Trying to find out if a Christopher Rivers could be the father of my grtgrtgrdfather Alva M. C. who was born 1815 "both state Va." I only find him (Chris) in Brooke for the 1810 census, and then Belmont Co. Ohio in the 1820, then spend final years 30/40/50 in Morgan Co. Since he didn't stay long in both places, he may not have owned a farm. Chris may have originated from Loudoun Co. but haven't confirmed that. My Alva first appeared on a census by name in the 1840 one but there is also another Rivers male(1816/18) named John F. in the same area as Chris, so can't be sure what relation these men are to him. My Alva was a Plasterer, so if Chris was a tradesman, would there be any records to that anywhere? Or if he rented farms until he ended up in Morgan Co., is there any record of that? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I am trying to find if my grtgrtgrdfather was born in Brooke Co. Born 1815 "Va" , I can only find a Christopher Rivers, who I believe is his father, in the 1810 Brooke. If he was a tradesman(Chris) instead of a farmer, or only rented farms, this may explain why they didn't stay in one place very long. I believe he may have migrated from Loudoun Co. Va., but not proven yet. What kind of records are there for me to search to see how long he may have been there? I only find Chris in Belmont Co. Ohio for the 1820 census also, then he finished his life, as a farmer, in Morgan Co. 1830/40/50. From the early census records, my grgrgrdfather would be the right age to be his son. And the first seen of him is in the same area as Christopher, newly married, but there is another Rivers male about same age. Any ideas of where to look greatly appreciated.
My Great Great Grandparents were born in Virginia, so far this is what I have: DOWLING, ? husband and father DOWLING, Sarah nee: PARKS wife and mother Children: Have only my Great Grandmother's information, unable to find anything more on siblings, etc. DOWLING, Anna Eliza born 03 May 1846 in Virginia. Married Elijah PHILLIPS after his first wife Ann KELLER died in 1873. On the 1860 census - North Fayette, Allegheny, Pennsylvania Anna E DOWLING was living/staying with Alex MORROW birthplace Virginia, his wife Ellenor birthplace Ireland, and their children: James - 1832 - Pennsylvania John - 1835 - " Richardson L - 1836 - " Alex - 1839 - " Robert - 1844 - " I would appreciate any information. Alice California
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/FCC.2ACE/69.1 Message Board Post: Hi, just saw your message, and just wanted to wish you good luck with your search, I know the message is quite old so you may have done it by now! As we share the same surname, I thought I'd drop you a note! Seems there's lots of McConn's in USA, but not many over here in the UK - looks like they all headed West during the potato famine! Anyway, good luck! Lesley
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/FCC.2ACE/1053.1 Message Board Post: Quinlan and Timothy are Dominic's half brothers not step brothers.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: hissom, McIntyre/ballentine Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/FCC.2ACE/853.1.1 Message Board Post: HiSusan! Well at least you found one cousin. My name is Alla Jean Shaw. My mom was Edna Ethel Hisson Rose. I remember Uncle Amos. Last seen around 1957-58 before going to California. Tried many times to find him. My number is 330-720-7492. I am in Ohio.
NEHGH Database Available for 3 Days "As a way to introduce potential members to the wealth of information available to members, NEHGS is pleased to offer free access to one of the thousands of databases on NewEnglandAncestors.org, The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. Normally available only to NEHGS members, the Register database will be accessible to all from Monday, March 20 through Wednesday, March 22, 2006. "Published quarterly since 1847, the Register is the flagship journal of American genealogy and the oldest journal in the field. The database includes issues from 1847 to 1994. For more information visit www.newenglandancestors.org/research/Database/register/reg_info.asp. Non-members will be asked to provide contact information, which will not be shared, but will be used to send information about membership to visitors. Visitors will be taken automatically to the Register database after submitting their information. "PLEASE NOTE: Only the extensive Register database will be open for public use. The remainder of the databases continue to be accessible to members only."
