Dear JRene630@aol.com, Samuel G. Matison WIDEMAN was the son of John Henry WIDEMAN (ca. 1810-after 1880) and wife Mary THOMPSON (ca. 1814-after 1880). Samuel married 21 Apr. 1878 to Nancy Jane HUSKEY. John Henry WIDEMAN was the son of Jacob WIDEMAN (ca. 1784-1840-2) and wife Sarah. Jacob WIDEMAN was the son of Henry WIDEMAN (Johann Henrich WEIDMANN.) Rick Saunders http://pweb.netcom.com/~fzsaund/wideman.html
----- Original Message ----- From: <cowgirlinpayson@webtv.net> To: <MOJEFFER-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 23, 2001 7:50 PM Subject: [MOJEFFER] RE: Civil War Records > > Where would be the best place to write for Civil War records for > somebody that enlisted from MO. > > Thank you for any help or information. > > Bobbie > It depends on the unit they joined. Missouri State Archives http://mosl.sos.state.mo.us/rec-man/arch.html National Archives and Records Administration http://www.nara.gov/ Desoto Joe/The Record Man
Posted on: Jefferson County Queries Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/Mo/Jefferson/421 Surname: Miller, Wease, McManus ------------------------- Looking for family Andrew Jackson Miller and Mylinda Wease. Children: Joe, Gus, George Edward, Kate, Bob, Bell and Walt. I am researching my Miller family line. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank-you Dianna Miller Souza
Looking for any information on Samuel G. Matison Wideman, I believe born 1859, Grubville, Jeff Co. Thanks
Posted on: Jefferson County Obituaries Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/Mo/JeffersonObits/240 Surname: Telgmann, Klahs, Kochner ------------------------- Translated from German Newspaper Obituary Obituary Notice of Henry Telgmann January 14, 1918 Last Friday, the eleventh of this month, Mr. Henry Telgmann died in his daughter's house, Mrs. Henry Kochner. He was a very loyal member of our congregation. Mr. Heinrich Telgmann well prepared by often taking of the Holy Sacrament. He was born in the year 1850 in Wuell (suburb) Muenster of Westphalen. He came to Maxville, Missouri with his parents Bernhard and Gertrude Telgmann. His name is found on the list of members of the young men's society which was organized in the year 1873. He married Franzisca Klahs. He joined the St. Joseph's Men's Society and was a member since 1880. With heart and soul (was) he for the society and its activities. He was secretary and treasurer for many years and became president in 1917. He died as president of the society. The upkeep and welfare of the parish was dear to his heart. He had always an open hand when it came to church finances. The church lost one of its best and loyal helpers (members). He was a man of noble character, a man of no faults and a man according to the heart of God. As his life was God pleasing, so was his death. May his soul receive its deserved reward and rest in peace with God. At his grave side were his son Anton and daughters Katharine, Lizzie, Francisca, Gertrude and Lena. The last two Gertrude and Lena are Sisters of the Marian Order. Link: Wind and Sonntag Family Tree URL: <ttp://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=SRCH&db=bjnixon&surname=@>
Where would be the best place to write for Civil War records for somebody that enlisted from MO. Thank you for any help or information. Bobbie
Hi, am researching the following names mainly from Jefferson Co., MO.-----Wilson, Pierce, Huskey, Copeland and Drennen. Joyce Roth
--part1_62.b395d4b.279f324d_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Since I live in CA, I was unable to attend the seminar on tracing Jefferson County ancestors back to Germany. This is one of my research priorities, to find more about my Gildemeister ancestors who came to Jefferson County in 1865 from Pommern, Prussia. Were there any handouts at the seminar held last Saturday? I would be happy to pay for a copy if there were. I'd also be interested in to about the agenda and if any other seminars on this topic will be held in the future? Thanks for any information you can pass on about this seminar. Ann Gildemeister Smith San Mateo, CA --part1_62.b395d4b.279f324d_boundary Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Disposition: inline Return-Path: <MOJEFFER-L-request@rootsweb.com> Received: from rly-za03.mx.aol.com (rly-za03.mail.aol.com [172.31.36.99]) by air-za05.mail.aol.com (v77.31) with ESMTP; Fri, 12 Jan 2001 16:19:45 -0500 Received: from lists5.rootsweb.com (lists5.rootsweb.com [63.92.80.123]) by rly-za03.mx.aol.com (v77.27) with ESMTP; Fri, 12 Jan 2001 16:19:30 -0500 Received: (from slist@localhost) by lists5.rootsweb.com (8.10.1/8.10.1) id f0CLIoS16247; Fri, 12 Jan 2001 13:18:50 -0800 Resent-Date: Fri, 12 Jan 2001 13:18:50 -0800 X-Original-Sender: BDiehl@BSDA-Transit.org Fri Jan 12 13:18:49 2001 Message-ID: <70EEFD120841D311A5A10060977142CA0113E40C@bsda-transit.org> From: "Diehl, Barbi" <BDiehl@BSDA-Transit.org> Old-To: "'MOJEFFER-L@rootsweb.com'" <MOJEFFER-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Fri, 