In a message dated 8/17/2004 3:35:29 PM Eastern Standard Time, rchafin@mindspring.com writes: DOES ANYONE HAVE THE PHONE NUMBER FOR THE ARCHIVE IN CLEVELAND? The Cuyahoga County Archives 2905 Franklin Blvd. Cleveland, Ohio 44113 216-443-7250 FAX-216-443-3636
Richard Chafin rchafin@mindspring.com Why Wait? Move to EarthLink. DOES ANYONE HAVE THE PHONE NUMBER FOR THE ARCHIVE IN CLEVELAND?
I would like to make contact with anyone with these Surnames. I have documents I would like to share. lflowers@altadisusa.com lucieflowers@earthlink.net
At 10 Colfax Street, which runs parallel with Kinsman Rd. (around E.68th-E.79th) and is just a short distance south from Woodland Cemetery. Sandy On 17 Aug 2004 at 1:48, Kcs423@aol.com wrote: > Did find them on the 1880 census > > Cuyahoga County, Cleveland > > Charles GREENE, 46, b. ENG, sewing machine agent, > Jane, wife, 37, b. ENG > John, son, 14, at school > Joseph, son, 12, at school > Edward, son, 10, at school > George, son, 8, at school > Gertrittarde, daughter, 6 > Mina, daughter, 4 > Evett, son, 6m > > All children b. OH > > Had no luck yet on 1870 or 1900. > > > ==== OHCUYAHO Mailing List ==== > Reminder: Please do not send GEDCOM's or large files to the list. > These must be sent to the user who requested them. Please contact the County Coordinator, Katie McClellan-Ross at (kathryn.ross2@verizon.net) with questions or concerns. > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 >
Did find them on the 1880 census Cuyahoga County, Cleveland Charles GREENE, 46, b. ENG, sewing machine agent, Jane, wife, 37, b. ENG John, son, 14, at school Joseph, son, 12, at school Edward, son, 10, at school George, son, 8, at school Gertrittarde, daughter, 6 Mina, daughter, 4 Evett, son, 6m All children b. OH Had no luck yet on 1870 or 1900.
Hello... This is a great help but can you tell me what Ward Number is attached to this 1910 census enumeration? Bette > I just lucked out. Here it is.... > > Series T624, Roll 1174, pages that include 161 *Heritage Quest > Enumerated April 18th, Supervisors Dist. 19, ED 339, Sheet 3A > > Check pages on either side for more names.
Hello. I found the following family on IGI through www.familysearch.org, and am trying to verify the details and find out more about the family. Let me know if you can help. Jane BEDFORD and Charles Vincent GREEN (b. 1837 London England - d. 11 Apr 1903) had the following children: John Robert GREEN (b. 25 Jun 1866, Cleveland - d. 25 Mar 1929) Joseph Henry GREEN (b.08 Apr 1868 Cleveland) Charles Edward GREEN (11 July 1870 Cleveland - 14 Sep 1949) George Richard GREEN (b. 03 Nov 1872 Cleveland - d. 12 Dec 1948) Margetta Gertrude GREEN (b. 19 Oct 1874 Cleveland) Ida Minnett GREEN (b. 11 Sep 1876 Cleveland - d. 03 Dec 1938) Everett Robert GREEN (b. 16 Jan 1879 Cleveland) Flossie Mable GREEN (b.01 May 1885 Cleveland - d. 14 Jun 1967) [note- dates for flossie & walter conflict] Walter Ralph GREEN (b. 23 May 1885 Cleveland - d. 09 Dec 1972) Roland Quinlan GREEN (b. 08 nov 1887 Cleveland - d. 23 May 1973) I have a cemetary record in Woodland Cemetery that appears to be for Jane & Charles and 2 of their sons (John R and Charles). And there's a marriage record on the online index for Jane & Charles (I haven't ordered a copy yet). I have found John R Green and Charles Edward Green in the necrology index. But I haven't been able to locate anyone in the census yet...or anything else online so far...so I thought I'd send this out to see if anyone else has information (or ideas for where else to look). Thanks, Kelly Moran moranfamilytree@hotmail.com _________________________________________________________________ Get ready for school! Find articles, homework help and more in the Back to School Guide! http://special.msn.com/network/04backtoschool.armx
