The First Hundred Years, First Lutheran Church of Kearney, 1884-1984 If you have Swedish ancestors in Buffalo County, there's a good chance that they were a part of this church. http://www.rootsweb.com/~nebuffal/churches/firstluth/index.htm From the Mardos Memorial Library. www.memoriallibrary.com/ Thanks, Pam, for making this available!! As always, an easy way to see what's new on Buffalo County NEGenWeb is to go to the main page http://www.rootsweb.com/~nebuffal/ and click on Recent Changes. Happy Digging! Mona Meadowlark7@juno.com Buffalo Co. Coordinator, NEGenWeb - http://www.rootsweb.com/~nebuffal/ Houser63@brick.net
The obituary of Robt. Haber, born in Lincoln, NE, appears in the Daily Breeze this morning. It is "saved" at this link but if it is gone when you see this, you can contact me. http://dailybreeze.abracat.com/c2/email_clips/results/index.xml?se.category.q=ADID_69951896&se.category.cat=ANN&se.control.spm=s&se.category.src=em __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail - 50x more storage than other providers! http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail
Bonnie Taylor WICHITA - Bonnie Taylor, 53, of Wichita, a former Parsons resident, died at her home Tuesday, Aug. 17, 2004. She had been in her usual health and death was unexpected. She was born Jan. 9, 1951, in Columbus, Neb., to Logan and Elizabeth Roberts. She graduated from Abraham Lincoln High School in Columbus in 1969. She attended Emily Griffith Opportunity School and became a licensed practical nurse. She later moved to Denver, where she worked as an LPN at Denver General Hospital. She married Gary R. Taylor of Parsons on Nov. 19, 1973. They moved to Parsons, where she worked at Good Samaritan Center and Elmhaven West nursing home. After their divorce, she moved to Pittsburg and worked at Mt. Carmel Regional Medical Center. In 1991, she moved to Wichita, where she worked in several nursing homes. She had been an LPN for 31 years. She had recently been employed with Wal-Mart in Wichita. She was a Catholic. She enjoyed gardening, cooking and taking care of her pets. Survivors include one son, Brian Taylor of Littleton, Colo.; one daughter, Kelly Taylor of Parsons; two grandsons, Luke and Logan Duroni of Parsons; one brother, David Roberts of Colorado; and her former mother-in-law, Kay Taylor of Parsons. She was preceded in death by her parents and her former father-in-law, Raymond Taylor. The service will be at 7 p.m. today at Forbes-Hoffman Funeral Home with the Rev. Robert Wachter officiating. The family will receive friends following the service until 9 p.m. Memorials to fund her grandchildren's education may be left at or mailed to the funeral home, 405 Main, Parsons, Kan., 67357.
I have recently come into the possession of a personal genealogy "Henry Cobb Stryker and Amanda Rosetta Walker. I am not related to this family in any way, but would like to contact persons who are. It looks like this family lived in Butler County. Bonnie
Plattsmouth Journal, Monday, December 9, 1918 DEATH AFTER SHORT SICKNESS [front page] MRS. H.K. ZAVGREN DIED IN OMAHA THIS MORNING FROM SPANISH INFLUENZA WAS FIRST TAKEN SICK SUNDAY Leaves Husband and One Child, Besides Mother and Brother and Sisters From Friday�s daily Mrs. H.K. ZAVGREN, daughter of Mrs. Mary HEINRICH, of this city, the daughter making her home in Omaha, died there this morning after a sickness extending since Sunday. It was not thought here that her condition was so serious, until the message came telling of her passing away. Miss Katie Heinrich was born in this city, and here grew to womanhood, and was well known by a large number of people. When a girl, she was known as one of the finest young women in this city, and has made many friends since going to Omaha to make her home. As yet no arrangements have been made as to the funeral or burial, her mother, Mrs. Mary Heinrich, and a sister departed on the first train this afternoon for Omaha, to confer with the saddened husband and to arrange for the funeral. _______________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Win 1 of 4,000 free domain names from Yahoo! Enter now. http://promotions.yahoo.com/goldrush
Plattsmouth Journal, Thursday, January 16, 1919 SEARCHING FOR HIS MOTHER AND BROTHER HERE [front page] HALF BROTHER OF JOHN JOHNSON WHO DISAPPEARS SOME TIME SINCE LOOKS FOR HIM From Tuesday�s daily I.M. BRILEY, of Gravilburg, Saskatchewan, Canada, has been in the city for the past few days, stopping here for a short time, on a trip from his home to Vancouver, where he has thought to stay for some time. Mr. Briley, who is a half brother of John JOHNSON, who had disappear[ed] from here some few years ago, and whose body was found at Nebraska City, later, had worked here for about a month in the Burlington shops in 1896. He had not heard anything from his brother or mother since leaving here, and had come here to find out what he could, regarding them and to visit with both. When he arrived here, he could not find anything of their whereabouts, but after [looks like] cordial inquiry, it developed that it was John Johnson and his mother that he was looking for and that they were both dead. Mr. Briley will remain here for a few days and will see what he can do to find out about the estate which was left. There were five nephews by the name of TAGUE, who were here and lived also at Glenwood, but have gone from here to Omaha or elsewhere. __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? New and Improved Yahoo! Mail - 100MB free storage! http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail
The 1925 Rural Directory of Lancaster County, Nebraska is being scanned & placed online at the Denton Community Historical Society web site, so please check occasionally for additions. I hope to have the directory all online in a week or two. Thanks for your understanding & patience! The directory was donated by Sue Williams. Many other interesting articles are on the DCHS web site and should be of interest to anyone with ancestors from the Southwest Lancaster County, Nebraska area. Berks, Burnham, Centerville, Cheese Creek, Cobb Jct., Denton, Emerald, Hallam, Kramer, Martell, Olive Branch, Princeton, Rokeby, Sprague, & Yankee Hill, Nebraska (all in Southwest Lancaster County) are covered in this website. This site includes historical information of interest to the residents of Denton and to the many descendants of its early inhabitants who are researching their family history. If you have school or church records, newspaper articles, photographs, a family history or two or almost anything related to Denton history and would like to share the materials with other Denton history and Denton family history researchers, please contact: Sue Williams at: mwilliams3@neb.rr.com Take care, Kathie Harrison Lancaster Co., NEGenWeb Project http://www.rootsweb.com/~nelancas/index.html
The 1925 Rural Directory of Lancaster County, Nebraska is being scanned & placed online at the Denton Community Historical Society web site, so please check occasionally for additions. I hope to have the directory all online in a week or two. Thanks for your understanding & patience! The directory was donated by Sue Williams. Many other interesting articles are on the DCHS web site and should be of interest to anyone with ancestors from the Southwest Lancaster County, Nebraska area. Berks, Burnham, Centerville, Cheese Creek, Cobb Jct., Denton, Emerald, Hallam, Kramer, Martell, Olive Branch, Princeton, Rokeby, Sprague, & Yankee Hill, Nebraska (all in Southwest Lancaster County) are covered in this website. This site includes historical information of interest to the residents of Denton and to the many descendants of its early inhabitants who are researching their family history. If you have school or church records, newspaper articles, photographs, a family history or two or almost anything related to Denton history and would like to share the materials with other Denton history and Denton family history researchers, please contact: Sue Williams at: mwilliams3@neb.rr.com Take care, Kathie Harrison Lancaster Co., NEGenWeb Project http://www.rootsweb.com/~nelancas/index.html
"Shot down in cold blood" we thought the very worn stone said and the exact time of death: 7 AM was listed--which is also unusual. The back of the stone was in another language & though we couldn't positively identify the language, some words were similar enough to english to send us to the cemetery office in search for more information. The folks at Westlawn-Hillcrest were helpful, but the spelling fo the stone matched nothing in their data base. It wasn't until we started tossing names from markers up & down the row from our mystery stone that we made the identification. They confirmed that the person had, in deed, died of a gunshot wound. A trip to the W. Dale Clark Library brought pay dirt as several successive days told a lurid tale of jealousy in a perceived love triangle where the young man & his girl friend had been shot by a 3rd party also interested in the girl. The perpetrator had then shot himself, accoridng to the story, resulting in his immediate death following that of the girl friend. Our young man had lingered a couple more days, during which the paper contributed graphic detail of his suffering to the reader. Not all the stories are as colorful as this one & certainly they don't all hit the newspaper, but all the folks there in the cemetery have a story. Many of the stories will forever remainuntold, but some of the stories are ours, because some of the people in the cemetery are ours. The stories we could tell of those in our families may be lost if we do n't put pen to paper (or fingers to the keyboard) and tell what ewe remember of those stones lie silent in the grass. "Budded on earth to bloom in heaven" Was the child whose stone carries this sentiment forgotten by his parents when the stone capped the grave? Probably not. But his parents may well have joined him by now--and if his parents were our parents--or grandparents--can or will we tell their story? A family's history took years to unfold and may take years to write. But if we don't write the stories, there will be none to remeber. They need not be elaborate. And there's always someone who can fix the grammar & spelling if necessary, although not everyone can tell the story. If you won't, who will? (And you may be surprised what other stories come forth once you share the story with relatives.) Greater Omaha Genealogical Society is parent organization for the writers group that meets 4th Saturday mornings at 10:00 at Crossroads food court. You can have brunch, coffee or juice if you like from the various vendors and share your writings with others that come. The important thing is that we start writing about our selves and our families. This month's topic is "Regrets". It could be something we regret doing, or not doing, or someone else in the family has regrets about.