My husband & I were in Follansbee last weekend and noticed that they had a sign over Main St. about the city celebrating it's 100 year anniversary this year (1906-2006). We attempted asking our waitress at a restaurant and a librarian at the Follansbee library if they were any displays, etc. (since I am interested in Follansbee 1910 issues/photos/history, etc.), but they acted like they didn't even know what the heck I was talking about! So, does anyone have any information about any events that are going to take place in Follansbee this year for this anniversary? I would greatly appreciate any info. Thank you, Lori --------------------------------- Relax. Yahoo! Mail virus scanning helps detect nasty viruses!
Hello, Is anyone on the list researching the Rogers(or Rodgers), Hahne (prounounced "honey"), or Power surnames, espescially in the Follansbee area? I am asking because I am indirectly related to all of them. My William & Miriam Timothy had a daughter named Anna who married Matthew Power (both are buried in the Brooke County Cem. in Wellsburg), and another daughter, Mary Elizabeth (known as Elizabeth) who married George Hahne (they are buried in Follansbee). Anna & Matthew had 6 children, and as far as I know right now, Elizabeth & George Hahne had one daughter, Mabel Hahne (married a McGraw). Miriam Timothy's maiden name was Rogers and her brother was Thomas H. Rogers, who was Mayor of Follansbee in 1910. I posted previously about Follansbee issues relating to my Great-grandfather, Jack Timothy (Miriam's son), who murdered the Chinese laundryman, Yee On, in Follansbee in 1910. It's interesting to know that his uncle was the town mayor at the time and that his brother in law, George Hahne, sat on some town government committees as well. Anyway, if anyone has any Rogers, Hahne, or Power connections, let me know & we can exchange info. Thanks! Lori --------------------------------- Yahoo! Travel Find great deals to the top 10 hottest destinations!
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/FCC.2ACE/2065.1.1.1 Message Board Post: Mr Gracey, Thank you for your reply.My email address is [email protected] I am a rookie in genealogy, picking up where my dad left off in the early 1970's. Much of his information came from family resources and correspondence with a Frank Baxter in California.Dad also had info from an Alice Lachmund who researched the Butler's and Baxter's.Any help or guidance would be wonderful.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/FCC.2ACE/2065.1.1 Message Board Post: Happy to share with you what I have on either the Butler or the Baxter lines but can't read your e-mail address to send the file. Provide your address and I'll compare notes with you on these lines. Thanks, Bob
Aristocrat seeks heir: Britons need not apply By Sarah Lyall The New York Times TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 2006 NORTH NEWTON, England WANTED: Heir for $13 million estate, including 13th-century manor house, in bucolic Somerset. Must be able to pay $140,000 annual upkeep and meet incidental costs of, for example, repairing the driveway ($70,000) and fixing the stables ($1 million). Also, "He can't be a drug addict," said Sir Benjamin Slade, the current owner of the estate and its manor, Maunsel House, which has been in the family since 1772. "He can't be a Communist. It's politically incorrect to say so, but he can't be gay, because he may not produce any children." The problem, said Sir Benjamin, who is 59 and childless himself, is that none of his army of relatives is willing to take on the property when he dies. So he is searching for an heir in America, where some Slades settled in the 18th century. "Americans have more energy and a better work ethic," he said, sipping tea in his sumptuous library. ("There are no bookcases, because my family was illiterate," he said.) Paintings of ancestors plastered the walls; a fire roared in the hearth; a leak dripped steadily from the ceiling. Running even a comparatively small estate requires not only money and energy, but also the putting aside of one's natural distaste at allowing strangers to traipse through one's house. Sir Benjamin rents out Maunsel House for weddings, conferences and house parties. Most of the bedrooms are reserved for paying guests; he and his companion, Kirsten Hughes, live in the back. Other aristocrats operate cafes, shops, garden paraphernalia centers, theme parks and wildlife sanctuaries on their estates, or simply charge the public to look