12 Jan 2001 15:17:25 -0600 MIME-Version: 1.0 X-Mailer: Internet Mail Service (5.5.2650.21) Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Subject: [MOJEFFER] Seminar - Tracing your Jefferson County Ancestors Back to Germany Resent-Message-ID: <EwctkC.A.p9D.5S3X6@lists5.rootsweb.com> To: MOJEFFER-L@rootsweb.com Resent-From: MOJEFFER-L@rootsweb.com X-Mailing-List: <MOJEFFER-L@rootsweb.com> archive/latest/2973 X-Loop: MOJEFFER-L@rootsweb.com Precedence: list Resent-Sender: MOJEFFER-L-request@rootsweb.com Please join us at the next meeting of the Jefferson County Genealogical Society on Saturday, January 20, 2001, for a talk by Dan Vornberg on Tracing your Jefferson County Ancestors Back to Germany. The regular meeting starts at 9:30 am and the talk will begin about 10:15 am and finish about 11:30 am. We hope to have a follow-up session later in the year continuing on this subject. Our meetings are held at the High Ridge branch of the Jefferson County Library, 3033 High Ridge Boulevard, High Ridge MO. Everyone is welcome and the talk is free. If you can attend, please call 314/892-2670 to let us know how many will be attending. Thanks Barb Diehl President JCGS ==== MOJEFFER Mailing List ==== The townships of Jefferson County in the late 1880s: Big River, Central, Joachim, Meramec, Plattin, Rock, and Valle. The county seat, Hillsboro, is located in Central Township. --part1_62.b395d4b.279f324d_boundary--
I 'me researching my family surnames & would be happy to share information. Thanks, Jackie
Am researching the above names and would love to share information. Barb Diehl bdiehl@bsda-transit.org P.O. Box 510092 St. Louis MO 63151-0092
Posted on: Jefferson County Queries Reply Here: http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/gc/USA/Mo/Jefferson/420 Surname: davis, pruitt, clark ------------------------- I apoligize for all the messages. I kept getting a notice that they weren't going through because the server was to busy so I kept trying. I also couldn't get back to the list to see if they made it. Just for your info the last one gives the most info. Darlene
Posted on: Jefferson County Queries Reply Here: http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/gc/USA/Mo/Jefferson/419 Surname: davis, clark, bettick ------------------------- Fredric, Thank you so much for your response. I had seen the records also stating James Davis was a free black. I also had seen copies of Henry Widemann's will and found it very curious the way James was mentioned in it "My grandson, who goes by the name of James Davis." Do you have any idea why he was so readily accepted by the white population, everyone else who married into the family seems to have been white. Was there less discrimanation towards blacks then (1800) as opposed to the 1850/60's? Do you know where the Herrington cemetery is located? Just one more thing I recently heard that Mary Herrington had married John Wilson. this John Wilson is my gggggrandfather.through their son Alexander Chambers and his daughter Mary Jane and Thomas Williams. Mary Jane (first mar. Moses Osie). Mar Jane and Thomas'son Davis mar Viola Ethel Davis, d/o William and Eliza Jane Bettick Davis, William being the s/o John and Margaret Clark Davis. John being the s/o James and Sarah Davis. I alsothink I might have a few of those alien ancestors,and they did a good job of hiding and destorying ther records. Again thanks for responding, Darlene
Posted on: Jefferson County Queries Reply Here: http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/gc/USA/Mo/Jefferson/418 Surname: davis, clark, bettick ------------------------- Fredric, Thank you so much for your response. I had seen the records also stating James Davis was a free black. I also had seen copies of Henry Widemann's will and found it very curious the way James was mentioned in it "My grandson, who goes by the name of James Davis." Do you have any idea why he was so readily accepted by the white population, everyone else who married into the family seems to have been white. Was there less discrimanation towards blacks then (1800) as opposed to the 1850/60's? Do you know where the Herrington cemetery is located? Just one more thing I recently heard that Mary Herrington had married John Wilson. this John Wilson is my gggggrandfather.through their son Alexander Chambers and his daughter Mary Jane and Thomas Williams. Mary Jane (first mar. Moses Osie). Mar Jane and Thomas'son Davis mar Viola Ethel Davis, d/o William and Eliza Jane Bettick Davis, William being the s/o John and Margaret Clark Davis. John being the s/o James and Sarah Davis. I alsothink I might have a few of those alien ancestors,and they did a good job of hiding and destorying ther records. Again thanks for responding, Darlene Green
