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    1. Re: [Q-R]
    2. Have you searched for your grandfather in the 1910 census? His parent's state of birth will be listed in that census. The Haines family was well known in Germantown, Philadelphia, PA. Many were Quakers. The LDS has most, if not all, of the records from the early Quaker meetings. Once you find out where Edward was born, then you can search the Quaker records from that state.

    04/10/2005 04:37:19
    1. Scholarguy
    2. Hello, This is my first post to this list. I would not have felt comfortable in doing so if their had it not been said that there are no foolish questions here and beginners are welcome. My name is William Hugh Haines My father is William Edward Haines My Grandfather was Gilbert Hugh Haines My Great Grandfather was Edward Haines (No middle name) What I know is that my Grandfather was born in 08 and his father was "older" at the time. Family tradition says that my great grandfather was a Quaker and we know that he moved to Minnesota from "the east" sometime before my grandfather was born. He married a Catholic immigrant from Germany and never returned to meeting. My grandfather and his siblings were raised as catholic. They moved to California sometime after the first world war and I am told my great-grandfather never spoke much about his youth. He was a painter and much of his work remains hanging in family members homes. I am the first of my family to return to meeting since my great grandfather. I have been trying to figure out what I can about my family line. When I google the name Haines and Quaker I get a few hits. It also seems that the names William and Edward were common to the family. I have been unable to connect the small line mentioned above to any family back east. I cannot seem to connect my great grandfather William Edward Haines to a Quaker line....I know or at least feel strongly that there must be a connection but I don't know where to look or how to find it. Is anybody on this list a Haines? Is there a family history I can access? Any other information I could use? Does anyone know how Edward Haines fits into the line? Any advise at all would be appreciated...I have never done anything like this but, I am very curious as to my roots. Thanks In Friendship Bill Haines -- No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Anti-Virus. Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.9.5 - Release Date: 4/7/2005

    04/10/2005 01:23:20
    1. Re: [Q-R] BUTTERWORTH in Wiltshire, England
    2. Ian Butterworth
    3. Hi List, My 3 x Great Grandfather was James Henry BUTTERWORTH 20 Oct 1810 in Wiltshire, England. I think he may have been a son of Edward BUTTERWORTH and Hester PERRETT nee COGSWELL (Hester had previously married a Richard PERRETT on 31 Jan 1799) who married Staverton, a chapelry of Trowbridge, Wiltshire, England by licence on the 2 Aug 1803. Some of the COGSWELL's appear in Zion Baptist Church records. I have been stuck with finding the parents of my 3 x Great Grandfather was James Henry BUTTERWORTH ever since I started my research in 1993 so would appreciate any help to find his parents. Thanking you. Best regards, Ian BUTTERWORTH RESERVOIR, VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA -- No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Anti-Virus. Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.9.5 - Release Date: 7/04/2005

    04/10/2005 04:36:37
    1. Re: [Q-R] Chuck Hole Meeting House
    2. > Looking for information on the Chuck Hole Meeting House located in Pipe > Creek Tp., Madison County, Indiana. > > Anyone who knows anything about this Meeting House please contact me. > > Phyllis Leedom > Genealogy Chair > Madison County Historical Society, Inc. > I do not find in my database <www.quakermeetings.com> any reference to a Chuck Hole meeting anywhere in North America. Because Madison County has Fall Creek MM from one of the yearly meetings where I hold membership, I have searched title at the county courthouse and paid some attention to lower-level Friends meetings there. Perhaps Chuck Hole is a local name for one of the preparative meetings within the five or six monthly meetings my site lists in Madison County, Indiana. I would be glad to learn more of any Friends relation to Chuck Hole. Tom Hill

    04/09/2005 06:07:44
    1. Re: [Q-R] Chuck Hole Meeting House
    2. There is no Friends Meeting by that name listed in: "All Friends Meetings that Exist or ever Existed in Indiana--1807-1955" by Willare Heiss.

    04/08/2005 01:15:23
    1. Chuck Hole Meeting House
    2. Phyllis Leedom
    3. Looking for information on the Chuck Hole Meeting House located in Pipe Creek Tp., Madison County, Indiana. Anyone who knows anything about this Meeting House please contact me. Phyllis Leedom Genealogy Chair Madison County Historical Society, Inc.

