Your grandma Bailey, I research Bailey's from Monroe County, and Jackson Tn. Who was your Grandma? Jeanette Bailey > Date: Tue, 29 Oct 2013 17:18:51 -0400 > From: jeannie40215@gmail.com > To: kymonroe@rootsweb.com > Subject: Re: [KYMONROE] Zora Barton Filson Tuck > > Thank you for the information. I have the date she married my grandpa > Bailey. She had a sweet sweet smile and voice when she sang > > > On Thu, Oct 24, 2013 at 5:49 PM, Michael Meador <jimmead@nctc.com> wrote: > > > Zora Barton was married to Edward Washington "Wash" Tuck (1862-1925). She > > was also married 27 Dec 1908 to Matthew Filson and 12 Sept 1927 to Walter > > Hargis > > Michael > > This is not a list member. > > ------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > > KYMONROE-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > > > > -- > Jeannie > God Bless > God Speed > kymonroe@rootsweb.com > ancestraltrackers.org > This is not a list member. > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to KYMONROE-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Strong close to set up a monster week ahead! This is Ready to Move! Long Term Target Price: $1.40 Today Price: 0.52 Date: Oct, 25th Symbol traded: AL A_N Name: ALANCO TECHNOLOGIES, CORP. Unbelievable!!! ONE Hour until we release our Wild News.
I submitted information re this person but I never saw it show up.do you have any record of receiving it? Glen Horn
Zora Barton was married to Edward Washington "Wash" Tuck (1862-1925). She was also married 27 Dec 1908 to Matthew Filson and 12 Sept 1927 to Walter Hargis Michael
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Douglas Cummins <dcumyns@gmail.com> Date: Tue, Oct 8, 2013 at 11:08 AM Subject: [MSATTALA] Lesser Known Probate Records To: "msattala@rootsweb.com" <msattala@rootsweb.com> Lesser Known Probate Records. Part One, by Robert Barnes This article discusses less common sources of probate, what they do, and how they help the researcher. In their pursuit of probate sources, I urge researchers to be methodical, to keep a list of all sources checked, and to remember that a record may be found in an adjacent political subdivision. Sometimes clues are found where they are least expected, as in the case of some of the indentures listed in Part Two of this article. Original Records Researchers should be aware that when probate records, such as Administration Accounts, Inventories, Wills, etc., were taken to the county court they would be copied into large register volumes, or libers, but the original records were kept on file. When these documents were copied, mistakes in spelling and punctuation could often occur. When abstracters prepared materials for publication, even more mistakes might occur. The careful researcher should check these original records against subsequent transcriptions. In Maryland, for example, the Prerogative Court has Wills, Original (Series S 540), for the years 1666 to 1777. Baltimore, Caroline, Cecil, Frederick, Prince George's, Queen Anne's, Somerset, and Talbot counties have Wills, Original, dated from the colonial period, overlapping the Prerogative Court. The Maryland State Archives has original Administration Accounts, Administration Bonds, Guardian Accounts, Guardian Bonds, Indentures, and Inventories, as well as Wills. Accounts of Sales Accounts of Sales are sales of the personal property of deceased persons. They may contain a more detailed list of his or her possessions than an actual inventory. Many times family members purchased some of the property of the decedent. When John Hignet's property was sold in 1822, George Hignet purchased an old gun for $1.50; Louisa and Mary Ann Hignet purchased feather beds, sheets, blankets, quilts and pillows for $11.00 and $10.00, respectively. Master John Hignet, Jr., purchased a small chest for 50¢, Louisa Hignet bought a trunk for $1.50, George Hignet paid $3.00 for a map of the United States, and Mary Ann Hignet bought a large chest for $1.50. When John McComesky's personal estate was sold in 1823, the first purchaser was Agnes McComesky, whose name is repeated later in the list. Administration Bonds These may show the possible value of the estate. