Hi all. I was doing a "Newton, NJ" search on eBay, and I pulled up an auction of six old photos that were all taken at photo studios in Newton, NJ. I asked the seller for the names written on the backs (listed below) and they aren't any of my kin, but I hope one of you will recognize somebody. Good luck! Sincerely, Liz France Searching ROBBINS, WASHER, WINFIELD, JARVIS, KIMBLE, WOODBURN, TITUS, BERRY and others in Sussex Co. and surrounds. ______________________________________________________________________ #1131135413 -- 1850s HARD PAPER PHOTOS, SIX PHOTOS Here's the answer I got from the seller to my info request -- Liz -- photo of young man states Daniel Lee dated 1875, photo of young girl states Alice Fleet could be something ales, dated 1850, photo of young women in black dress states school friend Doucus Epplegate could be something ales dated 1870, photo of half women states Permelia Runion Lawrence dated 1873, photo of young women with arms crossed states Aunt Corwin no date, photo of young girl in white dress states Isabelle Slaton, married a Wolf no date. I have identified these photos to the best of my ability. Sincerely, Rosina
Hi, folks.... I've added a list of marriages from the Smithfield, PA, Dutch Reformed Church, 1745-1786 to my web site. You can see the list at http://raub-and-more.com/smithmar.html. Jan Reuther
Scranton Times, Tuesday, July 19, 1904, page 5: OBITUARY The funeral of the late Frank Fogel, who was killed in the Hyde Park mine, will be held tomorrow morning. The remains will be taken to Hackettstown, NJ, for burial. Deceased is survived by a widow, mother and sister and three brothers. He was 24 years of age. Scranton Times, Tuesday, July 19, 1904, page 7, West Scranton news: Miner Killed - Fall of Roof Crushes Out Frank Fogel's Life - Frank Fogel, of Jackson Street, was instantly killed yesterday morning at the Hyde Park mine, where he was employed as a miner. He was working in the rock vein. Miners who came to his assistance worked for nearly two hours before his mangled body was recovered from the debris. He was taken to his home. he is survived by his widow and several brothers and sisters. He came here a short time ago from Hackettstown, NJ, and during the early part of this month started to work in the mine. The funeral arrangements will be announced later. Scranton Times, Wednesday, July 20, 1904, West Scranton news: The funeral of Frank Fogel, who was killed Monday, in the Hyde Park mine, was held this morning from his home on Jackson Street. A high mass of requiem was held this morning from Saint Patrick's church. The remains were taken to Hackettstown, NJ, where interment was made. At Death Last name is listed as Fogel: Friday, July 22, 1904 issue of the Hackettstown Gazette: "Frank Vogle, formerly of Hackettstown, was instantly killed Monday morning in the Hyde Park mine at Scranton, where he was employed as a miner. He was working in what is called the "rock vein," when the roof caved in and he was crushed to death. Miners who went to his assistance worked nearly two hours before his mangled body was recovered from the debris. Vogle had been in Scranton but a short time and during the ealy part of July started to work in the mine. His remains were brought back to Hackettstown on Wednesday for burial." Father was James W Fogel-Vogel Mother Rebecca Willever-Woolever My N.J.-Willever-Woolever-Roots & P.A.Kin Nolan,Fogle,Vogel,Johnson,Hill,Alexander,Major,Crostley Lee,Gerard,Handler,Tims,Miller,Dalley,Benward,Houston Dalton,Wainwright,Caskey,Taylor, http://www.familytreemaker.com/users/w/o/o/Stewart-J-Woolever-jr/index.html Woolever Kinship http://www.expage.com/page/wooleverkinship
Hi, folks..... I've added Harmony Methodist Cemetery to my web site. You can find it at http://raub-and-more.com/harmonymeth/harmcem1.html. Jan Reuther
