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    1. Allinson/Force
    2. K Finch
    3. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/oQB.2ACE/1532 Message Board Post: I hope someone can direct me. My gg-grandfather was John M. Allinson - supposedly born in Burlington County, NJ to a Charlotte "Force" Allinson in 1854. He had two sisters - Maegaret and Mary. I cannot unearth who his father was. In the 1860 Burlington census - it smiply states that Charlotte is head of household. Could someone point me in the right direction? I believe John M. died in 1900 in NJ and Charlotte remarried a man named "Silas Havens". Thank you for any assistance.

    04/24/2006 03:08:38
    1. William C Poulson
    2. Thomas Hollinger
    3. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/oQB.2ACE/1530 Message Board Post: Seeking information on William C Poulson born abt 1862 and was approx 48 in the 1910 census. He married first ???? and had at least one child, Lillie F born NJ. She was 26 in the 1910 census and was a saleswomen in a grocery store in Port Norris, Cumberland County, NJ. In approx 1908 he married Anna B Hollinger, daughter of Eli Hollinger and Anna Barnes. She was born approx June 1884. They had Francis C 1905, Elwood P 1909. In the 1920 census they were living in Burlington County, Palmyra twp, 1st district on Charles Street. A third son, Walter W 1912 and Anna's step grandfather Francis Asbury Cobb born approx 1853 is living with them. Anna's grandfather was Theophilus Holliger and her grandmother was Martha Ann Hand Holliger Cobb. I am a seeking any information concerning living relatives and the burial place of the above mentioned individuals. Any help is greatly appreciated.

    04/24/2006 03:07:25
    1. Abraham Brown and wife 1 Catherine, wife 2 Mary Potter
    2. Gail Brown
    3. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/oQB.2ACE/1529 Message Board Post: In my research of the Abraham Brown line, I've seen where researchers attach Mary Potter as the mother of Abraham's children. Abraham and Mary were m. in 1692, the same year Abraham Jr m. Leah Clayton. Also, there are certain records: Taken from Stillwell's Historical Miscellany of NJ, page 130: *Abraham and Cattron Brown were witnesses to the wedding of their daughter: 1686-7, 3d of 1st mo., John Hamton, of Middletown, md. to Martha Brown , of Shrews. , "at the publicke meeting house of ffriends", the first day of the week. *Abraham and Mary Brown were witnesses to the wedding of Abraham's son: 1692, 29th of 7th mo., [in margin 4th of 12th mo., 1692], Abraham Brown md. to Leah Clayton, he of Shrews., she of Middletown , on fifth day of week, at house of John Clayton *Abraham was witness to a wedding: 1689, 9th of 11th mo., [in margin 10th of 2d mo., 1690],Robert Ray md. to Jenett Hamton , both of Shrews. , at house of John Hamton. In the first entry, Abraham and Catherine (Cattron) are noted as witnesses to the wedding of THEIR daughter, Martha (in 1686/7). In the second entry, Abraham and Mary are noted as witnesses to the wedding of ABRAHAM'S son... not THEIR son, but Abraham's... (in 1692) All of Abraham's children had been b. by 1692 and considering Martha m. in 1687 and Abraham Jr in 1692, seems most (if not all) were pretty much grown by then, making it impossible for Mary Potter to be the ancestress of anyone descended from Abraham Sr. So, why do some researchers insist on making Mary the mother of Abraham's children?? Is it because Catherine is such an anonymous ancestress, being we don't know her maiden name? Is it because Mary is listed as his wife in his will and people just assume? Is it some just don't take the time to wonder or question it - I'll admit, for a long time I had Mary listed as mother to Abraham's children, but then I actually read (and absorbed) some of this information and thought about marriage dates vs. birthdates, and it occurred to me that Catherine Unknown was truly the Brown ancestress, not Mary. Gail Brown

