Hi, I saw your email about Mary Pollock Neville. I have a Mary Elizabeth Pollock Neville married Joseph Neville about 1815. She was born about 1792 in Kentucky and died about 1870 in Franklin County, IL. I have the names of her children and spouses if you would like them. Looking forward to hearing from you. Mary
Dear Listers, I received this in an email today. Wonderful sentiment. Maybe it will stimulate us to reach and share and go to those libraries, records offices, and web sites to find those shreds of yesteryear that tell our own family stories! Happy Hunting, Sandy - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - We are the chosen. In each family there is one who seems called to find the ancestors. To put flesh on their bones and make them live again, to tell the family story and to feel that somehow they know and approve. Doing genealogy is not a cold gathering of facts but, instead, breathing life into all who have gone before. We are the story tellers of the tribe. All tribes have one. We have been called, as it were, by our genes. Those who have gone before cry out to us: Tell our story. So, we do. In finding them, we somehow find ourselves. How many graves have I stood before now and cried? I have lost count. How many times have I told the ancestors, "You have a wonderful family; you would be proud of us." How many times have I walked up to a grave and felt somehow there was love there for me? I cannot say. It goes beyond just documenting facts. It goes to who am I and why do I do the things I do. It goes to seeing a cemetery about to be lost forever to weeds and indifference and saying I can't let this happen. The bones here are bones of my bone and flesh of my flesh. It goes to doing something about it. It goes to pride in what our ancestors were able to accomplish. How they contributed to what we are today. It goes to respecting their hardships and losses, their never giving in or giving up, their resoluteness to go on and build a life for their family. It goes to deep pride that the fathers fought and some died to make and keep us a Nation. It goes to a deep and immense understanding that they were doing it for us. It is of equal pride and love that our mothers struggled to give us birth, without them we could not exist, and so we love each one, as far back as we can reach. That we might be born who we are. That we might remember them. So we do. With love and caring and scribing each fact of their existence, because we are they and they are the sum of who we are. So, as a scribe called, I tell the story of my family. It is up to that one called in the next generation to answer the call and take my place in the long line of family storytellers. That is why I do my family genealogy, and that is what calls those young and old to step up and restore the memory or greet those whom we had never known before. (Unknown Author)
I see I forgot to mention the Jackmans in volume 1. In looking those up, I discovered that the index did not include persons listed under their surname section, so I am doing it a second time. Those shown with "&" are assumed to be husband & wife. Persons in Alcock's Vol. 1 of Fauquier Families: Blackburn: Judith, Richard Scott, Sarah Brown Jackman:Adam (son of Thomas) & Jane, Elijah, Joseph (son of Thomas), Richard (son of Thomas) & Mary, Thomas Jr (son of Thomas), William (son of Thomas), Thomas & Hannah, William & Judith, Hannah, Hester, Joseph, Lydia, Thomas, Thomas Jr & William Joyce: none Neavill: George (son of Joseph), George Jr.(son of Joseph) & Rachel, George & Mary, George, Henry, James, Joseph Sr & Jr, John, John R, William, Joseph & Mary, Mary (widow of George), Thomas & Mary, Thomas (son of John dec'd), Judith, Lettice, Mary, Thomas, Letty, Peggy, Susanna Shirley