Know some of these names might be connected to Warren Co Stewart Saturday Sept.?1916----A reunion of The Welliver Family was held in Benton ParkSat.Sept?1916 .Eighty-Five relatives were present.Those from a distance were: Mr.&Mrs.Bennie Fritz&Miss Carrie McHenry,of Blue Springs,Neb.-Mr.&Mrs.J.D.Welliver,Ethel,&Arden,of Milford;Mr.&Mrs.William Welliver,Nora,&Hazel,of Montrose;Mr.&Mrs.John Harrington,of Matamoras;Mr.&Mrs.Howard Jones& Mrs.John Jones,of Bloomsburg; Mrs.Ethel McHenry,of Westmore;Mr.&Mrs.Chas.Wright,Kenneth,Paul,Mary,&Iva;Mr.& Mrs.George Confair& Son, of Berwick,Mr.& Mrs. Russell Force,& Alice,of Harveyville;Mr.& Mrs.Jonathan Evans,of Unityville;Mr.&& Mrs.Reuben Hess Robert,& Margarite,Mr. & Mrs. Nathan Hess, Genevieve,Ethel,& Letha of Cambria;Mr.& Mrs. Harry Force,Boyd,Cletus,Loren,& Harold,Mr. & Mrs.Grover Force,& Edith,Mrs. Irene Long& Nellie,of Millville; Minor Kale of Fairmont Springs; Mart Shomaker,of Sonestown. Those from Benton, and vicinity were;Mr.&Mrs.Howard Welliver,George Welliver,Mr.& Mrs. Eddie Fritz,Mr.& Mrs Warren Thompson,Clinton Hartman,Mr.& Mrs. Frank Hartman,Marilia Hartman,& Etta Moore,Mr.& Mrs. Harvey Hess,Mary J.&Naoma Hess,Ora Bender,Mr. & Mrs. Wm.Yocum,Mr. & Mrs. Charles Welliver,Neilie,Ruth,Hilda,Doris,&&Elsie Welliver;Mr.& Mrs. Harry Hess,Mr.& Mrs. John Umbewust,Mrs Erla Davis,and Roberta Davis. . Bill Bishop [email protected]
> I am still looking for connections to the Garrison side of my family. > My greatgrandfather was William Garrison and his wife was Lucy > Bloomer. I have some information on them, but I am trying to see if > there are any relatives buried in the Warren cty area. I know the > Garrison name appears quite often, but I have yet to link it to mine. > If anyone has any information on the Garrison, please let me know. The only thing I can offer is a William GARRISON, son of James GARRISON and Dinah ROBINS, born in 1809 in NJ, probably Hunterdon County. William's sister, Susan, is my great great grandmother and married Abraham LAKE in Hunterdon County. Abraham and Susan moved to Warren County, NJ (first to Greenwich and later to Knowlton) sometime between 1820 and 1827. Maybe William went with them? I know all of William's siblings if that helps you. -- Marshall Lake - [email protected] - http://melake.erols.com http://melake.erols.com/the-beach http://melake.erols.com/genealogy
Hi everyone, I am still looking for connections to the Garrison side of my family. My greatgrandfather was William Garrison and his wife was sLucy Bloomer. I have some information on them, but I am trying to see if there are any relatives buried in the Warren cty area. I know the Garrison name appears quite often, but I have yet to link it to mine. If anyone has any information on the Garrison, please let me know. This family is driving me crazy! Pat from NJ>PA>ID _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com
Would anyone have info on this Church,trying for info on Rev Major December 17, 1853 On the 5th inst., by the Rev. Henry C. Major, Samuel W. Hawn to Lucinda Beem, both of Oxford township, Warren county, N.J. January 6, 1855 On the 28th ult., by the Rev. H. C. Major, William Ayres, to Ann Elizabeth Conover, both of Oxford, Warren Co., N.J. 1856 [February 2, 1856 On the 19th inst., in the Upper Mt Bethel Church,Pa by the Rev. H. C. Major, Nathan Castner, to Mary A. Erls. By the same, Peter Castner to Sarah Walters, all of Hunterdon. February 20, 1858 On the 14th inst., by Rev. H. C. Major, Jabez C. Lee, of Hunterdon county, to Jemima Ocary(?) of Warren county. Stewart My N.J.-Willever-Woolever-Roots & P.A.Kin Nolan,Fogle,Vogel,Johnson,Hill,Alexander,Major,Crostley Lee,Gerard,Handler,Tims,Miller,Dalley,Benward,Houston Dalton,Wainwright,Caskey,Taylor, http://www.familytreemaker.com/users/w/o/o/Stewart-J-Woolever-jr/index.html Woolever Kinship http://www.expage.com/page/wooleverkinship
Hi Received thsi from another list hope it's helpful yours in genealogy Joanne -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] Try this link ... if it doesn't work.. go to Google.com and search "deadfred" or try www.deadfred.com again .. it should work now <A HREF="http://deadfred.com/">Dead Fred - Genealogy Photo Archive</A> ============================== Shop Ancestry - Everything you need to Discover, Preserve & Celebrate your heritage! http://shop.myfamily.com/ancestrycatalog
