I thought of the full name of that huge set of attorney directories - Martindale-Hubbel. They are published annually if I remember correctly. There's a set for US and volumes for other countries, too, including Germany. Locally there are directories too, whether published by Parker's in St. Louis or not, I don't know. Perhaps you could call someone in a law office - talk to the secretaries or paralegals (I say that from experience, no offense to those honorable attorneys out there). The people not to call are the civil servants at the courthouses, bless their little hearts. Again, speaking from my experience. Your experience may differ. A law library may look it up for you, or at least tell you how far back these directories go. Maureen
In a message dated 1/13/2005 03:00:34 Central Standard Time, MOSTLOUI-D-request@rootsweb.com writes: > My g-great grandfather's sister, Maria Bingen, married a man named Nicholas > Uder, a shoemaker, from Prussia. She was born around 1825 in Prussia and > came to the US in 1846. The family lived in Wisconsin until Nicholas died in > 1878. > > It appears that Maria/Mary moved to St. Louis, where she was located in the > 1880 and 1900 Census. She is gone by the 1910 Census, so I' would think she > died between 1900 and 1910. > Why don't you write for a death certificate? It will give you the day of death then go to the St. Louis newspapers and see if a death notice is listed. see website http://stlouis.missouri.org/citygov/recorder/vitalrecords.html if the links do not come through. City of St. Louis Vital Records (Get Birth and Death Records at City Hall) As of July 1, 2002, the Vital Records Office (formerly located at the Health Department) is part of the Recorder of Deeds Office in City Hall at 1200 Market Street, St. Louis, Missouri 63103. Customer Service Plus! Get birth, death, marriage and real estate records at the same place. Fee Change Effective August 28, 2004: Certified Copy - Birth Certificate: $15.00 Certified Copy - Death Certificate: $13.00 first copy, $10.00 for subsequent copies of same record. More Information. Office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Birth Certificates: Room 127 (314) 613-3016 (314) 613-3017 Death Certificates: Room 124 (314) 613-3018 (314) 613-3019 Mailing Address: Vital Records Room 126 c/o Sharon Quigley Carpenter Recorder of Deeds 1200 Market Street St. Louis, MO 63103 Vital Records Forms and Information Ordering and Payment Information Birth Copy Request Form (PDF) Death Copy Request Form (PDF) These forms reference new fees effective August 28, 2004. OldeNTQer
There are directories for attorneys, huge ones, many volumes for every attorney in the country - can't think of the name right now - a hyphenated name, Hubble - ?? which the law libraries have and the large public libraries. These come out each year, so I'm not sure where a set from 1900 might be. Everything else is on CD's now, so I imagine the new sets are too. Possibly Lexis-Nexus. There are also (at least today) annual directories, published by Parker, which gives name, address, phone, specialty for each locality. It is the first set which gives you birth, wife, college, mini-biographical paragraph. Also check the city directories for several years around that time - at St. Louis City and County libraries I believe. You might also check with the American Bar Association. Maureen (a former Paralegal)
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: McBride Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/WMB.2ACE/4847 Message Board Post: I just found a missing family member in the 1900 census of st. Louis City. He was a roomer in a house on Olive St. along with several other young men. All of these men had "attorney at law" listed as their occupation. Now that I have this nugget of info, I have no idea where to go!! I'd like to know what law firm he worked for or law school he might have attended. Any ideas where I can track down this information? The person I am looking for is John L. McBride. He was born in the Dakota Territory and was 21 in 1900. His 2 brothers died without any heirs. I am hoping he married & had children. However, I cannot find him in any later censuses. So......... TIA in advance!
