The following query was posted to the Augusta County Query Page on Sat Jan 30 19:25:33 1999 PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: PULTZ1@aol.com (Cecil Edward Pultz) Looking for information on the "Pultz" surname. In recent conversations by e-mail, I have been told that two pultz brothers arrived in Virginia in the 1700's. One staying in Virginia and one moving to New York. They were said to have married native women. Of interest would be the "Monocan" tribe? Would this tribe of natives be from the Augusta Co. area of Virginia? If so, does anyone have any links to where I might find more info. about them? Also mentioned was a place called "Bear Mountain". Is this there also? PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: PULTZ1@aol.com (Cecil Edward Pultz)
The following query was posted to the Augusta County Query Page on Sat Jan 30 13:53:57 1999 PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: Art@ArtMichaelis.com (Art Michaelis) My 2g grandfather Edward Lee ALLISON was born in VA in 1829 and I am looking for his family. In the 1830 census for Augusta Co. there are three ALLISON families listed with male children under 5, John ALLISON (p002), John ALLISON (p002) and William ALLISON (p002). Are these three families related? Does anyone have information on the children of these gentleman? I would appreciate hearing from you even if Edward is not among the children so that I can eliminate the family as a possibility. Thank you and "Good Hunting" to everyone! URL: http://artmichaelis.com PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: Art@ArtMichaelis.com (Art Michaelis)
The following query was posted to the Augusta County Query Page on Sat Jan 30 12:56:26 1999 PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: sam@crossroadsnv.com (Sam Scott) I have been looking years for Alexander Scott.b ca.1698. He lived for a time on and died at (ca. 1751) Lord Fairfax's Northern Neck estate on the South Branch of the Potomac River. His son's John,James, and Benjamin also lived here. PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: sam@crossroadsnv.com (Sam Scott)
The following query was posted to the Augusta County Query Page on Sat Jan 30 08:38:41 1999 PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: kellyandmyers@pathway.net (Sheryl Anne Kelly) I am searching for the ancestors of William and Jane (McCormick) McNees. We have proof of land ownership in Augusta County, VA as early as 1763 - Land Entry Book I page 57, 11-17-1763. Wiiliam McNees, 200 acres between John Magills on the north side of the North River joining Shanklies land. William, Jane and children ended up in western Pa. I have much info about the family from this point on. Any information about ancestors of this couple and how William was related to other McNees' in the colonies. PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: kellyandmyers@pathway.net (Sheryl Anne Kelly)
The following query was posted to the Augusta County Query Page on Fri Jan 29 14:25:38 1999 PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: vincedonna@aol.com (donna maldonado) There is a farm owned by a Earl Coombs in 1828. My gggrandparents are buried there, John Patterson & Mary Ructman. D.Jul 1828. Does anyone know of this farm or cemetery? PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: vincedonna@aol.com (donna maldonado)
The following query was posted to the Augusta County Query Page on Fri Jan 29 13:29:12 1999 PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: rpenninger@logicon.com (RON PENNINGER) Looking for Va. MILITA records 1755-56. Erasmas PENNINGER was a member 1755-56 in Capt.Christopher SEITZ(SIDES)company and participated in the Carolina Expedition.Other officers in the unit were named STARNES OR STAHRINGS.Any information or advice where to look? Militia unit may have been from Augusta County PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: rpenninger@logicon.com (RON PENNINGER)
G. Lee Hearl wrote: I guess the members of this list will think I'm a "nit picker", but I read the historical information about the first colonies of Virginia and found it quite interesting, HOWEVER, I must question the part which stated that the water of James River, which the colonists had been drinking, became contaminated and a deep well was dug for drinking water. The water of James River has never been drinkable because it is brackish (salty) up to the falls at Richmond. I am sure the person who posted the information obtained it from some source which was thought to be reliable and true. In reference to the post about "taking on water at Newport News", I worked 24 years at Newport News Shipbuilding Co. and there was a spring along the bank of James River, inside the shipyard, a building had been built over it but the water seeped up through the floor and finally had to be piped into the river. I wonder if that was the watering place of colonial ships??? Any of you who go to Jamestown and Williamsburg, Va. should drive down to Newport News and visit the Mariners Museum, it's very interesting. G. Lee Hearl.. Abingdon, Va. G.Lee Hearl; I'm glad you're a nit picker, it gives me a chance to