In 1880 in DeRoche Township, Hot Spring County Arkansas Mary Phillips 66 NC NC NC Joseph son 25 AR NC NC farmer Mary Dau. 18 AR NC NC Hanah sister (probably sister-in-law) 67 NC Mary Phillips was the wife of Richard Phillips. This family was in Clark County Arkansas in the 1850, 1860 and 1870 census, living in Cedar Township. Richard was dead by the 1870 census, and Mary was the head of the house. In 1880 living near Mary Phillips is a 20y old Thomas Phillips and his wife Mary. Also found nearby is Basil Phillips 53 NC with his wife Jane born in Tennessee, and Hettie, Martha and Isaac. In 1870 this family was living next door to Mary Phillips in Cedar Township of Clark County. Basil Phillips was probably the son of William Phillips who lived in Hot Spring County in 1850, and Clark County in 1860 and 1870. William and Richard were likely brothers. Does anyone have information on these families? Mary and Richard Phillips had a son, William H. (Billy) who married Leanna Elizabeth Davis, and they lived in Clark County. Any help would be appreciated. Wanda
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/nNABAIB/5519 Message Board Post: Looking for the parents of Maggie Mae Phillips, born May, 1879. Some records list she was born in Indiana, other report St. Louis. She married William Charles Ash, April 1898, possibly in Indiana. They had nine children, Parker Neal, Hugh, Daniel, Joseph, Nettie, Nellie, Lily Belle, Lula, and Mary. Any information is appreciated. My email is jstephenson48@comcast.net. Thanks, Jerri Stephenson
This is to the gentleman that sent me the "headstone" picture of John and Elizabeth Phillips.. Could you Please send me that photo again.... :) I crashed my computer and lost the picture :( Also you had mentioned that there was a Peter Phillips on the same plot.. Was his name on the same headstone as John and Elizabeth? If there was a seperate head stone, would you send me that picture as well... You kindness is greatly appreaciated..... Thank you.... Ronye
Could someone tell me how to go about getting a death certificate for someone in Canada? I know that John K. Phillips died in 1852, and believed to be buried in Warkworth(?) as well as Elizabeth Phillips. Elizabeth died in 1880. Any information would be greatly appreciated... Thank you Ronye
I am wondering if anyone can look up John and Elizabeth in the 1850 census for Ontario to see if John and Elizabeth appear in it. They had 5 children as follows: Peter, Mary, Susan, John, and Josiah. I am not sure if Josiah and Mary were born in Cornwall, England like the rest of the kids, so they may not be on the census untill 1852 or there of.. John (elizabeth's husband) died in 1852 2 years after comming here from Cornwall, England..
Could some one look in the canada census to see if they can find John F. Phillips? He lived in Canada from the years of 1850 to 1865. In 1850, he was 6 years old, therefore in 1865, he would hae been 21. We are told that he was farmed out at the age of 8 when his father passed away. I am not sure how to go about looking for him in a Census. He also lived in New York from the years of 1865 to 1870/71. again his age would have been 21 to 26/27. Thank you for your time... Ronye researching PHILLIPS,HESS,KETCHUM,ROBERTS
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/nNABAIB/2570.1 Message Board Post: paul do you know what part of somerset the phillips are from im trying to find phillips pre 1800 wells somerset thanks gwen phillips
To Showlj and listers: I have a Nevada Phillips, 7 years old in 1880, shown on Darwin, Clark Co, 1880 census living with aunt Jane and Uncle Daniel Beachum (not sure of last name due to writing). I have been unable to find his ancestors. Does Nevada sound familiar to you? Have seen several different birth places listed, OH, IL and IN. Would gladly share the info I have on descendants with anyone interested. Thanks, Pam Lawhorn