I have an obituary for Margaret Brant, born in Davenport, NE to Charles and Bessie Brant. It did not get posted online today, but I have it in case anyone would like to see it. Give me a little time to get my scanner hooked up again. Becky __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com
Hi all, I am in need of a volunteer to obtain obituaries from these online newspapers for the NEBRASKA OBITUARY ABSTRACTS, since the volunteer I had apparently was not able to commit to getting these to me on a weekly basis. If you can assist myself and the other volunteers by doing this please contact me at: NEObitsLady28@aol.com I need these sent to me every Friday. Beatrice The Daily Sun BellevueLeader.com Blair The Enterprise Custer County Chief Burwell Tribune Columbus Telegram Fremont Tribune Kearney Daily Hub McCook Daily Gazette North Platte Bulletin North Platte Telegraph We now have 457 pages online as of today! Thanks to the volunteers who have helped me with this site! Take care, Kathie Harrison NEBRASKA OBITUARY ABSTRACTS http://www.rootsweb.com/~neobits/index.htm
Plattsmouth Journal, Monday, February 3, 1919 SAW HALF CENTURY OF LIVING IN NEBRASKA AND EVENT IS PROPERLY CELEBRATED BY FAMILIES OF THESE TWO MEN IN CASS COUNTY MOST OF TIME George E. Buell and George E. Vandenburg Arrived in Omaha on January 23rd, 1869 At the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. E. BUELL near Murdock, in Cass county, Nebraska, on Home Rest Farm, January 23rd occurred the celebration of the arrival in Nebraska fifty years ago of George E. Buell and George E. VANDENBURG. Mrs. Buell served a delicious four-course dinner to the following relatives: Mr. and Mrs. G.E. VANDENBURG and son, Edd; Mr. and Mrs. S.M. COX; Mr. and Mrs. F.E. BUELL and son, Noble; Mr. and Mrs. A. ROSENKOETTER and daughter Vera; Mr. and Mrs. L.B. GORTHEY and daughter, Dorothy, and sons Charlie and Fred Buell. On January 11, 1869, these then young men, taking Horace Greeley�s advice, left eastern New York, where they were boys together, for the unknown West. They made a short stay in Ohio; also stopped in Iowa, where they could have bought land for $6 and acre, but they did not have the $6. They arrived at Omaha on January 23, 1869. Their first work was at Bellevue, Nebraska, sawing wood for their board. Here they met their boyhood friend, S.W. Orton, now of Weeping Water, who had come from the same neighborhood a short time before. They helped survey and make ties for the Omaha, south Western railroad, which is now the Burlington. They also sawed wood for the first engines over that road in Nebraska. After this they came on to Cass county where they settled on adjoining farms in 1869. Part of their land was preempted and part was deeded by Pres. Grant. The eighty acres on which the celebration was held was homesteaded by Mr. Buell and he has lived upon it ever since. Their parents and grandparents had lived on adjoining farms in eastern New York since 1792. These men have lived through the hardships of pioneer days and have also lived to see Nebraska develop from the one room shanty and the sod house to the modern home with all of its conveniences also from the ox team (which they drove exclusively for the first four years) to the automobile � and aeroplane. Some of the hardships of the early days were the grasshopper times and the drought of the early 70s. Although the Indians and the buffaloes were scarce in this part of the state at that time, so also were the trees and inhabitants. Nothing much but rolling prairie. They sold corn and hauled it with oxen to Ashland for twelve cents a bushel, in trade and burned many bushels of corn for fuel. They also sold and hauled wheat for 35 cents a bushel and hogs for $2.00 a hundred to Plattsmouth, a distance of 27 cents. Although neighbors lived far apart in those days, their sociability cannot be surpassed by that of the present time. So the early days were not all hardships; there was sunshine as well as shadows. It has been the custom on Home Rest Farm on the 4th of July to hang out �Old glory� and shoot an old flint lock gun that was made and carried by one of Mr. Buell�s ancestors in the Revolutionary war. It was made in Colchester, Conn., in 1776. this gun also spoke on November 11, 1918 and January 23, 1919. In Nebraska the period of the pioneer is past and yet, we have some pioneers with us still. Yes, the pioneer days are past, but their witnesses are in our midst. It is well to recount their deeds while they are still among us. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com
