Greetings, My husband and I were having fun at a antique store in Conway, and Found my husbands grandfather who died before he was born in a high school annual of Sealth High school...Is this the School of Arts on Capital Hill? If any one wants me to check this annual let me know. Its fun to find such things, and can also confuse since it says he `entered from Stadium HighSchool, Tacoma' from what we know they never lived out of Seattle. Interesting. Donna, who is a newborn babe, desiring the sincere milk of the word, that I may grow thereby..... <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> < Richard and Donna Potts Walling < rwalling@greatnorthern.net < New Hope Mennonite Church <http://www.anabaptists.org/churches/everett.html <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
This brought to my mind a question that has long interested me. My father was born in a place called Loweton, Saskatchewan in 1906. The only reason that it was Loweton is that the "Post Office" was in his parents' home. I would dearly love to find the place but, of course, like so many things in the past no apparent evidence of its existence remains. At least so far as I know. I'd love to heart differently anyone!! George Lowe John Wm Sloniker wrote: > Place names come about to satisfy the needs of the Postmaster General in > Washington, DC. Most people know about Joplin, MO, but there are at least > two other Joplin's, perhaps three or four, ( I forget how many). > > In 1939 my folks moved to Joplin, VA where we got our mail at the general > store PO. When the store owner agreed/wanted to be the local PO, he was > asked what name he wanted to use. He said "Since I grew up in Joplin, MO > let's call it Joplin, VA." > > The general store & PO are gone now, but our old house is still there. > > There's a web site URL to find place names and Joplin, VA is still listed. > Sorry, I don't have it handy. Fred, do you know it? > > On Mon, 7 Dec 1998, Fred Pflugrath wrote: > > > Doty, Washington, according to "Washington State Place Names" by James > > W. Phillips, University of Washington Press, 1971 - > > > > Doty, (Lewis) - Named for C.A. Doty, who established a sawmill there in > > 1900. > > > > According to the Tacoma Public Library > > > > Doty is a town on the Chehalis River 19 miles west of Chehalis in west > > central Lewis County. Once it was a busy sawmill town, but has been > > inactive since the largest sawmill moved out in 1929. It was named for > > Chauncey Albert Doty, owner of Doty Lumber and Shingle Company, who > > built a sawmill and shingle mill in the late 1890s. > > > > Fred Pflugrath > > Peshastin, WA > > > > Happy to help anytime, > > John > *====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====* > # John Wm Sloniker <johnwms@serv.net> Seattle, WA # > # (206) 789-6663 7323 - 19th Ave NW 98117-5612 # > # =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- # > # I have Ancestors, Aunts, Cousins, Uncles, Brothers, Sisters. # > # Some are very good, some are very bad, but they're all mine. # > *====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*
John Wm Sloniker > There's a web site URL to find place names and Joplin, VA is still > listed. > Sorry, I don't have it handy. Fred, do you know it? > Sorry, John - the only place names I have are for Washington state - which is the Tacoma Public Library, the book I have at home - "Washington State Place Names" by James W. Phillips, and the collection that I have collected for the last 30 years that are not in either. Fred Pflugrath Peshastin, WA
Fredi, I think you provided her with quite a bit, and that will help me. I'm going down to the Historical Society tomorrow. Evelyn
Place names come about to satisfy the needs of the Postmaster General in Washington, DC. Most people know about Joplin, MO, but there are at least two other Joplin's, perhaps three or four, ( I forget how many). In 1939 my folks moved to Joplin, VA where we got our mail at the general store PO. When the store owner agreed/wanted to be the local PO, he was asked what name he wanted to use. He said "Since I grew up in Joplin, MO let's call it Joplin, VA." The general store & PO are gone now, but our old house is still there. There's a web site URL to find place names and Joplin, VA is still listed. Sorry, I don't have it handy. Fred, do you know it? On Mon, 7 Dec 1998, Fred Pflugrath wrote: > Doty, Washington, according to "Washington State Place Names" by James > W. Phillips, University of Washington Press, 1971 - > > Doty, (Lewis) - Named for C.A. Doty, who established a sawmill there in > 1900. > > According to the Tacoma Public Library > > Doty is a town on the Chehalis River 19 miles west of Chehalis in west > central Lewis County. Once it was a busy sawmill town, but has been > inactive since the largest sawmill moved out in 1929. It was named for > Chauncey Albert Doty, owner of Doty Lumber and Shingle Company, who > built a sawmill and shingle mill in the late 1890s. > > Fred Pflugrath > Peshastin, WA > Happy to help anytime, John *====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====* # John Wm Sloniker <johnwms@serv.net> Seattle, WA # # (206) 789-6663 7323 - 19th Ave NW 98117-5612 # # =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- # # I have Ancestors, Aunts, Cousins, Uncles, Brothers, Sisters. # # Some are very good, some are very bad, but they're all mine. # *====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*====*
