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----- Original Message -----
From: Pat Rossiter
To:
Subject: Pant Estate nr Hafodrynys
----- Original Message -----
From: Pat Rossiter
Subject: Pant Estate nr Hafodrynys
Greetings from Australia
Could sks assist with the location of PANT FARM nr Newbridge.
Any info can be of assistance.
Thanks in advance
PATRICK ROSSITER
----- Original Message -----
From: Pat Rossiter
Subject: re Family History
,Greetings from Australia .
I am e-mailing if possible if anyone may assist me with details of lost family members ??
>HERBERT LEWIS of ABERCARN Tinplate works abt 1929
>> JOHN POWELL of ABERCARN Lockkeeper abt 1925
>>> FRON-HAUL at NEWBRIDGE abt 1907
>>>> MARK ROSSITER at CWM-DOWS abt 1930-1933.
>>>>> CEMETERY RECORDS of BLACKWOOD abt 1925-1935
My contact e-mail address is rossiter(a)one.net.au
I plan to Visit STH WALES in OCT 2000 ,So any information can be of assistance.
Thanks in advance & Awaiting your reply.
PATRICK (PAT) ROSSITER
From: Pat Rossiter
Subject: RE JOHN LEWIS
Could sks assist regarding JOHN LEWIS from ST CLEARS ,who lived near TREVETHIN ,STH WALES abt 1870's.
Possible marriage to ? POWELL..
Thanks in advance .PATRICK
rossiter(a)one.net.au
Greetings from Australia
Could sks assist with details of
> School Records& Employment Records of coal miners abt 1918-1930 also newspapers 1907-1930
I will be in ABERCARN in Sept/Oct 2000.
>> Assistance required regarding places to do lookups also advice regarding B & B's around area of ABERCARN .
Thanks in advance
PAT ROSSITER
Afon/Avon (English(?) version) = river - so it is very good having the River
Avon!! - sort of River River! - as in Stratford on Avon, Bradford on Avon;
Aberafon/Aberavon - bridge over river.
Afton is a river in East Ayrshire, Scotland running through Afton Bridgend
but is probably the same root derivation as Afon/Avon - see multi-map at
http://uk8.multimap.com/map/places.cgi and enter Afton - you can then find
it on the map. Very useful site for all sorts of places - could save a lot
of queries on this list!!
Andrew
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Watergrdnr(a)aol.com [SMTP:Watergrdnr@aol.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2000 1:40 PM
> To: BlaenauGwent-L(a)rootsweb.com
> Subject: [BlaenauGwent] Re: BlaenauGwent-D Digest V00 #183
>
> Hi Josephine and Listers,
>
> I have just learned that afton means river. I had commented on one of my
> favorite old songs, "Flow gently, Sweet Afton." I had always been told
> that
> it was a song from Scotland and understood that Afton was the name of the
> river. Will someone please tell me the origin of the song and whether it
> refers to rivers in general or to a particular one?
>
> Thanks for your help.
>
> Jodie BOWEN Russu
>
>
> ==== BlaenauGwent Mailing List ====
> Abertillery website:
> http://www.abertillery-net.co.uk/
This e-mail, and any attachment, is confidential. If you have received it in error, please delete it from your system, do not use or disclose the information in any way, and notify me immediately. The contents of this message may contain personal views which are not the views of the BBC, unless specifically stated.
Glyn Hale, Thanks for your great web site. I have added it to my
favorites!
Ed McMillen
New Mexico
Researching;
BIRD; Abersychan, Trevithin, Blaina
STIFF; Usk, Trevethin
JENKINS; Usk
----- Original Message -----
From: Glyn Hale <ghale(a)argonet.co.uk>
To: <BlaenauGwent-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Tuesday, June 27, 2000 5:37 PM
Subject: [BlaenauGwent] Re: Mon, England or Wales - again.
> On Tue 27 Jun 2000 (02:00:04), Bl Gwent wrote:
>
> >I can find Monmouthshire on the older England map but not on my newer
England
> >map. The IGI states that my Jeremiah BIRD was born in Monmouthshire,
> >England yet my aunt said that Jeremiah was born in Wales. What's going
> >on?
>
>
> Hi geographically confused Ed,
>
> This is a question that crops up at least once a month on the lists.
