RootsWeb.com Mailing Lists
Previous Page      Next Page
Total: 8060/9605
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] SAVILLE, SAVILL, SAVELL
    2. Hello everyone! I am looking for any information on the above surnames. Also, was Hampshire Co., in VA at one time? Thanks so much! Queet

    03/09/2000 03:52:26
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] Purgett geneology
    2. john kleinke
    3. To Martha of Greymatters For some reason, can't send you e-mail direct so thanks for the info. I have most of the info you sent but not the sources. I also have a diary from Willian S. Purgett from 1865 which is on the web. http://www.rootsweb.com/~wvminera/purgitt.html good reading. Am trying to connect him with Henry. or his son William who inherited the property in Purgittsville. A man by the name of Lawrence High is supposed to own the old house in Purgittsville. As of 1980 anyway. If you know any more info I would gladly appreciate it. Diane Kleinke (Purgett)

    03/08/2000 10:22:35
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] Purgett Geneology
    2. john kleinke
    3. Thanks, everyone for the info you sent me on the Purgett family. Many of the Purgetts from Purgittsville stayed in the area Mary married a Recor, Elizabeth married a Schoemaker and Rachel married Henry Sulser(Suber) Aug.15,1825. William got the property after Henrys death and Frederick married Mollie Schoemaker and moved to Ohio. The younger Henry, I think moved to Pickaway Co., Ohio. There was a William S. Purgett who ran the post office in New Creek in 1865 and his daughter Kate was postmistress of Purgittsville for a long time . Don't have dates or how related for sure . There is a Dow Purgett who owns an old school house neer Purgittsville. Don't know if he is still alive. Thanks again Diane Kleinke (Purgett)

    03/08/2000 09:38:32
    1. Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] USGS Maps for Hampshire Online
    2. Cut & paste? Just click on the URL, and it will take you there. The home page for this USGS Mapping Service is http://www-nmd.usgs.gov/www/gnis/gnisform.html, a good site to bookmark since you can look up a map for any feature in the U.S. Just type in the feature name, state, and county if you know it. To get the entire list of the 564 Hampshire Co. features at one time, one needs only to fill in the state and county, but most people already have a place name in mind, so it's more expeditious to fill in an individual feature name than go down a list of 564 names. Brian D Core wrote: > I'm not sure if this will be useful, but here goes. The USGS has online > maps for Hampshire County, with 546 geographical features. The URL is; > > http://mapping.usgs.gov:8888/gnis/owa/gnisprod?f_name=&variant=N&f_state=WV&f_cnty=hampshire&f_type=&pop1=&pop2=&elev1=&elev2=&cell=&tab=y > > I know it's tough to cut and paste a two-line URL, but that's the best I > can do. I don't have the URL for the USGS home page; if I want to access > maps for other counties and states, I just type over the state and county > in this URL.

    03/08/2000 05:41:51
    1. Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] Purgett Geneology
    2. thelma
    3. Did some of your family move to Ohio? My grandma married a Purgett. Thelma thelma1@flash.net john kleinke wrote: > My 4greatgrandfather was Henry Purgett of whome Purgittsville is named > after. The info I have is that he was born in Franklin Town Maryland in > 1753 but don't know how or where to find records. He bought > land,400acres, on the waters of Mill Creek on Jan.7,1785 next to John > Moffatt and John Glaze. He married Elizabeth Fiedler(Fidler) , we think > in 1794 after her son Jacob transfered some land to her which she in > turn transfered to Henry. He was 41 at the time but lists 7 children. > Maybe he was married before and some of these are from his first wife, > need any info on how to get birth dates of the 7. ,or any other info > anyone has. > Thanks. Diane Kleinke (Purgett)

    03/07/2000 10:51:34
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] Purgett Geneology
    2. john kleinke
    3. My 4greatgrandfather was Henry Purgett of whome Purgittsville is named after. The info I have is that he was born in Franklin Town Maryland in 1753 but don't know how or where to find records. He bought land,400acres, on the waters of Mill Creek on Jan.7,1785 next to John Moffatt and John Glaze. He married Elizabeth Fiedler(Fidler) , we think in 1794 after her son Jacob transfered some land to her which she in turn transfered to Henry. He was 41 at the time but lists 7 children. Maybe he was married before and some of these are from his first wife, need any info on how to get birth dates of the 7. ,or any other info anyone has. Thanks. Diane Kleinke (Purgett)