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/nNABAIB/5472.1 Message Board Post: I've been working on the Padelford family, so I have a tiny bit on the descendants of Liscomb Phillips. You may already have this: Descendants of Liscomb Phillips Generation No. 1 1. Dr. Liscomb2 Phillips (Philip1) was born March 23, 1777 in Ashfield, Mass., and died October 10, 1821 in South Adams, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts. He married Nancy Padelford February 02, 1806 in Taunton, Bristol Co., Mass., daughter of Peleg Padelford and Sarah Clapp. She was born August 23, 1780, and died Aft. 1825. Notes for Dr. Liscomb Phillips: "[A]fter studying medicine with Dr. Bryant of Cummington, the father of William Cullen Bryant, the poet, [Liscomb Phillips] set up in the practice of medicine and surgery in Savoy. . . . "With her brother [actually cousin Zachariah III], Nancy Padelford, a fine horsewoman who had made three trips on horseback from Savoy to Taunton through the wilderness, resided, having come hither to teach school. Dr. Phillips made his home with the Padelfords, and afterwards married her. The cellar and orchard of the old Padelford farm, a little way up from the intersection of the Jackson road with the old highway to Adams is still pointed out and the site and orchard of the Dr. Phillips home still farther up the Jackson road and about three-quarters of a mile from Savoy Hollow is still to be seen. . . . "After a number of years' residence in Savoy, in which Dr. Phillips became eminent in his profession, he removed to the south village of Adams having purchased a fine colonial mansion on Park street, formerly standing on the north end of the present home lot of Hon. W. B. Plunkett and which for very many years was known as the Phillips homestead. While resident in Adams Dr. Phillips had a large and lucrative practice in that and in adjacent towns, and while in the midst of his active and busy life was suddenly stricken down by the rupture of a blood vessel in his brain and expired almost instantly. He had just returned from a horseback visit to Savoy, and while in the act of repairing the fastening of the door of his barn, suddenly sat down upon th sill, when his wife observed blood pouring from his nose in a stream. Help was summoned and the first to reach him George N. Briggs, his then near neighbor and personal friend, who with others carried him into the house where i! n a few minutes he expired without a groan or a word though evidently cognizant of his condition. . . ."---Berkshire Hills, IV:252-253. Notes for Nancy Padelford: After the death of Dr. Liscomb Phillips, "the task of rearing his young family fell upon his wife as a duty involving the severest trial and the greatest hardship. Yet she rose up most bravely and nobly to meet the emergency and surviving two of these children before her death saw the others all comfortably settled in life, and filling honorable and respected positions therein."---Berkshire Hills, IV:253. Children of Liscomb Phillips and Nancy Padelford are: 2 i. Dr. Henry Padelford3 Phillips, born January 24, 1807 in Savoy, Berkshire Co., Mass.; died November 24, 1881. He married Cecelia H. Tyler 1829 in New Lebanon Springs, New York; born Abt. 1810 in Massachusetts; died Aft. 1850. More About Dr. Henry Padelford Phillips: 1850 Census: physician, $1700 real, living in Adams, Berkshire Co., MA 1860 Census: doctor, $1900 real/$1000 personal, living in Adams, Berkshire Co., MA More About Cecelia H. Tyler: 1850 Census: living with husband in Adams, Berkshire Co., MA 1860 Census: living with husband in Adams, Berkshire Co., MA 3 ii. Sarah Ann Barton Phillips, born February 12, 1808 in Savoy, Berkshire Co., Mass.. She married Deacon William Smith. Notes for Deacon William Smith: "Sarah, the eldest daughter, married William Smith, a skillful mechanic, a man of marked intellectual ability and a member of a once noted Berkshire family."---Berkshire Hills, IV:255. 4 iii. Erasmus Darwin Phillips, born May 31, 1809 in Savoy, Berkshire Co., Mass.. He married Catherine Browning; born April 11, 1814 in Colrain, Massachusetts. Notes for Erasmus Darwin Phillips: "Mr. Phillips was a student of Williams College during the freshman years; he studied law in the office of George N. Briggs, Esq., of Berkshire Co.; afterward removed to Buffalo, N. Y., and was for a time a law student in the office of Erastus Root in that city; he came to Milwaukee in the spring of 1836, and was oon after admitted to the bar; while in Milwaukee he engaged in speculating, buying and selling of land claims; in 1856, he came to Geneva and purchased 21 acres of land within the corporation of the village, on which he has since lived. Mr. and Mrs. Phillips have two children---Darwin E., born near Milwaukee in 1850; he is now engaged in manufacturing at Blue Rapids, Kan.; and Alice G., wife of S.C. Ford. Mr. Phillips was one of the Board of Supervisors of the town of Oak Creek, near Milwaukee, and was Postmaster there twenty-one years, beginning with the administration of President Van Buren."---History of Walworth County, 908a. Notes for Catherine Browning: "Mrs. Phillips is said to have had one black eye and one blue, the only instance of the kind in the Browning family."