the 9 of June 1846." "Clarissa Caroline Kornegay born the 18 of June 1848." "John Lewis Kornegay born the 5 of May 1850." "Ann Winnifred Kornegay was born -?- May 24th 1852" (year repeated below the line) "Ann Winnifred Kornegay was born the May 24 1853." (entry repeated) "Peter Harget Kornegay born the 4 Oct. 1854" "Albert Bram Well Kornegay & Elbert Loftin Kornegay born June the 22, 1857." "John W. Kornegay twins born December the 16 day 1842. One born deed the other lived 7 days" "Children of J. P. Whitfield & C. C. Whit-" " Dora Fernandeo was born the 17th day of August 1867." "Ashley Haywood Whitfield was born the 2nd day of April 1870." "George Washington Whitfield was born the 25th day of March 1872." "Effer Fernella Whitfield was born the 14th of February 1874." (Transcriber's note: the preceeding 5 entries are all in the same hand and the same color ink indicating they may have all been made at the same time and not as the births occurred.) "Elsa Anna Kornegay born December 1 day 1881 her mother dide the same day in abut 4 hours on Thursday Evening about Five o'clock." (Last Entry) Deaths: "Elbert Loftin Kornegay Decd July 31th day 1857." "Albert Bram Well Kornegay Decd Sept 11 day 1857." "Ashley S. Kornegay Decd July the 16 1864 he dide in Richmond in Chim??? -?- house (?) hittle (hotel?) he was 19 years and 9 months likeing one day when he died." "Clarissa C. Whitfield decd Oct. the 23 day 1877." "Elsa A. Kornegay Decd the 1 day of December 1881." "Needham Loftin Sr.(?) Decds March 27th 1860." "Elizabeth Loftin Decd July 28th, 1843." "Catheren Kornegay Decd June the 23 day 1867." "Needham Loftin Jr. decd November 9th 1868." "Harget Kornegay Sen (Senior?) Decd 18th of August 1875." (following this entry is the notation "Ten Jobe 14 14" in pencil by a different hand.) "Susanna Kornegay Decd the 7 of June 1881." "Elsa A. Kornegay daughter of P. H. Kornegay died 4th September 1882." "Julia A. H.(?) Hill Decd June 7th 1883." In the margins of this page: "Julia Hill Decd June the 7 day 1883." (entry repeated) " Mary -?- Whitfield Dec March the 16 day 1884." (Last Entry) INSIDE BACK COVER: "December the 29 1866 commence snowing & snowe & sleeted for five days it was the largest I ever saw. J. W. Kornegay" Clipping - Obituary for Jane Elizabeth Kennedy (B: March 27 1840 - D: Oct. 91895). Married Zachariah Brown (killed in Civil War) and Harget Kornegay. Had five children, four of which died before 1895. Survived by husband (Harget?), one daughter and her mother. Clipping - Obituary for J. W. Kornegay. Died April 6, 1887 of "Larynx Consumption" (age 69). Survived by wife. Clipping - Obituary for Susanna Kornegay, wife of Harget Kornegay, Sr. Died June 7, 1881, age 82, leaving 14 children and 86 grandchildren. (Last Entry) ~~~~ John Washington Kornegay (1-13-1818,4-6-1887) married, 4-14-1842, Clarissa Wadsworth Loftin (5-22-1819, 6-11-1903) daughter of Needham (D 3-27-1860) and Elizabeth _ Loftin (D 7-28-1843) of Lenoir Co., N.C. Ten Children Twin Sons (B 12-16-1842) died in infancy. Ashley Simmons Kornegay (10-17-1844, 7-16-1864) C. S. A. Benjamin Franklin Kornegay (7-9-1846, 3-3-1898). Clarissa Caroline Kornegay (B 6-18-1848). John Lewis Kornegay (B 5-5-1850) married, 12-10-1874, Sophronia Grimes, daughter of David and Mary Grimes. Ann Winifred Kornegay (B 5-24-1852) Peter Hargett Kornegay (B 10-4-1854). Albert Bramwell Kornegay (B 6-22-1857) Elbert Loftin Kornegay (6-22-1857, 7-31-1857). Kornegay Site section 5. http://www.ncgenweb.us/duplin/kornegayfb.html ~~~~ 1850 pg 16B line 249/249 Kornegay, John 32 "", Clarsey W., 31 "", Ashly S. ? 6 male "", Benjamin T.? 4 "", Cariey ? C. 2 female "", ??? L. 1mo, Does not look like John ?? Next door to Catherine age 59 (66 in 1860). KORNEGAY JOHN W 42 MW NCDUPLIN MT OLIVE P O 1860 pg 169A "", Clarisa W., 41, Ashly S. 18, Benjamin F. 14, Clarisa C. 12, John W. 10, Ann W. 8, Peter H. 6. KORNEGAY JOHN W 42 MW NCDUPLIN MT OLIVE P O 1860 pg 169A "", Clarisa W., 41, Ashly S. 18, Benjamin F. 14, Clarisa C. 12, John W. 10, Ann W. 8, Peter H. 6. 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.