    03/07/2000 10:10:45
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] USGS Maps for Hampshire Online
    2. Brian D Core
    3. I'm not sure if this will be useful, but here goes. The USGS has online maps for Hampshire County, with 546 geographical features. The URL is; http://mapping.usgs.gov:8888/gnis/owa/gnisprod?f_name=&variant=N&f_state=WV&f_cnty=hampshire&f_type=&pop1=&pop2=&elev1=&elev2=&cell=&tab=y I know it's tough to cut and paste a two-line URL, but that's the best I can do. I don't have the URL for the USGS home page; if I want to access maps for other counties and states, I just type over the state and county in this URL. Brian Brian D. Core P.O. Box 1166 Brighton, CO 80601 Greenhouseguy@Juno.com Web Page: http://pages.prodigy.net/greenhouseguy For attachments, use: Greenhouseguy@prodigy.net ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.

    03/07/2000 06:47:06
    1. Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] Cresap
    2. Bill Pyles
    3. Laura, I have not followed the Cresap's since I thought they had been traced by other genealogists. I have seen the name Hite but don't have anything on them. The Sines/Pyles must be from Preston or Monongalia County, WV. There are lots of all of them. I will send you my Marker info and you can look it over. I just got this capability of attaching all or part of a genealogy of a family to a message. Jim Pileggi has all of the sudden came back into the family. I guess he was young and wild. Now that he is older, he appreciates his family roots and wants to know family members. He has visited us and we have visited them. He attend the Allen family reunion one year that we did. My mother thought a lot of his mother and aunt Gladys. Gladys was a year younger than my mother or about 97. She is in an assisted living facility. I will sent the attachment later today. Bill Pyles, Titusville, FL Sorry you got that ----- Original Message ----- From: Laura McKenzie <laurabrownmckenzie@worldnet.att.net> To: <WVHAMPSH-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, March 07, 2000 1:27 AM Subject: [WVHAMPSH-L] Cresap > Bill, do you know of any Cresap/Innes marriage resulting in an > Ann Innes b. ca 1740? There is a question between > researchers as to whether Ann Brown spouse of Nathaniel was a > Cresap/Innes or an ENOCH. I'd love to know more either way. > Ann and Nathaniel's daughter, Sarah, married Samuel Auxier > (whose mother was a Hornbeck). Other allied names may be Hite > and Coleman and Slaughter and Sanders maybe also Richardson, > Neville, and Green. > > > Haven't done Sines/Pyles in a while.... right now working on > those Browns. > > Thanks, > Laura > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Bill Pyles <bpyles@goldcrest.com> > To: <WVHAMPSH-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Monday, March 06, 2000 10:06 PM > Subject: Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] S BRANCH from Switzerland > > > > Watch for the Daniels name to pop up. Dennis Daniels helped > Thomas and > > Michael Cresap lay out some of the lands. That is my > ancestors. > > > > Bill Pyles, Titusville, FL > > > > > >

    03/07/2000 08:32:40
    1. Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] S BRANCH from Switzerland
    2. HERMON B FAGLEY
    3. My own Fegley-FAGALY-FAGLEY are "not" the Berks co,Pa bunch. But may be Swiss before a generation in s Germany. On Mon, 6 Mar 2000 19:48:09 -0700 Brian D Core <greenhouseguy@juno.com> writes: > Herman, > > I think I recognize some of your Swiss names from the early church > records of Berks and Lehigh Co., PA. I find a lot of oter South > Branch > names there, and I suppose that my George Core may have been kin to > some > of them. I find a George Kurr/Korr listed in the records of Lehigh > Chh. > in Lower Macungie, but he apparently died there ca. 1780's while my > George Core moved on westward. I'm patient, persistent, and > hard-headed, > so if there's a link between the Fegli's, Stumps, Neffs, and Cores, > I'll > find it. Thanks for posting your findings. > > Brian > > Brian D. Core > P.O. Box 1166 > Brighton, CO 80601 > Greenhouseguy@Juno.com Web Page: > http://pages.prodigy.net/greenhouseguy > For attachments, use: Greenhouseguy@prodigy.net > > ________________________________________________________________ > YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! > Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! > Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: > http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. > ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.