It is so interesting to read the discussions isn't it? I just learned by reading Carroll and John's discourse about London about Tuttle Hill, and a genealogy group, and I have Tuttle's way back on one of the lines. I printed it for future reference. Thanks guys! Evelyn
There used to be a Broadway High School, my mother now that I think of it attended there. It was on the corner of Broadway and Pine in Seattle. Later it became Edison Technical School. She was born in 1910, her name was Lillian Ford. She had three sisters, Gladys, Doris and Bessie Ford. I'm curious as to whether any of them are in that annual. Sealth High School was built in the mid-50's and was just off of Trenton Street between Delridge Way and 35th Avenue SW. I went to high school there! I'd love to know if the Ford girls were in that annual. Thanks. Evelyn at JOHuffER@aol.com.
There was a large Callow Family in Grays Harbor County for many decades past. As I recall, they had a large general store in Elma, were into banking, and were involved in the development of Ocean Shores, above Aberdeen. One of their family, Rusty Callow, was the crew coach at the Univ. of Washington during the twenties and thirties. Jim Pearson pearson@rio.com ---------- > From: Cyndi Howells <cyndihow@oz.net> > To: PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com > Subject: Unsuccessful mailing list command (was Re: unsubscribe) > Date: Thursday, September 03, 1998 6:10 PM > > At 09:56 PM 9/2/98 -0700, you wrote: > >unsubscibe > > > >_____________________________________________________________________ > >You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. > >Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com > >Or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866] > > > > > > > Hi - > > Your unsubscribe command didn't work because you used the wrong > e-mail address for the list. Here are the instructions for > unsubscribing: > > To unsubscribe, send a NEW e-mail message to: > PSRoots-L-request@rootsweb.com > (for individual messages) > OR > PSRoots-D-request@rootsweb.com > (for a digest of multiple messages) > In the body include only one word: unsubscribe > (Turn OFF your signature file when sending this > command) > > > Good luck, > Cyndi > > > ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~ > Cyndi Howells Puyallup, Washington > PSRoots List Poohbah > cyndihow@oz.net > > PSRoots-L Mailing List > http://www.rootsweb.com/~watpcgs/psroots.htm > > To subscribe or unsubscribe from the list, send a NEW e-mail > message to: PSRoots-L-request@rootsweb.com > or PSRoots-D-request@rootsweb.com (for digest mode) > with only one word in the body: subscribe > or: unsubscribe >
Hi you people of Puget Sound. I used to live near Port Townsend and thats where I began my genealogy trek..back in 1983 when I organized the Jefferson County Genealogical Society, still going great too. Check my Web page: www.webspawner.com/users/noy I now live in Cherokee Co., N.C. and have been saving Obituaries and births from the newspaper since April 1997. Lived six years near Eagle River, Wi. 1991-1997 and saved Obituaries from the newspaper there. I also transcribed all headstones of the Cemeteries of Vilas County, Wi. and will check the Index if you think you had an ancestor that is buried there. Need the name, please. Rose VanNoy rvannoy@grove.net www.webspawner.com/users/noy
A photo of Carrie Callow Hurley appears in the book: Shelton: the First 100 Years Plus Ten. She worked at Lumbermen's Mercantile when the photo was taken in 1909. Also in the same reference, Rusty Callow, it is said, was the star in Shelton during the 1915-1920 period, and eventually retired as crew coach at the Naval Academy. >From my own files which pertain to Kitsap County, William Callow was the mayor of Charleston which eventually became a part of Bremerton. He died in March, 1926 at city hall in Charleston. He first settled in Mason County about 1876 (according to his obit) and served as a member of the territorial legislature and worked with governor John H. McGraw for two terms. He served as sheriff ( believe of Mason county). He arrived in Kitsap county about 1901 and was a member of Odd Fellows for 50 years. Survivors included Wallace G. Callow, superintendent of schools, Paul, Ceilan, Vaughn and Myra. Another story has slightly different dates. In a 1914 newspaper clipping it said that he had arrived in Mason county more than 20 years previous. Sorry I couldn't provide more.
