Ronda; My wife was an Armstrong, originally from western Augusta County. Her heritage goes back to Robert Armstrong, an immigrant from Northern Ireland that was a Sergeant in the French and Indian War. Robert married Jane Vanarsdale in 1746. She has the family tree down to the current or latest date. Contact me off the list at bharris@ntelos.net and I will share information with you. Bucky Harris, Staunton, Va. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ronda Redden" <RondaRed@cox.net> To: <vaaugust@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2007 7:52 PM Subject: [VAAUGUST] ARMSTRONGS > I'm researching Armstrong's of Augusta County. There are way too many of > them and I can't keep them straight. Anyone else searching this surname in > Augusta County? > > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll > Call. Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us > something about your Brick Wall person. > To contact Listowner: > Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Lynden, A Robert Armstrong brought over a Owen Kelly as a indentured servant for four years. Owen came to Pennsylvania 7th of June 1773 and was ported from Dublin Ireland. Resident of Augusta Co, Va. I am researching James Kelly who came to America in 1773 also, and lived in the Greenbrier County area of Virginia. I do not know who this Owen Kelly is, have you ran across any Kelly's in your research? Owen had a land grant in 1795 in Augusta County three hundred and seventy acres on the N.W. side of Nap's creek, a branch of the Greenbrier River adjoining Michael Dougherty. James Kelly was born August 1756 in Ireland and married Nancy Caperton in 1782. How did people get to be indentured in the first place, were they known by the party who brought them over, were they kin in someway? Gay Nix Lynden Harris <bharris@ntelos.net> wrote: Ronda; My wife was an Armstrong, originally from western Augusta County. Her heritage goes back to Robert Armstrong, an immigrant from Northern Ireland that was a Sergeant in the French and Indian War. Robert married Jane Vanarsdale in 1746. She has the family tree down to the current or latest date. Contact me off the list at bharris@ntelos.net and I will share information with you. Bucky Harris, Staunton, Va. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ronda Redden" To: Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2007 7:52 PM Subject: [VAAUGUST] ARMSTRONGS > I'm researching Armstrong's of Augusta County. There are way too many of > them and I can't keep them straight. Anyone else searching this surname in > Augusta County? > > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll > Call. Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us > something about your Brick Wall person. > To contact Listowner: > Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll Call. Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us something about your Brick Wall person. To contact Listowner: Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message Gay Nix warpaint1128@sbcglobal.net
there was Houston Paris McClung m to Martha Crawford Bear. Martha b 1868 ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
I'm researching Armstrong's of Augusta County. There are way too many of them and I can't keep them straight. Anyone else searching this surname in Augusta County?
Sue: Your comments on Chalkey's work were excellent. It is tiring to hear everyone pile on when there is a problem observed and even more so to hear complains about those who add to the conversation with their observations that are congruent with the cited problem. Obviously the subject needed airing and your rational was exactly what was needed. James McCulloch Ann Arbor, Michigan
Sorry to hear that you are having such a rough time with the change! ----- Original Message ----- From: <Taxitaxi@aol.com> To: <vaaugust@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2007 9:41 AM Subject: [VAAUGUST] stop!: Chalkley and nitpicking In a message dated 4/26/07 5:04:57 AM, Atnvolsgirl@wmconnect.com writes: > Sounds like DAR is much like the LDS! Just because someone says that it is > the truth, they take it as gospel. > ENOUGH BACKBITING. STOP! GET ON WITH RESEARCH AND STOP WASTING TIME. > I'M ON THIS LIST TO GET INFORMATION, NOT HEAR YOUR GRIPES. ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll Call. Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us something about your Brick Wall person. To contact Listowner: Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Charles, I don't remember who the author is/was. After several years of searching the McClungs in Augusta County without much luck, I contacted a friend of mine who was a history professor at one of our local colleges and he is the one that recommended it to me. What I did was checked the book out of our local library, bought a package of transparencies and made my own set of maps of the counties as they were formed. They are all the same size, so I can overlay the transparencies to help figure out what area became what. Anita </HTML>
In a message dated 4/26/07 5:04:57 AM, Atnvolsgirl@wmconnect.com writes: > Sounds like DAR is much like the LDS! Just because someone says that it is > the truth, they take it as gospel. > ENOUGH BACKBITING. STOP! GET ON WITH RESEARCH AND STOP WASTING TIME. I'M ON THIS LIST TO GET INFORMATION, NOT HEAR YOUR GRIPES. ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