    03/07/2000 05:39:04
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] Cresap
    2. Laura McKenzie
    3. Bill, do you know of any Cresap/Innes marriage resulting in an Ann Innes b. ca 1740? There is a question between researchers as to whether Ann Brown spouse of Nathaniel was a Cresap/Innes or an ENOCH. I'd love to know more either way. Ann and Nathaniel's daughter, Sarah, married Samuel Auxier (whose mother was a Hornbeck). Other allied names may be Hite and Coleman and Slaughter and Sanders maybe also Richardson, Neville, and Green. Haven't done Sines/Pyles in a while.... right now working on those Browns. Thanks, Laura ----- Original Message ----- From: Bill Pyles <bpyles@goldcrest.com> To: <WVHAMPSH-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, March 06, 2000 10:06 PM Subject: Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] S BRANCH from Switzerland > Watch for the Daniels name to pop up. Dennis Daniels helped Thomas and > Michael Cresap lay out some of the lands. That is my ancestors. > > Bill Pyles, Titusville, FL > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Brian D Core <greenhouseguy@juno.com> > To: <WVHAMPSH-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Monday, March 06, 2000 9:48 PM > Subject: Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] S BRANCH from Switzerland > > > > Herman, > > > > I think I recognize some of your Swiss names from the early church > > records of Berks and Lehigh Co., PA. I find a lot of oter South Branch > > names there, and I suppose that my George Core may have been kin to some > > of them. I find a George Kurr/Korr listed in the records of Lehigh Chh. > > in Lower Macungie, but he apparently died there ca. 1780's while my > > George Core moved on westward. I'm patient, persistent, and hard-headed, > > so if there's a link between the Fegli's, Stumps, Neffs, and Cores, I'll > > find it. Thanks for posting your findings. > > > > Brian > > > > Brian D. Core > > P.O. Box 1166 > > Brighton, CO 80601 > > Greenhouseguy@Juno.com Web Page: http://pages.prodigy.net/greenhouseguy > > For attachments, use: Greenhouseguy@prodigy.net > > > > _______________________________________________________________ _ > > YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! > > Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! > > Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: > > http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. > > > > >

    03/06/2000 11:27:02
    1. Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] S BRANCH from Switzerland
    2. Bill Pyles
    3. Watch for the Daniels name to pop up. Dennis Daniels helped Thomas and Michael Cresap lay out some of the lands. That is my ancestors. Bill Pyles, Titusville, FL ----- Original Message ----- From: Brian D Core <greenhouseguy@juno.com> To: <WVHAMPSH-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, March 06, 2000 9:48 PM Subject: Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] S BRANCH from Switzerland > Herman, > > I think I recognize some of your Swiss names from the early church > records of Berks and Lehigh Co., PA. I find a lot of oter South Branch > names there, and I suppose that my George Core may have been kin to some > of them. I find a George Kurr/Korr listed in the records of Lehigh Chh. > in Lower Macungie, but he apparently died there ca. 1780's while my > George Core moved on westward. I'm patient, persistent, and hard-headed, > so if there's a link between the Fegli's, Stumps, Neffs, and Cores, I'll > find it. Thanks for posting your findings. > > Brian > > Brian D. Core > P.O. Box 1166 > Brighton, CO 80601 > Greenhouseguy@Juno.com Web Page: http://pages.prodigy.net/greenhouseguy > For attachments, use: Greenhouseguy@prodigy.net > > ________________________________________________________________ > YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! > Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! > Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: > http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. > >