respond. No one person can know everything. Many misleading genealogy records pass over the Internet without correction. The following sources, which speak to the subject of the salt in the James River and deaths of 1607-1625, as the tide goes out and the tide comes in, for the above questioning by you, I hope will be satisfactory to all: I-"The first year in Virginia portended the dreadful mortality that ravaged the colony until 1624." Observations by Master George Percy, 1607, Lyon Gardiner Taylor,ed., Narratives of Early Virginia, 1606-1625. II-". . .our men were destroyed with cruell diseases, as Swellings, Flixes, Burning Fevers, . . ." p.97, Travels & Works of Capt. John Smith, President of Virginia and Admiral of New England, 1580-1631, Edward Arber & A.G.Bradley, eds. Edinburgh, 1910. III-Wyndham B.Blanton, "Epidemics, Real & Imaginary, and Other Factors Influencing Seventeenth Century Virginia Population," Bulletin of the History of Medicine, XXXI, 1957. IV-Edward C.Raney, "Freshwater Fishes," in The James River Basin, Past, Present, & Future, Virginia Academy of Science, James River Project Committee, Richmond, Va., 1950. V-". . . actual causes of death-typhoid, dysentery, & perhaps salt poisoning." John Duffy, Epidemics in Colonial America, Baton Rouge,La., 1953. VI-"Our drinke [was] cold water taken out of the River, which was at a floud verie salt, at low tide full of slime & fieth, which was the destruction of many of our men." Observation of Master George Percy, Narratives of Early Vir. 1606-1625. VII-" . . . The ebb tide, though less saline, was very turbid, organically polluted, and deadly. The trapped pathogeny of typhoid & dysentery, thus floated back and forth past Jamestown with the summer tide. The danger from contaminated water faded in Sept. River discharge increased, pushing the salt incursion & its deadly associated downstream toward Hog Point." The First English Towns of North America, Geographical Review, LXVII, Carville Earle. VIII-" . . . the annual summer invasion of saltwater up the James River that contaminated the Jamestown water supply." Environment, Disease, and Mortality in Early Virginia. Carville V.Earle. p.104. IX-" . . . Highest discharge customarily comes in the spring, and pushes the saltwater to its seaward maximum; on the James the retreat is to Hog Point . . ." ibid., p.105. For further reading and research on the subject of the James River salt and death happening at early Jamestown, the following material and authors may be of worth to all Augusta 'listers': Philip L.Barbour, 'The Three Worlds of Capt. John Smith, Boston, 1964. Richard L.Morton, 'Colonial Virginia: The Tidewater Period, 1607-1710, Chapel Hill, N.C., 1960. Darrett B, and Anita Ratman, 'Of Agues & Fevers: Malaria in the Early Chesapeake,' WMQ, 3rd Ser. XXXIII, 1976. The Chesapeake in the Seventeenth Century, eds Thad W. Tate & David L.Ammerman, 1979. Maynard M.Nickols, 'Sediments of the James River Estuary, Virginia Geological Society of America, 1972. I stand by my early outline. Harry.
Searching for any information on the surname CHISM. My husband's gr.gr.grandfather was Franklin Chism, born November 7, 1807 in Augusta County, Virginia - according to information we have. By 1835 he had made two trips to Ohio with an unknown brother, and finally settled in Fairfield County, Ohio, where he married Elizabeth Geiger in 1838. We have been trying - unsuccessfully to this point - to find the names of Franklin's parents/siblings. Are there 1810, 1820, and 1830 Census for Augusta County? If so, are there any online? Any/all suggestions welcomed. Thanks. Sue Moyer Chism mchism@loganrec.com
To all on The Augusta County List. I am sorry for the confusion about the Vaught Mail List. No one is automatically subscribed to that list. Please ignore the letter and delete it from your inbox. If you want to subscribe, please follow the instructions for subscribing in the letter. Again, I am sorry for the confusion. Marilyn Vaught Young mvyoung@shawneelink.com
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I guess the members of this list will think I'm a "nit-picker", but I read the historical information about the first colonies of Virginia and found it quite interesting, HOWEVER, I must question the part which stated that the water of James River, which the colonists had been drinking, became contaminated and a deep well was dug for drinking water. The water of James River has never been drinkable because it is brackish (salty) up to the falls at Richmond..I am sure the person who posted the information obtained it from some source which was thought to be reliable and true. In reference to the post about "taking on water at Newport News", I worked 24 years at Newport News Shipbuilding Co. and there was a spring along the bank of James River, inside the shipyard, a building had been built over it but the water seeped up through the floor and finally had to be piped into the river..I wonder if that was the watering place of colonial ships??? Any of you who go to Jamestown and Williamsburg, Va. should drive down to Newport News and visit the Mariners Museum, it's very interesting. G. Lee Hearl.. Abingdon, Va.
