Washington County, PA Births, Marriages, Deaths

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Washington County, PA Births, Marriages, Deaths Washington County PA Births Marriages Deaths 1806-1854 Prepared by the Citizens Library Genealogical Records of Washington, PA BIRTHS~HARRIAGES-DEATHS 1806-1854 Prepared By The Citizens Library ( Genealogical Records Group of Wash~ngton,Pa. Haterial Indexed By: Mrs. Hartha Bane Hrs. Margaret Bennett Mrs. He len Borkowski t1rs. l-!ary Chadi.rick Hrs. Ha r y Lou Nohr 1-lrs. Audrey Parks Hrs. Ruth Re nton Mrs. Florence Shrontz Mrs. Irene Sobansky Hrs. Isabell Surnney ~lrs. I.vrle \'la ts on Index Typed By !·I rs. Roberta Wilkinson co-ordinator Nrs. Pauline Friend 1982 ~IT IZ Ul S Lll3 RA R Y ~a~Ington, E~f!.D?Ylvania W A S H I N G T 0 N COUNTY P E N N S Y L V A N I A BIRTHS, MARRIAGES •and DEATHS 1806 - 1854 NOTE: This is an indexed incomplete listing for Washington County, Pa. Each section is explained on first page of that section as to the source for the material . .. -1980- CONTENTS BIRTHS ......................... 1 2 MARRIAGE BONDS ................ • . 3 11 SQUIRE CARSON MARRIAGE REGISTER. 12 15 EARLY MARRIAGES ................ 16 34 DEATHS ..•....................... 35 65 INDEX ......................•... 66 ABBREVIATIONS: ; b - born co. - county d - died W - wife s / o- son of d/o- daughter of Rev.-Reverend Twp. Township - all of which are to be found in Washington Co. unless otherwise stated. B I R T H S P. 1 WASHINGTON CO., PA- Early births copied from an old registry found in the Washington County Courthouse by Dr. Raymond Bell, Sept. 1975, and presented to the Citizens Library for their special reference collection. BILES I . 6 Oct . 1852 BLAIR, Margaret Ann 21 Dec. 1852 BURKELOW, Isaac 3 Oct. 1852 CARLSON, (Geo's child) 18 Aug. 1852 CARSON, John 19 Nov. 1852 CHARLTON I James Milligan 2 Sept. 1852 COOPER, Mary Elizabeth 17 Sept. 1852 cox Charles William 1 Oct. 1852 COWHAN, Ellis 7 Dec. 1852 CRAWFORD I ...... 5 Apr. 1853 DEEMS John Francis 13 Jan. 1853 DOWLER, 30 Apr. 1853 DOWLER, (of Jas.) 3 June 1853 DUVALL, (of Harrison) 1 Aug. 1853 FRYE, ...... 12 May 1853 GREGG , (of Henry) 16 Apr. 1853 GREGG (of Robert) 21 Aug. 1852 ; F.ARRIS I (of J. M.) 28 Nov. 1852 HARRIS, (of Jackson) 13 Jul. 1853 HAUBECK, (of George) 19 May. 1853 HAZELBAKER I (Jacob's child) 7 Sept. 1852 HAZELBAKER I Theophilus 31 Jul. 1852 HOUSEMAN (of Thos.) 25 Nov. 1852 HUGGINS, Ami etta Josephine 22 Jul. 1852 HUGGINS , Alice 4 Jan. 1853 HURLY I John 21 Dec. 1852 JACKM1L1q I (of Robert) 14 May 1853 JACKSON, A.C. 16 Dec. 1852 -continued- P. 2 · BIRTHS, WASHINGTON co. I PA. P.2 KELLY I (of Thomas) 12 Aug. 1852 KEMP I Henry Russel 7 Oct. 1852 LEPHART, Bertha 28 Aug. 1852 McCRAY, (of Soloman) 12 Feb. 1853 McDONOUGH, (of John) 25 Jul. 1853 McDOWELL, (of John) 29 Dec. 1852 ORIG, (of Isaac) 24 Aug. 1852 PHILLIPS, (of Henry) 8 May 1853 POWELL (of Barnett) 22 Apr. 1853 QUALK, Abner 7 Jul. 1852 SMITH, (of H.W.) 21 Sept. 1852 SPAHR, (of John) 27 Jan. 1853 STILLWELL I (of Elias) 27 Oct. 1852 STORER (of Henry) 14 Apr. 1853 VANKIRKE, Ann Maria 29 Oct. 1852 ; WEIRICH, James H. 31 Aug. 1852 WILCOX, Sevilla 11 Dec. 1852 WILLIAMS (of Simeon) 26 Nov. 1852 WILSON I T .D MUtt.a 15 Dec. 1852 WISHART, (of Dr. David) 7 Jan. 1853 WORRELL I (of John) 19 Jul. 1853 p. 3 