Posted on: Jefferson County Queries Reply Here: http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/gc/USA/Mo/Jefferson/417 Surname: davis, clark, bettick ------------------------- Fredric, Thank you so much for your response. I had seen the records also stating James Davis was a free black. I also had seen copies of Henry Widemann's will and found it very curious the way James was mentioned in it "My grandson, who goes by the name of James Davis." Do you have any idea why he was so readily accepted by the white population, everyone else who married into the family seems to have been white. Was there less discrimanation towards blacks then (1800) as opposed to the 1850/60's? Do you know where the Herrington cemetery is located? Just one more thing I recently heard that Mary Herrington had married John Wilson. this John Wilson is my gggggrandfather.through their son Alexander Chambers and his daughter Mary Jane and Thomas Williams. Mary Jane (first mar. Moses Osie). Mar Jane and Thomas'son Davis mar Viola Ethel Davis, d/o William and Eliza Jane Bettick Davis, William being the s/o John and Margaret Clark Davis. John being the s/o James and Sarah Davis. I alsothink I might have a few of those alien ancestors,and they did a good job of hiding and destorying ther records. Again thanks for responding, Darlene
Posted on: Jefferson County Queries Reply Here: http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/gc/USA/Mo/Jefferson/416 Surname: davis, clark, bettick ------------------------- Fredric, Thank you so much for your response. I had seen the records also stating James Davis was a free black. I also had seen copies of Henry Widemann's will and found it very curious the way James was mentioned in it "My grandson, who goes by the name of James Davis." Do you have any idea why he was so readily accepted by the white population, everyone else who married into the family seems to have been white. Was there less discrimanation towards blacks then (1800) as opposed to the 1850/60's? Do you know where the Herrington cemetery is located? Just one more thing I recently heard that Mary Herrington had married John Wilson. this John Wilson is my gggggrandfather.through their son Alexander Chambers and his daughter Mary. I alsothink I might have a few of those alien ancestors,and they did a good job of hiding and destorying ther records. Again thanks for responding, Darlene
Posted on: Jefferson County Queries Reply Here: http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/gc/USA/Mo/Jefferson/415 Surname: davis, clark, bettick ------------------------- Fredric, Thank you so much for your response. I had seen the records also stating James Davis was a free black. I also had seen copies of Henry Widemann's will and found it very curious the way James was mentioned in it "My grandson, who goes by the name of James Davis." Do you have any idea why he was so readily accepted by the white population, everyone else who married into the family seems to have been white. Was there less discrimanation towards blacks then (1800) as opposed to the 1850/60's? Do you know where the Herrington cemetery is located? Just one more thing I recently heard that Mary Herrington had married John Wilson. this John Wilson is my gggggrandfather. I alsothink I might have a few of those alien ancestors,and they did a good job of hiding and destorying ther records. Again thanks for responding, Darlene
Posted on: Jefferson County Obituaries Reply Here: http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/gc/USA/Mo/JeffersonObits/238 Surname: Oaker, Oker ------------------------- Can anyone help me with locating OBITS from Jefferson Co., in ref to Oker or Oaker families? Please post these OBITS or email direct to: oaker@first-comm.net. I am having a very hard time finding my family roots and need some extra assistance! Anything on this family from the DeSoto, MO. area would be of GREAT help! Jack
Posted on: Jefferson County Queries Reply Here: http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/gc/USA/Mo/Jefferson/413 Surname: Wideman, Pruitt, Davis ------------------------- James DAVIS was a grandson of Henry WIDEMAN (Johann Henrich WEIDMANN) and named in Henry's will as his daughter Lucy PRUITT's son that goes by the name of James DAVIS. James DAVIS is listed in records as a free Negro. His father is believed to have possibly been a slave owned by the DAVIS family, neighbors of the WIDEMAN family in South Carolina. See other details on the WIDEMAN family at the site below. Link: WIDEMAN FAMILY URL: <http://pweb.netcom.com/~fzsaund/wideman.html>
I would like to hear from any one that is researching the Murrell line in Jefferson Co/or other MO counties. I am trying to find the Murrell parents of William A Murrell born in MO December 24, 1820. He settled in Ripley Co MO. Family story is that the rest of the family moved on but to and from where? The name was often misspelled Merrill, Morrell or with one or two R and L's Patricia Murrell Mata pjmm@tcac.net
FREIHAUT, MODER, MEES, HALMICH, APPERSON, HUTSON, HUGHES, CONE, BUSKIRK Carol Apperson-Freihaut lanlady@worldshare.net