Michael Humphrey at West Simsbury, Hartford Co., CT; married Annie Cordelia Brockett i. Laura 8 ; bornat Payson, IL; married Mark Christian s hope, rise up and Call her blessed http://jhholcombe.home.att.net/humphrey/mhumo007.htm
Extractions: Generation Seven Keturah Case ( Joseph Asahel Hannah Humphrey ... Michael ) was born on 24 Jun 1785 at Norfolk, Litchfield Co., CT. She married Solomon Cowles, son of Ebenezer Cowles and Mercy Barber, in Apr 1801. She died on 4 Oct 1868 at Norfolk, Litchfield Co., CT, at age 83. Children of Keturah Case and Solomon Cowles were as follows: Sarah Case ( Jedediah Jedediah Hannah Humphrey ... Michael ) was born on 20 Mar 1783 at Simsbury, Hartford Co., CT. She married Friend Case, son of Capt. Job Case and Joanna Wilcox, either 6 Jan 1802 or 1803 at Simsbury, Hartford Co., CT. She died on 10 May 1839 at
NCL-E, V52 N2, Zboray book is filled with what I Call John Bullery Annie Bigelow Lawrence, 25 April 1845,Annie B. (Lawrence 3, Poor Family Papers, SL; Sara Payson (Willis) Parton http://www.ucpress.edu/scan/ncl-e/522/articles/zboray.art522.html
Extractions: E-mail: journals@ucop.edu To some degree, literary criticism's challenge that history is as liable as other disciplines to produce a fictive image of the past has discouraged inquiries into documents beyond literary texts. Reviewing the body of reader-response criticism and even the so-called new historicism, James L. Machor notes this "lack of sustained inquiry into the experience of reading as a historically grounded dynamic." Still, a few researchers, such as Nina Baym, Barbara Sicherman, and James Smith Allen, have tried to identify readers through historical documents and manuscript sources.
Extractions: David J. Buerger (with the assistance of Art de Hoyos) The following titles are listed chronologically, the author appearing first, then title, then publisher. Reprints and/or revisions by same author are listed after the first title. Pertinent commentaries on the first title are listed under same number; some of these comments are taken from Chad Flake, comp., A Mormon Bibliography (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1978). Reprints of first title by other authors are listed under separate, chronologically sequenced numbers, with bibliographic reference to original source. Bracketed trailer numbers refer to Flake's identifying number in A Mormon Bibliography . Most titles contain only a partial depiction of the endowment ceremony. Photocopies of most titles are in the David J. Buerger Papers, Ms. 622, Manuscripts Division, Special Collections, Marriott Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah. Bennett, John C.
Gedlist Compiled From AHSGR Gedcom Files January 2000 Push The D Call, Nelson Call, Pat Bonita Call, Vernon * 19 Joseph Irvin * 10 Sep 1890 * Payson+ 18 Feb Harold Chavez, Margaret Cheatwood, Alice Annie Cheatwood, Beman http://www.ahsgr.org/gedlist/gedlist-c.txt
Descendants Of Theophilus Simonton Declining a Call in 1848 from Bethel and Ebenezer, Ga., he John Payson Brice 7 wasborn on 22 Sep 1889 and Annie Galloway 7 , died on 20 Jun 1935 in Washington http://www.mindspring.com/~dbn/simonton/d1.htm
Extractions: "Origin of the name [Simonton] goes back to the 12 century when a man whose given name was Symon became known as Symon of Symington (Symon Town). In 1153, he founded his parish church. He held lands in Ayreshire, and gave his name to Symontown in Kyle. Symontown families were numerous and fairly prominent in the city of Edinburgh. Some by this name emigrated to Ireland about 1690. There may still be many families of Simontons living both in Ireland (Ulster) and Scotland. The first advent of the Simonton name in America is found in the early settlements of New England, in and about Falmouth, Maine. By the middle of the 18th century, the Simonton name appears in many of the colonies, from Maine to the Carolinas."
