RootsWeb.com Mailing Lists
Previous Page      Next Page
Total: 1000/5289
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] Walters/Williams Deed
    2. Yes all those names sound familiar to me. In fact the Giles and Bright (brothers) are buried not far from me... -----Original Message----- From: Mary Alice <mageary@tampabay.rr.com> To: ncrobeso@rootsweb.com Sent: Tue, 10 Jul 2007 10:24 am Subject: Re: [NCROBESO] Walters/Williams Deed Delaney, Who are the children of your Giles WILLIAMS? My gr gr gr grandfather is Giles WILLIAMS m. Sarah HERRING. I have their children as: Benjamin Charity Nancy Christian Polly Susannah Bright Sarah Giles...b 21 Oct 1808 Do these children sound familure to you? Mary Alice ----- Original Message ----- From: "Delaney Black" <DelaneyB@mindspring.com> To: <ncrobeso@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2007 9:53 AM Subject: [NCROBESO] Walters/Williams Deed > BlankMichael, > > Could you send me the description of the deed listed below? Giles > Williams, son of Absalom, is my 4th great grandfather. > > Thanks for putting so much information online for the benefit of others. > Your effort is much appreciated. > > Delaney Black > (from the DAVIS' of Iona Presbyterian Church area) > Moore County NC > > > ROBESON COUNTY, NC - DEEDS - Walters Grantor deeds, 1800-1865 > ==================================================================== In . > This file was contributed for use i the USGenWeb Archives by: Michael > Walters MeWalters7@webtv.net > ==================================================================== These > are Grantor deeds from Robeson County North Carolina of all Walters > between the years of 1800 and 1865. I also have the amount of land and in > most deeds the description of the land. If you are interested in that > information please email me with year and Grantor and Grantee. > > Year Grantor Grantee > > 1805 Wm Wallters Sr Giles Williams 1805 > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NCROBESO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NCROBESO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ________________________________________________________________________ AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at AOL.com.

    07/10/2007 05:49:24
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] Walters/Williams Deed
    2. Mary Alice
    3. Delaney, Who are the children of your Giles WILLIAMS? My gr gr gr grandfather is Giles WILLIAMS m. Sarah HERRING. I have their children as: Benjamin Charity Nancy Christian Polly Susannah Bright Sarah Giles...b 21 Oct 1808 Do these children sound familure to you? Mary Alice ----- Original Message ----- From: "Delaney Black" <DelaneyB@mindspring.com> To: <ncrobeso@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2007 9:53 AM Subject: [NCROBESO] Walters/Williams Deed > BlankMichael, > > Could you send me the description of the deed listed below? Giles > Williams, son of Absalom, is my 4th great grandfather. > > Thanks for putting so much information online for the benefit of others. > Your effort is much appreciated. > > Delaney Black > (from the DAVIS' of Iona Presbyterian Church area) > Moore County NC > > > ROBESON COUNTY, NC - DEEDS - Walters Grantor deeds, 1800-1865 > ==================================================================== In . > This file was contributed for use i the USGenWeb Archives by: Michael > Walters MeWalters7@webtv.net > ==================================================================== These > are Grantor deeds from Robeson County North Carolina of all Walters > between the years of 1800 and 1865. I also have the amount of land and in > most deeds the description of the land. If you are interested in that > information please email me with year and Grantor and Grantee. > > Year Grantor Grantee > > 1805 Wm Wallters Sr Giles Williams 1805 > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NCROBESO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    07/10/2007 04:24:44
    1. [NCROBESO] Walters/Williams Deed
    2. Delaney Black
    3. BlankMichael, Could you send me the description of the deed listed below? Giles Williams, son of Absalom, is my 4th great grandfather. Thanks for putting so much information online for the benefit of others. Your effort is much appreciated. Delaney Black (from the DAVIS' of Iona Presbyterian Church area) Moore County NC ROBESON COUNTY, NC - DEEDS - Walters Grantor deeds, 1800-1865 ==================================================================== In . This file was contributed for use i the USGenWeb Archives by: Michael Walters MeWalters7@webtv.net ==================================================================== These are Grantor deeds from Robeson County North Carolina of all Walters between the years of 1800 and 1865. I also have the amount of land and in most deeds the description of the land. If you are interested in that information please email me with year and Grantor and Grantee. Year Grantor Grantee 1805 Wm Wallters Sr Giles Williams 1805

