Sally..... My prayers are with you for your upcoming back surgery..... I pray God will be with you and comfort you..... and you will be 100% after surgery. Love, Bunny Our own Sally Pavia will be going for surgery soon for her back. She could use our prayers & thoughts.
: : : : Good afternoon : : : does anybody please have access to the 1851 & or 1861 census : : please for London? : : : i have found the following - it seems like i have 3 people : : with nearly the same name & all married to a woman of the same : name - : : would anybody be able to help me with this problem - see if they : are : : one & the same person ???? : : : : : : 1) DANIEL THOMAS HOOTON -( c- 1812) married IN 1840 to SOPHIA : : : HITCHCOCK ( c. 1823) in London : : : 2) DANIEL HOOTON - also married to SOPHIA : : : 3) DANIEL WILLIAM HOOTON - also married to SOPHIA : : : : : : THERE were 12 children all together & all but 2 christenings : were : : : at the same church in London & the christenings were all between : : 1842 : : : & 1853- some of them multiples on the same day : : : : : : I am totally bamboozled - can someone please help me ? : : : : : : thank you very much : : : best wishes : : : Sheila.C : : : Gold Coast : : : Oz : : : [email protected] : : : : : : : : : : : ==== NEWGEN Mailing List ==== : DON'T FORGET TO USE THE WORDS "THANK YOU" WHEN SOMEONE HAS DONE : YOU A FAVOR....ALSO WHEN SOMEONE HAS TRIED TO BE HELPFUL. :
http://www.giddeon.com/wilkes/index.shtml Wilkes County Georgia Genealogy The premier site for Wilkes County, Georgia Genealogy. This site contains transcriptions of actual records pertaining to family history research. =~=~=~= http://www.comradesandcolleagues.com COMRADES AND COLLEAGUES Find lost British, Canadian, Australian and New Zealand military friends from this database of military personnel and military units. Find Army, Navy, and Air Force Personnel simply by specifying the persons name or the military unit that they served in. =~=~=~= http://www.home.zonnet.nl/terschellingdna/ Terschellinger stamboom Genealogy from Terschelling - Netherlands.DNA from all Terschellingers with 17.000 names on line. Gloria HCGS: http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/index.html List Owner: [email protected] http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/gloriaspage.html ACGS http://allencogenealogysociety.homestead.com/Main.html
SAPULPA, CREEK COUNTY, OKLAHOMA-lots of info here http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kinfolkkorner/ Gloria HCGS: http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/index.html List Owner: [email protected] http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/gloriaspage.html ACGS http://allencogenealogysociety.homestead.com/Main.html
Our own Sally Pavia will be going for surgery soon for her back. She could use our prayers & thoughts. Thanks! Gloria HCGS: http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/index.html List Owner: [email protected] http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/gloriaspage.html ACGS http://allencogenealogysociety.homestead.com/Main.html
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/tomals/Irish_maps_of_S_Lewis_1839.htm Tom's Big Chest of Old Irish Maps Irish county maps of 1839 by Samuel Lewis. Free to download. =~=~=~= http://homepage.ntlworld.com/tomals/Welsh-Maps-of-Samuel-Lewis,1833.htm Tom's Big Chest of Old Welsh Maps Welsh county maps of 1833 by Samuel Lewis. Free to download. =~=~=~= http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbken/Cemeteries.html Kent County New Brunswick Cemeteries =~=~=~= http://www.islandregister.com/skye/skye2003.html THE BELFAST HISTORICAL SOCIETY Celebrating the 200th Anniversary of the arrival of the SELKIRK SETTLERS to Belfast, Prince Edward Island, Canada. Gloria HCGS: http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/index.html List Owner: [email protected] http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/gloriaspage.html ACGS http://allencogenealogysociety.homestead.com/Main.html
All Icelandic Genealogy Information Now Online .. with two "tiny" problems Online "instant genealogy" has arrived, at least for the citizens of one island nation. Any resident citizen of Iceland can go online, type in a tiny bit of information, and then see a complete list of ancestors for the past 400-plus years. The database reportedly contains records of 99% of the residents who lived within the past 400+ years. An online database known as "Íslendingabók" was opened to the public this week. This is a nearly complete database of all available Icelandic genealogy information. That's right: nearly all known genealogy information for the island of Iceland -- and that's a lot of information! Iceland has genealogy records to be envied by residents of other countries. The new Web site includes information about every living Icelander and his or her ancestors, going all the way back to the original settlement of Iceland in the 9th century or as far as records exist. (Privacy of information for living individuals does not seem to be an issue in Iceland.) Almost any Icelander can go online and look up his/her family tree that is fairly complete back to 1650 or so, often with some branches extending back for more than 30 generations. This project started 15 years ago and has now finally reached the point where it can be made accessible to the public. Use of the database is free of charge. You can see it at http://www.islendingabok.is. Of course, there are two tiny problems anyone in other countries who is researching Icelandic ancestry: 1. The entire site is in Icelandic. 2. Access to the database requires an Icelandic ID number (I assume that is something like a U.S. Social Security Number.). I suppose there is a good chance that people researching Icelandic ancestors are fluent in the language. However, the Icelandic ID number may be a stumbling block for descendants living elsewhere. The creators of the site say that their first priority was to get the site online and available for those who will use it the most: Icelanders living on the island. Access for descendants of Icelandic emigrants will be enabled soon, and an English interface will be provided later. Small nation or not, it still boggles my mind that a free online database has a complete genealogy database for every living resident of an entire country for the past four and a half centuries, with many records going back 700 years or more! The following article is from Eastmans Online Genealogy Newsletter and is copyright 2003 by Richard W. Eastman. It is re-published here with the permission of the author. Information about the newsletter is available at http://www.RootsForum.com. Sally Rolls Pavia Sun City, AZ [email protected] List Owner: [email protected] "Without genealogy, the study of history is lifeless." All incoming and outgoing email checked by Norton Anti-Virus 2002 .
