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Matches 101 to 150 of 177
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| 101 |
There was no obituary published. According to her death certificate, she was a housewife. | HARRIS Vera
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| 102 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | HARRIS Virginia Ruth
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| 103 |
Ashley County Ledger Sep. 30, 1976 According to his obituary, he was a retired farmer and WWI veteran.
He was survived by wife, Etta Caldwell. Children: William Edward of Groves, Texas; Virginia Burchfield of Crossett, Arkansas; Mays McMurry of Santa Cruz, California; and Shirley Maxwell of Jacksonville , Florida. Sisters: Vera Thresher, Claire Warner, and Ruth Allen all of Port Arthur, Texas; 8 grand children and 6 great grandchildren.
Pallbearers: John Allen Giles, Tommy Durham, John W. Spivey, Van Carpenter, Jimmy Linder, and Ed Person.
According to Who is Who in Arkansas Vol 1 under Etta Caldwell Harris, page 125: he was direct descendant of Merriweather Lewis of Lewis and Clark expedition; and Captain Fielding Lewis and Betty Washington Lewis, sister of George Washington. Collateral relative of Josephus Daniel, South Carolina statesman. Children: William Edward Jr. of Port Arthur, Texas; Mrs. Jack Burchfield of Crossett, Arkansas; Mrs. William Charles McMurry of San Jose, California; and Mrs. Travis D. Maxwell, wife of Major Maxwell, U. S. Marine AF.
According to Who is Who in Arkansas Vol 1 under Virginia Ruth Harris Burchfield, page 50: (additional information) Merriweather Lewis, leader of Lewis and Clark expedition, private secretary to U. S. President , Thomas Jefferson. Also direct descendant of Zodak Daniel, War of 1812; and of Lawrence Lewis and wife Nellie Custis Lewis, step granddaughter and adopted daughter of George Washington. | HARRIS William Edward
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| 104 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | HARRIS William Edward
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| 105 |
Hanged for killing Allifair McCoy. | HATFIELD Ellison Mounts
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| 106 |
According to SSA index, his was born in Lewistown, Jefferson, Montana. (His birthplace is listed as Detroit, Michigan on daughters birth certificate.) His address on the application is in Ferriday, Concordia, Louisiana.
Florida Today Dec. ?, 1981 According to his obituary, he was a Brevard resident for 32 years.
According to his death certificate, he was a master machinist in auto repair. He lived at 1071 North Dixie Hwy, Palm Bay, Florida 32905. Informant was Maurice Davenport, 1069 North Dixie Hwy. | HEATHERINGTON Clarence Henry
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| 107 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | HEATHERINGTON Dolly Hester
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| 108 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | HEATHERINGTON Jared Maxie
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| 109 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | HEATHERINGTON Jared Maxie
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| 110 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | HIGGINBOTHAM Diane
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| 111 |
"Dickerson Holliday appointed guardian to Allen Holliday, orphan of Thomas Holliday, Dec. 5, 1804. S. D. Fanning, office of Court of Ordinary, Wilkes Co., GA Mar 12, 1912" from Catchings and Holliday Families and Related Families, p. 75 | HOLLIDAY Dickerson
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| 112 |
Was a merchant in Washington Co., Georgia | HOLLIDAY John
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| 113 |
from "The Catchings and Holliday Families"
A quote from Hayden's Virginia Genealogy: "Holliday is from the old English Haliday. The earliest land grants to the name in Virginia were made in the 18th Century. John Holliday received 93 acres in Norfolk Co., April 28, 1711, for transporting into the colony Robert Steward and Hannah Holliday, June 16, 1714. All of the Hollidays in Virginia are descended from John Holliday, who came to Spottsylvania Co., about 1740 from lower Virginia, 150 years ago. He was a ranger employed by the government to guard the colonists from the Indians. Capt. John Holliday fell in Gate's defeat."
"The Holliday ancestry came to America from England, some think they may have gone to England from Ireland. They settled in Virginia and Maryland, removing to Georgia prior to the Revolutionary War and located in Wilkes Co., near Columbia."
"During the Revolutionary War, the ladies of the family refugeed in Virginia, returning to Georgia when peace was made," Chas. M. Sanders, Penfield, Ga., January 26, 1898.
