Hello, I am looking for anyone who may have info on a Harriet A. Ramsey who was born about 1823 (maybe Ohio, maybe NJ). Her Mother was Sarah Emery (daughter of John and Deborah (Waters) Emery). Sarah was first associated with or married to a Mr. Ramsey and they produced Harriet. Sarah then married James Breeding and both of them and several of their children are buried in Bloom Rose Cemetery (edge of Brown and Clermont co). Harriet married Moses Thompson (Jan 1842) and they lived in Clermont for several years. Below is a list of the children for Harriet and Moses and also a list for Sarah and James Breeding . I am basically looking for anyone who can help me find out about Harriet's father and am hoping to find someone else who has been researching this family. Thank you so much for your time. Tina ======================================== Descendants of Moses F. Thompson 1 Moses F. THOMPSON 1821 - 1884 . +Harriet A. RAMSEY 1823 - 1882 ....... 2 Sarah E. THOMPSON 1843 - 1911 .......... +John CAMERON 1843 - ....... 2 Jacob Andrew (Barton) THOMPSON 1845 - 1911 .......... +Rebecca Loutica (Luticia) SHELTON 1847 - 1924 ....... 2 Mary Anne THOMPSON 1848 - 1911 .......... +? STEWART ....... 2 James B. THOMPSON 1850 - 1911 ....... 2 Angeline B. THOMPSON 1853 - 1860 ....... 2 Thomas J. THOMPSON 1855 - 1911 ....... 2 Martha B. THOMPSON 1859 - 1911 .......... +? DANBERY ....... 2 William W. THOMPSON 1861 - 1911 ....... 2 Margaret M. THOMPSON 1863 - 1911 .......... +William A. MCKEEVER ....... 2 Maxwell P. THOMPSON 1866 - 1911 *2nd Wife of Moses F. THOMPSON: . +Charlotte DONHAM - 1884 ============================= Descendants of James Breeding 1 James BREEDING 1807 - 1862 . +Sarah EMERY 1802 - 1871 ....... 2 Debbie A. BREEDING 1832 - ....... 2 Mary BREEDING 1834 - ....... 2 John E. BREEDING 1836 - ....... 2 Henry E. BREEDING 1838 - ....... 2 James W. BREEDING 1842 - 1875 ....... 2 George M. BREEDING 1844 - 1863 ....... 2 Elisha E. BREEDING 1849 - ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.
Found this on Franklin Co., Indiana page and thought this might interest Clermont Co., Ohio researchers. Bonnie Famtree456@aol.com Franklin County, Book C Deed 1817. Morris Witham and Rebeckah, his wife, to Edmund Billings. Signed Morris Witham, Rebeckah (X) Witham. Witness none, recorded 1818. p 325
I am researching the forebears of Elizabeth RODGERS, daughter of James and Lucy RODGERS, born 5/20/1810 in Cherry Valley, NY, married to Joseph HERRON in 1828 in New Richmond, Clermont County, Ohio, died 3/5/1837 in Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio. Ed in CA
To Davis Crane Near Denhams Town Clearmont County State of Ohio May 3rd 1812. Clear Creek Warren County Dear Cousin I have bin to owl Creek and saw your land and mine, and I found it lay in such a sittuation that both hundred acres ought to belong to one man. I am willing to buy or sell and I wish you would be so kind as to write to me imediately whether you will buy or not or whether you will sell or not and if you will sell what will be your price, and how and when your payments must be made and by so doing you will much oblige your friend and Cousin L. Ball P.S. I found Cousin Bewitcht on owl Creek. I should never thought the Witches could get so far back into the Countery But the Damnd Creatures is just like the Rats. They go where the people does. I wish I knew whether they have left Denhams Town or not. The cursed things is so cuning I am fraid they will get into this settlement, after the army marches. Direct your answer to Lebanon Post office with speed from your most obedient Luther Ball To Davis Crane
Hello everyone. Yesterday, someone told me that in a Clermont County Naturalization book that there was a listing for a Jacob Borst, who came to the US here and was naturalized in Clermont COUnty, about 1854. If anyone has that publication, could they please look him up for me, please. Also--I have been unable to find my Borst family in the Ohio census for 1860. I am seeking a Jacob Burst with a daughter Katherine, who was my great-grandmother. Katherine was born May 21, 1845. We thought Germany, but in the census she always gives her birthplace as KY. Thank you. Buffy