>Looking for any information on STEPHEN BECK whose will was probated July >15, 1788,Augusta Co. Wife Catherine (no maiden name), son Peter, daus. >MARY LEEDEKEY, CATHERINE FRENGER.I know absolutely nothng about him, >except the date of probate. Where did he live, where did he come from. This may not help much, but I do know there were several Beck/Peck families living in the area just south of Deerfield in Augusta county in the late 1700s to mid 1800s. I've encountered them in land records as neighbors of my Claytons, on the Calfpasture river, around where Clayton Mill Creek comes into the river. You might want to check Augusta land records to find Stephen and determine when he arrived in Augusta, and possibly where from (sometimes the first land purchase in a county gives the previous county of residence, e.g. "Stephen Beck of Louisa Co"). Regards, Holly Please visit my 3 websites: Hollyhock Press: http://id.mind.net/~cochran/hollyhock/ My Wanless Family Genealogy: http://id.mind.net/~cochran/ralphdsc/ Wan(d)less One-Name Study: http://id.mind.net/~cochran/wanlessweb/
The First Americans-The Cradle of the Republic; In 1607, the Spanish Empire's most hated enemy, the English, ventured forth to grab a piece of territory that had been lived on by Natives for many hundred of years. Three ships with 144 settlers left England and set sail to a land already decimated by the 'plague', brought there by the Spaniard, Samuel De Champlain in 1605. The English landed April 1607 and began a settlement at Jamestown, Va. Construction of a fort, digging for gold, planting of wheat got underway. The ships returned to England by June, 1607. January,1608, other ships arrived from England with supplies of food & equipment. Oct. 1608, arrival of supply ships, bringing 70 settlers, with two woman as the first to come to America. Drinking water from the James River became contaminated from excrement's of the colonists, so a "deep well" was dug at the fort. 1609 brought supplies and 400 new settlers. 1610, ships had returned from England with supplies & another 150 settlers. 1611, three supply ships arrived at 'James Citty' with 300 people, domestic animals ('cattle, cows, goats, swine, poultry, etc.)'. Due to over-crowding, new settlements were opened to other areas of Va. During the next few years, ships came & went, taking material to England & returning with people, supplies & animals. Exploring up & down the Atlantic coast took place. 1612, Henrico, Eastern Shore & Bermuda City were settled. 1613-1614, plantations were being developed. 1614-1615, farming & house building increased. 1614, Pocahontas & John Rolfe got married. 1616, a slightly firm peace with the 'Native' Indians, developed. John Smith named the area north of Virginia, 'New England' in 1614. Also 1614, the Dutch were living & farming in Albany, NY. 1617-1620, a plague wiped out an estimated 90% of the Native population, from Florida to Canada. 1614-1618, Samuel Argall explored north & attacked the French in New England & Nova Scotia, bringing back captives to Jamestown. 1613, tobacco was exported from Va. to England. 1617, more people came & some died. 1618, there was a drought & a hurricane to hit Va. 1616-1619, new partition of land developed. 1618, private ownership of property enlarged with 'headrights' which brought new settlers. 1619, representative government was established, (which extends to the present time). 1619, a Dutch ship brought & sold a group of twenty negroes from the West Indies. 1619, an attempt to establish a college for youth at Henrico began. 1619, brought 150 persons for 'iron works' industry. By 1620 there were 27 'Towns, Plantations, Settlements & Communities in Virginia.' In 1620, . . . but that's another history. Harry. macbd1 wrote: Several postings ... . . . in early times . . . . Neil McDonald ==== VAAUGUST Mailing List ==== > **************************************************************** The Augusta County mailing list page has instructions on how to subscribe and unsubscribe from the list Visit it at: http://www.rootsweb.com/~vapulask/augustaquery/augustalist.htm ***************************************************************
W.W.W. >From the records we have: "David Pietersz de Vries, a Dutch shipmaster visited Virginia in March,1633 at Newport News that was a watering point for incoming and outgoing,vessels. He says:'The 10th,we sailed up the river[James]. When we came to the before-mentioned point of Newport-Snuw, we landed and took in water. A fine spring lies inside the shore of the river,convenient for taking water from. All the ships come here to take in water on their way home. After we procured some water,we sailed on. . . ' On March20,when leaving Virginia,De Vries observed again'anchored at evening before the point of Newport-Snuw,where we took in water'." H. Angel329@prodigy.net wrote: > > I just wanted to write a note to cite a book a little older than the rest of > these....doesn't the Bible state all through it about the women,etc., going > to the well for drinking water??!! > There is no way that I would ever believe that a lush, green, clean country > such as Ireland wouldn't have had some fresh water. > I would also imagine that it was harder to find around London with the > contamination but I cannot believe that all/ or most of the water in Europe > was bad. I have heard