On 25 Jul, Lee wrote: I'm searching for any descendants of Patrick Neville from Potosi, Grant County, Wisconsin. Patrick died in1877, however his wife, Ellen, and their two children, Mary (b. about 1865) and John (b. about 1869) were last seen together on the Grant County Wisconsin State Census in 1885. Lee, Two generations of my ancestors also lived in Potosi, WI, but they spelled their name Neaville and Neavill. I noticed your Patrick in a few of the early Potosi census returns, but couldn't determine if there was any connection...didn't expect any since your Patrick was born in Ireland while my earliest known Neavill (John D.) was born in TN in 1807. Have you found any connection or interaction between them? My Neavill line in Potosi started with John A Neavill (1844-1930), lived in Potosi from 1850 to 1893. Children born in Potosi were Anna, James, Libbie, and Joseph between 1876 and 1882. John's siblings included William, James, and Mary, b. 1838-1842 in Council Hill, Jo Daviess Co., IL. John's father (John D. Neavill) died in 1852, and John was then raised by his uncle Alexander M. Neavill (b.1807 KY), who had settled in Potosi in 1840 and died there in 1881. Alexander's children included Henry, Enoch Frank, and Carlos, born between 1838 and 1853. Any one else find any connections? Still searching for John D. and Alexander's parents. Wayne Olsen Bonney Lake, WA
John P. Alcock recently came out with a second volume of Fauquier Families (Athens, GA: Iberian Publishing Co., 2001). One of the helpful sections is an abstract of various tithable & personal property tax lists. Some of this is in the first volume, that has been arranged as an index of sorts. However it is very helpful to see the original order of the lists. One item in particular caught my attention and I will relay it here. There are 3 tithable lists for 1759 & it apparently is complete, whereas for most years (1766, 1768, 1775, 1777, 1778, 1781, 1783) only partial lists have survived. James Neville was born 1 Sept. 1741, and in 1759 would have been 18. It would be sometime after this that he would be looking for a wife. If you recall, the unproven surname of his wife has been proposed as Blackburn, Jackman or Joyce. In 1759 there was no one named Blackburn or Joyce in the county. The only Neville in the county was George Neavell with one tithe (on p5). He is enumerated between John Obanyon & Samuel Earle. In 1777 there is only a list of tithables for the lower district of Leeds Parish, so large numbers of people are missing. The lower district of Leeds Parish was roughly from Courthouse village (Warrenton) north to what is now Marshall, according to Mr. Alcock. However we do find in 1777 (p39 of this book): ... Mr. Burr Harrison, Chas Haycock, N 7 - 9 tithes Thomas Jackman Jur, Saml Madden, 150 acres, 2 tithes Anderson Cockrell, 1 tithe James Neavill, Jos Neavill, Negros 3, 300 acres, 5 tithes Edward Ball, N 3, 4 tithes ... 1778 tithe list of William Pickett (p52) ... Peter Kemper Junr - 1 tithe James Nevell - 1 tithe Thomas Watts, Negroe 1 - 2 tithes Benjamine Stone - 1 tithe Addam Funk - 1 tithe Wm Jackman, Negr 1 - 2 tithes ... 1778 tithe list of Hezk Turner (p59) William Turley - 1 tithe Thomas Nevill - 1 tithe Jacob Fobey - 1 tithe .... 1781 list (p78; alpha order) Tho Neavill with 1 tithe [1783] List of Hezh Turner (p94; alpha order; according to Alcock this was the northwesternmost district) Thomas Nevil - 1 tithe This is all of the Neville references. There is no Blackburn or Joyce at all in this volume. The index has 10 references to Joseph, Thomas & William Jackman. Besides tithe lists Mr. Alcock has abstracted some marriage bonds recently found in loose papers and the first 76 chancery suits from 1759-89. I went back and looked at Alcock's first volume that is titled, Fauquier Families, 1759-1799, Comprehensive indexed abstracts of Tax and Tithable Lists, Marriage Bonds and Minute, Deed, and Will Books, and Others. There is no surname Joyce. For Blackburn there is a Judith Blackburn, a Richard Scott Blackburn & Sarah Brown Blackburn. The Nevilles (various spellings) are: George, Henry, James, Joanna, John, Joseph, Judith, Lettice, Letty; Mary, Peggy, Sarah, Susanna, Thomas, & William. None of this proves anything, but perhaps someday we will gather enough bits & pieces to make a good conclusion. Shirley Langdon Wilcox
the odds are that with good catholic names like they have they would come from the Limerick aera , my forebear was a patrick, so far i think i have found about 12 patricks from Limerick but to make things worse 5 are from askeaton & rathkeal. amongst the family are many thomas & johns. best of luck you will need it bob
>I'm searching for any descendants of Patrick Neville from Potosi, Grant County, Wisconsin. There is a Neville in the phone book in DeSoto, WI...which isn't far from Potosi...wouldn't surprise me if there were a link there. Interesting thing, too...the Sherrif of Prairie du Chien, WI is an Ostrander... Bev
