-----Original Message----- From: darlene [mailto:darlene@adweb.net] Sent: Wednesday, August 24, 2005 9:23 AM To: PACE-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [PACE-L] Richmond Pace picture Roy and Bob Webb I have to ask, does Bob Webb qualify for DNA on those Alabama Pace's ? Darlene Paceit No. He has to be a Pace; it only goes male to male. Roy ----- Original Message ----- From: "Roy Johnson" <royj@webster.edu> To: <PACE-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, August 23, 2005 8:27 PM Subject: [PACE-L] Richmond Pace picture > Bob Web just sent me the message below with a picture to be posted on > PacePix of the grave of Richmond Pace b. 1813, Alabama. I believe this info > should be shared and I'm sure Bob won't mind me sharing it with you. It is > most important to descendents of Richmond. You can see the picture at the > URL below, scroll all the way to the bottom of either the right or left > panel and click the link. > > > > The link Bob gives to the cemetery is also very worthwhile. Richmond Pace > descendents will probably want to bookmark it. It is in the middle of his > message. > > > > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~pace/pacepix/ > > > > Roy; > > > > Thanks for keeping the Pace Network up and running. > > > > Attached is a photo of the grave of Richmond Pace, born in > Clarke County, Alabama in 1813, son of John and Elizabeth (Jones) Pace. The > grave is in Hillcrest Cemetery, the oldest cemetery in the city of Temple, > in Bell County, Texas. It was long thought that Richmond was buried with his > second wife's family in Vashti, Texas, Clay County, in north Texas in 1892 > (nowhere near Bell County). I found the graves of his second wife Mary Ann > (Taylor) and a couple of sons and grandchildren in Vashti some years ago, > but did not find a stone for Richmond. After checking the tax records for > Newton County, Mississippi, I came to the wrong conclusion that Richmond had > never left Newton County and was probably buried on his home place, or > simply never had a marker. He shows up on the tax records in Newton up until > 1892, and his widow Mary Ann and family show up on the 1900 census for > Newton County, Mississippi. The second family left for north Texas a few > years after the turn of the century, a good decade after the death of > Richmond; case closed. Or so I thought. > > > > A few weeks ago I found the Web site for Hillcrest Cemetery in > Temple and was browsing through the transcriptions, looking for other > ancestors I knew were buried there. It was no surprise to find the graves of > a few of my pioneer ancestors (Clarks, Wilders), but I was floored to see > the listing for Richmond Pace. Richmond did have a couple of nephews who > lived in Bell County; William J. Pace (buried in > > Hillcrest) and James Willis Pace, and a niece, Mary Pace (buried in > Hillcrest), all children of Richmond's brother James Dempsey Pace. He also > had a couple of grandchildren living there; my great grandfather W. L. Pace > (his photo is posted on Pace Pix) and W. L.'s sister Sue Jane (Pace) > Pilgrim. These grandchildren were from his first family with wife Harriet; > the children of John M. Pace and Nora Delaney McClendon. Son John, a Civil > War veteran, died in 1867 back in Mississippi. W. L. and Sue Jane had > families of their own, so Richmond had several great-grandchildren as well > in the Temple area. > > > > Did 80 year old Richmond Pace go out to Bell County, Texas for a > visit, only to fall ill during some Texas blue norther? Or was he out there > for another reason? One mystery solved opens a door to another. > > > > Richmond Pace and family are recorded in the book "Pace: Your Family and > Mine", page 139 and is mentioned in Bruce Howard's "Our Colonial Ancestors," > page 239. The photograph of Richmond Pace's grave was taken > > 6 August, 2005. > > > > http://www.rootsweb.com/~txbell/cem/hillcrest/ > > > > But there is more to this story. Right after I took this photograph a car > pulled up several yards away. A couple got out and started to browse through > the graveyard. Up until then, I had been alone. This is a large cemetery, > and I was in the old section. I waved, they waved back, and I finished > taking notes. The man walks up, asks me if I know who's grave this is, and I > reply, "Sure. Richmond Pace... he's my great great great grandfather." The > man says, "Mine too." > > > > I think I went pretty slack-jawed at that point. He introduces > himself, "I'm Jeff Humphrey. I descend from his son John Micajah Pace and.." > I interrupt, "Nora Delaney McClendon. Me too." Well, we shake hands and > begin to compare notes. Jeff descends from the Sue Jane Pace Pilgrim family. > He and his friend came down from Dallas to Waco for a visit and decided to > drive to Temple to see this grave on the spur of the moment. He had found it > a few years ago. They asked if I was from Temple. "No," I said," I live in > Houston. I just decided to come up this weekend to see Richmond's grave. I > found it posted on the internet a few days ago." Now we were all pretty > amazed. Temple is in central Texas. Houston is near the coast, 185 miles to > the south east. Dallas is in north Texas, 130 miles north east of Temple. I > had been in this cemetery for thirty minutes, and another great great great > grandson of Richmond Pace shows up. Same generation, about the same age, > same interest in this family's history. Cue up the music from The Twilight > Zone. I'm sure it was just as strange for him to find me there at the very > grave he was looking for. > > > > But this was all strange in a very good way, and it was great to > meet a cousin I knew nothing about, and stand in front of our ancestor's > grave for a moment and share that moment. > > > > Bob Webb > > > > Richmond Pace, born April 8, 1813, died Dec. 19, 1893 For 60 Years a > (consistent) member of the Baptist Church Asleep in Jesus, blessed sleep > from which none ever wake to weep. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ==== PACE Mailing List ==== > Check out the Pace GenConnect Boards where you can post or peruse Pace Bibles, Obits, Bios, Deeds, Wills, Queries, etc. Bookmark this URL: > http://boards.ancestry.com > > __________ NOD32 1.1200 (20050823) Information __________ > > This message was checked by NOD32 antivirus system. > http://www.eset.com > > ==== PACE Mailing List ==== To share info which may be of interest to others, reply to the mail list (PACE-L@rootsweb.com). To say thank you or otherwise reply personally, reply to sender.