    04/08/2005 09:51:06
    1. Re: [Q-R] Daugherty Meeting
    2. What about a Moravian Church Meeting House? I was told some years ago that the old Muddy Creek [Union MM] Friends Burying Ground, Kernersville, Forsyth County, NC was once a Moravian Church Cemetery ~ Could some one respond on this, as I would like to know for certain. I do know that this is where John MASTEN [mentioned below] and his wife, Elizabeth STANLEY who were Friends are interred. Also, where my John NICHOLSON, b: 09 MAY 1757, Princeton, New Jersey, and his wife, Catherine STEVENSON, b: 15 JUL/SEP 1766 ~ d: 09 JUN 1843 are located, but I cannot find any record of them in Friends Church after they reached North Carolina, and have wondered if John was no longer welcome since he served in the Revolutionary War back in Jersey? [Hinshaw only mentions the interrment location.] John MASTEN, along with his younger brother, Mathias, and their sister, Elizabeth with her CLAMPITT family and others, left the Delaware area and started south, where they stopped at Wachovia, [now Stokes County] North Carolina, three miles east of the old German Moravian settlement, Salem, where in 1799, they bought land from the Moravians. John's land, which lay on the high land, or the north side of a large basin of swampland, cost him 85 pounds 8 shillings for his 106.75 acres.

    04/07/2005 05:13:55
    1. Re: [Q-R] Daugherty Meeting
    2. Thomas Hamm
    3. Quakers seldom named meetinghouses for individuals or families. I've never heard of a Quaker meetinghouse of this name in Guilford County. If it is simply identified as "Daugherty Meetinghouse," then it may not be Quaker. Other denominations, such as Baptists, also called their buildings meetinghouses. Tom Hamm >How do I view records of the Daugherty Meeting that was held in >Guilford County, NC prior to 1800? This meeting is on the Fred >Hughes map of Guilford but is not indexed. What group would hold >these early records? > >Sincerely, Dianne Black > > >==== QUAKER-ROOTS Mailing List ==== >Visit The Quaker Corner - http://www.rootsweb.com/~quakers

    04/07/2005 02:40:05
    1. Re: [Q-R] Daugherty Meeting
    2. Gregory McReynolds
    3. Though not the official name, the Pasadena Meeting of Conservative Friends, was sometimes referred to as the Edgerton Meeting because so many of that family were members. Gregory McReynolds Pasadena, California On 4/7/05 6:40 AM, "Thomas Hamm" <tomh@earlham.edu> wrote: > Quakers seldom named meetinghouses for individuals or families. I've > never heard of a Quaker meetinghouse of this name in Guilford County. > If it is simply identified as "Daugherty Meetinghouse," then it may > not be Quaker. Other denominations, such as Baptists, also called > their buildings meetinghouses. > > Tom Hamm > >> How do I view records of the Daugherty Meeting that was held in >> Guilford County, NC prior to 1800? This meeting is on the Fred >> Hughes map of Guilford but is not indexed. What group would hold >> these early records? >> >> Sincerely, Dianne Black >> >> >> ==== QUAKER-ROOTS Mailing List ==== >> Visit The Quaker Corner - http://www.rootsweb.com/~quakers > > > ==== QUAKER-ROOTS Mailing List ==== > Visit The Quaker Corner - http://www.rootsweb.com/~quakers >

    04/07/2005 12:51:07
    1. Quaker Records - North Carolina
    2. Violet O. Guy
    3. Somebody might be interested in this Quaker Genealogy -- North Carolina. http://showmethebitticks.com/other%20doc/stanfield_quaker_notes.htm Exerpts from Quaker Genealogy (Courtesey of Mary Bittrick Gallano) I browsed in to it as I was lookng for the MILLS Family. Violet Moore Guy

    04/06/2005 06:44:19
    1. Ancestors
    2. Grandma Lafferty
    3. My BRIGGS ancestors were involved in settling Rhode Island in the 1600's and 1700s. I am especially trying to find Richard BRIGGS. born 01 Feb 1674, married Susannah Spencer 23 Seep. 1700 in East Greenwich or Kingstown, RI, His mother was Frances Fisher, married to John BRIGGS. I think that she was born in MA, but then moved to Kingston, where at least most of her babies were born. I can find no accurate mention of Frances; she is often confused with a Hannah Fisher of RI, who married another John BRIGGS in Newport, RI. They are from different families, but have been confused over the years. Is there any way to get Records from Friend's. They were prominent in the early years in New England. Eloise Lafferty

    04/06/2005 06:41:44
    1. Daugherty Meeting
    2. gary dianne
    3. How do I view records of the Daugherty Meeting that was held in Guilford County, NC prior to 1800? This meeting is on the Fred Hughes map of Guilford but is not indexed. What group would hold these early records? Sincerely, Dianne Black

