Data from

 

37 1 1278 Nov  9% 2C 1962  U  38 1 1287 edward anthony oregon special operations 1964 -2005   TRAIL

 

 

[NI00001] Pappy

1LT US Army Air corps (WWII), 1938-Flight School; Active Duty 1941-1945.

Recalled to duty l950 for Korean War served only a week - Dupont recall for
assignment to Bomb plant in GA. Served at May Plant in Camden, SC.
Attended graded school at Kraft School, Charleston; Berkeley High in Moncks
Corner, SC. Graduated high school l937. Played baseball...Honor student.

Degree in Engineering, The Citadel; Studied Astronomy and Geology at Millsaps
in Jackson Mississippi. Student Assistantships at Millsaps and Citadel.

Worked for Sun Oil in oil exploration 1938, again 1945-1948. 1939-1941 worked
on ammunition bag loading plant in
Mississippi. College 1948-1950, The Citadel,
Charleston, SC. Owned and operated laundromat in McAllen, Texas 1947-48.
Employed by DuPont Construction Division on projects in Camden, SC (1950-1952);
DuPont built Celanese plant at Pensacola, FL. (1952-1954); Hq. DuPont Exper-
imental Station, Wilmington, DEL. (1954-1956); Orlon Plant, Shawnee, KS. (1956-
1957; Worked in
New York, lived in suburbs of New Brunswick, New Jersey, 1957-
1958. Resigned October 1958 because of assignment to
Virginia. Moved to
Charleston, SC November 1958. Worked for Corps of Engineers until 1962 when
transferred to Naval Facilities Engineering.
Charleston, SC. Retired Dec 1978.

Suffered series of small strokes (Benswinger's Disease) in 1987, hospitalized
1988, became resident of nursing home in February 1988.

SSAN 428-18-1529 Issued MS.

 

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[NI12781] VITA: ROBERT D. HARTER
Professor of Soil Chemistry

Business address: Department of Natural Resources
University of New Hampshire
Durham, NH 03824
Telephone: (603) 862-3944
FAX: (603) 862-4976
Email: [email protected]

Degrees received:
B.S. Agronomy 1961 The Ohio State Univ.
M.S. Soil Chemistry 1962 The Ohio State Univ. Advisor: E.O.Mclean
Ph.D. Soil Chemistry 1966 Purdue Univ. Advisor: J.L.Ahlrichs

Professional positions held:
1961-1962 Research Fellow, The Ohio State University
1962-1966 Graduate Teaching Asst., Purdue University
1966-1968 Asst. Soil Scientist, Conn. Agric., Exper.
Sta., New Haven
1968-1969 Assoc. Research Scientist, New York Univ., New York City
1969-1975 Asst. Professor, Univ. of New Hampshire
1975-1983 Assoc. Professor, Univ. of New Hampshire
Fall, 1976 Visiting Professor, Penn. State Univ.
1983-1984 Visiting Professor, Agric. Univ. of the Netherlands, Wageningen
1993-1994 Visiting Scientist, CSIRO, Adelaide, South Australia

Current position: 1983- present, Professor of Soil Chemistry; 60% Research, 40% Teaching

Membership in professional societies: Soil Science Society of America
International Society of Soil Science
American Society of Agronomy

Honors and awards received since baccalaureate degree:
Listed: American Men and Women of Science
Who's Who in Science and Engineering
Who's Who in America
Fellow: Soil Science Society of America......1988

