<A HREF="http://www.libertynet.org/gsp/">Click here: German Society of Pennsylvania</A> http://www.libertynet.org/gsp/ <A HREF="http://genealogy.org/~palam/ships.htm">Click here: List of Ships to Philadelphia</A> http://genealogy.org/~palam/ships.htm <A HREF="http://www.frontiermuseum.org/german.htm">Click here: German Farm</A> http://www.frontiermuseum.org/german.htm <A HREF="http://www.state.pa.us/PA_Exec/Historical_Museum/DAM/genie1.htm">Cli ck here: PA State Archives - Research Guides - Genealogical Records</A> http://www.state.pa.us/PA_Exec/Historical_Museum/DAM/genie1.htm <A HREF="http://www.delco.lib.pa.us/">Click here: Delaware County Library System Homepage</A> http://www.delco.lib.pa.us/ <A HREF="http://www.webring.org/cgi-bin/webring?ring=pagenealogy&list">Click here: WebRing: Navigation</A> http://www.webring.org/cgi-bin/webring?ring=pagenealogy&list <A HREF="http://usawebpages.com/pa/city.htm">Click here: Pennsylvania Webpages - City Search</A> http://usawebpages.com/pa/city.htm <A HREF="http://search.aol.com/redirect.adp?appname=QBP&query=%1d%42%4d%ba%70%b2% c7%29%ee%57%8a%d5%5f%5e%2d%93%e3%99%ba%9e%71%18%25%3d%33%bd%07%2f%44%4c%6d%5f% ab%58%76%fa%19%9f%3f%26%fa%46%fe%15%4c%f0%71%d0%01%35%67%96%68%41%ab%f2%89%43% dc%44%fd%31%96%f2%0d%9d%1e%59%f8%85%37%2c%f4%c3%af%66%30%71%a8%4b%74%ea%a9%e9% 77%b1%67%6b">Click here: PAGenWeb: Pennsylvania Genealogy</A> http://pa-roots.com/pagenweb/ I SURE HOPE THIS WORKED ??? Mary Jane Bright Star
Hi everyone, Thank you to all of you for your cut and paste directions. I am working on it, and will try and do better next time. I thought I knew how to do it, but I guess what I am doing is not coming out right to yous guys. This is what I have been doing: I highlight with left side of mouse I click and copy, right side of mouse I then paste to new mail, right side of mouse. So I will work on it for next few days, and see if I can do it better. Thanks to everyone for your advice. Mary Jane Bright Star
"Dover is the capital of Delaware. And it is in southern Delaware." I learn real "good." I held down the Ctrl and hit the V. Now, back to Delaware. Yes, Dover is the capital, but you wouldn't say it's in southern Delaware. Delaware has three counties: New Castle on the north, then Kent, and Sussex is the southern county. It's frequently called "Lower Slower Delaware." Dover is in Kent County. Barbara -----Original Message----- From: PACHESTE-D-request@rootsweb.com <PACHESTE-D-request@rootsweb.com> To: PACHESTE-D@rootsweb.com <PACHESTE-D@rootsweb.com> Date: Wednesday, August 02, 2000 7:53 PM Subject: PACHESTE-D Digest V00 #243
At 08:57 PM 8/2/2000 , fianna@fast.net wrote: Hi Sharon, all, This certainly is true! One must share the heritage with the Welsh that were probably already settled. Talk about fall-out. The Revolutionary War removed any question of "which side?" Quaker ranks were depleted with the enlistment of patriots. Many records exist of the re-receiving of R.W. vets into the Monthly Meeting. In re: BAREFOOT: NC State Representative,author of the history of Gen Robert E. Hoke, "Lee's Modest Warrior," and a leader in the Lincoln County Historical Society, as well as a Lincolnton attorney is Daniel W. Barefoot. He is probably descended to the folks you mention. You might write him at <danielb@ncleg.net>. I admire him immensely. My personal experience with him was as though I was allowed to see a man that history would speak kindly of. Except, instead of reading about it, I was allowed to see it during his age of achievement. Great list, best wishes, --Derick >Hi Sharon, >Berks Co. is certainly a good bet. It was a _very_ German county. And as well >as Caernarvon Twp., Douglassville and Amity Twp. are also in Berks. >Could the Barefoot family have been Quakers? The early Berks settlers who were >English-speaking were mostly Quakers, or the fallen-away children of Quakers. >In fact, Quakers were there before the Germans. >Karen > >Sharon Sheldon wrote: > > > Hey Folks, > > > > Here's one for ya: in a dictated autobiography my distant uncle made the > > following remarks about the progenitor of our Barefoot line: "Dr. Benjamin > > Barefoot, came over from the North of Ireland in the