    03/06/2000 09:06:32
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] South Branch Manor Lot Numbers
    2. Brian D Core
    3. What Charles Morrison didn't tell us... No disrespect to Charles Morrison intended. He published an article about the early grants along the South Branch River, in the October 1976 issue of West Virginia History Vol. XXXVIII, No. 1). He stated that the lots along the South Fork River were numbered 1 through 20, with lot no. 1 at the Fairfax line, and lot number 20 at Moorefield. This much appears to be true. Lots along the Wappacomo were numbered 1 through 64, with lot no. 1 being just north of the Trough, and lot no. 64 being at the juncture of the Wappacomo and the Potomac. This also appears to be true. He didn't mention in the article (as far as I can tell) that there were also numbered lots along the North Branch and the South Branch Rivers. I have a few copies of old Fairfax leases, and found that Frederick Ice had property on "the North Branch of Potowmack," lot no. 8. This land later passed to Francis Pierpoint and James Livingston. this lot would not have been considered a part of South Branch Manor. John Pancake owned lot no. 60, on "the West Side of the South Branch of Potowmack," with Lunice Creek as one of the boundaries. This would place the lot at the present site of the town of Petersburg (Grant County). I found that George Core's lot, on the west side of the South Branch, was number 12; the adjacent lot to the north, lot no. 9, was owned by John Pancake. The adjacent lot to the south was probably lot no. 13, owned at times by Michael Stump (Sr. or Jr.?), Christopher Cocke, and Joseph Innskeep. Lots 10 and 11 must have been on the east side of the river. A list of early lot owners also appears in Sage and Jones' Early Records of Hampshire County; they did not distinguish which branch of the river the lots were on, and may not have been familiar with the numbering systems. To make a long story short, it may be worth doing a little homework if you're trying to locate a lot based on information from either of these sources. If you can find an adjoiner's deed that has an identifiable landmark (such as a mountain or stream), you have a much more reliable reference point. I'd welcome discussion from anybody who has additional information about the lot numbering systems. Brian Brian D. Core P.O. Box 1166 Brighton, CO 80601 Greenhouseguy@Juno.com Web Page: http://pages.prodigy.net/greenhouseguy For attachments, use: Greenhouseguy@prodigy.net ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.

    03/06/2000 08:23:31
    1. Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] S BRANCH from Switzerland
    2. Brian D Core
    3. Herman, I think I recognize some of your Swiss names from the early church records of Berks and Lehigh Co., PA. I find a lot of oter South Branch names there, and I suppose that my George Core may have been kin to some of them. I find a George Kurr/Korr listed in the records of Lehigh Chh. in Lower Macungie, but he apparently died there ca. 1780's while my George Core moved on westward. I'm patient, persistent, and hard-headed, so if there's a link between the Fegli's, Stumps, Neffs, and Cores, I'll find it. Thanks for posting your findings. Brian Brian D. Core P.O. Box 1166 Brighton, CO 80601 Greenhouseguy@Juno.com Web Page: http://pages.prodigy.net/greenhouseguy For attachments, use: Greenhouseguy@prodigy.net ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.

