Dear Lists: I just found a "Harold Bishop, 1900, mid-Atlantic" mentioned on Family Tree Maker's Family Finder's Index. Expanded info mentions CD # 323 for more info on this person. If SKS has CD 323, would you please see if you could find the Harold Bishop I mention? I want to see if this might be my missing maternal grandfather. Thank you kindly, Jacquie (California)
Larry, That is good advice, however some libraries won't order microfilm from the Archives (i.e. Marysville Public) and some people have to drive 40-50 miles to find a LDS Center (i.e., me!) just to find out they don't have the records you are looking for. Also, we do not know if Elizabeth Louise was the oldest (b. abt 1869), so you should start with the 1860. She could very well be the youngest and had siblings move out by 1870. Then get the 1870 and finally the 1880. Linda, I am a Union County Look-up volunteer. I have already added your post to my list of look-ups. I will be happy to check the census and birth records here at the Union County Genealogical Society. However, I can not guarantee it will be before next week. I will let you know what/if I find. Kelly, Marysville, Ohio From: Famtreeman@aol.com To: OHUNION-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [OHUNION] Re: OHUNION-D Digest V01 #6 - William Brake children Date: Fri, 26 Jan 2001 03:57:29 EST In a message dated 1/25/01 8:06:07 PM US Mountain Standard Time, OHUNION-D-request@rootsweb.com writes: << X-Message: #2 Date: Thu, 25 Jan 2001 08:51:29 EST From: India425@aol.com To: OHUNION-L@rootsweb.com Message-ID: <f.f014542.27a18961@aol.com> Subject: [OHUNION] WILLIAM BRAKE & ALMIRA PERRY Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Disposition: Inline Hi All, I'm trying to find the children of the above. The only one I have is my great grandmother Elizabeth Louise born about 1869 in Union Co., Ohio. Thanks for any help. Linda >> --------------------------------- To help get you started, go to my page, click on the 1880 census index for union co OH. Then go down the list until you find where your surname begins, click on it. Then go down that list until you find BRAKE, William. Click on that and it will tell you what twp he is in and the page of the census to look at. You will see that he is in Liberty twp on page 040A of the census. Can't get much easier than that.You can order the census at your local LDS FHC or they may have it on the shelf as they do here. It will cost you $3.25 to order it and then you will have about 40 days to look at it when it comes in. When you look at BRAKE on the census it will give his children's names and ages. Then you will need to find him on the 1900 census as he may have more children born after the 1880 census and living at home. Another way to find the children is to order the birth index microfilm from the LDS FHC. Go down thru the index, find Brake, and then go to the page it references and see they have the correct parents. But this is not a sure thing as many births did not get reported and recorded even though there was a Federal mandate to report and record all births nation wide beginning in 1867. Some counties were better than others in getting this started. Another way to find the kids, assuming they remained in union co OH, is to look up any child whose last name is BRAKE on the marriage indexes. Then order the microfilm and see who the parents are. Parents names and birthdates for the children will be on the marriage license beginning in 1900. This may or may not help you if all the children got married before 1900. Once you find them on the census, contact me for a free cemetery lookup and maybe I can help you find when they died and in which cemetey they are buried. This is easier for the males. For the females you need to get the marriage info first so you know what surname to look under. Hope this helps you find them. Larry <A HREF="http://unioncoohio.homestead.com">http://unioncoohio.homestead.com </A> My Union County, OH, help web site. Visit it soon. ==== OHUNION Mailing List ==== _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com
Good morning everyone, I'm grasping at straws but have no place else to go as I'm trying to solve the 75 year old mystery of my maternal grandfather, Harold Lee BISHOP's disappearance from Union Co. Where would old documents such as a Voter's Registration Card be found? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Jacquie (California) "Formerly of Union County" "OHROOTS-L@rootsweb.com" "OHSUMMIT-L@rootsweb.com" "OHUNION-L@rootsweb.com"
