This is a little story about why we need to talk to our elderly "kin folks" now while they are living. Someday down the road, we will wish that we had listened and recorded their information!!!! Yesterday while having our Thanksgiving Dinner, my soon to be, 84 year- old Mother was telling us about growing up in Haw River, NC. My grandchildren were amazed at the names of the little different mill villages, many which were hilarious to them, also to find that both their great-grandmother and grandmother were born on RED SLIDE! Can you imagine teen-agers laughing at these names? For anyone out there that had ancestors or grandparents that lived in this area, around the "Cotton Mills", I want to give the names of the different little "hills", as we called them while I was growing up. There is a small town in present day Alamance County that celebrated their 250 years anniversary in 1995. This was called Trollinger's Ford in it's beginning. The mill villages that made up Haw River had interesting names. Closest to the Granite Plant (on land paved over for the present parking lot) was OLD TOWN, probably the earliest of the villages. Just to the east, behind the movie theater and Cole's Store on Rock Street was JOHNSTOWN. On the south side of Main Street, on the hillside between the old Cora Mill (or Tabardrey plant) and the river, was SUGAR HILL. TERRAPIN SLIDE and PINETOP were east of Tabandrey, down and around Stone Street. All of these were demolished in the mid 1950's. Still standing are the houses that made up the OVER THE RIVER Houses and RED SLIDE, on the west side of the river, north of the road (#70). Also standing are JOHNSON CITY behind the school on and around Third Street, and TROLLINGWOOD on and around State Street. Down the Graham Road (#49), many of the houses were built for Cone Mills management in the 1940's and 1950's. This area was dubbed SOCIETY HILL. ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange USGenWeb Orange Co, NC Archives site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/nc/orangnc.htm
Hear ye not the sound of battle, sabres clash and muskets rattle? Fight away, fight away, fight away in Dixie Land! In February, 1861, representatives from seven southern states met in Montgomery, Alabama, to form a Southern Confederacy. Simultaneously, delgates from twenty-one other states gathered in Washington for a "peace conference." North Carolina sent five delegates to the Washington "peace conference," on of whom was Chief Justice Thomas RUFFIN of Haw River. The venerable old judge opposed secession, and urged that the North and South compromise, concede or conciliate their differences--any step which would prevent the approaching civil war. Both President James BUCHANNAN and General Winfield SCOTT later admitted that had Judge RUFFIN persisted in his effort the war might had been avoided. After long discussion however, the Judge gave in to younger and stronger voices, and the conference passed seven weak articles toward the settlement of North-South problems. North Carolina voted against six of them. Regretfully, Judge RUFFIN came home to his Haw River farm. The war drew closer and closer; it now seemed inevitable. During the first week in March, more than a thousand Alamance County citizens met at the courthouse in Graham to vote on the question of state secession. Edwin M. HOLT presided at the meeting, and Rufus Y. MCADEN, an ardent Union supporter, denounced as traitiors those who wanted to join the Confederacy. When the vote was counted it was 1,116 to 284 against secession, and Giles MEBANE was elected to take this decision to a State Secession Convention. Meanwhile, Abraham LINCOLN, became President, and early in April, 1861, he wired Governor John W. ELLIS to send two regiments of North Carolina troops to the Federal Army. North Carolina had not yet seceded, but Governor ELLIS, himself a secessionist, refuled the President's request and immediately sent several thousand volunteers and a larg shipment of muskets to the Confederate Army. An anxiously-awaited news item appeared on April 10 in the Hillsboro Recorder: "We very much regret to announce today that hostilities have actually commenced between the Southern Confederacy and the Federal Government . . " When the news reached old Judge RUFFIN, it is said that his whole body quivered with emotion. Though