Europeans that come here talk about not drinking our > water and will only drink their bottles of water...we have bad water > .....i.e. chemicals, toxins... > That is one big thing that our ancestors didn't have to deal with and that > is all of these horrible toxins put into our streams. > Surely, though, I can trust that the Bible was correct in talking about the > cool, clean water... > Though, too, I would imagine if people had a choice of drinking plain > water-clean or not-or drinking some type of stimulant or go-go juice, they > would choose the later. > Diana Kinzer Heath > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > USGenWeb County Coordinator for: > Roanoke Co., Roanoke City & Salem City, VA at: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~varoanok/index.html > Wood Co., WV at: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~wvwood/indexa.htm > Mason Co., WV at: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~wvmason/ > > Rootsweb Mail List Owner/Admin for: > VAROANOK-L@Rootsweb.com > WVWOOD-L@Rootsweb.com > KINZER-L@Rootsweb.com > GRALEY-L@Rootsweb.com > MILLER-L@Rootsweb.com > SCHMIDT-L@Rootsweb.com > BERNHARD-L@Rootsweb.com > KARP-L@Rootsweb.com > > GenConnect Surname Boards Admin. for: > KINZER, CORNS & MILLER. > > MY HOME PAGE: > http://www.familytreemaker.com/users/h/e/a/Diana-K-Heath/ > > ***Proud Rootsweb Sponsor*** > > ==== VAAUGUST Mailing List ==== > **************************************************************** > The Augusta County mailing list page has instructions on how to > subscribe and unsubscribe from the list > Visit it at: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~vapulask/augustaquery/augustalist.htm > ***************************************************************
Hi, Very well said. That's my sense, too, of what it was like, exactly. Out of all that deprivation came eventually hundreds of us contemporary genealogists, those researched and tyhose not yet researched. Gene ATKIN <genea2@juno.com> Forty Surnames, etc.: <http://www.familytreemaker.com/users/a/t/k/Eugene-L-Atkin> On Fri, 29 Jan 1999 00:32:09 -0500 "G. Lee Hearl" <glh@naxs.com> writes: >Now that we have had our discussion on wine and water...and a few >other >things to drink, let's consider what a trip from Europe to America was >like >on a sailing ship in the early seventeen hundreds.. The ship takes on >passengers in Amsterdam and sails to England, Scotland or Ireland >where it >is tied up for two weeks waiting for cargo and other passengers.. The >people who boarded in Amsterdam are not allowed to leave the ship and >have >to spend the little money they have for food while they wait..Cargo is >finally loaded and more passengers are crowded aboard until the space >allowed each person is two feet by two feet by six feet..Finally the >ship >sails, most of the passengers have never been on a ship before and >half of >them get seasick, that makes everybody else sick..nobody can leave >their >"space" and go up on the deck for fresh air..Some woman goes into >labor and >begins screaming with pain...everybody gets so upset..they decide to >push >her out a port hole into the ocean..a child dies and is buried at >sea.. >nobody can take a bath...everybody gets lice...they are being fed salt >cured meat...and the water supply runs low...they hit a storm and >everyone >thinks they will never live through it...they all start to >praying...or >cursing the day they got on that ship...parents die, leaving small >children >to look after themselves..the food supply runs out and there is >nothing >left except the ship biscuit..and it has made several voyages back >forth >across the atlantic and is full of bugs and worms...finally after two >months or more under such conditions..land is sighted...Everyone who >is >still able..gives thanks to the Lord..The ship docks in Barbados..they >all >get some fresh water but are not allowed to leave the ship..Finally >they >arrive in Philadelphia, sick,starving, dirty, covered with lice and >broke, >facing several years of indentured service for their passage to the >new >world. After such a trip, our forefathers were prepared to face the >wilderness, wild animals, savage Indians or anything else to stay here >because they knew they were never going to get on another ship! G. Lee >Hearl Abingdon, Va. > > >==== VAAUGUST Mailing List ==== >**************************************************************** >The Augusta County mailing list page has instructions on how to > subscribe and unsubscribe from the list > Visit it at: >http://www.rootsweb.com/~vapulask/augustaquery/augustalist.htm >*************************************************************** > > ___________________________________________________________________ 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/getjuno.html or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866]
I need very much to know just who is Sarah Blake. In a deed abstraction, someone put "Peter and Sarah Blake to Hugh Donaghe" in a deed of 28 April 1800 in Augusta Co. Augusta Co., Deed Book 31, p. 37. Actually, was it Peter Blake and his wife Sarah, or Peter Blake and his daughter Sarah, or what. Hugh Donaghe states in a deed of 1795 that he gives a slave girl to his granddaughter Sarah Blake, daughter of Peter Blake. Hugh's daughter is never named and is unknown, unless this deed from Peter and Sarah names her as his wife. ANY help would be most appreciated. Chester R. Johnson Hurst, TX