Walt, I looked for him a while back, but was unable to find anything, however I didn't look in Brown or Warren counties any chance he may be in either one of these? Bruce Walt Conner wrote: > Does anyone know if Hugh Rankin, born Abt 1780 and married Elizabeth > Light in 1806 in Clermont Co., OH, is listed as buried in Clermont > Co., OH? > > Thanks for any help, > > Walt Conner > > ============================== > Free Web space. ANY amount. ANY subject. > RootsWeb's Freepages put you in touch with millions. > http://cgi.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/acctform.cgi
I posted yesterday Mittletown,Monmouth Co,ne NJ'S merchant JOHN Bowne's 1707 [?] estate inventory twice mentioning Antoni Sadowski amd Mordachi Lincoln. I noted elsewhere that Increase Miller had some Holmes blood. Background Holmes Family History HOLMES FAMILY HISTORY OBADIAH HOLMES >From "Baptist Piety: The Last Will and Testament of Obadiah Holmes", Edwin S. Gaustad Arno Press 1980. D. Testimony to his Children VERY PROBABLY OBADIAH HOLMES' POSTERITY WAS HIS GREATEST LEGACY. His nine children presented him with some forty-one grandchildren. If that rate of productivity continued to the end of the colonial period, Obadiah and Catherine Holmes would have been responsible by that time for a progeny of more than twenty thousand persons! It is, of course, impossible to follow more than a couple of lines. Of the immediate children, four migrated south, either to Gravesend on Long Island or across Lower New York Bay into New Jersey, forming there a settlement named Middletown in honor of the Rhode Island home. Among the twelve original patentees of Monmouth County, New Jersey were Obadiah Holmes, Jr. and John Bowne, the husband of Lydia Holmes. Obadiah, Jr. later settled in Cohansey (West Jersey), which became a major Baptist center; he served as a lay preacher as well as "at the time of his death in 1723 a judge of common pleas for Salem County."[*] Jonathan Holmes also settled in Middletown, where he was elected deputy to the New Jersey assembly in 1668. A decade later he and John Bowne served on the Middletown-Shrewsbury court. Bowne, in fact, later became "a great figure in East Jersey"[1] And it is through Lydia and John Bowne that the senior Obadiah Holmes stands as an ancestor of Abraham Lincoln."**" Mary Holmes, the eldest daughter, married John Browne, son of Chad Brown, the Baptist minister in Providence, Rhode Island. From this union emerged the remarkable "Browns of Providence Plantations," that family so central to the economic, cultural, and educational life of the colony-state from that day to this.[***] The second daughter, Martha, married a man named Odlin, a fact known only through the reference to her in her father's will. The same minimal information is available for the youngest daughter, Hopestill, who married a Taylor and died sometime before her father made out last final will in 1681. Samuel Holmes, who also died before his father did (in 1679), was, along with his wife, among those migrating to Gravesend. John Holmes apparently remained in the Rhode Island region, for he witnessed a land sale by John and Mary Browne in 1669;[2] he was twice married and the father of nine children. Jonathan Holmes, also the father of nine children, purchased the family farm (see Section G, below), returned to Newport and joined his father"s church. He was not the eldest son, but was probably chosen because he could make the desired financial settlement. Jonathan in turn left the farm to his son, Joseph, who expanded the holdings considerably, leaving an estate valued at nearly £8000 (compared with the estate of his grandfather, valued at about £130).[3] In Rhode Island, New York, and New Jersey, and ultimately in the nation that Obadiah Holmes never knew, his children"and their children's children "came to constitute an imposing monument. In colonial New England, among Puritans and Baptists alike, a parent was expected to offer counsel and wisdom to his children before his death. Richard Mather, for example, wrote of his "be loved sons" near the end of his life: . . . I think it not amiss, for the furtherance of their spiritual good, to lay upon them this serious and solemn charge of a dying Father, that none of them presume, after my decease, to walk in any other way of sin or wickedness, in one kind or in another, or in a careless neglect of God or of the things of God and of their own salvation by Christ....