    07/10/2007 03:53:51
    1. [NCROBESO] Will of William Moore, dated 1809
    2. JOAN OXENDINE
    3. Someone recently asked about William Moore, and since that request was made I found an extract of the will of William Moore which I had copied a few years ago from records on file at the library in Lumberton William Moore, dated 1809 daughter Catherine son John daughter Aseneth son James son William son John daughters Catherine, Eleanor, Mary, Sarah, Nancy, Eliza, Eleanor, and Olive Also of possible interest is mention of Mary Moore in the will of George Blount, proved 1818, dated 1818, which mentions: nephew John Sterling Fowler mother Mary Barker land that "I purchased of John Hammons" land that "my mother Mary Moore gave unto me" executors (worthy relations) Samuel Willis and Moab Willis witnesses Neill Buie, Willis Pope, Richard Powell The will mentions both "mother Mary Barker" and "my mother Mary Moore". I haven't researched this family so don't know the story behind the two surnames for Mary.

    07/10/2007 01:39:22
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] NC Laws which led to the outmigration
    2. dayle biba
    3. This was very interesting!! Thanks for providing the links, as I explored them all. Dayle Biba ----- Original Message ----- From: "Marcia Lee" <mlee@uwf.edu> To: <NCROBESO-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, July 09, 2007 2:37 PM Subject: [NCROBESO] NC Laws which led to the outmigration Sorry it took so long to get back with the info on the laws you were asking about in NC. The NC State law passed in 1715 banned marriages of whites with Native Americans & African Americans. I don't know the statute. But from the website http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/wicazo_sa_review/v018/18.1.barker.html "North Carolina possessed a code that prohibited marriages between white persons and an Indian, Negro, Mustee, or Mulatto or any person of mixed blood to the Third Generation. Such laws meant that a part-Indian of one-eighth American ancestry and seven-eighths European ancestry would not have acquired sufficient European "blood" to be accorded the legal privileges of whiteness." The tithable taxes, another state law, taxed non-white heads of households plus women in the household over the age of 12. This hit especially hard on large families. In 1835 NC revised the NC State Constitution. From the website Lumbee Voices at http://linux.library.appstate.edu/lumbee/Miscellaneous/lumv.html - The 1835 Revised NC Constitution - "No free Negro, free Mulatto, or free persons of mixed blood shall vote, bear arms without a license or serve in the militia. These restrictions in Robeson County came to be applied to the Lumbee." From http://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/butler/butler.html - The Croatan Indians of Sampson County, North Carolina, their origins ... by George Edwin Butler. "From the close of the Revolution to the year 1835 they (the Croatans/Lumbee) exercised the elective franchise equally with white men, performed militia duties, encouraged schools, and built churches, owned slaves and lived in comfortable circumstances. By an ordinance clause 3, section 3, of the North Carolina State Convention of 1835 the elective franchise was denied to all free persons of color and afterwards they were debarred from voting till the year 1868 when a new constitution was adopted." - It actually read "no free negro, free mulatto, or free person of mixed blood descended from negro ancestors to the fourth generation inclusive (though one ancestor of each generation may have been a white person) shall vote for members of the senate or house of commons." -- Regarding marriages again in Section 7, Chapter 68, of the acts of the General Assembly of 1854, provides that all marriages since the 8th day of January 1839 and all marriages in the future between a white person and a free negro or free person of color, to the third generation shall be void. It was held that the term "or free persons of color" applied to the Croatans/Lumbees. Lastly two websites that will cover the use of the word Portugee or Portuguese as a term to disguise mixed blood - Indians recorded as Mulatto at http://sciway3.net/clark/freemoors/ARose.html scroll down to North Carolina 1857 & 1871. The origins of the Lumbee by S. Pony Hill at http://sciway3.net/clark/freemoors/lumbee.html . Marcie ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NCROBESO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    07/09/2007 09:44:05
    1. [NCROBESO] NC Laws which led to the outmigration
    2. Marcia Lee
    3. Sorry it took so long to get back with the info on the laws you were asking about in NC. The NC State law passed in 1715 banned marriages of whites with Native Americans & African Americans. I don't know the statute. But from the website http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/wicazo_sa_review/v018/18.1.barker.html "North Carolina possessed a code that prohibited marriages between white persons and an Indian, Negro, Mustee, or Mulatto or any person of mixed blood to the Third Generation. Such laws meant that a part-Indian of one-eighth American ancestry and seven-eighths European ancestry would not have acquired sufficient European "blood" to be accorded the legal privileges of whiteness." The tithable taxes, another state law, taxed non-white heads of households plus women in the household over the age of 12. This hit especially hard on large families. In 1835 NC revised the NC State Constitution. From the website Lumbee Voices at http://linux.library.appstate.edu/lumbee/Miscellaneous/lumv.html - The 1835 Revised NC Constitution - "No free Negro, free Mulatto, or free persons of mixed blood shall vote, bear arms without a license or serve in the militia. These restrictions in Robeson County came to be applied to the Lumbee." From http://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/butler/butler.html - The Croatan Indians of Sampson County, North Carolina, their origins ... by George Edwin Butler. "From the close of the Revolution to the year 1835 they (the Croatans/Lumbee) exercised the elective franchise equally with white men, performed militia duties, encouraged schools, and built churches, owned slaves and lived in comfortable circumstances. By an ordinance clause 3, section 3, of the North Carolina State Convention of 1835 the elective franchise was denied to all free persons of color and afterwards they were debarred from voting till the year 1868 when a new constitution was adopted." - It actually read "no free negro, free mulatto, or free person of mixed blood descended from negro ancestors to the fourth generation inclusive (though one ancestor of each generation may have been a white person) shall vote for members of the senate or house of commons." -- Regarding marriages again in Section 7, Chapter 68, of the acts of the General Assembly of 1854, provides that all marriages since the 8th day of January 1839 and all marriages in the future between a white person and a free negro or free person of color, to the third generation shall be void. It was held that the term "or free persons of color" applied to the Croatans/Lumbees. Lastly two websites that will cover the use of the word Portugee or Portuguese as a term to disguise mixed blood - Indians recorded as Mulatto at http://sciway3.net/clark/freemoors/ARose.html scroll down to North Carolina 1857 & 1871. The origins of the Lumbee by S. Pony Hill at http://sciway3.net/clark/freemoors/lumbee.html . Marcie