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/WMB.2ACE/4844.1 Message Board Post: Jody, according to the 1880 census. Tooloose William 37 born Illinois Ann 33 MO. Margaret 12 MO. Edward A. 10 MO. Harriet A. 8 MO. They were living in Jefferson County,Missouri. Hope this helps. Michele
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/WMB.2ACE/4846 Message Board Post: Group, I've transcribed the street names within St Louis's 1910 enumeration districts, and that file is now up on the Morse One Step site at: http://www.stevemorse.org/census/index.html With this file you can find an enumeration district from an address for 1910. I thank Dave Lossos who provided me a high resolution 1930 digital map of St. Louis. I also worked from a 1943 map, and used the boundary definitions of the EDs from NARA T1224. All street names within all EDs were transcribed (to the best of my abilities), but if there are obvious errors let me know. The Morse website also has a section on street name changes, which should prove helpful for these types of searches. If I was aware of a street name change since 1910, I included both names within the EDs. Since the maps I used were 20-30 years more recent than 1910, also expect street names shown on the database that didn't exist in 1910, but that's a plus with our search system. Also...a historical note/treat. My procedure is to scan the T1224 boundary pages so I can work with them on my home computer. While looking at the boundary definitions, I found that some bored? census employee had used 4 of those pages to doodle art work, probably from 1911. He/she even signed one of the pictures.... a dancing dog!!! and I've put that image up on my website: http://members.cox.net/census1930/ This website contains many of the files that the One Step search engine is based on. Enjoy... Joel Weintraub and the One Step Team.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/WMB.2ACE/4843.2.1 Message Board Post: Thanks for the info. The website is a good one but has some years missing. Do you think they will fill in these years?
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/WMB.2ACE/4845 Message Board Post: Need help with some loose ends does anyone have anything on these names?
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/WMB.2ACE/4844 Message Board Post: I need help in searching for my family in the St Louis area. The surname is Toulouse/Tooloose/Toolooze. 3 brothers 3 different spellings. Any info would help. Mostly in search of a man born 1870 named Edward A. Tooloose/Toolooze. Need to know his parents and his middle name. Would tie some loose ends together. Thanks
Ok....what am I missing? I don't see any dates between 1945 through 1991? Linda -----Original Message----- From: gc-gateway@rootsweb.com [mailto:gc-gateway@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of lyonsjeff@verizon.net Sent: Friday, January 14, 2005 1:18 PM To: MOSTLOUI-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: Need help finding death record or obit in St. Louis This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/WMB.2ACE/4843.2 Message Board Post: Excuse me: I put up the wrong link. This one is the obituary link: http://www.slpl.lib.mo.us/libsrc/obit.htm ============================== Search Family and Local Histories for stories about your family and the areas they lived. Over 85 million names added in the last 12 months. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13966/rd.ashx
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/WMB.2ACE/4843.2 Message Board Post: Excuse me: I put up the wrong link. This one is the obituary link: http://www.slpl.lib.mo.us/libsrc/obit.htm
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/WMB.2ACE/4843.1 Message Board Post: The ENTIRE St. Louis Patch Dispatch Obituary index is available online dating back to the late 1800's. It is broken out by year and then alphabetically by categories (A-I, K-P, Q-Z or something) It gives you the date that the obituary was published. Might be a good place to start. Here is the link. http://www.sjcpl.org/databases/obituary/obituary.html Once you have a date, then you could write the City Clerk's office for a copy of the death certificate.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/WMB.2ACE/1756.1.1 Message Board Post: Correction - Mary (Polly) James, b 1808, d 1834, was a sister to Gilbert James (b 1803), and daughter of Cumberland James. Sorry for the error.