    04/24/2006 03:03:39
    1. Samuel Brown b. 1725 vs. Samuel Brown b. 1740
    2. Gail Brown
    3. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/oQB.2ACE/1528 Message Board Post: Hello! I've been researching the Abraham Brown line for a few years now and have recently had a couple of other researchers contact me (or me them) who are, or believe to be, descended from the Samuel Brown branch - Samuel being b. 1725 and m. Ann Buffin. It is said by some researchers that this Samuel is the son of John and Catherine Brown, John being the son of Abraham and Leah (Clayton) Brown. Where did this info come from, and why are some people so "sure" about it? I mean, we have a belief that John and Catherine m. abt 1724, and Samuel was b. abt. 1725. Is that the only basis for why this particular Samuel is attached to John and Catherine? And what about Patriot Samuel Brown b. 1740 m. Eleanor (Ellen) Cutler? It is said, he too is the son of John and Catherine. A theory I buy into more than the older Samuel, and here's why... Take John's will dated Sept 1747. In it he names children, Clayton, Theodosia (Groves), John, Samuel, Sarah and Catherine. One of those previously mentioned Brown researchers shared some of this following info with me, which was put together by a relative of his many years ago, and he's unsure of what sources the relative used to gather this info: John Brown, New Hanover, Burlington Co., NJ; d. 1748; m. Catherine Children: Theodocia b. ca. 1723 Clayton b. ca. 1725 John b. ca. 1727 Samuel b. 1729 Sarah b. ca. 1731 Catherine b. ca. 1733 If John and Catherine were m. abt 1724, seems unlikely Theodocia could have been b. ca 1723, or 1724... maybe 1725. But then, Clayton is shown as be b. ca 1725... which is when Samuel m. to Ann Buffin was said to be born. But in the above list, he's b. 1729 - and note that he, Sarah and Catherine are all younger than their brother John. John's will reads that he leaves "John the plantation at age, paying legacies to Samuel, Sarah and Catherine, and making suitable provisions for his mother, Catherine." That to me sounds as though John may have been the oldest boy still at home or still unmarried, since it was put upon him to provide for his mother and pay the legacies to the other younger siblings. It also suggests to me that John was a minor at the time of his father's will writing/death. Which means, if John was b. ca 1727, as the aforementioned list suggests, then in 1747/8, John would have been of age... however, if John was b. 1736, as I believe, then that would mean he was only 11/12 in 1747/8, and not yet "of age." If he wasn't of age, and we see that Samuel, Sarah and Catherine were younger than him, then they most certainly weren't of age either... putting Samuel to be b. abt 1740, and making sense that he be the Patriot Sam m. to Eleanor Cutler, and the son of John and Catherine. Also, from www.njpinebarrensanddownjersey.com I located an article that mentions: "Living on what later became known as the "Wright Place" was Samuel Brown, who served gallantly in the Monmouth Militia... John Holmes the elder had a mill on the north branch of Forked River. John Holmes Jr married Catherine Brown, sister of Samuel Brown, who lived in what became the Wright Place... Abram Brown, Jr married Leah Clayton and had John who married Catherine Tilton in 1724. Their daughter, sister of Samuel Brown, was married to John Holmes in 1764." That article was written many years ago. However, the information about Abram Brown Jr m. Leah Clayton and having a son John who m. Catherine in 1724 is fairly accurate. We know John and Catherine had a son Samuel and a daughter Catherine, so that's accurate. Seems to me the rest would be accurate too, about Patriot Sam being their son. For if we go by the earlier list, Catherine would have been b. ca 1733, making her 31 in 1764 - not an impossible age to be married at, but is kind of late for a first marriage at that time. If we set her birthdate closer to 1744/46 (based on John in 1736 and Patriot Sam in 1740), then she would have been m. between ages of 18-20, which is most likely, though either way could have happened. In that aforementioned list, the children all seem to be about 2 years apart, which, if my theory is correct, would make their birthdates approx: Theodosia b. abt. 1732 Clayton b. abt. 1734 John b. 1736 Samuel b. 1740 Sarah b. abt. 1742 Catherine b. abt. 1746 Now if John and Catherine were m. abt 1724, surely they had children previous to Theodosia in 1732 - they had 8 years to have children before her... and most likely did. But then who are they? Did they not survive to adulthood, or for one reason or another just not get mentioned in the will, or are those earlier birthdates the correct ones? But if so, then why wouldn't John have been of age in 1747? And what happened to Clayton? Theodosia was already married and wasn't left anything... is that what happened to Clayton, too? Was he already m. with his own family and so not mentioned further in the will and not expected to provide for his mother? There were most definitely (2) Samuel Browns in this area of Burl Co. (probably more than 2), one b. abt. 1725, the other abt. 1740... but only one can be the son of John and Catherine (unless they named two sons Samuel??)... so which truly is, and why do you think so? What proof/evidence is there? What have I overlooked or gotten confused about? Or will we ever be able to figure it out beyond a reasonable doubt? Why are some researchers so certain that Samuel m. to Ann Buffin is the son of John and Catherine, when there seems to be more information suggesting he isn't? Bear in mind, the answers to these questions, as far as I know, do not effect me directly, for I seem to be descended from Sam's brother, John Brown, something I'm still looking into. I've just become very curious about this "mystery" and some of the inconsistencies involved with the Samuels - especially when John's will seems (I stress "seems") to say it all. It just seems to me that somewhere along the line, someone saw John's marriage date of ca. 1724, saw John's mention of Samuel in his will, and then stumbled upon a Samuel Brown b. 1725 and just assumed he was the Samuel who John referred to without giving much consideration to the other possibilities. I just don't know... I'd be more inclined to believe Samuel 1725 was John's son, if John's will wasn't worded the way it is. What does everyone else think? Gail Brown