Thanks so much for posting this hint. I have needed to find an orphage in Columbus, Franklin Co. and have yet to run across the orphan's home. I know I used just a first name to locate a WHITE. Tootsie MLYOUNG1@flash.net wrote: > I missed some of this discussion. > > I tried a little bit to find the orphanage. I don't have the > time to complete the search, but I did find 2 orphanages and a > convent. > > This is what I did.... > > I have a head of household index for 1910. > I searched for female children named Julia between 10 and 20 in > 1910 that were listed as heads of households in Cleveland. There > were quite a few, but this method theoretically will find the > orphanage eventually, if they had a girl named Julia. > > Do you have the family in the 1900 census? I have an image of > that I can e-mail you. > > Best of luck.... > > Melanie > > ==== OHCUYAHO Mailing List ==== > Register your surnames and queries at (http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohcuyaho/cuyaoh.htm) > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 -- "Lord, keep your arm around my shoulders....and your hand over my mouth."
I just lucked out. Here it is.... Series T624, Roll 1174, pages that include 161 *Heritage Quest Enumerated April 18th, Supervisors Dist. 19, ED 339, Sheet 3A Check pages on either side for more names.
I missed some of this discussion. I tried a little bit to find the orphanage. I don't have the time to complete the search, but I did find 2 orphanages and a convent. This is what I did.... I have a head of household index for 1910. I searched for female children named Julia between 10 and 20 in 1910 that were listed as heads of households in Cleveland. There were quite a few, but this method theoretically will find the orphanage eventually, if they had a girl named Julia. Do you have the family in the 1900 census? I have an image of that I can e-mail you. Best of luck.... Melanie
In a message dated 8/15/2004 6:33:36 PM Eastern Daylight Time, srozhon@comcast.net writes: The steel mills were a big draw for people looking for work. They sure were, in my family tho they went first to Pittsburgh Pa in time for the 1860 and went to Mahoning Co in 1865 Eliz
Barb How are you doing? It's been along time. Where is the Valentine Stark home ? I will be there next month. Are you still researching the Cullens? My cousin has done some research on them and the Falveys. I guess Terry had about 5 children that I never knew about. Did you know? John Carroll
Thanks Sandy and Jean, That never entered my mine even though his occupation in the 1900 census was "Foreman in Factory." Like one of those "duh" moments. I am not thinking like someone from that time in the industrial north. The only thing is that would have been an incentive from a lot of areas in PA. Back to looking at every census in every county of PA hoping for a link or hint to his father. Nancy Eustace Researching: Phelps, Pupikofer, Mackenzie I agree that the steel mills were a great incentive for work. Great industrial town. In PA my relatives worked in the coal mines that dried up. Jean -----Original Message----- From: Sandy Rozhon [mailto:srozhon@comcast.net] Sent: Sun, August 15, 2004 3:33 PM To: OHCUYAHO-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [OHCUYAHO] Incentive to move from PA to OH On 13 Aug 2004 at 15:25, NREustace@aol.com wrote: Paul Bauer mentioned in an email about a relative being born around 1850 in PA, but showing up in the 1900 census in Cuyahoga County. My Phelps line has done the same thing, in the same time frame. Was something going on during that time which gave them the incentive or caused these families to consider moving? I have yet to be able to determine where in PA they came from. The steel mills were a big draw for people looking for work. Sandy---===---===---===---===---===---===---===---===--- }><(((((*> Sandy Rozhon <*)))))><{ ---===---===---===---===---===---===---===---===---