Marilyn A Caretti wrote: > Becky > Are you aware there is a small town named Doty. It is near Dryad > andChehalis in Washington State. Don't know if it was named for > anyone > in your family but might prove interesting to find out. It is very > small. > Marilyn Doty, Washington, according to "Washington State Place Names" by James W. Phillips, University of Washington Press, 1971 - Doty, (Lewis) - Named for C.A. Doty, who established a sawmill there in 1900. According to the Tacoma Public Library Doty is a town on the Chehalis River 19 miles west of Chehalis in west central Lewis County. Once it was a busy sawmill town, but has been inactive since the largest sawmill moved out in 1929. It was named for Chauncey Albert Doty, owner of Doty Lumber and Shinle Company, who built a sawmill and shingle mill in the late 1890s. Fred Pflugrath Peshastin, WA
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --part0_913044957_boundary Content-ID: <0_913044957@inet_out.mail.aol.com.1> Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Hi everyone, This sounded like an awesome site. I did check it out and found some really good stuff on a couple of my families! Just wanted to pass on the info! Cheryl Hawley In a message dated 12/6/98 9:07:43 AM Pacific Standard Time, mikeandcindy@stratos.net writes: << Subj: [OHCUYAHO-L] [Fwd: Fw: A website with immense research potential] Date: 12/6/98 9:07:43 AM Pacific Standard Time From: mikeandcindy@stratos.net (Cindy Gant Sopko) To: OHCUYAHO-L@rootsweb.com Ben Gantt wrote: > A website with immense research potential is online ... and the wonderful > Cynthia Van Ness explains it below ... > -------- > > ... I just learned about an underpublicized website that has great > potential for genealogists. Those of you who know the Library of Congress's > website inside and out are already way ahead of me on this one, so I beg > your patience. > > I heartily recommend visiting the "National Union Catalog of Manuscript > Collections," also known as NUCMC, at: > <http://lcweb.loc.gov/coll/nucmc/nucmc.html> > > The print version, which we librarians call "nuck-muck," has been a > reference standby for years. I didn't know it was available online, and > boy, did I print out reams of records from it. > > So why should you be interested in NUCMC? First of all, let me explain > what a "union catalog" is. A union catalog is what you call the result > (whether in print, microform, or online) of recording and describing the > holdings of multiple libraries, archives, or similar repositories. For > example, I worked in a public library that had a county-wide union list of > periodicals, which enabled us to refer patrons to another local institution > (college, university, historical society, etc.) if our library happened not > to subscribe to a certain periodical (magazine, journal, etc.) and someone > else did. > > Now, most of you know that the colleges, universities, historical > societies, archives, and libraries across this country have all sorts of > one-of-a-kind items, usually from people, places, and things that aren't > there anymore. People who are deceased, companies that are defunct, > charities that folded, and so on. Items such as: > > * family bibles > * family papers > * business records > * church records > * charity records > * ethnic organization records > * arts & cultural organization records > * photographs > * political and advocacy organization records > * maps, posters, charts > * architectural plans > * letters, correspondence, diaries > > What NUCMC did was survey these repositories large and small--across the > entire US--and publish the results in many, many large volumes, which are > still available in libraries. And now NUCMC is online, meaning that you can > do a search on your family names, place names, and institutions connected > with the people you are researching. You can search the companies they > worked for, the clubs, societies, and fraternal organizations they belonged > to, the churches they attended, and so on. > > Now, there's *never* any guarantee that the records you seek were given to > a proper repository instead of going in the furnace or dumpster, or that an > ancestor left important papers, but try a simple search on your (US) > hometown and see if you were familiar with half of the stuff that turns up. > Then