    03/06/2000 07:48:09
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] S BRANCH from Switzerland
    2. HERMON B FAGLEY
    3. Ancestry.com - Swiss Emigrants in the 18th CenturyMember Login | My ALeonard HYER,OF THE SOUTH BRANCH. Migration from switzerland, to Tuliphocken,Berks,Pa,to South Branch,FROM ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS Search > Record Type > Swiss Emigrants in the 18th Century > Search ResultsMarch 6, 2000 ists of Swiss Emigrants in the Eighteenth Century to the American Colonies: Volume 2 ZÜRICH TO CAROLINA AND PENNSYLVANIA, 1734-1744 INTRODUCTION THE CANTON OF BASEL AND THE CONDITIONS OF ITS INHABITANTS IN THE COUNTRY DISTRICTS Considerable time before the beginning of the year some eighteen subjects from Biel-Benken, Arisdorf and other places had come to Basel and expressed their desire to go to Carolina, but the Mayor had denied them the Chancery order to their Obervögte, and the Council had upheld his action (RP 108, Oct. 20, 1736). Still earlier the Council had learned of some 'plotting' at the house of the 'Lehnsmann,' fief holder or sub-tenant Lienert Heyer on the Rütihard, and ordered the Obervogt to look into the matter. The result of his investigation, embodied in his report of Sept. 4, 1736 (AA), was in substance as follows: Footnote This letter of Antony Gondy was printed for the first time in the American Historical Review (1916), Vol. XXII, pp. 115-117, among the Documents in Swiss Archives relating to Emigration to American Colonies in the Eighteenth Century, contributed by A. B. Faust. DISTRICTS page 111 Lienert Heyer's brother and Antoni Rieger of Benken and Jacob Küntzlin, a carpenter, and Hans Kapp, a wagon-maker, of Münchenstein had discussed emigration to Pennsylvania. They had been actuated to do so partly by the letter of Gondy1 in praise[p.111]of Carolina, written in Charleston, S. C., in 1733, but only lately come into their possession through a man of Grenzach across the Rhine, and partly by their own unfavorable circumstances. The carpenter and the wagon-maker had complained of the growing competition in their trades and all of them had arrived at the conviction that their heavy debts and the 5 percent interest they had to pay in consequence of the mandate (see Introduction) combined with the tithes of grain and wine made it impossible for them to sustain themselves here any longer. While Jacob Küntzlin and Hans Kapp gave up the thought of emigration for the present and did not go till three years later, Lienert Heyer and Antoni Rieger actively pushed their preparations and succeeded in obtaining the consent of the government. They claimed to have friends in the vicinity of Mannheim in the Palatinate and, if they did not find their fortunes there, they would seek it in another country. The following table of their families and their property is based on FAF and supplemented from AA and KB. LisICTS FAF Saturday, May 11, 1737. From Li Rudolf Lützler, of Benken, (60 years of age), Lolonies: Volume 2 ZÜRICH TO CAROLINA AND PENNSYLVANIA, 1734-1744 INTRODUCTION THE CANTON OF BASEL AND THE CONDITIONS OF ITS INHABITANTS IN THE COUNTRY DISTRICTS Lienert Heyer, his son-in-law from there, (41 years of age), and Clara Lützler, his wife, (32 years of age), who also intend to go to the Palatinate, Lists of Swiss Emigrants in the Eighteenth Century to the American Colonies L Pro manumissione at lb. 10.........................30.— - Tax on lb. 1200 worth of Rudolf Lützler's property at 10 percent 120.— - Terms & Conditions | Privacy Statement | About Us | Partner with Us | Contact Us Copyright 1998-2000, MyFamily.com Inc. and its subsidiaries. Ancestry.com - Swiss Emigrants in the 18th CenturyMember Login | My ResultsMarch 6, 2000 Lists of Swiss Emigrants in the Eighteenth Century to the American C Tax on their lb. 130 worth of property at 10 percent. 13.— Another daughter, by the name of Elsbeth, bapt. Dec. 20, 1716, did not emigrate, for according to KB of Rümlingen she came to Waldenburg in 1743 though her family in America longed very much for her. LiTHE CANTON OF BASEL AND THE CONDITIONS OF ITS INHABITANTS IN THE COUNTRY DISTRICTS The further experiences of the two families are known through a letter by Lienert Heyer written two years after his emigration and an entry in RP 129, Aug. 7, 1756. Lienert Heyer lost his youngest child, Clara, by the smallpox in England and the next youngest, Hans Ulrich, in America, but had another son Antoni. In 1739 he and Antoni Rieger were living at 'Dolben Hagen,' apparently meant for Tulpehocken, Pa. In 1756 the Junt brothers attest his presence in Virginia and report his willingness to renounce his claims to an inheritance in favor of his son-in-law who stayed in Switzerland. Besides it can hardly be amiss to recognize him in the Lieni who renders such generous assistance to Jacob Pfau, the writer of the unsigned letter of Sept. 17, 1750, printed by A. B. Faust, Jahrbuch der Deutsch-Amer. Ilisl. Ges. von Illinois, 1918 19. He took his fellow-villager with his family and his things all the way up from the coast to Frederikstown, Virginia. T Since Gerster speaks of the safe arrival of four families from Basel in Philadelphia this year, we have to look for two more and may find them in Martin Heggendorn or Heckendorn with his wife and children and Hans Itin and his wife. To be sure they petitioned only for permission to go to the Palatinate, or to Lorraine or the Palatinate (RP 108, Apr. 6 and 13), but they may likewise have used this only for a pretext, because permission to go to America would hardly have been obtainable this year. The entries in FAF are as follows: Lists of Swiss Emigrants in the Eighteenth Century to the American Colonies Saturday, May 11, 1737. From Ilans Itin of Arristorff and Elsbeth Weber, his wife, who also intend to move away, pro Manumissione at lb. 10..........................20.— - Lists of Swiss Emigrants in the Eighteenth Century to the American Colonies: Volume 2 Z Tax on lb. 150 worth of property 15.— (35.—) Lists of Swiss Emigrants in the Eighteenth Century to the American Colonies: Volume 2 Saturday, May 25, 1737. From Martin Heckendorn and Ursula Jenni, his wife, of Langenbruck,for Manumission at lb. 10..........................20.— - Colonies: Volume 2 Z 10 percent tax on lb. 900 withdrawn 90.— (110.—) Lists of Swiss Emigrants in the Eighteenth Century to the American Colonies: Volume 2 ZÜRICH TO CAROLINA AND PENNSYLVANIA, 1734-1744 Ipage 113 [p.113]Their seven children in KB: Elsbeth, bapt. March 2, 1718; Magdalena, March 19, 1719; Anna, Nov. 3, 1720; Sara, Nov. 7, 1723; Ursul, Nov. 3, 1726; Maria, Nov. 11, 1732; Barbara, Jan. 9, 1735. rms & Conditions | Privacy Statement | About Us | Partner with Us | Contact Us Copyright 1998-2000, MyFamily.com Inc. and its subsidiaries. ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.

