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    1. DEATH CERTIFICATES of persons who died in Ohio (1913 - 1937)
    2. Barbara Jean Green
    3. http://www.ohiohistory.org/dindex/search.cfm ...This database indexes Death Certificates of persons who died in Ohio in the above years, useful for determining date of death and certificate number. Using the index information, a researcher can later obtain a copy of the certificate itself, which holds further information.

    04/01/2001 05:27:47
    1. MAPS-Clermont County in 1895 & Currently
    2. Barbara Jean Green
    3. 1895: http://www.livgenmi.com/clermontOH.htm Currently: http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohclermo/moremaps.htm PS: I have printed out both maps to include in my family history.

    04/01/2001 05:27:27
    1. MILITARY in Clermont County, OH
    2. Barbara Jean Green
    3. http://members.aol.com/traltman/Military.html Revolutionary War War of 1812 Mexican War Civil War COMPANY E, TWENTY - SECOND REGIMENT OHIO INFANTRY COMPANY I ,TWENTY - SECOND REGIMENT OHIO INFANTRY COMPANY C , TWELFTH REGIMENT OHIO INFANTRY SECOND REGIMENT OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY COMPANY C THIRD REGIMENT OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY COMPANY B THIRTY SIXTH OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY FORTY EIGHTH OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY EIGHTY NINTH OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY FIFTH OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY SIXTH REGIMENT OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY COMPANY B TENTH REGIMENT OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY COMPANY K ELEVENTH REGIMENT OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY COMPANY E WW1 WW2 Korean Vietnam Persian Gulf

    04/01/2001 05:27:18
    1. ADDRESSES in Clermont County to be used for research
    2. Barbara Jean Green
    3. http://members.aol.com/clermont197/Addresses.html

    04/01/2001 05:26:35
    1. CENSUS - Info by Year
    2. Barbara Jean Green
    3. http://www.freegenealogylookups.com/census_rolls.htm (Census Years: 1790-1920) I have made a print-out for my handy reference. An added feature of this site is the instant ability to click on any Census Year and get printable BLANK census pages for personal use. ...Suggest you 'Bookmark' for future recall.

    04/01/2001 05:26:18
    1. Re: Clover Chapel Cemetery Burial Records?
    2. Barbara Jean Green
    3. http://www.clermont.lib.oh.us/pages/location.htm It might be worthwhile to write the local library for assistance. When asking for genie info, always remember the Golden Rule...to include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Williamsburg Branch 594 Main Street Williamsburg, OH 45176 It appears to be a small burg so perhaps the librarian would kindly oblige if you make a desperate plea. They might even have a book on burials in different cemeteries. Lots of times, we still have to write LETTERS via snail mail to get what we want. It's a pain but can be very lucrative. Barbara Jean ----- Original Message ----- From: Richard Moore <ramoore@home.com> To: <OHCLERMO-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, March 31, 2001 2:28 PM Subject: Clover Chapel Cemetery Burial Records? > Does anyone know who is buried in the cemetery adjacent Clover Chapel M. E. > Church in Clermont? An early map of the area shows a cemetery there. It is not > far from 1830-era homes of my Trout ancestors east of Williamsburg. Does the > cemetery still exist? Richard Moore ramoore@home.com

