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    1. Re: [SouthernTrails] Longley-Preston-Brown-& Wild Bill Longley
    2. Coffee
    3. Is that tool similar to a "jo-blade"? They use a jo-blade to cut heavy underbrush. My friend from Mississippi called it a jo-blade. I don't know what else to call it. It is a single edge blade with a curved tip on it. Perhaps it is called a sling-blade by some people. It is not a yo-yo, I know what those damned things are because I have used them enough. . Jerry C. -----Original Message----- From: wyly1@juno.com <wyly1@juno.com> To: Southern-Trails-L@rootsweb.com <Southern-Trails-L@rootsweb.com> Date: Friday, June 15, 2001 8:49 AM Subject: Re: [SouthernTrails] Longley-Preston-Brown-& Wild Bill Longley >An eye hoe is one with a heavier blade, heavier handle- long handle, and >a tapered eye on the back of the hoe which keeps the handle tight in the >hoe. it is much heavier than a regular Garden hoe and in an 8 or 10 hour >day it will blister hands without gloves andmake for very sore muscles- >the boys who hauled hay and did a cotton or corn crop with an eye hoe >were in shape for Football season started, if they were still in school. >One had a file handy to keep it razor sharp . > > We used them on large cockleburs or Cuckleburs and used to dig Johnson >grass runners and cut sunflowers out of cotton and corn with them. My >Uncle let some land grow up when starting a dairy. @When he tried to plow >it with a John Deere tractor and a light breaking plow, he had to first >cut down many10 foot tall Sunflowers with a light axe and got smaller >ones with an Eye hoe so the plow would track in dry Blackland Prairie. He >had a 30 HP tractor. Today they use 60 to 90 HP Tractors or larger and >shred all such trash growth int straw and then plow it under . > >Next time you go to a museum, ask to see an Eye Hoe. > >Take Care, Charles A. Wyly > >On Thu, 14 Jun 2001 16:17:06 -0500 skm <flintlock@kcnet.com> writes: >> Could you please explain to our friends to the N. what an eye hoe >> is. >> An eye hoe can cure a lot of problems. Smart mouth is one. >> >> wyly1@juno.com wrote: >> >> > hI, Someone got a date wrong. He served in the Civil War and >> washanged >> > Oct.11, 1878, so he was bornHe must have been born before 1850. . >> The >> > photo in this paper shows with a Black Beard (Narrow Goatee) and >> heavy >> > black moustashe. He was hanged for killing Wilson Anderson,one of >> his 32 >> > victims. My grandson is 19 and sported a beard and mustashe for a >> few >> > months, He is six feet and did weigh over 250 when he played >> football 5 >> > years ago. He is not fat, just big boned and muscled. >> > >> > Great Grandad Robert Augustine Wyly marched into the Battle of >> Shiloh as >> > a Drummer, age 13 and marched out as a soldier with a gun. He >> lived to be >> > 93 and died in Tulsa, 1937 of Typhoid, caught from a well. His >> brother >> > James Allen Wyly was in the same battle, His Uncle Capt. Ben F. >> Wyly , >> > lost an eye in the Battle of Knoxville and lived into his late >> 80's, >> > buried in Comanche County, Texas. Oliver Cromwell Wyly, their >> dad, sent >> > a letter to the Gov. of Georgia promising 3000 gallons of fine >> Whiskey >> > for the troops,( His brother and son Ran the Wyly Wholesale >> Grocery in >> > Atlanta. O.C.soon joined as a Captain and returned to Habersham >> County >> > where he piled a trunk full of Confederate money in his yard and >> burned >> > it. >> > >> > So far as age goes, my wife's grandfather was born abt 1850 in >> Ireland , >> > James Whitcomb O'Riley, stowed awayn on a ship and the Captain >> signed him >> > on as a Sheet Metal (Tinker) Aprentice in New York Harbor. He >> moved top >> > Cleburne, Texas and died in 1893, leaving 2 sets of Children. My >> wife was >> > born in Pettit, Texas in 1936 whgen her dad was about 50. >> > >> > Also, Ben F. Wyly's grandson drove 3000 head of sheep to San >> Angelo, >> > Texas, age 17 and deliverred them to former owners of >> Stephenville, Tx >> > Cage and Crow Bank- they swapped the sheep for Erath County >> property. He >> > had to stay up some nights with a rifle, age 17 to keep cattlemen >> from >> > riding in and shooting the sheep. That