Your George Young appears in the 1930 US census in Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, OH. He is living in a household also occupied by his brother. They apparently reside in an apartment building at 6401 Euclid Avenue in the city of Cleveland, for which they pay monthly rental of $22. Both men are identified as single white males, can read & write, and are not military veterans. George Young is listed as age 27, born KY & both parents born KY, he worked as an ice man at the ice company. Also in the household is his brother William Young. William is listed as age 23, born KY & both parents born KY, he worked as a clerk in an office. I referred to my book, an index of burials in the Frankfort Cemetery, Franklin County, KY (published by the cemetery in 2005). I do not see George Young listed as being buried there. However, I see a possible older brother: Gilbert I. "Zip" Young, born 03 April 1902 & died 19 April 1973. Age 71, male, married. Interred 21 April 1973. Buried in section AA, lot 19F, grave 1. Buried next to him in section AA, lot 19F, grave 2 is his wife Georgia R. Young, born 14 April 1908, died 03 March 1992. Age 83, female, married. Her maiden name may have been Flynn, since "Young-Flynn" is engraved on the grave marker. Good luck! Virginia Perry Cox ----- Original Message ----- From: "KarenKingHiatt" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, January 12, 2007 1:39 AM Subject: [KYFRANKL] YOUNG and WOOLUMS >I just opened my mail -- and have a Marriage Record (1930) in Cuyahoga >County, OH (Cleveland) for > George Young, age 27 and Matilda Schneider, age 23, the biological > grandparents of my adopted children. The marriage ended in divorce within > six years -- after the birth of two children -- and the family does NOT > talk about George Young. It has taken me YEARS to get enough information > to DO any research. > > Matilda remarried -- to Frank Ryan -- he adopted the children -- and we > have a puzzle that has been a brick wall. > > According to the marriage record I'm holding -- > George Young was born in Frankfort Kentucky about 1903 -- > his parents were Gilbert Young and Susie Woolums. > > Up until tonight, I thought that George Young was born in Michigan -- but > this marriage record that shows his birthplace in Frankfort, Kentucky is > finally providing us a clue we can research. > > This is probably the beginning of a long search -- and I'm just posting > this tonight because I'm EXCITED -- and there's no one to talk to here (my > husband died in 2002 -- or he'd be doing the Happy Dance with me! I also > received an obituary for an unwed Mom in MY family -- that had married > surnames for her granddaughters, but that's another story -- just a darn > good day -- and I'm sharing it with you!) > > The HIATT family story is that grandfather George Young was a Native > American -- and certainly, my children do look as if they had that > heritage. > > I am interested in documenting the history of their family -- for our 11 > grandchildren. > > I know NOTHING about searching in Kentucky -- we're lucky in Cuyahoga > County to have a Historical Marriage Index, on line, for free -- and once > I finally learned the NAMES of the grandparents, I sent for the document. > I did expect to get a photocopy of the APPLICATION -- which would have > given a lot more info -- instead, this RECORD is more of an abstract -- > all typewritten. Ptui. Tomorrow I'll deal with it. > > meanwhile -- if anyone is miraculously interested in this same historical > family -- I'll be THRILLED. Or if some kind Gene-angel will head me in > the right direction for Kentucky research, all advice will be gratefully > received. I'm willing to do the work -- just too excited tonight to > figure it out. > > AND I keep hoping for miracles! (which is what happened once I'd > documented 3 generations of HIATT -- and then we were linked to the full > ten generations back to William Penn's second ship of Quaker immigrants. > Ahhh. All documented. By Bob's 4th cousin Lynn Messina, in Indiana, > Bless Lynn for finding Bob's ONLY first cousin and introducing us before > both Bob and Burt died.) > > I have met the nicest people while researching family history! I do some > genealogy volunteer work here -- and will take digital pictures of > headstones here if someone needs that. > > Warm regards, > > Karen King Hiatt > in cold Cleveland OH > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Thank you. So very much! The family story may bite the dust as we track George Young through Kentucky! I just really want to know -- and the older I get, the more I recognize the "stubborn" in me -- Thank you for taking the time to look this up -- and being so kind to send it to me. Warm regards, Karen ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jennie & Bob Cox" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, January 12, 2007 5:54 AM Subject: Re: [KYFRANKL] YOUNG and WOOLUMS Your George Young appears in the 1930 US census in Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, OH. He is living in a household also occupied by his brother. They apparently reside in an apartment building at 6401 Euclid Avenue in the city of Cleveland, for which they pay monthly rental of $22. Both men are identified as single white males, can read & write, and are not military veterans. George Young is listed as age 27, born KY & both parents born KY, he worked as an ice man at the ice company. Also in the household is his brother William Young. William is listed as age 23, born KY & both parents born KY, he worked as a clerk in an office. I referred to my book, an index of burials in the Frankfort Cemetery, Franklin County, KY (published by the cemetery in 2005). I do not see George Young listed as being buried there. However, I see a possible older brother: Gilbert I. "Zip" Young, born 03 April 1902 & died 19 April 1973. Age 71, male, married. Interred 21 April 1973. Buried in section AA, lot 19F, grave 1. Buried next to him in section AA, lot 19F, grave 2 is his wife Georgia R. Young, born 14 April 1908, died 03 March 1992. Age 83, female, married. Her maiden name may have been Flynn, since "Young-Flynn" is engraved on the grave marker. Good luck! Virginia Perry Cox ----- Original Message ----- From: "KarenKingHiatt" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, January 12, 2007 1:39 AM Subject: [KYFRANKL] YOUNG and WOOLUMS >I just opened my mail -- and have a Marriage Record (1930) in Cuyahoga >County, OH (Cleveland) for > George Young, age 27 and Matilda Schneider, age 23, the biological > grandparents of my adopted children. The marriage ended in divorce within > six years -- after the birth of two children -- and the family does NOT > talk about George Young. It has taken me YEARS to get enough information > to DO any research. > > Matilda remarried -- to Frank Ryan -- he adopted the children -- and we > have a puzzle that has been a brick wall. > > According to the marriage record I'm holding -- > George Young was born in Frankfort Kentucky about 1903 -- > his parents were Gilbert Young and Susie Woolums. > > Up until tonight, I thought that George Young was born in Michigan -- but > this marriage record that shows his birthplace in Frankfort, Kentucky is > finally providing us a clue we can research. > > This is probably the beginning of a long search -- and I'm just posting > this tonight because I'm EXCITED -- and there's no one to talk to here (my > husband died in 2002 -- or he'd be doing the Happy Dance with me! I also > received an obituary for an unwed Mom in MY family -- that had married > surnames for her granddaughters, but that's another story -- just a darn > good day -- and I'm sharing it with you!) > > The HIATT family story is that grandfather George Young was a Native > American -- and certainly, my children do look as if they had that > heritage. > > I am interested in documenting the history of their family -- for our 11 > grandchildren. > > I know NOTHING about searching in Kentucky -- we're lucky in Cuyahoga > County to have a Historical Marriage Index, on line, for free -- and once > I finally learned the NAMES of the grandparents, I sent for the document. > I did expect to get a photocopy of the APPLICATION -- which would have > given a lot more info -- instead, this RECORD is more of an abstract -- > all typewritten. Ptui. Tomorrow I'll deal with it. > > meanwhile -- if anyone is miraculously interested in this same historical > family -- I'll be THRILLED. Or if some kind Gene-angel will head me in > the right direction for Kentucky research, all advice will be gratefully > received. I'm willing to do the work -- just too excited tonight to > figure it out. > > AND I keep hoping for miracles! (which is what happened once I'd > documented 3 generations of HIATT -- and then we were linked to the full > ten generations back to William Penn's second ship of Quaker immigrants. > Ahhh. All documented. By Bob's 4th cousin Lynn Messina, in Indiana, > Bless Lynn for finding Bob's ONLY first cousin and introducing us before > both Bob and Burt died.) > > I have met the nicest people while researching family history! I do some > genealogy volunteer work here -- and will take digital pictures of > headstones here if someone needs that. > > Warm regards, > > Karen King Hiatt > in cold Cleveland OH > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] 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 [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message