Publications: (10 of 58):
Harter, R.D. 1979.
Adsorption of copper and lead by Ap and B2 horizons of several
Northeastern United States soils. Soil Sci. Soc. Amer. J. 43:679-683.
Harter, R.D. 1983. Effect of soil pH on adsorption of Pb, Cu, Zn, and Ni. Soil Sci. Soc.
Amer. J. 47:47-51.
Lehmann, R.G. and R.D. Harter. 1984. Assessment of copper-soil bond strength by desorption
kinetics. Soil Sci. Soc. Amer. J. 48:769-772.
Snyder, K.E. and R.D. Harter. 1985. Changes in solum chemistry following clearcutting of
northern hardwood stands.
Soil Sci. Soc. Amer. J. 48:223-228.
Harter, R.D. 1989. A new modeling compatible solution to the first order kinetics equation.
Soil Sci. 147:97-102.
Harter, R.D. 1991. Micronutrient adsorption-desorption reactions in soils. pp 59-87 in J.J.
Mortvedt and L.M. Shuman (Ed) Micronutrients in Agriculture, 2nd Ed. SSSA Book
Series, No. 4.
Soil Science Society of
America, Madison, WI.
Harter, R.D. 1991. Kinetics of sorption/desorption processes in soil. pp 135-149 in D.L. Sparks
and D.L. Suarez (Ed) Rates of Soil Chemical Processes.
SSSA Spec. Publ. No. 27,
SSSA,
Madison, WI.
Harter, R.D. 1992. Competitive sorption of Cobalt, Copper, and Nickel ions by a Calcium-
saturated soil. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 56:444-449.
Kookana, R., R. Naidu, and R. Harter. 1994. Vertical heterogeneity and pollutant transport
through soil profiles. Proc. 25th Congress of the International Association of
Hydrogeologists.

Harter, R.D. and R. Naidu. 1995. Role of metal-organic complexes on metal sorption by soils.
Adv. Agron. 55: 219-263


Current research projects:
Granite weathering processes and rates: Response to organic acids.
Physical and Chemical Heterogeneity of Aquifers: A Quantitative Geological Investigation

 

 

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[NI31896] James M. Kisamore, son (of I.H.), 15 single appears in the 1910 census of Pendelton County WV,

James taught in a one room school, Keyl Schoolhouse, in Union District of Pendleton County, WV. It was located on lower Timber Ridge Rd.

Began writing to Mary Elizabeth Riffle, whose name he had received from a mutual friend, while serving overseas in the Army as a supply seargent with the 313 Field Artillery during WW1. They married shortly after his return to the states.

Resided on
George Street in Cumberland Md in an apartment over a barber shop. . First son, Leo Riffle Kisamore was born in this apartment. Later moved to Ridgley WV where Kenneth Lee was born, Built his own home in Bowling Green, Cumberland,
MD
where Norman Dale was born.

Active in his church, he helped build St. Matthews United Church of Christ. . The baptismal font and much of the altar work was made by James. He was extremely talented as a wood-worker.

Mild mannered and well respected by his community.

During the depression he lost his 1st wife,Mary Elizabeth . . . and was forced to move out of his home to a cheaper place so he could rent it out in order to make the morgage. Worked for Kelly Springfield Tire Company sporadically during
depression.


Got a job with the US Postal Service where he was employed at the time of his death in 1962.

Married Stella Beverlin and had 2 daughters.... Linda Lou and Janet Marie.

He donated a stained glass window to the St. Matthews Church in
Bowling Green in memory of his son,Leo, who was shot down over the North Sea while on a bombing mission May 15, 1943.

 

-----

 

[NI36174] The Albuquerque, New Mexico City Directories show Le Roy (or La Roy) Oxley as Lab Foreman in 1952 thru 1958; as Foreman for Robert McKee Contruction in 1959 thru 1961, and as Supt. for Reynolds Electric in 1962 thru 1965.

 

----

[NI36215] The 1962 Angleton, Texas City Directory shows Mrs Velma E. Shell as Assistant Clerk, Selective Service with residence on Downing Road.

----

[NI36248] Mann Outlaw was a member of the 1907 Elgin Blues Texas League Baseball Team.

He was living in Anson,
Jones County, Texas during July 1910 according to the U.S. Census.

Lived at
3235 Richmond St. in El Paso, Texas in March 1936, at the time of his son's untimely death.

The 1936 El Paso City Directory shows him living at
3415 Altura Blvd with his wife and daughter and was employed as a meat cutter at the Hot Spot Market.

