Hi From Western Australia: I am really really keen to find information about my late stepfather, Herbert Allison Davis. I did a search on the Rootweb SSI site and discovered that Herb was born Sept. 21, 1914 and died 24 November 1996 and resided at his death in Hyattsville, MD. A Rootweb search also revealed 2 listing on OBIT TIMES. They indicate that the Washington Post had printed articles about his death as follows: DAVIS, Herbert A., Wash DC Post, 1996-11-20; remik DAVIS, Herbert Allison; Hyattsville MD; Wash DC Post, 1996-12-1; andrusko I have tried contacting the Washington Post and they can't find any record of the obituary articles mentioned above. I have also tried to find email addresses for the Prince Georges County Library in Hyattsville, MD and I can't find any listed. I had hoped that perhaps the library might have 1996 copies of obits. I am trying to find about Herb and his father for my half-brother, Doral Allison Davis. Our mother and Herb Davis divorced when Doral was 18 months old and he has not seen Herb or the family since then. Doral was in shot in the spine in about 16 years while at work. He is now a quadriplegic and I think this information this would give him a big lift. If anyone could help in any way, it would be very much appreciated. Best wishes to all you genealogy searchers. I too have done a great deal of research over the past few years. It sure is more difficult to research US family from Western Australia! JoAnn O'Neil Mandurah, Western Australia
In a message dated 3/2/01 3:14:06 PM Central Standard Time, astinson@midamerica.net writes: > Subj: Re: Thomas Harris & Sarah Offutt, Prince George's, MD & Louisa, VA > Date: 3/2/01 3:14:06 PM Central Standard Time > From: astinson@midamerica.net (ann stinson) > Reply-to: astinson@midamerica.net (ann stinson) > To: ChHarris47@aol.com > > Chuck, We are searching for the parents of Elizabeth Harris who married > Charles Fenley in PG County in 1711. Charles Fenley was born in Calvert Co > in 1689. Is there a possibility that your Thomas b. 1699 might have had a > sister named Elizabeth? Ann > > Ann: > It looks like this Thomas b. 1699 had the following brothers and sisters > that I know of: > 1) Samuel d. 1774 > 2) Benjamin c. 12 Sept 1714 All Hallows Parish, Anne Arundel, MD > 3) Thomas b. 1699 > 4) Ruth who married a Belt > 5) Sarah who married a William Tannehill > 6) Rebekah who married a Perry > Sorry, no Elizabeth....yet! When I read your email, I was getting excited because I thought I remembered seeing a Fenely just recently. I looked it up and it was a Henly as follows: Maryland Calender Wills. p. 129 Vol 1 Henly, Robert, Pyckywaxen, Charles Co, MD 15 Feb 1683, 31 Mar 1684 to Bethsheba and Mary, daughters of Thomas Harris Eliza, Charity, daughter of John & Charity Courts, personality son-in-law John Courts, Charity, his wife & heirs, residue of estate. Good Luck Chuck
Dear Jude and Wilma: In December of 1999 we communicated regarding Thomas Harris, of Prince George's Co, MD. b. 1699 who married in 1725 to Sarah Offutt of Calvert Co., MD. I have their children as: 1) Thomas b. 17 Dec 1726 (noted as the son of Thomas Jr.) 2) Mary b. 20 July 1728 3) Nathan b. 1747 d. 1820 who married Rachel Lawrence Jude, you placed 4) Zedekiah Harris who married Elizabeth Owens b. 1772 you then listed the children of Thomas's second marriage to Sarah Hall of which you are a descendant: 1) Celia (Catherine) m John Clark 2) Simeon b. 1780 m Susannah Owen 3) Overton 4) Elizabeth 5) Rhonda 6) Abigail m. Nathaniel Clark 7) William 8) Agnes (Nancy) Jude, you also had Thomas's b. abt 1750 in MD (as a guess) and indicated he shows up on the Louisa Co, VA census in 1787, left shortly after that with the Hall, Stringer, and Parrish families. You indicated they lived in Lexington, KY until after 1788 when they left due to the threat of Indians, indicating they went to Bullitt Co, KY. Wilma, you asked the question about one of Thomas's and Sarah's son's who was named Overton and asked if Thomas came from the Jamestown Harrises? 1) Have either of you found any new information about these families? 2) Can either of you provide an ancestory tree of this Thomas? 3) Can either of you provide a descendent tree for thisThomas? 4) According to my charts, Thomas would have been 89 years old when the Indians were threatening him in Lexington. Could this be correct? Is it possible the Thomas in Lexington is a different Thomas? Thanks. Chuck Harris