"My grandfather, Thomas Holliday, came from Virginia and settled in Wilkes Co., Ga., with several cousins," Mrs. Billington M. Sanders, nee Cynthia Holliday, Georgia.
"An old lady in Georgia stated that her playmate, Mary Holliday (Mrs. Joseph Catchings) had an uncle, Joseph Holliday, but did not know what became of his family."
Joseph Holliday received as bounty in Burke Co., Ga., 200 acres for services in the Revolutionary War.
From the relationship of the descendants of the oldest members of the family of whom we have any knowledge, it is presumed that Thomas Holliday, who m. Martha Dickerson; Miss Holliday, who m. Mr. Johnson; John Holliday, who m. Sarah Ford; and Ayres Holliday, who m. Olivia Johnson; were brothers and sisters, and were children of Elijah Holliday and Margaret Johnson." However, this is not altogether authentic. (?- I'm not sure what this means and I do not understand why the following statement compromised the supposition) "Elijah Holliday who m. my great aunt, Margaret Johnson, was the great-grandfather of Mrs. Sarah Milsaps Wadsworth, widow of Rev. Wm. Wadsworth, a Methodist minister," Mrs. John A. Ellis, Amite City, Louisiana, Nov. 21, 1893."
"I have been told that Gen. Joseph E. Johnston was related to us, and I named one of our children after him. A Mr. Ellis paid us a visit many years ago. He was a cousin of my mother, and told about their moving from Georgia to this State together. Their mothers were twins, and were never separated. He told me how pretty my mother was, and that he brought her in his arms most of the way from Georgia, " Mary Johnson Milsaps, Brown's Well, Dec. 15, 1898." | HOLLIDAY Thomas
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| 114 |
"It was a very hot summer day and we had just finished eating our meal. My grandparents always ate their main meal at noon and called it dinner. My grandpa worked in the oil field of central Texas but he drove home for a hot meal and many glasses of ice-cold tea. After dinner we rested, napping or reading. Grandpa lay on the lineoleum floor instead of the bed because he wore his workclothes, blue overalls and long sleeve shirt and heavy boots with steel toes. Of course, the silver hard hat was taken off before he came inside.Sometimes he would take off his work boots and sometimes he'd leave them on while he relaxed on the floor in front of the back door. The only air conditioning then was the breezes from outside or the rythmic one created by oscillating fans, whirring back and forth with a clunk and a pause between each pass.
On this particular day I wasn't interested in taking a nap or in reading, but Grandmother always knew how to keep us quiet when it was time to be quiet. Searching through a dresser drawer over my head, she found a heavy square glass with a convex top and concave underside. She whispered as she showed me its purpose. I was introduced to a new perspective of my world. She allowed me to explore with the magnifying glass if I promised not to drop it and to be very quiet so Grandpa would not be disturbed.
After I looked at the most interesting things in the house--the crocheted coverlet on the setee, sheet music at the piano, Grandpa's pipe tobacco, and the weave in the cane-bottomed chair--I asked Grandmother for permission to go outside with it. A quick promise later and I was out exploring another new world.
Grandmother's pink roses and the leaves on the plum trees, the difference in the bark of the pecan and the chinaberry,the jungle of thick green St. Augustine or carpet grass, pulled me into a more mysterious world. I was lost. In a few minutes I was moving through this other world like one of its tiny inhabitants, the ant. As I followed the ant along its route I imagined how it must feel to be a permanent member of its world which I was noticing now for the first time through my microscopic eye. The boulders this ant must avoid or climb over were only gravel on the back porch step for me, but here they were a large part of the landscape for this reddish ant with a black head. It scurried along and as I hurried on my hands and knees I found that its world seemed to move a lot faster than mine. It would probably be exciting to live in such a place but I was not sure I would like it.
This last thought exploded into reality as I followed the ant over the step into the jungle and my myopic view becamed filled with the scaly face and beady black eyes of a monster. I screamed and jumped up and "within two shakes of a lamb's tail" I was inside the house. Needless to say that was the end of my exploration as well as Grandpa's nap that day, but I never would forget my first experience seeing things from a different perspective."
--Cassie Ann Keeton Griffin: recalling slower days in 1950s, Caldwell County, Texas | KEETON Charles Randolph, Jr.