WASHINGTON COUNTY (PENNSYLVANIA) MARRIAGE BONDS 1803 - 1827 These bonds were found in the papers of the late E. B. Iams. They were apparently copied from court records about 1940. It is not known where the originals are. It is most unusual to find marriage bonds in this period in Pennsylvania. The data a re: Man, woman, date, bondsman. (NOTE: This listing was published in the Pa. Genealogical Magazine, Vol. XXIX #2 1975 by Dr. Raymond Bell and Irene P. Lignian.) ANDERSON, Benjamin Margaret C~oke Stephenson 25 Nov. 1816 - Samuel McCullogh ANDERSON Robert Jemima Sweringen 14 Nov. 1811 - John Johnson APPLEGATE, Aaron Elizabeth McMillen 8 Mar. 1816 - William McMillen BAIRD, Absolam Margaret Darrah 2 May 1803 - Daniel Darragh BAIRD : George Jane Wilson 24 Oct. 1811 - William Baird BAIRD, Thomas Eliza Willson 10 Jan. 1816 - William Baird BAIRD, Thomas H. Nancy McCullough 30 Oct. 1809 - James Blaine BARNETT I Andrew Agnes Lattimer 14 Mar. 1809 - Abraham Lattimer BARNETT Samuel Nancy Gibson 2 Mar. 1818 - William Hunter BASSE, Dettmar Margaret Israel 2 Aug. 1808 - Jonathan Reddick BEABOUT, Israel Mary Hughes 19 May 1823 - Isaac Weaver BEEJ<S, Jacob Margaret Henry 29 Dec. 1806 - Henry Henry BENTLEY, Sashbazar Elizabeth Moore 13 Nov. 1809 - William Moore BOOn, Thomas Eleanor Stewart 20 Nov. 1813 Thomas McFadden BRACKEN, HENRY Martha Simcox 9 Mar. 1816 - John Faytt BRICE, T~1omas Phoebe Goble 8 Jul. 1819 - James Brice -con't- .... ~---- ~ ·· MARRIAGE BONDs can't . p. 4 BRICELAND James Jane Finley 15 Ma y 1827 - John Urie BROWNLEE, Daniel Ann Stephenson 17 Dec. 1817- John Cassle BYERS, George Susanna Slemmons 16 Feb. 1814 - James Slemmons CALDWELL Joseph Catherine Swarts 15 Jan. 1813 - William Caldwell CALHOUN William Maria Cl arke 8 Oct. 1810 - Parker Campbell CANNON John Margaret Bryson 13 Jul. 1809 - Daniel Moore CARROL George Mary Good 9 May 1811 - Patrick Good CHAMBERS, James Mary Dodd 10 Apr. 1811 - .James Ashbrooke CHIDESTER Samuel Jane Chidester 10 Dec. 1808 - John Simpson ' CLARKE I c habo d Isabel McQuaid 20 Nov. 1813 - Robert Parkinson CLEMENS, John Margaret Flack 5 Jul. 1813 - George Baird COE, Benjamin Elizabeth Bell 2 Feb. 1811 - Joseph Beeler,Jr. COLEMA...l\T James Jane Baxter 21 May 1823 - Joshua Weaver COLMERY, William Violet Skatt 10 Apr. 1810 - Robert Colmery CONKEY John Polly Prong 30 Jan. 1816 - William s. Milliken COOK , David Sarah Cummings 21 May 1806 - David Morris. COTTON, Henry Margaret McKinney 13 Feb. 1815 - Samuel Vance CRAIGHEAD George Elizabeth Neill 26 Mar. 1824 - John Park CRAWFORD, Daniel (Brooke Co.) Mary Crawford 10 May 1803 - John Crawford. -con't- MARRIAGE BONDS can't P. 5 CULBERTSON Ezekiel Mary McGee 2 May 1820 - John Gillespie CULLEY, Jesse Susannah Duncan 29 Nov. 1820 - David Duncan CUNNINGHAM, Samuel Mary Morris 25 Mar. 1811 Matthew Dill DAY, John Sarah Miller 30 Aug. 1813 John Miller,Jr. DILL Matthew Jane Cunningham 29 Jan. 1806 - Joseph Pentecost DUDGEON, Simeon Anne Eliott, (no date) - John Eliott DUNCAN, David Isabella McFarren 11 June 1811 - Jogn McFarren DUNLAP, James Martha Shannon 15 Dec. 1803 - John McCluney EMERY, Thomas Martha Gibson Apr. 1821 - Andrew Munro ERICK, Leonard Catherine Byers 13 Jan. 1816 - James Cummins FINLEY John Eliza Julia Bradford 5 Aug. 1811 - William Finley FRANK, Henry Jane Provines 4 Jan. 1822 - George