link to FEDERAL PENSION LIST FOR 1835 http://members.tripod.com/~rosters/index-5.html
List members - can anyone help Holly with Su Wilson's email address? I seem to have lost it, and do not know how to contact her. Holly's s email is [email protected] Thanks, Mike McGarity Chester Admin -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Monday, September 08, 2003 2:17 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Chester, South Carolina site...... Dear Michael: I am trying to reach Susan Wilson who was the Chester County site coordinator around 1998. Do you know her e-mail address or how I can get in touch with her? I am researching my great-grandfather, WILLIAM MARTIN WILEY/WYLIE and she had written about a William Martin Wylie in 1998. Thank you, Holly in CA
Although the list administrator sometimes picks up a request like this and processes it, it often doesn't work. The best (and official) way to change your address is to send a message to <[email protected]> from your old address with the subject and message, "unsubscribe" and then send a message to the same address from your new one with the subject and message, "subscribe". This worked well for me with all the lists when I changed addresses. It goes directly through Rootsweb and saves a lot of time and effort. Happy Hunting, Margie Rich Morrison wrote: >This is a multi-part message in MIME format... > >------------=_1062913957-8106-0 >Content-Type: text/plain >Content-Disposition: inline >Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit > > > >--- message from [email protected] attached: >please discontinue this email address and replace is with this one. > >[email protected] > >_____________________________________________________________ >Get Unlimited Internet Access for only $7.99/mo! http://www.talentg.com/internet.html > >------------=_1062913957-8106-0 >Content-Type: message/rfc822 >Content-Disposition: inline >Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary > >Received: from lists5.rootsweb.com (lists5.rootsweb.com [207.40.200.41]) > by imta07.mta.everyone.net (Postfix) with ESMTP id A676EA5576 > for <[email protected]>; Sat, 6 Sep 2003 08:01:13 -0700 (PDT) >Received: (from [email protected]) > by lists5.rootsweb.com (8.12.8/8.12.8) id h86F0jKK015320; > Sat, 6 Sep 2003 09:00:45 -0600 >Date: Sat, 6 Sep 2003 09:00:45 -0600 >Message-Id: <[email protected]> >From: [email protected] >Subject: SCCHEST2-D Digest V03 #98 >X-Loop: [email protected] >X-Mailing-List: <[email protected]> archive/volume03/98 >Precedence: list >MIME-Version: 1.0 >Content-Type: multipart/digest; boundary="----------------------------" >To: [email protected] >Reply-To: [email protected] > >------------------------------ > >Content-Type: text/plain > >SCCHEST2-D Digest Volume 03 : Issue 98 > >Today's Topics: > #1 Re: [SCCHEST2] Sandefur/Sandifer F [[email protected]] > #2 [SCCHEST2] Re: SCCHEST2-D Digest V [[email protected]] > #3 [SCCHEST2] Clayton Rogers' son Wil [[email protected]] > >Administrivia: >To unsubscribe from SCCHEST2-D, send a message to > > [email protected] > >that contains in the body of the message the command > > unsubscribe > >and no other text. No subject line is necessary, but if your software >requires one, just use unsubscribe in the subject, too. > >______________________________ >------------------------------ > >X-Message: #1 >Date: Fri, 5 Sep 2003 22:29:47 EDT >From: [email protected] >To: [email protected] >Message-ID: <[email protected]> >Subject: Re: [SCCHEST2] Sandefur/Sandifer Family >Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" >Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit > >Hi all: > >I have been searching this family for what seems like ages, and have received >many leads....but nothing exact. I would like to try one more time....Does >anyone have any information on the "Samuel Miles Sandifer" family who lived in >Chester County, SC---definitely between 1780 and about 1820. Samuel Sandifer >was married to Mary Lott. I am trying to find out who Samuel's father was. >Some say it may have been Abraham Norvell Sandifer....others say it may have >been William "Abraham" Sandefur, Jr who was born in 1758. In all of my >research I have found out lots of information on both of these two leads, but none of >them reference Samuel Miles Sandifer. HELP!!! > >Thanks, > >Jeannine > >______________________________ >------------------------------ > >X-Message: #2 >Date: Sat, 6 Sep 2003 02:20:45 EDT >From: [email protected] >To: [email protected] >Message-ID: <[email protected]> >Subject: [SCCHEST2] Re: SCCHEST2-D Digest V03 #97 >Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" > >I