    04/24/2006 03:02:18
    1. The World of Wills for Daniel WILLS
    2. Robert H. Smith
    3. 1698 March 25, WILLS, Daniel, of Northampton, Burlington Co., 65 years old; will of. Children - James (who has son John), Daniel, John, Mary Ewer, Ann. etc.....Proved March 30, 1700; Inventory Oct 8, 1698; 1727/28 January 25, WILLS, Daniel, of Northampton, Burlington Co., husbandman; will of. Children - Daniel, Joseph, James, Elizabeth, Ann, Margett, and Hannah, son-in-law (stepson?} Levi Shinn. Proved February 1, 1727/28. Inventory March 29, 1728. 1742/43 January 29, WILLS, Daniel, of Northampton, Burlington Co., merchant; will of. Sons- Noah, Richard, David, Daniel, John and George. Daughters - Margaret, Hope and Hannah. wife - Margarette. Proved Dec 5, 1747, Inventory November 17, 1747. 1760 November 29, WILLS, Daniel, of Northampton, Burlington Co., yeoman; will of. Sons - Daniel, Aaron, Moses. Daughters - Mary, widow of William Busby, Hope, wife of Benjamin Lippincott, Hannah, wife of Caleb Lippincott, 1764 April 8, WILLS, Daniel, of Burlington Co., carpenter, will of. Wife, Meribah. Children - Jacob, James, Samuel, Mary and Bulah. This is like looking for my John SMITHs..... Best, Bob Smith Port Murray, NJ