[4] Roger Clap began his memoirs in this fashion: "I thought good, my dear children, to leave with you some account of God's remarkable providences to me.... The Scripture requires us to tell God's wondrous works to our children that they may tell them to their children, that God may have glory throughout all ages."[5] And it was far better for a father to speak the words too early "in Holmes" case, seven years before his death"than to wait until it was too late. John Barnard's father delayed too long, and his son noted in his diary: "He spake but a few words which is a very great aggravation of my sorrow; had it pleased God to have given him the use of his tongue, he might have spoken something that might have had a great and lasting impression upon my heart...."[6] Obadiah Holmes thus followed a respected and pervasive tradition as he faithfully discharged this serious paternal duty. In writing to his children, some of whom were "in Christ" and some of whom (judging from external appearances) were not, Holmes reminds them of the biblical models for whom they are named. Biblical names were bestowed not just because they were familiar or conveniently "at hand," but because they held forth a standard anda goal by which one's growth in "wisdom and in stature" might be measured. The family enjoyed a closeness which Holmes hoped would not be shattered by his death; he enjoined that their love, one to another," continue and increase...visit one another...take counsel one of another...advise...reprove...and take it well." As was the case in the Puritan tradition generally, Holmes does not counsel a withdrawal from the world or a monastic sort of asceticism. What God has given, enjoy--and "be you content with your present condition." Meat is good, gluttony is not; drink is good, drunkenness is not; living in and with the world is good, yet attachment to and reliance upon the world is a costly and eternally damning sin. But the pervading mood of Holmes' letter to his children is that it is now up to them--and to God. "Although my care and counsel has been extended to you," now it is beyond my ken and control. Let your life be "squared" with the Scriptures; and be prepared, as courageous sons and daughters, to part with all else "for truth's sake." *John E. Pomfret, The Province of East New Jersey, 1609-1702 (Princeton, 1962), pp. 42-44; Pomfret, The Province of West New Jersey, 1609-1702 (Princeton, 1956), p. 274; Norman H. Maring, Baptists in New Jersey (Valley Forge, Pa.,1964), pp.14f.,23,38, 41,74. The following listing is drawn largely"though not exclusively " from J. O. Austin, Geneological Dictionary, pp. 103-104. (John?, "infant of Obadiah Hulmes of Redish" buried at Stockport June 27, 1633) 1. Mary (?-1690+); married John Browne; 7 children 2. Martha (1640-1682+); married ____ Odlin 3. Samuel (1642-1679); married Alice Stillwell; 6 children 4. Obadiah (1644-1723); married ____Cole; 5 children 5. Lydia (?-1682 +); married John Bowne; 5 children 6. Jonathan (?-1713); married Sarah Borden; 9 children 7. John (1649-1712);married, Frances Holden; M. Greene; 9 children 8. Hopestill (?-between 1675 and 1681), married Taylor 9. Joseph (?- 1682 + ); mentioned in will; no other record **The discovery of the direct line from Holmes to Abraham Lincoln was made by Wilbur Nelson, who published a small booklet on the subject: Obadiah Holmes,Ancestor and Prototype of Abraham Lincoln (Newport, 1932). The chart below is found on page 156. Obadiah Holmes Catherine Hyde | Samuel Lincoln Lydia Holmes Martha John Bowne |I| Mordecai Lincoln Sarah Bowne Sarah Jones Richard Salter | | Mordecai Lincoln & Hannah Salter | John Lincoln Rebecca Morris | Abraham Lincoln Bathsheba Herring | Thomas Lincoln Nancy Hanks | Abraham Lincoln ***James B. Hedges, The Browns of Providence Plantations: Colonial Years (Cambridge, Mass.,1952). A portion of the chart found on p.21 is given below: John Browne (b.1630) - Mary Holmes | James Browne (b 1666)-Mary E Harris | Obadiah (b.1712) James (b 1698)-Hope Bowen Elisha(b. 1717) | James (b. 1724) Nicholas (b. 1729) Joseph (b.1733) John (b. 1736) Moses b).1738) By the end of the nineteenth century, at least one dozen "Obadiah Brown's" occur in this lineage; see [A. I. Bulkley], Chad Browne Memorial . . . I638-1888 (Brooklyn, 1888). >From "The Lincoln Kinsman", Nbr 23 published by Lincolniana Publishers, F.t Wayne, IN: The article starts with information on Richard Saltar and continues to the Bowne family and then to John Bowne's wife's family, the Holmeses. Not only