http://historicalpreservationgroup.org Historical Preservation Group History of Lenoir County and surround Counties in Eastern North Carolina. Civil War Battlefields and Old homes. =~=~=~= http://home.vicnet.net.au/~kilmore/WW%201%20Soldiers.htm Kilmore & District World War 1 Soldiers and nurses A list of district soldiers and nurses from Kilmore, Victoria compiled from various sources. =~=~=~= http://www.geocities.com/richardsouther/Hingham.Cemetery.html Hingham Cemetery, also known as "Old Ship" Cemetery An alphabetic listing of 3,953 burials at Hingham "Old Ship" Cemetery located in Hingham, Massachusetts - also a link to other Hingham Cemeteries. =~=~=~= http://www.kindredtrails.com/delaware.html Delaware Genealogy & History Resources Links to Delaware genealogy and history resources and informational websites. Gloria HCGS: http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/index.html List Owner: [email protected] http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/gloriaspage.html ACGS http://allencogenealogysociety.homestead.com/Main.html
Perhaps, the most chief port in the European arena is the German port of Hamburg. Lists of persons departing the port of Hamburg are available beginning with 1850 and extending to 1934, with a gap from August 1914 through 1919 (due to World War I). The earliest of these lists, those compiled between 1850 and 1910, are actually divided into two sets. The Direct Lists include the names of passengers traveling directly to their final destinations without stopping. The Indirect Lists contain the names of those whose ships made stops prior to arriving at their final destination. Each of these sets has its own index referred to as the Direct Index and the Indirect Index respectively. Beginning in 1911, the two sets of lists were combined, and the result is covered by a single set of indexes. Before using any of these indexes, you should be aware that they are not indexes in the usual sense of the term. Rather, they are calendars, that is, annual lists arranged alphabetically by the first letter of the surname, then chronologically by the departure date. Under this system, if you are searching for someone with the Schmidt surname who emigrated to America some time between 1860 and 1865, you would have to search all of the "S" entries in the six calendars dated 1860, 1861, 1862 through 1865. Each passenger is listed by name, with his or her age, sex, place of origin, and destination. Although the U.S. arrival lists also give a place of origin for each passenger, these departure lists are more likely to give a detailed location, making it easier to determine the exact town of the emigrants previous residence. This can be invaluable in searching parish registers and other records of genealogical value. Sally Rolls Pavia Sun City, AZ [email protected] List Owner: [email protected] "Without genealogy, the study of history is lifeless." All incoming and outgoing email checked by Norton Anti-Virus 2002 .
http://jewishwebindex.com Jewish Web Index A compendium of thousands of links and bits and pieces of information relating to researching one's Jewish roots - in alphabetical order by Country or Subject and it is free!. Gloria HCGS: http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/index.html List Owner: [email protected] http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/gloriaspage.html ACGS http://allencogenealogysociety.homestead.com/Main.html
INDIANA. Monroe County. Death Records -- 1921 through 1940 7,248 records; Lana Taylor, for INMONROE list for Monroe County. http://userdb.rootsweb.com/deaths/ KENTUCKY. Lyon County. Marriage Index, 1891-1901 1,468 records; Scott L. Byrd http://userdb.rootsweb.com/marriages/ KENTUCKY. Mason County. Marriage Book 1,1789-1805 2,779 records; Gail Childress, assisted by Kathy Hines http://userdb.rootsweb.com/marriages/ Gloria HCGS: http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/index.html List Owner: [email protected] http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/gloriaspage.html ACGS http://allencogenealogysociety.homestead.com/Main.html
Pennsylvania German Pioneers Passenger Lists Directory of Online Transcriptions Germany to Philadelphia 1727-1808 http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~pagermanpioneers/ This webpage contains a directory of links to online transcriptions of the passenger lists in Pennsylvania German Pioneers by Ralph B. Strassburger and William J. Hinke. More links will be added as they are found. Sally Rolls Pavia Sun City, AZ [email protected] List Owner: [email protected] "Without genealogy, the study of history is lifeless." All incoming and outgoing email checked by Norton Anti-Virus 2002 .