I'm searching for any descendants of Patrick Neville from Potosi, Grant County, Wisconsin. Patrick died in1877, however his wife, Ellen, and their two children, Mary (b. about 1865) and John (b. about 1869) were last seen together on the Grant County Wisconsin State Census in 1885. Any information is appreciated! Thanks Lee
try searching the phone book on line and people in the area with the same last name, good luck , Joan
The father's/daughter's last name would help. The mother's first name would help if available info didn't include her family. Going by the mother's maiden name alone makes the search more difficult. I checked all of my listings and did not find any Sherry Lynne or Theresa Elizabeth. But not all programs can do that. Good luck Carol of San Diego
I am helping a friend find her mother's family. Mother was a Neville (spelling?), most likely Irish descent. After arguing with her husband, she got in a car with some of her relatives & they were all killed in a crash. Father re-married about 1 year later. Sherry-Lynne was 4 & Theresa Elizabeth (Terry) was 8 years old. Family ties got lost. People may be in Bellville ot Tottenham, Ontario. Thankyou. Mary Harris
Just thought I'd get this word to you, though I suspect we are not talking about the same Neville family. I am working on James S. Neville who emmigrated in 1846 from North Erie, Tyrone, Ireland, married Margaret Duncan in Pennsylvania and they traveled to Illinois and Iowa and Kansas. If you know of a connection, please let me know. Carol of San Diego
Hi Bob, From the information you just sent to Sid, I can assume that my Nevilles are from Ireland. We always assumed this because of the names and the religion. My husband's grandmother was Linda Neville, born in Cleveland. Her father was James J. Neville, he also had a brother Michael J. (John) Neville. They were born in Cleveland or Bainbridge, Ohio. James's father was Patrick Neville born in Ireland. Do you know anything about this side of the family? Lee Patton Brennan ----- Original Message ----- From: <bob.n@clear.net.nz> To: <NEVILLE-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, July 16, 2001 7:14 AM Subject: [NEVILLE-L] Re: NEVILLE FAMILY > > HI SID...sorry i can't help you with your side of the tree, but using a general rule of christian names being prodestant and canada usualy having free settlers the odds are in favour of you decending from a branch of the norman nevilles. > Most of the irish nevilles come from limerick & are very strong catholics. the names patrick,john,dan,& michael are the most common names and keep re'ocuring each generation which creats a hell of a problem when you try to sort them out > I don't know if you have the norman family facts so incase you havn't. > > NEVILLE~L' Neuville = new places; 150 places in france,including Calvados; but the great Durham family were from neville in Sein-Maritime. Family name of the barons braybrooke. > MOTTO; Ne vile velis, Form no mean wish. > ARMS; Gules, a saltire argent.(Silver cross on red background > CREST, A Bulls head as it is now borne by the Marquess of Abergavenny & as it will be seen on the Garter plate of william Neville, LORD FAUCONBERGE > > > ==== NEVILLE Mailing List ==== > Have you tried Cyndi's List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet? > http://www.oz.net/~cyndihow/sites.htm >
My notes from the 1860 Hardy Co., WV census show no Rachel Susan Neville. There is a WPA transcription of Hardy Co. births, but she is not in that either. How do you know she was a Neville? Shirley Langdon Wilcox On 24 Jun 2001 19:56:54 -0600 NBWEMontague@cs.com writes: > > I am looking for any information with regard to my great-great > grandmother, Rachel Susan Neville, who was born January 1, 1860 in > Moorefield, Hardy Co., WV. She was adopted in June 1863 by Casper > and Mary Devilbiss in Harrisville, Harrison Co., OH and christened > Minerva Lois Devilbiss at that time. The Devilbiss family moved to > Shellsburg, Benton Co., IA, where Minerva (Rachel) married Dennis > Ashbury Livermore on 24 December 1883. She died January 29, 1911 in > Cedar Rapids, Linn Co., IA. I am interested in knowing about the > Neville family connection and who her parents were. > > Nancy Montague. > > > ==== NEVILLE Mailing List ==== > Visit the Neville Heritage Society Home Page: > http://www.prairienet.org/neville/ > > ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.