would like to see a picture of the Catholic Church memorial and view a >transcription of the Revolutionary war soldiers who were members. My >GGGGreatgrandfather John Rock was one of them and I wonder if he is on that list. He later >became a member of the Beaver Dam RP church where he was an elder until his >death in 1821. >Glen Stevenson in WI > >______________________________ >------------------------------ > >X-Message: #3 >Date: Sat, 6 Sep 2003 09:58:54 EDT >From: [email protected] >To: [email protected] >Message-ID: <[email protected]> >Subject: [SCCHEST2] Clayton Rogers' son William >Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" > >Clayton and Betridge Sadler Rogers lived in Chester Co., SC, from about 1775 >until 1809. They had six children, William, Amos and Isaac, Rachel, Sarah and >Hannah. >Does anyone know -ANYTHING- about their son William, who was born sometime >between 1780 and 1800. He's my great-great-grandfather, and all I know about him >is that he had a son, Jefferson C., born somewhere in Tennessee in 1820. >I've been looking for info on this man for 15 years and am desperate. Any >help would be greatly appreciated. >Jay Rogers in San Antonio TX > >-------------------------------- >End of SCCHEST2-D Digest V03 Issue #98 >************************************** > >------------=_1062913957-8106-0-- > > >==== SCCHEST2 Mailing List ==== >The 40th annual reunion of the descendants of Samuel Joseph Curry >(May 13, 1849 - May 9, 1931) son of Robert M. Curry and Nancy Agnes Miller Curry will be held at the Pleasant Grove Presbyterian Church, 1600 Pleasant Grove Road, Chester SC on OCTOBER 12, 2003. Church service will be at 11:00AM followed by a picnic lunch at noon and business meeting at 1:00PM. For more information, contact [email protected] or [email protected] > > > > >
This is a multi-part message in MIME format... ------------=_1062913957-8106-0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit --- message from [email protected] attached: please discontinue this email address and replace is with this one. [email protected] _____________________________________________________________ Get Unlimited Internet Access for only $7.99/mo! http://www.talentg.com/internet.html ------------=_1062913957-8106-0 Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary Received: from lists5.rootsweb.com (lists5.rootsweb.com [207.40.200.41]) by imta07.mta.everyone.net (Postfix) with ESMTP id A676EA5576 for <[email protected]>; Sat, 6 Sep 2003 08:01:13 -0700 (PDT) Received: (from [email protected]) by lists5.rootsweb.com (8.12.8/8.12.8) id h86F0jKK015320; Sat, 6 Sep 2003 09:00:45 -0600 Date: Sat, 6 Sep 2003 09:00:45 -0600 Message-Id: <[email protected]> From: [email protected] Subject: SCCHEST2-D Digest V03 #98 X-Loop: [email protected] X-Mailing-List: <[email protected]> archive/volume03/98 Precedence: list MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/digest; boundary="----------------------------" To: [email protected] Reply-To: [email protected] ------------------------------ Content-Type: text/plain SCCHEST2-D Digest Volume 03 : Issue 98 Today's Topics: #1 Re: [SCCHEST2] Sandefur/Sandifer F [[email protected]] #2 [SCCHEST2] Re: SCCHEST2-D Digest V [[email protected]] #3 [SCCHEST2] Clayton Rogers' son Wil [[email protected]] Administrivia: To unsubscribe from SCCHEST2-D, send a message to [email protected] that contains in the body of the message the command unsubscribe and no other text. No subject line is necessary, but if your software requires one, just use unsubscribe in the subject, too. ______________________________ ------------------------------ X-Message: #1 Date: Fri, 5 Sep 2003 22:29:47 EDT From: [email protected] To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [SCCHEST2] Sandefur/Sandifer Family Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Hi all: I have been searching this family for what seems like ages, and have received many leads....but nothing exact. I would like to try one more time....Does anyone have any information on the "Samuel Miles Sandifer" family who lived in Chester County, SC---definitely between 1780 and about 1820. Samuel Sandifer was married to Mary Lott. I am trying to find out who Samuel's father was. Some say it may have been Abraham Norvell Sandifer....others say it may have been William "Abraham" Sandefur, Jr who was born in 1758. In all of my research I have found out lots of information on both of these two leads, but none of them reference Samuel Miles Sandifer. HELP!!! Thanks, Jeannine ______________________________ ------------------------------ X-Message: #2 Date: Sat, 6 Sep 