Many thanks to Jan Reuther for providing those Warren County maps online. Wouldn't it be wonderful if we had that kind of information for all the areas our ancestors inhabited. Best wishes, Dennis Reiley [email protected] ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jan Reuther" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, March 23, 2001 8:20 PM Subject: [NJWARREN] Warren County 1874 > Hi, folks.... > > Al Hosbach sent me the most wonderful atlas of Warren County, published in 1874, which shows maps of all the towns, townships and villages, and shows on the maps where everyone lived. > > I was able to scan the maps; I resized the larger ones to 7-1/2" x 10" so that they are printable, but the print is still readable. This is a large picture for the net, and they may take a while to load, but I felt that they would be worthless if the print was so small you couldn't read it! > > You'll find an index of the map at http://raub-and-more.com/maps/atlasindex.html. > > Jan Reuther > > > ==== NJWARREN Mailing List ==== > > > > ============================== > Ancestry.com Genealogical Databases > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/rwlist2.asp > Search over 2500 databases with one easy query! > >
Hi, folks.... Al Hosbach sent me the most wonderful atlas of Warren County, published in 1874, which shows maps of all the towns, townships and villages, and shows on the maps where everyone lived. I was able to scan the maps; I resized the larger ones to 7-1/2" x 10" so that they are printable, but the print is still readable. This is a large picture for the net, and they may take a while to load, but I felt that they would be worthless if the print was so small you couldn't read it! You'll find an index of the map at http://raub-and-more.com/maps/atlasindex.html. Jan Reuther
a few interesting sites to inform ourselves about what genealogy research books are out there!!!!! http://www.rootsweb.com/~njwarren/wclib.html#wcbooks http://www.advanceplus.com/genealogy/books/ http://www.madigansbooks.com/de.html http://www.sussexcountyhistory.org/ yours in genealogy Joanne
--part1_94.11cb1bcf.27eb88ed_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit --part1_94.11cb1bcf.27eb88ed_boundary Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Disposition: inline Return-Path: <[email protected]> Received: from rly-yh04.mx.aol.com (rly-yh04.mail.aol.com [172.18.147.36]) by air-yh05.mail.aol.com (v77_r1.21) with ESMTP; Thu, 22 Mar 2001 08:21:48 -0500 Received: from lists2.rootsweb.com (lists2.rootsweb.com [63.92.80.32]) by rly-yh04.mx.aol.com (v77_r1.21) with ESMTP; Thu, 22 Mar 2001 08:21:30 -0500 Received: (from [email protected]) by lists2.rootsweb.com (8.10.1/8.10.1) id f2MDKZn22502; Thu, 22 Mar 2001 06:20:35 -0700 Resent-Date: Thu, 22 Mar 2001 06:20:35 -0700 X-Original-Sender: [email protected] Thu Mar 22 06:20:35 2001 From: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Date: Thu, 22 Mar 2001 08:20:20 EST Old-To: [email protected] MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: AOL 5.0 for Windows sub 127 Subject: [NJGLOUCE] (no subject) Resent-Message-ID: <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Resent-From: [email protected] X-Mailing-List: <[email protected]> archive/latest/142 X-Loop: [email protected] Precedence: list Resent-Sender: [email protected] Hi list, Need help. Researching William H. Abbott. First what I have and than my problem. Marries Sarah Hunt 10/11/1879 at ME Church Delaware Water Gap PA., giving his residence as Franklenville, NJ. Becomes member ME Church 1/22/1882 with Albina Hunt as spouse. Shows up as parent with Albina Hunt at Emma Abbott's baptism 9/12/1882. Problem: Have no stats on the above William H. to possibly connect him with William H. from Franklin Township, Gloucester Co. that shows up on 1850 census index. 1) Anyone have info on ME Church Philadelphia Conference original record where the above info came from? Saw a lot of recent messages on list regarding ME Churches. 2) Pa county records weren't kept prior to 1893. No Pa. census records for 1870 or 1880. Contacted Methodist Church archives, and they couldn't help. I think I'm stuck without having his age so I can connect him with possible prospects. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Bill Abbott --part1_94.11cb1bcf.27eb88ed_boundary--
I am looking for any information about a Methodist Children's Home which was in Phillipsburg NJ in the early 1900's. The woman who was in the home was taken out of the home and returned to the family in about 1915. A sibling died in the home abt. 1906.