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HENRY HANNA, SON OF WILLIAM HANNA AND LETITIA THOMPSON
HENRY HANNA WAS BORN, FEB. 21.1773. Maybe Ireland. He was in Williamsburg, South Carolina, where he married Elizabeth Knox. Elizabeth Knox was the daughter of Archibald Knox and Ann McKee. Ann McKee was the daughter of Joseph McKee, proven by will. Joseph listed no sons, and his daughters married names. To his grandson Samuel Knox, he left the plantation and houses and two tracts of land. Of course, he left his wife, the use of the remainder of his estate, during her natural life. To Henry Hanna, of Mississippi Territory the whole of my part of the property of my father Archabald McKee, which has been lately gained in a Court of Equity. You can see this will, in the South Carolina Magazine of Ancestral Research, Vol. 11, number 1, winter, 1974. Copied from Williamsburg County Will Book A. I found this on the Ancestry.Com. So. from one will we can go back. Archabald McKee Joseph McKee, wife Ann McKee, husband Archibald Knox Elizabeth Knox, husband Henry Hanna William H. Hanna, wife? Humphrey Perry H. Hanna, wife Mary Ann Robinson Mary Ann Hanna, husband Walter Franklin Love Nellie Hanna Love, husband Olaf S.Sydnes Elizabeth M. Sydnes, husband Abnor Frederich Geary Dorothy Nell Geary ,husband Walton Wade Keeton.
On the Hanna side , we start with William Hanna, wife Letitia Thompson Henry Hanna, wife Elizabeth Knox.
Some of this information can from the bible of Henry Hanna. Owned by Elizabeth Craig, Lubbock, Texas. in 1973. Who is she? Is she from the second marriage of our William H. Hanna to his cousin Ann Hanna? I have bible records of Henry and Elizabeth HannaÆs daughter, that Cass found on the internet. Some information came from a group in South Carolina, who are working on the HannaÆs ,trying to find them in Ireland. There is a Witherspoon book that take the Witherspoon back, but I have not been able to find it again! Form what I have found, the HannaÆs our HannaÆs ,came straight from Ireland to South Carolina, also the Witherspoon, to South Carolina , around 1777. Hope you enjoyed this, or wanted to hear about this. I can go back on most of our Love line to the 1700Æs. So If you want me to put them in, just say so. I try only to put in what seams to be right. Dot | KNOX Elizabeth
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| 116 |
Service: He was under Capt. John McClure and then under Capt. Hugh Knox. The family came from S.C. to Mississippi in 1798 | KNOX Robert
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| 117 |
~460-10-1108 | LAWSON Cratus Stoklie
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| 118 |
James died young without issue. | LOVE James
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| 119 |
Re: Letter from R. Fisher to Nellie Hanna Love dated 2/14/1958
"I found in the State's Library a history of Pike County, Miss. the Love family is featured and were in the county in 1815, when county was erected. I believe that they arrived in the Territory prior to 1810, this family has always been prominent. There are Loves at Leland, Mississippi and about 8 miles to Winterville. Rocky Springs above mentioned now a ghost town was in the days of our ancestors a thriving inland town, to-day only the Methodist Church stands. Here your grandmother and her mother attended church, of course the Fisher family, James W. Davis once operated a store here, and owned a plantation nearby. I live today 6 miles from Rocky Springs."
Note: "grandmother and her mother" refer to Mary Ann Robinson and Leah Davis. | LOVE Robert
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| 120 |
Walked about 65 miles in a day and a half to visit his betrothed Margaret McDowell in Spartanburg Co. He died suddenly. His youngest brother William later married Margaret. | LOVE Robert
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| 121 |
Her brothers served in the Revolutionary War; she was killed in war by soldiers in her brothers' troops who mistook her for a man as she ran out of the house toward her brothers to persuade them to spare her husband who was a Loyalist. | LOVE Sarah
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| 122 |
Tombstone inscription in Love Cemetery, Walthall, Mississippi showed William Love to be 84 yr 10 mo 27 days when he died. He and his wife are buried on N.W. Bank of Love Creek, Walthall Co., Mississippi. | LOVE William
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| 123 |
Violet Luckey moved to Lawrence County, Alabama in 1824 where she resided until shortly before her death, November 5, 1846. She died in Marion County, Alabama. Names and dates of family were located in the National Genealogical Society Quarterly, VOL XXIII, No. 1, March 1935.