    04/06/2005 05:19:55
    1. Please help me contact Piers Anthony or Teresa Jacob Engeman?
    2. Dear Friends: This is a follow-up to my prior query about the heirs of Professor Alfred Jacob with respect to authorizing republication of his translation of Solomon Ibn Gabirol's "Fountain of Life" (1987). I have ascertained with the help of respondents that his two surviving children are his son the author Piers Anthony and his daughter Teresa Jacob Engeman (who from other information I have was probably publications manager of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends in the 1980s). Does anyone have a lead as to the current whereabouts or descendants of Piers Anthony or Teresa Jacob Engeman? This information will assist materially in the republication of Professor Jacob's translation of "Fountain of Life," a medieval classic which Professor Jacob showed can be relevant to our conception of ultimate spiritual reality as moderns. Thank you for your help so far, and I hope we can take the next step together! Lenny Levin

    04/06/2005 04:34:07
    1. Burial Place of Delilah Bowland Maxson?
    2. Leslie W. Saint
    3. List, Delilah Bowland Maxson has a grave marker at the Springdale Cemetery, Springdale, Cedar Co., IA. Her husband, William Maxson, is buried in the Oak Ridge Cemetery, West Liberty, Muscatine Co., IA with Delilah's death date and age on the same marker. The dates are the same, Died Oct. 31, 1850, Aged 44 So where is Delilah really buried? Would William have had Delilah moved? Or is her name placed on his marker as a cenotaph? William Maxson attended the Springdale meeting and was host to John Brown and his men, who raided Harper's Ferry, VA in 1858 in an attempt to spark a slave rebellion. Leslie W. Saint

    04/06/2005 02:28:38
    1. Hinshaw books
    2. Terri
    3. Thank you Gary, Tom and Forrest. As per Forrest's advice, I'll check with my local LDS library. Keep well all -- Terri

    04/06/2005 01:18:54
    1. Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books
    2. Violet O. Guy
    3. Gary D. Wilson: http://www.genealogy.com/192facd.html?priority=0000900 Genealogical Publishing Company - Baltimore, MD Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc. Mailing and Street Address: 1001 N. Calvert Street Baltimore, Maryland 21202-3897 Phone: To place an order or for problems with your order, 1-800-296-6687 For all other inquiries: 1-410-837-8271 Fax: 1-410-752-8492 or 1-800-599-9561 Orders: sales@genealogical.com General Info: info@genealogical.com The publisher of William Wade Hinshaws Quaker Records; but many are out of print. A CD #192 Family Tree Maker's Family Archives - Genealogical Records: The Encylopedia of Quaker Genealogy, 1750-1930 -- www.genealogy.com . You will need Family Tree Maker program or a viewer that will work with this CD. I use the CD and OK, but I prefer the books, which I did have access to through the pulic library, when living in Illinois. Violet Moore Guy ----- Original Message ----- From: "gary d wilson" <thesarge578@adelphia.net> To: <QUAKER-ROOTS-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, April 06, 2005 11:26 AM Subject: Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books > Good Day: > I am New at this Quaker Family, but have been into Genealogy for 12 > yr's, plus, but Is their anyone Out their that has the Complete of the > Recd's of The Society of Friends, including the Indiana on, that would be > interested in Selling??? > > Regards: > The Sarge > G D Wilson (E-mail: thesarge578@adelphia.net) > PO Box 476 > Cambridge, Oh 43725-0476 > "Honor and Courage"" > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Thomas Hamm" <tomh@earlham.edu> > To: <QUAKER-ROOTS-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Wednesday, April 06, 2005 11:12 AM > Subject: Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books > > >> Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, edited by >> Willard Heiss, published in 7 volumes by the Indiana Historical Society >> between 1962 and 1977. It is now out of print, but the Society is now >> publishing a revised edition, the first two volumes of which have >> appeared. Volume 3 will appear next year. I am coeditor of the >> revision. >> >> Tom Hamm >> >> >>>I own volumes 1 through 6 and have major ancestry in Indiana. Does >>>anyone know the official title and other identification information so I >>>can try to locate "the (UN)official volume 7?" >>> >>>David >>>decann@infionline.net >>> >>>-----Original Message----- >>>From: Thomas Hamm <tomh@earlham.edu> >>>Sent: Apr 6, 2005 10:34 AM >>>To: QUAKER-ROOTS-L@rootsweb.com >>>Subject: Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books >>> >>>There are six volumes. The Indiana records were published as "volume >>>7," but they were a separate enterprise. >>> >>>Tom Hamm >>> >>> >>>>Hello all - >>>> >>>>Can someone tell me how many Hinshaw books there are? I've heard there >>>>are several and I've only found five at one library, less at others. >>>> >>>>Thanks much -- Terri >>> >>> >>>==== QUAKER-ROOTS Mailing List ==== >>>Visit The Quaker Corner - http://www.rootsweb.com/~quakers >> >> >> ==== QUAKER-ROOTS Mailing List ==== >> Visit The Quaker Corner - http://www.rootsweb.com/~quakers >> >> > > > ==== QUAKER-ROOTS Mailing List ==== > HOW TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS LIST: Send an email to: > QUAKER-ROOTS-L-REQUEST@RootsWeb.com > The ONLY word in your message should be UNSUBSCRIBE. > >