Listers--- I would like to exchange information with anyone who has KATE MOTLEY born about 1754 and George RIEMAN born about 1752 in their database. They were married in Warren Co. N.J. in the early 1770's and had children Peter, John, Jacob and Kate. Thanks, Pat
This is a response I rec'd from the National Archives regarding a question I had sent to them about obtaining Naturalization Records. I hope someone "out there" finds this helpful(or at least interesting). It *is* quite lengthy, but I found it to be interesting. Regards, Dan in Nebraska >From: "Cliff Macwha" <[email protected]> >To: <[email protected]> >Subject: Re: Naturalization Records >Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 14:08:10 -0500 > >Dear Mr. Conner- >In order to find your ancestors' naturalization records, you first must >know where they naturalized. Naturalization records in the National >Archives are, for the most part, kept at the branch that services the >region where the naturalizations took place. >Because of the time period in which your ancestors came over, you may have >to go to state or county courts to find these records; it wasn't until 1906 >that naturalizations were required to be done through the federal courts. >I am enclosing an article on the naturalization process that should help >direct your search. Good luck. > >Clifford MacWha >Archives I Research Room Services Branch (NWCC1) >National Archives and Records Administration >700 Pennsylvania Ave., NW >Washington, DC 20408-0001 > >Naturalization Records > >The following article should assist you in locating the naturalization >record you are looking for. You can find an updated version at our website >at <http://www.nara.gov/genealogy/natural.html>. > >"The Location of Naturalization Records." >By Claire Prechtel-Kluskens. >Reprinted from The Record, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 21-22 (Nov. 1996). > > We are frequently asked where an ancestor's naturalization records can be >found. This article will provide general guidance that should assist most >researchers in finding these records. > > Naturalization is the process of by which an alien becomes an American >citizen. It is a voluntary act by the alien; naturalization is not >required. Twenty-five percent of foreign-born persons listed on the 1890 >through 1930 censuses had not become naturalized or filed their "first >papers." > >The Courts > > From the first naturalization law passed by Congress in 1790 up through >much of the twentieth century, an alien could become naturalized in any >court of record. Thus, most people went to the court most convenient to >them, usually a county court of some kind. The names and types of courts >vary from state to state. The names and types courts have also varied >during different periods of history--but may include the county supreme, >circuit, district, equity, chancery, probate, or common pleas court. Most >researchers will find that their ancestors became naturalized in one of >these courts. A few State Supreme Courts also naturalized aliens, such as >the Supreme Courts of Indiana, Idaho, Iowa, Maine, New Jersey, and South >Dakota. > > Some persons who lived in large cities become naturalized in a Federal >court, such as a U.S. District Court or U.S. Circuit Court, if one of those >courts were convenient to them. > >General Rule: The Two-Step Process > > Congress passed the first law regulating naturalization in 1790 (1 Stat. >103). As a general rule, naturalization was a two-step process that took a >minimum of five years. After being in the United States a minimum of two >years, an alien could file a "declaration of intent" to become a citizen. >A minimum of three years after that, the alien could then "petition for >naturalization." After the petition was granted, a certificate of >citizenship was issued to the alien. These two steps did not have to take >place in the same court. As a general rule, the "declaration of intent" >will contain more genealogically-useful information than the "petition." >The "declaration" may include the alien's month and year (or possibly the >exact date) of his immigration to the United States. > >Exceptions to the General Rule > > Having stated this "two-step, five-year" general rule, it is necessary to >note several exceptions. The first major exception was that "derivative" >citizenship