National Treasure is a movie with Nicholas Cage where they are on a treasure hunt and steal the declaration of independence for clues. They are in Philadelphia and there are some shots around the city. I will watch the video which just came out last week and look again but I think I remember from the movie that they have a scene in which they are waiting in Arch St Cemetery. To keep this on subject Arch St is where Dr. Thomas Wynne PA is buried.
Cuz Becky Can you do a quick run down on the background of Thomas Wynne's wife/wives. Kind of the offical WGS take on all the confusion of who was who and what we think is true?
Dear Cuz Joan II I don't have a copy of all those pages but if you can get them I would love to have them. Hugs Cuz B ----- Original Message ----- From: "Joan Bretz" <jbretz1@earthlink.net> To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2005 4:22 PM Subject: Re: [WGS] Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania > Becky. At the Uniontown reunion, I gave you copies of material from books > in the PA law library. Wasn't this material that was included? Have you > checked your files? If no one else has copies, I could put a visit to the > PA State Library on my list - the law library portion would have the books. > I'll also see if I have a copy of what I gave you - can't believe I would > have given you my only copy. > > PS. CD arrived yesterday. Thanks. > > JoanII > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "The Thill Group Inc" <ttg-inc@comcast.net> > To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Monday, May 09, 2005 11:53 PM > Subject: [WGS] Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania > > > > Does anyone have these two vol? > > > > Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania, A Biographical Dictionary, > > Volume > > One, 1682-1709 > > > > Wynne, Elizabeth see Chorley, Elizabeth > > > > Wynne, Hannah, 774 > > > > Wynne, Jonathan, 774, 777 > > > > Wynne, Martha see Buttall, Martha > > > > Wynne, Mary, 774 > > > > Wynne, Rebecca, 774 > > > > Wynne, Sydney, 774 > > > > Wynne, Tabitha, 774, 776-77 > > > > Wynne, Thomas ap, father of Thomas, 774 > > > > Wynne, Thomas, 23, 38, 86, 205, 220, 229, 273, 277, 333-34, 349, 443-44, > > 451, 460, 471, 572, 644, 660, 682, 704, 733, 738, 744, 761, 764, 774-77, > > 779, 823 > > > > Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania, A Biographical Dictionary, > > Volume > > Two, 1710-1756 > > Wynne, Mary, 538-39 > > > > Wynne, Thomas, 249-50, 538 > > > > Hugs Cuz B > > ttg-inc@comcast.net > > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/ > > > > > > ============================== > > Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the > > last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more: > > http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx > > > > > > > > ============================== > Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the > last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx >
Becky. At the Uniontown reunion, I gave you copies of material from books in the PA law library. Wasn't this material that was included? Have you checked your files? If no one else has copies, I could put a visit to the PA State Library on my list - the law library portion would have the books. I'll also see if I have a copy of what I gave you - can't believe I would have given you my only copy. PS. CD arrived yesterday. Thanks. JoanII ----- Original Message ----- From: "The Thill Group Inc" <ttg-inc@comcast.net> To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, May 09, 2005 11:53 PM Subject: [WGS] Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania > Does anyone have these two vol? > > Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania, A Biographical Dictionary, > Volume > One, 1682-1709 > > Wynne, Elizabeth see Chorley, Elizabeth > > Wynne, Hannah, 774 > > Wynne, Jonathan, 774, 777 > > Wynne, Martha see Buttall, Martha > > Wynne, Mary, 774 > > Wynne, Rebecca, 774 > > Wynne, Sydney, 774 > > Wynne, Tabitha, 774, 776-77 > > Wynne, Thomas ap, father of Thomas, 774 > > Wynne, Thomas, 23, 38, 86, 205, 220, 229, 273, 277, 333-34, 349, 443-44, > 451, 460, 471, 572, 644, 660, 682, 704, 733, 738, 744, 761, 764, 774-77, > 779, 823 > > Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania, A Biographical Dictionary, > Volume > Two, 1710-1756 > Wynne, Mary, 538-39 > > Wynne, Thomas, 249-50, 538 > > Hugs Cuz B > ttg-inc@comcast.net > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/ > > > ============================== > Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the > last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more: > http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx > >
Dear Cuz Connie, ??? What is the movie National Treasure? and Why did they have the Arch St. burial ground in it? Hugs Cuz B ----- Original Message ----- From: <GramereC@aol.com> To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2005 11:31 AM Subject: Re: [WGS] Delaware and Dr. T > I am reminded that in the movie National Treasure There is a scene with the > burial ground at Arch St. (I think). > > Cuz Connie > > > ============================== > Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the > last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx >
Dear Cuz Connie, Ummmm, thought I would share? No one is sharing or talking so thought I would throw a chunk out there..... =) Hugs Cuz B ----- Original Message ----- From: <GramereC@aol.com> To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2005 11:29 AM Subject: Re: [WGS] Elizabeth Rowden Brock Eayre; A Note > > > OK Becky I will bite. What are you thinking with this one????? > In a message dated 5/9/2005 10:10:36 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > ttg-inc@comcast.net writes: > > Elizabeth [Rowden] [Brock] Eayre: A Note > By Milton Rubincam > > In the National Genealogical Society Quarterly for June 1965 was published > an article by Lewis D. Cook entitled, "Marriage Intentions, 1685-1730, > Burlington County, N. J." Among the declarations of intentions recorded on > page 129 appears the following: "Richard Airs and Elizabeth Brock, Oct. 5, > 1704." > The bride's name is erroneously stated. It was not Brook but Brock, and > her family connections are well known. > Her maiden name was Elizabeth Bowden or Rawden, and she belonged to a > Yorkshire family. Her father's name is unknown, but her mother was > Elizabeth Chorley1 who married [1] ...Rowden [Rawden], probably of Wistow, > co. York, [2] Joshua Maude, of Wakefield, Yorks [license issued in 1667], > and [3] 20.5mo.1676 [by Quaker ceremony] at Rainhill, Lancashire, Dr. Thomas > Wynne, the distinguished Welsh Physician who accompanied William Penn on the > Welcome in 1682; and subsequently became the first Speaker of the > Pennsylvania General Assembly. By Rowden she had one daughter, Elizabeth, > the heroine of our story, and by Maude she had Jane and Margery Maude.2 Her > union with Wynne was childless, but by his first wife, Martha Buttall, of > Wrexham, co. Denbigh, North Wales, he was the father of Mary, Rebecca, > Sydney [a girl], Hannah, Tabitha, and Jonathan Wynne. > Dr. Wynne's family came to Pennsylvania in successive migrations. His > oldest daughter, Mary, her husband, Dr. Edward Jones, and their children > arrived in the Lyon of Liverpool, 13 August 1682.3 Dr. Wynne, accompanied > possibly by his wife [who, however, may have come on a later