around. "The old money has always got some business on the side," Sir Benjamin said. But even the best-run estates are finding it harder to compete with the siren calls on Britons' leisure time. Some of Sir Benjamin's friends, he said, are down to only 50,000 visitors a year, from more than 100,000 in better times. Also, things fall apart. The beautiful Victorian wallpaper in one bedroom at Maunsel House is torn and stained. The stair carpet is frayed. "This window unfortunately fell out onto the lawn," Sir Benjamin said, gesturing into a bathroom. Many huge old houses in Britain are run by the National Trust, which takes over properties and opens them to the public, letting the former owners remain rent-free. But Sir Benjamin practically burst a button on his natty green tweed jacket when the subject came up. "They are absolutely the most awful people," he said. He told a cautionary tale about a friend who donated his castle to the National Trust, only to be banished to a drafty upstairs apartment. When the friend left his baby's stroller in the hall, the National Trust said it was unsightly and ordered him to remove it. Sir Benjamin has a ready store of scandalous stories about his ancestors, to whom he refers in the first-person plural. Many of his tales have to do with the Slade habit of losing money in inheritance-related disputes. The hardest-fought of these, perhaps, was between a set of male Slade twins in the 19th century, only one of whom could be the heir. "The problem was that no one knew who popped out first," Sir Benjamin said. The ensuing suit - Slade v. Slade - cost a fortune in legal fees, adding to the family's financial woes. "We were absolutely stuffed," Sir Benjamin said. Sir Benjamin, who has a head of snowy hair and a prosperous-looking, ruddy complexion, was not supposed to inherit the baronetcy or Maunsel House, which belonged to his uncle. But the uncle died, childless, when Sir Benjamin was a teenager - along with, in the space of four years, Sir Benjamin's father, mother and older brother - leaving him as the sole heir. When he took possession of Maunsel House, it was a ruin, his surviving aunt confined to just two rooms. "She lived on Mars bars and Milky Ways," he said. "She drank for Somerset. She had about 18 different driving offenses - hit and run, driving over a policeman's foot. When she died, she left £22.50, and she didn't leave it to me." Once, Sir Benjamin said, the aunt set the house on fire, hoping to collect insurance, only to have the fire fizzle out because of the pervasive dampness. Annoyingly, not one of Sir Benjamin's vast array of British relatives seems eager to inherit. His nephew, Lord Rotherwick, is Sir Benjamin's legal heir, but he already has a grand house, Sir Benjamin said; he would probably sell off Maunsel House. Other relatives have been ruled out as too uninterested in their roots. "If you ask any of them, 'Who was your grandmother?' 'What did Sir John Slade do in the Peninsular War?' they have no idea," Sir Benjamin said. He feels it is too late to produce a suitable heir of his own, even though he has some frozen sperm on deposit in a sperm bank ("they said I had nine months' supply, whatever that means"). If he were to have a child right this minute, it would be a good 25 years before the child would be ready to take on the estate - "and then it would be too late," he explained. He got the idea for the heir hunt when an American television company, researching a program about Britons' American relatives, got in touch. "So I said, 'While you're in America, could you find me an heir?'" Sir Benjamin recalled. So far, he added, the company has come up with thousands of American Slades ("I don't know where they got them - Google, I suppose") prompting sacks full of letters from people who think they are his relatives. The idea is to winnow down the field to a few viable prospective heirs, with methods including DNA tests. "I think we should dig up one of those Slades down in Devon," Sir Benjamin said, referring to his dead ancestors. "You just dig up a bone and away you go." The television company - which Sir Benjamin said has asked him not to discuss too many details - is now hoping to turn the search into an "Apprentice"- style reality program, in which potential heirs would live at Maunsel House and undergo a series of challenges, with Sir Benjamin eliminating them one by one. Sir Benjamin is looking forward to ejecting losers with his own aristocratic catchphrase: "You're disinherited!"