    04/01/2001 05:25:44
    1. Web page update
    2. John Charles Tippet
    3. Fellow researchers: Please be advised that I have just posted an update to my web page. Point your browser to: http://members.home.net/johntippet/ Included with this update are the following (all in the Beckelhymer section of my web site): (1) I added transcriptions of the land tax lists of Franklin County, VA (1786 - 1805A) for Beckelhymer/Picklesimer and allied families. These include: Archer, Beckett, Dillman, Fishburn, Harger, Kinsey, Landis, Lazena, Lemon, Logan, Phares, Prator, Rinker, Trout, Waggoner, Wimmer, and Young. I found it interesting that there were no Rinkers listed even though they were known to have lived in Franklin County for about 10 years per the personal property tax lists. Apparently, they didn't own land. (2) I added transcriptions of the land tax lists of Botetourt County, VA (1782 - 1809) for Beckelhymer/Picklesimer and allied families. These include: Beckett, France, John Henry, Kinsey, Lemmon, William Logan, Trout, Waggoner, and Wedell. (3) I updated the transcriptions of the Beckelhymer/Picklesimer deeds for Franklin County, MD. Previously, the transcriptions were based solely on the deed index. Now they are based on the actual deeds, themselves. I added a descendancy narrative of a new family to my web page: the Hosseltons. This family lived in Hocking/Pickaway/Perry Counties, OH in the early 1800s and prior to that in VA/PA/MD (a similar migration pattern as for the Behymers). Enjoy! John Charles Tippet johntippet@home.com

    04/01/2001 03:21:28
    1. Clover Chapel Cemetery Burial Records?
    2. Richard Moore
    3. Does anyone know who is buried in the cemetery adjacent Clover Chapel M. E. Church in Clermont? An early map of the area shows a cemetery there. It is not far from 1830-era homes of my Trout ancestors east of Williamsburg. Does the cemetery still exist? Richard Moore ramoore@home.com