he had been against war, he was a Southerner, and now he raised his arms above his head and shouted "I say fight! Fight! Fight!" The State Legislature immediately called for 20,000 volunteers, and the Secession Convention, attended by Giles MELBANE and Judge RUFFIN, declared the independence of the State of North Carolina at Raleigh on May 20, 1861, and pledged the State's support to the Confederate States of America. The war had come, and the people rose to meet the challenge. Eight days after the Legislature asked for troops, the hastily formed Hawfields company climbed aboard the train at Mabane bound for the Charlotte training camp. A large crowd of friends and neighbors gathered to see them leave, and with tears in their eyes, the wives and mothers of the community presented the departing soldiers with a blue and scarlet flag. At Company Shops, Charles F. FISHER, who was president of the North Carolina Railroad, put on the neat gray uniform of a Confederate Colonel and set about the business of organizing a regiment of troops. He established a training camp at Company Shops, on the site now occupied by the Broad Street High School, and within two months had recruited the full regiment, two companies of which included men and boys from Alamance County. On July 7, the State was saddened by news that Governor ELLIS had paaed away in Virginia after a long period of failing health. colonel FISHER and part of his regiment left immediately to escort the Governor's body back to Raleigh. When this grim duty was finished, the regiment was ordered to return to Virginia and was assigned to General BEE's Confederate Brigade at Winchester. The first important battle of the war occurred a few days later at Manassas. BEE's Brigade was part of 22,000 men who, under Confederate General BEAUREGARD, where concentrated west of the Potomac River near Washington. General BEAUREGARD received word that the Union Army planned to march on Richmond, the Confederate Capital, and he hoped to stop them at this point. The Union Troops marched westward however, and reached the Confederate lines at a place weakly guarded by a Colonel EVANS. BEE's brigade was nearby, and was immediately ordered to EVANS' aid. Colonel FISHER's Sixth Regiment had been separated from BEE's Brigade that moring, and did not arrive at Manassas until shortly after noon. The sounds of battle could abe heard from a distance, and Colonel FISHER quickly marched his men toward the front. When they reached the scene, the battle was raging furiously, and the newly-arrived troops took up a position on the left end of the Confederate line. Directly in front of FISHER's regiment was a Federal gun battery, and the Southern boys began to lay down a heavy fire on it. Within a short time, they forced the Union troops to retet and moved forward to capture the gun emplacement. near exhaustion by this time, FISHER's men paused for a short rest. Hardly had they put down their muskets, however, when another gray-clad regiment appeared on their left and opened fire on them. Believing the other regiment to be Confederate troops, Colonel FISHER ordered his own men not to fire and called out for the others to cease firing. A bullet struck him as he spoke and he fell, mortally wounded. The entire Sixth Regiment now opened fire on the nearby troops, and, after a short battle the enemy force withdrew. As Colonel FISHER lay dying, the Confederate Army pushed forward with renewed strength, and the Union Troops fled the field, leaving behind them a vast amount of supplies and ammunition, fifteen members of the Sixth Regiment lost their lives in the battle, and fifty-three others were wounded, but the victory which their sacrifices helped to win at Manassas brought badly-needed courage to the South. During the months which followed, Alamance County gave rwelve companies of troops to the Confederate Armies, more men at that time than the county had voters. Several members of the same family frequently enlisted. Mr. & Mrs. Lemuel SIMPSON of this county gave eleven sons to the service, and there were a number of other families who made almost an equal sacrifice. There were many mothers like Mrs. Lettie JONES LONG, a widow of this county, whose three eldest boys enlisted in the Confederate Army. All three of them were killed. Mrs. LONG's youngest son, who was not old enough to volunteer for the Army when the war began, ran away from home and arrived at the headquarters of a Confederate regiment just as the war ended. ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange USGenWeb Orange Co, NC Archives site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/nc/orangnc.htm