In a message dated 1/25/01 8:06:07 PM US Mountain Standard Time, OHUNION-D-request@rootsweb.com writes: << X-Message: #2 Date: Thu, 25 Jan 2001 08:51:29 EST From: India425@aol.com To: OHUNION-L@rootsweb.com Message-ID: <f.f014542.27a18961@aol.com> Subject: [OHUNION] WILLIAM BRAKE & ALMIRA PERRY Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Disposition: Inline Hi All, I'm trying to find the children of the above. The only one I have is my great grandmother Elizabeth Louise born about 1869 in Union Co., Ohio. Thanks for any help. Linda >> --------------------------------- To help get you started, go to my page, click on the 1880 census index for union co OH. Then go down the list until you find where your surname begins, click on it. Then go down that list until you find BRAKE, William. Click on that and it will tell you what twp he is in and the page of the census to look at. You will see that he is in Liberty twp on page 040A of the census. Can't get much easier than that.You can order the census at your local LDS FHC or they may have it on the shelf as they do here. It will cost you $3.25 to order it and then you will have about 40 days to look at it when it comes in. When you look at BRAKE on the census it will give his children's names and ages. Then you will need to find him on the 1900 census as he may have more children born after the 1880 census and living at home. Another way to find the children is to order the birth index microfilm from the LDS FHC. Go down thru the index, find Brake, and then go to the page it references and see they have the correct parents. But this is not a sure thing as many births did not get reported and recorded even though there was a Federal mandate to report and record all births nation wide beginning in 1867. Some counties were better than others in getting this started. Another way to find the kids, assuming they remained in union co OH, is to look up any child whose last name is BRAKE on the marriage indexes. Then order the microfilm and see who the parents are. Parents names and birthdates for the children will be on the marriage license beginning in 1900. This may or may not help you if all the children got married before 1900. Once you find them on the census, contact me for a free cemetery lookup and maybe I can help you find when they died and in which cemetey they are buried. This is easier for the males. For the females you need to get the marriage info first so you know what surname to look under. Hope this helps you find them. Larry <A HREF="http://unioncoohio.homestead.com">http://unioncoohio.homestead.com </A> My Union County, OH, help web site. Visit it soon.
Forwarding this URL from another list. http://www.nara.gov/nara/electronic/kcasal.html Jacquie Lisa Huckins wrote: > I just found on the NARA (National Archives and Records Administration) site, > a list of all Korean War Casualties. You can get it alphabetical by town or by > town, etc. > > Check it out, there are a lot of Nova Scotian Names. > > http://www.nara.gov/nara/electronic/kcasal.html > > Lisa Huckins > > ==== BOSTON-STATES Mailing List ==== > Search Genconnect for any surname board. > If your surname board isn't there, you can start one! > http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/indx/FamAssoc.html
Hi All, I'm trying to find the children of the above. The only one I have is my great grandmother Elizabeth Louise born about 1869 in Union Co., Ohio. Thanks for any help. Linda India425@aol.com
In a message dated 1/24/01 12:04:56 AM US Mountain Standard Time, OHUNION-D-request@rootsweb.com writes: << X-Message: #2 Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2001 09:23:05 -0600 From: "Poor House Lady" <phlady@jump.net> To: OHUNION-L@rootsweb.com Message-ID: <NEBBLIGFELEJADFEFAGNIENHDBAA.phlady@jump.net> Subject: [OHUNION] County Historian? Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Could someone please tell me the name of the current County Historian for Union County ... and how to contact him/her? Is there a list of County Historians in Ohio somewhere on the internet? Or does someone have a list which could be posted to this e-mail list? (And maybe to OHIO-ROOTS?) Thanks, Linda Crannell >> ================== Linda - Go to the Union Co GenWeb page at - Use this link or use the one on my web page. <A HREF="http://www.rootsweb.com/%7Eohunion/"> http://www.rootsweb.com/%7Eohunion/</A> On the fourth line down from the top of the page, click on the end link, Ohio History Network. This will take you to the Ohio history page. Then go down the page a little and on the left side is a link to all the counties. Check it out. Also on the Union Co GenWeb page are several links to history in union co OH. Make sure you check out these references. Also on the Union Co Genealogy Society page - I have a link on my page also. <A HREF="http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohuniogs/"> http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohuniogs/</A> there is an e-mail contact for Denise Gresh. This is mainly for genealogy in union co OH, but she may be aware of a local historian for union co OH. I am sure if you joined the union co OH genealogy society for $8 per year, she would be more than happy to assist you. By joining the UCGS you get 6 informational newsletters per year and unlimited inquiries published in the newsletter and you are requested to submit a 5 generation chart of your family tree for them to add to their growing notebooks in the genealogy section of the Marysville OH library. I have found that some of the info in the 5 generation charts is well worth the $8 per year. One connection to your tree is priceless. Right??? Hope this helps. Larry <A HREF="http://unioncoohio.homestead.com">http://unioncoohio.homestead.com </A> My Union County, OH, genealogy help web site. Visit it soon.