vessel] came > aboard the Welcome, landing at Upland [now Chester], 28 October 1682.3 his > second daughter, Rebecca Wynne, and his young stepdaughters, Jane and > Margery Maude, had a stormy, fear-laden voyage in the Submission; it left > England on the 6th of the 7th month [September] 1682, and did not drop > anchor until the 2nd of the 9th month [November] at Choptank, on the Eastern > Shore of Maryland.4 Because of the violent storms it entered the Chesapeake > Bay rather than Delaware Bay. It is no known when Elizabeth Rowden came to > America; she may have been with her stepfather, or her step and > half-sisters, or she may have come by herself. She is probably about 16 > years old in 1682. > Soon after arrival Elizabeth fell in love with a young fellow named John > Brock, from Bramhall, Cheshire, who had come to Pennsylvania aboard the > 1. Francis James Dallett, F.G.S. P., "Mrs. Thomas Wynne of Philadelphia and > Her Family Corrections to the Pedigrees of Wynne and Maude," The > Pennsylvania Genealogical Magazine vol. XXII, no. 4, 1962 pp 222-223. > 2. Ibed., p. 224, note 6. > 3. Marion Rubincam Balderston, "The Real Welcome Passengers," reprinted from > The Huntington Library Quarterly, vol. XXVI, November 1962, p. 52; George E. > McCracken, Ph.D., R.A.S.G., "Welcome Notes," Part 2, H. "The Wynne Family," > The American Genealogist, vol. 39, Jan. 1963, pp 4-7. > 4. "The Sailing of the Ship 'Submission' in the Year 1682, with a True Copy > of the Vessel's Log." Publications of The Genealogical Society of > Pennsylvania, vol. I [1895-98], p. 10. > > Becky's Notes: Errors or additional information that may help some one: > Information on mr. Rawden: "Mrs. Thomas Wynne of Philadelphia and her > family" Corrections to the pedigrees of Wynne and Maude by Francis James > Dallett. F.G.S.P., p. 223, #7, 7. Rawden was a well-known Yorkshire name. > But the identity of Elizabeth's first husband is unknown. He may have been > the John Rawden of Wistow, whose estate was probated 12 July 1667, the year > of Elizabeth's marriage to Joshua Maude. "Index of the Wills and > Administrations entered in the Registers of the Archbishops at York, being > Consistory Wills, &c.," Yorkshire Archaeological society Record Series, > XCIII (1936), 60, citing Register Vol. 33, folio 89. More probably, her > first husband, Mr. Rawden, was of Drax, her residence at the time of her > marriage. > > When they sailed: > "The Rise of Thomas Wynne (A Welsh Quaker)' Geraint H Jenkins PhD in The > Journal of the Flintshire Hist. Soc., P. 53, Welcome on 30 August 1682.83 > With him he took his wife, Elizabeth. Following the death of his first wife, > Martha, Wynne had married for the second time on 20 July 1676, winning the > hand of Elizabeth Maude of Rainhill, Lancashire, herself a widow of Joshua > Maude of the Cliffs, Wakefield in Yorkshire. His daughter Mary, wife of Dr. > Edward Jones, and possibly his son Jonathan, had already sailed on the Lyon > and had arrived, after a relatively pleasant eleven-week journey, in the > Schuylkill River on 13 August 1682. Another daughter by his first marriage, > Rebecca, aged twenty, and his two step-daughters, Jane, aged fifteen, and > Margery, aged eleven, travelled on the Submission, which left Liverpool on 5 > November 1682.84 Wynne's other step-daughter, Elizabeth Rowden, brought two > other daughters, Sidney and Hannah, on the Morning Star, which sailed from > Liverpool in September 1683 and arrived in Philadelphia on 14 November. His > one remaining daughter, Tabitha - the black sheep of the family - did not > emigrate. > > And Also: > Extracts at Devonshire House and from the original book at Somerset House, > Lancashire Meeting Records, Monthly Meeting at Hardshaw East, "Thomas Allen > Glenn "Merion in the Welsh Track with sketches of the Townships of Haverford > and Radnor, Printed for Subscribers, Norristown, 1896", " Thomas Wynne, of > Carwis, in the County of Flint, in Wales, Chirurgeon and Elizabeth Maud, of > Rainhill, in Lancashire, were joyned together in marriage ye 20th day of ye > 5th month 1676 at John Chorley's house in the presence of Alexander Chorley, > ffaith Chorley, John Chorley, Alice Southworth, John Barnes, Ester Sixsmith, > Bruen Sixmith, Sarah Gandy, Sam: Dunbabin, Bridget Wilson, John Southworth, > Alice Dunbabin, William Crowdson, Margaret Dunbabin, James Wright, Mary > Southworth, William Sixmith, Alices Barnes." Carwis is intended for Caerwys, > which was the place of residence of Thomas Wynne at the time of this > marriage. It is very doubtful whether any of the witnesses were related to > him. They may have been to Elizabeth Maud. Alexander Chorley and John > Chorley were brothers. The latter married Ellen, daughter of John Barnes, of > Warrington. Bruen or Bryan Sixmith (Sixsmith?) has already been mentioned. > He was at one time a draper in Wrexham. He had a shop in High Street, next > to the Golden Lion. At the time of his death in 1692 he was a resident of > Great Sankey. His brother, William, who died in 1698, was living in Ashton, > both places near Rainhill, southern part of Lancashire, east of Liverpool. > He may have been a connection of the Buttalls, as certain given names are > used in both families. ["This Elizabeth Rowden is one of the witnesses to > the will of Richard Thomas, late of Whitford Garne, County of Flint"] [Page > 265] Joshua Maud, of Wakefield, Yorkshire, believed to have been a son of > John Maud, of Alverthorpe, was the first husband of Elizabeth. [Error here > he says her maiden name was Parr. This is wrong.] By him she had a son named > Joshua, who remained in Wakefield; a daughter Jane, who removed to > Pennsylvania and was married to a man by the name of Willbank, [Is this an > error for Wiltbank. Helminus Wiltbank, a Swede, was a very early settler new > Lewis. His descendants are numerous. T. A. G.] but died without issue, and a > daughter Margery. The latter married. > > "Paver's Marriage Licenses, Vol. II", Yorkshire Archeological Society Record > Ser. VOL. XLII (1909), pg. 110, "Paver's Marriage Licenses, Volume II" in > the Yorkshire Archeological Society Record Series, Volume XLIII (1909), page > 110, publishes an abstract of the license issued in the year 1667 to "Joshua > Maude, gentleman, 38, Wakefield," and "Elizabeth Rawden, widow, 34, Drax." 6 > >From this it is evident that when the Widow Maude married Dr. Wynne in1676, > she herself had been married not once before, but twice; her first husband > had been a Mr. Rawden 7 and her second Joshua Maude. Thus she, not the other > vague and actually non-existent second wife of Dr. Wynne, was the mother of > Elizabeth (Rowden Rawden) Brock. Thomas Wynne's supposed third wife was in > fact identical with his second wife, but he was her third husband. > > "Maude of West Riddlesden, Yorkshire", Alfred R. Justice Collection Vol. 16, > 5, Collections of the Genealogical Soc. of PA., Alfred R. Justice, one of > Philadelphia's leading genealogists a generation ago, states unequivocally > in a genealogical study, apparently never heretofore noticed in print, that > Elizabeth Rawden Maude Wynne was born Elizabeth Chorley, one of ten children > of John Chorley, armiger, of Rainhill, Lancashire, by his wife Elizabeth, > daughter of Hugh Ley of Liverpool .12 Mr. Justice extensively developed the > Chorley pedigree. In view of the fact that Elizabeth's marriage to Thomas > Wynne took place at John Chorley were witnesses (Justice's theory would make > the men her brothers), this statement is quite possibly correct. > > "Chorley of Chorley, Lancashire," Justice, GSP, Vol. 5, 75, In which she is > #43 of that record. > > "Maude of West Riddlesden, Yorkshire", Alfred R. Justice Collection Vol. 16, > 5, Collections of the Genealogical Soc. of PA.. > > Pennsylvania Genealogical Magazine, VOL. XXIII, William Penn's Twenty Three > Ships, with notes on some of their passengers., Pg. 47, (75) John Brock of > Bramhall, according to the certificate mentioned in Note 74 above, was > single. "The good he hath are his own being given him by his parents as his > portion," the certificate noted. He contracted with Charles Pickering in > Liverpool "in the yeare 1682" for Pickering to "bring [over] a passenger for > this province," but was "dispointed of the sd passenger as he was not > brought as above." As a result, Brock brought suit in Bucks Co., in 1686 to > recover the L5 12s 6d. he had paid Pickering for the passenger's fare, and > which William Yardley and Thomas Phillips, arbitrators, had awarded Brock in > 1683, but which Pickering had so far neglected to pay. Bucks Court Records, > 35, 36. Brock m. Thomas Wynne's step daughter Elizabeth Rawden in 1684, > when he was sheriff of the county. Ibid., 9. > Job Houle and Eliza Eaton (Heaton?) came on the Friends Adventure as > servants to John Brock. Houle (howell) appears to have been the son of > Thomas Howell (Hould) who settled in Southamton Twp., Bucks Co. See > Pennsylvania Archives, 2nd Series, XIX, 58 675; Bucks Court Records, 177, > 203, 274, 378. > > > Hugs Cuz Becky > ttg-inc@comcast.net > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/ > > > ============================== > Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records. > New content added every business day. Learn more: > http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx > > > > > > > > ============================== > Search Family and Local Histories for stories about your family and the > areas they lived. Over 85 million names added in the last 12 months. > Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13966/rd.ashx >
I am reminded that in the movie National Treasure There is a scene with the burial ground at Arch St. (I think). Cuz Connie
OK Becky I will bite. What are you thinking with this one????? In a message dated 5/9/2005 10:10:36 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, ttg-inc@comcast.net writes: Elizabeth [Rowden] [Brock] Eayre: A Note By Milton Rubincam In the National Genealogical Society Quarterly for June 1965 was published an article by Lewis D. Cook entitled, "Marriage Intentions, 1685-1730, Burlington County, N. J." Among the declarations of intentions recorded on page 129 appears the following: "Richard Airs and Elizabeth Brock, Oct. 5, 1704." The bride's name is erroneously stated. It was not Brook but Brock, and her family connections are well known. Her maiden name was Elizabeth Bowden or Rawden, and she belonged to a Yorkshire family. Her father's name is unknown, but her mother was Elizabeth Chorley1 who married [1] ...Rowden [Rawden], probably of Wistow, co. York, [2] Joshua Maude, of Wakefield, Yorks [license issued in 1667], and [3] 20.5mo.1676 [by Quaker ceremony] at Rainhill, Lancashire, Dr. Thomas Wynne, the distinguished Welsh Physician who accompanied William Penn on the Welcome in 1682; and subsequently became the first Speaker of the Pennsylvania General Assembly. By Rowden she had one daughter, Elizabeth, the heroine of our story, and by Maude she had Jane and Margery Maude.2 Her union with Wynne was childless, but by his first wife, Martha Buttall, of Wrexham, co. Denbigh, North Wales, he was the father of Mary, Rebecca, Sydney [a girl], Hannah, Tabitha, and Jonathan Wynne. Dr. Wynne's family came to Pennsylvania in successive migrations. His oldest daughter, Mary, her husband, Dr. Edward Jones, and their children arrived in the Lyon of Liverpool, 13 August 1682.3 Dr. Wynne, accompanied possibly by his wife [who, however, may have come on a later vessel] came aboard the Welcome, landing at Upland [now Chester], 28 October 1682.3 his second daughter, Rebecca Wynne, and his young stepdaughters, Jane and Margery Maude, had a stormy, fear-laden voyage in the Submission; it left England on the 6th of the 7th month [September] 1682, and did not drop anchor until the 2nd of the 9th month [November] at Choptank, on the Eastern Shore of Maryland.4 Because of the violent storms it entered the Chesapeake Bay rather than Delaware Bay. It is no known when Elizabeth Rowden came to America; she may have been with her stepfather, or her step and half-sisters, or she may have come by herself. She is probably about 16 years old in 1682. Soon after arrival Elizabeth fell in love with a young fellow named John Brock, from Bramhall, Cheshire, who had come to Pennsylvania aboard the 1. Francis James Dallett, F.G.S. P., "Mrs. Thomas Wynne of Philadelphia and Her Family Corrections to the Pedigrees of Wynne and Maude," The Pennsylvania Genealogical Magazine vol. XXII, no. 4, 1962 pp 222-223. 2. Ibed., p. 224, note 6. 3. Marion Rubincam Balderston, "The Real Welcome Passengers," reprinted from The Huntington Library Quarterly, vol. XXVI, November 1962, p. 52; George E. McCracken, Ph.D., R.A.S.G., "Welcome Notes," Part 2, H. "The Wynne Family," The American Genealogist, vol. 39, Jan. 1963, pp 4-7. 4. "The Sailing of the Ship 'Submission' in the Year 1682, with a True Copy of the Vessel's Log." Publications of The Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania, vol. I [1895-98], p. 10. Becky's Notes: Errors or additional information that may help some one: Information on mr. Rawden: "Mrs. Thomas Wynne of Philadelphia and her family" Corrections to the pedigrees of Wynne and Maude by Francis James Dallett. F.G.S.P., p. 223, #7, 7. Rawden was a well-known Yorkshire name. But the identity of Elizabeth's first husband is unknown. He may have been the John Rawden of Wistow, whose estate was probated 12 July 1667, the year of Elizabeth's marriage to Joshua Maude. "Index of the Wills and Administrations entered in the Registers of the Archbishops at York, being Consistory Wills, &c.," Yorkshire Archaeological society Record Series, XCIII (1936), 60, citing Register Vol. 33, folio 89. More probably, her first husband, Mr. Rawden, was of Drax, her residence at the time of her marriage. When they sailed: "The Rise of Thomas Wynne (A Welsh Quaker)' Geraint H Jenkins PhD in The Journal of the Flintshire Hist. Soc., P. 53, Welcome on 30 August 1682.83 With him he took his wife, Elizabeth. Following the death of his first wife, Martha, Wynne had married for the second time on 20 July 1676, winning the hand of Elizabeth Maude of Rainhill, Lancashire, herself a widow of Joshua Maude of the Cliffs, Wakefield in Yorkshire. His daughter Mary, wife of Dr. Edward Jones, and possibly his son Jonathan, had already sailed on the Lyon and had arrived, after a relatively pleasant eleven-week journey, in the Schuylkill River on 13 August 1682. Another daughter by his first marriage, Rebecca, aged twenty, and his two step-daughters, Jane, aged fifteen, and Margery, aged eleven, travelled on the Submission, which left Liverpool on 5 November 1682.84 Wynne's other step-daughter, Elizabeth Rowden, brought two other daughters, Sidney and Hannah, on the Morning Star, which sailed from Liverpool in September 1683 and arrived in Philadelphia on 14 November. His one remaining