    03/31/2001 03:28:08
    1. Re: [OHADAMS]Dan'l Boone+ Pres US GRANT
    2. HERMON B FAGLEY
    3. Note that James Boone's wives were from the 1698 GWYNEDD-NORTH WALES colony,inPhiladelphia Co,on the Bucks Co line. Colony was led over by - Roberts.At some date,the John Simpsons moved with-near the colony. And in 1818,John Simpson Jr and grown children moved adjoining me here at Bethel,Clermont,Oh. John's wife had Roberts blood. His son,Samuel,was married to a Griffith.And John's daus were married to James Griffith,and James Ross. And,here,1821,younger dau, Hannah,m Jesse Root Grant. 1822,she gave birth to Pres-Gen US Grant. 1825 , future Gov Sam Medary stopped to visit the Simpsons,and was talked into staying. He had gone to elementary school,in Gwynedd,Pa with Hannah Simpson, and his parents had married at the Simpson's Bucks Co,Pa Neshamminy Presbyterian. His parents,and Sam, and Mary Medary m John Iden [Foulke mom], lived ,say 1815-25 near Georgetown,DC. [1834 for Idens] 1857,in my Bethel,Ohio Jesse Root Grant was mayor,and tanner. A block west was Asher Medary's widow,and children. Oliver Grant m Asher's dau,and moved her, and the widow,to Galena,Ill. [Plane and Charity Sts.for Grant: Plane and Union for Medary.] So,if Georgetown,DC was named for Daniel Boone's grandfather, we have the MEDARY-IDEN[foulke] colony moving from the Gwynedd,Pa area to DC to join near kinsmen,the Boone's. And George Boone, grandfather of Dan'l-his move to Georgetown,DC must have been 1748 era,like Squire's,and one wonders if he continured in Prince George Co,Md witnessing and executing so many wills,as he had at Exeter,Berks,Pa. ? On Fri, 30 Mar 2001 21:49:34 -0700 "paulismith" <paulismith@earthlink.net> writes: > Hi Herman, > > No problem, > > James Boone, son of George Boone lll b. 1709,Cullompton, Devenshire, > England > md. #1 Mary Foulke #2. Ann Griffith. > > Notes: > Family was probably members of the Quaker meeting at Cullompton by > 1707. > > Immigrated with parents from England in 1717. > > James Boone (1709 in England - 1785) was the brother of Squire Boone > and > uncle of Daniel Boone. James was married twice: 1) Mary Foulke and > 2) > Anne Griffith. James had 12 children but don't know who belongs to > which > wife. James had a daughter (possibly the oldest of his children) by > the > name of Ann who married Abraham Lincoln. This would be a second > Boone/Lincoln marriage > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "HERMON B FAGLEY" <hermfagley@juno.com> > To: <paulismith@earthlink.net> > Sent: Friday, March 30, 2001 9:32 PM > Subject: Re: [OHADAMS] Boone - DeHart > > > > Normally,,I wouldn't ask you to trouble yourself, but his move may > help > > me > > understand my own Iden's and Medary's move. We already know James > Boone, > > Squire's brother,was married to a Iden or Foulke. My John Iden's > mother > > was a > > Foulke-his wife Mary Medary. Her parents,married in the GWYNEDD > area were > > near > > Georgetown 10 years later.As was their son,Gov Sam Medary,. And my > own > > John IDEN > > bUT, DO NOT HURRY. Just someday,when you happen across it. I > already > > study > > Rock Creek Hundred,n Georgetown,for Ninian Riley,whose son's > buried a > > mile from me. > > Which brings a thought. Rev Jerry Moore converted Ninian from > Episcopal > > to Baptist. > > Then Ninian moved a county north of the Eaton Baptist of Squire > Boone in > > NC. [Surrey Co] > > Squire Jr and George,of Squire were Baptist ministers in Ky. Was > the > > Quaker,George > > Boone,of Exeter, Pa Baptist at Georgetown,DC. > > I have a big colony of kinsmen from 50 miles n Wash DC, who spent > > 1773-87 in the WV > > panhandle, and 1787,at the Madison Co,Ky fort called George > Boone's and > > Wm Hoy's,at > > White Hall,ALONG I-75. Ky > BROWN,WELLS,SAPPINGTON,SAPP,DURBIN,LOGSDON, > > MCQUEEN,WEST,BAXTER. Said fort 7 mile west of George's brother's > > Boonesboro,Ky. > > When the Riley colony left NC ,1796,they also settled just north > of > > George Boone in Ky. > > Makes one think. > > > > On Fri, 30 Mar 2001 20:29:04 -0700 "paulismith" > > <paulismith@earthlink.net> writes: > > > Hi Herman, > > > > > > I will have to go back into my records and dig up the > information, > > > but for a > > > time, George Boone - grandfather of Daniel - the pioneer did > live > > > and own > > > the land upon Georgetown now is. when I find it, I will post the > > > sources. > > > > > > Pauli > > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > > From: "HERMON B FAGLEY" <hermfagley@juno.com> > > > To: <paulismith@earthlink.net>; <JPorterBarton@aol.com> > > > Sent: Friday, March 30, 2001 8:14 PM > > > Subject: Re: [OHADAMS] Boone - DeHart > > > > > > > > > > Was Georgetown,DC named for the George Boone involved [likely > > > writing?] > > > > witnessing so many wills at Exeter,Berks? Squire Boone > wintered in > > > the Va > > > > > > > > Valley in a neighborhood near Brock's Gap,with the Lincoln's. > Do > > > we have > > > > a date of a move > > > > from Exeter to Georgetown. I doubt not the plaque. I'm sure it > > > exsists. > > > > I'm a long time > > > > Boone researcher, but not of genealogy. Don't remember the 3-4 > > > George > > > > debate. Surely > > > > not all in this country. From total memory of 10+ year, the > > > Boone's came > > > > to Abington- > > > > Gwynedd-North Wales,PA in 2 groups a few years apart. I'll > guess > > > 1710 > > > > and 1720. Edward > > > > Foulke,-Roberts,-Griffiths to Gwynedd-North Wales in 1698. And > > > moved west > > > > to Exeter,Pa a bit > > > > later. 1730.aND,1748 FOR Squire's move south. > > > > JPorterBarton@aol.com lives in Pr Geo Co,Md and was Prodigy's > > > "special > > > > contributor" > > > > for Va-Md Tidewater. Jeanne,who was Georgetown,DC named for? > > > Was it a > > > > Quaker > > > > neighborhood? I think of it as Scotch. The falls of the > Potomac > > > just > > > > upstream making it > > > > the import-export center for Fredrick and Montgomery Co,Md. > Any > > > > ironworks. Squire Boone was > > > > a weaver,but also a blacksmith. > > > > On Fri, 30 Mar 2001 15:47:30 -0700 "paulismith" > > > > <paulismith@earthlink.net> writes: > > > > > Hi Herman, > > > > > > > > > > Actually the Georgetown story is true and well documented. > The > > > > > plaque in > > > > > Georgetown also proclaims the origins of the towns name as > being > > > > > named after > > > > > George Boone lll who owned the land at that time. I have > seen > > > the > > > > > plaque and > > > > > have a photo of it somewhere. > > > > > > > > > > Pauli > > > > > George's 7th great granddaughter > > > > > > > > > > There is another line of Boones in Maryland that a > relationship > > > to > > > > > the > > > > > George Boone line has not yet been established as far as I > know. > > > > > They were > > > > > in another part of Maryland. > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > > > > From: "HERMON B FAGLEY" <hermfagley@juno.com> > > > > > To: <OHADAMS-L@rootsweb.com> > > > > > Sent: Friday, March 30, 2001 3:22 PM > > > > > Subject: Re: [OHADAMS] Boone - DeHart > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I doubt the GEORGETOWN,D.C. story, but must admit,my > Iden's > > > spent > > > > > the > > > > > > 1800-34 period near there. Got a certificate in 1834 to > move > > > to > > > > > Ohio,but > > > > > > settled far from a Quaker meeting. > > > > > > I do know Md had SOME Boone family. Some have called the > > > > > Washington DC > > > > > > area a Quaker neighborhood once. Some have. Not me. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ==== OHADAMS Mailing List ==== > > > > > Help Instructions at: > > > > > http://www.bright.net/~chipmunk/SurnamesMail.html > > > > > or contact Betty at: chipmunk@bright.net > > > > > Archives: > > > > > > > > > http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/listsearch.pl?surname=OHAdams > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ________________________________________________________________ > > > > 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. > > > > > > > ________________________________________________________________ > > YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR INTERNET ACCESS! > > Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! > > Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: > > http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tage. >