    04/06/2005 07:17:02
    1. Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books
    2. gary d wilson
    3. Good Day: I am New at this Quaker Family, but have been into Genealogy for 12 yr's, plus, but Is their anyone Out their that has the Complete of the Recd's of The Society of Friends, including the Indiana on, that would be interested in Selling??? Regards: The Sarge G D Wilson (E-mail: thesarge578@adelphia.net) PO Box 476 Cambridge, Oh 43725-0476 "Honor and Courage"" ----- Original Message ----- From: "Thomas Hamm" <tomh@earlham.edu> To: <QUAKER-ROOTS-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, April 06, 2005 11:12 AM Subject: Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books > Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, edited by > Willard Heiss, published in 7 volumes by the Indiana Historical Society > between 1962 and 1977. It is now out of print, but the Society is now > publishing a revised edition, the first two volumes of which have > appeared. Volume 3 will appear next year. I am coeditor of the revision. > > Tom Hamm > > >>I own volumes 1 through 6 and have major ancestry in Indiana. Does anyone >>know the official title and other identification information so I can try >>to locate "the (UN)official volume 7?" >> >>David >>decann@infionline.net >> >>-----Original Message----- >>From: Thomas Hamm <tomh@earlham.edu> >>Sent: Apr 6, 2005 10:34 AM >>To: QUAKER-ROOTS-L@rootsweb.com >>Subject: Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books >> >>There are six volumes. The Indiana records were published as "volume >>7," but they were a separate enterprise. >> >>Tom Hamm >> >> >>>Hello all - >>> >>>Can someone tell me how many Hinshaw books there are? I've heard there >>>are several and I've only found five at one library, less at others. >>> >>>Thanks much -- Terri >> >> >>==== QUAKER-ROOTS Mailing List ==== >>Visit The Quaker Corner - http://www.rootsweb.com/~quakers > > > ==== QUAKER-ROOTS Mailing List ==== > Visit The Quaker Corner - http://www.rootsweb.com/~quakers > >

    04/06/2005 05:26:55
    1. Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books
    2. David E. Cann
    3. I own volumes 1 through 6 and have major ancestry in Indiana. Does anyone know the official title and other identification information so I can try to locate "the (UN)official volume 7?" David decann@infionline.net -----Original Message----- From: Thomas Hamm <tomh@earlham.edu> Sent: Apr 6, 2005 10:34 AM To: QUAKER-ROOTS-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books There are six volumes. The Indiana records were published as "volume 7," but they were a separate enterprise. Tom Hamm >Hello all - > >Can someone tell me how many Hinshaw books there are? I've heard there >are several and I've only found five at one library, less at others. > >Thanks much -- Terri

    04/06/2005 05:01:23
    1. Abstracts of Indiana Quaker Records
    2. Thomas Hamm
    3. There will be 7 or 8 volumes--we're still trying to decide how best to divide the material. Tom Hamm >I, for one, am thrilled to hear this! I'd read somewhere that there >was a plan to release more volumes, but hadn't been able to find out >any more about it. Are there still going to be 8 volumes? This is >just really exciting... > >Linda > > > >-----Original Message----- >From: Thomas Hamm <tomh@earlham.edu> >Sent: Apr 6, 2005 8:12 AM >To: QUAKER-ROOTS-L@rootsweb.com >Subject: Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books > >Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, edited >by Willard Heiss, published in 7 volumes by the Indiana Historical >Society between 1962 and 1977. It is now out of print, but the >Society is now publishing a revised edition, the first two volumes of >which have appeared. Volume 3 will appear next year. I am coeditor >of the revision. > >Tom Hamm

    04/06/2005 04:54:39
    1. Re: [Q-R] Hinshaw books
    2. Glenrose Englerth
    3. I am wondering just which book the "Newby Family" of N. C. and Indiana would be in? I have Jane NEWBY married Joseph S. ENGLERTH. Thank you for your help. Glenrose

    04/06/2005 04:25:27