Re:Recent inquiry about Susannah Pace, perhaps daughter of James Pace or Francis Pace. Brenda' Howorko's reply to you also agrees with my data. To clarify: Francis, Suzannah, and James were all children of John and Suzannah Houchins Pace, (I am a descendant of daughter Mary Pace Baskett, Brenda is a Descendant of son William,There were 13 in the family) Laura Elliott is a decendent is Suzannah( Stephen Johnson,),. Roy Johnson is a descendant of Francis(Elizabeth Robinson) and Ivan Pace is a descendant of James(1 Lydia Drake,2- Suzanna Mitchell).All are contributors to Pace L.and could give you more on their ancestor. Have more family info if you need it.... NancyAnn Rupp
Roy and Bob Webb I have to ask, does Bob Webb qualify for DNA on those Alabama Pace's ? Darlene Pace ----- Original Message ----- From: "Roy Johnson" <royj@webster.edu> To: <PACE-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, August 23, 2005 8:27 PM Subject: [PACE-L] Richmond Pace picture > Bob Web just sent me the message below with a picture to be posted on > PacePix of the grave of Richmond Pace b. 1813, Alabama. I believe this info > should be shared and I'm sure Bob won't mind me sharing it with you. It is > most important to descendents of Richmond. You can see the picture at the > URL below, scroll all the way to the bottom of either the right or left > panel and click the link. > > > > The link Bob gives to the cemetery is also very worthwhile. Richmond Pace > descendents will probably want to bookmark it. It is in the middle of his > message. > > > > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~pace/pacepix/ > > > > Roy; > > > > Thanks for keeping the Pace Network up and running. > > > > Attached is a photo of the grave of Richmond Pace, born in > Clarke County, Alabama in 1813, son of John and Elizabeth (Jones) Pace. The > grave is in Hillcrest Cemetery, the oldest cemetery in the city of Temple, > in Bell County, Texas. It was long thought that Richmond was buried with his > second wife's family in Vashti, Texas, Clay County, in north Texas in 1892 > (nowhere near Bell County). I found the graves of his second wife Mary Ann > (Taylor) and a couple of sons and grandchildren in Vashti some years ago, > but did not find a stone for Richmond. After checking the tax records for > Newton County, Mississippi, I came to the wrong conclusion that Richmond had > never left Newton County and was probably buried on his home place, or > simply never had a marker. He shows up on the tax records in Newton up until > 1892, and his widow Mary Ann and family show up on the 1900 census for > Newton County, Mississippi. The second family left for north Texas a few > years after the turn of the century, a good decade after the death of > Richmond; case closed. Or so I thought. > > > > A few weeks ago I found the Web site for Hillcrest Cemetery in > Temple and was browsing through the transcriptions, looking for other > ancestors I knew were buried there. It was no surprise to find the graves of > a few of my pioneer ancestors (Clarks, Wilders), but I was floored to see > the listing for Richmond Pace. Richmond did have a couple of nephews who > lived in Bell County; William J. Pace (buried in > > Hillcrest) and James Willis Pace, and a niece, Mary Pace (buried in > Hillcrest), all children of Richmond's brother James Dempsey Pace. He also > had a couple of grandchildren living there; my great grandfather W. L. Pace > (his photo is posted on Pace Pix) and W. L.'s sister Sue Jane (Pace) > Pilgrim. These grandchildren were from his first family with wife Harriet; > the children of John M. Pace and Nora Delaney McClendon. Son John, a Civil > War veteran, died in 1867 back in Mississippi. W. L. and Sue Jane had > families of their own, so Richmond had several great-grandchildren as well > in the Temple area. > > > > Did 80 year old Richmond Pace go out to Bell County, Texas for a > visit, only to fall ill during some Texas blue norther? Or was he out there > for another reason? One mystery solved opens a door to another. > > > > Richmond Pace and family are recorded in the book "Pace: Your Family and > Mine", page 139 and is mentioned in Bruce Howard's "Our Colonial Ancestors," > page 239. The photograph of Richmond Pace's grave was taken > > 6 August, 2005. > > > > http://www.rootsweb.com/~txbell/cem/hillcrest/ > > > > But there is more to this story. Right after I took this photograph a car > pulled up several yards away. A couple got out and started to browse through > the graveyard. Up until then, I had been alone. This is a large cemetery, > and I was in the old section. I waved, they waved back, and I finished > taking notes. The man walks up, asks me if I know who's grave this is, and I > reply, "Sure. Richmond Pace... he's my great great great grandfather." The > man says, "Mine too." > > > > I think I went pretty slack-jawed at that point. He introduces > himself, "I'm Jeff Humphrey. I descend from his son John Micajah Pace and.." > I interrupt, "Nora Delaney McClendon. Me too." Well, we shake hands and > begin to compare notes. Jeff descends from the Sue Jane Pace Pilgrim family. > He and his friend came down from Dallas to Waco for a visit and decided to > drive to Temple to see this grave on the spur of the moment. He had found it > a few years ago. They asked if I was