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/FCC.2ACE/2065.1 Message Board Post: From the book "Leaves of History", Cross creek Brooke county, by Kathryn Campbell Slasor and June Campbell Grossman....page 198 This may be some additional information. I DO NOT know if this is the same Baxter line or not. Nicholas Headington, of English descent, was born circa 1770 in Baltimore county MD. In 1792 he married Della Baxter, daughter of Greenbury and CHARITY LANE BAXTER . Te Baxters were among the earliest families of Maryland. Dellas' paternal gandparents being John and Mary Brown Baxter.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: SLADE Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/FCC.2ACE/2068 Message Board Post: Aristocrat seeks heir: Britons need not apply By Sarah Lyall The New York Times TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 2006 NORTH NEWTON, England WANTED: Heir for $13 million estate, including 13th-century manor house, in bucolic Somerset. Must be able to pay $140,000 annual upkeep and meet incidental costs of, for example, repairing the driveway ($70,000) and fixing the stables ($1 million). Also, "He can't be a drug addict," said Sir Benjamin Slade, the current owner of the estate and its manor, Maunsel House, which has been in the family since 1772. "He can't be a Communist. It's politically incorrect to say so, but he can't be gay, because he may not produce any children." The problem, said Sir Benjamin, who is 59 and childless himself, is that none of his army of relatives is willing to take on the property when he dies. So he is searching for an heir in America, where some Slades settled in the 18th century. "Americans have more energy and a better work ethic," he said, sipping tea in his sumptuous library. ("There are no bookcases, because my family was illiterate," he said.) Paintings of ancestors plastered the walls; a fire roared in the hearth; a leak dripped steadily from the ceiling. Running even a comparatively small estate requires not only money and energy, but also the putting aside of one's natural distaste at allowing strangers to traipse through one's house. Sir Benjamin rents out Maunsel House for weddings, conferences and house parties. Most of the bedrooms are reserved for paying guests; he and his companion, Kirsten Hughes, live in the back. Other aristocrats operate cafes, shops, garden paraphernalia centers, theme parks and wildlife sanctuaries on their estates, or simply charge the public to look around. "The old money has always got some business on the side," Sir Benjamin said. But even the best-run estates are finding it harder to compete with the siren calls on Britons' leisure time. Some of Sir Benjamin's friends, he said, are down to only 50,000 visitors a year, from more than 100,000 in better times. Also, things fall apart. The beautiful Victorian wallpaper in one bedroom at Maunsel House is torn and stained. The stair carpet is frayed. "This window unfortunately fell out onto the lawn," Sir Benjamin said, gesturing into a bathroom. Many huge old houses in Britain are run by the National Trust, which takes over properties and opens them to the public, letting the former owners remain rent-free. But Sir Benjamin practically burst a button on his natty green tweed jacket when the subject came up. "They are absolutely the most awful people," he said. He told a cautionary tale about a friend who donated his castle to the National Trust, only to be banished to a drafty upstairs apartment. When the friend left his baby's stroller in the hall, the National Trust said it was unsightly and ordered him to remove it. Sir Benjamin has a ready store of scandalous stories about his ancestors, to whom he refers in the first-person plural. Many of his tales have to do with the Slade habit of losing money in inheritance-related disputes. The hardest-fought of these, perhaps, was between a set of male Slade twins in the 19th century, only one of whom could be the heir. "The problem was that no one knew who popped out first," Sir Benjamin said. The ensuing suit - Slade v. Slade - cost a fortune in legal fees, adding to the family's financial woes. "We were absolutely stuffed," Sir Benjamin said. Sir Benjamin, who has a head of snowy hair and a prosperous-looking, ruddy complexion, was not supposed to inherit the baronetcy or Maunsel House, which belonged to his uncle. But the uncle died, childless, when Sir Benjamin was a teenager - along with, in the space of four years, Sir Benjamin's father, mother and older brother - leaving him as the sole heir. When he took possession of Maunsel House, it was a ruin, his surviving aunt confined to just two rooms. "She lived on Mars bars and Milky Ways," he said. "She drank for Somerset. She had about 18 different driving offenses - hit and run, driving over a policeman's foot. When she died, she left £22.50, and she didn't leave it to me." Once, Sir Benjamin said, the aunt set the house on fire, hoping to collect insurance, only to have the fire fizzle out because of the pervasive dampness. Annoyingly, not one of Sir Benjamin's vast array of British relatives seems eager to inherit. His nephew, Lord Rotherwick, is Sir Benjamin's legal heir, but he already has a grand house, Sir Benjamin said; he would probably sell off Maunsel House. Other relatives have been ruled out as too uninterested in their roots. "If you ask any of them, 'Who was your grandmother?' 