The 1937 El Paso City Directory shows Mann Outlaw as Market Manager for Piggly Wiggly #3 and living at 3235
Richmond with his wife Monnie & their daughter Evelyn and son-in-law Robert F. LaLonda.

1940 Directory (last year shown in El Paso) has Mann as Manager, Hot Spot Market and living with his wife, Monnie at 2521 Federa,l in El Paso.

Moved to
Albuquerque, New Mexico about 1951.

Jan 5, 1962 Obituary--Albuquerque, New Mexico Newspaper:
Funeral services will be held in El Paso for Mann Outlaw, resident here 11 years who died in a local hospital yesterday after a short illness. He was 79. Mr. Outlaw lived at 2025 Utah NE. He was a member of the
Hoffmantown Baptist Church. He is survived by his widow; a daughter, Mrs L.R. Oxley of Albuquerque, and a sister, Mrs Hattie Pierce of Austin, Texas.

El Paso Times Obituary- Mann Outlaw,79, died Wednesday in
Albuquerque. He was a long time resident of El Paso and owner of the Union Meat Market prior to moving to Albuquerque. He is survived by his wife, Mrs Monnie Outlaw, one daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Oxley, both of Albuquerque, two grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 11AM
Friday in the Kaster & Maxon Chapel. Burial will be in
Restlawn Memorial Park.

Buried in plot with wife and son.

----

 

[NI36266] Birthdate based on Apr 1910 census of Jones County, Texas and a letter received from the Jones County Clerk. This was later confirmed by the Social Security Death Index and her daughter Peggy..

According to daughter Peggy, Evelyn was unable to have children of her own; Peggy and Clifford Oxley were adopted from Maysville, Mason County, Kentucky.

In 1952 thru 1965 Albuquerque City Directories, Evelyn is shown living at 2027 Utah N.E. Her parents, Mann and Monnie Outlaw lived next door at 2025 Utah N.E. The 1962 directory shows Evelyn as Stenographer for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. In 1966, husband La Roy is no longer shown as a member of the family in the directory but daughter Peggy is now included. In 1967 daughter Peggy is listed as student and in 1969 Clifford Oxley appeared in the directory as a "student" as well. Evelyn is listed as widow of La Roy. The 1971 directory reflects the same information. In the 1974 Albuquerque City Directory, Clifford and Lynn Oxley are listed as students living at 2323 Kathryn SE,
Apartment# 464.

 

----

 

[NI41441] Service to Texas
Eligibility
GOVERNOR OF
TEXAS and JUDGE ON THE DISTRICT COURT

Biography

DAVIS, EDMUND JACKSON (1827^1883). Edmund J. Davis, Union Army officer and Reconstruction governor of Texas, was born at St. Augustine, Florida, on October 2, 1827, the son of William Godwin and Mary Ann (Channer) Davis. His father, who came from South Carolina, was a land developer and attorney at St. Augustine. The young Davis received his education in Florida and moved with his family to Galveston, Texas, in January 1848. There he worked as a
clerk in the post office and studied law. In mid-1849 he moved to
Corpus Christi, where he worked in a store and read law. He was admitted to the bar in the fall of 1849. Between 1849 and 1853 he was an inspector and deputy collector of customs at Laredo. In 1853 he became district attorney of the Twelfth Judicial District at Brownsville. About 1856 Governor Elisha M. Pease named him
judge of the same district, and
Davis continued to serve as a state judge until 1861. As judge he accompanied the ranger unit of Capt. William G. Tobin, who was involved in the Cortina affair at Brownsville in 1859 (see CORTINA, JUAN NEPOMUCENO).

On
April 6, 1858, Davis married Anne Elizabeth Britton, daughter of Forbes Britton, a state senator and friend of Sam Houston. The couple had two sons, Britton and Waters. Britton was born in 1860, attended West Point, and became an officer in the United States Army. Waters, born in 1862, attended the University of Michigan and became an attorney and merchant in El Paso.