was 1887. >> > >> > My wife's dad had 4 years of Schoolhousing, but could add 2 >> columns of >> > Cotton weight or calf prices in his head faster than I could write >> them. >> > At age 12 or so he was buying cattle around Glen Rose and driving >> them >> > back across the Brazos to the Cleburne Slaughter House. >> > >> > Sometimes I do not think every child should be in a computerized >> > classroom to age 18 - He coulds be learning more in a Cooperative >> > Education Class or working. A man in Hill County said an Eye Hoe >> in a >> > Johnson Grass infested cotton patch would cure Juvenile >> Delinquency and >> > provide motivation to find a better life. >> > >> > Charles A. Wyly >> > >> > On Thu, 14 Jun 2001 09:27:27 -0600 Peter Selph/Kathy Duncan >> > <ppskdd2@airmail.net> writes: >> > > Charles: >> > > >> > > You are the person to ask about Wild Bill Longley. >> > > >> > > The Dallas Morning News article in today's paper >> > > says that Longley was hanged in 1878 at the age of >> > > 27 and that he was "one of the West's bloodiest >> > > pre-Civil War outlaws. I've never been very good >> > > at math, but just how bloody a career can someone >> > > manage before the age of 10?! And did he enlist >> > > near the beginning of The War or the end? Was he >> > > just a drummer boy? >> > > >> > > The Dallas Morning News also has a picture of full >> > > skeletal remains for Longley, exhumed in 1998--not >> > > just a tooth. In fact, they used his remains to disprove >> > > a one of Longley's wild stories that he had been >> > > shot in the mouth: "'That didn't happen because he's >> > > got beautiful teeth and didn't lose any of them,' >> > > Dr. Owsley said." >> > > >> > > They matched the DNA of the skeleton to the DNA of >> > > Helen Chapman, a great-grand daughter of Longley's sister. >> > > >> > > Still there are no details about Longley's prepubescent >> > > crime-spree and that seems like the most interesting >> > > part of the story!! :) >> > > >> > > In any event, it looks like Ted Wax is going to have to >> > > give up and do some real research on his Brown family!! >> > > Can't blame him for trying to turn his Brown's into >> > > Longleys--Brown has got to be the worst name on the planet >> > > to research. It's right up there with Smith. >> > > >> > > Kathy Duncan >> > > >> > > wyly1@juno.com wrote: >> > > > >> > > > Hi, >> > > > >> > > > never heard of him? His life was depicted in the 1950's TV >> movie >> > > or >> > > > programs called THE TEXAN. He was born WILLIAM PRESTON >> (WILD >> > > BILL) >> > > > LONGLEY and was a veteran of the Civil WarHe was hanged and >> > > buried in >> > > > Giddings, Texas in 1878The story persisted that the sheriff >> was >> > > bribed to >> > > > put some leather harness under his shirt and fake a hanging. >> TEXAS >> > > HAS >> > > > NEVER HAD PUBLIC HANGINGS, ACCORDING TO h. GRADY PERRY, State >> > > Rep. from >> > > > Erath County. The scaffold was prepared as crowds of families >> > > gatherred >> > > > to watch. Blinds were raised around the actual hanging site. >> The >> > > criminal >> > > > was marched in vew of the crowd, Blinds were raised for >> > > > privacy,thehanging took place, and the blinds or privacy >> shields >> > > were >> > > > dropped after he was pronounced dead for all to see as a crime >> > > prevention >> > > > and education method. >> > > > >> > > > Ted Wax of .Gonzales, la. claimed he was a grandson of CAPT. >> JOHN >> > > > CALHOUN BROWN, a prosperous planter of Bienville Parrish , >> La. >> > > This line >> > > > followed the idea that a box of Rocks were in Wild Bill's >> grave in >> > > Texas. >> > > > BROOKS ELWOOD, Chairman of Genealoogy Dept of Louisiana >> State >> > > > Universith started investigating and somehow got the >> Smithsonian >> > > > Institute interested. They used imaging equipment to find >> Bill's >> > > grave in >> > > > Giddings , as the family knew where it was- but his headstone >> had >> > > been >> > > > moved as some objected to be buried by a criminal. - moved >> twice, >> > > > according toplats and historians. The Grave was not moved. >> > > > >> > > > When LSU and the Smithsonian excavated the grave recently, >> they >> > > found >> > > > decayed