from Temple. "No," I said," I live in > Houston. I just decided to come up this weekend to see Richmond's grave. I > found it posted on the internet a few days ago." Now we were all pretty > amazed. Temple is in central Texas. Houston is near the coast, 185 miles to > the south east. Dallas is in north Texas, 130 miles north east of Temple. I > had been in this cemetery for thirty minutes, and another great great great > grandson of Richmond Pace shows up. Same generation, about the same age, > same interest in this family's history. Cue up the music from The Twilight > Zone. I'm sure it was just as strange for him to find me there at the very > grave he was looking for. > > > > But this was all strange in a very good way, and it was great to > meet a cousin I knew nothing about, and stand in front of our ancestor's > grave for a moment and share that moment. > > > > Bob Webb > > > > Richmond Pace, born April 8, 1813, died Dec. 19, 1893 For 60 Years a > (consistent) member of the Baptist Church Asleep in Jesus, blessed sleep > from which none ever wake to weep. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ==== PACE Mailing List ==== > Check out the Pace GenConnect Boards where you can post or peruse Pace Bibles, Obits, Bios, Deeds, Wills, Queries, etc. Bookmark this URL: > http://boards.ancestry.com > > __________ NOD32 1.1200 (20050823) Information __________ > > This message was checked by NOD32 antivirus system. > http://www.eset.com > >
Bob Web just sent me the message below with a picture to be posted on PacePix of the grave of Richmond Pace b. 1813, Alabama. I believe this info should be shared and I'm sure Bob won't mind me sharing it with you. It is most important to descendents of Richmond. You can see the picture at the URL below, scroll all the way to the bottom of either the right or left panel and click the link. The link Bob gives to the cemetery is also very worthwhile. Richmond Pace descendents will probably want to bookmark it. It is in the middle of his message. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~pace/pacepix/ Roy; Thanks for keeping the Pace Network up and running. Attached is a photo of the grave of Richmond Pace, born in Clarke County, Alabama in 1813, son of John and Elizabeth (Jones) Pace. The grave is in Hillcrest Cemetery, the oldest cemetery in the city of Temple, in Bell County, Texas. It was long thought that Richmond was buried with his second wife's family in Vashti, Texas, Clay County, in north Texas in 1892 (nowhere near Bell County). I found the graves of his second wife Mary Ann (Taylor) and a couple of sons and grandchildren in Vashti some years ago, but did not find a stone for Richmond. After checking the tax records for Newton County, Mississippi, I came to the wrong conclusion that Richmond had never left Newton County and was probably buried on his home place, or simply never had a marker. He shows up on the tax records in Newton up until 1892, and his widow Mary Ann and family show up on the 1900 census for Newton County, Mississippi. The second family left for north Texas a few years after the turn of the century, a good decade after the death of Richmond; case closed. Or so I thought. A few weeks ago I found the Web site for Hillcrest Cemetery in Temple and was browsing through the transcriptions, looking for other ancestors I knew were buried there. It was no surprise to find the graves of a few of my pioneer ancestors (Clarks, Wilders), but I was floored to see the listing for Richmond Pace. Richmond did have a couple of nephews who lived in Bell County; William J. Pace (buried in Hillcrest) and James Willis Pace, and a niece, Mary Pace (buried in Hillcrest), all children of Richmond's brother James Dempsey Pace. He also had a couple of grandchildren living there; my great grandfather W. L. Pace (his photo is posted on Pace Pix) and W. L.'s sister Sue Jane (Pace) Pilgrim. These grandchildren were from his first family with wife Harriet; the children of John M. Pace and Nora Delaney McClendon. Son John, a Civil War veteran, died in 1867 back in Mississippi. W. L. and Sue Jane had families of their own, so Richmond had several great-grandchildren as well in the Temple area. Did 80 year old Richmond Pace go out to Bell County, Texas for a visit, only to fall ill during some Texas blue norther? Or was he out there for another reason? One mystery solved opens a door to another. Richmond Pace and family are recorded in the book "Pace: Your Family and Mine", page 139 and is mentioned in Bruce Howard's "Our Colonial Ancestors," page 239. The photograph of Richmond Pace's grave was taken 6 August, 2005. http://www.rootsweb.com/~txbell/cem/hillcrest/ But there is more to this story. Right after I took this photograph a car pulled up several yards away. A couple got out and started to browse through the graveyard. Up until then, I had been alone. This is a large cemetery, and I was in the old section. I waved, they waved back, and I finished taking notes. The man walks up, asks me if I know who's grave this is, and I reply, "Sure. Richmond Pace... he's my great great great grandfather." The man says, "Mine too." I think I went pretty slack-jawed at that point. He introduces himself, "I'm Jeff Humphrey. I descend from his son John Micajah Pace and.." I interrupt, "Nora Delaney McClendon. Me