was granted to wives and minor children of naturalized men. >From 1790 to 1922, wives of naturalized men automatically became citizens. >This also meant that an alien woman who married a U.S. citizen >automatically became a citizen upon marriage. From 1790 to 1940, children >under the age of 21 automatically became naturalized citizens upon the >naturalization of their father. Unfortunately, however, names and >biographical information about wives and children are rarely included in >declarations or petitions before September 1906. > > The second major exception to the general rule was that, from 1824 to >1906, minor aliens who had lived in the U.S. five years before their >twenty-third birthday could file their declarations and petitions at the >same time. > > The third major exception to the general rule was the special >consideration given to veterans. An 1862 law allowed honorably-discharged >army veterans of any war to petition for naturalization without previously >having filed a declaration of intent after only one year's residence in the >United States. An 1894 law extended the same no-previous-declaration >privilege to honorably-discharged five-year veterans of the Navy or the >Marine Corps. Over 192,000 aliens were naturalized between May 9, 1918 >and June 30, 1919, under an act of May 9, 1918, that allowed aliens serving >in the U.S. armed forces during "the present war" to file a petition for >naturalization without making a declaration of intent or proving five >years' residence. Laws enacted in 1919, 1926, 1940, and 1952 continued >various preferential treatment provisions for veterans. > >The Records > > It is impossible to provide hard-and-fast rules about the content or even >the existence of naturalization records. The 1905 Report to the President >of the Commission on Naturalization remarked: > > The methods of making and keeping the naturalization records in both the >Federal and State courts are as various as the procedure in such cases. >Thus the declaration of intention in some courts consists merely of the >bare statement of the intention and the name and allegiance of the alien, >while in other courts it also includes a history of the alien.... In a >majority of courts alien applicants are not required to make the >declaration of intention required by law ... and in other courts he is. >Previous to 1903 a majority of courts did not require petitions or >affidavits; other courts did. Some courts keep a naturalization record >separate from the other records; other courts include the naturalization >record in the regular minutes of the court. Some records contain full >histories of the aliens, but a majority of the records show only the name, >nationality, oath of allegiance, and date of admission. > >In 1903, a Justice Department investigator made even more damning comments: > > I find the naturalization records in many cases in a chaotic condition, >many lost and destroyed, and some sold for old paper. Most the records >consist of merely the name and nativity of the alien with no means of >identifying aliens of the same name.... In numerous cases I find aliens >naturalized under initials instead of Christian names, surnames misspelled >or changed entirely, and names of witnesses inserted in place of the alien >naturalized.... The examination of the records discloses the remarkable >fact that never, since the first enactment of the naturalization laws, has >any record been made in any court of the names of minor children who, under >the operation of the statutes, were made citizens by the naturalization of >their parents. > >The Location of these Records > > For a comprehensive guide to where naturalization records for specific >courts can be found, see Christina K. Schaefer, Guide to Naturalization >Records of the United States (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., >1997), which is available in many public libraries, as well as from >genealogical booksellers and the publisher. > > Naturalization records from county courts may still be at the county >court, or in a county or state archives, or at a regional archives serving >several counties within a state. Some of these records or indexes have >been published, such as the Index of Naturalizations, Ashtabula County, >Ohio, 1875-1906, published by the Ashtabula County Genealogical Society. > > Do