try a search on "_______ family" (your surname). Those with Anglo > names will probably have the most success. > > I did an easy word search on "Buffalo, New York" and got over 500 hits, > several of which told me that some religious charities' records are now held > by an archive elsewhere in the state; that the papers of a few prominent > Buffalo citizens are likewise in out-of-town repositories. > > Every record in NUCMC gives a detailed description of the item and > identifies the institution that owns it, either using a code or, in most > cases, giving the full name and address. The institutional ("RLIN") codes > are available on the site. > > IMPORTANT distinction to keep in mind: the original documents (letters, > diaries, photographs, maps, etc.), are NOT online at NUMCMC--just a > detailed, written descriptions. What we in the library biz call catalog or > bibliographic records. To get copies of original documents, you must > contact the institution that owns them or, if you hit a gold mine, plan a > research trip. > > Other goodies at NUCMC include links to conservation and preservation > information, a perennial question on the genealogy newsgroups. > > Happy digging! >> --part0_913044957_boundary Content-ID: <0_913044957@inet_out.mail.stratos.net.2> Content-type: message/rfc822 Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit Content-disposition: inline Return-Path: <OHCUYAHO-L-request@rootsweb.com> Received: from relay27.mx.aol.com (relay27.mail.aol.com [172.31.109.27]) by air09.mail.aol.com (v53.20) with SMTP; Sun, 06 Dec 1998 12:07:43 -0500 Received: from bl-14.rootsweb.com (bl-14.rootsweb.com [204.212.38.30]) by relay27.mx.aol.com (8.8.8/8.8.5/AOL-4.0.0) with ESMTP id MAA19263; Sun, 6 Dec 1998 12:07:36 -0500 (EST) Received: (from slist@localhost) by bl-14.rootsweb.com (8.8.5/8.8.5) id JAA29166; Sun, 6 Dec 1998 09:01:11 -0800 (PST) Resent-Date: Sun, 6 Dec 1998 09:01:11 -0800 (PST) Message-ID: <366AB9A9.3CEAFF31@stratos.net> Date: Sun, 06 Dec 1998 12:06:50 -0500 From: Cindy Gant Sopko <mikeandcindy@stratos.net> X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.5 [en]C-DIAL (Win95; U) X-Accept-Language: en Old-To: Cuyahoga List <ohcuyaho-l@rootsweb.com> Subject: [OHCUYAHO-L] [Fwd: Fw: A website with immense research potential] Resent-Message-ID: <"nhi3sD.A.3FH.Uhra2"@bl-14.rootsweb.com> To: OHCUYAHO-L@rootsweb.com Resent-From: OHCUYAHO-L@rootsweb.com X-Mailing-List: <OHCUYAHO-L@rootsweb.com> archive/latest/670 X-Loop: OHCUYAHO-L@rootsweb.com Precedence: list Resent-Sender: OHCUYAHO-L-request@rootsweb.com Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: quoted-printable Ben Gantt wrote: > A website with immense research potential is online ... and the wonderfu= l > Cynthia Van Ness explains it below ... > -------- > > ... I just learned about an underpublicized website that has great > potential for genealogists. Those of you who know the Library of Congre= ss's > website inside and out are already way ahead of me on this one, so I beg > your patience. > > I heartily recommend visiting the "National Union Catalog of Manuscrip= t > Collections," also known as NUCMC, at: > <http://lcweb.loc.gov/coll/nucmc/nucmc.html> > > The print version, which we librarians call "nuck-muck," has been a > reference standby for years. I didn't know it was available online, and > boy, did I print out reams of records from it. > > So why should you be interested in NUCMC? First of all, let me explai= n > what a "union catalog" is. A union catalog is what you call the result > (whether in print, microform, or online) of recording and describing the > holdings of multiple libraries, archives, or similar repositories. For > example, I worked in a public library that had a county-wide union list = of > periodicals, which enabled us to refer patrons to another local institut= ion > (college, university, historical society, etc.) if our library happened = not > to subscribe to a certain periodical (magazine, journal, etc.) and someo= ne > else did. > > Now, most of you know that the colleges, universities, historical > societies, archives, and libraries across this country have all sorts of > one-of-a-kind items, usually from people, places, and things that aren't > there anymore. People who are deceased, companies that are defunct, > charities that folded, and so