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~pagermanpioneers/ Pennsylvania German Pioneers - Directory of Online Passenger Lists Passenger lists of the ships carrying German immigrants to Philadelphia 1727-1808. =~=~=~= http://www.southcarolinaindianaffairs.com South Carolina Indian Affairs Commission The tribes of South Carolina. =~=~=~= http://newbern.cpclib.org/research/obits.html New Bern, N.C., Obituary Index An index of obituaries found in New Bern, N.C., newspapers. =~=~=~= http://newbern.cpclib.org/research Library Homepage of the Local History and Genealogy Section of the New Bern-Craven County Public Library, New Bern, N.C. =~=~=~= http://www.sloveneancestry.com Birth and marriage records from the Ribnice Slovenia area dating back as far as the early 1700's. =~=~=~= http://www.genlookups.com/texas_marriages/ Texas Marriages Index 1966-2001 Search for Texas marriages both new and old from this search resource. =~=~=~= http://www.genlookups.com/texas_divorces/ Search through millions of Texas divorce records from 1968-2001. =~=~=~= http://www.northstarchapter.org North Star Chaper of Minnesota Germans from Russia Orginization. Gloria HCGS: http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/index.html List Owner: [email protected] http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/gloriaspage.html ACGS http://allencogenealogysociety.homestead.com/Main.html
Read more of these fascinating bits at: http://www.state.deus/facts/ushist/revfacts.htm SHOULD BE: http://www.state.de.us/facts/ushist/revfacts.htm Little Known Revolutionary War Facts The Americans of 1775 had the highest standard of living and the lowest taxes in the Western World and the British wanted a piece of the cash flow and tried to tax the Colonists who resisted violently. There were two Boston Tea Parties. Everybody knows about the Sons of Liberty who dumped chests of tea into Boston harbor on December 16, 1773. Fewer know that the act was repeated on March 7, 1774. The two tea parties cost the British around $3 million in modern money. By 1779, there were more Americans fighting with the British than with Gen. Washington. There were no less than 21 regiments (estimated to total 6500 to 8000 men) of Loyalists in the British Army. Washington reported a field army of only 3,468. About one-third of Americans opposed the separation from England. Sally Rolls Pavia Sun City, AZ [email protected] List Owner: [email protected] "Without genealogy, the study of history is lifeless." All incoming and outgoing email checked by Norton Anti-Virus 2002 .
I believe there may be Loyalists in my family's history. There were a number of Boughners in New Jersey (?), who moved to Ontario during the war. There are still a number of Boughners in that area, but also in Michigan, where they returned after the war. Haven't managed to connect yet, since I can't quite get past the Civil War with that line... Thanks, Sally, I didn't know there were that many colonists fighting for the other side! Wendy www.DianasLegacy.net -- If you cannot get rid of the family skeleton, you may as well make it dance. - George Bernard Shaw
Little Known Revolutionary War Facts The Americans of 1775 had the highest standard of living and the lowest taxes in the Western World and the British wanted a piece of the cash flow and tried to tax the Colonists who resisted violently. There were two Boston Tea Parties. Everybody knows about the Sons of Liberty who dumped chests of tea into Boston harbor on December 16, 1773. Fewer know that the act was repeated on March 7, 1774. The two tea parties cost the British around $3 million in modern money. By 1779, there were more Americans fighting with the British than with Gen. Washington. There were no less than 21 regiments (estimated to total 6500 to 8000 men) of Loyalists in the British Army. Washington reported a field army of only 3,468. About one-third of Americans opposed the separation from England. Read more of these fascinating bits at: http://www.state.deus/facts/ushist/revfacts.htm Sally Rolls Pavia Sun City, AZ [email protected] List Owner: [email protected] "Without genealogy, the study of history is lifeless." All incoming and outgoing email checked by Norton Anti-Virus 2002 .