I made a typo in reference to duplicate messages. I wrote "NC-SC-ORANGE" which does not exist. It should have been "NCORANGE". I hope all had a wonderful Thanksgiving and remembered what it is all about. Larry Noah - larmil-1@worldnet.att.net Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list See my Ancestors at - http://www.trailerpark.com/tango/lrnoah Gedcoms & other data are at - http://members.tripod.com/~lrnoah Florence Co,SC GenWeb - http://www.rootsweb.com/~scfloren Orange Co, NC GenWeb - http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange GENDEX at http://www.gendex.com/gendex/ has over 1500 databases on line
Does anyone have a copy of the history of Eagle Lodge in Hillsborough, and willing to do a lookup? Would appreciate your checking for COOLEY. Thanks very much. Shelly ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange
ANNOUNCING MDCHAR-L and MDCHARLE-D Mailing List MDCHARLES-L and MDCHARLES-D are mailing list for sharing genealogical surname research and queries about families from Charles County in Maryland. Come join us and find new cousins to share your family. I am the Co-Ordinator for Charles County USGenWeb site and Listowner for this mailing list and welcome any comments, corrections and suggestions. Feel free to email me, Barbara Farthing Bonham at msb@myfamily.org You can subscribe to the list in mail mode by sending a message to MDCHARLE-L-request@rootsweb.com that contains the word subscribe and nothing else. If you prefer digest mode, the command instead to MDCHARLE-D-request@rootsweb.com. To unsubscribe, send the command "unsubscribe" to MDCHARLE-L-request@rootsweb.com (if in mail mode) or MDCHARLE-D-request@rootsweb.com (if in digest mode.) To switch from one mode to the other, you should unsubscribe from one and then subscribe to the other. There is no "no mail" mode -- if you want messages to stop, you should simply unsubscribe. To post to both MDCHARLE-L and MDCHARLE-D, messages should be sent to MDCHARLE-L@rootsweb.com Messages sent there will appear both places. Please note: the MDCHARLES list is sponsored by the RootsWeb Genealogical Data Cooperative. RootsWeb is funded *entirely* by individual memberships -- no grants or corporate subsidies, only your subscriptions. If you find these lists helpful in your research, please consider supporting RootsWeb's work by becoming a member: see <http://www.rootsweb.com/rootsweb/how-to-subscribe.html>. . ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange USGenWeb Orange Co, NC Archives site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/nc/orangnc.htm
In a message dated 97-11-15 14:14:53 EST, cjohn@tznet.com writes: << Antoher legend said that some of CORNWALLIS' men believing that Simon DIXON possessed a money box tortured him with red hot lron tongs to make him reveal its location. >> Hi Group, Thanks for posting your war stories! I enjoyed each of them very much! My favorite is about Ann Moody McCuiston, whose husband, Thomas was a wagon driver at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse, and died there. The story goes that Ann Moody was the grand aunt of the future president of the United States, Andrew Jackson, and ALL of young Andrew's family had died after Gen. Lincoln surrendered Charleston, SC to the British. Ann Moody found out somehow about the death of her relatives, and sent her young son, Alexander McCuiston, to find his cousin, which he did, and brought him to live with Ann Moody McCusiton, who lived across the road from Dr. David Caldwell, the minister of the North Buffalo Presbyterian Church in Greensboro. The story goes that when Ann Moody was 8 years old she inherited a keg of gold from her grandfather's brother, Capt. Alexander McQuiston in Scotland, and she and young Andrew Jackson rolled the keg of gold into the Duck Creek behind their home to keep the British Army from taking the gold. A messinger had been intercepted by the British Army, and Cornwallis knew about the keg of gold, and he camped his army on both farms a day or two before the Battle of