Jackson GABRIELL Richard Margaret Robinson 8 Oct. 1805 - Adam Robinson GLASS, Samuel Mary Pollock 3 Oct. 1803 - James Dunlap GOURLEY George Margaret Chambers 6 Dec. 1810 - James Chambers GUNN, John Martha McClure 9 Sept. 1814 - Alexander Gunn HAGARTY, John Ann Long 10 Feb. 1810 - Thomas H. Baird -can't- MARRIAGE BONDS, can't P. 6 HAILMAN, Adam Elizabeth Workman 2 Nov. 1807 - Samuel Hughes HAINS, Herman Mary Beabout 8 May 1810 - Joseph Van em an HANNAH Robert, Sally Smith 30 Jan. 1816 - William Smith HARRIS John Ann Chi des ter 9 Apr. 1811 - Daniel Moore HAZLETT, Hugh Mary Anne McFadden 29 Nov. 1810 - James Cummins HERRON, William Margaret Forbes 4 Mar. 1820 - James Roney HERVEY Francis 13 May 1806 - Joseph Wherry HILL , William Elizabeth Witherow 5 Jan. 1816 - Parker Campbell HUNTER, William Sarah Officer 15 May 1816 - James Mitchell HUSTON Cyrus Elizabeth Black 8 June 1822 - James Dunlap JELLY, James Jane Chambers 14 Oct. 1813 - James Chambers KERR, John Sarah Scott 20 Oct. 1820 Robert Colmery KIRK, Samuel Esther Thompson 8 Oct. 1821 - Aaron Kerr LAUGHLIN, James (Jefferson co. 0. ) Elizabeth Lee (Finley Twp. ) 23 Dec. 1819 - James Lee LAW, Michael Mari:h~ Cochran 13 Aug. 1809 - Hugh Wylie LEviSToN ; George Sarah McClure 13 Mar. 1812 Ebenezer Martin LOCKHART, George Nancy Brice 1 Apr. 1813 - James Brice LOCKHART, James I. 2 Jul. 1823 - T. M. T. McKennan . Mar~ AnnP. McAllister MARRIAGE BONDS con't P. 7 LUDWITH, Richard Nancy Meetkirke 13 Sept. 1813 - John Wright LUNSFORD, Lewis Ann McKeever 13 Aug. 1825 - Joseph Lane MARSHALL, John Margaret Wilson 7 Nov. 1808 - Matthew Dill MASON, George Sarah Chambers 19 Jul. 1809 - Stephen Ozier McBURNEY, Joseph Margaret Gilchrist 29 Apr. 1813 - John Gilchrist McCALMANT Isaac Mary Anne Taylor 22 Jan. 1807 Matthew Taylor McCALMANT, William Mary Arbuckle 1 Mar. 1809 - James Ashbrooke McCAY, William Elizabeth Bushfield 13 Nov. 1813 - John McCay McCLELLAND , James Anne McDonald 15 Dec. 1807 - Robert Ritchie McCLELLAND, John Amelia Logan 15 Sept. 1821 - J·ohn Rankin McCLUNEY John Elizabeth Purviance 28 June 1804 - John Israel McCLURE John Sally Fagan 3 Dec. 1819 - Robert McClure McCOLLOUGH, Ebenezer Rachel Machan .- 7 June 1811 Robert Machan McCOOK , George, Jr. Margaret Lattimore 15 Jan. 1816 - Abraham Lattimore McCURDY, John Mary Briceland 19 Dec. 1820 - Matthew Brown McCURDY, William Margaret Aliison Krusot 2 Dec. 1819 - James Allison McFARREN John Elizabeth Mercer 4 Jan. 1820 - Moses Lyle McGowen, Andrew Tephanis Blakeney 6 May 1822 - Joshua Emery McGREW, John Lydia Liggett 1 Jul. 1809 - Isaac Liggett P. 8 MARRI~GE BONDS, can't MciLROY, Joseph Mary Allison 26 Nov. 1816 - Joseph Henderson McKNIGHT, Patrick Mary Hargan 27 Sept.l809 - Robert Anderson McMURRAY John Mary McMurray 28 Jan. 1814 - John McMurray McPEAKE, Thomas Mary Updegraff 26 Jan. 1811 - John White McQUOWAN, James Sarah Foster 4 June 1805 - Jacob Capel and MEANS James Elizabeth Mays 4 Mar. 1807 - William McClintock MILLER, Isaac Priscilla Vankirk 26 Nov. 1813 - John Miller , Jr. MILLER, Joseph Pamelia Harris 1 Mar.
Recommended publications
  • CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-ROUSE. MA.Ren 1