Would anyone researching CLAYBURN families in Nebraska, please make contact with me off list. My area of research is shown on URL: <http://freespace.virgin.net/rod.clayburn/clayburn/usa/clayusa.htm>http://freespace.virgin.net/rod.clayburn/clayburn/usa/clayusa.htm Thank you Rod Clayburn
Kathleen: Could this be your Charles EDWARDS? I have access to the 1900 Census and I am trying to narrow the possiblities of who his parents are be guessing that they were born in Ohio from a 1920 Census of a Charles EDWARDS at the age of 20 or 21. 1900 Census Beaver City, Furnas, NE EDWARDS, John H. EDWARDS, Amanda D. EDWARDS, Ross M. (born July 1887 in NE) EDWARDS, Charley B. (born Sept 1889 in NE) Could you tell me where Charles was during the 1920's census record taking? And who he was married to and any children that could possiblities have been born during that time frame? If you would like to see this census image just let me know. Thanks. Matt Matthew D. Friend NEGenWeb Morrill County Coordinator NEMorrill@yahoo.com http://www.rootsweb.com/~nemorril/index.html --------------------------------- Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail - 50x more storage than other providers!
Looking for the parents of Charles EDWARDS born, Sept. 1889 in Nebraska. Thanks. Kathleen
Upcoming Programs & Events for the Lincoln Lancaster County Genealogical Society -- Contact Ron Gaddis with questions: rongaddis@neb.rr.com or Eva Bachman: ebachman1@unl.edu Things are really happening! Tune in now! Don't miss out! Three very important learning opportunities in the near future: 1) The next meeting on 14 September ~ "Working With a Volunteer AND Being a Volunteer". Our members with experience will share with us the secrets working with volunteers...all the way from a single use of a volunteer's assistance to establishing a permanent collaborator to help you dig in the corners and turn over rocks of Aunt Minnie's county to find her onery elusive relatives! Then we will discuss 3 arenas of potential volunteering and the astounding benefits of so doing: a) internet possibilities for hosting and/or assisting in numerous projects, b) volunteering in non-LLCGS Nebraska efforts like helping LDS and our Historical Society. working with schools and churches on family history and finally, c) the MANY volunteering opportunities within our own LLCGS organization. You think you are not terribly interested? Think again! This program should prove to be extremely interesting. We are going to hear about things we never even dreamed of before and we can learn a great deal. And this volunteering stuff is the very "life blood" of genealogy and family history. Much of what we "discover" is due to the efforts of someone else who preserved the info and found a way to pass it on to us. We owe it to ourselves to find out more about volunteering! 2) Further away is the October 12 meeting on "Genealogy & Photography" presented by our own expert, Dick Young. New digital photography offers us a phenomenal new tool, both outdoors and indoors, along with some challenges as well. Plan now to attend this meeting! 3) October 16 (Saturday) during Family History Month is our workshop for the fall. See details elsewhere, but this will also be a golden opportunity! Meetings are at 7:15 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month in the Amphitheater, Dick Administration Bldg., Union College, 3800 S. 48th St., Lincoln, NE. http://www.rootsweb.com/~nellcgs/index.htm Take care, Kathie Harrison LLCGS Website Coordinator http://www.rootsweb.com/~nellcgs/index.htm
