Hi John You could ask Cleadie Barnett about his email address - She is at [email protected] Muriel ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2009 5:26 PM Subject: [ NB ] George C. Bidlake > Hi; > > Does anyone have George C. Bidlake's E-mail address? He is the gent that > compiled The Forest Hill Cemetery Book. > > Thanks > > John > > **************A Good Credit Score is 700 or Above. See yours in just 2 > easy > steps! > (http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100126575x1221823310x1201398722/aol?redir=http://www.freecreditreport.com/pm/default.aspx?sc=668072&hmpgID=62&bcd= > JulystepsfooterNO62) > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] 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 - http://www.avg.com Version: 8.0.374 / Virus Database: 270.13.20/2248 - Release Date: 19/07/2009 05:57
Someone else posted it as: [email protected] -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected] Sent: 21 July 2009 13:27 To: [email protected] Subject: [ NB ] George C. Bidlake Hi; Does anyone have George C. Bidlake's E-mail address? He is the gent that compiled The Forest Hill Cemetery Book. Thanks John **************A Good Credit Score is 700 or Above. See yours in just 2 easy steps! (http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100126575x1221823310x1201398722/aol?redir=htt p://www.freecreditreport.com/pm/default.aspx?sc=668072&hmpgID=62&bcd= JulystepsfooterNO62) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Announcements can be found at http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hi; Does anyone have George C. Bidlake's E-mail address? He is the gent that compiled The Forest Hill Cemetery Book. Thanks John **************A Good Credit Score is 700 or Above. See yours in just 2 easy steps! (http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100126575x1221823310x1201398722/aol?redir=http://www.freecreditreport.com/pm/default.aspx?sc=668072&hmpgID=62&bcd= JulystepsfooterNO62)
Thanks, worked perfectly edd73 wrote: >Hi Shirley,Beryl and Aldene: > >When ever yo get a post like this that doesn't "open" first check to see if >the URL /address of the web site is highlighted, If not just forward to >yourself, as I have done here (cc ) to Edd: and most likely it will be >highlighted in the forwarded e-mail. > >I also deleted many of the deltas and messages at the bottom as well > >GL.....................edd > >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Aldene" <[email protected]> >To: <[email protected]> >Sent: Sunday, July 19, 2009 10:10 AM >Subject: Re: [ NB ] Complete Cdn Censuses to be online > > > > >>Is this the correct web sight as I could not get in either. >> >>Thank you >>Aldene >>----- Original Message ----- >>From: "bgm" <[email protected]> >>To: <[email protected]> >>Sent: Saturday, July 11, 2009 1:29 PM >>Subject: Re: [ NB ] Complete Cdn Censuses to be online >> >> >> >> >>>S. Olfert wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>>Hi List, >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>I've tried to go into this site but always get an error and can't get >>>in. Anyone else have trouble? sounds good and would like to access >>>it. Thanks >>> >>> >This is very exciting... > >http://olivetreegenealogy.blogspot.com/2009/04/complete-canadian-census-1851-1916.html > >Shirley > > > > >
Aldene, in answer to your inquiry in the NEWBRUNSWICK Digest, Vol 4, Issue 111 (July 19) http://olivetreegenealogy.blogspot.com/2009/04/complete-canadian-census-1851-1916.html will get you to Olive Tree Genealogy Blog, you will notice in the first paragraph, shown below, they make reference to Ancestry.ca, that is where you have to go for the information. "On Wednesday the 10th of June, 2009, Ancestry.ca in partnership with the Library and Archives Canada (LAC) is holding a media event in Toronto to launch online the complete Canadian Censuses from 1851 to 1916." You can do a search on The Olive Tree site but the information is not very good and if you want anything more than what you see you have to PAY. On June 28 a notice was sent out by Ancestry.ca allowing free access to the 1865-1935 census for 5 days, if you have access to "Ancestry" that is the way to go.