In a message dated 4/26/07 9:24:44 AM, eswiger@cebridge.net writes: > The DAR requries doucuments to prove your lineage....Each generation must > have been proven by either census, marriage, death, birth or any other > papers you can produce. > Just a little note. DAR does not accept censuses as proof. Censuses can be submitted as supplemental proof, but not proof on it's own. Censuses have too many errors to be considered as proof. All of us have witnesses that with censuses. Censuses are only backups on other docs when proving links between generations. They are not the meat of proof for DAR. They're side dishes. I'm sure that's what you meant, but for those out there considering joining DAR, you can't just offer censuses. As far as any documents go, there are errors in court records too. Any record can have errors. Ex 1: My grandfather's mother is named Vina Harlon in the Perry Co., OH books. Her name was Vinnie Harlow proven by death, marriage and other records. Ex.2: I have an ancestor with his named spelled 3 different ways in the same 1786 deed. Spelling was not so important in old courthouse documents. Those docs on immigrants are especially terrible when it comes to surname spellings. People took liberties with phonetics. Ex 3: Local history books can also have errors - even the the ones highly touted. I have seen this with my own family as well. Look for sources in history books, then verify them. In summary, all sources should be taken into consideration, evaluated & compared. If everything had to be engraved in stone before putting it out there as references, then nothing would be shared. Everybody knows that verification is needed. -Donna ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
Subject line needs to be changed when subject is changed. I think it's about time to CHANGE the subject. Those of you who feel more needs to be said about the last 2-3 days subject about Chalkley and nitpicking, and the lack of documentation that exist therein, please do so privately among yourselves. Also DAR records.. Perhaps one of you who is an authority on the subject, could send a list of what is needed to join to me privately. Let us move on. Do any of you have transcribed Revolutionary war patriots pension applications that you could send to be placed on our VAAUGUST website. Let us spend time on something productive, rathar than NITPICK someone elses work. I own the soap box. Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~renaworthen/
Chalkley is very good if you are needing information on collateral families or neighbors. If you are interested in getting a sense of who lived on a given river you can "find on page" the name of the river and come up with much information about neighbors. It will not be a complete census of the area, but it does let you know a great deal about the people who may have come in contact or associated with your ancestor. This can be especially helpful if you have an ancestor with a common name. The same goes for collateral families whom you do not wish to spend a great deal of money or time on but would like to get a sense of how they might relate to your ancestor. Chalkley is also a good source to start with. In it you can find clues as to which records you might want to order or check out more thoroughly. If you know your ancestor is in the area but isn't listed in Chalkley then you will have to do a lot more digging in other sources but for many of us enough information is given to point us in the right direction. I don't think anyone is detracting from either Chalkley's work or the work of the volunteers who put him on line. Both tasks were horrendously time consuming and exacting. As with any source there are limitations and being aware of them is part of using the source. Being aware that Chalkley did not abstract every record and that there were errors in his work gives hope to those whose ancestors do not appear that records may still be found by checking other sources. Sue Liedtke ----- Original Message ----- From: "Debi" <repunzul@tampabay.rr.com> To: <vaaugust@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2007 7:24 PM Subject: Re: [VAAUGUST] Herb & other nitpickers > George: Thank you for saying what (I am sure) many of us were thinking. > > Herb: For those of us who cannot get to Augusta County to view the > Minutes, > or afford to pay a researcher, at least Chalkey's gives us a starting > point > and insight. The time and humongous effort of the persons responsible for > putting this online is sooooooo very much appreciated. > > Debi > > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: vaaugust-bounces@rootsweb.com > [mailto:vaaugust-bounces@rootsweb.com]On > Behalf Of OLDHIKER50@aol.com > Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2007 6:15 PM > To: vaaugust@rootsweb.com > Subject: [VAAUGUST] Herb & other nitpickers > > > > I seldom get on a soapbox BUT.... sheesh get a life man. shuddup > > Herb if you don't want to use Chalkey - Don't > > A lot of people have gotten good from it and a lot of people worked hard > to > get it online. > > Feel free to email me privately if you want to vent but stop messing with > a > good message board. > George Young > > > In a message dated 4/25/2007 4:07:43 PM Pacific Daylight Time, > herb_316@bellsouth.net writes: > > If you take the trouble to go to > > http://www.lva.lib.va.us/whatwehave/local/va5_chalkleys.htm > > you can decide for yourself how valid the Chalkey Chronicles are. > > There is a whole page write up on the Chalkey Chronicles. If you do as I > did > call LVA up and discuss what the page is about. > > The NSDAR had a study done in 