too." Well, we shake hands and begin to compare notes. Jeff descends from the Sue Jane Pace Pilgrim family. He and his friend came down from Dallas to Waco for a visit and decided to drive to Temple to see this grave on the spur of the moment. He had found it a few years ago. They asked if I was from Temple. "No," I said," I live in Houston. I just decided to come up this weekend to see Richmond's grave. I found it posted on the internet a few days ago." Now we were all pretty amazed. Temple is in central Texas. Houston is near the coast, 185 miles to the south east. Dallas is in north Texas, 130 miles north east of Temple. I had been in this cemetery for thirty minutes, and another great great great grandson of Richmond Pace shows up. Same generation, about the same age, same interest in this family's history. Cue up the music from The Twilight Zone. I'm sure it was just as strange for him to find me there at the very grave he was looking for. But this was all strange in a very good way, and it was great to meet a cousin I knew nothing about, and stand in front of our ancestor's grave for a moment and share that moment. Bob Webb Richmond Pace, born April 8, 1813, died Dec. 19, 1893 For 60 Years a (consistent) member of the Baptist Church Asleep in Jesus, blessed sleep from which none ever wake to weep.
A lot of this same information can also be found at http://www.genealogy.com/genealogy/12_heing.html And on the Pace Network at http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~pace/african.htm#richard This is very interesting to me, as I am probably a product of one of these pairings between an African male and a white female. Our family oral history says our Johnsons are of Swedish origin, but the earliest family records are from Appalachian Kentucky, not an area of Swedish settlement. My Y-DNA is haplotype E3a, West African, closest matches in the Gambia-Senegal area, and a haplotype common among African-Americans. Probably the Swedish story was a cover-up, or maybe the female was Swedish, as there were Swedes in New Jersey and Delaware and some migrated out. I'm sure there are many "white" folk who have Negro ancestry. Some might not care to admit it, but I prefer the truth. Roy Johnson -----Original Message----- From: Betty A. Pace [mailto:bapace2@juno.com] Sent: Tuesday, August 23, 2005 4:02 PM To: PACE-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [PACE-L] Richard Pace, Edgecombe Co. NC 1735 From: http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/introduction.htm The slave population on the frontier was much lower than in the settled areas of Virginia, so the presence of free African Americans would not have posed a threat to most settlers. And several of these free African Americans owned slaves of their own. However, land ownership was more likely the social equalizer for them and their white neighbors. The McKinnie family, originally from Isle of Wight County, Virginia, was one of the leading white families in the area around the Roanoke River. Barnaby McKinnie, member of the General Assembly from Edgecombe County in 1735, was witness to many of the early Bass, Bunch, Chavis, and Gibson deeds. John McKinnie called Cannon Cumbo his friend when he mentioned him in his 28 February 1753 Edgecombe County will. Other leading white settlers who sold them land adjoining theirs and witnessed their deeds were Richard Washington, William and Thomas Bryant, Richard Pace, and William Whitehead. Arthur Williams, member of the General Assembly for Bertie County in 1735, and John Castellaw, (brother?) of James Castellaw, a member of the Assembly from Bertie County, had mixed-race common-law wives, Elizabeth and Martha Butler [Saunders, Colonial Records, IV:115 and the Butler history]. ==== PACE Mailing List ==== If you haven't done so within the last six months, please post a message describing your Earliest Pace Ancestor and how you descend from them. Please include dates, places, spouses, etc, if possible. Send the message to PACE-L@rootsweb.com
From: http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/introduction.htm The slave population on the frontier was much lower than in the settled areas of Virginia, so the presence of free African Americans would not have posed a threat to most settlers. And several of these free African Americans owned slaves of their own. However, land ownership was more likely the social equalizer for them and their white neighbors. The McKinnie family, originally from Isle of Wight County, Virginia, was one of the leading white families in the area around the Roanoke River. Barnaby McKinnie, member of the General Assembly from Edgecombe County in 1735, was witness to many of the early Bass, Bunch, Chavis, and Gibson deeds. John McKinnie called Cannon Cumbo his friend when he mentioned him in his 28 February 1753 Edgecombe County will. Other leading white settlers who sold them land adjoining theirs and witnessed their deeds were Richard Washington, William and Thomas Bryant, Richard Pace, and William Whitehead. Arthur Williams, member of the General Assembly for Bertie County in 1735, and John Castellaw, (brother?) of James Castellaw, a member of the Assembly from Bertie County, had mixed-race common-law wives, Elizabeth and Martha Butler [Saunders, Colonial Records, IV:115 and the Butler history].