2003 02:20:45 EDT From: [email protected] To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Subject: [SCCHEST2] Re: SCCHEST2-D Digest V03 #97 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" I would like to see a picture of the Catholic Church memorial and view a transcription of the Revolutionary war soldiers who were members. My GGGGreatgrandfather John Rock was one of them and I wonder if he is on that list. He later became a member of the Beaver Dam RP church where he was an elder until his death in 1821. Glen Stevenson in WI ______________________________ ------------------------------ X-Message: #3 Date: Sat, 6 Sep 2003 09:58:54 EDT From: [email protected] To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Subject: [SCCHEST2] Clayton Rogers' son William Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Clayton and Betridge Sadler Rogers lived in Chester Co., SC, from about 1775 until 1809. They had six children, William, Amos and Isaac, Rachel, Sarah and Hannah. Does anyone know -ANYTHING- about their son William, who was born sometime between 1780 and 1800. He's my great-great-grandfather, and all I know about him is that he had a son, Jefferson C., born somewhere in Tennessee in 1820. I've been looking for info on this man for 15 years and am desperate. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Jay Rogers in San Antonio TX -------------------------------- End of SCCHEST2-D Digest V03 Issue #98 ************************************** ------------=_1062913957-8106-0--
this is in reply to the Authur of the books written about Chester County and its families of long ago. can you tell me who wrote the books 1 and 2?and how would I go about getting copies? I know Kidd and Morrow are two of the old families of Chester, maybe I can find some info in these books. >From: [email protected] >Reply-To: [email protected] >To: [email protected] >Subject: SCCHEST2-D Digest V03 #97 >Date: Fri, 5 Sep 2003 19:00:42 -0600 > ><< message2.txt >> ><< message4.txt >> ><< message6.txt >> ><< message8.txt >> _________________________________________________________________ Compare Cable, DSL or Satellite plans: As low as $29.95. https://broadband.msn.com
Clayton and Betridge Sadler Rogers lived in Chester Co., SC, from about 1775 until 1809. They had six children, William, Amos and Isaac, Rachel, Sarah and Hannah. Does anyone know -ANYTHING- about their son William, who was born sometime between 1780 and 1800. He's my great-great-grandfather, and all I know about him is that he had a son, Jefferson C., born somewhere in Tennessee in 1820. I've been looking for info on this man for 15 years and am desperate. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Jay Rogers in San Antonio TX
I would like to see a picture of the Catholic Church memorial and view a transcription of the Revolutionary war soldiers who were members. My GGGGreatgrandfather John Rock was one of them and I wonder if he is on that list. He later became a member of the Beaver Dam RP church where he was an elder until his death in 1821. Glen Stevenson in WI
Hi all: I have been searching this family for what seems like ages, and have received many leads....but nothing exact. I would like to try one more time....Does anyone have any information on the "Samuel Miles Sandifer" family who lived in Chester County, SC---definitely between 1780 and about 1820. Samuel Sandifer was married to Mary Lott. I am trying to find out who Samuel's father was. Some say it may have been Abraham Norvell Sandifer....others say it may have been William "Abraham" Sandefur, Jr who was born in 1758. In all of my research I have found out lots of information on both of these two leads, but none of them reference Samuel Miles Sandifer. HELP!!! Thanks, Jeannine
Dear list, I need some kind soul to photograph 4 Gravestones in an old cemetery (Paul's Graveyard) in Chester county SC. They are of my GGGGreatgrandfathers family. John Rock was a Revolutionary war soldier and died in 1821.. I have a good discription of where it is but have never been to the east coast. If you live within a reasonable distance of there please contac me for instructions at [email protected] Glen Stevenson in WI