---Genealogy of the Brownings in America from 1621 to 1908, 49. 5 iv. Charles Fox Phillips, born February 26, 1811 in Savoy, Berkshire Co., Mass.. He married ? Farnum. More About Charles Fox Phillips: Residence: Blackwater, Wisconsin 6 v. Julia Ann Phillips, born December 16, 1812 in Savoy, Berkshire Co., Mass.; died Aft. 1860. She married Stoel E. Dean Bef. 1860; born April 18, 1809 in Massachusetts; died Aft. 1860. More About Julia Ann Phillips: 1860 Census: living with husband in Adams, Berkshire Co., MA Notes for Stoel E. Dean: "Julia A., the second daughter, became the wife of Stoel E. Dean, a notable member of the famous Dean brothers of Adams, who owned and carried on for many years a large number of tanneries in Adams, Cheshire and Dalton during the last century. Mr. Dean at a later period was a woolen manufacturer in partnership with B. F. Phillips and afterwards with his son-in-law, A. H. Lamont, at Adams and Bridgeport, Ct."---Berkshire Hills, IV:256. More About Stoel E. Dean: 1860 Census: manufacturer of woolen goods, $49k real/$7700 personal, living in Adams, Berkshire Co., MA 7 vi. William Phillips, born 1814 in Savoy, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts; died Abt. 1825 in Adams, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts. Notes for William Phillips: "A sad fatality in the family of Dr. Liscomb Phillips was the death of the fourth son, William, at the age of eleven years. While playing ball with a number of Adams schoolmates the club slipped from the grasp of one of these and striking him in the head with great velocity he was instantly killed. The sad event so thoroughly influenced the family as for many years afterwards to prevent their witnessing this game and much less participating in it."---Berkshire Hills, IV:257. 8 vii. Benjamin Franklin Phillips, born 1817 in Adams, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts; died Aft. 1904. He married (1) Cecelia Morin 1846; died Bef. 1860. He married (2) Maria O'Neil 1863. Notes for Benjamin Franklin Phillips: "Woollen manufacturer, of Adams; representative one year."---Phillips Genealogies, 144. More About Benjamin Franklin Phillips: 1860 Census: manufacturer of woolen goods, $3200 real/$11.5k personal, living in Adams, Berkshire Co., MA 9 viii. Horatio Phillips, born 1818 in Adams, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts; died Abt. 1818. 10 ix. Albert Liscomb Phillips, born 1821 in Adams, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts; died 1893. He married Mary Green. Notes for Albert Liscomb Phillips: "Wool dealer, of Racine, Wis.; representative from Racine some years since; recently nominated for Senator from his district."---Phillips Genealogies, 144.
Virginia, Williamson Phillips is my gggrandfather. How are you related to Williamson, or Betsy Coleman? I have a fair amount of information on Williamson, and his branch of the Phillips family, but less on Betsy. Let me hear from you. We may be able to break down some "brick walls." Larr Phillips
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/nNABAIB/5518 Message Board Post: The families of Alfred age 38, Oscar age 34, and Charles age 37 are in the 1870 Burlington township, Lapeer Co, MI census. It appears these males may be brothers. Alfred and wife Orpha have a son Orin age 8. This is actually Lewis Orin Phillips b. about 1862. Lewis O married Minnie Smith in Oakland Co in 1884. They had children Alfred and Mattie when Minnie died in Tuscola County. Those children were taken, at least for while, to Lapeer County to be with relatives. Lewis would have only been in his 30's and probably remarried. I am looking for any clues to what happened to Lewis Orin Phillips and his children. Mailing address 1405 Hunt Rd, Mayville, MI 48744
Can someone help? I am looking for the following: Hattie Phillips Registered birth August 1886... I've learned it is on LDS roll # 1289325 1886 Birth Index Page 169. Can anyone access the information for me?? Thanks, Evelyn
could someone please look up the following in the 1930 census & or soundex Phillips, Joseph or Fannie 5903 Windsor Avenue Philadelphia Phillips, Bernard J 1315 Chestnut or 1600 Walnut or 4621 Osage Philadelphia Phillips, Evelyn 42 N. Farson Philadelphia Thanks, Evelyn
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Phillips Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/nNABAIB/5517 Message Board Post: I would like any information on my GG Grandmother, Christina Phillips Born 30 Nov 1858 in Eckard, Maryland Died 14 Dec 1937 Farrell, PA.