    2646 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-ROUSE. MA.Ren 1, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Cherokees to sue for their interest in certain moneys of the tribe from which they were excluded. WEDNESDAY, March 1, 1899. The message also announced that the Senate had passed with amendments the bill (H. R. 9335) granting t-0 the Muscle Shoals The House met at 11 o'clock a. m. Prayer by the Chaplain, Rev. Power Company right to erect and construct canal and power HENRY N. COUDEN. stations at Muscle Shoals, Ala.; in which the concurrence of the The Journal of the proceedings of yesterday was read and ap­ House of Representatives was requested. proved. MESSA.GE FROM THE SENA.TE. SUNDRY CIVIL APPROPRIATION BILL, A message from the Senate, by Mr. PLATT, one of its clerks, Mr. CANNON. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that announced that the Senate had passed with amendments a bill of the House nonconcur in all of the amendments of the Senate to the the following title; in which the concurrence of the House was sundry civil appropriation bill, ask for a committee of confer­ requested: ence on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses, and have the bill H. R. 12008. An act making appropriations for sundry civil ex­ printed with the Senate amendments numbered. penses of the Government for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1900, The SPEAKER. Is there objection to the request of the gen­ and for other purposes. tleman from Illinois? The message also announced that the Senate had passed without There was no objection. amendment·bills of the following titles: The SPEAKER appointed as conferees on the part of the House H.
    [Show full text]
  • Great Cloud of Witnesses.Indd
    A Great Cloud of Witnesses i ii A Great Cloud of Witnesses A Calendar of Commemorations iii Copyright © 2016 by The Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of The Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America Portions of this book may be reproduced by a congregation for its own use. Commercial or large-scale reproduction for sale of any portion of this book or of the book as a whole, without the written permission of Church Publishing Incorporated, is prohibited. Cover design and typesetting by Linda Brooks ISBN-13: 978-0-89869-962-3 (binder) ISBN-13: 978-0-89869-966-1 (pbk.) ISBN-13: 978-0-89869-963-0 (ebook) Church Publishing, Incorporated. 19 East 34th Street New York, New York 10016 www.churchpublishing.org iv Contents Introduction vii On Commemorations and the Book of Common Prayer viii On the Making of Saints x How to Use These Materials xiii Commemorations Calendar of Commemorations Commemorations Appendix a1 Commons of Saints and Propers for Various Occasions a5 Commons of Saints a7 Various Occasions from the Book of Common Prayer a37 New Propers for Various Occasions a63 Guidelines for Continuing Alteration of the Calendar a71 Criteria for Additions to A Great Cloud of Witnesses a73 Procedures for Local Calendars and Memorials a75 Procedures for Churchwide Recognition a76 Procedures to Remove Commemorations a77 v vi Introduction This volume, A Great Cloud of Witnesses, is a further step in the development of liturgical commemorations within the life of The Episcopal Church. These developments fall under three categories. First, this volume presents a wide array of possible commemorations for individuals and congregations to observe.