last years of the 18th > > century and located among the Pennsylvania Germans in German County." > > > > Now I know there's no such thing as German County, and Germantown isn't a > > possibility, either, according to their historical society. In 1785 my > > Benjamin Barefoot first appears on the tax records in West Nantmeal Twp., > > Chester Co., PA. A man I believe is his brother, Samuel Barefoot, is > on the > > tax list as well. Does anyone have any comments on where would be a good > > place in Chester Co. that would earn the designation of German County by > > one who would not know any better? > > > > As an aside, the best I can find on this family (or even this surname) > shows > > activity in the 1760's off and on in Douglassville, Amity Twp. & West > > Nantmeal. There's also a James Barefoot who would be a contemporary of > > these two listed on the tax records in Nottingham Twp. In the 1770's there > > were a few Barefoots who were in the Caernarvon Twp. area of Berks Co. as > > well, but I can't find evidence of them in Berks earlier than that. > > > > This is my first foray into anything German in PA. Any clues, anyone? :) > > > > Thanks a bunch for reading this. > > > > Sharon > > No. VA > > > > ==== PACHESTE Mailing List ==== > > Stop by our associated website for Chester County Genealogy at > > http://www.rootsweb.com/~pacheste/chester.htm > > >==== PACHESTE Mailing List ==== >Check out other counties in PA! >http://libertynet.org/~gencap/pacounties.html > >
Hi Sharon, Berks Co. is certainly a good bet. It was a _very_ German county. And as well as Caernarvon Twp., Douglassville and Amity Twp. are also in Berks. Could the Barefoot family have been Quakers? The early Berks settlers who were English-speaking were mostly Quakers, or the fallen-away children of Quakers. In fact, Quakers were there before the Germans. Karen Sharon Sheldon wrote: > Hey Folks, > > Here's one for ya: in a dictated autobiography my distant uncle made the > following remarks about the progenitor of our Barefoot line: "Dr. Benjamin > Barefoot, came over from the North of Ireland in the last years of the 18th > century and located among the Pennsylvania Germans in German County." > > Now I know there's no such thing as German County, and Germantown isn't a > possibility, either, according to their historical society. In 1785 my > Benjamin Barefoot first appears on the tax records in West Nantmeal Twp., > Chester Co., PA. A man I believe is his brother, Samuel Barefoot, is on the > tax list as well. Does anyone have any comments on where would be a good > place in Chester Co. that would earn the designation of German County by > one who would not know any better? > > As an aside, the best I can find on this family (or even this surname) shows > activity in the 1760's off and on in Douglassville, Amity Twp. & West > Nantmeal. There's also a James Barefoot who would be a contemporary of > these two listed on the tax records in Nottingham Twp. In the 1770's there > were a few Barefoots who were in the Caernarvon Twp. area of Berks Co. as > well, but I can't find evidence of them in Berks earlier than that. > > This is my first foray into anything German in PA. Any clues, anyone? :) > > Thanks a bunch for reading this. > > Sharon > No. VA > > ==== PACHESTE Mailing List ==== > Stop by our associated website for Chester County Genealogy at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~pacheste/chester.htm
Highlight by clicking the left mouse button then click the right mouse button and a box will appear asking if you want to cut-copy or paste, click on one and hold the button down. Put the curser where you want it and release the right mouse button. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Talk to your friends online with Yahoo! Messenger. http://im.yahoo.com