Many thanks Bob....Regards...Sid
HI SID...sorry i can't help you with your side of the tree, but using a general rule of christian names being prodestant and canada usualy having free settlers the odds are in favour of you decending from a branch of the norman nevilles. Most of the irish nevilles come from limerick & are very strong catholics. the names patrick,john,dan,& michael are the most common names and keep re'ocuring each generation which creats a hell of a problem when you try to sort them out I don't know if you have the norman family facts so incase you havn't. NEVILLE~L' Neuville = new places; 150 places in france,including Calvados; but the great Durham family were from neville in Sein-Maritime. Family name of the barons braybrooke. MOTTO; Ne vile velis, Form no mean wish. ARMS; Gules, a saltire argent.(Silver cross on red background CREST, A Bulls head as it is now borne by the Marquess of Abergavenny & as it will be seen on the Garter plate of william Neville, LORD FAUCONBERGE
my neville family tree in australia have a number of johanna's in it's branches . our family come from limerick which seems to be the home of the irish nevilles
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------7C3A325D3D1BB4F8BC3ACA64 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit This was sent to me and has some information for those interested in the Boone's and Lincoln's. Don't know how factual it is, but with these two families (Boone's and Lincoln's) things are always interesting............ -- ======================================================================== Ren and Judy Neville 925-516-4976 voice/FAX "If God so clothe the grass of the field..... shall He not much more clothe you" MATT. 6:30 "My fathers badge, old Nevil's crest, the rampant bear chain'd to the ragged staff" Henry VI, part 2, verse 1........William Shakespeare http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=johnneville Ne vile velis "Form no mean wish" --------------7C3A325D3D1BB4F8BC3ACA64 Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Disposition: inline Return-Path: <WMCURCI@aol.com> Received: from imo-d09.mx.aol.com ([205.188.157.41]) by merlin (EarthLink SMTP Server) with ESMTP id tkqknj.dkt.37tiu4s for <beschutzer@earthlink.net>; Thu, 12 Jul 2001 00:34:11 -0700 (PDT) Received: from WMCURCI@aol.com by imo-d09.mx.aol.com (mail_out_v30.22.) id f.8d.937e012 (25712) for <beschutzer@earthlink.net>; Thu, 12 Jul 2001 03:34:08 -0400 (EDT) From: WMCURCI@aol.com Message-ID: <8d.937e012.287eacef@aol.com> Date: Thu, 12 Jul 2001 03:34:07 EDT Subject: Shoop/Boone Family Information To: beschutzer@earthlink.net MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: AOL 4.0 for Mac - Post-GM sub 56 X-Mozilla-Status2: 00000000 Hi Ren, I was doing my usual search for "Shoup/Shoop" and discovered this biography. It certainly looks like it has a wealth of family information that fits your family. Will you let me know if there is a connection? Thanks. Jane Curci Naples FL wm curci@aol.com http://searches.rootsweb.com/usgenweb/archives/pa/northumberland/bios2/f123148 .txt WILLIAM G. SHOOP, of Danville, Pa., one of the leading business men of that place and of the surrounding territory, was born in Danville, only END OF PAGE 125 son of Gideon M. and Amelia (Gearhart) Shoop, the former of whom was for years one of the foremost citizens of this part of Pennsylvania. George Shoop, grandfather of William G. Shoop, was born Jan. 1, 1783, in Cumberland county, Pa., son of John Shoop. He married Elizabeth Cockley, who was born in Dauphin county April 30, 1783, and she died July 21, 1832, in Sunbury, Pa., Mr. Shoop surviving until June 21, 1849. They were the parents of seven children, born as follows: Mary Ann, Aug. 30, 1804 (born in Cumberland county); John, Sept. 10, 1807 (born in Sunbury); Amelia, March 30, 1810 (born in