    03/06/2000 10:53:50
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] North River Mills Day
    2. Elaine D Tomkins
    3. Does anyone know anything (when and where) about North River Mills Day which I have heard is celebrated sometime in June? Would appreciate any info. Elaine in Ohio

    03/04/2000 02:55:04
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] URGENT!!!
    2. Bill Pyles
    3. URGENT!!! Do not open any files that were sent under my name. Someone sent me a virus and it took my address book and sent it out to everyone in it. The file is Pretty Park.exe. Sorry, I did not send it. It sends itself automatically. It is a new virus. My son works on Computer at the Kennedy Space Center and he recognized it immediately. Most virus scanners will not pick it up because it is new. You need to update you virus scanner. Bill Pyles

    03/02/2000 11:12:18
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] NARA PRICES GOING UP
    2. Sara Patton
    3. > > * * * * * > > The National Archives will be increasing the price of > Military Service Records from $10 to $17.50 > Pension Records (Rev. War, Civil War, etc.) from $10 to $40 > Effective July 1, 2000 > > I was told this information by a staff member of the National Archives > this > last Saturday in Washington, DC. You might want to get any orders in > before > the increase.

    03/02/2000 07:14:26
    1. [WVHAMPSH-L] 1830 Census information
    2. Donna Hull
    3. Here is the National Archives web page with all the information about the re= lease of the 1930 census. http://www.nara.gov/genealogy/1930cen.html -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I'm Ancestrally Challenged!! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    02/28/2000 03:09:06
    1. Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] Location 1770's
    2. Sara Patton
    3. Based on other land records for Kuykendall's, Kuykendall Mill Run is on the east side of South Branch near the Trough - NE of Old Field . One land record indicates it is "between SE Mtns. And Trough Hills" probably "Sawmill Ridge" and "Sawmill Run" on today's map. Sara Patton ----- Original Message ----- From: "Veerle Foreman" <vforeman@shentel.net> To: <WVHAMPSH-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, February 27, 2000 10:22 AM Subject: [WVHAMPSH-L] Location 1770's > Can anyone tell me the loaction of Kuykendall Mill Run and Piney > Mountian? > They were listed on a survey in the late 1700's. > > Thanks...Mike Foreman > > ______________________________

    02/28/2000 11:44:25
    1. Re: [WVHAMPSH-L] South Branch Manor/South Branch Valley
    2. Gray Matters
    3. Thanks for posting this! Very interesting. You can order copies of any documents from the WV Archives--they charge a $10 search fee for any request (this covers two names/documents and I believe a minimal number of photocopies), plus pages copied in excess of whatever their minimum is (sorry, can't remember this aspect...). I found their service quite fast and professional (only tried them once so far). Martha Grenzeback graymatters@ibm.net At 11:51 AM 26-02-2000 -0700, you wrote: >I did a search for South Branch Manor on the google.com search engine, >and came up with the following: > >West Virginia State Archives Manuscript Collections >Ms79-198 South Branch Valley Collection > >http://www.wvculture.org/history/ms79-198.html > >The manuscript collection has LOTS of personal notes and letters from the >late 1700's through the mid-1800's, many original deeds, receipts, >affidavits, depositions, papers from court cases, real estate disputes, >etcetera. I don't know how to accessthese records short of driving to >Charleston, but locating the records is certainly a start. > >Brian > >Brian D. Core >P.O. Box 1166 >Brighton, CO 80601 >Greenhouseguy@Juno.com Web Page: http://pages.prodigy.net/greenhouseguy >For attachments, use: Greenhouseguy@prodigy.net > >________________________________________________________________ >YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! >Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! >Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: >http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. >

    02/28/2000 10:45:29