Bed & Breakfast Amelia Payson House an elegantly restored B B located Annie s Jughandle BeachBed Breakfast Inn - classic a warm, hospitable port-of-Call along Maine s http://www.cannylink.com/hotelbedbreakfast.htm
Extractions: - elegant accomodations in a 20 room mansion with gardens, just fifteen minutes from the airport. 1740 House - historic bed and breakfast inn located in Lumberville, Buck County, PA on the Delaware River near New Hope and other interesting destinations. 1763 Inn - combines old-world charm with modern convenience. - 200-year-old West Indies colonial plantation style inn located in the heart of the Georgetown National Register Historic District. 1801 Inn - historically restored farmhouse located 30 minutes west of Augusta, Georgia. 1906 Pathway Inn - bed and breakfast offering a romantic candlelight breakfast, whirlpools, and more. 5th Generation Farm - located in scenic Brown County. 7th Heaven Log Inn - 1863 red brick townhouse. A Bed Of Roses - nature-lovers delight. A popular North Conway Bed and breakfast, walking distance to tax-free shopping, attractions, theater, and outdoor recreation. Aalaska Treetop Bed and Breakfast - offers guided fishing trips.
New Page 2 In 16 Jan 1881, Martha married Edward Payson Lea in Lott 1875 to 1877, when he accepteda Call to TX viz Mrs. Harriett Anne Storey 37 , Miss Annie Wood, Miss http://home.earthlink.net/~rodbush/Hebron_Presb.htm
Extractions: SESSIONAL RECORDS OF HEBRON PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH MANTUA, GREENE COUNTY, ALABAMA Records from: Presbyterian USA Historical Society Montreat, North Carolina Session Minutes 1867-1905 Hebron Presbyterian Church Mantua, Greene County, Alabama Transcribed by Jim Taylor Houston, Texas ladasca@aol.com Published November, 2002 Foreword In its lifetime, estimated from about 1828 to 1905, Hebron Presbyterian Church was a busy worship and community center for Mantua. Greene County, AL, but both the Church and the adjoining cemetery have met a sad and unfortunate fate. The Church dissolved and the building has disappeared. The road to its old location is now an eroded red clay path. The cemetery has suffered from neglect, but much more from deliberate destruction. Today, only a fraction of the graves remain marked; what pieces remain of the other markers is hidden in long grass. My father, Cecil Adrian Taylor [b 17 Jan 1916/d 15 Sep 1989 and the son of Walter Eugene Taylor, Sr. and Vicie Elizabeth Wilson] grew up in the Mantua area. Before he died, we visited the site where the church used to be. I already knew that some of my ancestors were members of Hebron and are buried in the cemetery; I am now sure that many more are buried there. I was cautioned by both Mr. Bill Bynum, the Assistant Director for Reference/Technical Services at the Presbyterian USA Historical Society in Montreat, NC, and Ms. Joyce Parris, who did the copying, that the minutes were incomplete. That is obvious, since the church began about 1828, and the first minutes are from 1867. Still, a lot of names are contained within these records that helped me and may assist others in locating their ancestors during this time frame. I believe it is important that records such as these not be allowed to languish in repositories or be lost to history and those of us who use them.