Hi Shirley,Beryl and Aldene: When ever yo get a post like this that doesn't "open" first check to see if the URL /address of the web site is highlighted, If not just forward to yourself, as I have done here (cc ) to Edd: and most likely it will be highlighted in the forwarded e-mail. I also deleted many of the deltas and messages at the bottom as well GL.....................edd ----- Original Message ----- From: "Aldene" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, July 19, 2009 10:10 AM Subject: Re: [ NB ] Complete Cdn Censuses to be online > Is this the correct web sight as I could not get in either. > > Thank you > Aldene > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "bgm" <[email protected]> > To: <[email protected]> > Sent: Saturday, July 11, 2009 1:29 PM > Subject: Re: [ NB ] Complete Cdn Censuses to be online > > >> S. Olfert wrote: >> >>>Hi List, >>> >>> >>> >> I've tried to go into this site but always get an error and can't get >> in. Anyone else have trouble? sounds good and would like to access >> it. Thanks This is very exciting... http://olivetreegenealogy.blogspot.com/2009/04/complete-canadian-census-1851-1916.html Shirley -- I am using the free version of SPAMfighter. We are a community of 6 million users fighting spam. SPAMfighter has removed 1355 of my spam emails to date. Get the free SPAMfighter here: http://www.spamfighter.com/len The Professional version does not have this message
Is this the correct web sight as I could not get in either. Thank you Aldene ----- Original Message ----- From: "bgm" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, July 11, 2009 1:29 PM Subject: Re: [ NB ] Complete Cdn Censuses to be online > S. Olfert wrote: > >>Hi List, >> >> >> > I've tried to go into this site but always get an error and can't get > in. Anyone else have trouble? sounds good and would like to access > it. Thanks > >>This is very exciting... >> >>http://olivetreegenealogy.blogspot.com/2009/04/complete-canadian-census-1851-1916.html >> >> >>Shirley >>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >>List Announcements can be found at >>http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm >>------------------------------- >>To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >>[email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >>quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> >> >> > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hi Aldene, No, that's just an announcement on the Olive Tree Genealogy blog. If you visit Library & Archives Canada at http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/archivianet/index-e.html and scroll down you'll find a list of census available for free. Only the 1861 and 1871 are not listed there. You have to go to http://www.ancestry.ca/search/rectype/census/canada/default.aspx?o_iid=36813&o_lid=36813to view those and they're not free. Automated Genealogy has an indexed/transcribed/linked site for free of 1901, 1911, 1906 & they are working on the 1851 census at http://automatedgenealogy.com/index.html familysearch.org (LDS) site also has 1881 census available for searching for free. Marilyn From: "Aldene" <[email protected]> Is this the correct web sight as I could not get in either. ----- Original Message ----- > S. Olfert wrote: <snip> >>This is very exciting... >>http://olivetreegenealogy.blogspot.com/2009/04/complete-canadian-census-1851-1916.html
I am trying to find a marriage certificate for these two. Patrick (b. @1790) came over according to census records in 1825. He may have been with a wife or she died in Ireland. Patrick had a son named Patrick (b @ 1814 in Ireland) when he arrived in Canada. They settled in Sussex. Jane (b @1811) came with parents John and Ann Walker in 1830 according to census and may have been Presbyterian while Patrick Reardon Catholic. There is a Walker family history in New Brunswick, but I do not have access to it. There was a son Henry (b @ 1836) who may have been the first of this union making us believe Patrick and Jane were married sometime between 1830 to 1836. Any help in finding a marriage certificate or the name of the previous wife of Patrick would be greatly appreciated. Patty Reardon Gault