Piscataway District Census page 106: #988 John king 37 Male Carpenter born MD #988 C. King 20 Female born MD #988 Jno. King 11 Male born MD #988 M.E. King 7 Female born MD #988 Chas. H. King 30 Carpenter born MD Piscataway District Census page 120: #1214 Daniel King 19 born MD-Phelps Household #1216 Jno. King 22 Laborer born MD #1216 An King 18 born Md #1216 Susan King 8 born MD #1216 Margaret King 42 born MD #1219 John King 32 Male born MD #1219 E or F. King 23 Female born MD #1219 Jno. King 9 Male born MD #1219 Spalding District Census page 103 #939 Thos. King 52 Male Farmer born MD #939 Cary King 47 Female #939 E. King Female 26 born MD #939 J. King 24 Male born MD #939 Jas. 22 Male born MD #939 Wm. King 18 Male #939 Jno. King 15 Male born MD Bladensburg District Census page 19 #257 Elizabeth King 40 Female born MD #257 Elizabeth King 15 born MD #257 Mary King 13 Female born MD #257 Henry King 9 Male born MD #257 William King 7 born MD #257 Otho King 5 Male born MD #257 Martha King 1 female born MD Piscataway District Census page 110 #1037 Henry King 40 Male Manager #1037 M. King 34 Female born MD #1037 Thos. King 12 Male born MD #1037 Henry 9 Male born MD #1037 Oscar King 7 Male born MD #1037 M. King 4 Female born MD #1037 L. King 1 Male born MD Spalding District Census page 89: #779 Sylvester King 28 Male Manager born MD #779 Sarah King 26 F. born MD #779 Richd. King 7 Male born MD #779 Jno. King 5 Male born MD #779 Alfred King 3 Male born MD
Bladensburg District Census page 8. House number 110. Lanham, Ann 32 Female born MD-living with a Smith family, Bladensburg District census page 15. House number 215 Lanham, Trueman 51 M. Farmer all born in MD Lanham, Mary 42 F. Lanham, Harriet 20 F. Lanham, Rachel 16 F. Lanham Trueman 10 M. Lanham, Mary M. 9 Lanham, Benjamin L. 6 M. Lanham, Geniva 1 F. Vansville District Census page 31 Lanham, Jane 24 F. born MD, living with other's: Anderson, Dismay, Riddle, and Coleman. House number 139. No Righter surname in the 1850 Prince George's County, Maryland Census.
The following Horten and Deutsch and Born families moved from Ellicott Mills, Maryland to the former White Marsh Plantation in the Queen Anne's district (Collington) near Bowie in Prince Georges County, Maryland circa 1865. The families were tenant farmers to the Jesuit priests of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church and first worked in their vineyards. After a few years the vineyards failed and John Horten and Frank Deutsch harvested willow branches for basketweaving. Letters from Frank to Father Zwinge tell this story. The families lived on farms (actually in District #14) across the Annapolis Road from the church grounds, about a mile from the Patuxent River Priest's Bridge - just off of Crain Highway. The Hortens lived in one farm dwelling nearby and the Deutsch and Born families lived in dwellings right next door to each other on the same farm property. I would really like to know the history of the Jesuit tenant farmers, the vineyards, and willow harvesting, and to contact anyone who might know about these properties across from historic Sacred Heart, its history, and its current owners. the two farms and three dwellings consisted of: John Horten (b. 1827) and his wife Kate (or Catherine- b. 1822) Deutsch Horten and children Anna (b. 1852), John (b. 1858), Mary Frances (b. 1861), and Francis Erasmus (b. 1863) and Kate's brother Francis (Frank) Joseph Deutsch (1827) and his wife Elizabeth Born Deutsch and children Francis Cleophus (1858), Maria Anna (1860), Nicholas Bonaventure (1862), Julia Elizabeth (1864), Anna Martina Carolina (1866), Anastasia Antonia Margaretha (1868) and Frank's mother Mary (or Anna Maria- 1793) Deutsch. and in a dwelling next door lived Elizabeth's family Margaret Born (age 54), Mary (age 32), and Julia (age 17) It seems that Frank and Kate's father - Joseph Valerius Deutsch (1792) and Elizabeth's father - John Born may have died in Ellicott Mills (No grave has been found) and Mary Deutsch dies eventually in Prince George's County. No grave for her was ever found at Sacred Heart. Don't know whether Elizabeth Deutsch parents John and Margaretha Born and sister Mary and Julia M. ever moved from Ellicott Mills to Prince Georges County. The Deutsch family remained in Prince Georges County for generations but the Horten family grew tired of the struggles of rural life and returned to Baltimore City by 1874. I would like to know what happened to the Deutsch family. All of the adults were German immigrants from Rhenish Prussia in the 1850s and the children before 1859 were born in Baltimore City and baptized at St. Alphonsus Catholic Church and after 1859 in Ellicott Mills and baptized at St Paul Catholic Church. In Ellicott Mills, John Horten and Frank Deutsch had worked for the Christian Brothers at Rockhill College. They lived in Howard County briefly during the Civil War skirmish -The Raid of Ellicott Mills and moved to Prince Georges County by the end of the war. Thanks for your help. Bill Horten 4925 Madison Avenue San Diego, CA 92115 williamhorten@home.com
