Welcome to the list Gaye -- do you have Milton T.'s death date and location and when and who he married. I had Katharine Sarah spelled with a C - Catherine -- will change to K if you say so since this is your line. Wilma ----- Original Message ----- From: Gaye Lynn Stanga <gstanga@telocity.com> To: <YOUNGER-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, July 30, 2001 8:01 PM Subject: [YOUNGER] Re:Milton T. Younger b 1802 KY > Have been enjoying all the back and forth on this list. Decided to > state my relationship to Youngers. I am descended through Katharine > Sarah Younger, daughter of Milton T. Younger, son of Charles Younger and > first wife Nancy Toney. Katharine Sarah Younger, b 1 Dec 1825, MO, > married Robert Milton Wallace on 24 Oct 1843 in MO. They had 9 > children, including my gggrandmother, Hannah Arent Wallace b 26 Jan > 1850. Hannah married Amos Barton Cheatham on 19 Aug 1870 in Denton Co., > TX. Hannah & Amos had 10 children, including my g-grandfather, Silas > Terry Cheatham. > > Are there any more of Milton Younger's descendants out there? Katharine > Sarah Younger Wallace died 22 Dec 1891 in Gordon, Palo Pinto County, > Texas. > > Gaye Lynn Stanga > gstanga@telocity.com > > > ==== YOUNGER Mailing List ==== > If anyone knows what would make a good line for this area. Don't hesitate to e-mail > > ============================== > Visit Ancestry's Library - The best collection of family history > learning and how-to articles on the Internet. > http://www.ancestry.com/learn/library > >
I do not have Milton Younger's death date and location or when and who he married. I do not know what his middle initial "T" stands for. I have seen his mother's name as Nancy Toney and Toomey, also, but do not know which is correct. Katharine Younger is spelled with a "C" in Charles Younger's will. But I have a copy of a letter she wrote to her children in 1883 in which she signs her name "Katharine S. Wallace." Her tombstone at Blue Flat Cemetery in Texas has "K. S. Wallace." I assumed her middle name was Sarah because she is listed as "Sarah" in the 1870 Denton Co., TX federal census. I probably shouldn't have made that assumption. Will double check to see what other proof I may have. In her letter of 1883, she talks about "your Uncle Wash." Who are the best candidates for this Uncle Wash? So many questions, so few answers. Gaye Lynn Stanga gstanga@telocity.com