    04/24/2006 02:39:59
    1. Re: [NJBurlin] Another George Wills.....1760-1780?
    2. Robert H. Smith
    3. John Fenimore of Springfield, Burlington Co., in his will of February 20, 1769, refers to his daughter Priscilla, wife of George WILLS. ----- Original Message ----- From: "gjpalo" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, April 22, 2006 5:35 PM Subject: RE: [NJBurlin] Another George Wills.....1760-1780? > Stephanie - I descend from Dr. Daniel Wills several ways... Through his > sons > Daniel and John. > > I had Daniel 1658 - 1727 m. Margaret Newbold as the son of Dr. Daniel's > first wife Elizabeth Oliver. > > I have George, 1729 - aft 1787 m. Priscilla Fenimore. > >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Stephanie [mailto:[email protected]] >> Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2006 3:40 PM >> To: [email protected] >> Subject: [NJBurlin] Another George Wills.....1760-1780? >> >> Hello.....I am hoping to find someone who is researching >> this WILLS line of Burlington County NJ. >> A] Dr. Daniel+ Mary?? their son >> B] Daniel + Margaret Newbold their son C] Daniel >> [1692-1747]+ Margaret Eayre[1695-1748] their sons >> 1] David + Martha Crispin had a son >> George b. 1759 >> 2] John + Sarah Griffith had a son >> George b. 1767 >> 3.] George [1729- til after 1787] said to have had three wives >> Jane Knowles 1741, >> Elizabeth Russell 1779 >> Sarah Paschall 1787 >> Does anyone here know if he also had a son George?? >> and if so, when was he born.?? and who did he marry? >> >> I believe a George Wills from this line was the father of my >> gggrandpa George Wills, b. 1808 in Burlington County. >> But which one. ? >> Dr. Richard Wills has me almost convinced that it is David's >> son but he would have been fairly old to father my George >> 1808 [49] and his brother William Shreve Wills ., b. 1816.[57] >> Plus---- in a diary connected with William Shreve's family[ >> or perhaps in Family lore] there is mention of a George who >> had 3 wives as either the father or grandfather of W.S. and >> MY George. >> OR >> The girl Phoebe LNU --- whom David's son George is said to >> have married in about 1796 and who is said to be the mother >> of Moses, Ephraim, John ,George? Samuel, and William S.--- >> all born between 1798 and 1816-- Could she have been a >> THIRD WIFE of THIS GEORGE? >> It looks like He might have been 18-20 years her senior . >> So he could have had a wife or two before her I suppose. >> Anyone have anything on this possibility? >> >> If anyone can shed light on the offspring of Daniel and >> Margaret Eayre's sons and their wives and progeny named >> GEORGE, . I would love to hear of it. >> Thanks ever so. >> Regards >> Steph Powell Cecil [email protected] >> >> >

    04/24/2006 01:13:28
    1. RE: [NJBurlin] Another George Wills.....1760-1780?
    2. gjpalo
    3. Stephanie - I descend from Dr. Daniel Wills several ways... Through his sons Daniel and John. I had Daniel 1658 - 1727 m. Margaret Newbold as the son of Dr. Daniel's first wife Elizabeth Oliver. I have George, 1729 - aft 1787 m. Priscilla Fenimore. > -----Original Message----- > From: Stephanie [mailto:[email protected]] > Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2006 3:40 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: [NJBurlin] Another George Wills.....1760-1780? > > Hello.....I am hoping to find someone who is researching > this WILLS line of Burlington County NJ. > A] Dr. Daniel+ Mary?? their son > B] Daniel + Margaret Newbold their son C] Daniel > [1692-1747]+ Margaret Eayre[1695-1748] their sons > 1] David + Martha Crispin had a son > George b. 1759 > 2] John + Sarah Griffith had a son > George b. 1767 > 3.] George [1729- til after 1787] said to have had three wives > Jane Knowles 1741, > Elizabeth Russell 1779 > Sarah Paschall 1787 > Does anyone here know if he also had a son George?? > and if so, when was he born.?? and who did he marry? > > I believe a George Wills from this line was the father of my > gggrandpa George Wills, b. 1808 in Burlington County. > But which one. ? > Dr. Richard Wills has me almost convinced that it is David's > son but he would have been fairly old to father my George > 1808 [49] and his brother William Shreve Wills ., b. 1816.[57] > Plus---- in a diary connected with William Shreve's family[ > or perhaps in Family lore] there is mention of a George who > had 3 wives as either the father or grandfather of W.S. and > MY George. > OR > The girl Phoebe LNU --- whom David's son George is said to > have married in about 1796 and who is said to be the mother > of Moses, Ephraim, John ,George? Samuel, and William S.--- > all born between 1798 and 1816-- Could she have been a > THIRD WIFE of THIS GEORGE? > It looks like He might have been 18-20 years her senior . > So he could have had a wife or two before her I suppose. > Anyone have anything on this possibility? > > If anyone can shed light on the offspring of Daniel and > Margaret Eayre's sons and their wives and progeny named > GEORGE, . I would love to hear of it. > Thanks ever so. > Regards > Steph Powell Cecil [email protected] > >