Hi Listers ... I've had such wonderful help from this list and particularly OmahaMom and Catherine Caffrey. They passed along several key sites that spilled forth an amazing amount of information on my particular family and may be useful to others here: 1. Forest Lawn Cemetery, Omaha has most of my Omaha family buried in Sections 5 and 7. :) And, it is an *enormous* cemetery indeed. The site is at: www.forestlawnomaha.com <http://www.forestlawnomaha.com> 2. For more current information (primarily archives are recent but reach back to 2000) was the Omaha World-Herald: http://www.omaha.com/ (the main page); and the archives at: http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_pg=527 3. And, at RootsWeb, this ambitious and wonderful project to put online the obituaries of the past: http://www.rootsweb.com/~neobits/index.htm Now to share more ... I've been on a number of Norwegian mailing lists and got a real "goodie" the other day. When inquiring about a record, I had sent along the very long URL for them to see the source of my problem. One of the responses sent me this site -- which shortens URLs (leaving them to function properly). I can't tell you how many times I've used it since. Hope you all find it helpful, too. It's free but stays online as a tool: SnipURL site: http://snipurl.com/ You copy/paste your monster URL into it and it will give you the new abbreviated form which you can copy/paste into your eMail query. For those of you using Digitalarkivet in Norway this will be helpful! Their URLs are getting more and more complex when you get down to a specific page of source information! To ALL of you, *thank you* ... :) Karen (Oleson) West Palm Beach, FL --
Family History Month Genealogy Workshop in Omaha October 30, 2004 9:00 - 4:00 John Philip Colletta of Washington DC, where he conducts workshops for the National Archives and teaches at the Smithsonian Institution and local universities will be our featured speaker. His topics: 9:00 Using Original & Derivative Sources: How to evaluate evidence Defining & discussing original sources, exploring the assets and drawbacks of each. How to resolve conflicting facts, how to weigh documentary evidence to arrive at the "most probable" truth, how to combine sources to see the "whole picture & test hypotheses to learn the true story of your own ancestors. 10:45 Only a Few Bones: The biographical facts we discover about our ancestors did not happen in a vacuum. Our ancestors were born, lived, & died under specific physical circumstances at specific times in history. Using 7 specific 19th centruy case studies drawn from my book, Only a Few Bones: A True Account of the Rolling Fork Tragedu & Its Aftermath, this lecture demonstrates how to turn biographical facts into the real-life experiences they were, by gathering together multiple documentary sources bearing on a particular ancestral event & individualizing it. The case studies include: locating the precise place in the backcountry where an ancestor was born; determining whether an ancestor built his house on his city land or his country land; learning the circumstances--time,place, weather, society, etc. of a wedding ceremony; exploring an ancestor's appointment to public office during reconstruction; examing a Freedman's experience as Justice of the Peace; locating the grave of a Jewish clerk who died young; reconstructing an ancestor's legal dispute with the captain of the Robert E. Lee. 1:30 Military Pension Bounty Land Records 1776 - 1912 What federal military pension & bounty land records are! How are they arranged at the National Archives, what information they contain and what you need to know to begin a search for an ancestors record. Using 2 specific sample cases, John demonstrates how to use resources available locally on microfilm, in books and on the Internet, as well as those in the National Archives to find and obtain the record of an ancestor's military pension or bounty land. 3:00 Breaking through Brick Walls: Use your Head: The path of genealogical investigation is strewn with many stumbling blocks, and every so often we even hit a brick wall. When that happens, it's time to use your head? This lecture offers some guidelines, some points of methodology, for how to proceed when you hit a brick wall using five or six solid, practical examples. The conference will be at the Paralyzed Veterans of America site 7612 Maple in Omaha. Email _Mavmom18@aol.com_ (mailto:Mavmom18@aol.com) for a flyer, pick one up at a meeting, or at a branch library. You can also call 344-2887 or 556-8875, or 706-1453 for more infor mation. This is a conference that people will have to pay for, due to expenses involved in bringing in a national speaker. There are discounts for those who are members of Greater Omaha Genealogical Society and/or pre-pay. We are also going to offer sandwich box lunches on a pre-order basis for those who may not want to go out to lunch.