1912 which basically confirmed that the > Chalkey Chronicle "had abstracted only some of the records pertained to > persons and > families in which he was interested"... > > A 24 page report is available which give examples of names left out of > records to illustrate the incompleteness and inaccuracies of the Chalkey > Chronicles. > > Most certainly it is a good start for someone not familiar with Augusta > County VA records, but the LVA Research Library recommended going to the > original > Augusta County Court Minutes for the "real" information. > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Rena Worthen > To: vaaugust@rootsweb.com > Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2007 12:18 PM > Subject: [VAAUGUST] Chalkley and nitpicking > > > > As with every history book printed for information 200 > + years old, Chalkley's is a great addition to the > VAAugusta site. I feel the subscribers should be happy > to have the information close at hand so they can sit > at their desk at home for a small internet fee, and > read an entire book on-line. > SHAME on you all for Mis-behaving. > > Let us keep a positive attitude about all the hard > work that our volunteers have places on site. > Rena > List adm > > Please varify Receipt of this letter by > replying to me doreatr@rbnet.com > or doreatr@yahoo.com > > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around > http://mail.yahoo.com > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll > Call. > Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us > something > about your Brick Wall person. > To contact Listowner: > Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes > in the subject and > the body of the message > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll > Call. > Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us > something > about your Brick Wall person. > To contact Listowner: > Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes > in the subject and > the body of the message > > > > > > > > ************************************** See what's free at > http://www.aol.com. > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll > Call. > Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us > something > about your Brick Wall person. > To contact Listowner: > Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes > in the subject and the body of the message > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.5.463 / Virus Database: 269.6.1/776 - Release Date: 4/25/2007 > 12:19 PM > > No virus found in this outgoing message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.5.463 / Virus Database: 269.6.1/776 - Release Date: 4/25/2007 > 12:19 PM > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll > Call. Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us > something about your Brick Wall person. > To contact Listowner: > Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Not so Anita. The DAR requries doucuments to prove your lineage....Each generation must have been proven by either census, marriage, death, birth or any other papers you can produce. Then there must be proof that your soldier served during the Revolutionary War. We think of men serving but there were women patriots as well. On one of my supplementals they refused him but with the correct information it was corrected and now that information will help someone else who wishes to join under him. It's always such a good feeling to know that we have the ways and means to correct old information. Those persons 100 or 200 years ago did not have the advantages we do now days. Thank goodness they left their information for ALL of us to use and had the "get up and go" to do all the leg work. Off my soap box. Ethel DAR in WV ----- Original Message ----- From: <Atnvolsgirl@wmconnect.com> > Donna, > > Sounds like DAR is much like the LDS! Just because someone says that it > is > the truth, they take it as gospel. > > Anita -- I am using the free version of SPAMfighter for private users. It has removed 143 spam emails to date. Paying users do not have this message in their emails. Get the free SPAMfighter here: http://www.spamfighter.com/len
I don't know about all of that - I do know that SAR has my ancestor and though they gave me the last application from 2005, someone was nice enough to double check my ancestor in DAR and its got a tag on it saying that the next person who tries to apply under him, Spencer Lehue, has to prove that he was involved in the Rev war i.e. me, lol - so I'm going to need some help trying to find where he interacted. I found his brothers, but not him, lol. I think the previous person said that he had signed a discenter's document.... Julie in CA -------------------- Hi, John If others have joined DAR on the 'combined" record previously, they will make note and any new members will have to provide more documentation to the correct ancestor. Because they have so few genealogists in proportion to the number of applications and supplementals applications they receive, they file everything according to the date it is received, and also according to whether it is for a 'new' ancestor, proven ancestor, thru a 'new' child, etc. When they get new documentation that DISPROVES an ancestor, they do take it quite seriously. sometimes they don't know something is inaccurate until folks like you let them know. It's like anything else in genealogy...........Karen --------------------------------- Ahhh...imagining that irresistible "new car" smell? Check outnew cars at Yahoo! Autos.