not be surprised if county court employees tell you their >naturalization records are at "the National Archives" or that their court >never conducted naturalizations. Most current court employees are probably >not genealogists and may not be familiar with, or interested in, the >court's older records. It is up to the researcher to have persistence in >determining the location of older court records. Some of these records may >have been microfilmed and may be available through "Family History Centers" >run by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ("Mormon"). Family >History Centers are open to the public. > > If the naturalization took place in a Federal court, naturalization >indexes, declarations, of intent, and petitions will usually be in the >National Archives' Regional Archives serving the state in which the Federal >court is located (addresses listed at end of message). Some of these >indexes and records have been microfilmed and are available through >"Mormon" Family History Centers or the American Genealogical Lending >Library (a private company that rents microfilmed genealogical records to >the public). > > The Microfilm Reading Room (Room 400) in the National Archives Building in >downtown Washington, D.C., has some microfilmed Federal court >naturalization indexes, declarations, and petitions, but it is by no means >a complete collection of these records. To repeat, most Federal >naturalization records are found in the National Archives Regional Archives >serving the state in which the Federal court is located. > > Although the National Archives does not have naturalization records >created in state or local courts, we do have three microfilmed indexes that >serve as a finding aid to some state and local court naturalizations. >National Archives Microfilm Publication M1285, Soundex Index to >Naturalization Petitions for the United States District and Circuit Courts, >Northern District of Illinois, and Immigration and Naturalization Service >District 9, 1840-1950 (179 rolls) serves both as an index to naturalization >petitions from the two Federal courts mentioned in its title and as an >index to naturalization petitions filed in county courts in eastern Iowa, >northwestern Indiana, eastern Wisconsin, and northern Illinois. > > National Archives Microfilm Publication M1674, Index (Soundex) to >Naturalization Petitions Filed in Federal, State, and Local Courts in New >York, New York, including New York, Kings, Queens, and Richmond Counties, >1792-1906 (294 rolls) serves a similar finding aid function for New York >City naturalization petitions. > > National Archives Microfilm Publication M1299, Index to New England >Naturalization Records, 1791-1906 (117 rolls) serves a similar function for >naturalizations occurring in various courts in the New England states. > > For more detailed information, consult John J. Newman, American >Naturalization Processes and Procedures, 1790-1985 (Indianapolis: Indiana >Historical Society, 1985). > >National Archives Regional Archives Addresses > >NARA--New England Region (Boston), 380 Trapelo Rd., Waltham, MA 02154. >617-647-8100. Email: <[email protected]>. States: CT, ME, MA, >NH, RI, VT. > >NARA--New England Region (Pittsfield), 10 Conte Dr., Pittsfield, MA 01201. >413-445-6885. Email: <[email protected]>. MICROFILM ONLY; no >original records. States: CT, ME, MA, NH, RI, VT. > >NARA--Northeast Region (New York City), 201 Varick St., New York, NY. >212-337-1300. Email: <[email protected]>. States: NJ, NY, >Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands. > >NARA--Mid-Atlantic Region (Philadelphia City Center), 900 Market St., Room >1350, Philadelphia, PA 19107. 215-597-3000. Email: ><[email protected]>. States: DE, MD, PA, VA, WV. > >NARA--Southeast Region (Atlanta), 1557 St. Joseph Ave., East Point, GA >30344. 404-763-7477. Email: <[email protected]>. States: AL, >FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, SC, TN. > >NARA--Great Lakes Region (Chicago), 7358 South Pulaski Rd., Chicago, IL >60629. 312-581-7816. Email: <[email protected]>. States: IL, >IN, MI, MN, OH, WI. > >NARA--Central Plains Region (Kansas City), 2312 East Bannister Rd., Kansas >City, MO 64131. 816-926-6272. Email: <[email protected]>. >States: IA, KS, MO, NE. > >NARA--Southwest Region (Fort Worth), 501 West Felix St., P.O. Box 6216, Ft. >Worth, TX 76115. 