    04/22/2006 10:35:10
    1. Andersonville
    2. Terri
    3. How kind of you to remind us -- Thank You -- Terri

    04/10/2006 12:56:29
    1. Andersonville Civil War POW site
    2. Kevin Frye
    3. Hey gang, Just a short reminder to the vets and newbies at this site of my free research for the asking here at Andersonville. Please email me directly with request so we dont tie up the county site. Kevin Andersonville Historic Site Historian / NPS Volunteer www.angelfire.com/ga2/Andersonvilleprison/index.html

    04/09/2006 06:27:11
    1. Re: MATTHIAS
    2. I am looking for teh MATTHIAS family of Mt. Holly NJ. I have them in 1850, 1870,1880 and 1910. I cannot find the other years. (1920 or 1930) Irvin , Ada ( married about 1896), Faith b: 1898, and Rebecca B: 1902. If anyone has any informartion that would be great. Thank You Linda Skehan

    04/07/2006 07:51:05
    1. [Fwd: [NJ] Jersey Roots / Spring Program]
    2. Michelle Chubenko
    3. -------- Original Message -------- Subject: [NJ] Jersey Roots / Spring Program Date: Mon, 3 Apr 2006 00:53:41 -0400 From: Joan M Lowry <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Hi All I've seen people on the lists asking about whether or not materials from the Jersey Roots III and GSNJ Spring Program will be made available for purchase. I do not know what the committees will decide and so cannot say for certain. I do know that there are no current plans to tape the lectures, either for audio or video. What was done for the previous Jersey Roots lectures was that copies of the syllabus were made available for purchase after the lecture series ended. Copies were sold in cd-rom or in paperback. Prices were not determined until the end of the lecture series when the size of the final syllabus was known. This may be done again this year. When a decision is made about whether or not the syllabus materials from this series will be sold, and in what formats - we can post a notice to the lists and at that point someone can take your names and email addresses. Then, when the series is over and a final price is set - everyone who requested to be on the list can be notified of how to order a copy and what the price will be. I hope that might be a good start... Regards, Joan Joan M. Lowry mailto:[email protected]