The records of Trinity Anglican Church in Kingston, 1816-1970, are on a microfilm numbered #F1101 at the Archives in Fredericton. I have also seen the same records on LDS microfilms numbered 1412405 & 1412406, which you can borrow from Salt Lake City if you can't get to Fredericton.. As for something in book format, there is(was?) a typewritten transcription of just the baptisms, 1816-mid 1901, which I also saw at the Archives in Fredericton a few years ago. It was called "Kingston Baptisms" and was compiled by Julia Walker. I don't know if there is anything else in paper format for deaths & marriages, however. I don't know if the original register books are still kept in the office of Trinity Church in Kingston, nor, if they ARE still there, whether the public is allowed to handle them. They may be pretty fragile. I suppose it might be worth a phone call to the church office to find out. Carol Norman [email protected] > > > ------------------------------ > > > Dear John, > > > > Thank you so much for sending the Manchester info. It was invaluable. > > > > The Ann married to Samuel Scribner, and the Mary Ann m. to Gould > > Pickett would be in the age group to be John Manchester's sisters. > > Until now, neither had a surname. I am deperately trying to figure out who > > was > > the Thomas White that Ann Manchester Scribner remarried to. He does not > > have his own file in First Families. These Manchesters were certainly > > elusive, and kudos to you for ferreting some of them out! > > > > I am curious as to how one accesses the Trinty Anglican Church records > > for Kingston. It sounds like it would be an extremely valuable asset for > > me. > > Is it a book - or are we looking at pouring over microfilm??? > > > > Thanks again, John. > > Lisa Z
Jaed, You're a wonder. How do you do that?? Lisa Z
Jared, Thanks for this. Elizabeth (Brittain) Manchester is a daughter of one of my ancestors and I had wondered where she went, since there were few records of her existence in NB. Interestingly, her sister Mary, wife of Jacob Pidgeon, named one of her children David Manchester Pidgeon. At 04:08 PM 17 07 2009, Jared Handspicker wrote: >Lisa, > >Seems, if one cross-references the names in the FF file on MANCHESTER, the >family most obviously moved to Burritt Twp, Winnebago Co, IL, USA. Here >are some additional notes on the family line from Census, marriage, and >history records of various types... > >1840 US Census for Illinois for Winnebago County and Burritt Township: >John Manchester >Males=M Females=F >M---5 to 10 yrs==1 >M--10 to 15 yrs==2 >M--20 to 30 yrs==1 >M--30 to 40 yrs==1 (William?) >M--50 to 60 yrs==1 (John) >F---10 to 15 yrs==1 >F---15 to 20 yrs==1 >F---50 to 60 yrs==1 > >1850 US Census for Burritt, Winnebago Co, IL: > >MANCHESTER: >John, 62, m, NB >Elizabeth, 60, f, NB >Abraham, 30, m, NB >Charles, 16, m, Canada (son) > >Further down the page: >Stephen G. Manchester, 21, m, NB (listed as Stephen C. in FF) >then >William Manchester, 52, m, NB (perhaps a brother of John's? - not noted in >FF) > >and on another page, same location: > >Joseph Manchester 40 b. NB >Elizabeth Manchester 20 b. Eng (wife) >Nelson Seaver 14 b. NY > > >In 1860 US Census for same location: > >Josheph Manchester 50 >Elizabeth Manchester 28 (wife, b. England) >Oscar H Manchester 9 (son) >Rachel Williams 21 >Fredrick Tilke 30 >Elizabeth Manchester 15 (unsure of relationship... could even be mother >with age incorrectly listed???) > >Another MANCHESTER listing in the town COULD be related, if Thomas B. >MANCHESTER listed was a son or grandson of John & Elizabeth... > >Adine Manchester 27 b. NY - school teacher (married to Asa R. Godding aged >45, in 1880 US Census) >Albert Manchester 6 b. IL >Stephen Manchester 4 b. IL (stepson of Asa Godding in 1880, in Iowa) >Thomas B. Manchester 22, b. IL > >Here's John and Elizabeth's son, Charles, in Burritt in 1860: > >Charles Manchester 26 b. Canada >Climend Manchester 24 b. ME >Franklin Manchester 5 b. IL >Fredrick Manchester 4 b. IL >Charles Manchester 1 b. IL > > >In 1870 US Census for same location, found Joseph, b. 1810, and Elizabeth >b. 1789, but no John. Joseph was HoH, with his mother (widowed) living >with his family. > >Joseph Manchester 60 >Elisabeth Manchester 39 (wife, b. England) >Elisabeth Manchester 81 (mother) >Minnie Manchester 10 (daughter, b. IL) >Mary Bryan 23 (domestic) >William Bryan 25 (farm laborer) > >by 1880, none left in Winnebago Co, IL... >Joseph and wife Elizabeth are removed to Bover, Crawford Co, IA: >listed with a male child, Eddie Manchester, who is aged 9, but listed b. >IL to parents both born IL... he IS listed as a son, but perhaps a >grandson, or adopted?? > >Perhaps this couple's move to Iowa is another reason to believe the Thomas >B. Manchester