Hello List, If you have ask me for a look-up on the 1850 Prince George's County, Maryland Census and have not had an answer, please re send your request. My computer's Norton option caught an" illness" before it could do my machine harm and shut down. I lost I do not know how many e-mails. The "illness" has been killed so, do not fear my e-mail. My husband is an expert and makes sure that I do not spread the "illness" to others. Also, for all who have ask my daughter who lives S.E. of Olympia, Washington is all right after this mornings earthquake. The house was shaking so much that she hurt her back getting the baby out of harms way. Things were flying off the walls and bookcase. So please let me know if you didn't get the information requested. Helen
Additional comments: You can request "a copy of the application proving the patriot (give name, dates, wife for identification)" if you don't know the name of the DAR member who applied, with your $5.00 check. The application will give the applicant's lineage generation by generation, b. d. m. dates and spouse, back to the Revolutionary War ancestor. It gives the children of the Rev. ancestor if they are known, but this is often incomplete or inaccurate. Doesn't give his parents. Sources are also listed for the data. The quality of proving data varies - DAR now requires more than in earlier years. And it should be verified independently, getting your own copy of wills, etc., as with any information you get. I prepared an application and proofs (over 50 pages) to prove a previously unproved Rev. War patriot for my daughter to join the DAR last year. Ruth Dunlap Illinois -----Original Message----- From: Janmim@aol.com <Janmim@aol.com> To: MDPGEORG-L@rootsweb.com <MDPGEORG-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Sunday, February 25, 2001 2:15 PM Subject: Re: DAR Lookup INFO on cost, etc. >Hello Everyone, > >I am pasting in a self-explanatory post on this subject I did for the >Southside Virginia list earlier this year. > >Janet (Baugh) Hunter > >CNIDR Isearch-cgi 1.20.06 (File: 24) > >========================================================================= >Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2001 17:28:16 EST >From: <Janmim@aol.com> >To: VA-SOUTHSIDE-L@rootsweb.com >Message-ID: <a0.f15eb44.279f5f80@aol.com> >Subject: Re: [VA-SOUTHSIDE-L] How to Access DAR Info..Footnote on "Bound OUt" >Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" >Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit > >What follows is based on my personal experience at DAR, a place where I could >go in and not come out for ten years and still have more to do (it has >complete census records by the way just like the Natl Archives only much >better microfilm readers and they actually have the lights turned on so you >can see if you want to write a note), but it doesn't have the original >pension files or actual land grant sales records, not included at the BLM >website...Sorry if I ramble. > >In a message dated 1/23/01 12:54:39 PM Eastern Standard Time, >slyfox38@juno.com writes: > ><< I am trying to figure out how to obtain info (actually copies of > approved > applications for membership)from the DAR regarding the membership > of my late aunt and the person whose application she "piggybacked on" to > > prove her descent from a Revolutionary War soldier. >> > >Clay and everyone else, > >I live in Alexandria VA and have been lucky enough to research at DAR (and >the Natl Archives) without paying their exorbitant fees. (Of course, I CAN'T >from here get the Missouri info my mother wants..) > >I called them and have an answer for you. > >First, they have two types of information available..