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    1. MARSHALL Scotland, Bellefonte PA, Kansas, Missouri, USA
    2. dpgray
    3. I am Dorothy Gray of Louisiana and just joined the list. I have a nice book of Marshall genealogy by James Marshall on the Marshall's of Bellefonte, PA in which I would gladly do lookups. I am interested in correspondence with other descendents of these Marshalls. Regards, Dorothy

    07/22/2004 09:32:06
    1. Re: MARSHALL-D Digest V04 #67
    2. Sealin
    3. I didn't send info but will try to find for u. I too am researching my marshalls. tx,de,nj,il and beyond liz Liz, I have MARSHALLs from New Jersey, the family of Alexander and Agnes (KINLOCH) MARSHALL. Any relation? Lynne

    07/21/2004 04:44:12
    1. Re: [MARSHALL] Hammond Marshall
    2. I didn't send info but will try to find for u. I too am researching my marshalls. tx,de,nj,il and beyond liz

    07/20/2004 06:48:15
  1. 07/20/2004 10:41:35
    1. Hammond Marshall
    2. Broomfield
    3. Because of upgrading my computer, I have lost some of my valuable Marshall information! A nice lady sent me the census record for Hammond Marshall, 1840 in Pennsylvania. I don't even have her address now. I would certainly appreciate having that record again if anyone can help. I am also looking for the 1850 record for Mason County, Kentucky, Maysville area. Hammond is supposed to have lived there between 1850-60. Thank you for any help, Elizabeth Broomfield Fairfield Glade, Tennessee [email protected]

    07/20/2004 05:42:06
    1. Re: [MARSHALL] William Marshall n Bedford County
    2. Please take my name off of your list. We are in no way related. Thanks. Catherine Marshall Palmer

    07/14/2004 04:45:56
    1. Re: [MARSHALL] William Marshal in Bedford County
    2. Lynn Visone
    3. > Anyways, back to your brick wall right. Since your Martha C. Pickle was > 18 on the 1850 then she could have been married shortly there after and more > then likely close to where she was enumerated. You may want to find the > churchs around the area and near by towns and check their wedding records. > Once again, I recommend a phone call rather then a letter or email because > you can get faster results. Carol, her obit states she was married at age 22 (so, 1854) near Memphis. I put in a request to the Tennessee state archives. They searched the counties surrounding & including Memphis but came up with nothing. I've been thinking it strange a young woman would leave home before marriage, but perhaps she didn't; perhaps her home (family she lived with) moved, and she with them. I need to see if Jonathan & Penelope Leggit are still in Bedford Co in 1860 but haven't done so yet. > In the mean time, I would definitely write away for any information > regarding William being buried in Mt. Zion Cemetery, Winfield, KS. That > would be a good place to start since you know where he is already. From > there you might find other relatives buried in the same plot. Good idea, but already done. :-) I have requested a film from the LDS library that contains the Mt. Zion records. William H. & Martha are buried there, as well as their son William J. & his wife Ora. Beverly Horner submitted a complete list of names for Mt. Zion to Interment.com, so I apparently have no other relatives there. Dean and Faye Alley live in the area and were kind enough to send me photographs of the tombstones of my Marshall graves. (yes, I was thrilled!) I hope the film will tell me the cause of death and where William was born. I have the death certificate for Martha (died in 1917) and her daughter did not know her mother's parents names or where they were from - not surprising if they died when Martha was a child. > This link http://www.oz.net/~cyndihow/pensions.htm#Links is a web site > that will help you find and order records from the National Archives. It > seems pretty thorough and straight forward. Give it a try, you mat find > that your William was infact a part of the Civil War after all. There were at least 4 William H. Marshalls in the War, according to one site I checked out. I'm not sure how I'm going to figure out which one is mine, so I may have to order all of them. > And as for the Land Grants, there is always the good old stand by > http://www.cyndislist.com/land.htm Cyndi's List. She is very good, infact > you may want to use her for the Civil War Records too > http://www.cyndislist.com/cw.htm . I think that you might have to contact > the actual state that Bedford county is in and see what sort of treasures > they may have for you. Once again, a visit in person will most certainly be > more productive then an email, letter or phone call this time. I hope to eventually visit, but I have other travel plans this summer, so I don't know when I'll get there. Thanks for the suggestions. Lynn > Let me know how these all turn out for you > All the best > > Carol Gabriel > > List Admin > > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 > >