Davis was a Whig until the mid-1850s. In 1855 he joined the Democratic party in a fusion against the American (Know-Nothing) party, and he remained a Democrat until after the Civil War. In later politics he supported Sam Houston and opposed secession in 1861, when he ran unsuccessfully to become a delegate to the Secession Convention. After secession Davis refused to take the oath of
loyalty to the Confederacy, and the state vacated his judgeship on April 24.

As a result of his opposition to the Confederacy, he fled the state in May 1862. With John L. Haynes and William Alexander, he went to
New Orleans, then to Washington, where the men met with President Abraham Lincoln, who recommended providing arms to troops that they wanted to raise. On October 26, 1862, Davis received a colonel's commission and authorization to recruit the
cavalry regiment that became the First Texas Cavalry (U.S.).

Davis and the First Texas saw extensive service during the remainder of the war. They were at
Galveston on January 3, 1863, and barely escaped capture when Confederates took that city back from Union hands. On March 15, 1863, Confederate citizens and off-duty soldiers seized Davis in Matamoros, where he was attempting to take his family out of Texas and recruit men for his unit.
This event precipitated diplomatic trouble between the Confederacy and
Mexico that lasted until Gen. Hamilton P. Bee released Davis to appease Mexican governor Albino López. From November to December 1863 Davis was in Texas as a part of Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks's unsuccessful Rio Grande campaign. His unit marched to Rio Grande City and seized cotton and slaves in an effort to disrupt the border trade. On November 4, 1864, Davis was promoted to
brigadier general. For the rest of the war he commanded Gen. Joseph J. Reynolds's cavalry in the Division of Western Mississippi. On
June 2, 1865, he was among those who represented Gen. Edward R. S. Canby at Gen. Edmund Kirby Smith's surrender of Confederate forces in Texas.

Davis participated in state politics as a Unionist and Republican after the war. He served in the Constitutional Convention of 1866 and ran unsuccessfully for the state Senate from his old district in the 1866 general election. He represented the border district and was president of the Constitutional
Convention of 1868^69. In this period he consistently supported political programs that would have restricted the political rights of secessionists, expanded rights for blacks, and divided the state. He also favored the ab initio theory, which held that all laws passed since secession were null and void
(see AB INITIO QUESTION).

In the election of 1869
Davis ran for governor against Andrew J. Hamilton, another Republican, and won in a closely disputed race. His administration was a controversial one. Its program called for law and order backed by a State Police and restored militia, public schools, internal improvements, bureaus of immigration and geology, and protection of the frontier. All of these measures
encountered strong attacks from both Democratic and Republican opponents and added to the controversy surrounding Reconstruction in
Texas. Davis ran for reelection in December 1873 and was defeated by Richard Coke by a vote of two to one. Davis believed that the Republican national administration was partly responsible for his defeat, and relations between the governor and Washington were strained until he was removed from office by Democrats the following January in what is known as the Coke-Davis controversy.

From 1875 until his death
Davis, contemporarily described as a "tall, gaunt, cold-eyed, rather commanding figure," headed the Republican party in Texas as chairman of the state executive committee. In 1880 he ran again for governor but was badly defeated by Oran M. Roberts. In 1882 he ran for Congress in the Tenth District against John Hancock, again unsuccessfully. He was nominated as collector of customs at Galveston in 1880 but refused the job because of his
opposition to the administration of President Rutherford B. Hayes
. Supporters recommended him for a cabinet position under President Chester A. Arthur, but he received no appointment.
Davis died in Austin on February 7, 1883, and is buried there in the State Cemetery.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Ronald N. Gray, Edmund J. Davis: Radical Republican and Reconstruction Governor of
Texas (Ph.D. dissertation, Texas Tech University, 1976). William C. Nunn, Texas Under the Carpetbaggers (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1962). Charles W. Ramsdell, Reconstruction in Texas (New York: Columbia University Press, 1910; rpt., Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 1970).