Could someone please tell me the name of the current County Historian for Union County ... and how to contact him/her? Is there a list of County Historians in Ohio somewhere on the internet? Or does someone have a list which could be posted to this e-mail list? (And maybe to OHIO-ROOTS?) Thanks, Linda Crannell
Dear Listers: You may want to check out this URL, http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/special/military.htm - Jacquie (USA, California)
You could post this to Somebody's Links. See below. SOMEBODY'S LINKS. Please send notices about genealogical treasures found to juliecase@prodigy.net. To subscribe to SOMEBODY'S LINKS NEWSLETTER, send e-mail that says SUBSCRIBE to Somebodys-Links-Newsletter-L-request@rootsweb.com Back issues can be read online or downloaded from ftp://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/somebody/ and are part of the fully searchable MISSING LINKS archives at http://e-zine.rootsweb.com/ Also use the GenConnect "Somebody's Links" message board at http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/genbbs.cgi/SomebodysLinks/ A photo (probably a copy print) that appears to be a family grouping (10 adults, one young boy, and three babies) was turned in to the Thrift Shop of the Hospital Auxiliary at Delta, British Columbia, Canada. On the back is written "Capt. & Mrs. William David DOUGLAS & Family, Taken at Annan Oct. 2nd 1889 on the 34th Anniversary of their Wedding day. Cissie on Mother's knee." One of the volunteers thought the photo had been rescued from the garbage. The Thrift Shop would be happy for someone descended from this family to have this photo. Gwen Szychter gwens@dccnet.com I have a copy of the Civil War military service records (not pension record) of Joseph A. or H. HEASLEY of Mercer County, Pennsylvania. He was 18 when he enlisted in February 1864. I would be glad to send them to someone researching his family. Judy JStubbs100@aol.com I found papers about the ROTHROCK family in a second-hand store in Spokane, Washington. Most of them seem to be copies, but someone went to great lengths to put this family together from about 1848 into the 1900s. Other names include RAFFE and HADLEY. If someone wants these, they can have them for the postage. Betty Massey bmassey@plix.com [Last week a notice about two red glass items brought from Lithuania to the U.S.A. in 1917 appeared in this section of ML.] I received two e-mails from Jerusalem and several here. Now I can return his grandmother's 1917 red glass items to Steven Lee Signoff. Many thanks to all. Lu Juana Cartwright Lipscomb txcuz@hotmail.com ----- Original Message ----- From: Kelly Smith <yadilla@hotmail.com> To: <OHUNION-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, January 14, 2001 10:57 PM Subject: [OHUNION] Old military pics, Help? > Sorry this has nothing to do with Union or Logan county but I am hoping > someone out there can direct me to where I should post this info. > > I found 2 old photographs in a tube of old prints I bought at an antique > store years ago in Arizona. Just came across them a few days ago and would > love to GIVE them to anyone interested in having them. > > Both are panoramics. > > #1 approx 3 feet by 10 inches. 50th, 51st, and 52nd Companies, USMC Paris > Island, SC. > Very Good condition except it's rolled and won't lay flat by itself. Faces > of VERY YOUNG men are extreamly clear. Approx 300 people. Look more like > older boy scouts than young Marines. No date on photo but I guess 1940s ? > on back written: "Silma Eubanks, Good Samaritan Hospital. Marine Picture of > Homer and Group of Marines". > There is an arrow penciled in above one of the men. I assume that is "Homer" > > #2 Approx 2 feet by 10 inches. Also won't lay flat by itself and large crack > through the middle. > 82nd Infantry Division Standing "Retreat" following Sgt. Allen C. York's > Address to the division. The first assembly of the division since > re-activation. Camp Clairborne, LA. May 7, 1942 > Panorama is of "thousands" no faces are clear enough to recognize in > background, Men raising/lowering flag in foreground. > Inset picture of the stage with man giving spech into microphone with others > standing behind. > Nothing written on this one. > > > Would greatly appreciate any direction as to where I can post this info in > hopes of finding someone who would like to have them. I have no use for them > but would never throw old photos out. > > Feel free to forward this to other lists > > Thanks, > Kelly Smith > yadilla@hotmail.com > _________________________________________________________________ > Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com > > > ==== OHUNION Mailing List ==== >