were the Bownes important in colonial political history but Captain bowne married into a family equally influential in the field of religion. Captain Bowne's wife was Lydia Holmes, youngest daughter of the Reverend Obadiah and Katherine Hyde Holmes. Reverend Obadiah Holmes, the pioneer, landed at Salem Massachusetts, about four years after Captian Bowne, so...can be traced back to Salem, where Samuel Lincoln landed in 1637. Obadiah was born at Preston, Lancaster, England in 1606, the son of Robert Holmes (spelled Hulme). Upon arriving in America in 1639 he worked at glass making in Salem for seven years.... Obadiah Holmes united with the baptists shortly after 1646 and, because of the persecutions he was obliged to undergo, moved to Newport in 1650. The following summer he was arrested for preaching doctrines contrary to the belief of the established church. He was taken to Boston and imprisoned for several weeks. Finally he was taken to the whipping-post on Boston Common and given thirty strokes with a three-corded whip which left him for weeks in a frightful physical condition. As soon as he was able he returned to the pastorate at the First Baptist Church at Newport. He preached here about thirty years, serving until the time of his death of October 15, 1682. He was buried at Middletown, five miles from Newport. Several of the eight children migrated to New Jersey, among them his son Obadiah and his youngest daughter,Lydia Holmes Bowne, the wife of Captain John Bowne.... The holems were among the first land purchasers in New Jersey, Obadiah and Jonathon Holmes acquiring land as early as 1668. In 1675 a list, containing the names of those with Rights of Land due according to the concessions, contained the name of "Obadiah Holmes for self and wife 240 acres." The Holmes family took a vital interst in political activities of New Jersey, and whena provincial Congress was called to take action on "tyrannical acts" of Great Britain in 1774, two of the delegates from Monmouth County were members of the Holmes family." This articles gives the foollowing information on Obadiah and Katherine Hyde Holmes and their eight children: Obadiah 1607-1682 m. Katherine Hyde: Mary (1639-1690) m. John Brown Martha (1640-1682) Samuel (1642-1679) m. Alice Stilwell Obadiah (1644-1723) m. Hannah Cole John (1649-1712) m. 1) Frances Holden (2) Mary (Sayles) Green Jonathon ( -1713) m. Sarah Borden Hopestill (no dates) m. _______ Taylor Lydia (1669-1714) m. Captain John Bowne 1Pomfret, East New Jersey, pp.44, 56, 96 2 Early Records of the Town of Providence, 21 vols. (Providence: 1892-1915), I, 17. 3 Newport Historical Society, Vault A, Box 50, Folder 9. Jonathan Holmes received one of the largest land grants in Monmouth County-761 acres. He also served as captain of the Middletown (N.J.) militia in 1673. See Edwin P. Tanner, The Province of New Jersey, 1664-1738 (New York, reprint 1967); and Documents Relative to the Colonial History of New York (Albany, 1858), II, 608. 4 Quoted in Gordon E. Geddes, "Welcome Joy! Death in Puritan New England,1630- 1730" (Ph. D. diss., University of California Riverside,1976), p.136. 5 Ibid., pp. 135-136. 6 Ibid., p. 135. A great link to a Bowne family descendant: http://www.ptsi.net/user/umschab/des/de2G3711.htm List of Surnames Home
----- Original Message ----- From: <OHCLERMO-D-request@rootsweb.com> To: <OHCLERMO-D@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2000 5:00 AM Subject: OHCLERMO-D Digest V00 #144
Does anyone know if Hugh Rankin, born Abt 1780 and married Elizabeth Light in 1806 in Clermont Co., OH, is listed as buried in Clermont Co., OH? Thanks for any help, Walt Conner
Ancestry.com's statement says "Dat6a may be used by non-commercial entities" as long as the statement of policy is included. They do not restrict the free sharing of information, as long as credit it given, but any use for profit is prohibited. Virginia.
Harriet - I am researching John HERON/HERRON who came to Philadelphia c 1790 settling in Lancaster County, moved to Clermont County c 1816. He and his wife, Rebecca CLARKE, had eight children: David, John, James, Andrew, William, Anna, Rebecca, and Joseph. Rebecca HERRON m. Moses RARIDEN in 1833. They had 3 children: Timothy Andrew, John Furly and Parmella. Is this the RARIDEN line you are researching? Regards, Ed in CA
Is posting copyrighted material illegal like that from Ancestry.com?