    07/09/2007 07:37:26
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] unscribe
    2. John Brown
    3. It tells you at the bottom of every message how to unsubscribe Bsjm13@wmconnect.com wrote: > > > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NCROBESO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > >

    07/08/2007 04:29:41
  1. 07/08/2007 03:44:12
    1. [NCROBESO] FW: Outmigration from Robeson Co. NC webpages
    2. Marcia Lee
    3. ________________________________ From: Marcia Lee Sent: Sat 7/7/2007 3:25 PM To: NCRobeson-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Outmigration from Robeson Co. NC webpages Sam, Hope this helps: 1- First cousins of the Mississippi Territory www.geocities.com/BourbonStreet/Delta/3731 click on box with man & woman on yellow background to get to name index. 2 - Randy Willis and sons webpage www.randywillis.org 3 - Lee Murrah's genealogy www.murrah.com/gen/ 4 - Georgia land lotteries at Georgia USgenweb Archives www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/ga/galand.htm 5 - Cherokee country GA 1832 lottery see above site 6 - Old 300 genealogical database www.bchm.org/gene/gene/html 7 - USGenwebsites for LA & TX for Calcasieu, Natchitoches Parishes in LA & Angelina, Jefferson, Nacogdoches, Orange & Washington Cos. in TX 8 - for Neutral Strip Redbone Heritage Website one page at http://wwwgenealogypages.parrottfarms.com Extractions of marriage & pension records of familiar names -- Don C. Marler's article Louisiana Redbones www.afrigeneas.com/library/redbones.html 9 - Defenders of the Alamo site with names http://hotx.com/alamo/defenders.html Don't know why some of these hi lighted in blue, some black. Marcie

    07/08/2007 03:03:41
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] FW: Outmigration fron Robeson Co., NC 1820-1830
    2. RickandRana
    3. On 7/5/07, sam.west <sam.west@ncmail.net> wrote: > > Marcia, > Do you have the web addresses for these sites? It would be nice and apprreciated if those sites would be posted to this list. Rick ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NCROBESO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes > in the subject and the body of the message > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NCROBESO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    07/07/2007 06:59:11
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] RECORDS OF DIX HILL
    2. RickandRana
    3. On 6/26/07, sam.west <sam.west@ncmail.net> wrote:My question is what about the records of state hospitals like Doretha Dix which dates back to the 1800s. Sam, in GA an aunt died about 1900 in a mental hospital. To access her records we went to the local Judge of Probate Court, identified ourselves with (in those days) the only required document: our driver's license; paid a fee of forty or so dollars, filled out the required form, the medical records clerk called to verify the information and the process was completed. About a month later the packet of medical and family information arrived at our door. I am suggesting to you in this round-about way to place a phone call to the medical records clerk and present your questions. Best of luck, Rick

