Notes


Matches 3,551 to 3,600 of 8,717

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3551 Harvey's middle name might be Walter or William, Vaulta didn't know. She thought he might be like George and only had an initial. GARDNER, Harvey W (I2207)
 
3552 Harvie C Disney, age 25, born 1 Nov 1891, Rogers, Arkansas, is a farm laborer for Ben Rankin near Crowder. He is married with two children. He is tall with a medium build, blue eyes and brown hair. DISNEY, Harvey Clyde (I3541)
 
3553 Harvie D Garrison, age 25, born 22 Aug 1892, Waco, Texas, is a ranch hand for the Barnard Brothers in San Onofre. He's single, tall and slender with dark brown eyes and black hair. GARRISON, Harvey Dwight (I6910)
 
3554 has a son, PJ PHIPPS, Patricia Ann (I1566)
 
3555 has two girls and 4 stepchildren?
Shirley, Bud, Darlene, Shirl, Donna 
HOLDER, Pryor Fonval (I1442)
 
3556 Haughton Avenue, Grand Rapids Township
George S Sawyer Head M 63 Sep 1836 Indiana m. 3 yrs.
Norah Sawyer Wife F 32 Sep 1867 Indiana 1/1 children
Hubert Sawyer Son M 2 Jan 1898 Minnesota
George A Ulrey B-i-l M 29 Apr 1871 Indiana m. 6 yrs.
Mattie Ulrey S-i-l F 28 Dec 1871 Indiana 0/0 children
George S is a house carpenter and George A is a stationary engineer. 
ULREY, George A (I23754)
 
3557 Haughton Avenue, Grand Rapids Township
George S Sawyer Head M 63 Sep 1836 Indiana m. 3 yrs. [33, 1866]
Norah Sawyer Wife F 32 Sep 1867 Indiana 1/1 children
Hubert Sawyer Son M 2 Jan 1898 Minnesota [Hubert Grove Sawyer]
George A Ulrey B-i-l M 29 Apr 1871 Indiana m. 6 yrs.
Mattie Ulrey S-i-l F 28 Dec 1871 Indiana 0/0 children
George S is a house carpenter and George A is a stationary engineer. 
SAWYER, George W (I23753)
 
3558 Haughton Avenue, Grand Rapids Township
George W Sawyer Head M 65 Indiana
Nora E Sawyer Wife F 62 Indiana
Herbert Tunler Lodger M 22 Indiana
They're all unemployed. George and Nora were first married at ages 33 and 31. 
SAWYER, George W (I23753)
 
3559 Have 2 separate accounts of letter from Goodman to Garrett Cornelison that mention various family connections to Rebecca King and Rachel Boling. Info mentioned for Uncle Boling King says he was brother to Rebecca King. Also mentions that a Charles Boling was a nephew to Rachel (Boling) Cagle as well as Gardner Boling as brother to Rachel, too.
I have Rebecca King as daughter to Peter and Susannah (Bolling/Boling) King. Peter as s'o Johnston King who was s/o Peter (II) King who was s/o Peter (I) King of Ulster, Ireland. Susannah Bolling as d/o Alexander Bolling and Susannah Bolling. These 2 parents were first cousins, their fathers (Stith and Robert, Jr. Bolling) being sons of Robert Bolling, Sr. and his 2nd wife Anne Stith (md. 1681).
I don't have parents for Rachel Boling. However based on the letter from Goodman to Garrett, Gardner Boling is mentioned as brother of Rachel Boling. If this is so, then I connect Gardner Boling to Benjamin and Patsy (Phelps) Bolling, Jr. Benjamin was a s/o Benjamin Bolling who was s/o John Bolling. John Bolling was the only son of Robert Bolling, Sr.'s (mentioned above)first marriage. Robert Bolling, Sr. married Jane Rolfe in 1675 in Petersberg, VA.
You may not recognize Jane Rolfe. She was the only granddaughter and descendant of Matoaka Powhatan, aka Pocahontas.
If these connections to Rebecca King and Rachel Boling can be proven, then Garrett and Martha "Patsy" Cagle Cornelison descendants are of the so-called "Red" and "White" Bolling lines. Would welcome any comments. Johnny Burl Cornelison  
CORNELISON, Jarrett (I11800)
 
3560 Hawkinsville PO
James Alderson M 24 Tennessee
Nancy J Alderson F 21 Ky
Polly Dinnin F 46 Ky
Elizabeth Dinnin F 20 Ky
Lydia Dinnin F 15 Ky
Tabitha Dinnin F 14 Ky
Susan Dinnin F 13 Ky
Aggy Dinnin F 11 Ky
John William Dinnin M 9 Ky
Wm Holloway M 7 Ky 
MAY, Mary (I10171)
 