>From the ''News and Reporter'' this was in yesterday's LIFESTYLES section of ''News and Reporter'' link no longer good here is a copy and paste >>There's a lot to be proud of in Chester, local historian says By ANNE P. COLLINS Featured columnist This is the first of a two-part column written by local historian Anne Pickens Collins. The second portion will be published next Wednesday. There are lots and lots of good and exemplary things about Chester that you need to remember. We used to be a classy county. Some newspapers daily publish the down and dirty deeds that take place around here. Such stories sell papers. The reading public gobbles them up and relishes them like hot fudge sundaes. Let me print out some good things about Chester. I know what they are because I have researched, studied, read, written and published 13 books about Chester - who, what, when, where and why and how early settlers made us known to the rest of the world. No other county in South Carolina comes close to 13. There are more than 800 family histories in "Volume I" of "Chester County Heritage History" and more than 500 in "Volume II." All those family histories were written and submitted by their descendants. I didn't fabricate a single one, and they were written with pride. Chester County was explored, mapped and settled in the 1700s by intrepid pioneers who weren't deterred by Indians, cane fields or rattlesnakes. They weren't turned back by the powerful, noisy and awesome Great Falls or Catawba River. They lawfully claimed land grants from the Lord' Proprietor of England, measured and marked their bounds, respected their neighbor's boundaries and helped each other clear the wooded terrain, dig up stumps and build rustic homes and churches. Guts, gumption and determination kept them working from dawn until dark. These settlers early on built churches and attended them every time the doors were opened. They lured ministers from England, Ireland and Scotland. They built a courthouse, the finest in the country. They built a jail mostly to hold horse thieves and drunkards. Liquor stills - like boll weevils and erosion - came early as Satan staked out claims on Chester's population. The little town of Chester was conceived and laid out in the middle of the county. At one time in early history, Chester had five banks, all busy and prosperous from the growth and sale of cotton. At one time, Chester County was one big cotton patch. Many elegant mansions centered big plantations. Owners became rich and self-styled aristocrats. Chester's backwoodsmen, armed with defiance toward British oppression and their trusty squirrel rifles, are belatedly credited with the lion's share of winning Revolutionary War battles. Four major battles and nine local skirmishes were fought here, as Mel Gibson recently reminded us. Lawbreakers, thieves - all varities of lawbreakers -- were dealt with swiftly and firmly. If a citizen was arrested for driving under the influence, once was enough to assure him he wouldn't be allowed a second chance. In those early days, if you sullied your reputation it stayed that way. Everybody remembered your disgrace, even as they gazed at your dead face. Transgressions and transgressors were firmly meshed into family annals - in minds if not in published memoirs. Once a black sheep you remained a black sheep, and people did not "keep company" with you. Convicts and lawbreakers were outfitted in suits of bold black and white stripes, chained at the ankles and put to hard labor building and maintaining county roads. At night they were locked in county prisons. If they were defiant and loose-tongued they were fed only bread and water. There was no such term as substance abuse because there was no "substance!" Liquor stills and county prisons were far apart and well guarded. <<
Go to the online Chester NEWS AND REPORTER link to read about Catholic Presbyterian Church. http://www.onlinechester.com/ONLINECHESTER/sites/ONLINECHESTER/0262edition/myarticles557907.asp?P=557907&S=485&PubID=11007 [copy and paste] >> Holy foundations: Catholic Presbyterian one of several churches built in 1700s By ALAN JENKINS Features Editor The rusted metal key first turned in the church's lock 160 years ago, and it has been trusted to one minister or another since the 1840s. But the Rev. Don Simpson, who holds the key now, is the latest leader of a church that has served the community between Chester and Great Falls since 1759. It's old, but Catholic Presbyterian Church is not the oldest in the county. Chester County's history has been forged by more than 150 churches which actively serve the community. Approximately 244 years ago, three groups began meeting at the site where Catholic stands now - Presbyterians, Reformed Presbyterians and Covenanters, Simpson said. The minister at the time, the Rev. William Richardson, lead all three groups until he convinced them to unite and build a church in 1771. The new church was called Catholic - the common term for the church universal. Sixty-one members of the church fought in the American Revolution. Their names