kay.singer@duke.edu wrote: >This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > >Surnames: Phillips >Classification: Query > >Message Board URL: > >http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/nNABAIB/5516 > >Message Board Post: > >I've just learned that my GG granfa Frederick Phillips was born in Nova Scotia in 1826. He died in Talladega County, AL in 1909. First record I have of him in AL is 1862 when he enlisted in the Confederate Forces. Served with 30th AL and then was transferred to Taliaferro's Brigade, 10th Reg VA Vol. Was paroled at Appomatox. Married Mrs. Martha Barrett (maiden name UNK), widow of James Barrett, in 1866. They had two children Wm David and Anna Lou. Later married Edna Lenora (maiden name UNK). They had additional children. She died in 1941. Any help with these families would be greatly appreciated. Will share all info I have. >Thanks, Kay > This looks like them in the 1880 US census at: http://www.familysearch.org/ Household: Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace F. PHILIPS Self M Male W 49 CANADA Farming CANADA CANADA M. PHILIPS Wife M Female W 35 GA Keeping House SC SC L. A. PHILIPS Dau S Female W 11 AL At Home CANADA GA W. D. PHILIPS Son S Male W 9 AL CANADA GA Source Information: Census Place Buckhorn, Talladega, Alabama Family History Library Film 1254033 NA Film Number T9-0033 Page Number 250C Regards, Herb Savage
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Phillips Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/nNABAIB/5516 Message Board Post: I've just learned that my GG granfa Frederick Phillips was born in Nova Scotia in 1826. He died in Talladega County, AL in 1909. First record I have of him in AL is 1862 when he enlisted in the Confederate Forces. Served with 30th AL and then was transferred to Taliaferro's Brigade, 10th Reg VA Vol. Was paroled at Appomatox. Married Mrs. Martha Barrett (maiden name UNK), widow of James Barrett, in 1866. They had two children Wm David and Anna Lou. Later married Edna Lenora (maiden name UNK). They had additional children. She died in 1941. Any help with these families would be greatly appreciated. Will share all info I have. Thanks, Kay
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/nNABAIB/5294.1.1.1.2.1 Message Board Post: No, I don't know anything about a school. But I wouldn't be a bit surprised. Do any of the censuses for him give teacher as occupation? Some of the information I got on Abraham III came from notes of his grandson Lyman T. Phillips (who later became a Dentist in Nashville)....that have been circulated among the researchers and came I think from the Parham Collection in McClung Library in TN. (I don't have any notes with me at the moment) In that it also tells that his home was used on the Underground Railroad...and these folks were religious so a school and adopting orphan kids wouldn't be too far off. Abraham also took two sons to CA in the 1850's to look for gold. One was killed, but Abraham and another son made it back home. I think the land Abraham had wasn't in Nashville per se but out in Beaucoup...which is just the next little town over...eastward...and first settled before Nashville. But I would have to check on that. I know that John Phillips and the Whitte! nbergs and John's sister Rachael who married a Logan all had land in Beaucoup. I am not sure where the Farmer guy (Polly's husband) had his. I can look this up as I plotted out the whole Beaucoup area from the land grants. If you find out more on the school and the orphan train kids, I would be interested. Ava
I tried to email you direct but it was returned. I am a descendent of Isham Phillips but don't have any info further back. Will be glad to share. Also am interested in the Holland family as it ties in with my Whitehead and Layton families. Edna Whitehead
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Phillips, Doonan, Finningham Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/nNABAIB/5294.1.1.1.2 Message Board Post: Dear Ava, Would you know if Abraham Phillips III had a school on his property in Nashville, IL (I heard from a source he had a school and was a school teacher and may have had an orphanage?) and if he had indentured children from the orphan trains. My gggrandmother, Maggie Finningham, was born in New York and came to live with him abt 1859-1860 when she was 12. I noticed on the 1860 Washington Co, Census she was on with another child name Thomas Doonan. I believe he had them listed as servants or the such. I've already tried to contact the Orphan Train website, but they havent been much help. I'm also blood related to the phillips by Abraham's sister Polly. Thanks for your help.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/nNABAIB/5294.1.1.1.1 Message Board Post: Thank you Ava for answering so soon. I'll keep looking and I'm sorry too that we didn't hook up.