None of the marriages are on-line for Douglas marriages. Early ones have been published, or they can be looked up on microfilm at the library. Early years are indexed up to about 1932. Karen
Karen Oleson would like to thank Kathie Harrison [NelliBlu28@aol.com] She also needs help. Please respond to Karen on the ListServ. Karen, if you "respond to all" we can share info and we all get educated! I am the most ignorant person in the group, frankly. :)) Cate catecaffrey@cox.net <mailto:catecaffrey@cox.net> -----Original Message----- From: Karen E. Oleson [mailto:keoleson@adelphia.net] Sent: Tuesday, August 17, 2004 4:46 AM To: Catherine Caffrey Subject: Re: [NEBRRoots] OLESON [OLSEN]-THOMPSON [THOMSEN], Omaha Hi Kathy ... Thank you for this update and I've added the link. You all have taken on a major project indeed! I've made contact with my Ganong Family thanks to you and Omaha-Mom and perhaps I'll find some obits there which I'll transcribe and send along. :) I know every little thing helps. Thank you again! Karen -----Original Message----- From: Catherine Caffrey [mailto:catecaffrey@cox.net] Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2004 1:35 PM To: NEBRRoots-L@rootsweb.com Subject: RE: [NEBRRoots] Need help You should also go to the Main Library in Omaha where they have a great Genealogy Room and people to help you. They have the street directories for Omaha, for example. Main Library 215 South 15th St. Omaha 68102-1629 444-4800 Mon - Thur 10:00 am-8:00 pm Fri & Sat 10:00 am-6:00 pm Sunday CLOSED http://www.omahapubliclibrary.org/aboutus/locations/gen.html The Genealogy Department @ Omaha Public Library Genealogy researchers come from throughout the United States to research our growing collection. You'll have free access to: Genealogy reference collection of nearly 7,000 items Census & Mortality Indexes Federal and State Census & Soundex Microfilm Over 100 genealogy CDs The Nebraska Reference collection includes books and microfilm on a variety of Omaha and Nebraska historical topics United States Federal Documents of Interest to Genealogists. Unique Resources such as: Genealogical periodicals Obituary file clipped over the years from various local newspapers Omaha newspapers on microfilm, back to the 1860's Place name directories and maps Internet access to genealogical databases Research WebLinks selected by our staff Greater Omaha Genealogical Society - volunteers available to assist researchers Local Research Help Free genealogy classes Tours available by appointment Self-service photocopy fees are $ .10 a page and microfilm copies are $ .25 a page Telephone: 402-444-4826 E-mail: HSS Department or please feel free to use our webform -----Original Message----- From: Budd & Jessica [mailto:hacademy@televar.com] Sent: Thursday, May 20, 2004 10:51 PM To: NEBRRoots-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [NEBRRoots] Need help Hi List, Is it possible to visit the Office of Vital Statistics in Lincoln and research the death records from 1923 to 1935. I am searching for information on Sadie Stewart I know that she was alive in 1923 but died before 1935. On the 1920 census she was alive widow and living in Omaha. Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated. We are visiting relatives in Fremont for the next few days. Thanks Louise Westphalen ==== NEBRRoots Mailing List ==== To Unsubscribe NEBRRoots-L <"mailto:NEBRRoots-L-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe"> To Unsubscribe NEBRRoots-D (digest) <"mailto:NEBRRoots-D-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe"> Subscribe to Nebraska Trivia & History: <"mailto:NEBRHeritage-L-request@rootsweb.com?subject=subscribe"> ==== NEBRRoots Mailing List ==== To Unsubscribe NEBRRoots-L <"mailto:NEBRRoots-L-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe"> To Unsubscribe NEBRRoots-D (digest) <"mailto:NEBRRoots-D-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe"> Subscribe to Nebraska Trivia & History: <"mailto:NEBRHeritage-L-request@rootsweb.com?subject=subscribe">