married to Adine in 1870, was a son/grandson of John & >Elizabeth's... > >There are also some Manchesters in Natick, MA in the 1850-1870 census >records, with NB roots. > >There is indication that John died in Manchester Settlement (Burritt Twp) >on 16-Mar-1859, and that he and Elizabeth had six chidren (a bit less than >what FF indicates, but perhaps only six of their chidren came with them or >were born in IL???). > > > >From early IL marriage indexes... Winnebago Co... > >Abraham G. MANCHESTER m. 26-Sep-1844, to Emily Russell >Charles MANCHESTER m. 04-May-1854 to Climena Crowell (see 1860 census) >Joseph MANCHESTER m. 15-Apr-1850 to Elizabeth Barsby (her father is listed >in one census record, but I thought he was just a lodger). >Stephen C. MANCHESTER m. Adaline B Love, 13-Oct-1853 >T. Whitemore MANCHESTER m. Fannie Lawrence on 07-Jul-1875 (Thomas??? or >unrelated??) >Adaline (LOVE) Manchester m. Asa R. Godding on 05-Sep-1866 (widow? of >Stephen) >Christina (Chrishan) MANCHESTER m. Thomas M. Bryan, 20-Jun-1837 >Esther Jane MANCHESTER m. John S. McIntosh, on 26-Dec-1841 >Harriet E. (Eliza?) m. Dillazon S. Hurd, on 03-Nov-1844 > > > >From the History of Burritt, IL: > >Burritt was the 5th Township in our County to organize Augrst 1835- just >17 years after Statehood of Illinois. In these early days, living and >working was a hardship, remember no electricity, on radios, no >television, no cars, truck or tractors. Just walking, an ox, horses and >wind, was the transportation and power of the day. Small communities or >settlements, sprang up, very likely for convenience and protection. > >One such area was Manchester Settlement, started by one John Manchester in >about 1835, along with Isaac Hame, John McIntosh, A. Shearman and Elias >and Alva Trask. Manchester Settlement was located near the intersection of >Trask Bridge Road and Winnebago and Cemetery Roads. At the end of Cemetery >Road and South of Trask Bridge Road, stood a Blacksmith Shop and a Wagon >Shop. Across the road and East of Cemetery Road was the Inn and Post >Office. This Post Office was later moved to Wempletown. > >The Manchester Cemetery (aka Atkinson Cemetery) was and is still located >west of Winnebago Road and south of Trask Bridge Road. Buried in this >obscure, weed infested area are the pioneers of our earliest heritage of >Burritt. The Rev. W. Stillwell, founder of our first church, lies >peacefully on the western slope, under a beautiful old tree. His head >stone long since, toppled by the elements, reading simply Rev. Wm. >Stillwell, died May 12, 1850. Near Stillwells grave are other headstones >of our early pioneers, John Manchester, no readable dates. Mary Ann, >daughter of S. & J. Toogood died Oct. 7, 1855. Nancy Westbrook, age about >20, wife of T. Westbrook, died Jan. 19, 1846. Apparently of child birth as >her infant daughter rests with her. The whole McIntosh family rests here. >John McIntosh, Born Sept. 26, 1810, died Sept. 18, 1866. His wife >Catherine, age 31, died Sept. 27, 1840 and three children, Henry died >Sept. 23, 1841. Eldridge, died Aug 15, 1846 and John D. died July 11, >1850. Other head stones show a Julius, son of J & M Scott, died July 31, >1844, age 2 months & 3 days and Catherine, wife of R. Brainard, died Dec. >3, 1855. Age 40 years 1 month 15 days. These headstones, almost lost by >time, are mute testimony of the hardships of the early pioneers of >Burritt. > >Charles T Manchester enlisted in Union as a Corporal in Burritt IL, on >08-Sep-1862, was in Company H, IL 74th Inf Regt. He mustered out in >February 1863. > >Land records for Winnebago Co, IL, show Jospeh and Otis Manchester, filing >claims on 01-Mar-1847. Abraham G. on 01-Mar-1848, as well as John and >Otis, again. I've not a clue on Otis!!! > > >Hope these help out a bit... > >Jared > > > Dear John, > > > > Thank you so much for sending the Manchester info. It was invaluable. > > > > The Ann married to Samuel Scribner, and the Mary Ann m. to Gould > > Pickett would be in the age group to be John Manchester's sisters. > > Until now, neither had a surname. I am deperately trying to figure out who > > was > > the Thomas White that Ann Manchester Scribner remarried to. He does not > > have his own file in First Families. These Manchesters were certainly > > elusive, and kudos to you for ferreting some of them out! > > > > I am curious as to how one accesses the Trinty Anglican Church records > > for Kingston. It sounds like it would be an extremely valuable