Is anyone familiar with the Richardses of Franklin and/or Washington Townships (Felicity) from 1808 (approximately) through 1930s. Generations that farmed and stayed in the vicinity are: J. Franklin 1862-~1930 (m. Caddie Moore); father Robert J. 1825-1909 (m. Bena Smith, imm. Ger 1840); his father according to one theory was a John Richards 1788-1849 (m. Anna Richards, different family, 1796-1880). Anna was daughter of George Richards and Anne Penn , both from Frederick MD. . The other account I have come across is that Robert was son of Noah Richards and Mary____ (Noah was Anna's brother, b. 1797) Robert J. had a brother William F. who m. Roseanna Morehead. Robert, William and Anna Richards Wedding(2nd marriage) were at same address at 1880 census. Can anybody verify/ discount/ or otherwise comment on this family? Dee Franz
My wife learned today that her eldest maternal aunt,Virginia Ashton m Jack Donaworth, just died. I think Virginia was in the 1st class my 101y Dad taught at Williamsburg High, 1927-28. Jack sold Baldwin pianos in downtown Cincinnati; then had his own Baldwin dealership in Wisc,and lastly, Ft Myers,Fla. Jack and Virginia had a son,Jack ,who was a Navy pilot, and a dau June Donaworth Smith,who survive. James Allen Ashton and Myrtle Mahaffey were Virginia's parents, and she had 3 sisters. Eleanor [Kelly] m 1st Dutch Coyle,and 2nd,Ed Kuster. Kathleen m Carl Foster, and my m-i-law Jean Ashton m 1st Eldon Kirkpatrick,and 2nd Frank Summers.
Ancestry.com - Individual Database Search ResultsMember Login | My Account earch > Record Type > New York Military in the Revolution > Search ResultsJune 9, 2000 Search Results Database: Full Context of New York Military in the Revolution C New York in the Revolution Supplement; The Military and Naval Service The Army American Prisoners of War Previous to the battle of Long Island, Aug. 27, 1776, very few of the Americans had become Prisoners to the Enemy. One thousand were taken after that Battle; and 700 at Fort Washington, when the British came in full possession of the City of New York and its immediate vicinity. The Presbyterian and Dutch Reformed Churches of that City were the first Prisons for the captive Americans. Then other Churches, the Provoost (later the Hall of Records) Columbia College and the sugar houses in Liberty and Duane Streets were used for the same purpose. The accommodations being crowded, transport ships were used in Wallabout Bay, on the Brooklyn shore. The worst of the Prison Ships was the "Jersey". Others were:--the "Scorpion", the "Falmouth", the "Good Hope", the "Chatham" and the "Prince of Wales". While the deaths in the Prisons on shore were frequent, the mortality on the Prison Ships was far worse--as many as 15,000 in the latter case. In 1808, the bones of many of the Prisoners were given public burial in Brooklyn, by the Tammany Society of New York; and, in 1826, a monument was erected to their memory at the Wallabout. New York in the Revolution Supplement; The Military and Naval Service The Army American Prisoners of War John Beaty, Elias Boudinot, Thomas Franklin, Lewis Pintard and Abraham Skinner were Commissaries of Prisoners; and Thomas Franklin and Garret H. Van Wagenen were Deputy Commissaries. Thomas Linn was director of the Hospital, in Canada. Henry Dodge was Commissary of Prisoners' Pay. New York in the Revolution Supplement; The Military and Naval Service The Army American Prisoners of War American Prisoners were also kept in New Utrecht, Flatbush (the Bergen Homestead), Gravesend, Flatlands and New Lots--all on Long Island. These Prisoners were taken, for the most part, at Fort Washington, Fort Montgomery and Germantown. Col. Samuel B. Webb, of the Connecticut Line, himself a Prisoner, was active in making exchanges. He corresponded, at great length, with Gen. Washington and the Continental Congress on this subject. Little was done, however, because the British and American authorities could not agree upon a ratio of exchange. (See Sparks' "Life of Washington"; and the several volumes of "The Public Papers of George Clinton", already published.) Col. John Ely, also of the Connecticut Line, as a Prisoner, ministered to the wants of the Prisoners on Long Island. He was a physician, especially skilled in the treatment of small-pox. His son led a sortie, captured a British officer of equal rank and made all the arrangements for the exchange of Col. Ely. But the latter refused