Carl H. Moneyhon

(Courtesy of The Handbook of
Texas)

Headstone Inscription & Sentiments



FRONT:

EDMUND J. DAVIS
DAVIS

SIDE:

BORN
OCT. 2, 1827
IN
ST. AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA
DIED FEB. 7, 1883
IN
AUSTIN, TEXAS

BACK:

EDMUND J. DAVIS

SIDE:

Judge of the District Court of
Texas.
Brigadier General
U. S. Volunteers.
Governor of State of
Texas from 1870-1874.

Erected to his memory by his brother.

"In 1871, Texas Governor Edmund Davis appointed 3 commissioners to pick a site for the newly established
Agricultural & Mechanical College - Texas A&M College. The commissioners chose this location in large part because of the existence of a Houston and Texas Central (H&TC) railroad line which began in southeast Texas and extended through this area to its terminus in Bryan (5 miles North).

 

 

 

 

[NI41442] He was a teacher, legislator, was a Quartermaster Sarg. 49th Regt GA INF

 

[NI69030] From: Streig3
1/14/01
Descendants of Mary Ann Rodabaugh

Generation No. 1

1. MARY ANN5 RODABAUGH (JOSEPH HIRAM4, ADAM3 RODABOUGH, JOHN2 RODABAUGH, CHRISTIAN1) was born
21 Oct 1844 in, Jefferson, IA1, and died 22 Feb 1930 in Watsonville, Santa Cruz, CA. She married WILLIAM DEHART3 27 Feb 18674, son of ELI DEHART and HANNAH HARKNESS. He was born 26 Feb 1843 in, Hancock, IL5,6, and died 20 May 1928 in Watsonville Hospital, Watsonville, Santa Cruz, CA7,8.

More About MARY ANN RODABAUGH:
Burial: I. O. O. F (Pioneer),
Watsonville, Santa Cruz, CA9
Cause of Death: hypenephom of kidney


Burial: I.O.O.F (Pioneer),
Watsonville, Santa Cruz, CA9
Cause of Death: hypostatic Pneumonia

 

----


4. EDITH ANNETTE7 DEHART (JOSEPH6, MARY ANN5 RODABAUGH, JOSEPH HIRAM4, ADAM3 RODABOUGH, JOHN2 RODABAUGH, CHRISTIAN1) was born
29 Oct 1893 in Watsonville, Santa Cruz, CA43, and died 02 Nov 1991. She married NORMAN ALFRED WOOD 31 Oct 1916 in San Rafael, Contra Costa, CA44. He was born 26 Jun 1886 in Stockton, San Joaquin, CA44, and died 25 Jul 1962 in San Mateo, San Mateo, CA44.

 

 

 

[NI69524] MOTTE, JACOB (1700-1770). Son of JOHN ABRAHAM MOTTE; Father of ISAAC MOTTE and JACOB MOTTE, JR. (1729-1780); Grandfather of WILLIAM DRAYTON (1776-1846), JOHN HUGER (1786-1853), RICHARD SHUBRICK, and THOMAS SHUBRICK (1756-1810); Father-in-law of JOHN SANDFORD DART, WILLIAM DRAYTON (1732-1790), JOHN HUGER (1744-1804), JAMES IRVING, THOMAS LYNCH (1727-1776), WILLIAM MOULTRIE (1730-1805), HENRY PERONNEAU, and THOMAS SHUBRICK (1711-1779).

Jacob Motte, son of John Abraham Motte and Sarah Hill, was born in
Dublin where his Huguenot father was the Dutch Counsel. The Motte's immigrated to South Carolina early in the eighteenth century. On 22 October 1713, Jacob was apprenticed for seven years to Francis LeBrasseur. Upon completion of his apprenticeship, he entered into partnership with his uncle, CHARLES HILL. The partnership ended in 1725 and Motte was on his own. His store was on Tradd Street and his wharf at the east end of the same street. During the next twenty years he became one of the three largest merchant-bankers in colonial Charleston.