Dear Darrell, What you say is correct and still people don't get their lineage correct. Our Hendricks Family Association spent gobs of money and years collecting Hendricks Family data we now offer for free on a DVD - 2+GBits. We know it is not entirely correct and we say it. So what we do is we give the DVD away for those who will have their Hendricks Y-DNA test done. What does DNA prove? It proves which line of Hendricks you are kin to. The record helps you sort though the data to map your family if it is there. Many people are greatly disapppointed and other elated at finally finding out who they were related to and where they came via the DNA test.. They also find knowledgeable people who will help solve their family lineage because they are now known cousins proven by DNA testing.. It does not give you a lineage chart but it point you in the correct direction. So when it comes to research it is best to know what is the best truth you can get but DNA testing will point the way in the end. ----- Original Message ----- From: Darrell Vessell To: vaaugust@rootsweb.com Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2007 2:03 AM Subject: Re: [VAAUGUST] Chalkley and nitpicking I can't help myself, I just have to add my $.02 worth. We all have to remember that knowing one's family history for in the most part is a new thing. The average American 30 to 40 years ago had no idea of their family history back passed their grandparents. The average American didn't care or didn't have the know how or had the resources available. All we knew was we came here from somewhere else! The rich and famous or those that wanted to rub elbows with the rich and famous always had a honorable and upstanding family history that when back hundreds of years. They had it in print, and didn't you know "If its in a book it has to be the truth". Knowing one's family history back to whenever was more of a social thing to brag about, not to many years ago. There is evidence that some people, for a price, did find, make-up, leave out information or twist the truth to fit their client so they were the great-grandson or great-granddaughter of whoever they wanted and many times the client didn't even know. I guess they had to keep the client happy. However, most historical compiler do and did the best they can. As I remember the three volume set of Lyman Chalkey "Chronicles" is about 1800 type set pages. I wonder how much time it took the man to compile 1800 pages of information, had to take years. How did the man even keep tract of what he covered and didn't cover from day to day. Today he would have a staff of compilers? Wonder how much profit he made for years of work? My comment to those that find fault with his work. "If you can do a better job, why don't you redo it. But remember you cannot make any errors or leave out any related material regardless of the reason or how many thousand or so pages it may take". Get real. I have compiled several family history books. One had much researched done in Augusta County. Some of that research cost me several hundred dollars with a well known Augusta County researcher of the day. I made the 600 mile one-way trip more then I care to count. Pencil and pad no lap-top. At the time I don't think they made lap-tops. Well copies was only $.05 each. Please note, I refer to myself as a compiler I'm not an author. A author writes his version of history, a compiler, compiles the facts of that history. Then came the information age driven in most part by the internet. Now, some want to research their family history from their living room. I hate to burst your bubble, "Can't be done"...... The one thing that makes my blood pressure go up. If I want to see some of the information that I compiled and uploaded to the internet in the beginning I have to pay to see it. Darrell ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll Call. Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us something about your Brick Wall person. To contact Listowner: Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Donna, Sounds like DAR is much like the LDS! Just because someone says that it is the truth, they take it as gospel. Anita </HTML>
In a message dated 4/25/07 11:23:11 PM, mlmquilt@zoomnet.net writes: > I purchased the three volumes of Lyman Chalkely on Amazon.com a couple of > months ago for $110.00, they were new. > Interesting. I just read something that said it was out-of-print. -Donna ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