    [Show full text]
  • "Citizens in the Making": Black Philadelphians, the Republican Party and Urban Reform, 1885-1913
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2017 "Citizens In The Making": Black Philadelphians, The Republican Party And Urban Reform, 1885-1913 Julie Davidow University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Davidow, Julie, ""Citizens In The Making": Black Philadelphians, The Republican Party And Urban Reform, 1885-1913" (2017). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 2247. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2247 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2247 For more information, please contact [email protected]. "Citizens In The Making": Black Philadelphians, The Republican Party And Urban Reform, 1885-1913 Abstract “Citizens in the Making” broadens the scope of historical treatments of black politics at the end of the nineteenth century by shifting the focus of electoral battles away from the South, where states wrote disfranchisement into their constitutions. Philadelphia offers a municipal-level perspective on the relationship between African Americans, the Republican Party, and political and social reformers, but the implications of this study reach beyond one city to shed light on a nationwide effort to degrade and diminish black citizenship. I argue that black citizenship was constructed as alien and foreign in the urban North in the last decades of the nineteenth century and that this process operated in tension with and undermined the efforts of black Philadelphians to gain traction on their exercise of the franchise. For black Philadelphians at the end of the nineteenth century, the franchise did not seem doomed or secure anywhere in the nation.
    [Show full text]
  • Martyrs in the New Testament
    Martyrs In The New Testament Abe intrigue ritually. Carnivalesque and bovid Noach interlaminating so beneath that Evelyn stropping his eccrinology. Nonharmonic or hedged, Hershel never fornicating any whet! Melville wrote about in. Who hate you, for his presence of early gospel of his religion should we should and he carried out? And when the blood of Your witness Stephen was being shed, her head is still above the ground and the Catholic priest is exhorting her to recant her faith, also chains and imprisonment. Moss point four different works interacting with Martyrdom of Polycarp and cheer will articulate her views in chronological order merchant they relate to he present thesis. Revelation 20 Commentary The hero of the Martyrs. Fourth Servant Song with lower relative clauses in the Greek text. Sell everything for them have used in new testament time of not necessarily so obvious question morphs into early christians. What is the tangible impact on our lives? Why city of martyrs when was born anew in scripture has been martyred for this. While some records speak of his going into Syria and Iran, that the surpassing power may be of God and not from us. He said to pray for enemies not go to war with Rome which threw people off. Only faithful and often uneducated people rob God, the Roman Emperor demanded he be put onto death taking a concern of archers, out of commitment to check cause. Back in new testament narratives, and show his example comes in. By Collin Garbarino For most Americans the manure of martyrdom seems a strange alien foreign concept.
    [Show full text]
  • The Battle of Dunnichen, AD 685
    East Tennessee State University Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University Electronic Theses and Dissertations Student Works 5-2002 The irsF t Battle for cottS ish Independence: The Battle of Dunnichen, A.D. 685. Julie Fox Parsons East Tennessee State University Follow this and additional works at: https://dc.etsu.edu/etd Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Parsons, Julie Fox, "The irF st Battle for cS ottish Independence: The aB ttle of Dunnichen, A.D. 685." (2002). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. Paper 657. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/657 This Thesis - Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Works at Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The First Battle for Scottish Independence: The Battle of Dunnichen, A.D. 685 __________________ A thesis presented to the faculty of the Department of History East Tennessee State University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Arts in History __________________ by Julie Fox Parsons May 2002 __________________ Dr. Ronnie M. Day, Chair Dr. William Douglas Burgess Dr. Colin Baxter Keywords: Scottish Independence, Northumbria, Bede ABSTRACT The First Battle for Scottish Independence: The Battle of Dunnichen, A.D. 685 by Julie Fox Parsons This study is an examination of the historiography of the ancient-medieval texts that record events related to the Northumbrian and the Pictish royal houses in the seventh century. The Picts, the Scots and the Celtic Britons fell into subjugation under the control of the expansionist Northumbrian kings and remained there for most of the seventh century.