Motte's public career began in 1734 when he was elected vestryman for St. Philip's Parish. The voters of the parish elected him to the Twelfth (1739-1742) and Thirteenth (1742-1745) Royal Assemblies. When GABRIEL MANIGAULT resigned as Public Treasurer, the Commons House in March 1743 nominated Motte to be his successor.

Motte's public record was subject to severe criticism. He had no knowledge of double entry bookkeeping, mixed public monies with his private funds, was cronically late with his reports, and allowed merchants to illegally defer payment of import duties. A hurricane in 1752 damaged his property and he could not pay his public or private debts. The House delayed investigating the Treasurer's accounts for several months in hopes that Motte could get his financial affairs in order. He could not. The legislative investigation showed that he had misappropriated £90,000 from the provincial treasury. He was allowed to keep his position but had to turn over his estate to a trust. By 1759 the funds had been repaid and Motte regained control of his property. In an attempt to increase his income he formed a partnership with James Laurens in the ironware and ship chandlery firm of Laurens & Motte (1751-1755). At his death Jacob Motte owned a town house in
Charleston, Mount Pleasant Plantation in Christ Church Parish, and 20 slaves.

In Charleston Jacob Motte was active in the life of the city. With other concerned businessmen, he formed and was secretary (1736-1738) of the Friendly Society, an insurance company. He was a member of the Charleston Library Society (1750-1770) and the South Carolina Society (1754-1770) of which he was senior warden (1756-1757) and steward (1758-1759). Motte served St. Philip's Parish as vestryman (1734-1735), tax assessor and collector (1736), and Woodmeasurer (1738-1740) and St. Michael's Parish as vestryman (1760-1764). Other offices he held were justice of the peace for
Berkeley County (1732, 1756, 1765, 1767, 1769); commissioner, under the Revenue Act (1740, 1742); and vestryman for Christ Church Parish (1759-1760). A benefactor of the established church, he contributed to the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel's school for Indians and slaves and gave Christ Church a set of communion silver.

Motte married twice. His first wife was Elizabeth Martin, daughter of Hannah and Patrick Martin. They had 19 children: Martin, Sarah (m. Thomas Shubrick), Jacob, Elizabeth, Martha (1726-1728), Anne (m. Henry Peronneau), John, Abraham (1735-1763), Hannah (m. 1st Thomas Lynch, 2nd William Moultrie), Isaac, Mary (m. William Drayton), Robert, Martha (m. John Sandford Dart ), Amey, Charlotte ( m. John Huger ), Charles, Rebecca, Elizabeth (m. James Irving), an unnamed son, and Harriott. Elizabeth Martin Motte died in February 1757. On
19 June 1763 Motte wed Ann LeBrasseur, daughter of Francis LeBrasseur and Anne Mellish and the widow of Joseph Pickering. They had two children, Abraham and Francis. Jacob Motte died on 17 June 1770 and was buried in St. Philip's Churchyard in Charleston.

12th Royal Assembly 1739 - 1742 St. Philip
13th Royal Assembly 1742 - 1743 St. Philip

The Huguenots of Colonial South Carolina
By
Arthur Henry Hirsch, Ph.D.
1928, Duke University Press
reprinted 1962 by Archon Books

 

 

---------------

 

| | | | | | | | | 1 Lucy Adalina King (1962 - )

 

 

 

| | | | | | & Eleanor Fleming Charlton (1893 - 1962)

 

 

 

| | | | | | m. aft 1962

[NI08527] Prior to marriage resided: Gayhill, Crawford and Denison, TX Family has resided: Sherman (1955), Galveston (1955-59), Gatesville (1959), Fort Worth (1959-60), Ranger (1960 to present). DeRitter, LA (1961-62) while serving as doctor in the army.

 

Address is from 1960

[NI50808] Birth date is as given in the source, but it has to be incorrect. 1830?

