Does anyone have access to the 1850 Morgan County census and not mind doing a lookup for me? I am interested in the households of Thomas FOUCH on page 129 and Susan FOUCH on page 312. Thanks Barry Fox Greenville, SC
In a message dated 5/20/2001 5:36:23 PM Eastern Daylight Time, jgmott@wcoil.com writes: > If the list is through Rootsweb such as this one, the virus is not coming > from the list. Any list that has a "Rootsweb" is safe and is filtered for > virus. That does not mean that one can sneak through, but it has never > happened yet(that I know of) and I have been on many Rootsweb lists for 5 > years. > >From what I have seen, the virus is not coming through the list -- not directly. What seems to be happening is that, unfortunately, people on these various lists are getting the virus. When we send messages to the lists, and the person with the infected computer reads the email from the lists, the virus sends itself to the sender, thereby bypassing Rootsweb. We just all need to be careful in downloads, even if it is from someone you know. The person you know could have inadvertently downloaded this sneaky virus. If you receive an attachment, before downloading, take a little extra time and contact the sender to see what the contents of the attachment is. I have had the virus come through to me with very legitimate file names; but I was not expecting any attachments from anyone and I took that one little precaution and managed to -- so far -- stay virus free. Dot
In regard to the virus' circulating just recently, watch for ANY emails with attachments that you haven't been waiting for specifically. The viruses come in thru the attachments and rootsweb lists do not allow attachments. The digest form of the lists do send you the emails as an attachment, but if they have kept out the attachments from the original submission, they can't pass something on to you thru their attachment. Other signs of common viruses are odd subject lines, like "The Real Story of Snow White, Ha Ha Ha Ha", or exact duplicate emails, the second email is identical to the one preceding it, except the second is carrying an attachment, the Trojan horse type viruses in the attachment. Terri - in Florida _______________________________________________________________________ > If the list is through Rootsweb such as this one, the virus is not coming > from the list. Any list that has a "Rootsweb" is safe and is filtered for > virus. That does not mean that one can sneak through, but it has never > happened yet(that I know of) and I have been on many Rootsweb lists for 5 > years. > Gloria > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Sue Sisk" <suesisk@yahoo.com> > > > > > > > Seems like every list I join these day`s has Virus`s circulating. > > > > patti@infinet.com > > > > Please check out your computer! > > > > Sue > > > > ==== OHMORGAN Mailing List ==== > > > >
If the list is through Rootsweb such as this one, the virus is not coming from the list. Any list that has a "Rootsweb" is safe and is filtered for virus. That does not mean that one can sneak through, but it has never happened yet(that I know of) and I have been on many Rootsweb lists for 5 years. Gloria ----- Original Message ----- From: "Sue Sisk" <suesisk@yahoo.com> > > Seems like every list I join these day`s has Virus`s circulating. > > patti@infinet.com > > Please check out your computer! > > Sue
Seems like every list I join these day`s has Virus`s circulating. patti@infinet.com Please check out your computer! Sue
I don`t have the book or the index, that`s why I`m asking. Sue Yvonne Proch wrote: > > Sue-is there anything in the book about the Deavers-my lineage is-Rueben > > JamesMoody, Perley, Dora, Blair. In the Roseville area. Where would I get such a book? > Thanks, Yvonne > Sue Sisk wrote: > > > > > > Surname:NEEDHAM > > > > Does anyone have the book entitled > > "Historical Reminisces of Morgan County" or > > "Oak Grove A Pioneer Community" page 116 lists a Family Bible page > > for the NEEDHAM family. I have the page but I would like to know if > > the Bibliography lists where the family bible is or some way to > > check the information. > > > > Sue Sisk > > suesisk@yahoo.com > > > > > > ==== OHMORGAN Mailing List ==== > > > >
Surname:NEEDHAM Does anyone have the book entitled "Historical Reminisces of Morgan County" or "Oak Grove A Pioneer Community" page 116 lists a Family Bible page for the NEEDHAM family. I have the page but I would like to know if the Bibliography lists where the family bible is or some way to check the information. Sue Sisk suesisk@yahoo.com
Hi, I am wondering if anyone might know who the Contact person is for the McConnessville Cementary in Morgan County. I need to find who would have the actual Cem. records for burials there. I know some of the books list people, but I do not think a stone is there so I need to find someone at the cementary who might have acess to the records. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you all for your help. Stephen Fox
Hi List, I am going to temporarily UNSUBSCRIBE to the mailing list. For those of you that are expecting a reply and for those of you that are working with the following surnames - COX, MYERS, HARMON, HARMAN, BALDWIN, ROBISON, ROBINSON please e-mail me at patrobison@aol.com. For those of you that are searching or are sharing information on the following I will be in touch with you directly and again please send your responses to me direct at patrobison@aol.com. WILLIAM PERNAL COX THOMAS HARMON/HARMAN SARAH JANE MYERS CLARISSA JANE CAIN/KAIN HARMON WILLIAM AZAREAL COX CHARLES PERNAL COX LILLIE E. SHOMO THOMAS FRANKLIN COX CECIA A. BRADY DANA HERSHEL COX ADDIE LOUISE FIMPLE JOHN MILTON COX BESSIE VICTORIA PHILLIPS COX SKINNER ELIZABETH MELVINA HARMON COX SOLOMON MICHAEL ROBISON SOLOMON ROBINSON MARY ALICE SINNETT ROBINSON JOSHUA ROBINSON BERTHA VIRGINIA KAYLOR ROBISON JOHN KAYLOR Thanks for all you help and I will re-subscribe shortly. Pat Dallas, Texas patrobison@aol.com.