daughter, Tabitha - the black sheep of the family - did not emigrate. And Also: Extracts at Devonshire House and from the original book at Somerset House, Lancashire Meeting Records, Monthly Meeting at Hardshaw East, "Thomas Allen Glenn "Merion in the Welsh Track with sketches of the Townships of Haverford and Radnor, Printed for Subscribers, Norristown, 1896", " Thomas Wynne, of Carwis, in the County of Flint, in Wales, Chirurgeon and Elizabeth Maud, of Rainhill, in Lancashire, were joyned together in marriage ye 20th day of ye 5th month 1676 at John Chorley's house in the presence of Alexander Chorley, ffaith Chorley, John Chorley, Alice Southworth, John Barnes, Ester Sixsmith, Bruen Sixmith, Sarah Gandy, Sam: Dunbabin, Bridget Wilson, John Southworth, Alice Dunbabin, William Crowdson, Margaret Dunbabin, James Wright, Mary Southworth, William Sixmith, Alices Barnes." Carwis is intended for Caerwys, which was the place of residence of Thomas Wynne at the time of this marriage. It is very doubtful whether any of the witnesses were related to him. They may have been to Elizabeth Maud. Alexander Chorley and John Chorley were brothers. The latter married Ellen, daughter of John Barnes, of Warrington. Bruen or Bryan Sixmith (Sixsmith?) has already been mentioned. He was at one time a draper in Wrexham. He had a shop in High Street, next to the Golden Lion. At the time of his death in 1692 he was a resident of Great Sankey. His brother, William, who died in 1698, was living in Ashton, both places near Rainhill, southern part of Lancashire, east of Liverpool. He may have been a connection of the Buttalls, as certain given names are used in both families. ["This Elizabeth Rowden is one of the witnesses to the will of Richard Thomas, late of Whitford Garne, County of Flint"] [Page 265] Joshua Maud, of Wakefield, Yorkshire, believed to have been a son of John Maud, of Alverthorpe, was the first husband of Elizabeth. [Error here he says her maiden name was Parr. This is wrong.] By him she had a son named Joshua, who remained in Wakefield; a daughter Jane, who removed to Pennsylvania and was married to a man by the name of Willbank, [Is this an error for Wiltbank. Helminus Wiltbank, a Swede, was a very early settler new Lewis. His descendants are numerous. T. A. G.] but died without issue, and a daughter Margery. The latter married. "Paver's Marriage Licenses, Vol. II", Yorkshire Archeological Society Record Ser. VOL. XLII (1909), pg. 110, "Paver's Marriage Licenses, Volume II" in the Yorkshire Archeological Society Record Series, Volume XLIII (1909), page 110, publishes an abstract of the license issued in the year 1667 to "Joshua Maude, gentleman, 38, Wakefield," and "Elizabeth Rawden, widow, 34, Drax." 6 >From this it is evident that when the Widow Maude married Dr. Wynne in1676, she herself had been married not once before, but twice; her first husband had been a Mr. Rawden 7 and her second Joshua Maude. Thus she, not the other vague and actually non-existent second wife of Dr. Wynne, was the mother of Elizabeth (Rowden Rawden) Brock. Thomas Wynne's supposed third wife was in fact identical with his second wife, but he was her third husband. "Maude of West Riddlesden, Yorkshire", Alfred R. Justice Collection Vol. 16, 5, Collections of the Genealogical Soc. of PA., Alfred R. Justice, one of Philadelphia's leading genealogists a generation ago, states unequivocally in a genealogical study, apparently never heretofore noticed in print, that Elizabeth Rawden Maude Wynne was born Elizabeth Chorley, one of ten children of John Chorley, armiger, of Rainhill, Lancashire, by his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Hugh Ley of Liverpool .12 Mr. Justice extensively developed the Chorley pedigree. In view of the fact that Elizabeth's marriage to Thomas Wynne took place at John Chorley were witnesses (Justice's theory would make the men her brothers), this statement is quite possibly correct. "Chorley of Chorley, Lancashire," Justice, GSP, Vol. 5, 75, In which she is #43 of that record. "Maude of West Riddlesden, Yorkshire", Alfred R. Justice Collection Vol. 16, 5, Collections of the Genealogical Soc. of PA.. Pennsylvania Genealogical Magazine, VOL. XXIII, William Penn's Twenty Three Ships, with notes on some of their passengers., Pg. 47, (75) John Brock of Bramhall, according to the certificate mentioned in Note 74 above, was single. "The good he hath are his own being given him by his parents as his portion," the certificate noted. He contracted with Charles Pickering in Liverpool "in the yeare 1682" for Pickering to "bring [over] a passenger for this province," but was "dispointed of the sd passenger as he was not brought as above." As a result, Brock brought suit in Bucks Co., in 1686 to recover the L5 12s 6d. he had paid Pickering for the passenger's fare, and which William Yardley and Thomas Phillips, arbitrators, had awarded Brock in 1683, but which Pickering had so far neglected to pay. Bucks Court Records, 35, 36. Brock m. Thomas Wynne's step daughter Elizabeth Rawden in 1684, when he was sheriff of the county. Ibid., 9. Job Houle and Eliza Eaton (Heaton?) came on the Friends Adventure as servants to John Brock. Houle (howell) appears to have been the son of Thomas Howell (Hould) who settled in Southamton Twp., Bucks Co. See Pennsylvania Archives, 2nd Series, XIX, 58 675; Bucks Court Records, 177, 203, 274, 378. Hugs Cuz Becky ttg-inc@comcast.net http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/ ============================== Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records. New content added every business day. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx
Does anyone have these two vol? Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania, A Biographical Dictionary, Volume One, 1682-1709 Wynne, Elizabeth see Chorley, Elizabeth Wynne, Hannah, 774 Wynne, Jonathan, 774, 777 Wynne, Martha see Buttall, Martha Wynne, Mary, 774 Wynne, Rebecca, 774 Wynne, Sydney, 774 Wynne, Tabitha, 774, 776-77 Wynne, Thomas ap, father of Thomas, 774 Wynne, Thomas, 23, 38, 86, 205, 220, 229, 273, 277, 333-34, 349, 443-44, 451, 460, 471, 572, 644, 660, 682, 704, 733, 738, 744, 761, 764, 774-77, 779, 823 Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania, A Biographical Dictionary, Volume Two, 1710-1756 Wynne, Mary, 538-39 Wynne, Thomas, 249-50, 538 Hugs Cuz B ttg-inc@comcast.net http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/