(1) The application >itself and then (2) the backup documentation, such as bibles, wills,etc. >They must be requested separately. > >There is an online form to request a copy of an application, no blood tests >required to determine your sex. It is at >http://www.dar.org/natsociety/RGR-1000.pdf > >This is a PDF document which requires an Acrobat reader, which many folks >with older, slower computers don't have. > >If that is the case then you CAN simply write a request letter including all >the information that you might have, including the name of the person's whose >application you want. In your case, that would be the original applicant, not >the piggybackers I guess. Include the name of the soldier, where he >served,where he died, his wife's name, and the DAR member number. > >The letter should go to: > >National Society Daughters of the American Revolution >Office of the Registrar General >Attention: Record Copy >1776 D Street, NW, >Washington, DC 20006 > >It should be accompanied by a check for $5.00 made payable to Treasurer >General NSDAR > >Now for the supplemntal, supporting documentation files they charge a ,omo,i, >$30.00/hour members, $40/hour nonmembers nonrefundable search fee. >Information is here and as I said above it a >separate process: http://www.dar.org/library/search.html > >I do not know whether to advise any of you to use this route or not if you >need supporting documentation, as I was supplied with everything I needed, >but the last two generations. from a cousin. > >What I do know is that I have requested many files as a cheap-for-me way to >get a hold of wills (as opposed to writing to the courthouse in Henry Co VA). > However, I would say about 50 percent of the time the files have been empty. > Many of the rest have included a mumbo-jumbo of mixed documents, MANY with >nothing before about 1850 or so, and then from my 7th cousins in faraway >places. > >(FYI, I have many ancestors who fought in the Rev War and don't think I have >an ancestor that arrived after about 1730. Except maybe for my never-to-be >known Warren Co TN gg grandmother who gave birth in 1840 to an illegitimate >child, maybe died in childbirth, undoubtedly sired by a future Congressman, >three months before he was married to 15 year old daughter, half his age, of >a prominent military man. The Congressman's descendants, well actually his >father's descendants, have accepted us by the way. But he was raised , never >acknowledged, by another family and letters he much later wrote from MO, to >which he ran at age 14 when his step mother remarried and he was BOUND >OUT..forgot about that in our recent discussion...make it clear that the >female in that household was "like a mother for all intense (sic) purposes).) > >Sorry for the digression, but I just remembered my most recent case of a >bound-out ancestor and its consequences on a headstrong 14 year old boy (for >whose probable ancestors there are several DAR memberships btw) and whose >marriage to the daughter of southern sympathizers caused a major family >breach,pictures turned to the wall and admonitions not to speak to speak to >her, though we think her mother may have ignored her father's shenanigans... > >As local DAR chapters have the initial say-so in who becomes members, you >might check with your local chapter on their eligibility requirements. DAR >has links for the states here: >http://www.dar.org/cgi-bin/natsociety/chapters.cfm?State=Index > >The bottomline is that the $30.00 search fee for supporting documentation is >really a crapshoot. If DAR membership is your goal and you don't have >contact with the other family members, it is probably worth it. If you have >already identified your ancestor, however, and want a will or something, you >are better off paying the money to a courthouse. > >Best Regards and the best of luck > >Janet Hunter > >______________________________ >- ---------------------------- > >______________________________
Your Day family was at house #753, right next door is your Ogdon family at house number #754. Spalding Districh Census page 88 Ogdon, John 27 Male Labourer-all born MD Ogdon, Delily 20 Female Ogdon, Wm. 8 Male
Spalding District Census page 88 #753 Day, Thos. 45 Farmer-all born MD. The last two I wonder about a typo. Sounds like male names? Day, Mary E. 30 Day, Thos. 16 Male Day, Sarah 11 Female Day, Wm. 9 Male Day, E. 7 Female Day, Jas. 3 Female- Day, Frank 6 Female- There is a African-American Thos. Day 23, living with a Boon family.
Yesterday I did look-ups for some people. The book was : 1850 Census Prince George's County, Maryland, editor Wilcox. 1978. Prince George's Genealogical Society.
In a message dated 02/25/2001 2:33:13 PM Eastern Standard Time, jhwest@ptialaska.net writes: > Vansville District Census page 42 > > #295 Riddle, Jacob 83 Planter born MD > #295 Riddle, Alethia 60 MD > #295, John 60 Planter born MD-others in this family listed > #295 Riddle, James 5 born MD > Hello List, I am doing Riddle research in PG Co. MD. Would the person who requested this information get in touch with me at dmt1951@aol.com. Thank you, Donna Thomas Researching Curtis, Dalton, Blalock, Noblett in NC, Dintaman, Ehrisman, Desh, Weiser, Sparr, Stevens, Green in PA, and Riddle in MD.