Guilford Courthouse, and his troops almost totally destroyed the McCuiston home looking for the gold. The story goes that Lord Cornwallis had Ann Moody brought to him and he asked her about the keg of gold, and Ann Moody is reported to have said that the rumor of the gold was rediculious, would she be living like this in the wilderness if she had a keg of gold! In 1818 Robert McCuiston, the son of Ann Moody McCusiton inherited his mothers keg of gold, and she had never taken a single coin from the keg! In 1836, President Andrew Jackson told his friend, President Sam Houston, about the keg of gold, that their friend, Robert McCuiston had inherited, and Robert had moved to Texas, so Sam Houston sent an invitation to Robert McCuiston and 15 other men thought to own gold, to attend a "State Dinner." President Sam Houston is reported to have given a 4 hour rousing speech and at the end, ask who would give their gold to save Texas, and all 16 men jumped to their feet and shouted, Aye! Robert McCusiton was given 10,000 acres of almost worthless land for his gift, and his ancestors still live on the land in Robertson County, Texas. I am told that his 90 year old descendant still lives on the ranch. She wrote a book about her family in 1979 and it is from this book that I got most of the above story. I am president of the Sons of the Republic of Texas chapter in my home town, and that is one of my favorite stories to tell to my patriotic friends! Keep History Alive! Tom Green TBGreen3@aol.com ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange GENDEX at http://www.gendex.com/gendex/ has over 1500 databases on line
Hi Group, Bebe asked me to post how the Green family was related to the Strouds, and I will do so, but should point out that this information came from David Green, a GREAT researcher who descends from Elijah Green, born 1752 in Ireland. David and I are convinced that his Elijah and my William Green, born February 6, 1762 in Prince Edward County, Virginia were brothers, but we have not been able to prove that relationship at this point. We are also trying to identify the parents of Elijah and William Green, if any on you have any idea. David gave me the E-Mail address for the Strouds. http://users/aol.com/luetergran/stroud.htm From this web page, you will see that John Stroud, born about 1784 in Burke County, NC married Rosamond Green. David Greene tells me that she was a daughter of Elijah Green. A brother of John Stroud, Peter Stroud, born 1791, married Rebecca Green, another daughter of Elijah Green. I am sure that David Green can give you other details of these families, as he has been researching for years. I have copied David on this message if you wish to "talk" with him. According to the Web Page, these brothers were the sons of Jesse Stroud, born 1758 in Orange County, NC, who married Naomie Stroud. Jesse was the son of Peter Stroud, born about 1736, who married Naomi Last Name Unknown. Peter Stroud was the son of John Stroud, born about 1674 in England, who married Hannah. I hope this helps some one! Tom Green TBGreen3@aol.com ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange
Can anyone help me find the parents of Rebecca Elizabeth CAUDLE who m James Monroe HATCH 13 Jan 1857 in Chatham Co., NC? Thank you. Judie
My ancestor Thomas Hardaway HATCH married on 1 August 1818 at Orange Co., NC to Mary BYNUM, b. ca 1802 at Orange Co., NC; died on ca 1894 at Orange Co., NC. She was the daughter of James BYNUM and Sarah SNIPES. I have no other information on James Bynum and would very much be interested in any information on the BYNUM family. Thank you. Judie
Justices Of The Peace Rockingham County, North Carolina 1786-1867 1851...F.L. SIMPSON 1853...Daiel J. JORDON, Thomas C. MEADOR, J.M. WALKER, N.H. DODD 1855...James A. VERNON, Richard MARTIN (Jr?), Thomas W. KEEN, John STACY, Alexander M. ROACH, David J. RAWLEY, Henry C. FULLER, Amos G. WALKER, Alfred M. WHITSETT, Allen P. SMITH, William SCOTT, John G. ROBERTSON, John W.S. LOWE, Thomas SETTLE, Sr, Junius SCALES, Thomas J. ROBERTSON, Romulus H. GLADSON, Winston KALLAM, Thomas PAYNE 1857...Henry BARNES, Alexander WALL, James T. SIMPSON, James M. GROGAN, Thomas B WHEELER, Emsley M. WOODBURN, Robert T. WILLIAMS, John AYERS 1859...Anderson G. RAKESTRAW, John M. MOORE, Samuel Hill BOYD, John A. Ratliff, Alfred WALKER, Iverson STACY, John W. ELLINGTON, Thomas Anderson RAATLIFFE, James Q. MONTGOMERY, Robert P. RICHARDSON 1861...Thomas A. RAGLAND, B.J. LAW, James C. LEAK, John GUNN, John Y. STOKES 1862..Richard JOHNSON 1863...Samuel P. MITCHELL 1864...Hugh L. PATRICK 1865..J.M. GALLAWAY, Francis WATKINS, Nicholas FELTS, William M. ELLINGTON, E. Wheeler HANCOCK, T. Whitfield PATTERSON, John M. LINDSAY, D.F. LEAK, J.C. MARTIN, T. REYNOLDS, M.S. BLACK, J.W. WHITSETT, W. BURTON The end of this list.... ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange GENDEX at http://www.gendex.com/gendex/ has over 1500 databases on line