Sunbury); George, Jr., June 14, 1813; Jeremiah, Oct. 1, 1815 (died April 19, 1847); Sarah, Aug. 24, 1818 (died Oct. 26, 1818); Gideon M., Jan. 23, 1821. Gideon M. Shoop attended public school at Sunbury until thirteen years of age, when he went to Franklin county, Pa., to learn the art of making French buhr millstones, at which he was employed for two years. When fifteen he went to Cumberland county, where he followed his trade for some time, until ready to establish himself in business. In 1841 he came to Danville as collecting agent for several stage lines, and in that capacity performed the duty of sorting and distributing the mail. In 1846 he rented the "Brady Hotel," which he repaired and improved, added another story and changed the name to the "Montour House," by which name it is still known. After eighteen months in the hotel business he sold out and went into the mercantile business, in which he was engaged for several years. On April 11, 1849, he was appointed postmaster of Danville, serving as such until Nov. 26, 1852. In 1850, when Montour county was formed out of Columbia, Mr. Shoop and Dr. Frick were the prime movers in the formation of the new county, and instrumental in its erection. For over thirty years he served as a director of the Danville National Bank, and he was influential in the promotion of various industries in Danville, was a director of the Danville Nail & Manufacturing Company, of the Danville Bridge Company, and of a number of similar concerns. Mr. Shoop became interested in the lumber business as opportunity offered, purchasing several tracts of timberland in Montour and adjoining counties, cutting the timber and building a number of sawmills in which to prepare the lumber for market. When wood grew scarce in his own locality he turned his attention to the South, where he acquired large interests. This was his last business. One of Mr. Shoop's pet enterprises was the Danville high school, of which he was one of the foremost advocates from the project was first broached. If there was one of his achievements which he valued above others it was undoubtedly what he accomplished in this direction. For fourteen years previous to his death he was a trustee of the hospital for the care of the insane at Danville. In political sentiment he was a stanch Republican, and influential in his locality, but not an office seeker; socially he was identified with Danville Lodge, No. 224, F. &. A.M., and with the Royal Arch chapter. He was a prominent member of St. Paul's Methodist Church, which he served faithfully as president of the board of trustees, steward and teacher in the Sunday school and his interest extended to the denomination at large. In 1880 he was elected a lay delegate to the Central Pennsylvania Conference, and the same year was elected by the Conference to the General Conference which met at Cincinnati Ohio. His death occurred March 20, 1909. On Dec. 2, 1846, Mr. Shoop married Amelia Gearhart, daughter of William and Sarah (Boone) Gearhart, both members of prominent old families of this region more particularly mentioned later in this article, and to them were born four children: Clarence and Jeremiah, twins, who died in infancy; William G., and George, who died at the age of five years. Mrs. Shoop died Oct. 17, 1896. William G. Shoop, son of Gideon M. and Amelia (Gearhart) Shoop, was given educational advantages in his youth, and upon commencing the earnest business of life became associated with his father. He has continued the sawmill successfully to the present time, maintaining the high reputation established by his father in a long and prosperous career. He has worthily worn a name which has been identified with the most progressive interests of this portion of the State for many years, and has managed all his interests with an ability which entitles him to rank among the