    07/13/2004 10:20:48
    1. William Marshal in Bedford County
    2. The Gabriels in BC
    3. Lynn Visone, Hi there, sorry for taking so long to get back to you. I will admit that I have been rather lazy these past few weeks and I have been ignoring everyone lately. Anyways, back to your brick wall right. Since your Martha C. Pickle was 18 on the 1850 then she could have been married shortly there after and more then likely close to where she was enumerated. You may want to find the churchs around the area and near by towns and check their wedding records. Once again, I recommend a phone call rather then a letter or email because you can get faster results. In the mean time, I would definitely write away for any information regarding William being buried in Mt. Zion Cemetery, Winfield, KS. That would be a good place to start since you know where he is already. From there you might find other relatives buried in the same plot. This link http://www.oz.net/~cyndihow/pensions.htm#Links is a web site that will help you find and order records from the National Archives. It seems pretty thorough and straight forward. Give it a try, you mat find that your William was infact a part of the Civil War after all. And as for the Land Grants, there is always the good old stand by http://www.cyndislist.com/land.htm Cyndi's List. She is very good, infact you may want to use her for the Civil War Records too http://www.cyndislist.com/cw.htm . I think that you might have to contact the actual state that Bedford county is in and see what sort of treasures they may have for you. Once again, a visit in person will most certainly be more productive then an email, letter or phone call this time. Let me know how these all turn out for you All the best Carol Gabriel List Admin

    07/13/2004 06:24:45
    1. Re: [MARSHALL] Marshall and Covington connection Scarborough too
    2. John & Joyce Feazell
    3. Le, Do you have anything more on Matthew Marshall? And what area was he from if you have it? I have been looking for years for a Matthew Marshall father of Henry Marshall. Joyce ----- Original Message ----- From: "Le Bateman" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, July 02, 2004 12:45 AM Subject: [MARSHALL] Marshall and Covington connection Scarborough too > I have a ancestor by the name of MARSHALL COVINGTON born in Virginia. Was > he named for Matthew MARSHALL . His father William COVINGTON was a witness > to Mr. MARSHALL'S will I believe in 1794. Was William's wife Mary the > daughter of Matthew MARSHALL. I also have a 4thgreatgrandfather William > MARSHALL SCARBOROUGH. Does anyone know if there is a MARSHALL SCARBOROUGH > connection or is this merely a coincidence. Now MARSHALL COVINGTON settled > in Dale County Alabama, where he died in 1879. His son Ransome > settled in Henry County Alabama. The Henry County COVINGTONS are descended > from him. Thanks > Le > > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 > >

    07/02/2004 02:53:02
    1. Marshall and Covington connection Scarborough too
    2. Le Bateman
    3. I have a ancestor by the name of MARSHALL COVINGTON born in Virginia. Was he named for Matthew MARSHALL . His father William COVINGTON was a witness to Mr. MARSHALL'S will I believe in 1794. Was William's wife Mary the daughter of Matthew MARSHALL. I also have a 4thgreatgrandfather William MARSHALL SCARBOROUGH. Does anyone know if there is a MARSHALL SCARBOROUGH connection or is this merely a coincidence. Now MARSHALL COVINGTON settled in Dale County Alabama, where he died in 1879. His son Ransome settled in Henry County Alabama. The Henry County COVINGTONS are descended from him. Thanks Le