asset for > > me. > > Is it a book - or are we looking at pouring over microfilm??? > > > > Thanks again, John. > > Lisa Z > > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > List Announcements can be found at > > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > > ------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > > >------------------------ >Jared "Jed" Handspicker >[email protected] > >"It's a dog eat dog world, and I have Milkbone underwear." (Norm - Cheers) > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >List Announcements can be found at >http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm >------------------------------- >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >[email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >quotes in the subject and the body of the message David Reed ([email protected]) Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Lisa, Seems, if one cross-references the names in the FF file on MANCHESTER, the family most obviously moved to Burritt Twp, Winnebago Co, IL, USA. Here are some additional notes on the family line from Census, marriage, and history records of various types... 1840 US Census for Illinois for Winnebago County and Burritt Township: John Manchester Males=M Females=F M---5 to 10 yrs==1 M--10 to 15 yrs==2 M--20 to 30 yrs==1 M--30 to 40 yrs==1 (William?) M--50 to 60 yrs==1 (John) F---10 to 15 yrs==1 F---15 to 20 yrs==1 F---50 to 60 yrs==1 1850 US Census for Burritt, Winnebago Co, IL: MANCHESTER: John, 62, m, NB Elizabeth, 60, f, NB Abraham, 30, m, NB Charles, 16, m, Canada (son) Further down the page: Stephen G. Manchester, 21, m, NB (listed as Stephen C. in FF) then William Manchester, 52, m, NB (perhaps a brother of John's? - not noted in FF) and on another page, same location: Joseph Manchester 40 b. NB Elizabeth Manchester 20 b. Eng (wife) Nelson Seaver 14 b. NY In 1860 US Census for same location: Josheph Manchester 50 Elizabeth Manchester 28 (wife, b. England) Oscar H Manchester 9 (son) Rachel Williams 21 Fredrick Tilke 30 Elizabeth Manchester 15 (unsure of relationship... could even be mother with age incorrectly listed???) Another MANCHESTER listing in the town COULD be related, if Thomas B. MANCHESTER listed was a son or grandson of John & Elizabeth... Adine Manchester 27 b. NY - school teacher (married to Asa R. Godding aged 45, in 1880 US Census) Albert Manchester 6 b. IL Stephen Manchester 4 b. IL (stepson of Asa Godding in 1880, in Iowa) Thomas B. Manchester 22, b. IL Here's John and Elizabeth's son, Charles, in Burritt in 1860: Charles Manchester 26 b. Canada Climend Manchester 24 b. ME Franklin Manchester 5 b. IL Fredrick Manchester 4 b. IL Charles Manchester 1 b. IL In 1870 US Census for same location, found Joseph, b. 1810, and Elizabeth b. 1789, but no John. Joseph was HoH, with his mother (widowed) living with his family. Joseph Manchester 60 Elisabeth Manchester 39 (wife, b. England) Elisabeth Manchester 81 (mother) Minnie Manchester 10 (daughter, b. IL) Mary Bryan 23 (domestic) William Bryan 25 (farm laborer) by 1880, none left in Winnebago Co, IL... Joseph and wife Elizabeth are removed to Bover, Crawford Co, IA: listed with a male child, Eddie Manchester, who is aged 9, but listed b. IL to parents both born IL... he IS listed as a son, but perhaps a grandson, or adopted?? Perhaps this couple's move to Iowa is another reason to believe the Thomas B. Manchester married to Adine in 1870, was a son/grandson of John & Elizabeth's... There are also some Manchesters in Natick, MA in the 1850-1870 census records, with NB roots. There is indication that John died in Manchester Settlement (Burritt Twp) on 16-Mar-1859, and that he and Elizabeth had six chidren (a bit less than what FF indicates, but perhaps only six of their chidren came with them or were born in IL???). >From early IL marriage indexes... Winnebago Co... Abraham G. MANCHESTER m. 26-Sep-1844, to Emily Russell Charles MANCHESTER m. 04-May-1854 to Climena Crowell (see 1860 census) Joseph MANCHESTER m. 15-Apr-1850 to Elizabeth Barsby (her father is listed in one census record, but I thought he was just a lodger). Stephen C. MANCHESTER m. Adaline B Love, 13-Oct-1853 T. Whitemore MANCHESTER m. Fannie Lawrence on 07-Jul-1875 (Thomas??? or unrelated??) Adaline (LOVE) Manchester m. Asa R. Godding on 05-Sep-1866 (widow? of Stephen) Christina (Chrishan) MANCHESTER m. Thomas M. Bryan, 20-Jun-1837 Esther Jane MANCHESTER m. John S. McIntosh, on 26-Dec-1841 Harriet