'What did Sir John Slade do in the Peninsular War?' they have no idea," Sir Benjamin said. He feels it is too late to produce a suitable heir of his own, even though he has some frozen sperm on deposit in a sperm bank ("they said I had nine months' supply, whatever that means"). If he were to have a child right this minute, it would be a good 25 years before the child would be ready to take on the estate - "and then it would be too late," he explained. He got the idea for the heir hunt when an American television company, researching a program about Britons' American relatives, got in touch. "So I said, 'While you're in America, could you find me an heir?'" Sir Benjamin recalled. So far, he added, the company has come up with thousands of American Slades ("I don't know where they got them - Google, I suppose") prompting sacks full of letters from people who think they are his relatives. The idea is to winnow down the field to a few viable prospective heirs, with methods including DNA tests. "I think we should dig up one of those Slades down in Devon," Sir Benjamin said, referring to his dead ancestors. "You just dig up a bone and away you go." The television company - which Sir Benjamin said has asked him not to discuss too many details - is now hoping to turn the search into an "Apprentice"- style reality program, in which potential heirs would live at Maunsel House and undergo a series of challenges, with Sir Benjamin eliminating them one by one. Sir Benjamin is looking forward to ejecting losers with his own aristocratic catchphrase: "You're disinherited!"
Does anyone have any photos of Main Street in Follansbee circa 1910 (or know how I can locate some)? Much thanks! Lori Martin --------------------------------- Yahoo! Mail Bring photos to life! New PhotoMail makes sharing a breeze.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: SIMPKINS Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/FCC.2ACE/2067 Message Board Post: In 1930 Brooke Co. WV listed _ my Grandfather Greenberry Simpkins, GM Ida Osborn Simpkins and some children. Cline Simpkins [ my Dad ], Clara Simpkins, Neil Simpkins, Cynthia Simpkins, Earl Simpkins and Martha Simpkins. The index has them under the name Simm Hino . The census taker may of put Simmkins and crossed out. making it hard to read. Looking for: William Robert Simpkins and wife Doris . married in Logan Co, 1922. son of Green and Ida. Edna Simpkins born around 1906 KY d/o Green and Ida Simpkins. Archie Simpkins born c1908 KY s/o Green and Ida. Archie was married to Bertha had children with her . lived in Ohio back in the late 40's early 50's. This Simpkins family can be found in 1910-1920 Logan Co. WV. Green and Ida with some children went to Washington Co. PA by 1935. Thanks, Patty Simpkins Cartwright e-mail: [email protected]
An Irishman's Adventure in Early Brooke Co., VA/WV Although the early days of the settlements here were times of considerable trouble and discomfort to the people, yet they had many occasions to celebrate in which the full sum of endanger, events often happened of the most ludicrous character. An old citizen related to us an event that transpired at old fort Edgington, which stood on the Virginia side of the river nearly opposite where Steubenville now stands, that admirably illustrate the fact, that into whatever position an honest Irishman is placed, he generally manages to make the most of it possible. One day about the close of the last century, a number of horsemen were heard in the vicinity of the fort, and suspicion was strong that it was Indians. A large scouting party left the fort in the evening to reconnoitre along the trail. After proceeding some distance without seeing any signs of the braves, and night was approaching, and not wishing to spend it in the forests in those dangerous times, they resolved to return to the fort, and the next day make a further reconnoisance. Shortly after turning back, they came to a small log cabin, which although, quite a cosy and comfortable spot was then tenantless. Now with the party was an Irishman, who had but lately come from the old country, and who had but a day or two before arrived at the fort, and had not yet had the satisfaction of seeing an Indian in full war costume. The Irishman, when he arrived at the hut and saw how comfortable it looked, determined to go no further, but would spend the night there and wait till his companions returned next morning. He could not be induced to change his determination, so they moved off and left him in his comfortable quarters. A large fire place was in one corner of the cabin, and a few slabs were stretched along the joists, up to which, after eating his little lunch, the Irishman