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries there were few newspapers in which to publish obituaries; church records did not always contain burials of all parishioners, and most people did not leave wills, so the administration bond might be the first permanent record of a death. After someone died, his executor or administrator would come into court, with two sureties, and post a bond that they would well and faithfully administer the estate of the decedent. They were required to file the first account within six months. Many times they were late and would be summoned to show cause why they were late. They would then be granted an extension. The two bondsmen or sureties promised that if the accountant did not carry out his or her duties, they would be responsible. If the wife (or widow) was the executrix or administratrix, the bondsmen were usually her relatives. If two executors were named in the will, one was usually a relative of the testator and the other a relative of the spouse. Guardian Bonds When the decedent left one or more minor children, a guardian would be appointed, and he or she would post a bond affirming that he/she would submit reports every six months detailing how much money had been spent on each minor's clothing, education, and other expenses. The bond would state that the guardian would post a bond he would look after the care of the child and he would name the child and perhaps give an age. Annual Valuations Annual Valuations may be found in land records, orphans court proceedings, or as a separate series. These were recorded to ensure that the guardian would not squander the estate by cutting down trees, selling the lumber, and pocketing the proceeds. Jonathan Plowman died in August 1798, leaving an orphan Jantha. We the subscribers, Henry Brawn, Henry Epaugh, at the request of Zachariah Loveall, entered into the lands and plantation of Jantha Plowman, an orphan and viewed the same with the improvements, which consist of a dwelling house and kitchen, the latter wants a new roof, one old barn almost useless, one old corn house, a spring house wanting a new cover, a small house covered with straw, the land mostly cleared, an apple orchard of about 200 trees which appears to be old and not thriving, all which we estimate at the annual value of £13, and we agree that the guardian should be further permitted to clear three acres at the east end of the said plantation for keeping the houses and fences in repair. (Baltimore County Orphans Court Proceedings 4:30-31) The Attala County Web Site is in need of contributions of photographs, documents, family letters, diaries, etc. Submit your material to Everette Carr at: <a href="mailto:attaladirector@gmail.com">Attala Director</a> ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to MSATTALA-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Douglas Cummins <dcumyns@gmail.com> Date: Sat, Oct 12, 2013 at 10:17 AM Subject: [MSATTALA] Fwd: Book Review: Without Indentures: Index to White Slave Children in Colonial Court Records (Maryland and Virginia). To: "msattala@rootsweb.com" <msattala@rootsweb.com> Book Review: Without Indentures: Index to White Slave Children in Colonial Court Records (Maryland and Virginia). The following book review was written by Bobbi King: Without Indentures: Index to White Slave Children in Colonial Court Records (Maryland and Virginia). By Richard Hayes Phillips, Ph.D. Published by Genealogical Publ. Co., 2013. 283 pages. The title is a shocking one. ‘White slave children’? Who would have thought such a heartbreaking list could exist? Dr. Phillips prefaces an example: “Your poor petitioner was spirited out of his native country, unknown to any of his friends, and shipped aboard for this country as a servant.” So begins the petition of John Lyme, presented to the County Court in Somerset County, Maryland on 15 January 1690. John Lyme was one of thousands of white children spirited out of their native countries, unknown to their families and friends, transported to America, and sold into slavery. The history books like to call them “indentured servants.” But this is not true. They had no indentures. The children were kidnapped. Indentures were contracts of servitude between a purchaser of ship’s passage for an immigrant who worked off the price with years of unpaid work duty, earning only freedom after a certain number of years. Children who