Hello Eliz & Tootsie.... Thank you both for your response and offer to look in the 1910 Census for my orphans. I have already done so and the children of my focus are not indexed by their biological surname, WHITTERN, using the correct spelling or any corruption /mis-spelling of the name that I have been able to think of. The problem, as I see it, with using this approach is that the sisters (Julia & Lillian, ages 6 & 5 years) were given to the Asylum in 1902 and by 1910 were more than likely adopted by someone and using the new surname of their adopting parents. The children's surnames were likely changed not once (adoption) but twice if you consider the fact that they probably both married at some point... perhaps as early as 1915-1920. I have looked in the Cuyahoga County Historical Marriage Index for both the sisters and their mother's marriage with no success. This is a toughie and although I am not giving up I am discouraged. Of course, locating the records for the Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum would be the key to unlocking the mystery all these many years later. Can anyone help with the census page for the 'CPOA' in the 1910 Cuyahoga County Census? Bette > If you give me the name you are hunting maybe I can find it in the 1910 > Miracode and that will give the ED. Okay so it is the hard way <G> but might work > <G> > eliz
On 13 Aug 2004 at 15:25, NREustace@aol.com wrote: > Paul Bauer mentioned in an email about a relative being born around 1850 in > PA, but showing up in the 1900 census in Cuyahoga County. My Phelps line has > done the same thing, in the same time frame. Was something going on during > that time which gave them the incentive or caused these families to consider > moving? I have yet to be able to determine where in PA they came from. The steel mills were a big draw for people looking for work. Sandy---===---===---===---===---===---===---===---===--- }><(((((*> Sandy Rozhon <*)))))><{ ---===---===---===---===---===---===---===---===---
In a message dated 8/15/2004 10:57:35 AM Eastern Daylight Time, bmcintosh@new.rr.com writes: Can someone please tell me on what page (where) in the 1910 Cleveland, Cuyahoga County Census I will find the enumeration of the Protestant Orphan Asylum @ 5000 If you give me the name you are hunting maybe I can find it in the 1910 Miracode and that will give the ED. Okay so it is the hard way <G> but might work <G> eliz
I agree that the steel mills were a great incentive for work. Great industrial town. In PA my relatives worked in the coal mines that dried up. Jean -----Original Message----- From: Sandy Rozhon [mailto:srozhon@comcast.net] Sent: Sun, August 15, 2004 3:33 PM To: OHCUYAHO-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [OHCUYAHO] Incentive to move from PA to OH On 13 Aug 2004 at 15:25, NREustace@aol.com wrote: > Paul Bauer mentioned in an email about a relative being born around 1850 in > PA, but showing up in the 1900 census in Cuyahoga County. My Phelps line has > done the same thing, in the same time frame. Was something going on during > that time which gave them the incentive or caused these families to consider > moving? I have yet to be able to determine where in PA they came from. The steel mills were a big draw for people looking for work. Sandy---===---===---===---===---===---===---===---===--- }><(((((*> Sandy Rozhon <*)))))><{ ---===---===---===---===---===---===---===---===--- ==== OHCUYAHO Mailing List ==== Reminder: Please do not send GEDCOM's or large files to the list. These must be sent to the user who requested them. Please contact the County Coordinator, Katie McClellan-Ross at (kathryn.ross2@verizon.net) with questions or concerns. ============================== Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237
Hello All, Can someone please tell me on what page (where) in the 1910 Cleveland, Cuyahoga County Census I will find the enumeration of the Protestant Orphan Asylum @ 5000 St. Clair Street. I believe the address was located in Ward 9, at least that was the Ward number in 1900, but perhaps the wards were renumbered by 1910. I need both the Ward and page number for the Asylum in 1910. Thank you for any help along these lines. Bette
Hi Jean: Thank you. I don't know yet if there is a connection. I appreciate your message. Phyllis
Hi, Where in Ohio did your PA relatives go? My Mickley family came from PA at that same time into Knox County, specifically Danville. McKenzie is a big name in Danville. Cheryl Quinn