Sorry this has nothing to do with Union or Logan county but I am hoping someone out there can direct me to where I should post this info. I found 2 old photographs in a tube of old prints I bought at an antique store years ago in Arizona. Just came across them a few days ago and would love to GIVE them to anyone interested in having them. Both are panoramics. #1 approx 3 feet by 10 inches. 50th, 51st, and 52nd Companies, USMC Paris Island, SC. Very Good condition except it's rolled and won't lay flat by itself. Faces of VERY YOUNG men are extreamly clear. Approx 300 people. Look more like older boy scouts than young Marines. No date on photo but I guess 1940s ? on back written: "Silma Eubanks, Good Samaritan Hospital. Marine Picture of Homer and Group of Marines". There is an arrow penciled in above one of the men. I assume that is "Homer" #2 Approx 2 feet by 10 inches. Also won't lay flat by itself and large crack through the middle. 82nd Infantry Division Standing "Retreat" following Sgt. Allen C. York's Address to the division. The first assembly of the division since re-activation. Camp Clairborne, LA. May 7, 1942 Panorama is of "thousands" no faces are clear enough to recognize in background, Men raising/lowering flag in foreground. Inset picture of the stage with man giving spech into microphone with others standing behind. Nothing written on this one. Would greatly appreciate any direction as to where I can post this info in hopes of finding someone who would like to have them. I have no use for them but would never throw old photos out. Feel free to forward this to other lists Thanks, Kelly Smith yadilla@hotmail.com _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com
<< In a message dated 1/9/01 7:01:34 AM US Mountain Standard Time, OHUNION-D-request@rootsweb.com writes: X-Message: #2 Date: Mon, 08 Jan 2001 18:51:19 -0800 From: William Mack <wrmjam@qwest.net> To: OHUNION-L@rootsweb.com Message-ID: <3A5A7CA7.1392D017@qwest.net> Subject: [OHUNION] Location of BUCK RUN Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Can anyone tell me the location of Buck Run? I've found two,one in Union Co.& one in Adams Co. My grandmother was born in Buck Run 1883.He father was a minister in the Reformed Church & was preaching at the Presbyterian Church at that time. Thank's for any help you can give! Joanne >> ============================================ Joanne If you go to my web site, click on search, it will take you to <A HREF="http://mapping.usgs.gov/www/gnis/gnisform.html"> http://mapping.usgs.gov/www/gnis/gnisform.html</A> Then when this page opens, in feature name enter buck run, in state enter Ohio, in county enter union. Then click send query. Back will come 3 items with buck run -- one is a creek, one is a populated area, and one is a cemetery. To find out more info on each one of them, click on the show features details and location under each one of them. It will take some time for the maps to load so be patient. But when the maps load you can see where they are located. If you go to my cemetery page under alphabetical, go down the list until you find Buck Run cemetery. You will notice it is in Allen township. So I imagine Buck Run was in Allen twp. I cannot confirm that as I do not have a union county map and the GNIS site does not tell. On my web site, click on History of Union Co 1883. Go down Volume 2, Part 5, to chapter 9, Allen twp, history. If you read all of this you will see several references to Buck Run. If fact, on page 463 under schools, it mentions Buck Run Chapel. On page 464 the churches are listed with the preachers they had. I do not see a reformed church listed. So maybe it is in the other county -- Adams. If you go to the GNIS site, clickable link above, and enter buck run, and ohio, but not union county, you will get back every Buck Run name in Ohio and where they are located. You can use this GNIS site to find anything in the US and if you want a map, you just click on the show features and details under the items that it finds for you. It is quite useful as you can see after you use it and get used to it. I would request the birth microfilm from your nearest LDS Family History Center of births that include the years you are looking for probably for Adams county first. See if you can find your grandmother on it. Then order the census for 1900 for Adams county and see if you can find the surname you are looking for on it. If you do, then you should find her lsited under her father at about age 17, unless she got married before she was 17. If you know when and where she died, then order her death certificate. If will have her birth date on it and maybe her birth place. It will also have her parents named on it and maybe where they were born. hope this helps -- good luck. Larry <A HREF="http://unioncoohio.homestead.com">http://unioncoohio.homestead.com </A> My Union County, OH, help web site.