arrived by ship into colonial ports alone and without indentures were brought into the courts and sentenced to years of bondage duty. Dr. Phillips has compiled an index of over 5000 names of children collected from the Court Order Books of colonial Maryland and Virginia. These county courts, with their panels of appointed judges called “Worshippfull Commissioners” in Maryland and “Gentleman Justices” in Virginia, left behind alphabetized names of thousands of children without indentures, lists of the names of the judges who sentenced the children into slavery, and the lists of the ships upon which the children were transported along with the names of the captains who commanded the vessels. A significant percentage of Worshippfull Commissioners and Gentleman Justices assumed ownership of the children they sentenced into servitude. Dr. Phillips provides a brief but thorough explanation of the statutes and customs that sanctioned state-sponsored kidnapping and subjugation of children in England and the practices that followed into the American colonies. Difficult as it is to comprehend, he explains these institutional practices with clarity and objectivity even as the shock of it all sets in. This compilation does not contain names of confirmed indentured children, Negro or Indian children (they were slaves for life), orphan children (they were assigned guardians), nor children given up for adoption (parents affirmed their voluntary decisions to give the children). Dr. Phillips describes his sources and repositories so well that a researcher in colonial records could find reason to consider looking at the same records for reasons aside from the indentured children cases. This book brings to light another secret and unpleasant piece of American history. Thanks to Dr. Phillips these ancestors’ early and difficult lives will be secret no more. Without Indentures: Index to White Slave Children in Colonial Court Records (Maryland and Virginia) is available from the publisher, Genealogical Publishing Company, at http://goo.gl/XPcu5O and other genealogy bookstores. The Attala County Web Site is in need of contributions of photographs, documents, family letters, diaries, etc. Submit your material to Everette Carr at: <a href="mailto:attaladirector@gmail.com">Attala Director</a> ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to MSATTALA-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Douglas Cummins <dcumyns@gmail.com> Date: Sat, Oct 12, 2013 at 10:24 AM Subject: [MSATTALA] U.K. National Archives Burial Records To: "msattala@rootsweb.com" <msattala@rootsweb.com> U.K. National Archives Burial Records from Closed Cemeteries Added to Deceased Online The following announcement was written by the folks at Deceased Online: The first tranche of burial records from another set of data held by The National Archives has been added to the Deceased Online website, www.deceasedonline.com. The dataset of transcriptions, RG37 ‘Removals of graves and tombstones’, comprises records from over 200 closed cemeteries and burial ground across many areas of England and Wales. The total records will comprise over 175,000 names/burials, with the first 105,000 now available on the website, dating back to the 17th century. Full details can be found on the website at this link: http://goo.gl/HHGQpC. This is the third set of data from The National Archives now available on Deceased Online the others being the historic Brompton Cemetery in London and a collection of military burial records from many sites across the UK. You can also read about the RG37 collection in Emma Jolly’s latest blog at: http://deceasedonlineblog.blogspot.co.uk/2013/10/tna-records-of-burial-ground-removals.html . Deceased Online will be adding another burial records data collection for a North East Yorkshire council area next week. For further information visit www.deceasedonline.com. The Attala County Web Site is in need of contributions of photographs, documents, family letters, diaries, etc. Submit your material to Everette Carr at: <a href="mailto:attaladirector@gmail.com">Attala Director</a> ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to MSATTALA-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
Please list the surnames you wish to have research -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com List Admin. ancestraltrackers.org