HISTORY OF DELAWARE. 1609 - 1888. BY J. Thomas Scharf, A.M., LL.D., Author of "History of Maryland," "History of the City of Philadelphia, Pa.," etc., etc. ASSISTED BY A STAFF OF ABLE ASSISTANTS. IN TWO VOLUMES, ILLUSTRATED. PHILADELPHIA: L.J. RICHARDS & CO. 1888 December 9, 1684, the court awarded the contract to Baptist Newcomb, "to build ye court-house and prison as is expressed elsewhere for 10,000 pounds of tobacco;" but he was in no hurry to begin the work, and on August 10, 1685, the wearied court lost patience and it was: "Ordered this day by the Court that Baptyst Newcom be forwith sent for that he build the prison and court house according to his former undertaking the last winter that he build it forthwith. John Street declaring he is willing to help and aid ye sd Babytyst to build the Said houses and upon the refusal or neglect of his doing the said worke that the Sheriffe should have an execution to serve the penalty of the obligation of Babytyst for non performance. Not even this extreme threat spurred Newcomb up to the discharge of his duty, and on May 3d, 1687, the grand jury tried its hand at coercion by the radical process of presenting the court "for not causing a court-house and prison to be made." Then the justices took up another plan of action, in which Newcomb again makes his appearance, and which is explained in the minutes of October 8, 1687.(16*) "It is agreed by this court that whoever subscribes any logs, to be gotten for the use of the prison and court-house, shall bring said logs to the place in the towne where it is to be built in forty days after the date hereof, or else forfeit duble the vallue of the said logs. There is to be as followeth: "54 logs at 4-8p (16*), 15 foote long, 1 foote over 8 inch thick. "16 ditto at 6-8, 23 foote long and over 8 inch thick, squared two sides. "Every person that undertakes to get any is to take 3 short and one long. "I doe undertake to get 20 logs: Wm. Clarke. "and I do undertake 44 logs: Tho. Wynne. "I doe undertake 20 logs: Henry Stretcher. "We doe undertake six short and two long: Francis Cornwall, Morrise Edwards. "for myself and Justice Gray, 3 long and 15 short; Henry Molleston, Samwell Gray. "I Baptist Newcomb, doe engage myselfe to find Rafftors and Clabords for a prison and cover the said prison, the court finding nails. Bapt. Newcomb." After all this delay of more than six years the project was still not executed, as the record of March 10, 1688, bears testimony that court was then being held "at the house of Henry Streitcher, commonly called the court-house." Streitcher was merely the keeper of the village tavern, in one of the rooms of which the court was holding its sessions. Norton Claypoole was then clerk and recorder, and had his office in his own house. On April 30, 1688, he reported to the grand jury that an attempt had been made to burn his office, and the jurymen came to the conclusion that the intention of the incendiaries was to destroy the county records. Although the county was yet destitute of a courthouse it had managed to begin the building of a prison, which on May 3, 1688, was officially viewed by the grand jury under order of court. Samuel Jones had undertaken the construction, but never completed it, for the report of the grand jury of which Luke Wattson was foreman, was that "wee now doe find that this worke is not sufficient for a prison." At the January, August and December terms in 1691, the court was thrice presented by the grand jury "for not having a sufficient prison," and as late as 1709 a similar presentment was made indicating that neither court-house or prison had beon built up to that time. Justices of the Peace. Appointed by William Penn. Thomas Wynne April 1, 1687 Thomas Price May 3, 1687 Samuel Gray May 3, 1687 George Young Sept. 6, 1687 Wm. Clarke Feb. 10, 1687 Thomas Wynne Feb. 10, 1687 CHAPTER LXVI. LEWES AND REHOBOTH HUNDRED "West Chester," a tract of nine hundred acres, on the northeast side of Love 's Creek, was deeded to John Crew by Francis Cook, September 3, 1700; and on the 4th of March, the same year, Peter Lewis deeded "Middleborough," four hundred and forty acres, near the town of Lewes, to Jacob Kolloch. This tract had been warranted to Alexander Moleston, who had also deeded five hundred acres on the head of Love Creek to Thomas Fisher, son of John, on the 8th of January, 1696. In 1702 William Futcher conveyed to "Richard Paynter, inn-keeper, of Lewes, his mansion, land and plantation, three hundred and sixty-six acres, bounding on King's Creek, from ye mouth, fronting upon ye bay, to ye head, part of a large tract called 'Peach Blossom.'" The John Fisher above mentioned came from England in 1682, and settled on the Horekill tract. He had besides the son, Thomas, another son, named John, and from the latter has descended Judge John Fisher. The wife of the first John Fisher, after his death, married Dr. Thomas Wynne, who came to Lewes in 1685, and two years later bought the one hundred and thirty-two acres of land previously sold to Luke Watson. THIS IS AN ERROR - RNT NOTE- Thomas Fisher son of John Fisher, married Dr. Thomas Wynne's step daughter Margary Maude. And Dr. Thomas Wynne and his 2nd wife Elizabeth gave Margary Maude and Thomas Fisher the 132 acres of land. ttg-inc@comcast.net http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/
Elizabeth [Rowden] [Brock] Eayre: A Note By Milton Rubincam In the National Genealogical Society Quarterly for June 1965 was published an article by Lewis D. Cook entitled, "Marriage Intentions, 1685-1730, Burlington County, N. J." Among the declarations of intentions recorded on page 129 appears the following: "Richard Airs and Elizabeth Brock, Oct. 5, 1704." The bride's name is erroneously stated. It was not Brook but Brock, and her family connections are well known. Her maiden name was Elizabeth Bowden or Rawden, and she belonged to a Yorkshire family. Her father's name is unknown, but her mother was Elizabeth Chorley1 who married [1] ...Rowden [Rawden], probably of Wistow, co. York, [2] Joshua Maude, of Wakefield, Yorks [license issued in 1667], and [3] 20.5mo.1676 [by Quaker ceremony] at Rainhill, Lancashire, Dr. Thomas Wynne, the distinguished Welsh Physician who accompanied William Penn on the Welcome in 1682; and subsequently became the first Speaker of the Pennsylvania General Assembly. By Rowden she had one daughter, Elizabeth, the heroine of our story, and by Maude she had Jane and Margery Maude.2 Her union with Wynne was childless, but by his first wife, Martha Buttall, of Wrexham, co. Denbigh, North Wales, he was the father of Mary, Rebecca, Sydney [a girl], Hannah, Tabitha, and Jonathan Wynne. Dr. Wynne's family came to Pennsylvania in successive migrations. His oldest daughter, Mary, her husband, Dr. Edward Jones, and their children arrived in the Lyon of Liverpool, 13 August 1682.3 Dr. Wynne, accompanied possibly by his wife [who, however, may have come on a later vessel] came aboard the Welcome, landing at Upland [now Chester], 28 October 1682.3 his second daughter, Rebecca Wynne, and his young stepdaughters, Jane and Margery Maude, had a stormy, fear-laden voyage in the Submission; it left England on the 6th of the 7th month [September] 1682, and did not drop anchor until the 2nd of the 9th month [November] at Choptank, on the Eastern Shore of Maryland.4 Because of the violent storms it entered the Chesapeake Bay rather than Delaware Bay. It is no known when Elizabeth Rowden came to America; she may have been with her stepfather, or her step and half-sisters, or she may have come by herself. She is probably about 16 years old in 1682. Soon after arrival Elizabeth fell in love with a young fellow named John Brock, from Bramhall, Cheshire, who had come to Pennsylvania aboard the 1. Francis James Dallett, F.G.S. P., "Mrs. Thomas Wynne of Philadelphia and Her Family Corrections to the Pedigrees of Wynne and Maude," The Pennsylvania Genealogical Magazine vol. XXII, no. 4, 1962 pp 222-223. 2. Ibed., p. 224, note 6. 3. Marion Rubincam Balderston, "The Real Welcome Passengers," reprinted from The Huntington Library Quarterly, vol. XXVI, November 1962, p. 52; George E. McCracken, Ph.D., R.A.S.G., "Welcome Notes," Part 2, H. "The Wynne Family," The American Genealogist, vol. 39, Jan. 1963, pp 4-7. 