[NI50882] aka Sarah
Justin Replogle give b. Bedford Co., PA

[NI50918] FBG 24/2 has correction that Elizabeth Cripe was not spouse of Jacob Shively (1767-1839)

[NI50924] Hessian service with Alt Von Lossberg Rgt. Deserted June 1778when brother was killed.

[NI51032] From FBR 13/4

Submitted by Ann Ward Freehafer Andersen (Mrs. Donald K.), 6445 N. Windfield,
Parker,
Colorado 80134:

A REPLOGLE LEGEND

This was told to me by a Replogle descendant whekl I was tracing my McMullen ancestry. It had been told to her by her aunt.

Peter Roof and a band of trappers saw a white girl with a band of Indians along the
Maumee River in Indiana. She had been well treated by the Indians and Peter fell in love with her. The trappers bargained with the Indians and took her home. Her name was Margaret Replogle. She had been taken in an Indian raid at the age of thirteen. She was sixteen when Peter found her.

Peter and Margaret settled in
St. Joseph County, Indiana. Peter had fought in the American Revolution with a unit from Pennsylvania. Peter and Margaret Roof had at least twelve children: Margaret, Dan, Eve, Fred, Andrew, Alec, Susan, Jacob, Peter, David, Adam and Elizabeth.

Since I was interested in the McMullens, she continued with the daughter Margaret, who married a man by the name of Bainter. Their daughter, Elizabeth Bainter married David McMullen. David was a son of Samuel
McMullen who was born in
Virginia and his first wife, Elizabthe Weaver of Franklin County, Virginia. David joined the Gold Rush to California in 1849. After his return, he worked for the Studebaker Wagon Works, the predecessor of the Studebaker Auto Company.

David and Elizabeth McMullen and their children, Lizzie, Margaret, Sarah and George Edwin migrated to Shelby County, Iowa in 1874. They located on a farm near
Harlan, Iowa. Lizzie married a Gillett and had
one daugher, Rose. Margaret married Samuel Elser, had ten children and moved to
Nebraska. Sarah never married and George Edwin married Rose Alice Shirk, daughter of William Shirk and Sarah Bomberger. They had three children. GeorgeEdwin became a banker in Harlan, Iowa. He died May 12, after his bank had failed.

Justin Replogle shows 1751 birthdate.

[NI51235] Benjamin served in the Union Army.

(my birth certificate is from terra houte Indiana union hospital)

Notes for ROGER WESLEY DEHART:
Notes from Sherri L. Richardson:
College: Between 1960 and 1964
University of California at Fresno, CA
Retirement: 1993
Name actually spelled "Rodger" on his birth certificate.

More About ROGER WESLEY DEHART:
Degree: 1964, BA in Geography48
Education: Bet. 1956 - 1960,
Madera Union High School, Madera, Madera, CA48
Occupation
: Bet. 1971 - 1993, Planner

| | | | | | | | 5 Margaret Laurens de Saussure (1960 - )

| | | | | | | | m. 27 Nov 1960

[NI74337] !s-Film 00962276; K W Harris;
o-farmer
e-attended Hampton Sidney
r-farm 7 mi from Orange where Battlefield of Rapids fought; 3 mi from Madison's house, received land where he now lives from father and 1 bl and after death of mother, her land; moved to MO in 1837 by private carriage to Wyndotte near Wheeling on Ohio R, then by boat f-witnesses at marriage were Christopher Austin and John Brooks; buried in Washington Cem in Glasgow along with wife, Mary B and Mary d 1917 and Cecil 1913-1960]
BURIAL: burial Watts Monument in Cem in Glasgow right next to Aunt Aggie's monument in Washington Cem
will-prob 10 feb 1840; wife is Polly, youngest son is Wm, son James J Watts,dau Mary M, son Wm B dau, Lavenia Gamble; also to Charlotte Letty and her dau Milley Letty from www Watts On Line

 

[NS019601] Customer pedigree.

 

 

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