Now that we have had our discussion on wine and water...and a few other things to drink, let's consider what a trip from Europe to America was like on a sailing ship in the early seventeen hundreds.. The ship takes on passengers in Amsterdam and sails to England, Scotland or Ireland where it is tied up for two weeks waiting for cargo and other passengers.. The people who boarded in Amsterdam are not allowed to leave the ship and have to spend the little money they have for food while they wait..Cargo is finally loaded and more passengers are crowded aboard until the space allowed each person is two feet by two feet by six feet..Finally the ship sails, most of the passengers have never been on a ship before and half of them get seasick, that makes everybody else sick..nobody can leave their "space" and go up on the deck for fresh air..Some woman goes into labor and begins screaming with pain...everybody gets so upset..they decide to push her out a port hole into the ocean..a child dies and is buried at sea.. nobody can take a bath...everybody gets lice...they are being fed salt cured meat...and the water supply runs low...they hit a storm and everyone thinks they will never live through it...they all start to praying...or cursing the day they got on that ship...parents die, leaving small children to look after themselves..the food supply runs out and there is nothing left except the ship biscuit..and it has made several voyages back forth across the atlantic and is full of bugs and worms...finally after two months or more under such conditions..land is sighted...Everyone who is still able..gives thanks to the Lord..The ship docks in Barbados..they all get some fresh water but are not allowed to leave the ship..Finally they arrive in Philadelphia, sick,starving, dirty, covered with lice and broke, facing several years of indentured service for their passage to the new world. After such a trip, our forefathers were prepared to face the wilderness, wild animals, savage Indians or anything else to stay here because they knew they were never going to get on another ship! G. Lee Hearl Abingdon, Va.
Temporarily unsubing to catch up on my "other" addiction - downhill skiing. I'll definitely be back. Helen D.
For a visit to a small winery located on the site of a Colonial vinyard, which was providing wine to Virginians 140 years before a drop was fermented in California, do not miss the Williamsburg Winery in Williamsburg, VA. They have the largest known collection of colonial wine bottles. I tried some of their wines, just a couple of weeks after my periodic trip to the Napa Valley, and they were surprisingly good! Mead and beer were sometimes watered down to expand the supply. Weak beer was one source of water to the common laborer in the Middle Ages, supplied by his master. I have seen the many messages on water, and wanted to add that, along with drinking and bathing in it, it has also been used frequently as a mixer. By the way, I hope there aren't too many objections to what has been a lively, interesting and informative thread of conversation. Bill Kincaid == Visit my webpages at http://members.tripod.com/lifeoncanvas/index.htm _________________________________________________________ DO YOU YAHOO!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
Robert, I'm sorry I don't know anything about your family, but I'm very interested in knowing more about the "Records of Augusta Co., Va. Vol ii 1745-1800. P455 Augusta Co. Parish Vestry Book". Do you know who published it and who was the author. I have seen references about it for my family line. I tried to send this individually to you but it was returned. I don't know how to use the address as you stated. Thanks. Patti by way of Michael Gwinn wrote: > The following query was posted to the Augusta County Query Page > on Wed Jan 27 12:49:43 1999 > > PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: RPrice9207.aol.com (Robert J. Price) > > I am asking for information with regard to my g-g-g-grandfather, Cullum > Price, born approx 1765 in Va. Married to Betsy (maiden name, marriage > date unknown). Cullum was in western N.C./eastern Tenn. at least > transiently, where one of sons was born in 1798 (Adam Price). They > subsequently migrated to Ky. prob. through the Cumberland Gap and were > known to be living in Clay Co, Ky. in 1818. > In searching through some records I found the following: "Records of > Augusta Co., Va. Vol ii 1745-1800. P455 Augusta Co. Parish Vestry Book > pg.429 "Processioners appointed viz Cullum Price from Mr. Jones to the > Picket Mountain and as low as the county line on both sides of the river > to north of South River". > The Cullum mentioned here seems to be too old for my relative, but he > might have been related. If anyone has any information that they might > contribute, I would be deeply appreciative. > You may contact me at RPrice9207.aol.com > > PLEASE ADRRESS YOUR REPLY TO: RPrice9207.aol.com (Robert J. Price) > > ==== VAAUGUST Mailing List ==== > **************************************************************** > Visit the Augusta County VAGenWeb Site at: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~vaaugust/ > ****************************************************************