    04/04/2006 04:33:55
    1. "Exploring Your Jersey Roots III" & GSNJ Spring Program
    2. Michelle Chubenko
    3. Subject: "Exploring Your Jersey Roots III" & GSNJ Spring Program From: "Joan M Lowry" <[email protected]> Date: Fri, 31 Mar 2006 09:30:18 -0500 GSNJ is very pleased to announce that once again we are co-sponsoring a wonderful lecture series with the NJ State Archives - "Exploring Your Jersey Roots III" There are too many details to squeeze into an email - but here are the highlights! "Jersey Roots III" will be held on Wednesday evenings from April 26 through May 24 and the grand finale for the series will be the all-day GSNJ Spring Program on Saturday, June 3. The evening lectures have wonderful topics and speakers - information follows: 26 April: Internet Sources for NJ Genealogy John W. Konvalinka 3 May: Using the Records of the East and West Jersey Proprietors Joseph R. Klett 10 May: The New Face of FamilySearch.org Cheri Wortmann 17 May: Tracing Your Immigrant Family at the New Jersey State Archives Bette M. Epstein 24 May: Genealogy for Kids: Activities and Projects to Celebrate Family History Catherine Wilkinson Zahn Saturday, June 3 will have a military theme and will be part of a two track event. Lectures will be: 1. Tracing your Revolutionary War Ancestor at the NJ State Archives Catherine S. Medich 2. The Veterans' Reverie, Researching genealogy (military biography) at the US Army Military History Institute Richard Baker (MSgt, USAF, ret.) 3. Website and Database Sources for Military Research at the NJ State Archives Veronica Calder & Vivian Thiele 4. Twentieth-Century Military Research Larry Fermi The second track on Saturday will be "Ask the Experts." There will be both a panel format and one-on-one consultations with either an Archives staff member, a GSNJ Trustee, or other professional genealogist. Saturday, June 3, will also feature a genealogy book fair with a number of vendors. BooksNJ, the Capital Bookstore, will also be open for the day (and offering a 10% discount to all attendees!) Everything will be happening in Trenton. The evening lectures will all be held in the NJ State Archives manuscript reading room and will also feature some extended hours in the microfilm reading room for attendees. Saturday's events will be hosted in the NJ State Museum Auditorium and the NJ State Archives building. Wednesday evening lectures begin at 6:30 and Saturday, June 3, registration will begin at 8:30, lectures at 9:30 and the day will end around 3:30. Light refreshments will be provided for the evening lectures and box lunches will be served on Saturday. Details and Registration forms will be available very soon on both the GSNJ website and on the NJ State Archives websites - as soon as the webmasters can get the details arranged in an easy to access format... GSNJ hopes to have the information up on the website over this weekend. Please take a look at <www.gsnj.org> The State Archives should also have the information up very soon. See their website at <www.njarchives.org/links/archives.html> We hope that you will all be able to join us for at least a few of these exciting topics and events! Regards, Joan Joan M. Lowry Genealogical Society of New Jersey mailto:[email protected] website: www.gsnj.org

    03/31/2006 04:02:38
    1. Re: [NJBurlin] Another George Wills.....1760-1780?
    2. I am also researching the WILLS line. We share a common ancestor in Daniel WILLS and Margaret EAYRE. I am descended from his son John and wife Sarah GRIFFITH and their son Daniel. Unfortunatly I have not been able to prove this connection. This generation seems to be a problem for both of us. I have reviewed all of my material and can find nothing to help you. I have the same information you have. George had three wives, but I have no info on any children. My records show Dr. Daniel WILLS had two wives. We are descended from the first, Elizabeth, whose maiden name may be OLIVE. My cousin, who is now deceased, speculated she was the daughter of Thomas OLIVE, with whom Dr. Daniel was so closely connected. Dr. Daniel's second wife was Mary WAGSTAFF, with whom he had six children two males; I have no record of either of them marrying or having children. All of Dr. Daniel's descendants come from his three sons by his first wife. They are John, James and Daniel. Good luck in your search.

    03/30/2006 02:43:20
    1. Another George Wills.....1760-1780?
    2. Stephanie
    3. Hello.....I am hoping to find someone who is researching this WILLS line of Burlington County NJ. A] Dr. Daniel+ Mary?? their son B] Daniel + Margaret Newbold their son C] Daniel [1692-1747]+ Margaret Eayre[1695-1748] their sons 1] David + Martha Crispin had a son George b. 1759 2] John + Sarah Griffith had a son George b. 1767 3.] George [1729- til after 1787] said to have had three wives Jane Knowles 1741, Elizabeth Russell 1779 Sarah Paschall 1787 Does anyone here know if he also had a son George?? and if so, when was he born.?? and who did he marry? I believe a George Wills from this line was the father of my gggrandpa George Wills, b. 1808 in Burlington County. But which one. ? Dr. Richard Wills has me almost convinced that it is David's son but he would have been fairly old to father my George 1808 [49] and his brother William Shreve Wills ., b. 1816.[57] Plus---- in a diary connected with William Shreve's family[ or perhaps in Family lore] there is mention of a George who had 3 wives as either the father or grandfather of W.S. and MY George. OR The girl Phoebe LNU --- whom David's son George is said to have married in about 1796 and who is said to be the mother of Moses, Ephraim, John ,George? Samuel, and William S.--- all born between 1798 and 1816-- Could she have been a THIRD WIFE of THIS GEORGE? It looks like He might have been 18-20 years her senior . So he could have had a wife or two before her I suppose. Anyone have anything on this possibility? If anyone can shed light on the offspring of Daniel and Margaret Eayre's sons and their wives and progeny named GEORGE, . I would love to hear of it. Thanks ever so. Regards Steph Powell Cecil [email protected]