    03/30/2001 10:33:22
    1. FOUND PICTURE
    2. Can someone please tell me how to post a picture this board. Missy

    03/30/2001 06:41:27
    1. re: Hesler census
    2. Thanks for all of those who took the time to lookup the 1900 census for me concerning my Hasler/Hesler entry. I agree with you that it was Louisiana. But I wonder if they were born there or just emigrated there. Thanks again, Kevin PS- Anyone knowing anything about my HASLER/HESLER clan or HARCOURT, any info would be greatly appreciated.

    03/29/2001 07:29:20
    1. GRAY families m. Trislers
    2. carol wilson
    3. Hello, I have several GRAY families that need to be connected. Is someone researching these families? ANY information on anyone here would be a great help! Washington GRAY b. 1814, son of Christian GRAY & Sallie PLUMMER Catharine GRAY b. 1797 m. John TRISLER 1826 in Clermont Co. George M. Gray b. 1873 m. Rachel Catherine TRISLER Tabitha GRAY b. 1818 m. Jonas TRISLER 1838 in Clermont Co. Christian GRAY b. 1793 m. Sallie PLUMMER 1816 Clermont Co. Barbara GRAY b. 1790 m. Thomas WEST. She d. Brown Co. H. F. GRAY b. abt 1838 m. Talitha unknown. She then m. Hiram S. TRISLER, member of Antioch Christian Church - where is this? Hannah GRAY b. abt 1807 Bethel, m. John KEETHLER 1832 Clermont Co. Thank you, Carol Wilson Mason, WI