Also, if you don't want to alter the original data, after you highlight the data (hold down mouse button and drag to highlight) hold down the control key and press C (for copy). This will copy the info into a temporary "buffer" - you then use the Control V to paste the data where you want it. -----Original Message----- From: Wilma <gencon@harborside.com> To: PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com <PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Wednesday, August 02, 2000 6:51 PM Subject: [PACHESTE] simple way to remember how to Cut and paste > I find this real easy to remember how to cut and how to paste > >First find what you want to cut.. high light it and do this.. > > to cut... hold down CTRL and press X > remember x is for zap/get rid of/xing out something.. > > next find where you want it to go and do this.. > > to paste... hold down CTRL and press V > remember that v is for victory.. > >and bingo... it is where you want it to be.. >x for get rid of >v for victory > > Wilma Fleming Haynes > gencon@harborside.com > > > >==== PACHESTE Mailing List ==== >To post a message to this list, send your message to >PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com > > > >
I have found a Dickey family in Chester, the first being John dickey who came to America in 1744, bringing with him membership from the Presby. church in Ireland, which he deposited in the Presby. church of New London. He was a farmer, "noted for integrity", and died at 75. His son, Robert, sold the farm and moved to New Castle, Lawrence Co, pa, where Jesse C. Dickey was born, 2-27-1808. The family returned to Chester in 1812, and money matters made it necessary for the Robert to "seek aid from his children." Thus, at the age of 11 Jesse became a farmer's boy, and continued working in the summer and attending school in the winter until he was 21, when began teaching......(there follows more about his life which I won't include..if later you discover this to be your line, let me know and I'll send the rest). Anyway, here comes the "good" part....Jesse married, 12-11-1834 a Miss Margaret Dickey, youngest dau. of Col. David Dickey, of Hopewell........ their children aren't listed, but this sounds a likely set of parents for your Margaret., There is also another Dickey line in Chester...These emigrated from the North of Ireland ,and were Presbyterians, too. Several of this line were ministers of the Associated Reform Presby. Church, and active in Oxford and Octorara areas....but, they don't seem related to the other Dickeys. A Joseph Gallagher was listed as a past master of the Lincoln Grange #130, that was established 2-24-1874. Sandra -----Original Message----- From: Mary Ann sutphin <msutphin@tcia.net> To: PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com <PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Wednesday, August 02, 2000 3:34 PM Subject: [PACHESTE] GALLAGHER/DICKEY >A marriage announcement from "Village Record," Nov. 19, 1867, >for Mr. Joseph GALLAGHER, of Dauphintown, PA. to Miss Margaret >Francina DICKEY of Penn Twp. at the home of Thomas POWELL. >Is anyone researching this family? Margaret DICKEY GALLAGHER >was the niece of Margaret DICKEY POWELL, second wife of Thomas >POWELL of Penn and East Nottingham twp. Chester County, PA. She >was raised in the POWELL home and continued living there after >her marriage, apparently to care for the aging POWELLs, who were >then living Elkdale. >Can anyone identify these Margaret DICKEYs? >Who were the children of Joseph and Margaret Francina DICKEY >GALLAGHER? Where are they buried? Where is Margaret DICKEY POWELL >buried? >Any help will be much appreciated. >Thank you, >Mary A. POWELL Sutphin > > >==== PACHESTE Mailing List ==== >Stop by our associated website for Chester County Genealogy at >http://www.rootsweb.com/~pacheste/chester.htm > > > >
Pennsylvania Wills, 1682-1834 will in Bergs Co of Jacob Morgan...1792, mentions Servant girl Martha BAREFOOT to be free after my decease. Berks: Sons Jacob and Benjamin. Wits: Lott EVANS, John BARKLEY and John SPYKER. Witness to codicil: Samuel LAVERTY and John EVANS. Lancaster co Pennsylvania Wills, 1682-1834 --- October 7, 1782 KNUP, JACOB (This should be NUPP.) Wife. Catharine Nupp. Children: Jacob, Anna, Elizabeth, Mary and Catharina. Ex. Henry Moore and Barefoot Brunson. Twp. omitted. The above are the only mentions of the surname Barefoot, on CD 209 Pa Wills 1682-1834. Church Records: Selected Areas of PA, 1600s-1800s Berks Co. St. Gabriel's church Martha Barefoot daughter of Samuel and