I'm looking for several Wilsons who may have been in Morgan Co. in the late 1850's and 1860's. They are: Shannon Wilson, b. abt 1839; Rebecca Wilson b. abt 1844; Ann Wilson, b. abt 1846, Delila Wilson, b. abt 1849 and Miley Wilson b. abt 1852. These are the children of Josiah Wilson and Phebe Durnal Wilson. Their mother and father lived in Bearfield Township, Perry Co. in the 1850's. Phebe died about 1857, and the children were "bound out" to "families in the area". Because of the proximity of Bearfield Township to Morgan County, I believe some of these children may have been living with families in Morgan. If any of these are "your" Wilsons, or if you can suggest other places I might look, I would appreciate hearing from you. Cindy Courtier ccourtier@russreid.com
My question about Stockport has been answered. Thank you all. Barb in MI
Would someone please tell me which Twp(s) Stockport & Big Bottom are in ?? Thank, Barb in MI
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------25F5C22BD5485C94AAC135EA Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Sorry, everyone, I did not intend to post to all. I had the address box set and then forgot to change it. That last message on Lebanon Cemetery should have gone only to the person asking. tjat was ,u fau;t sprru tp bptjer a;; pf upi/ --------------25F5C22BD5485C94AAC135EA Content-Type: text/x-vcard; charset=us-ascii; name="kha.vcf" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Description: Card for Haybron Adams Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="kha.vcf" begin:vcard n:Adams;Mr. K. Haybron x-mozilla-html:FALSE org:Brigham Young University;L. Tom Perry Special Collections adr:;;;Provo;Utah;; version:2.1 title:Associate Professor of Library Science fn:Mr. K. Haybron Adams end:vcard --------------25F5C22BD5485C94AAC135EA--
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------1DF96B95768B7B97C5551944 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit David is buried over in Leabanon Cemetery on State Hwy. 78. It is about 1/4 to 1/2 miles east of the jct. of Ohio 284 & Ohio 78. There is no tombstone for her. I'll look in the two histories and see if she is there. Sorry, to be so long getting back to you, my sister just called from Denver, and informed me my cousin in Chagrin Falls died of heart trouble. I'll get you an answer quickly, if she is in the history. Pjvgenealogy@aol.com wrote: > All I know is that David RUSH died in Bristol Twp, Morgan, OH. I had a > rreference that said he died in McConnelsville, but I know for a fact he > lived in Bristol TWP. I don't know if you have a book that only references > townships or not for that county. Pam --------------1DF96B95768B7B97C5551944 Content-Type: text/x-vcard; charset=us-ascii; name="kha.vcf" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Description: Card for Haybron Adams Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="kha.vcf" begin:vcard n:Adams;Mr. K. Haybron x-mozilla-html:FALSE org:Brigham Young University;L. Tom Perry Special Collections adr:;;;Provo;Utah;; version:2.1 title:Associate Professor of Library Science fn:Mr. K. Haybron Adams end:vcard --------------1DF96B95768B7B97C5551944--
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------3F4E15B259DCC91F85735B87 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit This may assist you in searching for Ohio Vital Records. I have previously posted a note about Marriage Records. If you need a Divorce Record, you need to look at the state level. Prior to the second Constitution which was written in 1852, Divorces were only granted by the Ohio Supreme Court. You must look for them there. Also, in some cases they had to be referred to the Supreme Court by the State Legislature, so you may also want to use the records of the State Legislature. OHIO BIRTH AND DEATH RECORDS Birth and Death Records for Ohio begin on a statewide basis in 1867. Some CITIES, E.G., Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Dayton, Youngstown, MAY have started earlier than the state. They created them to track diseases in certain neighborhoods, or within the city, so that they could determine if a number of people were dying from the same disease in a given location. This was important to the health departments. In the rural counties, which is most of the state, keeping these records was not mandated by state law until, as I have said, 1867. HOWEVER, In many cases we have found that it was almost 20 years or about 1885 before the law was being fully implemented by the various counties. In 1908, the law was changed and Departments of Health began to record the births and deaths in the state of Ohio. All the Births and Deaths recorded in the state of Ohio, FROM 1867- 1908?? (SOME COUNTIES CONTINUED TO RECORD THEM IN THE PROBATE