are inscribed on a stone memorial located outside the building. "We get a lot of people who visit because of the memorial," Simpson said. According to "Catholic Church: A Historical Discourse," written by the Rev. William Banks in the year 1876, the Covenanters formed a substantial portion of the church. These folks were against the Constitution of the United States. "Hence their opposition to the Constitution of the United States after its adoption, because it does not expressly acknowledge the being of God and the headship of Jesus Christ over the nation," Banks said in his discourse. The Covenanters continued to have a hard time merging with the other Presbyterians, however. They formed several other churches in the Chester County area - Big Rocky Creek, Little Rocky Creek, Beaver Dam and the Brick Church, Providence and McNinch's. Slavery was still fresh in the minds of Southerners when the discourse was written. Banks mentions slavery in several places. According to Banks, the original members of the church, including the early Covenanters, had no problem with slavery. Apparently, the Rev. William Martin, the church's first official minister, and several members owned slaves. The stone work surrounding the church's cemetary stands as a reminder of that long-past era. The work, which has stood for centuries, was performed by slaves, according to Simpson. The Covenanters began having severe problems with slavery, however. Almost all of them migrated to Ohio, Indiana and Illinois between 1825-31. "One great object of their emigrating from South Carolina was to go beyond the region of negro slavery, and to avoid, as some of them declared, the judgments which they said would some day fall on the South because of this sin," the discourse stated. The discourse does not mention the Civil War, but the conflict made its impact. There were three windows and a balcony for slaves to sit and worship God, Simpson said, all of which were removed. A rail, which once seperated men from women in the church, is gone. A microphone stands perched on an alter where ministers have preached since times before electricity. <<
Just testing my lists. No response required. I seem to have lost some of my lists. They will bounce back to me.
I was looking at a 1880 Census for Chester County, SC, and found a reference to a township or area referred to as Baton Rouge. What can you tell me about Baton Rouge, where was it located and what happened to this area, is it still in existence? Thank you for you interest in this subject. Jim Webb - Jacksonville, Florida
Hi! Can someone tell me a bit about this book and its author? Many thanks, Wallace in New Orleans ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, August 24, 2003 2:42 PM Subject: [SCCHEST2] R. Martin McFadden Hello Carol, You can find a bit of info on this family in “Captain Bill, Book Three,” by Robert J. Stevens (available from the Chester District Genealogical Society, P.O. Box 336, Richburg, S.C. 29729). ______________________________
Order blanks for the book (and others ) can be downloaded at this link on the Chester County main site: http://www.rootsweb.com/~scchest2/scchesterinfo.html Mike McGarity Chester Co. Coordinator. -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Sunday, August 24, 2003 3:43 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [SCCHEST2] R. Martin McFadden Hello Carol, You can find a bit of info on this family in “Captain Bill, Book Three,” by Robert J. Stevens (available from the Chester District Genealogical Society, P.O. Box 336, Richburg, S.C. 29729). It has the following: “Robert Martin McFadden, b. 9 Nov 1823, Chester County, d. 31 Dec 1901, married Jane Boyd Stewart, b. 7 Feb 1833, d. 6 Dec 1902, a daughter of John Jackson C. and Mona (Collins) Stewart. Both buried Union A.R.P. Church Cemetery, Richburg, Chester County, SC.” This information is from page 185. It lists his parents as John and Elizabeth McFadden, and begins on page 184 with John’s father, Robert McFadden, born in Ireland about 1748, and in present Chester County about 1772. The book claims that there were eleven children born to R Martin McFadden and his wife, Jane. Sincerely, Justin ==== SCCHEST2 Mailing List ==== The 54th annual KNOX Family Reunion will be held Sunday, August 3, 2003 at the Pleasant Grove Presbyterian Church,1600 Pleasant Grove Road, Chester SC. The descendants of Franklin Wylie Knox and Mary Caroline Proctor Knox and allied families are invited to attend. Bring a picnic lunch and drinks; paper products will be provided. Lunch begins at 1:00PM in the Social Hall and will continue until the last relative has gone!