    07/07/2007 06:55:59
    1. [NCROBESO] Info on Daniel B. Smith
    2. Steve E.
    3. I have some info on Daniel B. Smith for anyone who is researching this line. Steve Edgerton

    07/07/2007 06:20:34
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] Info on Daniel B. Smith - Off Topic Edgerton
    2. Mary Modlin
    3. Steve, Does your EDGERTON line have two brothers, Thomas and William, in Wayne County, NC who married daughters of Nathan PIKE and Rachel MAUDLIN in the early 1800s? I believe they are sons of Thomas EDGERTON who migrated from NJ to Wayne County. If so, please contact me off list. Mary Modlin -----Original Message----- From: ncrobeso-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:ncrobeso-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Steve E. Sent: Saturday, July 07, 2007 11:21 AM To: ncrobeso@rootsweb.com Subject: [NCROBESO] Info on Daniel B. Smith I have some info on Daniel B. Smith for anyone who is researching this line. Steve Edgerton ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NCROBESO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    07/07/2007 05:50:16
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] NCROBESO Digest, Vol 2, Issue 44
    2. In a message dated 7/7/2007 2:13:22 AM Eastern Daylight Time, ncrobeso-request@rootsweb.com writes: mlee@uwf.edu The area on east 72 near longbranch was called Fayetteville in early census ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.

    07/07/2007 12:12:56
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] RECORDS OF DIX HILL
    2. bj berrykeeper
    3. I tried recently to get records from a sanitarium for a friends g.grandfather in Arizona (obviously passed many years ago). The sanitarium told me that they only kept limited records (because of space) and that when the doctor and the patient were both deceased, the records were destroyed. That might be only that one sanitarium though. The sanitarium did tell me that if I wanted a copy of what they had, they required a letter from a judge in the district telling them to release the records. I've written letters to judges before, asking them to release information and there has never been a problem with it. You might try writing the judge in the district and ask that he ask the hospital to release what information they possess. Couldn't hurt. bj "sam.west" <sam.west@ncmail.net> wrote: Hi, I know that the Federal Government will not release censuses until 72 years after the census was taken in order to guard the personal and medical information which it contains, i.e. diagnoses like "lunatic", "idiot", etc.... My question is what about the records of state hospitals like Doretha Dix which dates back to the 1800s. I work in the Public Health field and have seen some older "social evaluations" of some patients. These Social Evaluations go into great detail, i.e. giving names of parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, siblings, etc... giving social economical information and telling about the environment in which they lived [a pot of gold for genealogist]. Now I know that these mental health records are under a protected class of records due to their sensitive nature, but what I would like to know is will they ever age out as the census records does and then become available for research??? I have been told that one of my early relatives was admitted to Doretha Dix Hospital back in the middle 1800s, and if I could at least get hold of copies of the social evaluations, then maybe some of my unanswered questions could be answered. Also, I am sure that they would have information on those inmates who died on the Hill back in the 1800s as well. Who knows, maybe it will help me understand why I am a Genealogy Nut! Think about, help if you can! Sam West Lumberton, Robeson Co NC ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NCROBESO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message "A person should think with his heart". Sun Bear 1890 --------------------------------- Looking for earth-friendly autos? Browse Top Cars by "Green Rating" at Yahoo! Autos' Green Center.