Jean of Amity Township in Berks County, b. February 15, 1759, bapt. September 13, 1778. Church Records: Selected Areas of PA, 1600s-1800s Ezabella Barefoot daughter of Benjamin and Rebecca, b. November 14, 1795, bapt. July 2, 1797. Church Records: Selected Areas of PA, 1600s-1800s William Barefoot son of Benjamin and Rebecca, b. December 10, 1791, bapt. July 2, 1797. Samuel Barefoot son of Benjamin and Rebecca, b. August 2, 1793, bapt. July 2, 1797. William Barefoot son of Benjamin and Rebecca, b. December 10, 1791, bapt. July 2, 1797. Samuel Barefoot son of Benjamin and Rebecca, b. August 2, 1793, bapt. July 2, 1797. Lancaster co,,,,St James Episcopal Church Records: Selected Areas of PA, 1600s-1800s Church Records: Selected Areas of PA, 1600s-1800s Cyrus of --- and Martha Barefoot, b. July 30, 1800, bapt. July 19, 1801 at old John Evans', farmer. After looking at the names of the citizenry of Coventry, I'd think it was mostly composed of Germans, through the 1700s. There certainly may be other areas, but this seems a likely place to look. Sandra -----Original Message----- From: Sharon Sheldon <slsheldon@earthlink.net> To: PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com <PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Wednesday, August 02, 2000 4:02 PM Subject: [PACHESTE] "GERMAN COUNTY, PA" >Hey Folks, > >Here's one for ya: in a dictated autobiography my distant uncle made the >following remarks about the progenitor of our Barefoot line: "Dr. Benjamin >Barefoot, came over from the North of Ireland in the last years of the 18th >century and located among the Pennsylvania Germans in German County." > >Now I know there's no such thing as German County, and Germantown isn't a >possibility, either, according to their historical society. In 1785 my >Benjamin Barefoot first appears on the tax records in West Nantmeal Twp., >Chester Co., PA. A man I believe is his brother, Samuel Barefoot, is on the >tax list as well. Does anyone have any comments on where would be a good >place in Chester Co. that would earn the designation of German County by >one who would not know any better? > >As an aside, the best I can find on this family (or even this surname) shows >activity in the 1760's off and on in Douglassville, Amity Twp. & West >Nantmeal. There's also a James Barefoot who would be a contemporary of >these two listed on the tax records in Nottingham Twp. In the 1770's there >were a few Barefoots who were in the Caernarvon Twp. area of Berks Co. as >well, but I can't find evidence of them in Berks earlier than that. > >This is my first foray into anything German in PA. Any clues, anyone? :) > >Thanks a bunch for reading this. > >Sharon >No. VA > > > >==== PACHESTE Mailing List ==== >Stop by our associated website for Chester County Genealogy at >http://www.rootsweb.com/~pacheste/chester.htm > > > >
>IN Red Lion Hundred! OK, now the light DAWNS! >And I gather this was seven to ten miles from >Wilmington - which is the capital of Delaware? If memory serves me correctly, Wilmington was once part of Pennsylvania up till the line dispute in 1790. It was originally called New Sweden as it was founded by the Swedish. Although Delaware is this nations first state, it is the second smallest. It's capital now rests in the town of Dover. Delaware City is a small southern town that lies along the Delaware River. Quite quaint if one were to travel there. Mainly wood, brick structures and such. Residents know all to well the chemical plants that are scattered about in that location. But for those who seek a special treat, try a visit to the old town of New Castle. Founded by the Dutch in the 1600's. The Court House still remains that housed those officials who one day placed a line on a map to claim Delaware right to land that was otherwise Pennsylvania. Much more could be said about that state's history, but perhaps I should leave that for a Delaware list. Hope I have enlighten some of you. Take care, and happy searching.................. Cheryl To answer the long outstanding question......Does Delaware exist? It seems to be there every Christmas when citizens from surrounding states bombard the "tiny state" for tax free shopping?!