4. "The Sailing of the Ship 'Submission' in the Year 1682, with a True Copy of the Vessel's Log." Publications of The Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania, vol. I [1895-98], p. 10. Becky's Notes: Errors or additional information that may help some one: Information on mr. Rawden: "Mrs. Thomas Wynne of Philadelphia and her family" Corrections to the pedigrees of Wynne and Maude by Francis James Dallett. F.G.S.P., p. 223, #7, 7. Rawden was a well-known Yorkshire name. But the identity of Elizabeth's first husband is unknown. He may have been the John Rawden of Wistow, whose estate was probated 12 July 1667, the year of Elizabeth's marriage to Joshua Maude. "Index of the Wills and Administrations entered in the Registers of the Archbishops at York, being Consistory Wills, &c.," Yorkshire Archaeological society Record Series, XCIII (1936), 60, citing Register Vol. 33, folio 89. More probably, her first husband, Mr. Rawden, was of Drax, her residence at the time of her marriage. When they sailed: "The Rise of Thomas Wynne (A Welsh Quaker)' Geraint H Jenkins PhD in The Journal of the Flintshire Hist. Soc., P. 53, Welcome on 30 August 1682.83 With him he took his wife, Elizabeth. Following the death of his first wife, Martha, Wynne had married for the second time on 20 July 1676, winning the hand of Elizabeth Maude of Rainhill, Lancashire, herself a widow of Joshua Maude of the Cliffs, Wakefield in Yorkshire. His daughter Mary, wife of Dr. Edward Jones, and possibly his son Jonathan, had already sailed on the Lyon and had arrived, after a relatively pleasant eleven-week journey, in the Schuylkill River on 13 August 1682. Another daughter by his first marriage, Rebecca, aged twenty, and his two step-daughters, Jane, aged fifteen, and Margery, aged eleven, travelled on the Submission, which left Liverpool on 5 November 1682.84 Wynne's other step-daughter, Elizabeth Rowden, brought two other daughters, Sidney and Hannah, on the Morning Star, which sailed from Liverpool in September 1683 and arrived in Philadelphia on 14 November. His one remaining daughter, Tabitha - the black sheep of the family - did not emigrate. And Also: Extracts at Devonshire House and from the original book at Somerset House, Lancashire Meeting Records, Monthly Meeting at Hardshaw East, "Thomas Allen Glenn "Merion in the Welsh Track with sketches of the Townships of Haverford and Radnor, Printed for Subscribers, Norristown, 1896", " Thomas Wynne, of Carwis, in the County of Flint, in Wales, Chirurgeon and Elizabeth Maud, of Rainhill, in Lancashire, were joyned together in marriage ye 20th day of ye 5th month 1676 at John Chorley's house in the presence of Alexander Chorley, ffaith Chorley, John Chorley, Alice Southworth, John Barnes, Ester Sixsmith, Bruen Sixmith, Sarah Gandy, Sam: Dunbabin, Bridget Wilson, John Southworth, Alice Dunbabin, William Crowdson, Margaret Dunbabin, James Wright, Mary Southworth, William Sixmith, Alices Barnes." Carwis is intended for Caerwys, which was the place of residence of Thomas Wynne at the time of this marriage. It is very doubtful whether any of the witnesses were related to him. They may have been to Elizabeth Maud. Alexander Chorley and John Chorley were brothers. The latter married Ellen, daughter of John Barnes, of Warrington. Bruen or Bryan Sixmith (Sixsmith?) has already been mentioned. He was at one time a draper in Wrexham. He had a shop in High Street, next to the Golden Lion. At the time of his death in 1692 he was a resident of Great Sankey. His brother, William, who died in 1698, was living in Ashton, both places near Rainhill, southern part of Lancashire, east of Liverpool. He may have been a connection of the Buttalls, as certain given names are used in both families. ["This Elizabeth Rowden is one of the witnesses to the will of Richard Thomas, late of Whitford Garne, County of Flint"] [Page 265] Joshua Maud, of Wakefield, Yorkshire, believed to have been a son of John Maud, of Alverthorpe, was the first husband of Elizabeth. [Error here he says her maiden name was Parr. This is wrong.] By him she had a son named Joshua, who remained in Wakefield; a daughter Jane, who removed to Pennsylvania and was married to a man by the name of Willbank, [Is this an error for Wiltbank. Helminus Wiltbank, a Swede, was a very early settler new Lewis. His descendants are numerous. T. A. G.] but died without issue, and a daughter Margery. The latter married. "Paver's Marriage Licenses, Vol. II", Yorkshire Archeological Society Record Ser. VOL. XLII (1909), pg. 110, "Paver's Marriage Licenses, Volume II" in the Yorkshire Archeological Society Record Series, Volume XLIII (1909), page 110, publishes an abstract of the license issued in the year 1667 to "Joshua Maude, gentleman, 38, Wakefield," and "Elizabeth Rawden, widow, 34, Drax." 6 >From this it is evident that when the Widow Maude married Dr. Wynne in1676, she herself had been married not once before, but twice; her first husband had been a Mr. Rawden 7 and her second Joshua Maude. Thus she, not the other vague and actually non-existent second wife of Dr. Wynne, was the mother of Elizabeth (Rowden Rawden) Brock. Thomas Wynne's supposed third wife was in fact identical with his second wife, but he was her third husband. "Maude of West Riddlesden, Yorkshire", Alfred R. Justice Collection Vol. 16, 5, Collections of the Genealogical Soc. of PA., Alfred R. Justice, one of Philadelphia's leading genealogists a generation ago, states unequivocally in a genealogical study, apparently never heretofore noticed in print, that Elizabeth Rawden Maude Wynne was born Elizabeth Chorley, one of ten children of John Chorley, armiger, of Rainhill, Lancashire, by his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Hugh Ley of Liverpool .12 Mr. Justice extensively developed the Chorley pedigree. In view of the fact that Elizabeth's marriage to Thomas Wynne took place at John Chorley were witnesses (Justice's theory would make the men her brothers), this statement is quite possibly correct. "Chorley of Chorley, Lancashire," Justice, GSP, Vol. 5, 75, In which she is #43 of that record. "Maude of West Riddlesden, Yorkshire", Alfred R. Justice Collection Vol. 16, 5, Collections of the Genealogical Soc. of PA.. Pennsylvania Genealogical Magazine, VOL. XXIII, William Penn's Twenty Three Ships, with notes on some of their passengers., Pg. 47, (75) John Brock of Bramhall, according to the certificate mentioned in Note 74 above, was single. "The good he hath are his own being given him by his parents as his portion," the certificate noted. He contracted with Charles Pickering in Liverpool "in the yeare 1682" for Pickering to "bring [over] a passenger for this province," but was "dispointed of the sd passenger as he was not brought as above." As a result, Brock brought suit in Bucks Co., in 1686 to recover the L5 12s 6d. he had paid Pickering for the passenger's fare, and which William Yardley and Thomas Phillips, arbitrators, had awarded Brock in 1683, but which Pickering had so far neglected to pay. Bucks Court Records, 35, 36. Brock m. Thomas Wynne's step daughter Elizabeth Rawden in 1684, when he was sheriff of the county. Ibid., 9. Job Houle and Eliza Eaton (Heaton?) came on the Friends Adventure as servants to John Brock. Houle (howell) appears to have been the son of Thomas Howell (Hould) who settled in Southamton Twp., Bucks Co. See Pennsylvania Archives, 2nd Series, XIX, 58 675; Bucks Court Records, 177, 203, 274, 378. Hugs Cuz Becky ttg-inc@comcast.net http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/