    07/01/2004 05:45:22
    1. Re: [MARSHALL] Quaker Marshill (Marshall)
    2. Lynn Visone
    3. B.D., Do you know the descendants of William and Lewis? My g-g-grandfather was William Marshall, born abt 1833 in NC, married Martha C. Pickle abt 1854 in TN, died in KS 3 Jan 1877. I do not know anything about William's parents, or any siblings. Lynn Stewart Visone > Mary; > Do you know who Ann was married too? My g-g-g-grandmother was Ann Brooker Marshall, married to William Marshall and came from England with their two sons, Lewis and William. Are we related? If so I would really appreciate anything you have on when they arrived and where. > Thanks. > B.D. Marshall > > Mary Marshall <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, Jerry! > > I'm responding to the list just in case there are others from this line. I have the family back to either England or Ireland (can't remember where they embarked off-hand) when they came to America. I do know the name was originally spelled Marshill and they come out of the Scottish clans. > > The original immigrants were Ann Marshill and her two sons. I have all the info on this. This family is also well documented in the Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy by Hinshaw in the PA and NC volumes. > > Please contact me later and I'll see what I can dig out. I'm on my way to Washington, D.C. on Monday for DAR Continental Congress and will be gone a week. So, it will be after then before I can really concentrate on all this. > > This is exciting! I think we've found a cousin! > > Mary > > > > *********** REPLY SEPARATOR *********** > > On 6/30/2004 at 8:31 AM Jerry Marshall wrote: > Hi Mary; > Glad to meet you! I am interested in any information that you might have to share. My line goes back to North Carolina from the early 1800's as best I can tell, but have been in Ga. ever since. I am at work so I dont have my research info right in front of me but would love to see anything that you might care to share. > Thanks for the post, best regards. > Jerry Marshall > > >>> [email protected] 06/29/04 05:01PM >>> > Hi! My name is Mary Hall Marshall and I'm keeper of the family history on both sides of the family. > > My husband descends from the Marshall/Hobson line that goes back to the PA and NC Quakers in William Penn's day. I have much information to share. His line led from NC into KY and eventually ended up in Farmington, IA where they stayed for a while. My husband was named Stephen, which came down the line from the Hobsons in every generation from the time his distant grandmother, Anna Hobson, married a Marshill and named a son Stephen after her father. > > I know there have to be others out there from this line. > > Glad to meet you! > > Hugs, > > Mary > > > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 > > > > ============================== > You can manage your RootsWeb-Review subscription from > http://newsletters.rootsweb.com/ > > > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 > >

    06/30/2004 10:14:35
    1. Re: [MARSHALL] Quaker Marshill (Marshall)
    2. B.D. Marshall
    3. I am sorry, but I don't think he would be the same William Marshall as I am pretty sure he was born in England. I know that both of his parents and his brother Lewis were born in England. I am a decendent of Lewis. It appears most of the family has stayed near the first homestead, which is in Branch County, Michigan. BD Lynn Visone <[email protected]> wrote: B.D., Do you know the descendants of William and Lewis? My g-g-grandfather was William Marshall, born abt 1833 in NC, married Martha C. Pickle abt 1854 in TN, died in KS 3 Jan 1877. I do not know anything about William's parents, or any siblings. Lynn Stewart Visone > Mary; > Do you know who Ann was married too? My g-g-g-grandmother was Ann Brooker Marshall, married to William Marshall and came from England with their two sons, Lewis and William. Are we related? If so I would really appreciate anything you have on when they arrived and where. > Thanks. > B.D. Marshall > > Mary Marshall wrote: > Hi, Jerry! > > I'm responding to the list just in case there are others from this line. I have the family back to either England or Ireland (can't remember where they embarked off-hand) when they came to America. I do know the name was originally spelled Marshill and they come out of the Scottish clans. > > The original immigrants were Ann Marshill and her two sons. I have all the info on this. This family is also well documented in the Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy by Hinshaw in the PA and NC volumes. > > Please contact me later and I'll see what I can dig out. I'm on my way to Washington, D.C. on Monday for DAR Continental Congress and will be gone a week. So, it will be after then before I can really concentrate on all this. > > This is exciting! I think we've found a cousin! > > Mary > > > > *********** REPLY SEPARATOR *********** > > On 6/30/2004 at 8:31 AM Jerry Marshall wrote: > Hi Mary; > Glad to meet you! I am interested in any information that you might have to share. My line goes back to North Carolina from the early 1800's as best I can tell, but have been in Ga. ever since. I am at work so I dont have my research info right in front of me but would love to see anything that you might care to share. > Thanks for the post, best regards. > Jerry Marshall > > >>> [email protected] 06/29/04 05:01PM >>> > Hi! My name is Mary Hall Marshall and I'm keeper of the family history on both sides of the family. > > My husband descends from the Marshall/Hobson line that goes back to the PA and NC Quakers in William Penn's day. I have much information to share. His line led from NC into KY and eventually ended up in Farmington, IA where they stayed for a while. My husband was named Stephen, which came down the line from the Hobsons in every generation from the time his distant grandmother, Anna Hobson, married a Marshill and named a son Stephen after her father. > > I know there have to be others out there from this line. > > Glad to meet you! > > Hugs, > > Mary > > > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 > > > > ============================== > You can manage your RootsWeb-Review subscription from > http://newsletters.rootsweb.com/ > > > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 > > ============================== Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237