Who are the desc. of David & Jane Johnson who sold property to Mr. Bosart in Union Co., Ohio 1838? I am aware of David & Sarah LAW JOHNSON who settled in Liberty Twp. and found in 1840 census.
LDS film # 0545340 Logan Co., OH Deed Index: Mathias Furrow Mar 31,1866 sells to Aaron Thornton. Belle Furrow purchases from Edward S. Furrow Apr 14,1883.
Can anyone tell me the location of Buck Run? I've found two,one in Union Co.& one in Adams Co. My grandmother was born in Buck Run 1883.He father was a minister in the Reformed Church & was preaching at the Presbyterian Church at that time. Thank's for any help you can give! Joanne
Isabelle Johnson who married Mathias Furrow is likely the same as the family of Belle Johnson Furrow who is listed in the Logan Co., OH General Index to Deeds particullarly 1894 through 1901 Selling to: James Headington, Samuel Marmon, G.F.Henry, & Elsworth B. Roberts. Purchases from Elsworth B. Roberts, Sallie M. Painter, Wm. M. Keller & A.F. Painter. She is beleived to be the wife of Mathisas Furrow, and the dau. of David & Sarah Law Johnson. Seeking Furrow researchers with a connection. Thank you, Jeannet
<< In a message dated 12/29/00 8:26:47 PM US Mountain Standard Time, OHUNION-D-request@rootsweb.com writes: X-Message: #2 Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2000 17:40:58 -0800 From: "Jeanne Crews" <jcrews@eriecoast.com> To: OHUNION-L@rootsweb.com Message-ID: <000f01c07201$95818100$256f1cd8@oemcomputer> Subject: [OHUNION] Plotners in Union Co Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Laura Plotner married Frederick Knowlton Keller 17 Nov 1881. I think her parents were William H. Plotner and Mary White who are buried in York Center Cemetery. Is there a Plotner researcher on the list? Jeanne jcrews@eriecoast.com >> ======================================= Jeanne I am not a Plotner researcher, but most likely if you looked on the 1870 and / or the 1880 census of William Plotner, you could find out if one of his children is named Laura. I have the 1880 census index for unioin co OH on my web site and you could check it and see if there is a William Plotner. If there is one, it will tell you what page of the 1880 census to look on to get the info you need, and will tell you what township he is listed under. I looked for the marriages of Laura to Frederick and on William to Mary. Neither couple was married in union co OH. There is a William Plotner married to Anna Morrow on 2 Sep 1886, in union co OH. Maybe a brother of Laura? If you need their cemetery grave marker inscription info, let me know. Or if you want to know where they are buried in the cemetery, what section and row. Or how to get to the cemetery. Hope this helps, Larry <A HREF="http://unioncoohio.homestead.com">http://unioncoohio.homestead.com </A> My Union County, OH, help web site.
<< In a message dated 1/1/01 4:03:20 PM US Mountain Standard Time, OHUNION-D-request@rootsweb.com writes: X-Message: #1 Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2000 17:05:31 -0600 From: "Jeannet Greiving" <jeannet@deseretonline.com> To: OHUNION-L@rootsweb.com Message-ID: <000f01c0737e$2d82e340$b33e1840@deseretonline.com> Subject: [OHUNION] Nancy Shirk/Daniel Johnson Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Is there any data available concerning the parents or birthplace in PA for Daniel Johnson who married Nancy Shirk? Jeannet >> ============================================ If I were you I would go to the GenWeb web page, click on PA, then inquire to the PA genealogy society for information. But hopefully, you will include much more info for them than you did for the rest of us on this site. Daniel JOHNSON married Nancy SHIRK on 29 Jun 1837 in union co OH, source is marysville OH court house book 2, page 14. A Nance Jane SHIRK married HISEY, John on 16 Mar 1865, book B page 105. Your local FHC will have books on PA and histories you can look at to gather info. It may take a long time to find anything. I know of people who searched for 20 years and then one day found a book that contained info on them. A lot of it is luck and a lot of it is knowing where to search. There have been several CDs compiled of PA info and in different counties, especially the German communities comprised of German immigrants. There has been much pubished on them. I would begin looking at some of it and see what you can find. There are books that have published marriages from the early days for PA. You might get lucky. You might want to join a list for PA, or maybe several lists that are strong in the German community, in different counties, and inquire to them also. Maybe even quaker lists. I am not sure of the name origination, which country. The name Pennsylvania Dutch really is the English version of Pennsylvania Deutsche, standing for the German immigrants. It got changed to the English version as time passed. Happy hunting and good luck. Larry <A HREF="http://unioncoohio.homestead.com">http://unioncoohio.homestead.com </A> My Union County, OH, help web site.