on. Items such as: > > * family bibles > * family papers > * business records > * church records > * charity records > * ethnic organization records > * arts & cultural organization records > * photographs > * political and advocacy organization records > * maps, posters, charts > * architectural plans > * letters, correspondence, diaries > > What NUCMC did was survey these repositories large and small--across t= he > entire US--and publish the results in many, many large volumes, which ar= e > still available in libraries. And now NUCMC is online, meaning that you= can > do a search on your family names, place names, and institutions connecte= d > with the people you are researching. You can search the companies they > worked for, the clubs, societies, and fraternal organizations they belon= ged > to, the churches they attended, and so on. > > Now, there's *never* any guarantee that the records you seek were give= n to > a proper repository instead of going in the furnace or dumpster, or that= an > ancestor left important papers, but try a simple search on your (US) > hometown and see if you were familiar with half of the stuff that turns = up. > Then try a search on "_______ family" (your surname). Those with Anglo > names will probably have the most success. > > I did an easy word search on "Buffalo, New York" and got over 500 hits= , > several of which told me that some religious charities' records are now = held > by an archive elsewhere in the state; that the papers of a few prominen= t > Buffalo citizens are likewise in out-of-town repositories. > > Every record in NUCMC gives a detailed description of the item and > identifies the institution that owns it, either using a code or, in most > cases, giving the full name and address. The institutional ("RLIN") cod= es > are available on the site. > > IMPORTANT distinction to keep in mind: the original documents (letters= , > diaries, photographs, maps, etc.), are NOT online at NUMCMC--just a > detailed, written descriptions. What we in the library biz call catalog= or > bibliographic records. To get copies of original documents, you must > contact the institution that owns them or, if you hit a gold mine, plan = a > research trip. > > Other goodies at NUCMC include links to conservation and preservation > information, a perennial question on the genealogy newsgroups. > > Happy digging! -- Our Ged-Com is online at: http://members.stratos.net/mikeandcindy/cindy.ht= m OR also at http://www.geocities.com/heartland/plains/1174/ Links to Barbie, Patented Tools etc at that site also. The ReFUNding Ring at http://www.geocities.com/heartland/plains/1174/refring.htm Cuyahoga CO., OHGenWeb Coor. http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohcuyaho/cuyaoh.htm ICQ # 1178520 AOL Instant Messenger DoUReFUNd and AreUACousn On Microsoft NetMeeting. Call me at mikeandcindy@stratos.net I'm on server - ils.microsoft.com (usually =DC ) =3D=3D=3D=3D OHCUYAHO Mailing List =3D=3D=3D=3D Remember, do not send GEDCOM's or large files to the list. These must be sent to the user who requested them. --part0_913044957_boundary--
Hi Fredi I'm not related - just curious. Is the Callow family that you have info on from Kitsap county? I was born and raised in Bremerton, and told that the Bremerton I knew was a combination of three little towns - Bremerton, which was created to lure in the Navy. Manette, an old settlement right on the water on the east side. Charleston, which I think was the largest of the lot, on the west side. The main street in "Bremerton Charleston" is Callow. It runs the length of Charleston and connects with the highway leading out of town. I never knew anyone named Callow, just this street. Diane (now in Shoreline) dhettrick@earthlink.net
Becky Are you aware there is a small town named Doty. It is near Dryad andChehalis in Washington State. Don't know if it was named for anyone in your family but might prove interesting to find out. It is very small. Marilyn
I live in Shelton, and lived in Thurston County for more years than I care to admit to. Would be happy to help you if I can. They have an excellent Historical Society downtown with intact newspapers they are willing to copy obits, and other pertinent articles for a donation. Also, There is a road between Shelton and Olympia called the Hurley-Waldrip Road. I know that there is some documentation of the Hurley family in Mason County. Evelyn