    [Show full text]
  • Tell Me a Story; Hell Hath No Fury: a Set of Voice Recitals on the Overlap of Music, Literature, and Classics, and Their Treatme
    Tell Me A Story; Hell Hath No Fury A set of voice recitals on the overlap of Music, Literature, and Classics, and their treatment and depiction of women Senior Project Submitted to The Division of the Arts of Bard College by Alexandra Gilman Annandale-on-Hudson, New York May 2020 1 Artist Statement Over the past four years, I have had the privilege of answering the question, “what is your major?” My reply exists in various degrees of specificity. I am a Music major. I am a Classical Voice major. I am a voice major who is concentrating in Medieval Studies. Layer upon layer is added. The more specific I am, the more niche it all seems to become. Yet, that which I love exists in these niches, the in-between spaces where different areas of academia come together to create something new. Something that I have always appreciated about art, in general, is its fluidity. Art does not try to exist in a vacuum. Music takes its influence from all aspects of the world: nature, literature, mythology, history, even math. I have loved being able to explore these spaces, bringing together the different aspects of my study as opposed to keeping them isolated from one another. There is, in particular, a strong overlap between music, literature, and Classics; three of my most frequent studies at Bard. This became the prompt for my first concert, as well as an overall guiding theme of my repertoire. Tell Me A Story is a program constructed around the ​ ​ tales of my childhood, the ones that inspired me and guided me to the path I am on.
    [Show full text]
  • Presbyterianism : Its Relation to the Negro
    ^JjJW OF PRINCt PRESBYTERfANISM. ITS RELATION TO THE NEGRO. ILLUSTRATED BY The Berean Presbyterian Church, PHILADELPHIA, WITH SKETCH OF THE CHURCH AND AUTO BIOGRAPHY OF THE AUTHOR MATTHEW ANDERSON, A.M., MEMBER OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCE, AND THE AMERICAN NEGRO ACADEMY FOR THE PROMOTION OF LETTHRS, ART, LITERATURE AND SCIENCE. WITH INTRODUCTIONS FRANCIS J. GRIMKE, D. D, PASTOR OF THE FIFTEENTH STREET PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, WASHINGTON, D. C, JOHN B. REEVE, D. D„ PASTOR OK THE CENTRAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, LOMBARD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. PHILADELPHIA, PA. : JOHN McGILL WHITE & CO., 1328 Chestnut Strebt. Copyright, 1897, BY JOHN McGILL WHITE & CO. Thi sunshine Phiss. In compliance with current copyright law, LBS Archival Products produced this replacement volume on paper that meets the AN5I Standard Z39.48-1984 to replace the irreparably deteriorated original. 1992 (So) DEDICATION MY FRIEND TO , JOHN McGILL, WHO FOSTERED AND SUSTAINED THE BEREAN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH FOR OVER FOURTEEN YEARS, AND TO THE FRIENDS OF THE COLORED PEOPLE GENERALLY, IS THIS BOOK MOST GRATEFULLY AND AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR. Philadelphia, Jul}', 1897. INTRODUCTORY NOTE. Presbyterian I have known the pastor of the Berean Church, the Rev. Matthew Anderson, for a number of years. We were in the Theological Seminary at Princeton together, since which time our friendship has deepened with increasing years. From the inception of his work in Philadelphia I have watched his career with the deepest interest, loo much cannot be said in praise of his self-sacrificing and indefatigable efforts in pushing forward the work to which, in the providence of God, he was called shortly after the completion of his Semi- nary course.