Hello Carol, You can find a bit of info on this family in “Captain Bill, Book Three,” by Robert J. Stevens (available from the Chester District Genealogical Society, P.O. Box 336, Richburg, S.C. 29729). It has the following: “Robert Martin McFadden, b. 9 Nov 1823, Chester County, d. 31 Dec 1901, married Jane Boyd Stewart, b. 7 Feb 1833, d. 6 Dec 1902, a daughter of John Jackson C. and Mona (Collins) Stewart. Both buried Union A.R.P. Church Cemetery, Richburg, Chester County, SC.” This information is from page 185. It lists his parents as John and Elizabeth McFadden, and begins on page 184 with John’s father, Robert McFadden, born in Ireland about 1748, and in present Chester County about 1772. The book claims that there were eleven children born to R Martin McFadden and his wife, Jane. Sincerely, Justin
Hello, Looking for info on R. Martin McFadden b. ca 1823. I am searching for information on the following family: 1880, Lewisville, Chester County, S.C. R. Martin McFadden Self 57M BSC Mo/Fa BSC Jane McFadden: Wife 46F " " Henry McFadden Son 28M " " Lafayette McFadden Son 18M " " Martin McFadden Son 15M " " Robert McFadden Son 11M " " Mary Jane McFadden Dau 7F " " Katie McFadden Dau 4F " "
I got this email from one of my lists the yesterday. Aol has a new spam blocking tool where you highlight unwanted mail, then click on a "block" button. it then sends a report to Aol, and blocks any email from that address. Aol has sued several people as well as filed criminal charges. Sound great right??? Apparently, it has it's flaws. People have been blocking mail from the rootsweb discussion lists, instead of unsubscribing when they are no longer interested. Here's the email I received: Several days ago AOL began blocking all emails sent by USGenNet's server. : This means that list subscribers who have AOL addresses can't receive the : list posts. Also, USGenNet account holders with AOL addresses can't use : their email aliases to forward their site's mail to their AOL address. This : holds true for all domains hosted by USGenNet, including ALHN and AHGP main : sites, USGenWeb Census Project, Combs Families, and TNGenWeb just to name a : few. : All mail originating from our server to any AOL address bounces back with : this message: : : "The information presently available to AOL indicates this server is : generating high volumes of member complaints from AOL's member base. Based : on AOL's Unsolicited Bulk E-mail policy at : http://www.aol.com/info/bulkemail.html AOL : may not accept further e-mail transactions from this server or domain. For : more information, please visit http://postmaster.info.aol.com." I called AOL Saturday and they specified what they felt warranted their : block, and I passed the information on to Jim Cole, our SysAdmin. Jim has : tested, and re-tested, but can't find anything to their claims. Our server : is not open to indescriminate use or abuse and is very secure. : : Since I was told by AOL that the block will not ever be lifted unless : USGenNet corrects the "problems" they mentioned, it seems unlikely : that the block will be removed any time soon and those affected should act : accordingly. : : We are continuing our efforts to get the block removed, and will keep you : informed. : : Ginger Cisewski : President, USGenNet.Org : Melissa Foster-Rose "My Family Tree is Full of NUTS!!! www.angelfire.com/ky3/nuts FOR MORE INFO, SEE ABOVE WEBPAGE!! Researching the following surnames: BIRT, BOLIN-OSBORNE, BRAY, BRONAUGH, BROWN, BUCKLES, CANADA, CARRICK, CARTER, CHAMPION, CHANDLER, CHEW, COWGER/KOGER/COGER, DAVENPORT, DICKERSON, DICKS/DIX/DIECKS, DOAN/DOANE, DUNNING, EYE, FOSTER, FRARY, GREEN, HARVEY, HAWKS, HIATT, HINSDALE, HOLLAND, KELLY, LARIMER, MADDOCK, MCGREW, MCMICAN, MCPHERSON, MELTON, MENDENHALL, NEWLIN, OSBORNE, PARKER, RARIDEN, VAUGHN, WELLS, WOODWARD, ZORN. ALSO, ROSE, PETTY, MCHUGH, CLINE
Very nice! I could look at these pictures all day long! Thank you! Mike McGarity Chester Admin -----Original Message----- From: Janean Ray [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Saturday, August 02, 2003 12:20 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [SCCHEST2] 1935-1945 photos Please pass this along to your other lists. What a nice site to visit. http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/fsahtml/fahome.html ==== SCCHEST2 Mailing List ==== If you have a Family Reunion scheduled that ties in with Chester County, SC, please email me at [email protected] and I will post your information on our website and here on the list!
Please pass this along to your other lists. What a nice site to visit. http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/fsahtml/fahome.html