1802 Violet & Amos left will in Oglethorp Co., Ga | LUCKIE Violet
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| 124 |
John Manning---On my Gary side John was the Emigrent to Va. in 1635 on the Globe. He was from England His wife was Lydia. I am sure they had more than one child, but I only have Thomas. Thomas had a son Nicholas,who married Elizabeth Joyce,daughter of Martin Joyce and his wife Judith .Their son John was born in Va.. This John ,of Norfork Co. Va. came to Bertie Co. North Carolina, in 1737.John married Mary Rouse(Rowse),and they had; Benjamin married Farabee(Pheraby Duggan, Dinah married John Hyman, George. There are several books on the Manning, this came from Manning and Allied Familes, Historical Collections of Georgia. Our family comes down throu Benjamin Manning. He married Farabee(Pheraby)Duggan, the daughter of William Duggan and Mary Smithwick.They lived in Bertie Co. N.C. and had ten children. Benjamin died after Nov.30,1784. Their Children are: Hillery married Sarah Lewis (these are ours);Priscilla married John Bentley;Mary married John Aires;John married Sarah Lawrence;Benjamin married Charity Gray;Elizabeth married William Mayo;Chloe married Samuel Garrett;Nacy married Hopewell,Jr;Elijah married Sophia Watkins?. Hillery Manning married Sarah Lewis in May 1779,who was born in 1755,Chowan Co.,N.C. Sarah died in 1800. Only one child has been found and that is Elijah Lewis. After Sarah died Hillerey married Mrs Judith ?Mayo. no children. Hillary died in 1809 in Edgecombe Co.N.C.,with Elijah his only heir. A lot of this is doucemented, from serveral different sources. I will do a different one for Elijah, who married Lydia Little. It was their oldeset daught ,Sarah Little Manning,who married Isacca H. Gary.
Rebecca,my granddaughter, found on the internet ,where some one traced,one of the lines back to Jamestown,Va.,but with no source for their information. But it there for everyone to find. | MANNING Elijah Lewis
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| 125 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | MAXWELL Travis D.
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| 126 |
Margaret McDowell Love is buried beside her husband William Love in the Love Cemetery, Walthall Co., MS. Her inscription read 77 yrs. 1 mo. 1 da on her death. | MCDOWELL Margaret
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| 127 |
According to his death certificate, he was a heating/air condition mechanic. | MCGEE Ivan Dale
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| 128 |
Ancestry- South Carolina Magazine of Ancestral Research, Vol. 1-20 Page 1 of 14 Search Results Provided By The No, 1 Source for Family History Online Anctflrycom Database: South Carolina Magazine of Ancestral Research, Vol. 1-20 ..August 18, 2001 The South Carolina Magazine of Ancestral Research SCMAR, Volume I Number 1, Winter, 1973 Requests for Information SCMAR, Vol. I, Winter 1973, No.1, p.54 17. .Mrs. William M. Craig (2321 18th Street, Lubbock, Tex. 79401) needs proof that William (D. prior to 1807, Williamsburg District, S. C.) and his wife Elizabeth were the parents of, Hugh, Agnes Letitia, (M. John Knox), and probably others. William and Elizabeth came to America from Ireland after February 1773. Cli,ktQYiewfyjlcQotext --~ The South Carolina Magazine of Ancestral Research SCMAR, Volume II Number 1, Winter, 1974 Williamsburg County Will Book A (Continued from Vol. 1, p.210.) SCMAR, Vol. II, Winter 1974, No.1, p.13 Pages 75-76. Will of Joseph McKee of Williamsburgh district, being weak in body. Dated 23 Mar. 1810. To my dearly beloved wife, my horse, Riding chair, & harness... also my Negroes Minda & her five children namely Carolina, Phillis, susey, Ceasor, & George, together with Phillis & susey's present and future increase. To my wife, the use of the remainder of my estate, both real and personal, during her natural life. To my granddaughter Ann Mitchell, five dollars. To my grandson John White, five dollars. To my granddaughter Elizabeth McCurdy, five dollars. To my grandson Samuel M. Knox, all the plantation houses & two tracts of land whereon I now live. To my brother Adam McKee's children, one hundred dollars on account of moneys lost during the American Revolution. Residue of my estate to be divided into two equal parts, one part for my grandchildren by my daughter Ann Knox (a Negro boy is bequeathed to my grandson Samuel Knox over and above his proportion of the said half part, for the service