Someone recommended the search site http://clusty.com It is amazing what you can turn up. 1718 Sources: [46] Surry County, VA court records a judgment for 300 lbs of tobacco plus court costs to be enforced by Sherif Stith Bolling against Richard Pace, the defendant, unless he appears to answer Robert Rainwater's charges at the next session of the court. No information about the nature of the suit against Mr. Pace is given. From: http://www.chronography.com/rainwater/early.html Someone recommended the search site http://clusty.com It is amazing what you can turn up.
James PACE -- wagon maker (1877-1880s) in Bellevoir, NC See: http://www.historync.org/carriages.htm
Anyone out there who might be related to the Pace, Dugard, Gass, Meek family in Glasgow Kentucky - any neighbors or friends, or anyone who might be interested in the date of this year's reunion. It will be at the shelter at Gorin Park, Glasgow KY, on Sunday September 4, 2005, and it will start about 10:00 a.m. If you would like to know more, please feel free to contact me. We would be glad to see you! Bring a dish for potluck lunch about noontime. Contact Georgette Lee at 678-7342 or email her at gclee@scrtc.com, or email Mary at mara@westchestergov.com. Here are 2 links so far..... http://www.wcluradio.com/live/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=14&Itemid=30 http://www.glasgow-ky.com/cbb/ _________________________________________________________________ Dont just search. Find. Check out the new MSN Search! http://search.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200636ave/direct/01/
Hi Helena, Go to the library of Virginia site, http://www.lva.lib.va.us click on What we Have, and then the Archives and manuscripts catalog will take you to http://ajax.lva.lib.va.us/F/?func=file&file_name=find-b-clas05&local_base=CLAS05 Type word or phrase Pace Field to search Words in Title in the list of hits, click on the number on the left to go to actual scans of the bible pages Courtney ----- Original Message ----- From: "H-S" <elusiveshreves@yahoo.com> > Hello Pace cousins, my name is Helena-Suzanne, a Pace descendandt > through my Meme's side of the family (Dad's Mom). I was curious as to if > anyone else is researching this line: > G8: Richard & Rebecca POYTHRESS Pace > G7: William & Celia BOYKIN Pace > G6: Stephen & Catherine Gatewood BUCHANNON Pace > G5: Hardy & Lucy KIRKSEY Pace > G4: Pinkney & Catron/Catherine PACE Randal(l) > G3: Captain Hardy Isaiah & Laura Sophia CHEWNING Randal(l) > G2: Harvey Gatewood & Laura RAKESTRAW Randall > Great-Grandparents: Luther Hill Sr. & Helen McCRARY Sr. Randall > > As well as this Pace Line: > G8: Richard & Rebecca (above) > G7: Rebecca PACE Bradford & William AYCOCK > G6: Winnifred Aycock & Jesse LANE Sr. > G5: Jesse Jr. & Rhoda JOLLY/EY Lane > G4: Winnifred Lane & William Fulcher CHEWNING > G3: Back to Captain Hardy Isaiah Randal(l) & Laura Sophia CHEWNING > G2: Harvey Gatewood & Laura RAKESTRAW Randall > Great-Grandparents: Luther Hill Sr. & Helen McCRARY Sr. Randall > > I have what is said to be the family tree but I know better than to just > believe anything in our genealogy world today, so I am looking for help in > proving my lines. Thank you so much for any help :)! > > Sincerely, > Helena-Suzanne
Hi listers. I posted a long time ago on this family in case anyone was interested and thought I would send it once again. I live in Alberta, Canada where virtually every small town has done a book on their pioneers. I always look for "Pace" just in case and came across this little story from the Nanton/Okotoks area of southern Alberta - I'm too lazy to type out the whole thing, so this is a series of clips. I would be pleased to scan the article for anyone that wants it though. Guy Lionel Pace wrote this little tribute to his pioneering family, but I'm sorry it isn't dated. "My family left their rented farm near Center, Saguache County, Colorado in 1902 for Alberta, travelling by train. ...Granddad and Grandmother Pace had moved to Colorado in 1883. They came from Kansas by covered wagon, with a small herd of cattle to start a cattle ranch on the Rio Grande River near Monte Vista, in the great San Luis Valley. Their forebears had likewise moved with the same desire for new land - from Tennessee to Missouri, and Kansas.... ...The family at the time of move to Alberta, consisted of Dad (James William Pace called Will), Mother (Sarah Alice called Alice), my oldest brother Robert Oswin Pace, then me, Guy Lionel Pace (called a good many things and sometimes Guy).... ...They joined Dad's older sister and her family who had arrived in Alberta the previous fall and spent the intervening time getting acquainted with the area. This family consisted of Uncle Scott Armor and his wife Gertrude Pace Armor and two girl cousins Edith and Eunice Armor - their ages, I believe, about nine and five respectively..... ...Later Granddad Pace (Thomas Robert Pace) bought a section............. .....During the time we lived on this homestead there were six additions to the family. Two died in infancy. Of the living, the first was James Stanley Pace (called Jim), born in 1902.......Percy Llewellyn Pace (called Percy), Dorothea Elizabeth Pace and Amy Alice Pace. Both of these girls had diphtheria in 1924 in Calexico, California. Dorothea died of the disease but Amy recovered after a long illness..... ....A few years after we arrived, Uncle Scott's older brother Walter Armor and his family arrived from the States..... ...About this time, a cousin of my father's, P.D. (Dave) Ragain (later it says a cousin