Trying to take it easy but here it is almost 4am and just sent in my avon order...off to bed...thanks to everyone for prayers and caring. Hugs, Kathleen >From: The Thill Group Inc <ttg-inc@comcast.net> >Date: Thu May 05 00:36:08 CDT 2005 >To: WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com >Subject: Re: Re: [WGS] Off Topic Kathleen Spurgeon in Hospital >Dear Cuz Kathleen, > Glad to hear your back on the path of feeling better! Take it easy and >get better soon. >Hugs Cuz B >----- Original Message ----- >From: <kathspur166@verizon.net> >To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> >Sent: Wednesday, May 04, 2005 10:48 PM >Subject: Re: Re: [WGS] Kathleen Spurgeon in Hospital > > >> Thanks for all of your prayers. I became so exhausted I ended up in the >hospital April 23rd to the 27th...no more Mono and all of my tests were >negative for anything serious. I was on vacation, slept when I wanted and >did lots of that and where else can you sleep and have 4 meals in bed, yes 4 >meals....had a bedtime snack. Do have sleep apnea so now wear a mask >instead of the nasal pillows..still look like an alein. Just wish I would >get my energy back quicker. still tire easily...guess just trying to do too >much. >> been catching up on all the e-mail back and forth. Need to get to >bed..God Bless all. >> Glad your mom is doing better,Becky. >> Love, >> Cuz Kathleen >> >> >> >From: Joyce Quigley <JOYCEWWYNNE@msn.com> >> >> >> >Date: Tue Apr 26 19:57:27 CDT 2005 >> >To: WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com >> >Subject: Re: [WGS] Kathleen Spurgeon in Hospital >> >> >Dear Kathleen, Please get better. We pray you will. Love Queenie Joyce >> > ----- Original Message ----- >> > From: The Thill Group Inc<mailto:ttg-inc@comcast.net> >> > To: >WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com<mailto:WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@root >sweb.com> >> > Sent: Tuesday, April 26, 2005 12:04 AM >> > Subject: [WGS] Kathleen Spurgeon in Hospital >> > >> > >> > Dear Cuz's, >> > Cuz Kathleen Spurgeon is in St. Luke's Hospital. She called tonight >and >> > said she should be home shortly. Please keep her in your prayers. Many >have >> > met her and her husband Orville at the last two reunions. >> > >> > Hugs Cuz B >> > ttg-inc@comcast.net<mailto:ttg-inc@comcast.net> >> > >http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/<http://freepages.genealogy.r >ootsweb.com/~ttg13/> >> > >> > >> > ============================== >> > Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records. >> > New content added every business day. Learn more: >> > >http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx<http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ash >x> >> > >> > >> > >> >============================== >> >Search Family and Local Histories for stories about your family and the >> >areas they lived. Over 85 million names added in the last 12 months. >> >Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13966/rd.ashx >> >> >> ============================== >> Jumpstart your genealogy with OneWorldTree. Search not only for >> ancestors, but entire generations. Learn more: >> http://www.ancestry.com/s13972/rd.ashx >> > > >============================== >Jumpstart your genealogy with OneWorldTree. Search not only for >ancestors, but entire generations. Learn more: >http://www.ancestry.com/s13972/rd.ashx
Dear Cuz Kathleen, Glad to hear your back on the path of feeling better! Take it easy and get better soon. Hugs Cuz B ----- Original Message ----- From: <kathspur166@verizon.net> To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, May 04, 2005 10:48 PM Subject: Re: Re: [WGS] Kathleen Spurgeon in Hospital > Thanks for all of your prayers. I became so exhausted I ended up in the hospital April 23rd to the 27th...no more Mono and all of my tests were negative for anything serious. I was on vacation, slept when I wanted and did lots of that and where else can you sleep and have 4 meals in bed, yes 4 meals....had a bedtime snack. Do have sleep apnea so now wear a mask instead of the nasal pillows..still look like an alein. Just wish I would get my energy back quicker. still tire easily...guess just trying to do too much. > been catching up on all the e-mail back and forth. Need to get to bed..God Bless all. > Glad your mom is doing better,Becky. > Love, > Cuz Kathleen > > > >From: Joyce Quigley <JOYCEWWYNNE@msn.com> > > > >Date: Tue Apr 26 19:57:27 CDT 2005 > >To: WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com > >Subject: Re: [WGS] Kathleen Spurgeon in Hospital > > >Dear Kathleen, Please get better. We pray you will. Love Queenie Joyce > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: The Thill Group Inc<mailto:ttg-inc@comcast.net> > > To: WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com<mailto:WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@root sweb.com> > > Sent: Tuesday, April 26, 2005 12:04 AM > > Subject: [WGS] Kathleen Spurgeon in Hospital > > > > > > Dear Cuz's, > > Cuz Kathleen Spurgeon is in St. Luke's Hospital. She called tonight and > > said she should be home shortly. Please keep her in your prayers. Many have > > met her and her husband Orville at the last two reunions. > > > > Hugs Cuz B > > ttg-inc@comcast.net<mailto:ttg-inc@comcast.net> > > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/<http://freepages.genealogy.r ootsweb.com/~ttg13/> > > > > > > ============================== > > Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records. > > New content added every business day. Learn more: > > http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx<http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ash x> > > > > > > > >============================== > >Search Family and Local Histories for stories about your family and the > >areas they lived. Over 85 million names added in the last 12 months. > >Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13966/rd.ashx > > > ============================== > Jumpstart your genealogy with OneWorldTree. Search not only for > ancestors, but entire generations. Learn more: > http://www.ancestry.com/s13972/rd.ashx >
Thanks for all of your prayers. I became so exhausted I ended up in the hospital April 23rd to the 27th...no more Mono and all of my tests were negative for anything serious. I was on vacation, slept when I wanted and did lots of that and where else can you sleep and have 4 meals in bed, yes 4 meals....had a bedtime snack. Do have sleep apnea so now wear a mask instead of the nasal pillows..still look like an alein. Just wish I would get my energy back quicker. still tire easily...guess just trying to do too much. been catching up on all the e-mail back and forth. Need to get to bed..God Bless all. Glad your mom is doing better,Becky. Love, Cuz Kathleen >From: Joyce Quigley <JOYCEWWYNNE@msn.com> >Date: Tue Apr 26 19:57:27 CDT 2005 >To: WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com >Subject: Re: [WGS] Kathleen Spurgeon in Hospital >Dear Kathleen, Please get better. We pray you will. Love Queenie Joyce > ----- Original Message ----- > From: The Thill Group Inc<mailto:ttg-inc@comcast.net> > To: WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com<mailto:WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Tuesday, April 26, 2005 12:04 AM > Subject: [WGS] Kathleen Spurgeon in Hospital > > > Dear Cuz's, > Cuz Kathleen Spurgeon is in St. Luke's Hospital. She called tonight and > said she should be home shortly. Please keep her in your prayers. Many have > met her and her husband Orville at the last two reunions. > > Hugs Cuz B > ttg-inc@comcast.net<mailto:ttg-inc@comcast.net> > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/<http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/> > > > ============================== > Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records. > New content added every business day. Learn more: > http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx<http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx> > > > >============================== >Search Family and Local Histories for stories about your family and the >areas they lived. Over 85 million names added in the last 12 months. >Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13966/rd.ashx