    06/30/2004 09:27:05
    1. Re: [MARSHALL] Quaker Marshill (Marshall)
    2. B.D. Marshall
    3. Mary; Do you know who Ann was married too? My g-g-g-grandmother was Ann Brooker Marshall, married to William Marshall and came from England with their two sons, Lewis and William. Are we related? If so I would really appreciate anything you have on when they arrived and where. Thanks. B.D. Marshall Mary Marshall <[email protected]> wrote: Hi, Jerry! I'm responding to the list just in case there are others from this line. I have the family back to either England or Ireland (can't remember where they embarked off-hand) when they came to America. I do know the name was originally spelled Marshill and they come out of the Scottish clans. The original immigrants were Ann Marshill and her two sons. I have all the info on this. This family is also well documented in the Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy by Hinshaw in the PA and NC volumes. Please contact me later and I'll see what I can dig out. I'm on my way to Washington, D.C. on Monday for DAR Continental Congress and will be gone a week. So, it will be after then before I can really concentrate on all this. This is exciting! I think we've found a cousin! Mary *********** REPLY SEPARATOR *********** On 6/30/2004 at 8:31 AM Jerry Marshall wrote: Hi Mary; Glad to meet you! I am interested in any information that you might have to share. My line goes back to North Carolina from the early 1800's as best I can tell, but have been in Ga. ever since. I am at work so I dont have my research info right in front of me but would love to see anything that you might care to share. Thanks for the post, best regards. Jerry Marshall >>> [email protected] 06/29/04 05:01PM >>> Hi! My name is Mary Hall Marshall and I'm keeper of the family history on both sides of the family. My husband descends from the Marshall/Hobson line that goes back to the PA and NC Quakers in William Penn's day. I have much information to share. His line led from NC into KY and eventually ended up in Farmington, IA where they stayed for a while. My husband was named Stephen, which came down the line from the Hobsons in every generation from the time his distant grandmother, Anna Hobson, married a Marshill and named a son Stephen after her father. I know there have to be others out there from this line. Glad to meet you! Hugs, Mary ============================== Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 ============================== You can manage your RootsWeb-Review subscription from http://newsletters.rootsweb.com/

    06/30/2004 06:35:40
    1. Re: [MARSHALL] Quaker Marshill (Marshall)
    2. Mary Marshall
    3. Hi, Jerry! I'm responding to the list just in case there are others from this line. I have the family back to either England or Ireland (can't remember where they embarked off-hand) when they came to America. I do know the name was originally spelled Marshill and they come out of the Scottish clans. The original immigrants were Ann Marshill and her two sons. I have all the info on this. This family is also well documented in the Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy by Hinshaw in the PA and NC volumes. Please contact me later and I'll see what I can dig out. I'm on my way to Washington, D.C. on Monday for DAR Continental Congress and will be gone a week. So, it will be after then before I can really concentrate on all this. This is exciting! I think we've found a cousin! Mary *********** REPLY SEPARATOR *********** On 6/30/2004 at 8:31 AM Jerry Marshall wrote: Hi Mary; Glad to meet you! I am interested in any information that you might have to share. My line goes back to North Carolina from the early 1800's as best I can tell, but have been in Ga. ever since. I am at work so I dont have my research info right in front of me but would love to see anything that you might care to share. Thanks for the post, best regards. Jerry Marshall >>> [email protected] 06/29/04 05:01PM >>> Hi! My name is Mary Hall Marshall and I'm keeper of the family history on both sides of the family. My husband descends from the Marshall/Hobson line that goes back to the PA and NC Quakers in William Penn's day. I have much information to share. His line led from NC into KY and eventually ended up in Farmington, IA where they stayed for a while. My husband was named Stephen, which came down the line from the Hobsons in every generation from the time his distant grandmother, Anna Hobson, married a Marshill and named a son Stephen after her father. I know there have to be others out there from this line. Glad to meet you! Hugs, Mary ============================== Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237