    03/28/2001 03:42:31
    1. 1870 census lookup please
    2. I need a lookup of the 1870 census of Clermont County if someone would be so kind. William McCoy 1819 Susanna 1826 Inita 1846 Sarah M 1849 James E 1853 Anna A 1857 M.H.C (girl) 1860 Any help would be great Thanks, Missy

    03/28/2001 08:18:21
    1. Harvey, Davis
    2. Darci R Stephan
    3. My Davis, and Harveys seem to intertwine. I have a Wm. Davis b. Aug. 9, 1851 married to Eliza Jane Harvey. Wm's father, Alexander Davis b. Nov. 9, 1819 married to Nancy J. Harvey. I have, from 1850 Tate Twp. a James Davis 62, Maria Davis 44, John Davis 21, Daniel Davis 17, Baldwin Harvey 17, Wm. H. Harvey 14. I'm trying to figure out if this Maria is also the same one that was married to Henry Harvey. This is very confusing. Any input appreciated! Thanks, Darci ________________________________________________________________ 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.

    03/27/2001 01:29:22
    1. Harrison
    2. Hi April, I'm interested in your Harrisons that were in Jennings County Indiana. My 3rd great-grandfather, Thomas Harrison lived in Jennings Co. INdiana in the 1830s. Land records show his wife's name to be Jahila. Their daughter Lydia married Lyman Harrington in Jennings Co., in 1841. Lydia and Lyman lived in Tipp. County Indiana until moving to Cerro Gordo ILlinois after 1850 where they spent the rest of their lives. I have no further info on Thomas or Jahila except that Lydia reported her father being born in Va. Lydia herself was born in Indiana on Jan. 16, 1821. Thomas does not appear in the 1850 Jennings Co, census so either he died or moved. Any ideas? Melissa Parrish

    03/27/2001 01:00:35
    1. :) Frog Wisdom
    2. Barbara Jean Green
    3. Two frogs fell into a deep cream bowl. One was an optimistic soul. But the other took the gloomy view. "We'll drown," he lamented without much ado, and with a last despairing cry, he flung up his legs and said "Goodbye." Quote the other frog with a steadfast grin, "I can't get out but I won't give in, I'll just swim around till my strength is spent, then I'll die the more content." Bravely he swam to work his scheme, and his struggles began to churn the cream. The more he swam, his legs a flutter, the more the cream turned into butter. On top of the butter at last he stopped, and out of the bowl he gaily hopped. What is the moral? It's easily found... If you can't hop out, keep swimming around!