of his mother's) arrived.... ...Mother had a stroke in 1912 and suffered from the cold weather, so Dad decided to return to the USA. We sold everything at auction and left by train in October 1914. We went to the Imperial Valley in Southern California and lived in Calexico on the Mexican border. Granddad and Grandmother Pace had moved there in 1908 when the valley was first opened up. During the next couple of decades, the family moved successively to Abraham, Utah; Marsyvale, California; back to Calexico; then to Yuma, Arizona; and the finally to Mount Shasta, California to a beautiful small ranch. The folks remained there until age forced them to sell and move to Susanville, California, where Bob and his family are still living. They both died there, Mother in 1955 and Dad in 1956....... ...During our stay in Calexico, our sister, Maroe, was born. She, Amy and Jim live in Mount Shasta. Percy lives in Klamath Falls, Oregon; Bob in Susanville, California. They all married and have grown families....." Guy closes with some personal history, where he tells that he graduated in 1926 as an electrical engineer and worked for Westinghouse in Pittsburgh and New England until 1940. He was called to active duty as a reserve officer (in 1940). After WWII he was given a commission in the regular army and remained on active duty until retired as a full Colonel in 1955. Course there is much more to this, including some interesting snapshots of their life on the farm in Alberta. Scott Armor and family. In this article it says that Dave Ragain, was a cousin of Gertrude Pace Armor and they eventually sold out to him and moved to Alturas, California where son, Headlee Armor was born. Edith Armour (Mrs. Charles Stanley) lived in Alturas next door to Headlee and Eunice Armor (Mrs. Ed Wilson) lived in Saratoga. There is also a short article on Walter Armor, Scott's brother who joined them in Alberta (from Missouri) in 1902. Again, if these are your kin (or if you are interested), I'd be delighted to photocopy the article and send it to you or just scan it and email it along. Brenda Howorko Executive Assistant to the Deputy Minister Alberta Energy Ph: (780) 427-7727 Fx: (780) 422-3920 This communication is intended for the use of the recipient to which it is addressed, and may contain confidential, personal and or privileged information. Please contact us immediately if you are not the intended recipients of this communication, and do not copy, distribute, or take action relying on it. Any communication received in error, or subsequent reply, should be deleted or destroyed.
Hello Pace cousins, my name is Helena-Suzanne, a Pace descendandt through my Meme's side of the family (Dad's Mom). I was curious as to if anyone else is researching this line: G8: Richard & Rebecca POYTHRESS Pace G7: William & Celia BOYKIN Pace G6: Stephen & Catherine Gatewood BUCHANNON Pace G5: Hardy & Lucy KIRKSEY Pace G4: Pinkney & Catron/Catherine PACE Randal(l) G3: Captain Hardy Isaiah & Laura Sophia CHEWNING Randal(l) G2: Harvey Gatewood & Laura RAKESTRAW Randall Great-Grandparents: Luther Hill Sr. & Helen McCRARY Sr. Randall As well as this Pace Line: G8: Richard & Rebecca (above) G7: Rebecca PACE Bradford & William AYCOCK G6: Winnifred Aycock & Jesse LANE Sr. G5: Jesse Jr. & Rhoda JOLLY/EY Lane G4: Winnifred Lane & William Fulcher CHEWNING G3: Back to Captain Hardy Isaiah Randal(l) & Laura Sophia CHEWNING G2: Harvey Gatewood & Laura RAKESTRAW Randall Great-Grandparents: Luther Hill Sr. & Helen McCRARY Sr. Randall I have what is said to be the family tree but I know better than to just believe anything in our genealogy world today, so I am looking for help in proving my lines. Thank you so much for any help :)! Sincerely, Helena-Suzanne __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com
CHOCTAW NATION MARRIAGES in Oklahoma GROOM INDEX 1890 - 1907 AT - ATOKA, ATOKA CO. OK, get copy of marriage from LDS Library BR - DURANT, BRYAN CO. OK. get copy of marriage from Durant Lf - POTEAU, LEFLORE CO. OK get copy of marriage from Poteau Mc - McALESTER, PITSBURY CO. OK get copy of marriage from Indian Archives OKC WIL - WILBURTON, LATIMER CO. OK you may be able to get copy from Muskogee Ok PACE, B M 32 GRAY, VIOLA 16 9 APR 1893 TALIHINA MC3©211 PACE, B M 37 DANIELS, WILLIE MRS 32 22 SEP 1898 ENTERPRISE Mc8©219 PACE, C W 35 HIGGINS, JOSIE 24 1 APR 1898 ENTERPRISE Mc8©109 PACE, R C 22 McANULTY, RIVERS 22 12 APR 1903 LEHIGH AT2©269 PACE, ROBERT L 38 JONES, LAURA 22 30 DEC 1904 BR1©435 PACE, RUFUS S 38 THOMAS, ALICE MRS 23 1 NOV 1896 THOMASVILLE/POTEAU MC7©118
I am trying to locate a Serena and a Seneca Pace from Louisiana. Seneca was originally from GA and moved and settled in Louisiana in about the 1800's. He was the overseer to the Magnolia Plantation around Natchitoches, La. Please contact me if you have any information about them. Thank you, Paula Broadway
Anyone know who this Charles Gregory is? I have been looking for the parents of a Mary Susan Gregory who married the son of John R.Pace b. 1809 m. Elizab? Son was names Richard Alphonse Pace He died in a railroad accident prior to 1900 Is found on thre 1880 Fluvanna census with the family -age 17 Mary Susan Gregory later married a Walter Watson Pace who was the son of John Hartwell Pace and Fannie Houchins John and Fannie had many children, a list of whom I have sent to this list earlier. Would love to find the Gregory-Pace connection
Does anyone have a Susannah Pace listed as a daughter to this couple and if so dates for her? I believe her to be married to Stephen Johnson. Thanks.