    08/14/2013 07:17:46
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] 1810 Duplin Co., Kornegay Census
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: JSchwoebel31907 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.kornegay/165.1.1.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I have susanna Simmons died June 7, 1881 from the Bible of John W. ---Clipping - Obituary for Susanna Kornegay, wife of Harget Kornegay, Sr. Died June 7, 1881, age 82, leaving 14 children and 86 grandchildren. (from Bible records see J.W.) -- From Ruth Westbrook (2002) 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.

    08/14/2013 07:16:22
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] 1810 Duplin Co., Kornegay Census
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: surgerynurse1970 Surnames: Kornegay, Winders Hargett, Outlaw, Simmons, Brymer Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.kornegay/165.1.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I found a few tidbits that may be helpful: William Kornegay (b:1736 d:22 Jun 1812), married Duplin Co, NC to Elizabeth Outlaw (b:1742 d:30 Apr 1821) parents of Isaac Kornegay (b:15 Apr 1766 d:29 Mar 1838), married 18 Mar 1792 to Hester Hargett (b: 22 May 1772 d:9 Oct 1817) parents of Harget Kornegay (b:17 Sept 1793 d:18 Apr 1875 NC), married to Susannah C. Simmons (b:1 Jul 1799 NC d:17 Jun 1881 NC) parents of William Kornegay (b:6 Dec 1823 NC d:6 May 1892 TX)married to Susan Catherine Winders b: 19 Nov 1829 d: 17 Feb 1915) Then Daniel Bowden Kornegay(spouse Dona Brymer) my great x2 maternal grandfather, father of Jewell Dewitt Kornegay (great x1 maternal grandfather, then Clarence D Kornegay (my grandpa) Tracy surgerynurse1970@gmail.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.

    08/13/2013 11:21:32
    1. [KORNEGAY] Tuscarora War
    2. kathy chruscielski
    3. Interesting article from Wikipedia provides some detail about the raids: For the full article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuscarora_War The Tuscarora War was fought in North Carolina <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Carolina> during the autumn of 1711 until 11 February 1715 between the British <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Britain> , Dutch <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netherlands> , and German <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germany> settlers and the Tuscarora <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuscarora_(tribe)> Native Americans. A treaty was signed in 1715. The first successful and permanent settlement of North Carolina by Europeans <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_ethnic_groups> began in earnest in 1653. The Tuscarora lived in peace with the European settlers who arrived in North Carolina for over 50 years at a time when nearly every other colony <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony> in America was actively involved in some form of conflict with the American Indians. However, the arrival of the settlers was ultimately disastrous for the aboriginal inhabitants of North Carolina. There were two primary contingents of Tuscarora at this point, a Northern group led by Chief Tom Blount <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tom_Blount&action=edit&redlink=1> (pronounced Blunt) and a Southern group led by Chief Hancock. Chief Blount occupied the area around what is present-day Bertie County <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertie_County> on the Roanoke River <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roanoke_River> ; Chief Hancock was closer to New Bern, North Carolina <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Bern,_North_Carolina> , occupying the area south of the Pamplico River (now the Pamlico River <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pamlico_River> ). While Chief Blount became close friends with the Blount family of the Bertie region, Chief Hancock found his villages raided and his people frequently kidnapped and sold into slavery <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_among_the_indigenous_peoples_of_the_Am ericas> . Both groups were heavily impacted by the introduction of European diseases, and both were rapidly having their lands stolen by the encroaching settlers. Ultimately, Chief Hancock felt there was no alternative but to attack the settlers.

    08/01/2013 04:35:00
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] Kornegay
    2. lj
    3. In Mississippi, or in Lauderdale County it is pronounced Kor nee gay. Sheila -----Original Message----- From: Grace Wisdom <grace@billwisdom.com> To: kornegay <kornegay@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tue, Jul 23, 2013 12:12 pm Subject: Re: [KORNEGAY] Kornegay We used the same pronunciation for our Texas Kornegay family also. Grace Texas -----Original Message----- From: kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Margie L Lawrence Sent: Monday, July 22, 2013 6:57 PM To: KORNEGAY@rootsweb.com Subject: [KORNEGAY] Kornegay In Texas the name Kornegay is pronounced as Korn=ne=gee. I remember when we were in Mississippi doing research I was corrected how we pronounced the name. I was told that was wrong but in Texas that is how the family said the name. I suppose where you live makes a difference. Margie Texas ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    07/31/2013 02:59:56
    1. Re: [KORNEGAY] Kornegay
    2. Barbara Justice
    3. I forgot to say My Kornegays are in Fl.,Ga,.Al. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Grace Wisdom" <grace@billwisdom.com> To: kornegay@rootsweb.com Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2013 9:12:12 AM Subject: Re: [KORNEGAY] Kornegay We used the same pronunciation for our Texas Kornegay family also. Grace Texas -----Original Message----- From: kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:kornegay-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Margie L Lawrence Sent: Monday, July 22, 2013 6:57 PM To: KORNEGAY@rootsweb.com Subject: [KORNEGAY] Kornegay In Texas the name Kornegay is pronounced as Korn=ne=gee. I remember when we were in Mississippi doing research I was corrected how we pronounced the name. I was told that was wrong but in Texas that is how the family said the name. I suppose where you live makes a difference. Margie Texas ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KORNEGAY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    07/23/2013 04:49:45