clothing, boot heels (tops had rotted) and a tooth. >> Bones >> > > had >> > > > decayed too much to test(?)According to DNA testing on the >> tooth >> > > and >> > > > known descendants of Mr. Longley, they are 100% sure this was >> a >> > > Longley, >> > > > and 95.something% that it was Wild Bill, not a box of rocks >> for a >> > > fake >> > > > funeral. ( I know of one Texas Cemetery where Blacks and >> whites >> > > are >> > > > buried in same cemetery, but several graves of white Cattle >> > > Rustlers are >> > > > buried down the road to themselves. I do not know if they were >> > > hanged >> > > > legally or by Vigilantes during the days that the >> Reconstrution >> > > days >> > > > sheriff and deputies stayed close to the office unless in >> groups. >> > > > >> > > > Does anyone have a Geneaology chart which shows these >> percentages >> > > of >> > > > accuracy? According to this report, Jesse James DNA proof >> should >> > > be 95% >> > > > accurate, decreasing each generation. If it did not , all us >> > > Coffee or >> > > > Cleveland or Wyly or Sevier or Miller or Harris cousins or >> > > Copeland or >> > > > Carey or Hipp cousins. would have the same DNA. Any answers? >> > > > >> > > > Scientists and archeologists and Geneaologists worked on this >> > > grave and >> > > > family testing for 15 months before issueing their final >> report. >> > > > >> > > > The past is fun to read about and profit from their mistakes >> once >> > > we >> > > > recognize them, and also for hereditary disease predictions, >> but I >> > > just >> > > > wish we would SPEND AS MUCH TIME FINDING OUR SOLDIERS IN >> KOREA >> > > AND >> > > > vIETNAM, ALIVE OR DEAD. Ask most Jr. High and many High >> School >> > > kids when >> > > > and where was the Korean War and they will askif it was before >> or >> > > After >> > > > WW1? I taught 33 years and have been Substituting since 1989. >> > > Korea and >> > > > Vietnam had many lessons we could learn if we just quit >> ignoring >> > > its >> > > > lessons. We did not ride down and shoot Vets who went to >> Canada to >> > > avoid >> > > > the draft as some did on both sides , making their own law as >> they >> > > went >> > > > along. I did not agree with them but they have the same >> freedonm >> > > to their >> > > > ideas as I doo to mine, . >> > > > >> > > > SOURCE OF LONGLEY INFO; >> > > > >> > > > Waco Tribune- Herald, June 14, 2001, from Cox News Service, >> Stphen >> > > Krupin >> > > > , reporter. >> > > > >> > > > >> > > > Take care, >> > > > Charles A. Wyly >> > > > >> > > > ============================== >> > > > Join the RootsWeb WorldConnect Project: >> > > > Linking the world, one GEDCOM at a time. >> > > > http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com >> > > >> > > >> > > ============================== >> > > Shop Ancestry - Everything you need to Discover, Preserve & >> > > Celebrate >> > > your heritage! >> > > http://shop.myfamily.com/ancestrycatalog >> > > >> > >> > ============================== >> > Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the >> #1 >> > Source for Family History Online. Go to: >> > >> http://www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11HB >> >> >> ============================== >> Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the >> #1 >> Source for Family History Online. Go to: >> http://www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11HB >> > > >============================== >Ancestry.com Genealogical Databases >http://www.ancestry.com/rd/rwlist2.asp >Search over 2500 databases with one easy query! >

    06/15/2001 02:57:40
    1. Re: [SouthernTrails] Longley-Preston-Brown-& Wild Bill Longley
    2. Billy and/or Sandra Mitchell