Its time again to post a query on Jesse Evans. I'm looking for his parents. He was proprietor of the inn called The Sign of the Swan from 1807 through about 1823. His wife ran the inn for a while after he quit, probably to run for sheriff. The inn was located in Downingtown and torn down in the 1950's after 148 years there. I understand there is a roadside marker #14 at the location of the inn. Jesse's wife was Esther Parke, daughter of Abiah Parke and Ruth Jones. Futhey and Cope have given me a good bit of the Parke family history, and another lister has given me substantial help on the Jones family. Esther's husband, Jesse Evans, is not the same Jesse Evans who married Lydia Valentine, daughter of Robert Valentine, but was in Downingtown at the same time. Esther's husband, Jesse, died in 1832 in East Caln, leaving one son, William Evans, a tailor by trade. Does this ring a bell for anyone? Florence
German Beginnings in America The English government was aware of the plight of the Palafines. It took measures to settle some of them in the colony of New York, beginning in 1709-10. William Penn hoped to obtain German settlers for the vast American lands that King Charles II had given him in 1680. Penn sent recruiting agents, who could speak German, to the Rhineland. These agents printed broad-sides to distribute in villages, such as Hordt, to attract potential settlers to the rich land in Pennsylvania. Religious freedom was among the advantages Penn offered. Pennsylvania became the focal point for German settlement in America, although there were areas of German settlement in New York, Maryland, and Georgia as well. Most of the German-speaking people who settled in the Valley of Virginia came there after living for several years in Pennsylvania. Early groups of German settlers arrived in Pennsylvania in the 1680s. The mass movement of Lutheran, Reformed Germans, and the smaller pietist sects like the Mennonites and Brethren began in 1709. These peoples quickly acquired prime farmlands in the areas surrounding Philadelphia. They began to spread westward into Lancaster County and towards the Susquehanna River. A few began to enter the northern Shenandoah Valley of Virginia in 1730. By the 1740s, the best farm lands in Pennsylvania had been claimed. The children and grandchildren of the early German settlers began to look southward to the great Valley of Virginia, and into North Carolina, for new lands to farm. In the Valley of Virginia, their areas of greatest concentration were in present-day Shenandoah County, where they were the overwhelming majority of the population, and in Frederick, Rockingham, Page and northern Augusta counties. After the American Revolution, and in the early -19th century, these Virginia Germans, many of them grandchildren of the immigrants from the Palatinate, began to move from the northern Valley into south-western Virginia. They leapfrogged over some counties and settled in Botetourt, Montgomery and Wythe Counties in large numbers. Mary Jane Bright Star
Cataloging Project In 1994, the 230th anniversary of the founding of the Society, the project to modernize and improve the Joseph Horner Memorial Library began. The goals of the project were to catalog the bulk of the important holdings of the library in modern, machine-readable form, to preserve the materials in the German American Collection in its entirety, and to begin the process of establishing a center for research into the history of German-America. The Library Project has been made possible thanks to generous contributions from the Robert Bosch Foundation in Stuttgart, the Fritz Thyssen Foundation in Cologne and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Federal Republic of Germany. Administrative support for the project is provided by the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures at the University of Pennsylvania. In February 1998, the library was closed in order to begin renovation of the library, which included removal of the drop ceiling and replacement of the original plaster ceiling, opening of the original skylight, new wiring and installation of a heating, ventilation and air conditioning system. The refurbished library was reopened to the public in October 1999. Cataloging of the German Society's library into the RLIN (Research Libraries Information Network) database began in October of 1994. To date, the Library Project's librarians have cataloged over 24,000 of the library's oldest volumes. Catalogers began with the oldest materials: those collected in roughly the first one hundred years of the library's existence, and which are housed in the original glass cases on the balcony and floor level of the library. Electronic catalog records are being entered into RLIN, a database into which many of the large university and research