Extractions: Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History Later National Literature, Part II The Later Novel: Howells ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Archives Of The Gray Herbarium Subject, Call Number, Type, Size, Date, Photographer, Notes, See Also. x 12 cm, 1916,Paterson (?), Miss Annie Lorenz. Payson, Edwin Blake (18931927), 0303, photoprint,9 x http://www.huh.harvard.edu/libraries/archives/p.htm
History Of John Edward Metcalf, Jr. was counselor.) From Gunnison she went to Payson and then to own sheep, though afterhis Call to work the most fully documented accounts is by Annie Clark, a http://www.metcalfwaslin.org/album/history/johnejr.htm
Extractions: great-great grandson Larry S. Smith I have relied heavily on a history written by John E. Metcalf Jr.'s daughter Blanche Metcalf Minster, a history of Mary Waslin by her great granddaughter-in-law Camille Nielson, a history of Mary Keziah Bartholomew by her niece Ella Grace Bown, remembrances written by John E. Jr.'s granddaughters Georgia Stringham Smith, Mildred Stringham Phillips, and Joy Stringham Blanchard, recollections of daughter Louisa Metcalf Denison Domgaard, daughter-in-law Marie Goodliffe Metcalf and grandchildren Evelyn Minster Bridges and W. Frank Minster. The material regarding polygamy was supplied by Larry Smith. There are even some facts I researched myself. Priesthood ordinations:
Holdaway Family Stories In 1887 the Call came again and David with his two sons, Thomas John William Outhousedied 8 Oct 1834 at Payson, Utah, and his Wife Annie Martha Mitchill http://users.sisna.com/wsimister/holdoth.htm
Extractions: The Holdaway Stories John Shadrack Holdaway, son of John Madison and Jane Gillespie Holdaway Mary Elizabeth Holdaway Conrad, daughter of Shedrick and Lucinda Haws Holdaway Amos David Holdaway, son of Shedrick and Lucinda Haws Holdaway George Timothy Holdaway, son of Elizabeth Haws Holdaway ... RESEARCH on the Holdaway and Trent Lines - where it was done John Shadrack Holdaway A history written by his daughter, Mrs. Edna Holdaway Newman, now deceased. John Shadrack Holdaway was born March 23, 1874 at Mammoth, Utah, where his father worked in the mines. He was the son of John Madison and Jane Gillespie Holdaway. His grandfather Shedrick was one of the early pioneers and builders of Utah valley. He built the road up the South Fork of Provo Canyon where he had a sammill; he brought the first carding machinery into Provo; he, with the help of his brother David, built the first threshing machine in Utah and he laid out a canal across Provo Bench without the aid of any instruments and he also took up a large tract of land on the east shore of Utah Lake and farmed it. He married Lucinda Haws in Salt Lake City 24 Dec. 1848 and she, too. did her part to pioneer this valley. She studied herb doctoring in Illinois before coming to Utah, so was called upon to doctor the sick, act as mid-wife and wrote many poems as a tribute to friends and loved ones, and especially to those bereaved. John's grandmother, Jane Gillespie, came from Sootland with her father and six brothers, her mother having passed away. She was a very lonely and sad little girl as her father and brothers went to work in the mines each day. She said she cried much of the time because she missed her mother so very much. One day she climbed up the side of the mountain, sat on a rock, and looking over the bleak land, prayed that she might go back to Soctland. She testified that she saw her mother and her mother told her to stop grieving, and she said a great peace came over her. John Madison Holdaway and Jane Gillespie were married Dec. 5, 1870. John Madison was a staunch and diligent member of the Church and filled a mission for the Church after his family was raised. He was particularly interested in genealogy of the family. He was watermaster in Provo for a number of years.
Salem County Historical Society - Guestbook Call Me 1888-896-5371 voice mail, leave Jean (Lewis) White MarWhite66@Hotmail.com Payson, Il USA Eventually, Andrew married Annie Smalley and they moved to http://www.salemcounty.com/guestbook/schs_p2.html
Extractions: Thank you for visiting the Salem County Historical Society's website! Note: All genealogical queries directed to the SCHS must be postal mailed to the Society for a response. SALEMCOUNTY .COM 's Message Board ! Our message board gives visitors a chance to post all sorts of information. If you're looking for lost family members, old friends, old classmates, genealogical information, Computer T ech S upport, games, etc. stop by and take a look. You just might find someone's trying to get in touch with you! View Entries Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 ... SC.COM's Forum I'm interested on getting data on Hannah Rodney (1678-) who married William Thompson (1669-1733) on 30 May 1699, Salem Co., New Jersey. It is possible that Hannah Rodney's ancestry could be of the Quaker faith, as the Thompson family were Quakers. However I don't have any evidence of this?