3561 Hawkinsville PO
James Alderson Male 24 Tennessee
Nancy J Alderson Female 21 Ky
Polly Dinnin Female 45 Ky
Elizabeth Dinnin Female 20 Ky
Lydia Dinnin Female 15 Ky
Tabitha Dinnin Female 14 Ky
Susan Dinnin Female 13 Ky
Aggy Dinnin Female 11 Ky
John William Dinnin Male 9 Ky
Wm Holloway Male 7 Ky
James is a farmer. 
ALDERSON, James (I10280)
 
3562 HAWLEY, Phyllis June (RAWNSLEY); 71; AZ; AZ Republic; 2008-4-4 RAWNSLEY, Phyllis June (I23727)
 
3563 Hawthorne Borough, 102 2nd Avenue
Osmer B Henerson head m 32 New York
Ella Henerson wife f 32 New York
Clinton Henerson son m 9 New York
Veronica Henerson dau f 6 New York
Doris Henerson dau f 1 6/12 New York
George Olmstead b-i-l m 29 New York
Mary Olmstead sister f 25 New York
Osmer is a railroad conductor and George is a brakeman. 
OLMSTEAD, George Edward (I24773)
 
3564 Hayes
Head ?tab?Benjamin F Coyle M ?tab?53 ?tab?Kentucky
Wife ?tab?Annie Coyle ?tab? F ?tab?46 ?tab?Texas
Son ?tab?James R Coyle ?tab? M ?tab?20 ?tab?Texas
Son ?tab?Webster Coyle ?tab? M ?tab?18 ?tab?Texas
Dau ?tab?Willie Coyle ?tab? F ?tab?16 ?tab?Oklahoma
Dau ?tab?Nellie Coyle ?tab? F ?tab?14 ?tab?Texas
Dau ?tab?Annie Belle Coyle F ?tab?12 ?tab?Texas
Dau ?tab?Frankie Coyle ?tab? F ?tab?10 ?tab?Texas 
COYLE, Benjamin Franklin (I18031)
 
3565 Hazel (town no longer exists)
Fred Pipkin Head M 39 Missouri
Orrie Pipkin Wife F 31 Arkansas
Ima Pipkin Dau F 11 Texas
Joe Pipkin Son M 9 Texas
Robert Pipkin Son M 7 Texas 
PIPKIN, Frederick Taylor (I12779)
 
3566 Hazel Vert was the informant for his death certificate and she gives his mother's name as L Berger. KIRKLEY, Harrison Franklin (I15839)
 
3567 He adopted her children. ROBERTS (I12853)
 
3568 He also lived in Barren County at some point. CARTER, Chillon Conoway (I21335)
 
3569 He also married Mary P Norman Frazier, daughter of Madison. I'm not sure if that is Mary or Martha. MURPHY, Parker M (I21338)
 
3570 He also used his stepfather's last name. JOHNSON, Harold Louis (I18018)
 
3571 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I12616)
 
3572 He came to Colorado with his brother, Frank, in 1908. [William] MCGHEE, Franklin (I11341)
 
3573 He died before Oct 1854 and never married [Sumner County, TN Court Records, Lawsuit #6804]. MOORE, Alexander (I12568)
 