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/WMB.2ACE/1756.1 Message Board Post: The first wife of Augustin Delaney was Mary (Polly) James, b 12 May 1808 St. Louis Co, MO, d 7 Mar 1834, daughter of Gilbert James and Keziah Patterson. Gilbert James, b 25 Feb 1803 St. Louis Co, MO, d 25 Apr 1845, bur Cold Water Cem, St. Louis Co, MO, m.4 Jan 1831 St. Louis Co, MO, Keziah Patterson, b 27 Jan 1811 St Louis Co, MO, d 6 Nov 1854, bur Cold Water Cem, St. Louis Co, MO, dau of John Patterson and Keziah Hornaday. Gilbert James was son of Cumberland James and Susan(na) Seely. Cumberland James, b 4 Jan 1770 NC, d 11 Nov 1845, bur Cold Water Cem, St. Louis Co, MO, m. 16 Oct 1801 St. Louis Co, MO, Susanna Seely, b 11 Jan 1781 PA, d 5 Jun 1855, bur Cold Water Cem, St. Louis Co, MO, dau of John Nichols Seely. (To St. Louis Dist. 1797, with Morris James & Sarah James there in 1798) Cold Water Cemetery @ http://www.usgennet.org/usa/mo/county/stlouis/coldwater_cemetery.htm Will of Susan(na) Seely James @ http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=message&r=rw&p=surnames.seely&m=277
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Sherman, Gaddy, Hedrick Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/WMB.2ACE/4843 Message Board Post: I am having trouble finding my grandmother;s death record. Her name was Katherine/Kattie Sherman (nee Gaddy). Born 1898 in Illinois. Husband-Joe Sherman. Mother-Mary Hedrick (nee Gaddy). Stepfather-John Hedrick. She used Hedrick growing up. She was living with my parents at 5581 A Easton Ave, St. Louis when she died. This is where it gets hard; her death was sometime between 1936-1950. I have written to the City and County and the State but without a closer year of death they can't help. Feel free to contact me at my personal e-mail address if help is available.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Bingen, Uder Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/WMB.2ACE/4841 Message Board Post: My g-great grandfather's sister, Maria Bingen, married a man named Nicholas Uder, a shoemaker, from Prussia. She was born around 1825 in Prussia and came to the US in 1846. The family lived in Wisconsin until Nicholas died in 1878. It appears that Maria/Mary moved to St. Louis, where she was located in the 1880 and 1900 Census. She is gone by the 1910 Census, so I' would think she died between 1900 and 1910. I would appreciate any help in locating her death cert (if there is one), an obit or where she is buried. Thank you very much!!
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/WMB.2ACE/4811.2 Message Board Post: I was an ARDENT Brownie fan in that era, saw many games with a Knot Hole gang pass, and do not recall the name. IF he played for the Browns, it might have been a Spring Training adventure for him.
FROM THE MARBLE HILL PRESS, Dec 19, 1912 ANDERSON PARK THOMPSON, son of Anderson and Annie Thompson was born in Dunklin County, December 28, 1858; died December 10, 1912 in Bethesda Hospital, St. Louis, aged 53 yrs. 11 mos. and 12 days. Little is known of his early life as he went out west as a young man. He suffered greatly about two years and when informed by physicians of his critical condition, he accepted their advice and returned to Missouri to spend his last days with his nieces and nephews. His suffering became more intense each day but he bore it bravely and very patiently. He never acknowledged being a Christian until a few hours before he died. He said "I am happy and my home is in heaven". Mrs. R. P. Hatcher, Mrs. J. W. Reilly, Miss Christine and Robert McAnally of St. Louis; M. L. Thompson, Senath; and Albert Thompson, Sibleyton, Mississippi attended the funeral which was conducted by the writer, after which the body was laid to rest in the Stroderville Cemetery about a mile and a half from Whitewate! r. Dear ones, mourn not for him! Your loss is his gain -- you shall meet again. Rev. M. M. Blaise. Rev. M. M. Blaise went to Whitewater Tuesday and conducted the funeral services of Anderson Thompson. ------------------------ FROM THE JEFFERSON CITY TRIBUNE, 13 January 1892 Uncle Johnny ROWE one of the oldest and most respected citizens of this county, died at his home in Clark township on the 29th of December, 1891. He was taken with la grippe some eight days before he died and never recovered from the same. He received good medical attention, but his ailment refused to yield to the science of man, perhaps old age had something to do with it. The news of Uncle Johnny's death was received throughout the neighborhood with genuine regret. Uncle Johnny possessed a charming congeniality and was a delightful conversationalist. He had many warm friends and was well liked