I have found a John Wesley Page, b. 20 Sep. 1842 in Fleming Co., KY - d. 20 Aug. 1933 in DeKalb, Buchanan Co., MO! He m. Calle Greems on 25 Aug. 1865, but I don't know the names of their children. The parents of John Wesley Page were Jesse William Page (b. 21 Dec. 1818 in IN - d. 4 Nov. 1891 in Platte Co., MO) & Emily Green Plummer (b. 4 Nov. 1822 in Fleming Co., KY the dau. of George Plummer & Hannah Seeven - d. 11 Sep. 1917 in Buchanan Co., MO). They were m. 11 June 1830 in Flemingsburg (Fleming Co., KY). Jesse William Page was the son of William Page, (b.c. 1764 in Goochland Co., VA - d. 1860 in Platte Co., MO). [Source: Patricia K. Wood, 3500 West 92nd Terrace, Leawood, KS 66206. An Page family reunion used to be held every year at the Sugar Creek Christian Church near Rushville, Buchanan Co., MO the Sunday after Labor Day as cited in the KY and MO sections of a two volume book, CAROLINA PAGES by Robert E. Page III.] Fleming Co., KY was created 1798 from Mason Co. This is NOT my line of Pages and I have no further info on this line! George W. Page At 05:56 PM 8/23/2000 -0400, you wrote: >Hello > > I am passing on this information in the hopes of finding more relatives >and information on our family tree. > > Queen Victoria Page was the daughter of John Wesley Page and was born in >Graves County, Kentucky on August 20, 1874. She was the 17th of the 18 >children of Mr. Page and his second wife. His first wife Mary Ann Elnora >Snowden had born the first nine before her death. > Queenie married Lee Anderson McClanahan and bore him 5 daughers, Nola > Lee, >Ruby Pearl, Maude Adelle, Marion Alice and Mary Lee. Ten days after the birth >of Mary, Lee contracted appendicitus and died. Several years later, she would >remarry John Yarbrough. He was known to the girls as "Big Papa". > John Yarbrough died about 1953, according to family sources. Queen >Victoria died on March 31, 1958 and is buried in the Woodville Kentucky >Cemetery. The family home was near Lovelaceville, Kentucky on the Ballard and >McCracken County Line. At one point after Lee's death, the house burned and >Queenie lived under a taurpaline while the house was being rebuilt by her >son-in-law William Eaker, who was a carpenter by trade. Because of his >diminutive size, he was known as Uncle Peck by the family. Her >granddaughters, Elizabeth Elrod stayed with her during this time and related >this story to Gary Pace. The only known photograph of Lee McClanahan was >saved from the fire and is in the possession of a second cousin. Gilbert >Elrod, his grandfather, gave Gary Pace a hand saw that he said belonged to >Lee McClanahan. > >Thomas W. Rogers >924 E. Jackson Street >Morton, Illinois 61550 > >Gary Pace >1308 6th Ave. North >Nashville, Tennessee 37208 > > >==== PAGE Mailing List ==== >PAGE list website - http://www2.netdoor.com/~cch/lists/PAGE.htm