he has rendered to me as an overseer), the other half part to my grandchildren by my daughter Elizabeth which she bore to James Fleming (a Negro girl to be taken out of said portion for my daughter Elizabeth). Should one or more of my grandchildren by James Fleming die unmarried or under age, his, her, or their parts to revert back to the surviving child or children of said James Flening. To my friend now of the Mississippi Territory the whole of my part onhe property of my father Archabald McKee which has been lately gained in a Court of Equity. My dearly beloved wife executrix, and my brother John Shaw, & my nephews Robert Witherspoon & Thomas Witherspoon, executors. CI j,kt Q-'ljew-luJJcQnrext -~- ---, The South Carolina Magazine of Ancestral Research SCMAR, Volume V Number 2, Spring, 1977 Spartanburg District Will Book B sCMAR, Vol. V, Spring 1977, No.2, p.81 Pp. 20-22: Will of John Owens of District of spartanburgh...unto my beloved wife Ann Owens, half of my plantation or tract of land that I now live on, and one Negro boy Toll, two Cows & Calvs, one young bay mare, two bed & furniture, my present stock of hogs, etc. my two sons viz. Jeremiah & David. to my eldest son Jeremiah Owens three Negroes Rose, Washington & Jackson. to my son Thomas Owens widow Terry the sum of $3. to my son David Owens all the other half of my plantation that I now live on, also at my wifes or widows death the other half of the said tract. to my daughter Elizabeth $3. to my daughter Milley $3. to son John ;~8/18/01 | MCKEE Joseph
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| 129 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | MULLINS Brian Keith
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| 130 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | MULLINS Neil Douglas
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| 131 |
"Aunt Anna Pipkin's death was not recorded herein, but it was when Elizabeth Baer was about 3 years (she must have died in 1911) old. We went to funeral. Uncle Louis had this Bible but neglected to record her death. It was not in Bible when the Bible came into my Possession. I regret very much that I do not have exact date. Aunt Anna had not passed away when he (L.M.P. erected the monument and dated his notation Feby. 13, 1905, herein." Written by Martha Elizabeth Pipkin Baer - - she means her dau. Elizabeth Baer was about 3 years old). | PIPKIN Anna Susannah Chew
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| 132 |
"He was conscious to almost the last moment; expressed himself as entirely resigned and died in great peace."
"Funeral notice: Died - - At his residence in the parish of St. Helena, La. on Saturday, the 11th day of May, 1878. Rev. Barnabas Pipkin, aged 83 years, 2 months and 14 days. The friends and acquaintances of the family are respectfully requested to attend the funeral of the deceased, which will take place from his late residence on Monday, the 13th inst., at 2 o'clock, P.M. Darlington, La. May 12, 1878."
Betty Baer, his only grandchild, wrote "They said Grandpa Barnabas might have lived longer but he just would ride horseback on his gentle old horse, Lucy. He did not come in one day so they hunted for him, found the horse grazing nearby and Grandpa had slipped from the saddle and was lying in the water of the small creek on the place. He was chilled. Uncle Wilbur wrapped him in his coat and they put him to bed. At his age he was not able to survive the exposure so after a short time he died. When dying all were around his bed. He seemed to be smiling and looking into the distance and mentioned his wife's name (Elizabeth Hanna). Papa asked him if he felt he was ready to go and he said, "Do you think after serving my Master all these years I am not ready to go - of course, I am."
(Mrs. James M. Sagely, Clinton, La., copied tombstone transcriptions from Clinton Cemetery, St. Helena Parish, Louisiana on March 20, 1969 and submitted them to the Louisiana Genealogical Register which published it Sept 1971. File prepared by Deandra Norred Pardue and shared with the LaGenWeb Archives.) "Located about one half mile west of Chipola Highway 432, turn south on dirt trail about one fourth mile to cemetery. Should be noted that this cemetery has not been used since late 1870, and since that time has been used as a negro cemetery. As far as we could tell, only this one small section which will be on your right as you enter the cemetery, are the only early white settlers buried there."