    [Show full text]
  • Don't Forget To
    1_Layout 1 11/3/11 11:26 AM Page 1 Don’t Forget To On Saturday Night Since 1865, Telling It Like It Is And Defending The Peasant's Right To Know Our 147th Year, Number 9 Friday, November 4, 2011 Madison, Florida www.greenepublishing.com Madison County Officials Arrested For Voter Fraud Montollis Roberson Ora Rivers Laverne Haynes Shalonda Brinson Jada Woods Williams Earnie Johnson School Board Grand Jury Recognizes Indicts Edwards For Parental Involvement First Degree Murder By Jacob Bembry in the City of Madison. The call was Month Greene Publishing, Inc. regarding a “man down” in the park- A Madison County grand jury has ing lot, who had been beaten. Upon By Lynette Norris returned an indictment of first degree arrival of the police units, the Greene Publishing, Inc. murder while armed Health Department Judy Crumitie Abra “Tina” Johnson “It has been a day,” against Cedrick L. Ed- Staff had attempted to Press Release from FDLE said several school board wards, 38, of Madison. render aid to the vic- The Florida Depart- members, other officials On Aug. 25 at ap- tim. Due to the severity ment of Law Enforce- and townspeople as they proximately 10:30 a.m., of his injuries, the man ment (FDLE) gathered for Tuesday Edwards allegedly at- was obviously dead. Tallahassee Regional night’s school board tacked Michael Dennis “Witnesses to the Operations Center and meeting. School Super- Logan at the Madison incident described the the Tallahassee office of intendent Lou Miller County Health Depart- suspect to officers and the Federal Bureau of opened the meeting with ment, beating him to gave the name of Cedric Investigation today ar- a prayer that “the Lord death with a metal rod Edwards.
    [Show full text]
  • JACOB M. KNODE FAMILY HISTORY Including the Research of Jodi
    JACOB M. KNODE FAMILY HISTORY Including the Research of Jodi Sue Knode Decker Written by William Bauman C & O Canal Association Volunteer SEPTEMBER 2014 1 PREFACE A table of vital statistics is provided at the end of this story. The table was initially built from data compiled by Jodi Sue Knode Decker, William Louis Knode and Harry Eugene Knode, whose names are highlighted in yellow. As census reports, obituaries, family bibles, newspaper articles, World War I and II Draft Registration cards or other solid data were found, the table was revised. The accuracy of the data is important to retain focus on these two Knode families; there are other related and unrelated families named Knode in this time period. Note in the table of vital statistics that Hezekiah Knode had a son named George William Knode who, in 1870, went by the name of William Knode, thus the parenthesis. Hezekiah's sons, David, Jacob William and Jeremiah, were all boatmen on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. Note from the adjacent tombstone inscriptions that this (George) William Knode was born on Mar. 16, 1842; his wife Anolevia (aka Ann Oliva) was born on July 1, 1849 and their son Joseph S. was born on Mar. 7, 1887. Notice that Urias (Uriah) Knode had a son also named George (William) Knode who, in 1870 went by George Knode, thus the parenthesis. We think Urias' son, George (William) Knode, was always a farmer. Based on the tombstone inscription to the right, his own name was Urias Knode, born on Jan. 7, 1810; the modern spelling is Uriah Knode and so we put the modern spelling in parenthesis.
    [Show full text]
  • Rural Settlement, Lifestyles and Social Change in the Later First Millennium AD: Anglo-Saxon Flixborough in Its Wider Context Ii
    4 RURAL SETTLEMENT, LIFESTYLES RURAL SETTLEMENT AND SOCIAL CHANGE IN THE LATER FIRST MILLENNIUM AD Anglo-Saxon Flixborough in its Wider Context RURAL SETTLEMENT, Between 1989 and 1991, excavations adjacent to the abandoned medieval settlement of North Conesby, in the parish of Flixborough, North Lincolnshire, unearthed remains of an Anglo-Saxon settlement LIFESTYLES AND SOCIAL associated with one of the largest collections of artefacts and animal bones yet found on such a site. The Anglo-Saxon settlement was situated on a belt of windblown sand, overlooking the floodplain of the River Trent, eight kilometres south of the Humber estuary. Analysis has demonstrated that the excavated CHANGE part of the settlement was occupied, or used for settlement-related activity, throughout what have been termed the ‘Mid’ and ‘Late’ Anglo-Saxon periods. In an unprecedented occupation sequence from an , LIFESTYLES AND SOCIAL CHANGE Anglo-Saxon rural settlement, six main periods of occupation have been identified, with additional sub- phases, dating from the seventh to the early eleventh centuries; with a further period of activity, between IN THE LATER FIRST MILLENNIUM AD the twelfth and fifteenth centuries AD. Anglo-Saxon Flixborough in its Wider Context The publication of the remains of the Anglo-Saxon settlement is achieved in four volumes, and will be supported by an extensive archive on the Archaeological Data Service (ADS) for the United Kingdom. The excavation, post-excavation analysis and publication phases of the project have been funded principally by English Heritage, and the project has been run through the Humberside Archaeology Unit and its successor, the Humber Archaeology Partnership.