most substantial men of the vicinity. On Dec. 2, 1906, Mr. Shoop married Mary Emma Robertson, of Galesburg, Ill., daughter of John and Mary (Wallace) Robertson, formerly of Cumberland county, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Shoop reside in the beautiful stone mansion at the corner of East Market and Fern streets, Danville. They attend the Presbyterian Church. William Gearhart, grandfather of Mrs. Gideon M. Shoop, came to Northumberland county, Pa., in 1790 with his brother Capt. Jacob Gearhart, William taking up the land between Kipp's run and the stream that enters the river above Riverside. Both had married in New Jersey, from which State they moved to this region, William (probably the elder) marrying Eleanor De Knight. They were the parents of seven children: William, Tobias, Aaron, Jacob, Elizabeth (Mrs. Amens), Mary (Mrs. Lamberson) and Ann (Mrs. Amens). William Gearhart, son of William and Eleanor Gearhart died in 1847. He married Sarah Boone, and they had five children, born as follows: Mayberry, in 1813; Eleanor, in 1814; Harriet, in 1815; Julia Ann, in 1818; Amelia, in 1821. END OF PAGE 126 The Boones, Mrs. Gideon M. Shoop's maternal ancestors, descended from George Boone (1), who lived in England. His son, George (2), was born in the city of Exeter, Devonshire, England, and died at the age of sixty years. By trade he was a blacksmith. He married Sarah Uppey, who lived to the age of eighty, and to their union was born George Boone (3), whose birth occurred in 1666 at the village of Stoak, near Exeter. He married Mary Manbridge, who was born in 1669, daughter of John and Mary (Milton) Manbridge, and died in 1740, in her seventy-second year. George Boone (3) and his wife arrived in Philadelphia Oct. 10, 1717, spent some time at Abington, Pa., then two years at North Wales, eventually moving to Oley township, Berks county, where they settled. Warrants for 400 acres of land there issued to him, dated 1718, are on record. The original homestead is now owned by Morris DeTurk. This George Boone died in Berks county July 27, 1747. He left eight children, fifty-two grandchildren, and ten great-grandchildren, all of whom excepting Sarah and Squire remained and died in Exeter township, Berks county, as the records of the Exeter Friends burying ground show. We have the following record of the children born to George Boone (3) and his wife Mary (Manbridge): (1) George (4), born July 13, 1690, died Nov. 20, 1753. He was a teacher by profession, served as magistrate, and was a man of great prominence in the community. On July 31, 1713, he married Deborah Howell, who died Jan. 26, 1757. (2) Sarah, born Feb. 18, 1691 (?), married Jacob Stover. They moved to Virginia and later to Kentucky. (3) Squire, born Nov. 25, 1696, died in 1764 in North Carolina, whither he moved in 1750.About 1745 he erected what was then the largest barn in Berks county, a stone structure which remained standing until 1875, when it was torn down by Mr. DeTurk, who needed a larger building. The masonry was found to be perfect, and the walls had to be blasted to pieces in spite of the fact that they had stood for over one hundred and thirty years. In 1750 Mr. Boone sold his farm to Mr. DeTurk, and it has since remained in the latter's family. Squire Boone married Sarah Morgan, an aunt of Gen. Daniel Morgan, of Revolutionary fame, and they were the parents of eleven children, nine of whom lived to the ages of between eighty-three and ninety-one years, one of this family being Daniel Boone, the famous Kentucky pioneer. Another was Hawkins Boone, who built Fort Boone, at the mouth of Warrior Run. (4) Mary, born Sept. 23, 1699, died Jan. 16, 1774. She married John Webb, and they were the parents of eleven children, of whom Samuel moved to Columbia county, Pa., settling near Espy. His daughter Mary married Mordecai