3574 He died in one of the Carolinas.

Died at Battle of King's Mountain.
>From "History of Tazewell County and Southwest Virginia" by Pendleton, p. 407
"Rees Bowen was the second white man who brought his family to make permanent residence in the Clinch Valley. Therefore, it is meet that he and his family should be the second considered in the sketches I am writing of the pioneer families.
The Tazewell Bowens are of Celtic blood. Their immediate ancestor was Moses Bowen, a Welshman, who married Rebecca Rees. They came from Wales to America a good many years before the Revolution, and settled in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Their son John was a Quaker, and he married Lily McIlhaney. He and his wife moved from Pennsylvania to Augusta County, Virginia, soon after the first settlements were made in the Shenandoah Valley, perhaps as early as the year 1732, and located in that part of Augusta now embraced in the county of Rockbridge. They had twelve children and Rees was one of their five sons. He married Louisa (?) Smith, whose parents then liven in that section of Augusta now known as Rockingham County. It is said that, after his marraige, he took up his abode on the Roanoke River close to where the city of Roanoke is now situated.
In some way Rees Bowen learned of the fertile lands and abundance of game that could be found in the Upper Clinch Valley; and he concluded to abandon his home on the Roanoke River and settle in this region, where he could locate and occupy, without cost, a large boundary of fine unoccupied land. It is known from tradition that when he arrived with his family in the vicinity of the great spring, to which he gave a peculiar name, he had not then selected the boundary of land upon which he would settle. After they went into camp, on the evening of the day he reached the place that has since been the home of the Bowens, he went out to find and kill a deer to get a supply of fresh meat. While thus engaged he discovered the spring. Bickley thus tells of the discovery of the immense fountain and what followed:
When Mr. Bowen first saw the spring, he discovered a fine young female deer, feeding on the moss within the orifice from which gushes the spring. He shot it, and when he went to get his deer, saw a pair of elk horns standing on their points, and leaning against the rocks. Mr. Bowen was a very large and tall man, yet he had no difficulty in walking upright under the horns. He chose this place for his, and the spring and river have since been known as Maiden Spring and Fork.
The first four years after he and his family located at Maiden Spring were free from any hostile demonstrations by the Indians against the Clinch settlements. He was possessed of great physical strength and was very industrious, and in the four years he erected a large and strong log house, extended his clearings into the forests, and added considerably to the number of horses and cattle he brought with him from his home on the Roanoke. Then came trouble with the Ohio Indians, in 1773, when the whole frontier of Virginia was threatened by the red man; and Rees Bowen built a heavy stockade around his dwelling, converting it into an excellent neighborhood fort.
In the meantime, his four brothers, John, Arthur, William and Moses moved out from Augusta to find homes in the country west of New River. John settled at some point in the Holston Valley; Arthur located in the present Smyth County, four miles west of Marion; and William and Moses took up their abode in the Clinch Valley, but in what immediate locality is now unknown. When Dunmore's War came on the three brothers, Rees, William and Moses went with Captain William Russell's company on the Lewis expedition to the mouth of the Kanawha River; and were prominent figures in the eventful battle of Point Pleasant. Moses Bowen was then only twenty years old; and on the return march from the Kanawha, he was stricken with smallpox, from which frightful malady he died in the wilderness.
After his return from Point Pleasant, for two years Rees Bowen, like all the pioneer settlers, was actively engaged in clearing up fields from the forest and increasing the comforts of his new home. While thus occupied, the war between the colonies and Great Britain began; and the British Government turned the Western Indians loose on the Virginia frontier. This caused the organization of a company of militia, expert Indian fighters, in the Clinch Valley. The two Bowen brothers were members of the company, William being Captain and Rees, Lieutenant. This company, composed of pioneers, did effective service for the protection of the settlers in the Clinch and the Holston Valleys.
When Colonels Shelby and Sevier, in the fall of 1780, appealed to Colonel William Campbell to join them in the expedition to King's Mountain, with a volunteer force from Washington County, Virginia, the company from Clinch Valley volunteered to go. Owing to illness from a serious attack of fever, Captain William Bowen was unable to lead his men on the expedition and the command of the company devolved upon Lieutenant Rees Bowen. He marched with his company and joined Campbell at Wold Hill (now Abingdon) and thence on to the Carolinas, and gave his life for American freedom, while leading his men in the memorable Battle of King's Mountain."
Draper, in his "King's Mountain and Its Heroes," tells of Lt. Rees Bowen. It seems he did not think hiding behind trees was the way to fight, so he did not hide. The result was a rifle ball in the breast and death in battle on 07 Oct 1780. Draper states: "Lieutenant Reece Bowen, who commanded one of the companies of the Virginia Regiment, was observed while marching forward to attack the enemy, to make a hazardous and unnecessary exposure of his person. Some friend kindly remonstrated with him - 'Why, Bowen, do you not take a tree--why rashly present yourself to the deliberate aim of the Provincial and Tory riflemen, concealed behind every rock and bush before you?--death will inevitably follow, if you persist.' 'Take to a tree,' he (Bowen) indignantly replied - 'no!--never shall it be said that I sought safety by hiding my person, or dodging from a Briton or Tory who opposed me in the field.' Well had it been for him and his country, had he been more prudent, and, as his superiors had advised, taken shelter whenever it could be found, for he had scarcely concluded his brave utterance, when a rifle ball struck him in the breast. He fell and expired. (Garden's Anecdotes, second series, p. 212, presumably communicated for that work by Judge Peter Johnston, of Abingdon, Virginia, a distinguished officer of Lee's Legion during the Revolution, and the ancestor of the present Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, and Hon. John W. Johnston, United States Senator from that state.)"
As Draper tell it, "Reece Bowen was born in Maryland about 1742. He first emigrated to what is now Rockbridge County, VA, and, in 1769 to the waters of the Clinch, in what is now Tazwell County. He shared in the battle of Point Pleasant, went to the relief of the Kentucky Stations in 1778; and on the King's Mountain campaign, he was Lieutenant of his brother, William Bowen's company. His brother being ill of fever, Reece Bowen succeeded to the command of the company. His heroic death has already been related; he is said to have been shot by a Tory boy, behind a baggage wagon, near the close of the engagement, when Campbell's men were driving the enemy toward the north-eastern end of the mountain. He was remarkable for his herculean strength and great activity. He left a family--his son, Colonel Henry Bowen, lived in Tazewell County to a good old age." (Draper, King's Mountain and its Heroes; History of the Battle of King's Mountain, p. 406] 
BOWEN, Reese (I4109)
 