libraries enter their libraries' holdings. In the process of cataloging, catalogers have found that fully 57% of the books cataloged are new to the database, and close to 20% represent unique titles in U.S. libraries! The library project recently set up a web-based catalog through which the public can access the electronically cataloged records. The German Society's library has always been a "Volksbibliothek," evidenced by the many popular subjects covered in the collection. The library has books on all topics, from history to religion, travel, music, art history and literature. Many of the types of books in the German Society's library would not have been collected by university libraries, which focused on more traditional scholarly materials. For just this reason, the library today has many unique books not represented in research libraries in the U.S., and possibly even in Germany. Today, historians will find many areas of potential research interest in our collection. Some of the interesting subject areas already cataloged include: a large collection of childrens' books; a section of books on parapsychology, including mesmerism, phrenology, somnambulism, animal magnetism and spirit posession; a large collection of travel literature, with many first-hand accounts of eighteenth and nineteenth century explorers on all continents; and a collection of German cookbooks. The library also contains a large collection of 19th and 20th century popular literarure. These are just a few examples of the wonderful books in the collection. Probably the most unique and interesting collection for historical research, however, is the German-American Collection, put together by Oswald Seidensticker, a prominent professor of German at the University of Pennsylvania in the late 1800s. This collection of over 9000 items contains pamphlets, books, broadsides, and manuscripts on every aspect of German life in the United States, beginning with the first settlers in Germantown in 1683. The entire collection was sent to the Northeast Document Conservation Center in Andover, Mass. for conservation treatment in the summer of 1994. The collection has been treated and returned to the German Society and is now being cataloged. The German Society is continuing to raise funds for the purchase of new materials for the library. For information about how you can help the Society achieve its goals, please contact the Executive Director of the Society at 215-627-2332. Mary Jane Bright Star
I find this real easy to remember how to cut and how to paste First find what you want to cut.. high light it and do this.. to cut... hold down CTRL and press X remember x is for zap/get rid of/xing out something.. next find where you want it to go and do this.. to paste... hold down CTRL and press V remember that v is for victory.. and bingo... it is where you want it to be.. x for get rid of v for victory Wilma Fleming Haynes gencon@harborside.com
Hey Folks, Here's one for ya: in a dictated autobiography my distant uncle made the following remarks about the progenitor of our Barefoot line: "Dr. Benjamin Barefoot, came over from the North of Ireland in the last years of the 18th century and located among the Pennsylvania Germans in German County." Now I know there's no such thing as German County, and Germantown isn't a possibility, either, according to their historical society. In 1785 my Benjamin Barefoot first appears on the tax records in West Nantmeal Twp., Chester Co., PA. A man I believe is his brother, Samuel Barefoot, is on the tax list as well. Does anyone have any comments on where would be a good place in Chester Co. that would earn the designation of German County by one who would not know any better? As an aside, the best I can find on this family (or even this surname) shows activity in the 1760's off and on in Douglassville, Amity Twp. & West Nantmeal. There's also a James Barefoot who would be a contemporary of these two listed on the tax records in Nottingham Twp. In the 1770's there were a few Barefoots who were in the Caernarvon Twp. area of Berks Co. as well, but I can't find evidence of them in Berks earlier than that. This is my first foray into anything German in PA. Any clues, anyone? :) Thanks a bunch for reading this. Sharon No. VA
A marriage announcement from "Village Record," Nov. 19, 1867, for Mr. Joseph GALLAGHER, of Dauphintown, PA. to Miss Margaret Francina DICKEY of Penn Twp. at the home of Thomas POWELL. Is anyone researching this family? Margaret DICKEY GALLAGHER was the niece of Margaret DICKEY POWELL, second wife of Thomas POWELL of Penn and East Nottingham twp. Chester County, PA. She was raised in the POWELL home and continued living there after her marriage, apparently to care for the aging POWELLs, who were then living Elkdale. Can anyone identify these Margaret DICKEYs? Who were the children of Joseph and Margaret Francina DICKEY GALLAGHER? Where are they buried? Where is Margaret DICKEY POWELL buried? Any help will be much appreciated. Thank you, Mary A. POWELL Sutphin