'kay, I have a Susanna Pace, born about 1749 to John Pace and Susanna Houchins Pace. She married on October 01, 1765 to Stephen Johnson. I have a note that says Stephen may have been Susanna's cousin and his parents are listed as Margaret Pace and William Johnson. Margaret Pace was born to John Pace and Elizabeth Newsome (or Elizabeth Wade) on March 05 either 1701 or 1702 depending on the source. She married William Johnson on Sept. 22, 1721. I can tell you that Susanna Pace also had an aunt Susanna Pace, born circa 1739, who married a Benjamin Johnson. These are not my research and I have no paper to back these up, so I'm offering them as clues. It look's like Susanna's brother Edward M. Pace (born May 27, 1761 may have married a Susanna Johnson on September 21, 1784 - don't know if she is related to Stephen Johnson or not. -----Original Message----- From: JRB6886@aol.com [mailto:JRB6886@aol.com] Sent: August 19, 2005 10:58 AM To: PACE-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [PACE-L] VS on Francis Pace b-1764 & James Pace b-1772 Does anyone have a Susannah Pace listed as a daughter to this couple and if so dates for her? I believe her to be married to Stephen Johnson. Thanks. ==== PACE Mailing List ==== If you haven't done so within the last six months, please post a message describing your Earliest Pace Ancestor and how you descend from them. Please include dates, places, spouses, etc, if possible. Send the message to PACE-L@rootsweb.com This communication is intended for the use of the recipient to which it is addressed, and may contain confidential, personal and or privileged information. Please contact us immediately if you are not the intended recipients of this communication, and do not copy, distribute, or take action relying on it. Any communication received in error, or subsequent reply, should be deleted or destroyed.
Maiden name of Samuel Maycock's wife/??--she is young enough to have married George Pace. MAYCOCK GENFORUM Direct Descendants of Johis Meacock 1 Johis Meacock b: 1542 in Yelvertoft, Northampton, ENG d: March 15, 1608/09 in Yelvertoft, Northampton, ENG ... +Unknown b: Abt. 1540 in Yelvertoft, Northampton, ENG d: March 14, 1608/09 in Yelvertoft, Northampton, ENG m: Abt. 1566 .. 2 Roger Maycocke b: February 02, 1567/68 in Yelvertoft, Northampton, ENG d: August 11, 1614 in Yelvertoft, Northampton, ENG ........ +Unknown b: Abt. 1575 in ENG m: Abt. 1588 ....... 3 Samuel Maycocke b: November 04, 1594 in Yelvertoft, Northampton, ENG d: March 22, 1621/22 in Jamestown, James City, VA ............. +Sarah Coonce b: Abt. 1600 in Jamestown, James City, VA ............ 4 Sarah Maycock b: 1622 in Jamestown, James City, VA d: 1655 in Charles City Co., VA .................. +George Pace b: 1609 in Wapping, ENG or Jamestown, VA d: June 04, 1655 in Charles City Co., VA m: 1637 in James City Co., VA ................. 5 John Pace b: Abt. 1640 in Jamestown, Surrey Co.,VA d: January 20, 1720/21 in Middlesex Co., VA ....................... +Elizabeth Newsome b: 1679 in Surry Co., VA d: December 30, 1716 in Middlesex Co., VA m: Abt. 1693 ...................... 6 Joseph Pace b: Abt. 1698 in Lagrange Creek, Middlesex, VA d: December 18, 1765 in Little Bird Creek, Goochland, VA ............................ +Ann Basford b: Abt. 1698 in Middlesex Co., VA m: April 18, 1721 in Middlesex Co., VA ........................... 7 John H. Pace b: March 14, 1721/22 in Christ Church Parish, Middlesex Co., Va d: 1790 in Goochland Co., Virginia ................................. +Susannah Houchens b: Abt. 1728 in Lancaster Co., VA d: Bet. 1808 - 1809 in Goochland Co., VA m: May 03, 1743 in Goochland Co., Virginia ................................ 8 [2] Murray Pace b: Abt. 1751 in Lickinghole Twp, Goochland, VA d: 1832 in Clark Co., Ky ...................................... +[1] Mary Ashley b: 1766 in Of, Goochland, VA m: September 15, 1775 in St. James Northam Parish, Goochland, Virginia .................................... 9 [3] Frances S Pace b: Abt. 1776 in Goochland County, VA d: 1858 .......................................... +[4] Giles Richeson b: Abt. 1765 in Caroline, Caroline, VA d: Bef. 1840 in TN m: October 28, 1793 in Goochland County, VA ......................................... 10 [5] Fielding Lewis Richeson b: 1825 in VA ............................................... +[6] Sapphira Hemingway b: 1841 in IA m: October 18, 1866 in Booneville, Warrick, IN .............................................. 