I am descended from the Andrew ESSLINGER listed in this email. Do you have anything more on the ESSLINGERs in Orange County? I understand that Andrew's widowed mother married Jasper BARR after the death of her husband Christian ESSLINGER. Dennis Aslinger daslingr@bellsouth.net
>Hi > >Is it just me or is anyone else receiving duplicate postings from Louise >Overton's msgs? Hers seem to be the only ones I get duplicates for.... just >wondering. > >Shelly I receive duplicate posting because I am also on the NC-SC-ROOTS list which Ms. Overton posts to also. So they are not actually duplicates - one comes from this list and the other from NC-SC-ORANGE. Happy Thanksgiving, All! Larry Noah - larmil-1@worldnet.att.net Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list See my Ancestors at - http://www.trailerpark.com/tango/lrnoah Gedcoms & other data are at - http://members.tripod.com/~lrnoah Florence Co,SC GenWeb - http://www.rootsweb.com/~scfloren Orange Co, NC GenWeb - http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange
Gov Burke's name has popped up a couple of times so thought I'd ask for info on his widow's 2nd husband. (Maj) George DOHERTY married Polly BURKE the Gov's widow, in Orange 23 Apr 1785. I have, for longer than I care to remember, tried to make a connection between George and my James DOHERTY who recieved a 1790 grant on Buck Water Creek. I believe, with 90% certainty, but can't prove, that my James was the son of Anthony DOHERTY Sr. Possible brothers of James would be Anthony Jr., George, and a Thomas DOHERTY who married Eunice (Unus) MOORE Oct 1802. James married Ester COHERN Apr 1790 in Orange. Anthony Jr. married Mary McCOOL Jul 1788 and fled to Canada with her family in 1794. Any additions, corrections, or hints will be appreciated. Charlie Weaver, Winston-Salem ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange GENDEX at http://www.gendex.com/gendex/ has over 1500 databases on line
A few days ago an interesting Rev. War pension application was posted regarding the effort to recapture Gov. Burke after Fanning's capture in Hillsboro. Capt. Douglas took his troops back to the home of Wm Stroud on several occassions. I descend from Stroud and therefore have some info on his children. His dau was married to Douglas so Douglas no doubt knew he could count on his father in law for food and shelter for his men. His wife was probably also in her father's home during this trying period. I am delighted to have this additional information regarding William Stroud. The Strouds lived in the area of current University Lake/Phils Creek/Smith Level. Bebe Fox Winston-Salem, N. C. ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange USGenWeb Orange Co, NC Archives site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/nc/orangnc.htm
Part 3 JUSTICES OF THE PEACE, ROCKINGHAM COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA 1786-1867 1834....A.B. HOLDERLY, A.M. POTTS, C.D. LADD, A.F. BRACKIN 1835...T. CARTER, Joel FAGG, A.G. MORTON, George W. GARRETT 1836...Hezekiah WILLIAMS, Samuel EDWARDS, William PRICE, John CRADDOCK, Josiah ROBERTS, Miles D. KING, Aaron P. ROBERTSON, Samuel GODSEY, Samuel A. HOBSON. James SUITOR 1837...Joseph LEMONS, Tilman COLEMAN, John HAMLIN, Thomas B. WHEELER, R. REED (REID), A.S. MARTIN, John P. GROGAN, Joseph PRITCHETT 1839...Samuel SHARP, Richard JOHNSON, John MATEER, Milton STAMPS, George D. BOYD 1841...R.M. NAPIER, Peter SEALES, Joseph W. NEAL, John P. PRICE, William DALTON, Joseph MARTIN, Robert H. SCALES, William D. BETHELL 1843...Jones W. BURTON, J.W. MARTIN, Francis WATKINS 1845...Robert WALKER Jr, Absalom REED, Henderson D. MOORE, Joseph NORMAN, Frances B. MOORE, John WITHERS, Allen PRICE, Horatio KALLAM, Charles STRONG 1847...Bird LOW, William B. CARTER, Edwin R. HARRIS, Robert M. YOUNG, Joseph H. CARDWELL, Albert LOMAX, James Daniel ELLINGTON 1849... George L. Aiken, P.D. McCOLLUM, Tyre CARTER, Anson MARTIN, William L. SCALES, Benton FIELD 1850...Alvis DANIEL, Thomas D. ROSEBOROUGH To be continued..... ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange USGenWeb Orange Co, NC Archives site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/nc/orangnc.htm