Lincoln, brother of Abraham, and son of Mordecai who died in 1735-36. (5) Joseph, born April 5, 1704, died Jan. 30, 1776; his wife's name was Catharine. (6) Benjamin, born July 16, 1706, died Oct. 14, 1762. In 1726, at Abington, Pa., he married (first) Ann Farmer, and they were the parents of John and Susanna. There were five children by the second marriage, Mary, Benjamin, James, Samuel (whose daughter married Hezekiah Pancoast) and Dinah, who married Benjamin Tallman, son of William and Ann (Lincoln) Tallman - Benjamin being their only child who reached maturity and left descendants. Ann (Lincoln), his mother, was the sister of Sarah Lincoln, wife of William Boone, and they were daughters of Mordecai Lincoln, whose will was probated in 1736. Mordecai Lincoln married (second) Mary Robinson, and Sarah and Ann were their children; there was also a posthumous son, Abram. Among the sons of his first marriage was John, who had a son Abraham, who was the father of Thomas Lincoln, who married Nancy Hanks and became the father of Abraham Lincoln, president. William and Ann (Lincoln) Tallman moved to Virginia, where they died. Benjamin and Dinah (Boone) Tallman also moved to Virginia, but about 1805-10 they settled in Ohio, where he died about 1820 and she about 1824. (7) James, born July 18, 1709, died Sept. 1, 1785. He married Mary Foulke and (second) Anna Griffiths, and by his wife Mary had fourteen children. One of his sons, James, became an astronomer; he wrote the Boone manuscript from which much of the material used in this article is taken. The eldest child, Ann, married Abram Lincoln, posthumous child of Mordecai Lincoln, who died in 1735- 36. Mordecai Lincoln, son of Abram and Ann (Boone) Lincoln, married Julia Mayberry, sister of Margaret Mayberry, who was the wife of George Boone, son of William and Sarah Boone. Margaret Lincoln, only child of Mordecai and Julia (Mayberry) Lincoln who reached maturity, married a Mr. Barto. George Boone (4), born July 13, 1690, married Deborah Howell, and they had a family of ten children, born as follows: George (5), May 3, 1713, who died Sept. 30, 1737; Mary, Feb. 10, 1716; Hannah, July 20, 1718; Deborah, Dec. 18, 1720; Dinah, Oct. 18, 1722; Wm. Sept. 18, 1724; Josiah, Jan. 6, 1726; Jeremiah, Jan. 16, 1729; Abigail, Aug. 9, 1732; Hezekiah, March 22, 1734. William Boone, son of George (4), born Sept. 18, 1724 died in 1771. His will, signed May 23, 1768 and probated Dec. 6, 1771, provides for the following: To daughter Abigail, wife of Adin Pancoast 70 pounds; to repair the Exeter burying ground; to daughter Mary, 100 pounds at age of twenty years; to son Mordecai 50 pounds before division. The remainder of the estate was to be divided equally among the sons who were to be put to trades. On March 26, 1748, William Boone married Sarah Lincoln, who was born END OF PAGE 127 in January, 1727, and died April 21, 1810. The mother and children Mordecai, William, Mary, George, Thomas, Jeremiah and Hezekiah, by certificate members of Fairfax Meeting, Virginia, Oct. 30, 1776 were dismissed from Exeter; Sarah Boone and her children Mary, William, George, Jeremiah and Hezekiah were dismissed to Exeter Meeting by certificate later. Following is the record of the children born to William and Sarah (Lincoln) Boone: (1) Abigail was married May 28, 1767, to Adin Pancoast, who died Dec. 12, 1822. Her death occurred May 14, 1808. She had a certificate to Fairfax Meeting and another to return to Exeter, June 28, 1797, and a third from Exeter to Catawissa, and in the last are named children as follows: William, Mary and Hezekiah. Of these, William married Vashti Cooper and their daughter Mary married James Evans Lindsey, by whom he had a son, William Lindsey. Hezekiah, born June 8, 1789, was married March 26, 1815, to Rachel Boone, who was born May 30, 1789, daughter of Samuel Boone, who died on