    07/06/2007 05:12:41
    1. [NCROBESO] Fwd: [NCHALIFA] How to use Google to create powerful genealogy searches
    2. ----- Original Message ----- From: 'Greg Matthews' <dialzero@bellsouth.net> To: <varoots@rootsweb.com>, <va-southside@rootsweb.com>, <scsaluda@rootsweb.com>, <sc-old96@rootsweb.com>, <sc-genealogy@rootsweb.com>, <nchalifa@rootsweb.com>, <scedgefi@rootsweb.com> Sent: Fri Jul 6 0:48 Subject: Fwd: [NCHALIFA] How to use Google to create powerful genealogy searches Rootsweb just added a new GOOGLE listserv for discussion of search techniques using google.com. I just made a large post on there that I thought I would share with the other lists I belong to. You will be surprised at some of the results you get with these search techniques. I use them practically every day when I'm researching. I know a lot of people have no idea of the power of google search techniques. A while back I started my own list of helpful google operators with examples of them. So, to hopefully get this list started I thought I would share them. Feel free to cross-post this to other lists if you like. You go to google and type the commands into the search box to use them. Alternately, if you have the google toolbar you can type the commands in the toolbox search box. 1) How to search for sites that link back to another site: example: Let's say you've found a great web site for your Smythe family research. Let's say that site is called www.smythefamily.com. There might be other people out there who also like that site and have linked back to it, and maybe you've never seen that other site. The command to find that other site is: link:www.smythe.com This will give you a list of any sites that google has indexed that link to www.smythe.com. 2) How to search for sites that are similar to another site: This technique is the same as if you clicked the "Similar pages" link on a list of returned results from a standard google search. What it will do is show you sites that cover material that is similar to the site you are interested in. For the example I'll use my own Mat(t) hews genealogy site: related:www.bluntrazor.com If you used this command you would get a short list of sites that google says are related to or similar to my site. 3) How to restrict a google search to a single web site or domain: We all use google or similar search pages to find things related to our genealogy research, but how often do we get TONS and TONS of results that are of no interest to us? A lot. Wouldn't it be really useful if you could restrict a search to a single web site? Let's say you only want to search rootsweb (sure they have search links for everything, but I don't think they have a single search to look at everything at once) or you only want to search the forums at genealogy.com. There are several different ways to search for different things so I'll show all the ones that come to mind with examples for each: The first again uses my web site to search for the surname "Pace": site:bluntrazor.com Pace The search returns 11 results and the search box on my site returns 12 so google does pretty good with that one (always remember that google can only return results for pages that it has indexed and there is no guarantee that it has indexed every single page on a web site.) Let's take that a little further and search for a man named Thomas Pace. Most people would put Thomas Pace in quote marks " " and you can certainly do that with your search, eg. site:bluntrazor.com "Thomas Pace", but I find it easier to use a google shortcut: site:bluntrazor.com Thomas.Pace Saves us a keystroke doing that. I find this search method really helpful when searching the forums at genealogy.com since they don't seem to have a global forum search. To use the command there you would do this: site:genforum.genealogy.com Thomas.Pace This turns up results for Thomas Pace on boards other than the Pace family forum. Keep in mind that this search will only return results for "Thomas Pace" together and not "Thomas or Pace" seperately. I've found that in general google does NOT have all of the genforums indexed, but you should get results from different forums that will hopefully give you an idea of some new places to look. What if you wanted to search for more than one surname from a single site? To do that we use what is called the "pipe" character: | . This key will be found most likely above your ENTER key. To search for two different names, eg. Isaac OR James from my site you would use: site:bluntrazor.com Isaac | James (alternately you could do site:bluntrazor.com Isaac OR James but the "OR" must be capitalized) this gives us a list of pages where EITHER of those names appear. Finally, if you want pages that include both Isaac and James on the same page, but not together (not as a single name "Isaac James") you would do: site:bluntrazor.com Isaac and James For some reason google tells me I don't need to use the word and, but I always get fewer results if I don't use it. 4) How to get results from pages with a specific name in the web site title: When I first saw this operator I was a little sceptical of it's usefulness, but when I used it I was surprised. A web page's title is the text you find at the top of your browser in the blue bar. I think part of the usefulness of this method is that it is a way to further narrow down a search. Let's say you were looking for pages on Charles City County (Virginia). If you just googled Charles City county you get over a half million results, but if you set the search to only those pages with Charles City County in the title of the page it cuts that number down to just over 5,000 (still a lot, but better than a half million). To use this technique you do this: intitle:Charles.City.County Returns from the above are going to have Charles City County in that exact order in the title (see below if you don't want the words necessarily in that order) If you were searching for a very unique surname this could prove helpful: intitle:Blackwelder Blackwelder is my mother's maiden name and everyone with the surname is related without question. Remember, any words put into a web page's title are going to be important as the site is generally specifically about whatever the title says. If you wanted Charles City County to appear in the title, but not necessarily in that order you would do this: allintitle:Charles City County allintitle will catch variations such as a web page title "County of Charles City". Curiously, allintitle only returns 505 results versus the broader intitle:Charles.City.County which gives 5,000 results. So, it pays to try it both ways. 5) How to get results from pages with a specific name in the web site url (address): This one might seem like it's splitting hairs with intitle, but I always get interesting results when I use it. Again, let's say we are looking for Charles City County. To search for sites that have that county in the ADDRESS of the web site we use: inurl:Charles.City.County Again, this gives returns with the exact phrase Charles City County. I just used this one and found a site I had not come across before on 17th century Charles City County that did not appear when used the intitle command on it. Alternately you could use: allinurl: Charles City County to get addresses that don't have the words necessarily in that exact order. Another method with this operator is: inurl:Blackwelder Isaac which returns results that have "Blackwelder" in the url and "Isaac" somewhere in the web page (NOT in the url). 6) How to mix operators It is possible to mix any of the above operators, but generally I don't as I find I get decent results without having to do that. But, let's say you wanted to search only a specific site for Blackwelder in the title of any of the web pages: intitle:Blackwelder site:edu This will returns results with sites that have Blackwelder in the title of the web page, _BUT_ it will only search web sites that end in .edu (this would be colleges and other schools, no .com or .org or dot anything else but .edu). I'm not sure why you'd want to do this with a genealogy search, but if you do that's how it's done. Other combinations using any of the above are possible also. Believe it or not, I learned the majority of this by watching a video of a college kid on youtube showing how to illegally download music from google :) Good luck to all with your searches. I have been pleasantly surprised with a lot of the results I've gotten using these techniques and I know you will be also. Greg Matthews ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NCHALIFA- request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    07/06/2007 10:50:49
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] Suttons of Robeson County
    2. Tom Sutton
    3. Marcie, the information that you have on Jesse Sutton and on back into England is about the same info that I have. I don't have the info that shows Him in Fayetteville, but all the other info showing Him as the father of John Caleb etc is about the same as what I have. Tom ----- Original Message ----- From: "Marcia Lee" <mlee@uwf.edu> To: <NCROBESO-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, July 06, 2007 8:24 AM Subject: [NCROBESO] Suttons of Robeson County > Does anyone have parents of John Caleb Sutton who married Marinda > Boyette or a list of his siblings? John was supposed to been born in > 1801. If he was born in Robeson Co. in the 1790 & 1800 censuses the only > male Sutton listed in those two censuses was a Jesse Sutton. In 1790 > Jesse listed on page 49c right close to Jesse Lee Sr. & Jr., Joseph Lee > & Zedekiah Lee. He is listed in the 16 & UPWARDS COLUMN, the only one in > household. In 1800 he is in Fayetteville with the same group of Lees & > no longer single. He is listed in the male age 26-44 column, with two > males under ten, one female under ten & one female in 16-25 column. > > Could he be the father of John Caleb & Susan Sutton. There is an entry > in Rootsweb WorldConnect which lists John's father as Jesse Sutton b. > 1752 in New Hanover Co., NC with mother's name unknown. This entry has a > pedigree backwards to a Richard Sutton from England & his wife Susanna > Buckley. It doesn't have a wife for Jesse or other children listed. Are > these Suttons familiar? > > Marcie > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NCROBESO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > -- > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.5.476 / Virus Database: 269.10.0/886 - Release Date: 7/4/2007 > 1:40 PM > >