    03/29/2006 10:39:45
    1. Re: NJBURLIN-D Digest V06 #36
    2. Is one of the spelling Bayliff? Like Benjamin and Ella? Linda Skehan

    03/29/2006 06:54:03
    1. Mt. Holly Mirror
    2. Diane Altona
    3. Thanks to information supplied by [email protected] and [email protected] I found a marriage in the Mt. Holly/New Jersey Mirror to add to my genealogy database for one of my most difficult lines! You are both the right kind of genealogists: you share! Diane Altona, San Diego BAYLES, BAYLIS and many other spellings

    03/27/2006 05:37:44
    1. Re: [NJBurlin] Mount Holly Mirror 1818 - 1947
    2. Randy Saylor
    3. Thanks and here is the URL http://index.burlco.lib.nj.us/Mirror/ Randy ----- Original Message ----- From: "Sherry Scull" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, March 27, 2006 10:25 AM Subject: RE: [NJBurlin] Mount Holly Mirror 1818 - 1947 > randy, go to burlington county library, mt holly on net there is a search > link for the mirrow...,.,happy hunting....SS > > >>From: "Randy Saylor" <[email protected]> >>To: [email protected] >>Subject: [NJBurlin] Mount Holly Mirror 1818 - 1947 >>Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2006 09:42:23 -0500 >> >>New to this list. >>I see that there are 34 microfilms of the Mount Holly Mirror and later the >>Burlington Advisor (1818-1947) at the NJDARM in Trenton. >> >>Has an index been done of births/mar/deaths for this newspaper? I am >>interested in 1818 to about 1860. >> >>Thanks >>Randy Saylor >>Toronto >> > >

    03/27/2006 05:25:53
    1. Re: [NJBurlin] YOUNG
    2. POP3 User
    3. Hi Georgia. Could your Irnee YOUNG actually be Irene D. YOUNG? I found an Irene D. YOUNG (yes, it's a he) on the 1880 and 1900 Census for Bordentown, Burlington, NJ. He was born in 1827 and his wife was Berthea. You should check it out. That 1850 Census page is so faint that it's quite possible that they (Ancestry.com) could have misspelled his name on the index. Good luck! Rhonda Hoover ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, March 27, 2006 7:09 AM Subject: [NJBurlin] YOUNG >I found (on Ancestry) an Irnee YOUNG in the 1850 census for Bordentown. >My > image of the census page is too faint to be legible. Can anyone give me > the > family group for Irnee Young. > > If anyone knows anything about this family, would you please let me know? > > Thanks, > Georgia Whitson >

    03/27/2006 04:38:25
    1. Re: [NJBurlin] Mount Holly Mirror 1818 - 1947
    2. Hi Randy An indexing project is ongoing at the Burlington County Library. Here is the link to their web-site: _Burlington County Library - Genealogy Resources_ (http://www.burlco.lib.nj.us/ReadyReference/genealogy.htm) If you click on newspapers, it will take you to the page where you can search several different newspapers. It is a work in progress so check back again. Good luck! Kathy Karn

    03/27/2006 04:32:08
    1. Mount Holly Mirror 1818 - 1947
    2. Randy Saylor
    3. New to this list. I see that there are 34 microfilms of the Mount Holly Mirror and later the Burlington Advisor (1818-1947) at the NJDARM in Trenton. Has an index been done of births/mar/deaths for this newspaper? I am interested in 1818 to about 1860. Thanks Randy Saylor Toronto

    03/27/2006 02:42:23