I don't manage the Monroe Co list tho I post Monroe Co data often to my South-Central-Kentucky list. If you want to subscribe to Monroe Co - send the request to: KYMONROE-REQUEST@rootsweb.com Sandi At 06:51 PM 10/20/2013, you wrote: >SUBSCRIBE >This is not a list member. >------------------------------- >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >KYMONROE-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without >the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
SUBSCRIBE
U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-Current<http://www.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=3693&enc=1> about Willie Carver Name:Willie Carver <https://secure.ancestry.com/VitalChek/selection.aspx?su=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2fcgi-bin%2fsse.dll%3frank%3d1%26new%3d1%26MSAV%3d1%26msT%3d1%26gss%3dangs-g%26gsln%3dcarver%26msypn__ftp%3dmonroe%2bcounty%252c%2bky%26cpxt%3d1%26catBucket%3drtp%26uidh%3dza4%26cp%3d12%26pcat%3dROOT_CATEGORY%26h%3d9813142%26recoff%3d11%26db%3dssdi%26indiv%3d1%26ml_rpos%3d40&ce=2&na=Willie+Carver&ed=1969&ci=Fountain+Run&co=Monroe&st=Kentucky&h=401-54-0646> SSN:401-54-0646Last Residence:42133 Fountain Run, Monroe, Kentucky, USA Born:14 Jan 1890Died:Sep 1969State (Year) SSN issued:Kentucky (1956) -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
Kentucky Death Index, 1911-2000 Kentucky Death Index, 1911-2000Name:Joseph B CarverDeath Date:19 Mar 1993Death Place:MonroeAge:77Residence:Tennessee Volume:16Certificate:7840 -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
Kentucky Death Index, 1911-2000 Kentucky Death Index, 1911-2000Name:William L CarverDeath Date:3 Nov 1994Death Place:Fountain RunAge:87Residence:Monroe Volume:64Certificate:31920 -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
Kentucky Death Index, 1911-2000 Kentucky Death Index, 1911-2000Name:Nancy A CarverDeath Date:7 Jul 1978Death Place:MonroeAge:84Residence:Tennessee Volume:37Certificate:18038 -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
Kentucky, Death Records, 1852-1953 Kentucky, Death Records, 1852-1953Name:Mollie Harlan Taylor [Mollie Harlan Carver] Death Date:29 Aug 1913Death Location:MonroeAge:34 Gender:FemaleEthnicity:WhiteBirth Date:3 Feb 1879Father's Name:Anderson CarverFather's Birth Location:TennesseeMother's Name:Emily WinklerMother's Birth Location:Tennessee -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
Kentucky, Death Records, 1852-1953 Kentucky, Death Records, 1852-1953Name:Kitt Carver of Color A Slane CarverDeath Date:28 Jun 1924Death Location:Monroe Age:86Gender:FemaleEthnicity:BlackBirth Date:28 Jun 1838Birth Location: Kentucky -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
Kentucky, Death Records, 1852-1953 Kentucky, Death Records, 1852-1953Name:Levi D Carner [Levi D Carver] <javascript:TGN.Ancestry.Search.Orem.DoOrem(788177)>Death Date:22 May 1917Death Location:MonroeAge:53Gender:MaleEthnicity:WhiteBirth Date:3 Apr 1864Birth Location:KentuckyFather's Name:J P CarnerFather's Birth Location:KentuckyMother's Name:Mary F CarnerMother's Birth Location: -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
Kentucky, Marriage Records, 1852-1914 Kentucky, Marriage Records, 1852-1914 Name:Viola CarverAge:22Est. Birth Year:abt 1884Residence:MonroeSpouse Name:W T NormanSpouse Age:35Est. Spouse Birth Year:abt 1871Spouse Residence: MetcalfeMarriage Date:27 Dec 1906Marriage Location:MonroeCounty of Record: Monroe -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
Kentucky, Marriage Records, 1852-1914 Kentucky, Marriage Records, 1852-1914 Name:Duessa F CarverAge:16Est. Birth Year:abt 1859Residence:MonroeSpouse Name:Joseph BrooksSpouse Age:25Est. Spouse Birth Year:abt 1850Spouse Residence:MonroeMarriage Date:7 Nov 1875Marriage Location:MonroeCounty of Record:Monroe -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org
Kentucky, Marriage Records, 1852-1914 Kentucky, Marriage Records, 1852-1914 Name:William CarverSpouse Name:Eliza Ann HayseSpouse Age:24Est. Spouse Birth Year:abt 1828Spouse Birth Location:MonroeSpouse Residence:MonroeMarriage Date:15 May 1852Marriage Location:MonroeCounty of Record:Monroe -- Jeannie God Bless God Speed kymonroe@rootsweb.com ancestraltrackers.org