climbed, and stretched himself for slumber. He was soon comfortable wrapped in the arms of Morpheus, and his dreams were doubtless of the far-off Erin land, when he was suddenly awakened by a loud jabbering of voices outside, and immediately the door was opened, a number of parties came in, set their guns in a corner, and proceeded to kindle a fire and cook some eatables. The Irishman, knowing full well that it was a band of redskins, maintained a deathly stillness for some time, but curiosity overcame the more discreet impulses of his nature, and he determined to take just one peep at the reds and see what matter of men they were. No sooner thought of that he put his project in execution and began to climb quietly along the slab he was on, to make an observation. He reached the end, stretched himself cautiously over to take a look, when the treacherous slap uplifted and landed the Hibernian right in the middle of the circle. He had hardly touched the floor when he bounded up again, yelling at the top o his voice, "Be Jasus, ye are all prisoners," and stretched his brawny arms for fight. The astonished troop of redskins, however, whose superstitious fears made them imagine that this huge mass of humanity was some thunderbolt hurled by the arm of the Great Spirit, broke out from the cabin with hideous yells and darted into the obscurity of the forest, leaving their guns in the hut. There was no more sleep for Pat that night, who remained faithfully at his post, blockading the door, and in the morning he was sound condition by his friends to who he turned over quite a number of guns and other Indian accoutrements. (Abstracted from History of the Pan-Handle, West Virginia, Pg. 316)
Whoops, I forgot to mention that the Mayor of Follansbee at that time, Thomas Rogers (aka Rodgers), was also Jack's uncle (his mother, Miriam Rogers Timothy's brother). Anyone have info on him or on Miriam Rogers Timothy, it would also be greatly appreciated. Lori Martin <[email protected]> wrote: Hello, I am new to the list and am looking for some very specific information on Follansbee, WV in 1910. First of all, does anyone know where I might be able to locate a STREET map of Follansbee from 1910? (especially one that has the entire length of Main Street between Broad & State) Secondly, does anyone know anything about Chinese people in Follansbee around that time? Does anyone know if there was more than one Chinese laundry in town back then? Thirdly, why would people be staying at a shanty behind some houses on Main street if they had a home on Virgina Avenue? One of the pieces of documentation that I have states that people where staying there & making soup to be taken down to the tin mill ("packing buckets to be taken to the mill") I am interested in this information because I am writing a book about the murder of Yee Lee (aka Yee On among other names I've found for this same person) in August of 1910. He was a Chinese laundryman in Follansbee and his laundry was located across from what was then the Follansbee Hotel. If you are wondering what this has to do with genealogy, My great-grandfather, Jack Timothy, was the murderer. Thank you, Lori Martin --------------------------------- Yahoo! Mail Bring photos to life! New PhotoMail makes sharing a breeze. --------------------------------- Yahoo! Mail Bring photos to life! New PhotoMail makes sharing a breeze.
Hello, I am new to the list and am looking for some very specific information on Follansbee, WV in 1910. First of all, does anyone know where I might be able to locate a STREET map of Follansbee from 1910? (especially one that has the entire length of Main Street between Broad & State) Secondly, does anyone know anything about Chinese people in Follansbee around that time? Does anyone know if there was more than one Chinese laundry in town back then? Thirdly, why would people be staying at a shanty behind some houses on Main street if they had a home on Virgina Avenue? One of the pieces of documentation that I have states that people where staying there & making soup to be taken down to the tin mill ("packing buckets to be taken to the mill") I am interested in this information because I am writing a book about the murder of Yee Lee (aka Yee On among other names I've found for this same person) in August of 1910. He was a Chinese laundryman in Follansbee and his laundry was located across from what was then the Follansbee Hotel. If you are wondering what this has to do with genealogy, My great-grandfather, Jack Timothy, was the murderer. Thank you, Lori Martin --------------------------------- Yahoo! Mail Bring photos to life! New PhotoMail makes sharing a breeze.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Varvarosky and Bananto Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/FCC.2ACE/1507.1 Message Board Post: Hi, I was just curious if he had any relatives from Cleveland, Ohio area. My Uncle was Hank Varvarosky, from Cleveland, Ohio. I'm searching for my two cousins Thomas and David Varvarosky. Any leads or information would be most appreciated. Jay Antol