In a message dated 11/26/97 12:11:42 AM, MWG914@AOL.COM wrote: <<Seeking to locate records to connect Mary Barker born May 18, 1805 NC died Jan 16, 1888 MO married Isaac McDANIEL 8/29/1823 Randolph Co. NC, to William BARKER son of Samuel BARKER and Margaret GREENFIELD. Understand there is a book written 1927 BARKER GENEALOGY by Elizabeth Frye Barker with such a listing but not sure of proof as I have not seen the book. Any help would be most appreciated. Mary W. Glenn >> Mary, Try the Caswell County Register of Deeds Office for information on the Barker family. A former register of deeds, Burch, collected papers and data on various families who brought data to him for verification. They are catalogued in the clerks office. There is a small collection of genealogical data in the public library in Yanceyville also. They have a fair record of many of the families who lived in the area early. John Fox Winston-Salem, NC ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange USGenWeb Orange Co, NC Archives site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/nc/orangnc.htm
I am sorry but the county of NC is unknown. Searching for the ancestry of Willis CARPENTER, son of John CARPENTER and Jane TUCKER. Willis was born in NC c. 1780. He married in Grainger Co. TN to Elizabeth (Betsy) ROSS daughter of Frances and Catherine (Katie) ROSS, May 01, 1813 in Grainger Co. TN. I have thought that it was possible that John CARPENTER was in the REV WAR and obtained land in TN as a result. Willis served in the TN VOLS in the Creek and Indian War of 1813. Their oldest son, John C. Carpenter was born c 1814 in TN. They came to ALA about 1820. Willis' brothers and sister as was told by family history was Martin, Sam, and Rita. I would appreciate help in locating this family or the family of FRANCIS ROSS. Thanks in advance. Mary W. Glenn ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange GENDEX at http://www.gendex.com/gendex/ has over 1500 databases on line
Randolph Co. NC - seeking information on Isaac McDANIEL who married Mary Barker 1823. There is an Isaac McDaniel who died 1822 Randolph Co. NC left an estate record with son Isaac. Would appreciate a copy of the record if anyone has it. The second Isaac was born 1799 NC and died 1879 MO. Isaac born 1755 died 1822 was the son of John McDANIEL. Any information on his ancestry would also be appreciated. Thanks, Mary W. Glenn ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange
Seeking to locate records to connect Mary Barker born May 18, 1805 NC died Jan 16, 1888 MO married Isaac McDANIEL 8/29/1823 Randolph Co. NC, to William BARKER son of Samuel BARKER and Margaret GREENFIELD. Understand there is a book written 1927 BARKER GENEALOGY by Elizabeth Frye Barker with such a listing but not sure of proof as I have not seen the book. Any help would be most appreciated. Mary W. Glenn ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange GENDEX at http://www.gendex.com/gendex/ has over 1500 databases on line
To date...I have four Moore lines in the area of OLD Orange County that married into my WHITSETT, CRISSENBURY, LOWE, and GILLIAM lines. In DESPERATION over the years I have researched all the Moore's that I could find. This is one of them: Alamance County, NC James Moore where deeds show that he lived on Laughlin's Creek of Stoney Creek. "Stoney Creek Presbyterian Church Records", I find that James Moore and his son Robert Moore served as Elders. Listed are the children that I can find for this James Moore. Anyone researching this line care to fill in the blanks? Thomas Moore married Dinah Hunter Robert Moore John Moore Martha Moore Nancy Moore Thanks, Louise ==== NCORANGE Mailing List ==== Larry Noah - lrnoah@bigfoot.com - Listowner - NCORANGE mailing list Orange Co, NC USGenWeb site is at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncorange GENDEX at http://www.gendex.com/gendex/ has over 1500 databases on line