Hello Everyone, I am pasting in a self-explanatory post on this subject I did for the Southside Virginia list earlier this year. Janet (Baugh) Hunter CNIDR Isearch-cgi 1.20.06 (File: 24) ========================================================================= Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2001 17:28:16 EST From: <Janmim@aol.com> To: VA-SOUTHSIDE-L@rootsweb.com Message-ID: <a0.f15eb44.279f5f80@aol.com> Subject: Re: [VA-SOUTHSIDE-L] How to Access DAR Info..Footnote on "Bound OUt" Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit What follows is based on my personal experience at DAR, a place where I could go in and not come out for ten years and still have more to do (it has complete census records by the way just like the Natl Archives only much better microfilm readers and they actually have the lights turned on so you can see if you want to write a note), but it doesn't have the original pension files or actual land grant sales records, not included at the BLM website...Sorry if I ramble. In a message dated 1/23/01 12:54:39 PM Eastern Standard Time, slyfox38@juno.com writes: << I am trying to figure out how to obtain info (actually copies of approved applications for membership)from the DAR regarding the membership of my late aunt and the person whose application she "piggybacked on" to prove her descent from a Revolutionary War soldier. >> Clay and everyone else, I live in Alexandria VA and have been lucky enough to research at DAR (and the Natl Archives) without paying their exorbitant fees. (Of course, I CAN'T from here get the Missouri info my mother wants..) I called them and have an answer for you. First, they have two types of information available..(1) The application itself and then (2) the backup documentation, such as bibles, wills,etc. They must be requested separately. There is an online form to request a copy of an application, no blood tests required to determine your sex. It is at http://www.dar.org/natsociety/RGR-1000.pdf This is a PDF document which requires an Acrobat reader, which many folks with older, slower computers don't have. If that is the case then you CAN simply write a request letter including all the information that you might have, including the name of the person's whose application you want. In your case, that would be the original applicant, not the piggybackers I guess. Include the name of the soldier, where he served,where he died, his wife's name, and the DAR member number. The letter should go to: National Society Daughters of the American Revolution Office of the Registrar General Attention: Record Copy 1776 D Street, NW, Washington, DC 20006 It should be accompanied by a check for $5.00 made payable to Treasurer General NSDAR Now for the supplemntal, supporting documentation files they charge a ,omo,i, $30.00/hour members, $40/hour nonmembers nonrefundable search fee. Information is here and as I said above it a separate process: http://www.dar.org/library/search.html I do not know whether to advise any of you to use this route or not if you need supporting documentation, as I was supplied with everything I needed, but the last two generations. from a cousin. What I do know is that I have requested many files as a cheap-for-me way to get a hold of wills (as opposed to writing to the courthouse in Henry Co VA). However, I would say about 50 percent of the time the files have been empty. Many of the rest have included a mumbo-jumbo of mixed documents, MANY with nothing before about 1850 or so, and then from my 7th cousins in faraway places. (FYI, I have many ancestors who fought in the Rev War and don't think I have an ancestor that arrived after about 1730. Except maybe for my never-to-be known Warren Co TN gg grandmother who gave birth in 1840 to an illegitimate child, maybe died in childbirth, undoubtedly sired by a future Congressman, three months before he was married to 15 year old daughter, half his age, of a prominent military man. The Congressman's descendants, well actually his father's descendants, have accepted us by the way. But he was raised , never acknowledged, by another family and letters he much later wrote from MO, to which he ran at age 14 when his step mother remarried and he was BOUND OUT..forgot about that in our recent discussion...make it clear that the female in that household was "like a mother for all intense (sic) purposes).) Sorry for the digression, but I just remembered my most recent case of a bound-out ancestor and its consequences on a headstrong 14 year old boy (for whose probable ancestors there are several DAR memberships btw) and whose marriage to the daughter of southern sympathizers caused a major family breach,pictures turned to the wall and admonitions not to speak to speak to her, though we think her mother may have ignored her father's shenanigans... As local DAR chapters have the initial say-so in who becomes members, you might check with your local chapter on their eligibility requirements. DAR has links for the states here: http://www.dar.org/cgi-bin/natsociety/chapters.cfm?State=Index The bottomline is that the $30.00 search fee for supporting documentation is really a crapshoot. If DAR membership is your goal and you don't have contact with the other family members, it is probably worth it. If you have already identified your ancestor, however, and want a will or something, you are better off paying the money to a courthouse. Best Regards and the best of luck Janet Hunter ______________________________ ------------------------------
Please be advised that the spelling differs as listed: Aquasco District Census page 54 #122-Langly, Wm. B.40 Labourer-all born in MD Langly, Mary E. 38 Langley, B.S. or R.S. 12 Male Langely C.C. 10 Female Langly, Mary J. 8 Langly, M.D. 6 Female Langly, C.B. 21 Male Langley, Wm. W. 4 Langly, M.L. 24 Female Marlbrough District Census page 72 Langly, Solomon 14 Male-living with: #431 Robertson, Jas. 22 Planter and Mary E. 21-all born MD Spalding District Census page 99 Langly, Wm.19 b.. MD-living with: #869 Biggs, Alfred Laborer and E. 37
No Garges No Gillott but, I wonder about GILLISS Family: Fanny 6, George M. 2, James 10. James M. 38 US Navy , John R. 5, Rebecca M. 12, Rebecca S. 36, William E 5. All from the Bladensburg District that's near the DC line then and still today. James M. Gilliss was born in MD but, the rest of the family were all born in DC.