Elizabeth M. Pipkin, March 21, 1809; August 4, 1846 Rev. Barnabus Pipkin, b. on Neuse River, N. C., Feb. 27, 1795; d. May 11, 1878. Was one of the Pioneer Methodist preachers of Mississippi and Louisiana. Preached in these states from 1820 until his death. A noble man, a devout Christian, and an active minister 60 years. Wilbur E. Pipkin, b. St. Helena, Dec 6, 1840; March 16, 1902 Henry W. Pipkin, b. St. Helena, Nov 20, 1831; Feb 13, 1905 Rev. George A Clinton, Jan 11, 1835; Dec 29, 1870 James Clinton, Aug 6, 1844; Dec 18, 1874 Ellen T. Clinton, Dec 20, 1838; Aug 7, 1864 Wm. W. Clinton, June 23, 1842; Aug 23, 1843 Benjamin J. Clinton, Jan 8, 1850; Feb 23, 1874 Annie L. Clinton, nee Hanna, Nov 9, 1807; Aug 17, 1876 Rev. Thomas Clinton, b. Philadelphia, Jan 2, 1793; Oct 28, 1875 Martha W. Clinton, April 23, 1829; Oct 2, 1868 Alouise Thompson, nee Clinton, Oct 18, 1832; July 7, 1879 | PIPKIN Rev Barnabas
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| 133 |
Died at home of niece Elizabeth Pipkin Baer. | PIPKIN Barnabas Hanna
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| 134 |
died in infancy | PIPKIN John Howard
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| 135 |
"Wm. C. Pipkin and Uncle Louis were graduated from old Centenary College at Jackson, La. and then studied law. Papa and Uncle Louis were both county judges, or parish judges, I should say in La."
"died suddenly while sitting in his chair at his own residence in Greensburg, La. March 22, 1901, aged 67 years 4 months and 23 days. His body was interred in Greensburg Cemetery, March 23, 1901." | PIPKIN Richard William Clinton
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| 136 |
"died at his residence, St. Helena Parish, La. February 13, 1905 aged 73 yrs. 2 months and 23 days. His remains was buried in Clinton-Pipkin cemetery Feby. 14th 1905 at 11 A.M. about 1 mile northwest of the Darlington Church."
"wills filed and recorded in St. Helena Parish, La.: Henry W. Pipkin, 1905" | PIPKIN Stephen Henry Winans
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| 137 |
"died at his residence, the old family homestead in Darlington, La. March 16th 1902 aged 61 yrs. 2 mos. & 10 days. His body was buried in Clinton-Pipkin cemetery about 1 mile northwest of the Darlington Church"
"will filed and recorded in St. Helena Parish, La: Wilbur F. Pipkin, 1902" Judge Louis Martin Pipkin, 1920
(Mrs. James M. Sagely, Clinton, La., copied tombstone transcriptions from Clinton Cemetery, St. Helena Parish, Louisiana on March 20, 1969 and submitted them to the Louisiana Genealogical Register which published it Sept 1971. File prepared by Deandra Norred Pardue and shared with the LaGenWeb Archives.):
Wilbur E. Pipkin, b. St. Helena, Dec 6, 1840; March 16, 1902 | PIPKIN Wilbur Fisk
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| 138 |
Amos Ponder entered the service May 1, 1781, while living "in the bounds of Rocky River" in South Carolina and served as private in Col. Anderson's S. C. Regiment; in many expeditions and in all served 22 months and 24 days. After expiration of his service he married in 178_, in Oglethorpe County, Georgia. June 10, 1850 Higdon Robertson, administrator of estate of Violet Ponder, deceased widow of Amos Ponder, applied on behalf of their children for pension due their mother.