to leave the Prisoners; and he remained with them almost to the end of the War. New York in the Revolution Supplement; The Military and Naval Service The Army American Prisoners of War Governor Clinton was an active agent in bettering the condition of the Prisoners. He expended as follows:--Dec. 15, 1777, a certain amount to Miss Clopper for three barrels of flour to be delivered to the Prisoners in the General Hospital, in New York City; Nov. 15, 1782, £84 to Captains Ward and Drake for the use of the Prisoners in Canada; Nov. 21, 1782, £3.4. to Capt. Harper for the use of the Prisoners returning from their captivity in Canada; Mar. 26, 1783, £3.14.6 for the same purpose; July, 1783, £175 to Nicholas Covenhoven for money advanced by him to the Prisoners on Long Island; September, 1783, £300 to Colonels Allison and McClaughry, and £2000 to Col. Allison, for the same purpose; Apr. 20, 1784, £30 to Thomas Tillotson for the use of the Prisoners; and, November, 1784, £3.4. to Alexander Harper for the same purpose. New York in the Revolution Supplement; The Military and Naval Service The Army American Prisoners of War The Governor, Jan. 21, 1783, had raised £25566.17.6 on the credit of the State in this manner:-- New York in the Revolution Supplement; The Military and Naval Service The Army American Prisoners of War Any Person upon Long Island who will advance to Colo. William Allison for the Use of himself and the other Officers of this State Prisoners of War the Sum of Five hundred Pounds in specie shall be repaid as soon as conveniently may be; for which the Faith of the State is hereby pledged--Given under my Hand at Kingston this 20th June 1780 New York in the Revolution Supplement; The Military and Naval Service The Army American Prisoners of War Geo. Clinton. New York in the Revolution Supplement; The Military and Naval Service The Army American Prisoners of War Received I September 1780 of Mr. Rem Cowenhoven the Sum of Three Hundred and Eleaven Pounds in Gold and Silver--in part of the Within draft New York in the Revolution Supplement; The Military and Naval Service The Army American Prisoners of War Wm. Allison Colo. N. Y. Militia. New York in the Revolution Supplement; The Military and Naval Service The Army American Prisoners of War [Indorsed] Recd. April 13th 1785. from Gerard Bancker Treasr. three hundred and eighty two pounds nineteen Shillings in full for the principal and Interest of this Note. Copyright © 1998-2000, MyFamily.com Inc. and its subsidiaries.
Since the subject of the message was referenced to Reakirt, I thought it would be pretty clear that these people mentioned would have that specific name. Bruce "Robert \"Bob\" Hills" wrote: > Wish you folks would use last names with your data so that the rest of > us could find them useful as well. A good example is the following > message. Is this Mary Reakirt and John Reakirt or some other surname? > > Bruce G Sillett wrote: > > > > Mary, found the following listed in the Monument book > > Green Mound Cemetery in New Richmond > > John born in Phila. Pa.on May15,1792 died 7/6/1894 > > Nancy wife of John born in Center County Pa. on 10/16/1795 died > > 6/29/1882. > > New Richmond was ,back then split in two parts. One was Sussana and > > the other > > was New Richmond, Susanna was later incorporated into New Richmond. > > Herm Fagley can probably tell us more about this. Hope this helps. > > Bruce > > > > ============================== > > Free Web space. ANY amount. ANY subject. > > RootsWeb's Freepages put you in touch with millions. > > http://cgi.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/acctform.cgi
They are in the Batavia Cemetery. There is only one in Batavia to the best of my knowledge. It is fairly easy to find. Bruce EBlair428@aol.com wrote: > Bruce, I have John White & Clarisa S. ROGERS....what Batavia cemetery are > they buried in? This John was the son of David WHITE & Nancy VAUGHAN. > > Eileen Blair
I'm moving, please unsubscribe me please, I'll resubscribe later. Thanks. Sincerely, William Baker mailto:scotsman@fidnet.com Researching: Sloan (Slone), Thompson, Edenton (place), Mann, Harris, Prickett
Hi, List, Does anyone have any JAMES in New Richmond? Following a hunch . . . Claudia
I need to be removed from the lists for a short time I am being sent to a school for my job until August and need to be removed from the list until the end of August how do I get this done? Beth