No real question here--just a thought I wanted to share to all who--like me--find themselves drawing oh-so-many inferences from not a lot of evidence. I've mentioned that I'm looking for information on my great grandfather, Charles Gelwicks. For a long while, all I had was his name on my grandfather's death certificate, and a birthplace, Pennsylvania (no county or town given). Then another researcher found him in the Franklin County 1860 census, age 48, with wife Elizabeth, 38, children Charlotte (12), Eleanor (10), Luther (6--my grandfather), Anna (2). But then in the Ancestry file I found a John Gelwicks, born 1812, wife Elizabeth, born 1815, and a bunch of children including Charlotte, born 1848, and Anna, born 1858 or 1859, but no Eleanor or Luther. He had lived in Franklin County until he moved to Carroll County IL in 1859 or thereabouts. It didn't seem possible to me that there could have been two men the exact same age named Gelwicks in Franklin County, each with a wife named Elizabeth, a daughter named Charlotte born in 1848 and a daugher named Anna born in 1858. Well, turns out that there were; I found John with his name misspelled Galwicks in the 1860 census in Carroll County. I was still puzzled by the coincidene of the two Charlottes and the two Annas. But now I find there definitely were two Charlottes. Charlotte No. 1, "my" Charlotte, married McCauley Zimmerman in McConnellsburg PA in 1870; Charlotte No. 2 married Lorenzo Asbury (or Asburg) in 1873 in Carroll County. Let this be a lesson to me! Judy Hall