COURT BOOKS UNTIL 1910) have been microfilmed and can be borrowed at your local Family History Center. The index to DEATH records after that date is available online through the Ohio Historical Society. The last time I checked it was from 1908-1944. You can then order the death certificate from them for that period. Death Certificates after that date are available. Look online at the Ohio Vital Records Cite. It is a government cite. USE THE OHIO GENWEB SITE. --------------3F4E15B259DCC91F85735B87 Content-Type: text/x-vcard; charset=us-ascii; name="kha.vcf" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Description: Card for Haybron Adams Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="kha.vcf" begin:vcard n:Adams;Mr. K. Haybron x-mozilla-html:FALSE org:Brigham Young University;L. Tom Perry Special Collections adr:;;;Provo;Utah;; version:2.1 title:Associate Professor of Library Science fn:Mr. K. Haybron Adams end:vcard --------------3F4E15B259DCC91F85735B87--
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------47956397566A36AB8159BC9A Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit I am sending this message I have created to answer your question, however, it may not apply IF you know where she died and it has been recorded in a cemetery inscription or a family/local history for Morgan County. Do you know where he is buried, I can look in the cemetery books for the county. I have all of them. OHIO BIRTH AND DEATH RECORDS Birth and Death Records for Ohio begin on a statewide basis in 1867. Some CITIES, E.G., Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Dayton, Youngstown, MAY have started earlier than the state. They created them to track diseases in certain neighborhoods, or within the city, so that they could determine if a number of people were dying from the same disease in a given location. This was important to the health departments. In the rural counties, which is most of the state, keeping these records was not mandated by state law until, as I have said, 1867. HOWEVER, In many cases we have found that it was almost 20 years or about 1885 before the law was being fully implemented by the various counties. In 1908, the law was changed and Departments of Health began to record the births and deaths in the state of Ohio. All the Births and Deaths recorded in the state of Ohio, FROM 1867- 1908?? (SOME COUNTIES CONTINUED TO RECORD THEM IN THE PROBATE COURT BOOKS UNTIL 1910) have been microfilmed and can be borrowed at your local Family History Center. The index to DEATH records after that date is available online through the Ohio Historical Society. The last time I checked it was from 1908-1944. You can then order the death certificate from them for that period. Death Certificates after that date are available. Look online at the Ohio Vital Records Cite. It is a government cite. Pjvgenealogy@aol.com wrote: > Is there somewhere a person could look for the death date for Mary RUSH, wife > of David RUSH? He died 1852. He was in the 1850 census with his son Willets > RUSH. In the 1850 census they had Mary as 73 yrs old. Thank you, Pam > > ==== OHMORGAN Mailing List ==== --------------47956397566A36AB8159BC9A Content-Type: text/x-vcard; charset=us-ascii; name="kha.vcf" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Description: Card for Haybron Adams Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="kha.vcf" begin:vcard n:Adams;Mr. K. Haybron x-mozilla-html:FALSE org:Brigham Young University;L. Tom Perry Special Collections adr:;;;Provo;Utah;; version:2.1 title:Associate Professor of Library Science fn:Mr. K. Haybron Adams end:vcard --------------47956397566A36AB8159BC9A--
Is there somewhere a person could look for the death date for Mary RUSH, wife of David RUSH? He died 1852. He was in the 1850 census with his son Willets RUSH. In the 1850 census they had Mary as 73 yrs old. Thank you, Pam
Could someone let me know if their is a Mary RUSH in the 1860 census of Bristol Twp? She was alive in the `1850 census of Bristol Twp. Her husband was David RUSH and son, Willets RUSH (Whose home she was in in 1850) David died in 1852. Thank you, Pam
I am looking for information on a David RUSH who died 28 March 1852 in McConnelsville. I don't know if his first wife Mary died there in 1830 or not. I also don't know if he remarried. Is there anyone who can do a marriage lookup, cemetery lookup, death record lookup, obit lookup, or will lookup? Thank you for your help. Pam
I am looking for information on a David RUSH who died 28 March 1852 in McConnelsville. I don't know if his first wife Mary died there in 1830 or not. I also don't know if he remarried. Is there anyone who can do a marriage lookup, cemetery lookup, death record lookup, obit lookup, or will lookup? Thank you for your help. Pam