by all who knew him. He will be sadly missed by the people of the neighborhood. He was the father of twenty-two children, nine by his first wife and thirteen by his second wife. He leaves a wife and sixteen children (of whom six are by his first wife and ten by his second wife) and a host of earnest friends to mourn his death. The youngest child is grown and all are married but tw! o. The remains were laid away to rest at the Spring Garden Cemetery, December 30 by the Masons, as he was a prominent member of the order and the ceremonies were witnessed by the relatives and a host of friends. Uncle Johnny was a native of Kentucky. Born in August 1812, he came to Missouri in 1827 and worked with the late Judge Robt. E. SIMPSON of Spring Garden on the farm, while a boy. He has lived within two miles of the place he died for sixty-four years, with the exception of a short time that he lived on the Osage river, some five miles below Tuscumbia, just after he was first married. Not liking the fog from the river so well as the breezes of the little prairie around Spring Garden, he soon left the river and came to a place in sight of the farm he died on. He was reasonably successful as a farmer in his younger days. At one time he acquired quite a tract of land, but the war came on and he, not taking any part, but thought everybody to be honest, would not refuse t! o accommodate anyone that called on him, and the result was that when he got through paying other people's debts he only had enough left to live on. There are but few, if any, that have been in Cole County longer than he was. A full history of his life would almost be a history of Clark township. A friend. ---------------------------- From the Boonville Weekly Advertiser, Friday November 2, 1894 Absalom HUGHES died at Cedar City, Callaway county Wednesday night and was buried yesterday afternoon in the Heart Hill Cemetery near that town. He was 84 years old and for many years had been a historic character in this state, from the fact that he was the only man living in Missouri who could legally run a dram shop without paying state, county or municipal license. He was first sergeant in Parson's regiment 1st Missouri volunteers Co. F. in the Mexico War. At the battle of Sacramento he had both legs broken by a cannon ball, but distinguished himself so conspicuously for personal bravery that the Missouri legislature, in 1844, passed a law authorizing him to keep a dram shop at Cedar City, Callaway County, during his life and exempting him from paying any license. He accepted the offer and for 50 years kept an unpretentious saloon in that little town. The wounds he received rendered him a cripple for life, and of late years he got around with great difficulty. Mr. Hughes! served in the regiment with Capt. M. T. Moore of this city. The deceased made but little more than a living out of his saloon. --------------------------------------- Full account found in First issue of November 1936 Sullivan (MO) News. CATHERINE BRUESEKE, nee SCHEERER, was born at Nordeck, Germany on June 5, 1848. When only fourteen years of age she left Germany and went to London, England, where she lived for five years. She was married in London, at the age of nineteen, to ADAM WAGNER. This couple left immediately after their marriage and came to America where they settled on a farm near Marthasville, in Warren County, Missouri. To this union was born one daughter, Mrs. Catherine OLTMANN of Union, MO. Mr. Wagner died shortly after the birth of this child. On September 10, 1872, she was married to ERNEST BRUESEKE. To this union nine children were born, eight of whom survive. They are: MRS. WINNIE SCHMIDT of Elmont, MRS. MATILDA SURKAMP of St. Louis, FRANK BRUESEKE of Elmont, MRS. MARTHA DRAKESMITH of St. Louis, MRS. MALINDA BUSCH of Spring bluff, MRS. HILDA ROBERTSON of St. Louis, MRS. BERTHA HARDECKE of Sullivan and MRS. CHARLOTTE POOLE of Wuchow, So. China. One son, ERNST BRUESEKE died at the age of t! hree. Besides the above mentioned loved ones she leaves one step-daughter, MRS. LIZZIE BOSTER of Cuba, and one brother and sister in Germany. Two sisters and one brother have preceded her to the Great Beyond in the past two years. She also leaves thirty-two grandchildren and forty-two great-grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. Brueseke lived in Warren county until 1884 when they moved to a farm near Elmont. Mr. brueseke died on September 22, 1902. Mrs. Brueseke continued to live on the farm until 1916. She was stricken with paralysis on October 23, of this year and passed away six