E. (Eliza?) m. Dillazon S. Hurd, on 03-Nov-1844 >From the History of Burritt, IL: Burritt was the 5th Township in our County to organize Augrst 1835- just 17 years after Statehood of Illinois. In these early days, living and working was a hardship, remember no electricity, on radios, no television, no cars, truck or tractors. Just walking, an ox, horses and wind, was the transportation and power of the day. Small communities or settlements, sprang up, very likely for convenience and protection. One such area was Manchester Settlement, started by one John Manchester in about 1835, along with Isaac Hame, John McIntosh, A. Shearman and Elias and Alva Trask. Manchester Settlement was located near the intersection of Trask Bridge Road and Winnebago and Cemetery Roads. At the end of Cemetery Road and South of Trask Bridge Road, stood a Blacksmith Shop and a Wagon Shop. Across the road and East of Cemetery Road was the Inn and Post Office. This Post Office was later moved to Wempletown. The Manchester Cemetery (aka Atkinson Cemetery) was and is still located west of Winnebago Road and south of Trask Bridge Road. Buried in this obscure, weed infested area are the pioneers of our earliest heritage of Burritt. The Rev. W. Stillwell, founder of our first church, lies peacefully on the western slope, under a beautiful old tree. His head stone long since, toppled by the elements, reading simply Rev. Wm. Stillwell, died May 12, 1850. Near Stillwells grave are other headstones of our early pioneers, John Manchester, no readable dates. Mary Ann, daughter of S. & J. Toogood died Oct. 7, 1855. Nancy Westbrook, age about 20, wife of T. Westbrook, died Jan. 19, 1846. Apparently of child birth as her infant daughter rests with her. The whole McIntosh family rests here. John McIntosh, Born Sept. 26, 1810, died Sept. 18, 1866. His wife Catherine, age 31, died Sept. 27, 1840 and three children, Henry died Sept. 23, 1841. Eldridge, died Aug 15, 1846 and John D. died July 11, 1850. Other head stones show a Julius, son of J & M Scott, died July 31, 1844, age 2 months & 3 days and Catherine, wife of R. Brainard, died Dec. 3, 1855. Age 40 years 1 month 15 days. These headstones, almost lost by time, are mute testimony of the hardships of the early pioneers of Burritt. Charles T Manchester enlisted in Union as a Corporal in Burritt IL, on 08-Sep-1862, was in Company H, IL 74th Inf Regt. He mustered out in February 1863. Land records for Winnebago Co, IL, show Jospeh and Otis Manchester, filing claims on 01-Mar-1847. Abraham G. on 01-Mar-1848, as well as John and Otis, again. I've not a clue on Otis!!! Hope these help out a bit... Jared > Dear John, > > Thank you so much for sending the Manchester info. It was invaluable. > > The Ann married to Samuel Scribner, and the Mary Ann m. to Gould > Pickett would be in the age group to be John Manchester's sisters. > Until now, neither had a surname. I am deperately trying to figure out who > was > the Thomas White that Ann Manchester Scribner remarried to. He does not > have his own file in First Families. These Manchesters were certainly > elusive, and kudos to you for ferreting some of them out! > > I am curious as to how one accesses the Trinty Anglican Church records > for Kingston. It sounds like it would be an extremely valuable asset for > me. > Is it a book - or are we looking at pouring over microfilm??? > > Thanks again, John. > Lisa Z > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ------------------------ Jared "Jed" Handspicker [email protected] "It's a dog eat dog world, and I have Milkbone underwear." (Norm - Cheers)
Dear John, Thank you so much for sending the Manchester info. It was invaluable. The Ann married to Samuel Scribner, and the Mary Ann m. to Gould Pickett would be in the age group to be John Manchester's sisters. Until now, neither had a surname. I am deperately trying to figure out who was the Thomas White that Ann Manchester Scribner remarried to. He does not have his own file in First Families. These Manchesters were certainly elusive, and kudos to you for ferreting some of them out! I am curious as to how one accesses the Trinty Anglican Church records for Kingston. It sounds like it would be an extremely valuable asset for me. Is it a book - or are we looking at pouring over microfilm??? Thanks again, John. Lisa Z