11 [7] Erastus Fielden Richeson b: February 12, 1867 in Pike Co., IN d: April 23, 1960 in Booneville, Warrick, IN .................................................... +[8] Mina E Dempsey b: April 1877 in Warrick Co., IN d: 1927 in Booneville, Warrick, IN m: March 11, 1893 in Booneville, Warrick, IN ................................................... 12 [9] Lillian Cornelia Richeson b: June 21, 1905 in Luce, Spencer, Indiana d: July 11, 1981 in Monrovia, Anaheim, CA ......................................................... +[10] Frederick Martin Kelley b: May 21, 1898 in Booneville, Warrick, IN d: July 29, 1940 in Booneville, Warrick, IN m: 1921 in IN ........................................................ 13 [11] Katie Ilean Kelley b: January 18, 1922 in Boone twp, Booneville, Warrick, IN d: October 02, 1969 in Eureka, Woodford, IL ...................... 6 William Pace b: March 25, 1711 in Middlesex Co., VA ............................ +Hannah Booten b: Abt. 1713 in VA m: December 26, 1733 in Middlesex Co., VA ........................... 7 Hannah Pace b: March 09, 1743/44 in Christ Church, Middlesex, VA d: 1820 in Logan Co., KY ................................. +William Ashley b: Abt. 1742 in VA d: 1812 in Logan Co., KY m: March 08, 1762 in St. James Northam, Goochland, VA ................................ 8 [1] Mary Ashley b: 1766 in Of, Goochland, VA ...................................... +[2] Murray Pace b: Abt. 1751 in Lickinghole Twp, Goochland, VA d: 1832 in Clark Co., Ky m: September 15, 1775 in St. James Northam Parish, Goochland, Virginia .................................... 9 [3] Frances S Pace b: Abt. 1776 in Goochland County, VA d: 1858 .......................................... +[4] Giles Richeson b: Abt. 1765 in Caroline, Caroline, VA d: Bef. 1840 in TN m: October 28, 1793 in Goochland County, VA ......................................... 10 [5] Fielding Lewis Richeson b: 1825 in VA ............................................... +[6] Sapphira Hemingway b: 1841 in IA m: October 18, 1866 in Booneville, Warrick, IN .............................................. 11 [7] Erastus Fielden Richeson b: February 12, 1867 in Pike Co., IN d: April 23, 1960 in Booneville, Warrick, IN .................................................... +[8] Mina E Dempsey b: April 1877 in Warrick Co., IN d: 1927 in Booneville, Warrick, IN m: March 11, 1893 in Booneville, Warrick, IN ................................................... 12 [9] Lillian Cornelia Richeson b: June 21, 1905 in Luce, Spencer, Indiana d: July 11, 1981 in Monrovia, Anaheim, CA ......................................................... +[10] Frederick Martin Kelley b: May 21, 1898 in Booneville, Warrick, IN d: July 29, 1940 in Booneville, Warrick, IN m: 1921 in IN ........................................................ 13 [11] Katie Ilean Kelley b: January 18, 1922 in Boone twp, Booneville, Warrick, IN d: October 02, 1969 in Eureka, Woodford, IL
Virginia Vital Records, Register of St. James Northam Parish, Goochland County: Births, lists: John Pace & Susanna Houchins Francis born Nov 25 1764Page 122 James born Nov 25 1772 Pg 127Darlene Pace
At 10:47 14/08/2005 -0700, Darren wrote: >The copyright in Howard's book states: >"Copyright reserved by the author on all material contained in this book, >except those parts which are excerpts of, or transcripts of official records. >It shall be unlawful for anyone to use or copy any copyrightable material, >contained in this book, electronically or by any other means whatsoever >without the written permission of the author." > >So, I read that all the official records, source documents are free to use >without permission. >It's his original wording, thoughts, and ideas that are protected by >copyright. That's my understanding also. >Also, if I understand the copyright for books, if your only intention is >to quote the author >properly (giving proper credit, footnotes, etc..) then you're not >infringing any copyright laws. >The key here is to stop someone from plagiarizing your work and calling it >their own. I may be out to lunch, but that's the way I always understood it. It's legal to quote without permission provided the quote fits the "fair use" criteria (http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html). >In this case however, I agree, it would be very easy to email Bruce and >get his permission. Yes. Or put Bruce Howard and the researcher in touch with each other. Ellen