    03/27/2001 01:52:51
    1. APRIL FOOL'S DAY coming up!
    2. Barbara Jean Green
    3. April Fool's Day: Beware! Claim: April Fools' Day began in the 1500s when the Gregorian calendar took over from the Julian. Those who forgot the change and attempted to celebrate New Year's (previously celebrated on the 1st of April) on the wrong date were teased as "April Fools." Status: Undetermined. Origins: It has become tradition on the first of April to pull jokes of the harmless variety on those near and dear to us. We plot and we scheme, and often the yuks are funnier in our imaginings than how they play out in reality but that doesn't stop us from sending the little kid in us out on a rampage. Even the most staid among us have been known to indulge in a practical joke or two, so beware of trusting anyone on that day! How the custom of pranking on April 1 came about remains shrouded in mystery. When the western world employed the Julian calendar, years began on March 25. Festivals marking the start of the New Year were celebrated on the first day of April because March 25 fell during Holy Week. The adoption of the Gregorian calendar during the 1500s moved the New Year to January 1. According to the most widely-believed origin for April Fools' Day, those who could be tricked into believing April 1 was still the proper day to celebrate the New Year earned the sobriquet of April fools. To this end, French peasants would unexpectedly drop in on neighbors on that day in a effort to confuse them into thinking they were receiving a New Year's call. Out of that one jape supposedly grew the tradition of testing the patience of family and friends. But that's only one theory... Wherever and whenever the custom began, it has since evolved its own lore and set of unofficial rules. Superstition has it that the pranking period expires at noon on the 1st of April and any jokes attempted after that time will call bad luck down onto the head of the perpetrator. Additionally, those who fail to respond with good humor to tricks played upon them are said to attract bad luck to themselves. Arguably the best media-generated April Fool's joke dates from a Richard Dimbleby "news report" aired on 1 April 1957 on BBC's Panorama. It opened with a line about Spring coming early this year, prompting the spaghetti harvest in Switzerland to be early too. Against a video backdrop of happy peasant women harvesting spaghetti from trees, whimsical claims about the foodstuff's cultivation were made in a straightfaced manner. Spaghetti's oddly uniform length was explained as the result of years of dedicated cultivation. The ravenous spaghetti weevil which had wreaked havoc with harvests of years past had been conquered, said the report. More than 250 viewers jammed the BBC switchboard after the hoax aired, most of them calling in with serious inquiries about the piece -- where could they go to watch the harvesting operation? Could they buy spaghetti plants themselves? (For those anxious to try their hand at homegrown pasta, Panorama producer Michael Peacock offered this helpful hint: "Many British enthusiasts have had admirable results from planting a small tin of spaghetti in tomato sauce." Although adults get into the spirit of things (ask any zoo worker about manning the phones on April 1 and having to field endless calls for Mr. Lyon, Guy Rilla, and Albert Ross), it's the children who seem to truly celebrate the day with wild abandon. April Fool pranking between students and teachers is an ongoing battle of wits, with kids favoring the timeworn standards of a tack on the chair, the "missing class" (kids hide under their desks when the teacher is momentarily called out of the room), or a springy fabric snake coiled in a can of nuts. Not every teacher fights back, but those who do are often inventive about it. For more than 20 years, one grade school teacher in Boston comes in early on that day to write the day's assignment upside down on the blackboard. When her curious students arrive, she tells them she did it by standing on the ceiling.

    03/27/2001 01:34:56
    1. Julia Redman/William Davis
    2. Is there anyone researching a Julia Redman that Married William Davis in Clermont county in 1853? Rose

    03/27/2001 01:12:21
    1. Re: QWERTY...Keyboard
    2. Herman Kleine
    3. Group, When I was a kid my father acquired an old typewriter that did not have the qwerty keyboard. My recollection is that it had the type on curved bars fastened at both ends. The different radii of the arcs permitted each letter to strike the paper at the same place. Other than those two differences it had the appearance of the manual typewriters many of us are familiar with. Herman Kleine -----Original Message----- From: Barbara Jean Green <bjgreen@infinet.com> To: OHCLERMO-L@rootsweb.com <OHCLERMO-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Sunday, March 25, 2001 10:38 AM Subject: QWERTY...Keyboard >WHY is the keyboard in such a weird order? > >...Christopher Latham Sholes developed the typewriter. But he didn't do a >particularly fantastic job of it. Sure, the idea was pretty neat. > >A series of rods--called type bars--hung in a circle, under a sheet of >paper. At the end of each rod was a small piece of type corresponding to a >letter of the alphabet. When you pressed a key, the appropriate bar would >swing up and strike the paper. Pretty nifty. Too bad Sholes was stuck in >1860s Milwaukee and didn't quite have the tools to pull this off. > >His type bars had a nasty tendency to tangle. The reason: He had arranged >the rods in alphabetical order and commonly used letter-pairs were too close >together. So he did a bit of brainstorming and came up with the QWERTY key >arrangement. By spacing the most popular letter-pairs far enough apart, >jams were minimized. > >Over the years, other inventors devised keyboards they claimed were more >efficient than QWERTY. But these never took hold because, frankly, no one >could be bothered learning how to type again. > >______________________________

    03/26/2001 05:23:59
    1. remove
    2. "Robert \"Bob\" Hills"
    3. Please remove all updates on Clermont CO. to this e/mail address.

    03/26/2001 03:59:14