days later, October 29, 1936, to be with Him in whom she believed, having reached the age of 88 years, 4 months and 24 days. She was baptized on June 6, 1848 and was confirmed in the Evangelical Lutheran Church on April 27, 1862. Funeral services were conducted Sunday afternoon, November 1, 1936, at the home of the daughter, Mrs. Malinda Busch, at 1:30 o'clock, thence to the Evangelical Church near Sprin! g Bluff. Internment was made in the cemetery of the Evangelical church near Spring Bluff. ------------------------- From the UNTERRIFIED DEMOCRAT, Wednesday, March 19, 1908 JOSEPH FREY, who would have been 90 years of age had he lived until the 19th of this month, died Thursday, March 18th, 1908 following a paralytic stroke about a week previous. Mr. Frey was a veteran of both the Mexican and Civil Wars. He was a good citizen and a man who stood high in the esteem of his fellow men. He leave surviving him, a widow. ------------------------- From the UNTERRIFIED DEMOCRAT, December 17, 1908 Mrs. Jule SENEVEY, nee LOUISE LEVIEN, was born near Bonnot's Mill, August 3, 1868 and departed this life at 1:30 o'clock December 10, 1908. She was married November 29, 1881 and leaves besides her husband, nine children to mourn her departure. The funeral service was conducted Friday morning at St. George's church by H. J. Muckermann, assisted by Rev. Carl Even of Bonnot's Mill. ------------------------------- From the UNTERRIFIED DEMOCRAT, March 12, 1908 HENRY ROBERTS of Bailey's Creek, aged 97 years passed to the great beyond on Tuesday, March 3, 1908. Mr. Roberts was a man of exceptional health and strength previous to his last illness. He leaves several children and many friends to mourn his demise. ------------------ From the UNTERRIFIED DEMOCRAT, Feb 16, 1922 Mrs. Mary HUBERT, widow of the late Frank Hubert, died at her home near Bonnot's mill, Friday morning, February 10, 1922, after an illness of several weeks, aged 80 years. She was laid to rest in the Catholic Cemetery at Bonnot's Mill the following day amidst a large concourse of sorrowing relatives and friends. Funeral services were conducted by Rev. Father Evens. Mrs. Hubert's maiden name was JOHANNES, she being a daughter of the late John Johannes or near Bonnot's Mill, one of the early settlers of Osage county. She reared a family of five children, three sons and two daughters, four of whom survive her, namely EMIL, AUGUST, and JULIE Hubert and Mrs. ELIK MEAMBER. Her other daughter, Mrs. Emil Levian having preceded her in death some thirteen years ago. She is also survived by 24 grandchildren and 15 great grandchildren, and an only brother, EMIL JOHANNES of near Bonnot's Mill. In the death of grandma Hubert, the community loses one of its oldest landmarks. ------------------------- From OSAGE COUNTY REPUBLICAN, WEDNESDAY OCT 30, 1901 MARY ARABELL BOYCE, devoted wife, loving mother, and Christian woman, died October 15, 1901 aged 65 years, 4 months and 24 days. She was born May 21, 1836 and reared in Osage county, Missouri. On June 25, 1854 she was married to J. T. Boyce who preceded her to the spirit land on February 2, 1890. To this union, eight children were born, one which died in infancy. At the time of this child's death, she had the trials such as many a devoted wife and mother had in those days, being the time when the dark clouds of war hovered over our beloved country, when her loyal sons rallied to the defense of the Union of the United States of America, among whom was her husband, serving his country in the 26th Missouri Infantry under Col. G. B. Boomer. to add to her trials and anxiety, her house with all its contents were destroyed by fire. Not withstanding all this, she bore "the burden laid upon her" with Christian fortitude and loyal devotion to God and Country. --------------------------------- From the UNTERRIFIED DEMOCRAT, LINN, OSAGE COUNTY, THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1915. On July 9, 1915 at 10 o'clock p.m. Mrs. Catherine Zewicki died at her home near Loose Creek, after a three week's illness of heart aflection. Mrs. Zewicki was born in Alsace-Lorraine, France in 1827. She came to America in 1848, landing at New Orleans, then making the trip by boat up the Mississippi River to St. Louis. Here, in 1841, she was married to Nicholas Zewicki, who died on the old homestead near Loose Creek, March 23, 1900. Mr. and Mrs. Zewicki came to Osage County in 1858 and resided continuously on the same farm. Mr. and Mrs. Zewicki's lives were full of strenuous and interesting experiences. The descendant of prominent stock and an