    3. I think we called those brush hooks which is a long handled cutter. The Eye-Hoe sometimes was called a grubbing hoe; hence the saying - " trying to grub out a living " Bill Mitchell ----- Original Message ----- From: "Coffee" <j.coff@verizon.net> To: <Southern-Trails-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, 15 June 2001 8:57 AM Subject: Re: [SouthernTrails] Longley-Preston-Brown-& Wild Bill Longley > Is that tool similar to a "jo-blade"? They use a jo-blade to cut heavy > underbrush. My friend from Mississippi called it a jo-blade. I don't know > what else to call it. It is a single edge blade with a curved tip on it. > Perhaps it is called a sling-blade by some people. It is not a yo-yo, I know > what those damned things are because I have used them enough. . > > Jerry C. > -----Original Message----- > From: wyly1@juno.com <wyly1@juno.com> > To: Southern-Trails-L@rootsweb.com <Southern-Trails-L@rootsweb.com> > Date: Friday, June 15, 2001 8:49 AM > Subject: Re: [SouthernTrails] Longley-Preston-Brown-& Wild Bill Longley > > > >An eye hoe is one with a heavier blade, heavier handle- long handle, and > >a tapered eye on the back of the hoe which keeps the handle tight in the > >hoe. it is much heavier than a regular Garden hoe and in an 8 or 10 hour > >day it will blister hands without gloves andmake for very sore muscles- > >the boys who hauled hay and did a cotton or corn crop with an eye hoe > >were in shape for Football season started, if they were still in school. > >One had a file handy to keep it razor sharp . > > > > We used them on large cockleburs or Cuckleburs and used to dig Johnson > >grass runners and cut sunflowers out of cotton and corn with them. My > >Uncle let some land grow up when starting a dairy. @When he tried to plow > >it with a John Deere tractor and a light breaking plow, he had to first > >cut down many10 foot tall Sunflowers with a light axe and got smaller > >ones with an Eye hoe so the plow would track in dry Blackland Prairie. He > >had a 30 HP tractor. Today they use 60 to 90 HP Tractors or larger and > >shred all such trash growth int straw and then plow it under . > > > >Next time you go to a museum, ask to see an Eye Hoe. > > > >Take Care, Charles A. Wyly > > > >On Thu, 14 Jun 2001 16:17:06 -0500 skm <flintlock@kcnet.com> writes: > >> Could you please explain to our friends to the N. what an eye hoe > >> is. > >> An eye hoe can cure a lot of problems. Smart mouth is one. > >> > >> wyly1@juno.com wrote: > >> > >> > hI, Someone got a date wrong. He served in the Civil War and > >> washanged > >> > Oct.11, 1878, so he was bornHe must have been born before 1850. . > >> The > >> > photo in this paper shows with a Black Beard (Narrow Goatee) and > >> heavy > >> > black moustashe. He was hanged for killing Wilson Anderson,one of > >> his 32 > >> > victims. My grandson is 19 and sported a beard and mustashe for a > >> few > >> > months, He is six feet and did weigh over 250 when he played > >> football 5 > >> > years ago. He is not fat, just big boned and muscled. > >> > > >> > Great Grandad Robert Augustine Wyly marched into the Battle of > >> Shiloh as > >> > a Drummer, age 13 and marched out as a soldier with a gun. He > >> lived to be > >> > 93 and died in Tulsa, 1937 of Typhoid, caught from a well. His > >> brother > >> > James Allen Wyly was in the same battle, His Uncle Capt. Ben F. > >> Wyly , > >> > lost an eye in the Battle of Knoxville and lived into his late > >> 80's, > >> > buried in Comanche County, Texas. Oliver Cromwell Wyly, their > >> dad, sent > >> > a letter to the Gov. of Georgia promising 3000 gallons of fine > >> Whiskey > >> > for the troops,( His brother and son Ran the Wyly Wholesale > >> Grocery in > >> > Atlanta. O.C.soon joined as a Captain and returned to Habersham > >> County > >> > where he piled a trunk full of Confederate money in his yard and > >> burned > >> > it. > >> > > >> > So far as age goes, my wife's grandfather was born abt 1850 in > >> Ireland , > >> > James Whitcomb O'Riley, stowed awayn on a ship and the Captain > >> signed him > >> > on as a Sheet Metal (Tinker) Aprentice in New York Harbor. He > >> moved top > >> > Cleburne, Texas and died in 1893, leaving 2 sets of Children. My > >> wife was > >> > born in Pettit, Texas in 1936 whgen her dad was about 50. > >> > > >> > Also, Ben F. Wyly's grandson drove 3000 head of sheep to San > >> Angelo, > >> > Texas, age 17 and deliverred them to former owners of > >> Stephenville, Tx > >> > Cage and Crow Bank- they swapped the sheep for Erath County > >> property. He > >> > had to stay up some nights with a rifle, age 17 to keep cattlemen > >> from > >> > riding in and shooting the sheep. That was 1887. > >> > > >> > My wife's