Physicians' File 1919 Caldwell, Peter Derek Call, Aleza Callan, John 2000 Fu, Denis Jackson 1934-Fuavai, Annie Fuchs, Ernst Donald 1905-1976 Gramlich, Edwin Payson 1932- Grant http://hml.org/mmhc/physfile/phyindex.html
Extractions: MMHC Home Hours About Us Contact Us ... HML Home The originated out of the "In Memoriam" project. Spearheaded by a committee from the Women's Auxiliary to the Honolulu County Medical Society, the project began as an effort to develop a historical scrapbook. With the help of Auxiliaries on the other islands, the Honolulu County Auxiliary produced biographical sketches of doctors who practiced in Hawaii ("In Memoriam-Doctors of Hawaii." Hawaii Medical Journal, 1956 March-April ; 15(4) : 353-6). In doing its research, the Auxiliary committee collected newspaper clippings, biographical index cards from the Hawaii Medical Association and the county medical societies, photographs, and photographic negatives. Thus, the contains all of the materials collected from this ongoing project. The was originally organized and called the "Photograph Collection." Since this collection consists mainly of material on physicians who practiced in Hawaii, and contains more than photographs, the Mamiya Medical Heritage Center (MMHC) renamed the collection the "Physicians' File."
SCOTLAND And for bonnie Annie Laurie. Marjorie A. Templeton, Foundation member of Payson, Arizonabecame became intoxicated with tales of exotic ports of Call of the http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~gowenrf/Gowenms054.htm
Extractions: OAS_AD('Top'); Glimpses of Old World Scotland By Col. Cliff H. MacLean-Hansen, Retired Of the 25 staff officers of a Highland Chief, these two were the most important: Am Seanachaidh [the Sennachie or Genealogist of the Chief's House] he was solely responsible for the clan register, records, genealogies and family history. The other, Am Marischal Tighe [the Seneschal composed of two men] were both well versed in the genealogies and precedents of all the clans. Within the croft families of the Western Isles, the children became the family Sennachie. They mentally stored the family genealogy. The Sabbath, greatly revered, permitted few household chores. Children were not on the Sabbath permitted to play outdoors. To eleviate boredom, the children, standing abreast before the hearth, would in unison recite their family tree. This was an oral presentation; no written notes. Everyone knew Ihe family kinship. However, with the gradual passing of the olden ways and immigration to distant lands, all this oral family history was lost. Judicial and county records reveal Rent Rolls and also inventories of household plenishing afford a glimpse of those who tilled the soil.
RSL: New M Surnames, October 2003 Update 2003 Maag 1801 1926 Hongg,Zurich, Switzerland Payson, Utah, Utah New South Wales JohnMcGregor married Annie Stobbie McGregir You can Call it up via the web at http://www.usenet.com/newsgroups/soc.genealogy.surnames.global/msg00035.html
Extractions: www.Usenet.com Group Index Chronological Thread - To learn more about the RSL, including how to access the full RSL which has over a million surnames (these postings are only the NEW or CHANGED names). how to submit surnames, etc., send any message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] or go to the URL http://rsl.rootsweb.com/ - Write directly to the submitter if you would like to exchange information. Match the nametag at the end of each surname to the submitters' addresses immediately following the list of surnames. Entries are formatted as follows: Surname Date1 Date2 Migration Comments & nametag Date1 is the earliest date for which the submitter has information. Date2 is the most recent date. The migration shows where people of this line lived during the period listed. Abbreviations used are in a file named family.abbrev that can be be obtained by sending the command "get family.abbrev" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] in a message with the subject line "archive". Or see the URL: http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/codes/
WebGED: Noyes Family Data Page 1835 1897) - m. 3 JUL 1860 -child Fairbanks, Annie Estelle (1864 Surry,North Carolina d. 19 JUN 1905 in Payson, Utah, Utah Herts commonly Call. http://noyes.rootsweb.com/wga30.html