Who is author of the book MAKING OF A STATE? What year was it printed? Charles H McClung Az. ----- Original Message ----- From: Atnvolsgirl@wmconnect.com To: VAAUGUST-L@rootsweb.com Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2007 4:57 PM Subject: [VAAUGUST] searching Augusta records While tracing some of my lines, I have learned to look into the counties of what is now West Virginia and Kentucky. Before either of those states were formed, they were a part of what is now Virginia and I know that what we now know as West Virginia was ALL a part of Augusta County, except the part that is in the "arm" and that was Fredrick County. After West Virginia was being formed, there were two areas of what we now know as West Virginia that were called Augusta County. What I mean is that there were actually three counties called Augusta County. The two areas in West Virginia are now known as Lewis, Gilmer and Harrison Counties and the other is now Pocahontas County. I discovered all of this in a book called "The Making of a State" in our local library. For several years I have been researching a family of McClungs that were first found in Augusta County. Charles McClung born about 1805 married Sarah Gabbart in 1834, Augusta County. Charles, Sarah and her parents can be found in the 1840 census of Harrison County, Virginia (now West Virginia). Besides trying for several years to find the name of Charles' parents, I am also trying to figure out if they actually left Augusta County and came into Harrison County OR was the area in which they lived renamed as the counties were being formed??? I guess what I am trying to say is that don't just search for your ancestors in Augusta County or in one place, but broaden the search area. Anita McClung Fayette County, WV </HTML> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll Call. Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us something about your Brick Wall person. To contact Listowner: Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Well, said Darrell. I appreciate Herb pointing out the information was incomplete, it can be used for clues it finding our ancestors. ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
Thank you Karen for supporting and defending DAR. The registrar in my DAR chapter works very hard to make sure everything is accurate. We have a chapter of over 150 and she has been responsible for most of those records! S. There are a lot of applications going to DC and it takes time to go through all of them. The year on those Chalkey Chronicles was 1912!! Shiryl ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
Dear George, If Old Augusta had originally posted the truth about Chalkey's Chronicles which is what I have posted about Chalkely's Chronicles nothing would have been said. People need to know the facts. Feel free to retrace my steps I reported and find out for yourself what the truth is. ----- Original Message ----- From: OLDHIKER50@aol.com To: vaaugust@rootsweb.com Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2007 7:15 PM Subject: [VAAUGUST] Herb & other nitpickers I seldom get on a soapbox BUT.... sheesh get a life man. shuddup Herb if you don't want to use Chalkey - Don't A lot of people have gotten good from it and a lot of people worked hard to get it online. Feel free to email me privately if you want to vent but stop messing with a good message board. George Young In a message dated 4/25/2007 4:07:43 PM Pacific Daylight Time, herb_316@bellsouth.net writes: If you take the trouble to go to http://www.lva.lib.va.us/whatwehave/local/va5_chalkleys.htm you can decide for yourself how valid the Chalkey Chronicles are. There is a whole page write up on the Chalkey Chronicles. If you do as I did call LVA up and discuss what the page is about. The NSDAR had a study done in 1912 which basically confirmed that the Chalkey Chronicle "had abstracted only some of the records pertained to persons and families in which he was interested"... A 24 page report is available which give examples of names left out of records to illustrate the incompleteness and inaccuracies of the Chalkey Chronicles. Most certainly it is a good start for someone not familiar with Augusta County VA records, but the LVA Research Library recommended going to the original Augusta County Court Minutes for the "real" information. ----- Original Message ----- From: Rena Worthen To: vaaugust@rootsweb.com Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2007 12:18 PM Subject: [VAAUGUST] Chalkley and nitpicking As with every history book printed for information 200 + years old, Chalkley's is a great addition to the VAAugusta site. I feel the subscribers should be happy to have the information close at hand so they can sit at their desk at home for a small internet fee, and read an entire book on-line. SHAME on you all for Mis-behaving. Let us keep a positive attitude about all the hard work that our volunteers have places on site. Rena List adm Please varify Receipt of this letter by replying to me doreatr@rbnet.com or doreatr@yahoo.com __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll Call. Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us something about your Brick Wall person. To contact Listowner: Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll Call. Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us something about your Brick Wall person. To contact Listowner: Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Third Sunday in each month will set aside for a "Brick Wall" Roll Call. Please always put the surname you seek in the subject and tell us something about your Brick Wall person. To contact Listowner: Rena Worthen doreatr@rbnet.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VAAUGUST-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message