817-334-5525. States: AR, LA, NM (most records from >Federal agencies in NM are at NARA-Rocky Mountain Region), OK, TX. > >NARA--Rocky Mountain Region (Denver), Building 48-Denver Federal Center, >Denver, CO 80225-0307. 303-236-0817. Email: <[email protected]>. >States: CO, MT, ND, NM, SD, UT, WY. > >NARA--Pacific Region (Laguna Niguel), 24000 Avila Rd., Laguna Niguel, CA >92656. 714-360-2641. Email: <[email protected]>. States: AZ, >southern CA, and Clark Co., NV. > >NARA--Pacific Region (San Francisco), 1000 Commodore Dr., San Bruno, CA >94066. 415-876-9009. Email: <[email protected]>. Northern CA, >HI, NV (except Clark Co.), Pacific Trust Territories, American Samoa. > >NARA--Pacific-Alaska Region (Seattle), 6125 Sand Point Way, NE, Seattle, >WA, 98115. 206-526-6507. Email: <[email protected]>. > >NARA--Pacific-Alaska Region (Anchorage), 654 West Third Ave., Anchorage, >AK, 99501. 907-271-2441. Email: [email protected]>. State: AK. > > >>> "Dan Conner" <[email protected]> 03/20/01 07:31AM >>> >I am hoping to find Naturalization Records for: >(1) GRAHAM, Isaac: from Belfast, Ireland. Came to America sometime before >1869 and lived in Philadelphia, PA >(2) STROM, Charles: came from Sweden to America sometime in the1880's. > >Thank you, >Dan Conner >Omaha, NE _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com
Hello, I am seeking any information on Ella E. Robbins (may be listed as Mary E.), born between 1862 and 1868 in Warren County. Ella moved to VA abt. 1880. I know this is really vague info, but, its all I have. Any info on her or her parents will be of great help. Thank You.
Interested in contacting anyone researching HUMMER. Looking for Mahlon HUMMER's parents. Mahlon HUMMER, b. 1815, d. 1887. Married Jane ?, b. 1818; d. 1863. Married Eliza J. ?, b. 1819; d 1872. Children: Catherine, b. 1837; d. 1923 Peter, b. 1837; d. 1863 Calvin, b. 1838 James, b. 1838; d 1872 Daniel, b. abt 1846 Mahlon, b. 1862; d. 1862 Sue [email protected] ________________________________________________________________ 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.
Fowarding this message to the list. Please respond directly to Elizabeth. Thanks, Judy --- "Elizabeth P. Everett" <[email protected]> wrote: > Date: Thu, 15 Mar 2001 07:19:42 -0700 > From: "Elizabeth P. Everett" <[email protected]> > To: <[email protected]> > Subject: {not a subscriber} Henry/ Phillips > > looking for some information on some of the > following > Benjamin Henry d. 1922--he apparently died in 1922 > of a tragic railroad > accident--he is my grandfather--he married Florence > Pearl Phillips --her > obit states she was born in Hainesburg NJ and is the > daughter of Mr. and Mrs > John Phillips if any body can lead me in the right > direction please email me > beth > [email protected] > ===== Judy Jamieson Pisano [email protected] "The Bird Families of New Jersey" <http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~birdnj> __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Auctions - Buy the things you want at great prices. http://auctions.yahoo.com/
- Tom Rue - wrote: > > I posted this article today, based on some old research notes that I had on > file... > > Article: "Discrepancies in vital records and indexes at the New Jersey > State Archives" > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~tomrue/njvitals.htm > > Warm regards, > Tom Rue, PO Box 706 > Monticello, NY 12701 > http://rue.4t.com/ > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~tomrue/ > > ==== NJHUNTER Mailing List ==== > Visit the Hunterdon County GenWeb page at: > http://members.aol.com/njysprez/index.htm > > ============================== > Shop Ancestry - Everything you need to Discover, Preserve & Celebrate > your heritage! > http://shop.myfamily.com/ancestrycatalog -- Michelle Tucker Chubenko ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ukraine WorldGenWeb Country Coordinator: http://www.rootsweb.com/~ukrwgw/index.html OKGenWeb County Coordinator: Adair Co.: http://www.rootsweb.com/~okadair/adaircty.htm Cherokee Co.: http://www.rootsweb.com/~okchero2/index.htm OKGenWeb Archives: Adair Co.: http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/ok/adair/adair.html Michelle's Home Page: http://members.home.net/famhist/shell.htm Woodbridge, NJ Amateur Radio Club http://members.home.net/famhist/k2odp/