    07/06/2007 10:32:53
    1. [NCROBESO] Suttons of Robeson County
    2. Marcia Lee
    3. Does anyone have parents of John Caleb Sutton who married Marinda Boyette or a list of his siblings? John was supposed to been born in 1801. If he was born in Robeson Co. in the 1790 & 1800 censuses the only male Sutton listed in those two censuses was a Jesse Sutton. In 1790 Jesse listed on page 49c right close to Jesse Lee Sr. & Jr., Joseph Lee & Zedekiah Lee. He is listed in the 16 & UPWARDS COLUMN, the only one in household. In 1800 he is in Fayetteville with the same group of Lees & no longer single. He is listed in the male age 26-44 column, with two males under ten, one female under ten & one female in 16-25 column. Could he be the father of John Caleb & Susan Sutton. There is an entry in Rootsweb WorldConnect which lists John's father as Jesse Sutton b. 1752 in New Hanover Co., NC with mother's name unknown. This entry has a pedigree backwards to a Richard Sutton from England & his wife Susanna Buckley. It doesn't have a wife for Jesse or other children listed. Are these Suttons familiar? Marcie

    07/06/2007 02:24:11
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] FW: Outmigration from Robeson Co., NC 1830-1840
    2. RickandRana
    3. On 7/5/07, Tom Sutton <tom1424@cox.net> wrote: > > No Rick I'm sorry but I don't have anything on an Asa. Appreciate the reply. Rick

    07/05/2007 01:54:51
    1. Re: [NCROBESO] Robeson County & Columbus County
    2. Is this book online? ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.

    07/05/2007 10:52:51