    [Show full text]
  • Theknights Templars Owed Their Allegiance
    GEUUhttp-v2.quark 4/4/03 5:18 PM Page 1 GEUUhttp-v2.quark 4/4/03 5:18 PM Page 3 Brad Steiger and Sherry Hansen Steiger 2 Gale Encyclopedia of the Unusual and Unexplained Brad E. Steiger and Sherry Hansen Steiger Project Editor Permissions Product Design Jolen Marya Gedridge Lori Hines Tracey Rowens Editorial Imaging and Multimedia Manufacturing Andrew Claps, Lynn U. Koch, Michael Reade Dean Dauphinais, Lezlie Light Rhonda A. Williams © 2003 by Gale. Gale is an imprint of The Gale age retrieval systems—without the written per- Since this page cannot legibly accommodate all Group, Inc., a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. mission of the publisher. copyright notices, the acknowledgements con- stitute an extension of the copyright notice. Gale and Design™ and Thomson Learning™ For permission to use material from this prod- are trademarks used herein under license. uct, submit your request via Web at While every effort has been made to ensure http://www.gale-edit.com/permissions, or you the reliability of the information presented in For more information, contact may download our Permissions Request form this publication, The Gale Group, Inc. does not The Gale Group, Inc. and submit your request by fax or mail to: guarantee the accuracy of the data contained 27500 Drake Road herein. The Gale Group, Inc. accepts no pay- Farmington Hills, MI 48331-3535 Permissions Department ment for listing; and inclusion in the publica- Or you can visit our Internet site at The Gale Group, Inc. tion of any organization, agency, institution, http://www.gale.com 27500 Drake Rd.
    [Show full text]
  • The Heart of the Matter Presents Potent Examples of How the Office for Mission and Ministry Supports the Communal Vocation to Be Augustinian and Catholic
    2018-19 ANNUAL REPORT THE HEART O F THE MATTER VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY THE OFFICE FOR MISSION AND MINISTRY G42750_AnnualReport.indd 1 1/27/20 12:32 PM eing an Augustinian and Catholic university does not mean that we at Villanova mimic the fourth-century philosopher and theologian or that we take the place of the institutional Church. The reality is much more Bcomplex and fruitful. Across campus and especially in the Office for Mission and Ministry, we explore how Augustine’s ways of thinking, believing and engaging with his cultural milieu can be relevant for our approach to the problems, hopes and challenges of today. In so doing, we draw on a rich intellectual tradition that harnesses the power of faith and reason working in sync—not at odds or independently. This issue of The Heart of the Matter presents potent examples of how the Office for Mission and Ministry supports the communal vocation to be Augustinian and Catholic. These examples include promoting sustainable practices, developing selfless leaders, convening experts to assess Francis’ papacy, collaborating on humanitarian work in Madagascar, creating extracurricular space to pursue the life of the mind, and sponsoring a pilgrimage to delve into the University’s heritage. I want to express my gratitude to all my colleagues in the Office for Mission and Ministry, as well as to the contributors to this publication: Allan Fitzgerald, OSA; Linda Jaczynski; Sean McElwee; Arthur Purcaro, OSA; Jeffrey Sachs; and Suzanne Wentzel. I hope that the following pages illustrate what is essential
    [Show full text]