Benedict Arnold, 1741-1801 Soldier. Best known for betraying his country to the British during the American Revolution. Born on January 14, 1741, in Norwich, Connecticut, of a prominent family. As a young man, Arnold worked for a druggist, fought in the French and Indian War, and engaged in trade with the West Indies. In 1767 he married Margaret Mansfield. When news of the battles of Lexington and Concord reached Arnold in April 1775, he set out at the head of a company of Connecticut militia for Cambridge, Mass., where George Washington was gathering an army to fight the British forces. His first engagement was the attack the next month on Fort Ticonderoga, where the British had a concentration of artillery. The operation was successful but Arnold got little of the credit, which went mostly to Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys. His second assignment was with an expedition against Canada. Leaving Cambridge on September 19, 1775, Arnold led his troops the length of Maine, by land and water and in snow and storms, reaching Quebec in early November. There he was joined by another column under General Richard Montgomery, which had come by way of Lake Champlain and Montreal. Together the two forces assaulted Quebec on December 31, but the attack failed, costing Montgomery his life and Arnold a severe leg wound. Arnold next went to Lake Champlain to prevent the British from using it as a highway from Canada to New York. He lost two naval battles on the lake in October 1776, but he had effectively delayed the British in their southward advance. In the same month Congress made Arnold brigadier general. The winter of 1776-1777 was an unhappy one for Arnold. His hot temper, impulsiveness, and impatience had earned him many enemies, who now made all sorts of accusations against himof misconduct on the march through Maine, of incompetence on Lake Champlain, and more. Worse yet, Congress in February 1777 promoted five brigadier generals, all Arnold's juniors, to major general. Only Washington's pleas kept Arnold from resigning from the army. Fortunately, the coming of spring gave him the chance for a successful operation. While visiting his home in New Haven, Arnold heard of a British attack on American supply depots in Danbury, Conn. He rounded up the local militia and raced to stop the enemy. Although he got there too late to prevent the destruction of the supplies, he did rout the British. A grateful Congress advanced him to major general on May 2, but he was still below the other five in seniority. Meanwhile, he faced a formal charge of stealing goods and property from Montreal merchants during the Canadian campaign. He was exonerated, but his anger at the charges moved him to resign his commission in July 1777. Once again Washington pleaded with him, and Arnold reconsidered. Washington needed him for service in northern New York to block a bold British plan to split New England from the other colonies by sending Gen. John Burgoyne from Ticonderoga down the Hudson River to New York City. Burgoyne not only failed in his mission; he lost his whole army, which he surrendered at Saratoga, New York, in October 1777. Arnold played a major role in the two battles that culminated in the British defeat. Burgoyne himself said of Arnold "it was his doing." Congress rewarded Arnold by restoring his seniority among the major generals. Arnold's next assignment was command of the garrison at Philadelphia, which the British had evacuated in June 1778. He married Margaret Shippen, daughter of a wealthy Philadelphian, in April 1779. (His first wife had died some years earlier.) Moving in aristocratic circles, Arnold lived lavishly and beyond his means, and he soon found himself heavily in debt. At the same time he was being charged with a number of offenses connected with using his military office for private gain. He demanded a court-martial, which Congress convened in May. The verdict handed down in December found him not guilty of most charges but ordered Washington to reprimand him. The general did this, but mildly, in April 1780. By this time, however, Arnold had already started on the road to treason. Personally hurt by Congress's treatment and sorely in need of money, he had begun to funnel information on troop movements and strength of units to the British in exchange for money as early as May or June 1779. Early in the summer of 1780, he conceived the idea of turning over the strategic post at West Point, N.Y., to the English for £10,000. He persuaded Washington to place him in command there, but Arnold's plan fell through when his contact, Major John Andre, was captured on September 21 with incriminating documents. Andre was executed and Arnold fled to the British lines. Arnold spent the rest of the war in a British uniform fighting his own countrymen. In 1781 he went to London, where he died 20 years later on June 14, despised in America and forgotten in England. Biography Resource Center, © 2000 Gale Group Sally Rolls Pavia Sun City, AZ [email protected] List Owner: [email protected] "Without genealogy, the study of history is lifeless." All incoming and outgoing email checked by Norton Anti-Virus 2002 . .
Pictures are on line from the Chicago Daily news...it is searchable, and has some really great pictures...check your surnames. http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpcoop/ichihtml/cdnhome.html I got the above link from a friend. I checked and did indeed find a Boughner in there, who appears to have been an employee. Unfortunately, I have no idea who he was. Maybe he's connected, maybe not! Anyhow, maybe some of you will find something. Wendy Whipple www.DianasLegacy.net -- There is no king who has not had a slave among his ancestors, and no slave who has not has a king among his. - Helen Keller
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I had Bill Cribbs upload my gedcom to FamGen.net, he had it up the same day. Take a look. Submit yours, it is free..he even has the background with your surname. It is a great way to put your family Tree on the web. http://www.famgen.net Gloria HCGS: http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/index.html List Owner: [email protected] http://hardincogenealogycenter.homestead.com/gloriaspage.html ACGS http://allencogenealogysociety.homestead.com/Main.html