insurrectionist at the time of the Poland uprising, Mr. Zewicki was made a Russian prisoner and given the choice of being sent to Siberia or America. Two brothers had fallen in the conflict and the property of his father was confiscated by the Russian government. On his arrival in America, Mr. Zewicki entered an English school in Ne! w York City, he having previously been well educated in his native country, speaking five languages fluently. Mr. and Mrs. Zewicki lived modestly and unpretentiously on the farm, enjoying quietness after the strenuous experiences of their earlier lives. The surviving children are MRS. CATHERINE LUECKE and MRS. MIKE FLANAGAN, LOUIS, OSCAR, HENRY, JOHN ULYSIS and DR. E. T. ZEWICKI. Funeral services were conducted first at the Catholic church in Loose Creek and concluded at the public cemetery in Linn. Rev. Bachmeier of Loose Creek officiating. ------------------ From THE UNTERRIFIED DEMOCRAT, August 26, 1915 The remains of LORENZ STRAUB, an old and respected citizen of Morrison, who died Saturday, August 14th at the age of 78 years, were laid to rest in the Cleary Cemetery, about one mile west of Morrison, on Tuesday, August 17th, 1915. He was buried with Masonic honors by Chamois Lodge No. 185 A.F. & A.M. assisted by members of Linn Lodge No. 326, and Hermann Lodge No. 123. Mr. Straub was born in Wheeling, West Virginia, April 9, 1837, and has lived near Morrison for many years. He became a Freemason more than forty years ago. He was not a member of any church but lived an honorable upright and exemplary life. Mr. Straub was never married but leaves a host of near and dear relatives to whom we extend our heartfelt sympathy. ---------------------- From the ST. LOUIS POST DISPATCH, August 17, 1931 Mrs. MARY DONLON REILLY, widow of Capt. John A. Reilly, who served with Fremont's Rangers in the Union Army during the civil war, died yesterday morning of the infirmities of old age at the home of her daughter, Mrs. MARY NORWINE, 31 North Newstead Avenue. she was 91. A resident of Glen Allen, Bollinger Co., MO., for many years, she came to St. Louis about six years ago. In addition to Mrs. Norwine, two other children survive, J. W. REILLY of Glen Allen and PHILLIP REILLY of Hillsboro, MO. Funeral services will be held tomorrow morning at 6:30 a.m. from the marshall Funeral Chapel, 4469 Washington boulevard to St. Louis Cathedral, Newstead Avenue and Lindell Boulevard. Burial will be at Leopold, MO.
Write to The Sporting News. The URL is www.sportingnews.com/ Perhaps there is something in their archives. Anyway, it added some color to my greatuncle's history. They sent me the following: Thomas "Pike" Crinnion was a pitcher for the St. Louis Browns. No metropolis in America has more pure baseball spirit than St. Louis, Missouri. It's a love affair that began in 1874, when a band of local boosters raised $20,000 to start a professional ball club, and the honeymoon still isn't over. The Browns were at one time the more popular St. Louis ballclub, and George Sisler was as good a player as any who played in St. Louis. Unfortunately, the Browns suffered through mediocrity, until 1944 when they won the pennant. (and played the Cardinals in the World Series!). Thomas(Pike)Crinnion`s obit appeared in The Sporting News, July 29, 1943. Ellen rltjwelty@ozarker.com wrote: >This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > >Classification: Query > >Message Board URL: > >http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/WMB.2ACE/4811.1.1 > >Message Board Post: > >I found my Harold McCarty . Turns out he played for Aberdeen Northern League. Minor League >I dont know much about this team . Rumors were he played for the St. louis Browns. Any Info about this would be so much appriciated. thank you > > >============================== >Census images 1901, 1891, 1881 and 1871, plus so much more. >Ancestry.com's United Kingdom & Ireland Collection. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13968/rd.ashx > > __________________________________________________________________ Switch to Netscape Internet Service. As low as $9.95 a month -- Sign up today at http://isp.netscape.com/register Netscape. Just the Net You Need. New! Netscape Toolbar for Internet Explorer Search from anywhere on the Web and block those annoying pop-ups. Download now at http://channels.netscape.com/ns/search/install.jsp
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/WMB.2ACE/4840 Message Board Post: Looking on any info on Ben Fry. He was married to Olga Rothweiler (she died in 1988 and is buried in St. Louis).