The trick to it is to "cut and paste. You highlight the URL, then go to the top of the toolbox, and click on edit. There. you will see cut, copy and paste. click on the cut. Then go to your email form, put the little blinking cursor where you want the URL to appear, go back to the top of the page and again click on edit...this time click on paste. This will put the URL (or whatever it was that you highlighted and cut) right where you want it. This is a great technique to master, for it will allow you to cut anything from any site, and paste it anywhere you want it; in your genealogical files, in emails, into folders, etc. Often times, an email, the same email, will be sent multiple times...I don't believe anyone quite knows why, but I got several of yours several times. -----Original Message----- From: REDSKI9136@aol.com <REDSKI9136@aol.com> To: PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com <PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Wednesday, August 02, 2000 1:52 PM Subject: [PACHESTE] Too much mail- message below >Subj: Re: [PACHESTE] Check out Cyndi's List - Ships & Passenger Lists >Date: 8/2/00 8:18:34 AM Eastern Daylight Time >From: ferg@intelos.net (Sandra Ferguson) >Reply-to: ferg@intelos.net (Sandra Ferguson) >To: REDSKI9136@aol.com > >Could you not, next time, incorporate all these emails into one....I had 18 >emails this morning from you.....why not put all the URLs in one? >-----Original Message----- >From: REDSKI9136@aol.com <REDSKI9136@aol.com> >To: PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com <PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com> >Date: Tuesday, August 01, 2000 10:43 PM >Subject: [PACHESTE] Check out Cyndi's List - Ships & Passenger Lists > > >> <A HREF="http://www.cyndislist.com/ships.htm">Click here: Cyndi's List >->Ships & Passenger Lists</A> http://www.cyndislist.com/ships.htm >> >> >> >> >> Mary Jane >> brightstar >> >> >>==== PACHESTE Mailing List ==== >>Stop by our associated website for Chester County Genealogy at >>http://www.rootsweb.com/~pacheste/chester.htm > > >Hi Sandra, > > I am sorry about all the single links sent. I have not learned >yet how to put them all into one piece of mail. I honestly don't know how 10 >pieces became 18, as you say you recieved.In any event, I saw many names that >our PACHESTE-L, ask about , so I sent them on. I won't make that mistake >again. > > Mary Jane > BrightStar > > >==== PACHESTE Mailing List ==== >Check out the searchable US GenWeb Project Archives! >http://searches.rootsweb.com/usgwarch.html > > > > >
In a message dated 8/2/00 7:53:12 AM Eastern Daylight Time, Ewenice@aol.com writes: << This batch of messages is beginning to look like Spam. >> Hello, If you are referring to the links I sent, please tell me how you consider them spam? Are we doing geneology here, or what??? Mary Jane Bright Star
Subj: Re: [PACHESTE] Check out Cyndi's List - Ships & Passenger Lists Date: 8/2/00 8:18:34 AM Eastern Daylight Time From: ferg@intelos.net (Sandra Ferguson) Reply-to: ferg@intelos.net (Sandra Ferguson) To: REDSKI9136@aol.com Could you not, next time, incorporate all these emails into one....I had 18 emails this morning from you.....why not put all the URLs in one? -----Original Message----- From: REDSKI9136@aol.com <REDSKI9136@aol.com> To: PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com <PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Tuesday, August 01, 2000 10:43 PM Subject: [PACHESTE] Check out Cyndi's List - Ships & Passenger Lists > <A HREF="http://www.cyndislist.com/ships.htm">Click here: Cyndi's List ->Ships & Passenger Lists</A> http://www.cyndislist.com/ships.htm > > > > > Mary Jane > brightstar > > >==== PACHESTE Mailing List ==== >Stop by our associated website for Chester County Genealogy at >http://www.rootsweb.com/~pacheste/chester.htm Hi Sandra, I am sorry about all the single links sent. I have not learned yet how to put them all into one piece of mail. I honestly don't know how 10 pieces became 18, as you say you recieved.In any event, I saw many names that our PACHESTE-L, ask about , so I sent them on. I won't make that mistake again. Mary Jane BrightStar
Message text written by INTERNET:PACHESTE-L@rootsweb.com >With any luck, this Sunday I am going to visit the cemetery at the Nantmeal Village M.E. Church where, according to records I've found, many of my McAfee ancestors are buried. Does anyone else have connections to this church? If so, I will gladly look around the cemetery for you while I'm there. < I may have TITLOW's buried there. Could you check that out for me? Thanks, Ray