1802 Amos & Violet left will in Oglethorp Co., Ga., Pension application W-10, 920; certified 8949 in Nat'l Archives | PONDER Amos
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| 139 |
According to Port Arthur City Directory, he worked for Gulf Oil Corp. | POWERS Kemp Wade
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| 140 |
According to Sue Pullin Tanner, Daniel Pullin went in search of his father's killers after the 1886 Daileyville incident and never returned. As did also William A. Pullin. This sounds very similar to the Tobias Elias Pullin and Wiley Pullin story. Could William A. Pullin be Wiley A. Pullin? | PULLIN Daniel
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| 141 |
Bureau of Land Management - Eastern States, General Land Office
Patent Description MS0120__.205 Cancelled: N Document Nr.:2129 Patentee Name: PULLIN, HENRY Authority: April 24, 1820: Cash Entry Sale (3 Stat. 566) Signature Present: Y Signature Date: 8/10/1826 Metes/Bounds: N Subsurface Reserved: N Land Office: JACKSON
Legal Land Descriptions Nr. 1 Aliquot Parts W 1/2 N W Sec/Blk 8/ Township 3-N Range 2-W Fract. Sect. N Meridian CHOCTAW MERIDIAN Acres 80.06 Counties HINDS | PULLIN Henry
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| 142 |
Known to his grandchildren as "Popcorn" which was mysteriously the name Cassie Ann Keeton called her grandpa, A. F. Geary, when she was old enough to talk. No one could ever explain why she called him that...not until 15 years later while working on family tree was this "coincidence" discovered. Hiram's father Henry and his uncle Hiram were killed in Daileyville in 1886. | PULLIN Hiram
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| 143 |
Hiram was a twin. He was killed with his older brother Henry Pullin by stray bullets during the 1886 gunfight at Daileyville, Karnes County, Texas. | PULLIN Hiram Rand
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| 144 |
John Pullin served in the War of 1812 under command of Col. Ignatius A. Few's Third Regiment, Georgia.(Dorothy Keeton located this record.) | PULLIN John
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| 145 |
[Mcgee.FTW]
SSN 438-78-3054 | REED Adosia
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| 146 |
Ashley County Ledger Dec. 19, 1984 According to her obituary, she died in New Orleans, LA. She was a native of Ashley County, a retired rural mail carrier, and member of Fountain Hill Methodist Church.
Survivors include daughter, Mary Carpenter of New Orleans, Louisiana; brother, Forrest Rice of Crossett, Arkansas; sisters, Marie Barton of Monticello, Arkansas and Irene Boyd of Fulton, Kentucky; 9 grandchildren, and 1 great grandchild.
Pallbearers: George Dewey McIntire, Barnet McIntire, Shawn McIntire, Steve Crane, Paul Crane, and Jimmy Rice; all grandsons. | RICE Anna Belle
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| 147 |
Ashley County Ledger Feb. 16, 1983 According to his obituary, he died at Ashley Memorial Hospital. He was a native of Ashley County, a retired farmer and a member of the Fountain Hill Baptist Church.
He is survived by sons, Jimmy Wade Rice, Ronald Rice, Dale Rice, all of Crossett, Arkansas and Billy Rice of Hamburg, Arkansas; daughter, Kay McGehee of Fountain Hill, Arkansas; brother, F. E. Rice or Crossett, Arkansas; sisters, Anna Bell Crane of Crossett, Arkansas, Irene Boyd of Fulton, Kentucky, and Marie Barton of Monticello, Arkansas; and 11 grandchildren.
Pallbearers: Sterling White, Omer White, Elmer Moffatt, Jr., Wayne Moffatt, William R. Jenkins, and Johnnie Bolin. | RICE Floyd W.
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| 148 |
Ashley County Ledger May 2001 According to her obituary, she was reared in Milo and graduated from Crossett High School. She had been employed as a clerk in the Ashley County School Superintendent's office in Hamburg and was instrumental in establishing the Parks and Recreation Department in Arkansas. She and her late husband, Paul G. Boyd, moved to South Fulton where they owned and operated a gas company for many years. She was a member of Fulton First Baptist Church and a member of the Fidelis Sunday School Class. She was also an avid bridge player.
Survivors include a brother, Forrest Rice of Crossett, Arkansas; 3 grandchildren, Irene Templeton Smith of Cordova, Tennessee, Paul Boyd Templeton of Harrisonburg, Virginia, and Ann Thomas Templeton of Enumclaw, Washington; and one great-grandson, Thomas Hudson Smith of Cordova, Tennessee. She was presided in death by a daughter, Barbara Ann Templeton; a brother, Floyd W. Rice; and three sisters, Annabelle Crane, Marie Branson Barton, and Myrtle Rice. | RICE Irene
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| 149 |
Ashley County Eagle Oct. 29, 1908 According to her obituary, she was visiting relatives in Argenta and contracted pneumonia and grew seriously ill. Her body was brought for interment at Egypt Church. She was a faithful Baptist. | RICE Sister Jessie M.
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| 150 |
~SSN 429-12-4607 | RICE Leone
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