McCornack's Genealogy-28 - Andrew McCornack - Marie Eakin * Children of Edwin McCornack and Annie Poindexter * *. i. Walter WallaceMcCornack. We Call him Cap. AGNES MARGARET McCORNACK EDWARD Payson GEARY. http://members.aol.com/jctonight/andrew.html
Extractions: ANDREW McCORNACK MARIE EAKIN Genealogy edited by John C. McCornack Yukon, Oklahoma PARENTS AND GRANDPARENTS OF ANDREW McCORNACK Andrew McCornack (One of the subjects of this genealogy) was born on the 15 Aug 1817 in the Galloway area of Scotland on a farm named Annabaglish southwest of Kirkcowan. He immigrated to America in 1838 at the age of 21. Andrew was the fifth child and the youngest son of Andrew McCornack and Helen McGeough. Andrew McCornack's father Andrew McCornack was born on the 14 Jun 1778 at Annabaglish in Scotland. The farm on which he was born is still in operation and many McCornack descendants have had the honor to return to visit his birthplace. A grandson, Daniel P. McCornack, visited Annabaglish in 1914, and reported that the tenants of the farm after Andrew McCornack were David Liddesdale, John Anderson, Sr., and John Anderson, Jr. who still lived on the farm. He also reported the farm which consisted of 2000 acres was formally owned by Lord Stair and now (1914) by a Sir Mark McTaggart Stewart. In 1985, the tenants of the farm are Robert and Mary McCracken and the owner is J. H. Brewer of Ardwell Estates. Andrew McCornack was a remarkable man living to an age of 98 years. He was a direct descendant of the old Covenanters who earlier had signed what was known as the "League and Covenant" which pledged the signers to the complete separation of the Church and State. They protested against any supervision of conscience as to how they should or should not worship the Creator. They were against any attempt of taxation to support the Church.
Unusual Guide To Texas, Wisconsin - Tour, Explore The Southwest NASHVILLE, TENN Jesse James and his wife Annie, rented a attorneys asked the juryto just Call it a Payson, UTAH - The King Sisters, singers, were born here http://members.aol.com/KSchessler/wizzi.html
Extractions: TENNESSEE ANTIOCH, TENN - Billy Ray Collins Jr. was a promising junior-middleweight boxer in June of 1983 when he entered the ring at Madison Square Garden to face Luis Resto. Collins, 21, was 14-0, Resto had a journeyman's record of 20-7-2. If Collins could beat Resto, he had a possible shot at the title, and hopes of escaping a life of poverty here in Antioch. During the fight, Collins complained to his father, Billy Sr., that it felt as if Resto had "rocks in his gloves." When the fight ended after ten rounds, Collins face was an ugly purple mass, he had a torn iris in his right eye, and his vision was forever impaired. His life would never be the same. Nine months later, his dreams of boxing glory shattered, his blurry eyesight leaving him unable to hold even a menial job, Collins, drunk and depressed, drove his car into Collins Creek here and died. Later, it was discovered that Resto's trainer, "Panama" Lewis had removed the padding from Resto's gloves. Many of Collins' friends said it was suicide, others said he was murdered by Lewis and Resto. Lewis and Resto were convicted of assault with a deadly weapon and sentenced to several years in prison.
Utah Genealogy Forum (All Messages) 02/03 Galvin Edgar Green, d Payson, 1956, looking Call for records from Norman (Grafton,OH) B.Franklin Herbert Penton/Elsie Louisa Annie Abel John Goater 7 http://genforum.genealogy.com/ut/all.html
Extractions: Sarah Houston Pratt Dick and Angie Grigg What Happened to Alexander Gardner? Dick and Angie Grigg Stewart Family line - Wellsville connection Adrienne Hahn Genealogy researching the KELTZ-KELTS-KELZ-KELS family James AnthonyTonyKeltz,Sr. Freeman Brown SLC c 1910-1925 Robert Benton Joseph Livsey 1874 SLC Terry Edward Kendrick Violet Uinta Wheeler Utah born 1893 John Gilson Re: Violet Uinta Wheeler Utah born 1893 pat pauls Re: Violet Uinta Wheeler Utah born 1893 John Gilson Re: Violet Uinta Wheeler Utah born 1893 pat pauls Re: Violet Uinta Wheeler Utah born 1893 John Gilson Re: Violet Uinta Wheeler Utah born 1893 pat pauls