dad had 4 years of Schoolhousing, but could add 2 > >> columns of > >> > Cotton weight or calf prices in his head faster than I could write > >> them. > >> > At age 12 or so he was buying cattle around Glen Rose and driving > >> them > >> > back across the Brazos to the Cleburne Slaughter House. > >> > > >> > Sometimes I do not think every child should be in a computerized > >> > classroom to age 18 - He coulds be learning more in a Cooperative > >> > Education Class or working. A man in Hill County said an Eye Hoe > >> in a > >> > Johnson Grass infested cotton patch would cure Juvenile > >> Delinquency and > >> > provide motivation to find a better life. > >> > > >> > Charles A. Wyly > >> > > >> > On Thu, 14 Jun 2001 09:27:27 -0600 Peter Selph/Kathy Duncan > >> > <ppskdd2@airmail.net> writes: > >> > > Charles: > >> > > > >> > > You are the person to ask about Wild Bill Longley. > >> > > > >> > > The Dallas Morning News article in today's paper > >> > > says that Longley was hanged in 1878 at the age of > >> > > 27 and that he was "one of the West's bloodiest > >> > > pre-Civil War outlaws. I've never been very good > >> > > at math, but just how bloody a career can someone > >> > > manage before the age of 10?! And did he enlist > >> > > near the beginning of The War or the end? Was he > >> > > just a drummer boy? > >> > > > >> > > The Dallas Morning News also has a picture of full > >> > > skeletal remains for Longley, exhumed in 1998--not > >> > > just a tooth. In fact, they used his remains to disprove > >> > > a one of Longley's wild stories that he had been > >> > > shot in the mouth: "'That didn't happen because he's > >> > > got beautiful teeth and didn't lose any of them,' > >> > > Dr. Owsley said." > >> > > > >> > > They matched the DNA of the skeleton to the DNA of > >> > > Helen Chapman, a great-grand daughter of Longley's sister. > >> > > > >> > > Still there are no details about Longley's prepubescent > >> > > crime-spree and that seems like the most interesting > >> > > part of the story!! :) > >> > > > >> > > In any event, it looks like Ted Wax is going to have to > >> > > give up and do some real research on his Brown family!! > >> > > Can't blame him for trying to turn his Brown's into > >> > > Longleys--Brown has got to be the worst name on the planet > >> > > to research. It's right up there with Smith. > >> > > > >> > > Kathy Duncan > >> > > > >> > > wyly1@juno.com wrote: > >> > > > > >> > > > Hi, > >> > > > > >> > > > never heard of him? His life was depicted in the 1950's TV > >> movie > >> > > or > >> > > > programs called THE TEXAN. He was born WILLIAM PRESTON > >> (WILD > >> > > BILL) > >> > > > LONGLEY and was a veteran of the Civil WarHe was hanged and > >> > > buried in > >> > > > Giddings, Texas in 1878The story persisted that the sheriff > >> was > >> > > bribed to > >> > > > put some leather harness under his shirt and fake a hanging. > >> TEXAS > >> > > HAS > >> > > > NEVER HAD PUBLIC HANGINGS, ACCORDING TO h. GRADY PERRY, State > >> > > Rep. from > >> > > > Erath County. The scaffold was prepared as crowds of families > >> > > gatherred > >> > > > to watch. Blinds were raised around the actual hanging site. > >> The > >> > > criminal > >> > > > was marched in vew of the crowd, Blinds were raised for > >> > > > privacy,thehanging took place, and the blinds or privacy > >> shields > >> > > were > >> > > > dropped after he was pronounced dead for all to see as a crime > >> > > prevention > >> > > > and education method. > >> > > > > >> > > > Ted Wax of .Gonzales, la. claimed he was a grandson of CAPT. > >> JOHN > >> > > > CALHOUN BROWN, a prosperous planter of Bienville Parrish , > >> La. > >> > > This line > >> > > > followed the idea that a box of Rocks were in Wild Bill's > >> grave in > >> > > Texas. > >> > > > BROOKS ELWOOD, Chairman of Genealoogy Dept of Louisiana > >> State > >> > > > Universith started investigating and somehow got the > >> Smithsonian > >> > > > Institute interested. They used imaging equipment to find > >> Bill's > >> > > grave in > >> > > > Giddings , as the family knew where it was- but his headstone > >> had > >> > > been > >> > > > moved as some objected to be buried by a criminal. - moved > >> twice, > >> > > > according toplats and historians. The Grave was not moved. > >> > > > > >> > > > When LSU and the Smithsonian excavated the grave recently, > >> they > >> > > found > >> > > > decayed clothing, boot heels (tops had rotted) and a tooth. > >> Bones > >> > > had > >> > > > decayed too much to test(?)According to DNA testing on the > >> tooth > >> > > and > >> > > > known descendants of Mr. Longley, they are 100% sure this was > >> a > >> > > Longley, > >> > > > and 95.something% that it was Wild Bill, not a box of rocks > >> for a > >> > > fake > >> > > > funeral. ( I know of one Texas Cemetery where Blacks and > >> whites > >> > > are > >> > > > buried in same cemetery, but several graves of white Cattle > >> > > Rustlers are > >> > > > buried down the road to themselves. I do not know if they were > >> > > hanged > >> > > > legally or by Vigilantes during the days that the > >> Reconstrution > >> > > days > >> > > > sheriff and deputies stayed close to the office unless in > >> groups. > >> > > > > >> > > > Does anyone have a Geneaology chart which shows these > >> percentages > >> > > of > >> > > > accuracy? According to this report, Jesse James DNA proof > >> should > >> > > be 95% > >> > > > accurate, decreasing each generation. If it did not , all us > >> > > Coffee or > >> > > > Cleveland or Wyly or Sevier or Miller or Harris cousins or > >> > > Copeland or > >> > > > Carey or Hipp cousins. would have the same DNA. Any answers? > >> > > > > >> > > > Scientists and archeologists and Geneaologists worked on this > >> > > grave and > >> > > > family testing for 15 months before issueing their final > >> report. > >> > > > > >> > > > The past is fun to read about and profit from their mistakes > >> once > >> > > we > >> > > > recognize them, and also for hereditary disease predictions, > >> but I > >> > > just > >> > > > wish we would SPEND AS MUCH TIME FINDING OUR SOLDIERS IN > >> KOREA > >> > > AND > >> > > > vIETNAM, ALIVE OR DEAD. Ask most Jr. High and many High > >> School > >> > > kids when > >> > > > and where was the Korean War and they will askif it was before > >> or > >> > > After > >> > > > WW1? I taught 33 years and have been Substituting since 1989. > >> > > Korea and > >> > > > Vietnam had many lessons we could learn if we just quit > >> ignoring > >> > > its > >> > > > lessons. We did not ride down and shoot Vets who went to > >> Canada to > >> > > avoid > >> > > > the draft as some did on both sides , making their own law as > >> they > >> > > went > >> > > > along. I did not agree with them but they have the same > >> freedonm > >> > > to their > >> > > > ideas as I doo to mine, . > >> > > > > >> > > > SOURCE OF LONGLEY INFO; > >> > > > > >> > > > Waco Tribune- Herald, June 14, 2001, from Cox News Service, > >> Stphen > >> > > Krupin > >> > > > , reporter. > >> > > > > >> > > > > >> > > > Take care, > >> > > > Charles A. Wyly > >> > > > > >> > > > ============================== > >> > > > Join the RootsWeb WorldConnect Project: > >> > > > Linking the world, one GEDCOM at a time. > >> > > > http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com > >> > > > >> > > > >> > > ============================== > >> > > Shop Ancestry - Everything you need to Discover, Preserve & > >> > > Celebrate > >> > > your heritage! > >> > > http://shop.myfamily.com/ancestrycatalog > >> > > > >> > > >> > ============================== > >> > Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the > >> #1 > >> > Source for Family History Online. Go to: > >> > > >> http://www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11HB > >> > >> > >> ============================== > >> Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the > >> #1 > >> Source for Family History Online. Go to: > >> http://www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11HB > >> > > > > > >============================== > >Ancestry.com Genealogical Databases > >http://www.ancestry.com/rd/rwlist2.asp > >Search over 2500 databases with one easy query! > > > > > ============================== > Join the RootsWeb WorldConnect Project: > Linking the world, one GEDCOM at a time. > http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com >

    06/15/2001 03:13:20