Hi Lisa, I can't tell you much about John & Elizabeth Manchester, but I can confirm that they were in Greenwich Parish. John received a grant of 430 acres in what is now the Parish of Kars in 1810. He and wife Elizabeth sold portions of this in 1821 and 1825 to Allen Price. In 1829 he is named as one of the administrators of the estate of Samuel Scribner of the Parish of Kingston. On 19 Nov. 1833, John and his wife Elizabeth sold what appears to be the remainder of the grant (lot #2) to Carmel Secord - 140 acres more or less, "being the land on which I now reside" - so they definitely appear to have been living there as late as 1833. However, if he was selling the remainder of his property at that time, they may have then moved on. The only other Manchester acivity in the land records between 1810 and 1835 is one William Manchester who bought property on the Belleisle Bay in 1818 and then promptly sold it again in Jan. 1819. He was noted as being of Greenwich at that time, but acknowledged the deed before a JP in Shediac - a hint that he might have moved to that area. The baptismal records of Trinity Anglican Church in Kingston record the baptism of an unnamed child of Samuel and Anne Scribner in Dec. 1819, indicating that her maiden name was Manchester - clears up why John was an administrator of Samuel Scribner's estate (along with Anne Scribner). The same records indicate that the maiden name of Mary Anne, wife of Gould Pickett was also Manchester. Not a lot of help here, but at least it shows they really were there! Regards, John ----- Original Message ----- From: "Lisa Zajkowski" <[email protected]> To: "New Brunswick List" <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2009 6:54 PM Subject: [ NB ] First Families of NB / Manchester > Hello All, > > In the First Families list, there is an entry for the family > of John Manchester & Elizabeth Brittain, who it claims, married in SJ in > 1810. > It suggests they lived in the area of Greenwich, Kings County, and gives a > list > of 13 children. > > I know the "FF" can be filled with errors, but I can find no evidence this > family ever even existed. There are some Manchesters in the area of > Apohaqui > late in the 1800's, but nothing else. > > I checked early Saint John marriages, but found no entries for this > family. > Dan Johnson's Vital Statics has some entries for the late 1800 people, but > the > few entries from way back are for people not mentioned as being part of > this > particular family. > > First Families is a wonderful resource, and errors or not, I have never > known it > to name a family that didn't exist. It's possible that the family moved > on very early, > but FF usually notes this. > > Can anyone tell me if this family was real? > > Thank You, > Lisa Z > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Here is the whole Maine list: Title Date Range Collection Age 1/6/1832 - 3/31/1901 Historical News American Advocate 8/23/1809 - 1/28/1835 Historical News Annals of the Times 7/21/1803 - 7/21/1803H istorical News Bangor Daily News (ME) 12/14/1992-Current America's Obituaries Bangor Weekly Register 11/25/1815 - 12/19/1827 Historical News Cumberland Gazette 7/20/1786 - 7/21/1814 Historical News Eagle 7/22/1793 - 12/9/1852 Historical News Eagle of Maine 7/1/1802 - 9/30/1802 Historical News Eastern Argus 9/8/1803 - 12/30/1880 Historical News Eastern Herald 1/2/1792 - 12/27/1802 Historical News Eastport Sentinel 8/31/1818 - 8/15/1832 Historical News Falmouth Gazette 1/1/1785 - 3/30/1786 Historical News Freeman's Friend 8/21/1805 - 6/9/1810 Historical News Freeman's Friend 8/21/1805 - 6/9/1810 Historical News Gazette 12/21/1719 - 12/23/1922 Historical News Gazette of Maine 7/25/1805 - 12/30/1828 Historical News Hallowell Gazette 2/23/1814 - 3/10/1870 Historical News Hancock Gazette 7/6/1820 - 12/28/1820 Historical News Herald of Gospel Liberty 9/1/1808 - 3/8/1816 Historical News Herald of Liberty 2/12/1798 - 9/2/1815 Historical News Independent Statesman 3/8/1822 - 8/1/1822 Historical News Kennebec Gazette 11/14/1800 - 7/31/1805 Historical News Kennebec Journal (Augusta, ME) 11/14/2003-Current America's Obituaries Lincoln Intelligencer 11/1/1821 - 10/24/1822 Historical News Lincoln Telegraph 2/15/1821 - 10/24/1822 Historical News Maine Gazette 12/8/1820 - 12/29/1820 Historical News Maine Intelligence r9/23/1820 - 12/29/1820 Historical News Maine Sunday Telegram (Portland,ME) 3/6/1994-Current America's Obituaries Morning Sentinel (Waterville, ME) 11/14/2003-Current America's Obituaries Oriental Trumpet 12/15/1796 - 11/5/1800 Historical News Portland Advertiser 1/3/1824 - 10/28/1834 Historical News Portland