Your in luck, looks like the family. From Vansville District (which is the northern area of P.G. County around Beltsville) Census page 44: All born in MD and all Vermilion surname: John 73 Carpenter Mary 65 William 39 Laborer Lawson, 37 Laborer Judson 34 Laborer Caroline 28 Louisa 23 Alfred 22 Laborer Sarah E. 11 Henry C. 4 Franklin 2 Eleanor 23 Walter 1. I'll bet John was Grandfather to Henry. May be hard to figure out who is who. However, use those names to try www. ancestry.com, someone else may know the family.
In the DAR Patriot Index there are: Carbee, Joel b. 4-3-1764 d. 2-19-1834 m. Lois Downer Pvt. MAss. Carberry, Joseph b. 7-20-1753 d. 1819 m. Mary Elizabeth ---Pvt. PA. Note about the state listed in DAR. Sometimes the men went and served for another state, or county, to join families in the fight, etc. Mattingly (includes Mattingely) John b.1756 d. 1831 m. Elizabeth---Pvt. VA John b. 2-15-1759 d. 2-23-1824 m. Dykander Boswell Pvt. VA *. The *=pension papers at NARA. Wm.b. c. 1760 d. 1820-30 m.(1) Catherine Spalding (2) Elizabeth Clarke Pvt. MD From Maryland in their Revolutionary War by Clements and Wright: Joseph, Patrick, and Peter Carberry, listed as serving from St. Mary's county with Ignatiuus, Luke, Robert, Thomas and Wm. Mattingly listed on the same page as serving from St. Mary's County. Bernard, Joseph, and Moses Mattingly served from Montgomery County, MD Zachariah Mattingly served from Charles County, MD There are no other records for your people in the above book, just a list of their names.
Hello P.G. Mailing list, I have several DAR books, so I can do look ups. However, it may take a little longer, am busy making bread today.
No Segar but there is a Thomas Segaan, listed. Doesn't mean they were not living there. Lot's of Walkers 9 Mary's can you give me an approximate age she would be in 1850? From Aquasco District Census page 53-the area on the map shows that it is indeed the Brandywine area, lower Southeast PG County. #108 Watson, Ozwell 45 Plasterer-all born MD #108 Watson, E. 45 #108 Watson, Amelia 21 #108 Watson, Caroline 20 #108 Watson, Ann M. 18 #108 Watson, Geo. W. 16 MD #108 Watson, Sophia 14 #108 Watson, Margaret V. 10 #108 Watson, Benjamin 11 #108 Watson, John Samuel 8 #108 Watson, Llewellyn 5
Vansville District Census page 22: #33-McNew, Joseph 28 clerk born NY #33 McNew, Louisa 25 b. MD #33 McNew, Laura 3 MD #33 McNew, William 2n MD #33 McNew, Anna 1 MD page 35 #201McNew, William Planter 50 born MD #201 McNew, Mary 50 born MD page 38. #244 McNew, Thomas 47 Planter born MD #244 McNew, Martha 49 b. MD #244 McNew, Mary R. 22 b. MD #244 Mc New, Martha J. 20 b. MD #244 McNew, Wilberforce 12 b. MD #244 McNew, Susanna H. 13 b. MD #244 McNew, Harritte E. 8 b. MD #244 McNew, Sarah J. 5 b. MD