I am a new subscriber to this list and I am just writing to find out if this list covers the Olympia & Shelton areas - as that is where my research has taken me. My welcome message was a scrambled mix of question marks & numbers. I am primarily searching the surname HURLEY with associated surnames of GRIGGS, LINDSEY, SIZEMORE, ALLEN, DURAND, CALLOW, CARSON, and CALVERT in Mason & Thurston Counties. I appreciate any reply. LaNaye Hennen henfarms@ruralink.com
I see the url for the Doty's didn't come through. Just go to www.infopace.com choose white pages and then fill in the name Doty and then Port Angeles WA and it will give all 7 to you. Gayle -----Original Message----- From: Becky A Morris <bm8404@toro.awc.cc.az.us> To: PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com <PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Sunday, December 06, 1998 1:26 PM Subject: Re: Doty :Gayle , Thanks for the info please tell what 411 is i'm still learning about :being on line. and if you might check with the Doty family to see if they might :help i would be very happy :you see I'm from PA too and the Doty and Wait family's go with the Morris :family but I just can't seem to find and on them Doty I mean and Grand ma :Morris is up in her 90's and can't help. so I'm stuck???? becky : :Gayle Fuson wrote: : :> Sorry, I don't. I know one family personally in Port Angeles. Their son and :> mine used to play together and are now 19 yrs old. :> Sorry I can't help, :> Gayle :> gayle@olypen.com :> Please vist my new homepage :> http://www.olypen.com/gayle/home.html :> -----Original Message----- :> From: Pam Dollarhide <misha@foxinternet.net> :> To: PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com <PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com> :> Date: Thursday, December 03, 1998 8:20 PM :> Subject: Re: Doty :> :> :Do you have any links to Doty's in Tacoma area? I grew up with a Doty :> :family (lived right across the street). The daughter and her husband are :> :still living there. Father's name was June Doty. Daughter is Barbara. :> :-----Original Message----- :> :From: Becky A Morris <bm8404@toro.awc.cc.az.us> :> :To: PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com <PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com> :> :Date: Thursday, December 03, 1998 7:13 PM :> :Subject: Doty :> : :> : :> :>I'm looking for any info on the Doty family of Port Angeles area please :> :>Thank you Becky :> :> :> :> :> : :> : : : : :
Hello Becky, Here is the url for Infospace. It is a world wide directory and I use it all the time. You can search by last name, email addy, or old home address! Use the White Page section. http://www.infospace.com/ Here is the url of Doty's in Port Angeles. http://kevdb.infospace.com/info/kevdb?OTMPL=%2Fres%2Fr1.html&QFM=N&QK=10&XNa vigation=&QN=Doty&QF=&QC=Port+Angeles+&QS=wa&KCFG=us Gayle
Hi I am researching the surnames of HAACK, CLINTON AND WHITTAKER. All three families lived in Wisconsin and moved to King County abt.1890. Karen California
Sorry, I really don't have any information on that name. Good luck in your search! Pam -----Original Message----- From: Becky A Morris <bm8404@toro.awc.cc.az.us> To: PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com <PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Sunday, December 06, 1998 1:16 PM Subject: Re: Doty >Ireally do not know my g grandmother was Floy Queen Doty she married a >Martain Wait know there was a Ida Moriell married a William Doty in 1858 >that's GGGrandparents but thats about it. if any of this sound like you >might know please let me know! >thanks becky > >Pam Dollarhide wrote: > >> Do you have any links to Doty's in Tacoma area? I grew up with a Doty >> family (lived right across the street). The daughter and her husband are >> still living there. Father's name was June Doty. Daughter is Barbara. >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Becky A Morris <bm8404@toro.awc.cc.az.us> >> To: PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com <PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com> >> Date: Thursday, December 03, 1998 7:13 PM >> Subject: Doty >> >> >I'm looking for any info on the Doty family of Port Angeles area please >> >Thank you Becky >> > >> > > > >