Will do. Hugs, Cuz Ida -----Original Message----- From: ttg1313 [mailto:ttg-inc@comcast.net] Sent: Monday, May 02, 2005 12:01 PM To: WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [WGS] "Meeting House and Counting House", Frederick B. Tolles Okie Dokie, send check as before Hugs Cuz B ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ida Lee B. Cann" <ilcann@infionline.net> To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, May 02, 2005 11:01 AM Subject: RE: [WGS] "Meeting House and Counting House", Frederick B. Tolles > Becky: > > I'll buy it from you. > > Hugs, > Cuz Ida > > -----Original Message----- > From: The Thill Group Inc [mailto:ttg-inc@comcast.net] > Sent: Monday, May 02, 2005 11:48 AM > To: WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com > Subject: [WGS] "Meeting House and Counting House", Frederick B. Tolles > > > Book for Sale, found I have two! > > "Meeting House and Counting House, The Quaker Merchants of Colonial > Philadelphia, 1682-1763", By Frederick B. Tolles, The Norton Library, NY, > 1963 > > Book & shipping: $15.00 > > If your interested let me know > Hugs Cuz B > ttg-inc@comcast.net > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/ > > > ============================== > Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records. > New content added every business day. Learn more: > http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx > > > ============================== > Search Family and Local Histories for stories about your family and the > areas they lived. Over 85 million names added in the last 12 months. > Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13966/rd.ashx > > ============================== Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx
Becky: I'll buy it from you. Hugs, Cuz Ida -----Original Message----- From: The Thill Group Inc [mailto:ttg-inc@comcast.net] Sent: Monday, May 02, 2005 11:48 AM To: WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [WGS] "Meeting House and Counting House", Frederick B. Tolles Book for Sale, found I have two! "Meeting House and Counting House, The Quaker Merchants of Colonial Philadelphia, 1682-1763", By Frederick B. Tolles, The Norton Library, NY, 1963 Book & shipping: $15.00 If your interested let me know Hugs Cuz B ttg-inc@comcast.net http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/ ============================== Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records. New content added every business day. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx
Okie Dokie, send check as before Hugs Cuz B ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ida Lee B. Cann" <ilcann@infionline.net> To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, May 02, 2005 11:01 AM Subject: RE: [WGS] "Meeting House and Counting House", Frederick B. Tolles > Becky: > > I'll buy it from you. > > Hugs, > Cuz Ida > > -----Original Message----- > From: The Thill Group Inc [mailto:ttg-inc@comcast.net] > Sent: Monday, May 02, 2005 11:48 AM > To: WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com > Subject: [WGS] "Meeting House and Counting House", Frederick B. Tolles > > > Book for Sale, found I have two! > > "Meeting House and Counting House, The Quaker Merchants of Colonial > Philadelphia, 1682-1763", By Frederick B. Tolles, The Norton Library, NY, > 1963 > > Book & shipping: $15.00 > > If your interested let me know > Hugs Cuz B > ttg-inc@comcast.net > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/ > > > ============================== > Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records. > New content added every business day. Learn more: > http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx > > > ============================== > Search Family and Local Histories for stories about your family and the > areas they lived. Over 85 million names added in the last 12 months. > Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13966/rd.ashx > >
Book for Sale, found I have two! "Meeting House and Counting House, The Quaker Merchants of Colonial Philadelphia, 1682-1763", By Frederick B. Tolles, The Norton Library, NY, 1963 Book & shipping: $15.00 If your interested let me know Hugs Cuz B ttg-inc@comcast.net http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/
Dear Cuz's, The following CD's were mailed today Joan Bretz Dee Thompson Brian Winn Joseph Dickerson Jean Harper Marty Winn Charlene Brosam Kathy Brown Ed Winn Jr. Becky Lang David Scott Jonathan Brown Mary Anderson Does that cover everyone? If not contact me privately ttg-inc@comcast.net Hugs Cuz B ttg-inc@comcast.net http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/
For the moment that is the only copy I have. I believe at one time, I had two made off of a negative; I had borrowed the 'original' negative and had to return it. So..please return all the items, and if I can find da utter un..I`ll resend it to you for keeps. A zillion thanks for all your work-yuse are da tops! Joe D from MD ----- Original Message ----- From: "The Thill Group Inc" <ttg-inc@comcast.net> To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, April 30, 2005 2:02 PM Subject: Re: [WGS] Dual "stuff" > Dear Cuz Joe Beaches, > Inside the envelope was a copy of your typed article with a picture of > Charles Dickinson, it was in an envelope addressed to me... Are those my > copies or do I return those to you. The rest were in the stack under your > preaddressed envelope. I don't want to be presumptuous and not return the > article and the picture with out asking. > Hugs Cuz B > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "The Thill Group Inc" <ttg-inc@comcast.net> > To: <WYNNE-GENEALOGY-SOCIETY-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Saturday, April 30, 2005 12:43 PM > Subject: [WGS] Dual "stuff" > > >> Dear Cuz Joe Beaches, >> So you know I didn't forget, I just finished scanning the pages > pertaining >> to the Wynn's in the Welcome Claimants - George McCracken.... So now I am >> scanning your duel stuff!!! Will be mailing your stuff back very soon and >> will be able to put your stuff on the website for every one... thank you >> again for sharing !!!! >> Love Cuz B >> ttg-inc@comcast.net >> http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~ttg13/ >> >> >> ============================== >> Census images 1901, 1891, 1881 and 1871, plus so much more. >> Ancestry.com's United Kingdom & Ireland Collection. Learn more: > http://www.ancestry.com/s13968/rd.ashx >> > > > ============================== > Census images 1901, 1891, 1881 and 1871, plus so much more. > Ancestry.com's United Kingdom & Ireland Collection. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13968/rd.ashx > --------------------------------------------------------------------------------