<< In a message dated 1/1/01 4:03:20 PM US Mountain Standard Time, OHUNION-D-request@rootsweb.com writes: X-Message: #3 Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2000 18:31:19 -0600 From: "Jeannet Greiving" <jeannet@deseretonline.com> To: OHUNION-L@rootsweb.com Message-ID: <002201c0738a$2a062220$b33e1840@deseretonline.com> Subject: [OHUNION] Alfred Stout's dau. Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Alfred also has dau: Etta May Stout age 8 in 1880 census Union Co., Taylor Twp. page 4 [Both of Alfred's children were born before this marr. in 1874]. >> ======================================= This would make Etta born in about 1872. The births were required to be recorded by federal mandate in 1867, although many of them were still not recorded. Assuming she was born in union co OH, and if you are lucky, you will find Etta's birth recorded on the union co OH LDS microfilm birth index for the early years starting in 1867. If you find her birth on the index, then you will be able to find more info on the page it references after the index. It will be a one line entry that will give her birth date and place and where the parents lived and gives her parents names. In these old births when entries were just beginning, it sometimes only gives the mother's given name and not her surname. You can order it from your local FHC for $3.25 to look at for about 40 days. If there is no FHC center near you, then check with your local library and see if they can get it for you by an inter-library loan. If you live in OH, then you should take a day or so and visit the OH Hist Soc in Col, OH, on Almeda Street jsut off the I-270 by-pass and just north of Grove City, OH. The OHS has all the films you might want to look at and more. If you find something on a film it will cost you about 25 cents to make a copy of it. But everything in it is free to look at and there is no entrance charge. If you live near Marysville, OH, go to the court house and look for the birth record on ETTA. They have all the original books and original records for births 1867 to 1909, deaths 1867 to 1909, and marriages (uncertain of dates -- but more than births and deaths), on the shelf, and you can look at all of them for free. A single copy costs about 50 cents, or you can transcribe it for free. Or you can go to my web site and get the address of the court house and write to them for a copy of everything you want, including wills and estate papers. They will write you back with what they found and how much money for you to send them to get the copies. If they do not find any info, then they will not write to you at all. I have done this many times, and know this is what they will do. It is best to get all the papers in an estate or will folder. I ordered one estate that contained 12 pages and it cost me $6.00 postpaid. If you find the parents of Etta, then they will probably be the same for Wilson, especially if they are both listed under the same parents on the census of 1880, even though it will not be the correct mother. Alfred STOUT was married twice - first to JOHNSTON, Margaret on 20 Oct 1853, source is Marysville courthouse book 2, page 342. second to HESS, Phebe A on 19 Nov 1874, book C page 188. It looks as if JOHNSTON, Margaret may have married again also on 6 Jul 1895, to WIGLE, HIRAM, book E page 450. I show only the one marriage for Phebe A Hess, so they would not be her children by an earlier marriage. If I had to make an educated guess -- Yes, Alfred Stout and Margaret Johnston are the parents. But proving it is more fun. His will and or estate papers might name his children, but will not list the mother. If you may know if she died or not, then the above may be someone else. But in union co OH, there are not very many JOHNSTON. There are many Johnson. If you know when WILSON died, you can order his death certificate. His parents will be named on it, and his birth date and sometimes place, plus his wife's maiden name. You might try the OHS web site to see if he is listed. If so, then you can download a form and request his death certificate for $1.00. Hope this helps. Happy hunting and Good luck. Happy New Year. Larry <A HREF="http://unioncoohio.homestead.com">http://unioncoohio.homestead.com </A> My Union County, OH, help web site.
Jeannet Greiving wrote: > > Alfred also has dau: Etta May Stout age 8 in 1880 census Union > Co., Taylor Twp. page 4 > [Both of Alfred's children were born before this marr. in 1874]. > May I assume you are also posting these queries on STOUT-L@rootsweb.com?