Fishing creek in 1811. (2) William married Susanna Parks, of Reading, Pa., who in 1778 had a certificate to Pipe Creek. In 1782 their descendants founded Boonsboro, Md. (3) Mordecai. (4) Mary married Isaac Lee, Exeter Meeting, May 8, 1777. (5) Thomas died Oct. 28 1823, in Amity township, Berks Co., Pa. married a daughter of Richard Lee. (6) Jeremiah. (7) Hezekiah married Hannah Hughs daughter of George Hughs, in Exeter township Berks Co., Pa. He died in Catawissa township Columbia Co., Pa., and his will was probated April 5, 1827. The children of his first wife were: William and George, of Schuylkill Co., Pa.; Martha Mrs. Lewis Vastine; Ann, Mrs. J. Wolverton; and Newton, who died in Bloomsburg, Pa.; the children by the second marriage were: Milton, who died at Pottsville; Surrissa; Hannah; John; Judah, of Schuylkill County, Pa.; Willetts, who died in Bloomsburg, Pa.; and Elizabeth, who died in Pottsville, Pa. (8) George, born in 1739, died in 1824. He married Hannah Hughs, and to them were born the following children: Edward Margaret, T. Ellis, Joseph, William Ridgeway, Elizabeth, and Jeremiah, all of whom died early in life. The mother of this family died in 1774 and Mr. Boone married (second) Margaret Mayberry, of Hereford township, Berks Co., Pa., daughter of Mrs. Ann Lee, wife of Richard Lee and widow of William Mayberry. By this union there were ten children, born as follows: Sarah, May l0, 1782 (married William Gearhart); William, Nov. 12, 1783; Ann, Aug. 21, 1785; Charles, Dec. 23, 1786: Mary, Oct. 18. 1788; George, Aug. 7, 1790 (died May 30, 1860); Elizabeth, Aug. 23, 1798; Harriet, Nov. 22, 1795; Margaret, May 25, 1798; Rachel, Feb. 5, 1801. --------------7C3A325D3D1BB4F8BC3ACA64--
I noticed the name Donald Ringsred in a message you posted as the wife of Anna Kehoe. Are these people still living? I have a Donald Ringsred listed as a son of Oswald Ringsred, and there are a few other Donald Ringsreds out there and I believe they are all related.
Gloria......thank you for sending along the information. When I pull up my file on these individuals I see that this is an area I have neglected. Calmes and Neville are connected two generations up where William Waller Calmes married Lucy Neville. I am going to cc: your post to the Neville List since there are several on the list that have (or had since they could have dropped off) a connection to Calmes. Seemingly they would get back to you individually. I have nothing to add to your information and appreciate your giving me the dates. Once again thank you for contacting me and hopefully someone still on the Neville List will be in contact with you. Take care....Ren Neville Gloria wrote: > Hello,I have birth and death dates for Miram and Thomas and Columbus > and others. They are buried in Oil Springs, Clark co. KY. in the Old > Eastin Burying cemetery. Miriam Calmes married Thomas Eastman in > Woodford, KY on 18 DEC 1823. I believe Thomas is the son of Thomas > Essman who was listed on the Monroe Co. KY Census 1820.Does any of > this information match data you have collected.Thomas Eastin died 20 > May 1859 aged 71 years.his wife Mariam Calmes Eastin b. 16 Aug 1797 d. > 11 Apr 1881Marcus Augustine Eastin d. 4 aug 1889 age 65 yearsColumbus > Calmes Eastin b. 17 June 1828 d. 21 March 1893Also believe that Chas. > L. Eastin and Priscilla J. ...Weaver are children of Thomas and Mariam > as well.Respectfully,Gloria -- ======================================================================== Ren and Judy Neville 925-516-4976 voice/FAX "If God so clothe the grass of the field..... shall He not much more clothe you" MATT. 6:30 "My fathers badge, old Nevil's crest, the rampant bear chain'd to the ragged staff" Henry VI, part 2, verse 1........William Shakespeare http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=johnneville Ne vile velis "Form no mean wish"