Daily Advertiser 8/13/1840 - 8/23/1898 Historical News Portland Press Herald (ME) 3/1/1994-Current America's Obituaries Waldo Patriot 12/30/1837 - 12/21/1838 Historical News Weekly Visitor 6/24/1809 - 6/30/1821 Historical News Wiscasset Argus 12/30/1797 - 1/13/1798 Historical News Wiscasset Telegraph 12/10/1796 - 3/9/1799 Historical News At 02:21 PM 7/16/2009, Heather Waddingham wrote: >Hi List :) > >Would anyone have access to GenealogyBank.com records?? I received >notice that they recently added the Eastport Sentinel Newspaper >Records to there database. > >Could someone please tell me which years from this newspaper are >covered. In particular I am interested in finding death >records/obituaries for persons who would have had some kind of >connection to Campobello Island, NB. > >Thanks for any help you may be able to provide. > >Heather > > > Heather Leighton Waddingham >Campobello Parish Coordinator http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcampob/ >My England and Canadian Roots >http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=CDNROOTS > > > > > >------------------------------- >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >[email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without >the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hi: Thanks for the tip. Still didn't find the actual marriage date but was able to add two more children that were born in Maine after they left Nash Creek, NB. Elenore At 03:49 AM 7/16/2009, you wrote: >Elenore there is a posting for this family on Roots Web > > Daniels parents f= Daniel Sawyer b/1796 New Carlisle > formly Cox Township PQ > m= Mary Jane Astles b/1812 > New Carlisle PQ >Daniels wife is posted as Elizabeth LeGouffe > > >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Elenore Chamberland" <[email protected]> >To: <[email protected]> >Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2009 4:28 AM >Subject: [ NB ] Sawyer/Legouffe married abt 1867 > > > >I am searching for the parents of Daniel Sawyer who married Marie > > Elisabeth LeGouffe possibly abt 1867. I know Elisabeth was born 20 > > May 1848 in New Richmond, Bonaventure,QC d/o Pierre Felix Legouffe > > and Marie Louise Comeau. The children of Daniel sawyer and Marie > > Elisabeth were baptized in Nash Creek, NB Have not been able to find > > a record of their marriage as yet. > > > > Any help would be appreciated. > > > > Elenore > > > > Kamloops, B.C. > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Kamloops, B.C.
Hi List :) Would anyone have access to GenealogyBank.com records?? I received notice that they recently added the Eastport Sentinel Newspaper Records to there database. Could someone please tell me which years from this newspaper are covered. In particular I am interested in finding death records/obituaries for persons who would have had some kind of connection to Campobello Island, NB. Thanks for any help you may be able to provide. Heather Heather Leighton Waddingham Campobello Parish Coordinator http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcampob/ My England and Canadian Roots http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=CDNROOTS
Elenore there is a posting for this family on Roots Web Daniels parents f= Daniel Sawyer b/1796 New Carlisle formly Cox Township PQ m= Mary Jane Astles b/1812 New Carlisle PQ Daniels wife is posted as Elizabeth LeGouffe ----- Original Message ----- From: "Elenore Chamberland" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2009 4:28 AM Subject: [ NB ] Sawyer/Legouffe married abt 1867 >I am searching for the parents of Daniel Sawyer who married Marie > Elisabeth LeGouffe possibly abt 1867. I know Elisabeth was born 20 > May 1848 in New Richmond, Bonaventure,QC d/o Pierre Felix Legouffe > and Marie Louise Comeau. The children of Daniel sawyer and Marie > Elisabeth were baptized in Nash Creek, NB Have not been able to find > a record of their marriage as yet. > > Any help would be appreciated. > > Elenore > > Kamloops, B.C. > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message
I am searching for the parents of Daniel Sawyer who married Marie Elisabeth LeGouffe possibly abt 1867. I know Elisabeth was born 20 May 1848 in New Richmond, Bonaventure,QC d/o Pierre Felix Legouffe and Marie Louise Comeau. The children of Daniel sawyer and Marie Elisabeth were baptized in Nash Creek, NB Have not been able to find a record of their marriage as yet. Any help would be appreciated. Elenore Kamloops, B.C.