3575 He fibbed about his age and the license was bonded in Butler County. Clay County is just south of Butler County. Family (F8269)
 
3576 He first married Sarah Little and had one son, Davy. Then he married Mary E Bell who died very shortly afterward. I believe Beulah and Mary are her children with the remaining children belonging to Anna.

I don't know what happened to them after the 1920 Census. I need to add the rest of the sources to this family but most of it is from Census records in Nacogdoches County. 
PIERCE, James M (I17633)
 
3577 He has a field stone marker, no information. NORMAN, Madison C (I21344)
 
3578 He is 39, single, and a farmer, born May 1861 in Mississippi. STOWERS, Caleb Z (I19283)
 
3579 He is 6 feet tall, 150 pounds, blue eys and brown hair. His contact person is Mrs George Topliff of Gilmore City. MCGHEE, Jesse Garth (I23536)
 
3580 he is a laborer. ASHBY, Luther Ed (I5120)
 
3581 He is a roomer and is widowed and 80 years old, and lived on S. Michigan St. KIRKLEY, Marshall (I15866)
 
3582 He is a student at the Iowa College for the Blind. ASHBY, Henry H (I19487)
 
3583 He is confined at the State Lunatic Asylum near Nevada [State Hospital #3]. MCCRACKEN, Thomas A (I8999)
 
3584 He is listed as a lodger on Ave H. He is a routeman for a laundry. RICKERT, Grenville Charles (I1781)
 
3585 He is listed as an inmate at the jail. WILLS, James Wilson (I17398)
 
3586 He is listed as divorced. KALBEY, Charles Albert (I6348)
 
3587 He is listed on the 1870 Federal census with Marzela and Augustus Shaw. He is a farmer and cannot read or write. BRAZZIL, Hardy (I18281)
 
3588 He is married to Arlie and is self-employed. WARREN, James Fred (I2365)
 
3589 He is not listed on the Census of 1784 but is listed in 1787 with 2 horses and a cow.
The land he was granted in 1783, 307 ac, adjoined, "the land the said Fairley now lives on, the land of Elisha Collins".
In the deed of 6 Nov 1801, John and Elizabeth were "of the county of Jefferson in the Territory Northwest of Ohio" and Elizabeth was unable to travel to the Hampshire County Court House.
There is no record of John and Elizabeth having any children.

He was probably born in North Carolina. 
FARLEY, John (I11471)
 
3590 He is not the Byrum Carter who died in Texas. CARTER, Byram (I21317)
 
3591 He is of medium height and build with blue eyes and dark brown hair. The person who will always know his location is Tille McGhee, it doesn't say wife. MCGHEE, Elba Ray (I23535)
 
3592 He is still single, age 49, and a farmer. STOWERS, Caleb Z (I19283)
 
3593 He is tall, with a mdium build, gray eyes and brown hair. MCGHEE, Jesse Garth (I23536)
 
3594 He is widowed and alone. HARRIS, George Washington (I11641)
 
3595 He lists Ruth Roome of Bandera as his contact. BRAZZIL, John Duncan (I8255)
 
3596 He lived at 167 Waverly, Buffalo. He was born 1/13/1890, Corfu. He worked as a machinist at Houck Wire Wheel and was married. He was tall, slender, had red hair and blue eyes. TUBBS, Merritt Ira (I4755)
 
3597 He lived in Tow and was widowed. WILLS, Clarence Oliver (I18278)
 
3598 He lives and works in Cravens as a machinist and supports his mother. He is of medium height and build with brown eyes and dark hair. SCURLOCK, Harvey Baine (I11264)
 
3599 He lives at Wilson and is a farmer. His wife is Cornelia W Pipkin. He is of medium height and slender build with blue eyes and brown hair. PIPKIN, Claud Emerson I (I12608)
 
3600 He lives in Whiting and works on the farm of A B Robinson in Lake Township. He is single and has served in the Iowa National Guard for 3 years. He is of medium height and build and has blue eyes and brown hair. KESNER, Raymond John (I15971)
 

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