    06/30/2004 06:17:12
    1. Helpful hints
    2. The Gabriels in BC
    3. John, thanks a lot for posting this link. I never did understand what Ahnentafel, let alone how to use it. Thank you for describing it so clearly for me. Great Job Carol Gabriel List Admin ----- Original Message ----- From: "John Rhymes" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, June 25, 2004 1:45 AM Subject: [MARSHALL] Helpful hints > Hi Cousins, > > I've presumed to do a page of Helpful Hints which I > hope will be of some value in record keeping. > > If you have any comment, I'd appreciate hearing from > you. > > It's at http://john.rootsweb.com/Longstreet/hints.html > > Regards, > John > New Orleans > > > > __________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Mail - 50x more storage than other providers! > http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail > > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 >

    06/30/2004 02:41:26
    1. Re: [MARSHALL] Quaker Marshill (Marshall)
    2. Mary, I do not believe that we are connected. My family came from Scotland through New York to Wisconsin. Sorry Marilyn

    06/29/2004 01:57:36
    1. Quaker Marshill (Marshall)
    2. Mary
    3. Hi! My name is Mary Hall Marshall and I'm keeper of the family history on both sides of the family. My husband descends from the Marshall/Hobson line that goes back to the PA and NC Quakers in William Penn's day. I have much information to share. His line led from NC into KY and eventually ended up in Farmington, IA where they stayed for a while. My husband was named Stephen, which came down the line from the Hobsons in every generation from the time his distant grandmother, Anna Hobson, married a Marshill and named a son Stephen after her father. I know there have to be others out there from this line. Glad to meet you! Hugs, Mary

    06/29/2004 10:01:44
    1. Hello
    2. Le Bateman
    3. I am Jacob L. Bateman III or Le middlename is LeRoy. I have two ancestors > with the given name MARSHALL. So I am trying to find the connection. Even though these relatives are not related I am interested in how they got the name MARSHALL as a given name. MARSHALL COVINGTON was born in 1800 in Lincoln County Ga. He died in Dale County Alabama in 1879. His father William COVINGTON born in 1731 in Amelia County was from Virginia. William MARSHALL SCARBOROUGH was also born in Georgia in Laurens County in 1839. His father William Perrien SCARBOROUGH was born in Georgia 1812. They are connected to the SCARBOROUGH'S from SCARBOROUGH FAIR England so I have been told. We descend from a cousin or brother of William SCARBOROUGH who was hung for being a conspirator with Col. Nathaniel BACON. That William was a brother or cousin to Captain Edmund SCARBOROUGH who first settled in Virginia. I do hope someone can help me. William MARSHALL SCARBOROUGH was the son of William Perrien and Penelope FORDHAM SCASRBOROUGH. Le

    06/27/2004 01:16:39
    1. Re: [MARSHALL] Found new info, now need new help.
    2. I am Catherine Alice Marshall. My twin brother John and I were born in Maryland, to George and Kate Marshall (both deceased). I also had an older brother, George Lynwood who died at age 18. My twin brother and I are now in our 70s. I live in Florida and miss Maryland very much. I would like to help you but I doubt if we have any connection. Some of our relatives married Clagetts or Claggett.

    06/27/2004 06:33:32
    1. Hello
    2. Le Bateman
    3. I am Jacob L. Bateman III or Le middlename is LeRoy. I have two ancestors with the given name MARSHALL. So I am trying to find the connection. Even though these relatives are not related I am interested in how they got the name MARSHALL as a given name. MARSHALL COVINGTON was born in 1800 in Lincoln County Ga. He died in Dale County Alabama in 1879. His father William COVINGTON born in 1731 in Amelia County was from Virginia. William MARSHALL SCARBOROUGH was also born in Georgia in Laurens County in 1839. His father William Perrien SCARBOROUGH was born in Georgia 1812. They are connected to the SCARBOROUGH'S from SCARBOROUGH FAIR England so I have been told. We descend from a cousin or brother of William SCARBOROUGH who was hung for being a conspirator with Col. Nathaniel BACON. That William was a brother or cousin to Captain Edmund SCARBOROUGH who first settled in Virginia. I do hope someone can help me. Le

    06/26/2004 04:04:24