> Some people, including the LDS, thought for a long time that Monmouthshire
was
> in England and that's why it's listed under England on the IGI. But to
most of
> us who live(d) in the county it's always been in Wales, so we think your
aunt
> was right.
> For a full explanation see my Short History of Monmouthshire at the
address
> below.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Glyn Hale
> --
> History of Monmouthshire Page
> www.argonet.co.uk/users/ghale/gwent.html
>
>
>
>
>
> ==== BlaenauGwent Mailing List ====
> South Wales Argus Newspaper:
> http://www.southwalesargus.co.uk/
>
>
In article <6a.4334128.268b4c2d(a)aol.com>,
<Watergrdnr(a)aol.com> wrote:
> Hi Josephine and Listers,
> I have just learned that afton means river. I had commented on one of
> my favorite old songs, "Flow gently, Sweet Afton." I had always been
> told that it was a song from Scotland and understood that Afton was the
> name of the river. Will someone please tell me the origin of the song
> and whether it refers to rivers in general or to a particular one?
Hi Jodie,
I don't know the answer to this. Perhaps Afton is the name of a particular
river or stream. Afon is the Welsh for river. It has a short a at the
beginning as in cat and the f is pronounced like a v.
Josephine
Researching Jenkin HARRIS and Charlotte HARRIS (formerly BAKER nee NORMAN)
at Garndiffaeth, MON 1859 and Six Bells, MON 1861
--
___ _|______________________:_ __________________________
\___|___Glas y Dorlan________|____ /
|________________________________/ / Josephine Jeremiah
http://www.argonet.co.uk/users/ianandjo ianandjo(a)argonet.co.uk
Hi Josephine and Listers,
I have just learned that afton means river. I had commented on one of my
favorite old songs, "Flow gently, Sweet Afton." I had always been told that
it was a song from Scotland and understood that Afton was the name of the
river. Will someone please tell me the origin of the song and whether it
refers to rivers in general or to a particular one?
Thanks for your help.
Jodie BOWEN Russu
On Tue 27 Jun 2000 (02:00:04), Bl Gwent wrote:
>I can find Monmouthshire on the older England map but not on my newer England
>map. The IGI states that my Jeremiah BIRD was born in Monmouthshire,
>England yet my aunt said that Jeremiah was born in Wales. What's going
>on?
Hi geographically confused Ed,
This is a question that crops up at least once a month on the lists.
Some people, including the LDS, thought for a long time that Monmouthshire was
in England and that's why it's listed under England on the IGI. But to most of
us who live(d) in the county it's always been in Wales, so we think your aunt
was right.
For a full explanation see my Short History of Monmouthshire at the address
below.
Cheers,
Glyn Hale
--
History of Monmouthshire Page
www.argonet.co.uk/users/ghale/gwent.html
TO ALL WHO RESPONDED! Thank you thank you thank you! My southern Wales
geographic history is much better now.
All of your responses were a bit different but generally the same. There
was only one discrepancy: One person stated that Blaina was in Aberystruth
Parish and another stated that it was in Bedwelty Parish?
Which parish is correct; Aberystruth or Bedwelty?
Thank you all again!
Ed McMillen
geographically clear in NM.
BIRD; Blaina, Abersychan, Trevethin
JENKINS; Panteg
STIFF; Usk, Trevethin
In article <000a01bfdf7b$69364900$22a7cece@default>,
oldeoak <oldeoak(a)cvn.com> wrote:
> My great aunt told me that her grandfather Jeremiah BIRD was born in
> "Blyna", Wales. I searched what poor maps I have of Wales and only
> found Blaenavon. Through the list here a town of "Blaina" is mentioned.
> Are Blaenavon and Blaina the same place?
Hi Ed,
No, Blaina and Blaenavon aren't the same place. They are near each other
but in different valleys in Monmouthshire. Blaina is in the next valley to
the west of Blaenavon and the communities are almost opposite each other
but divided by a mountain.
As members of my family lived in both places in the 19th century, I looked
in a gazeteer published in 1875 and extracted the following information:
The gazeteer claimed that Blaina, 9 miles west south west of Abergavenny,
was situated ' in a very picturesque spot between two very high and steep
ranges of hills, which separate the Ebwy Valley from that of the Afon'. It
was 18 miles from Newport by the Western Valleys Railway, which had a
station at Nant y Glo about one and a half miles from Blaina. At that
time, according to the gazeteer, the whole population of Blaina was
engaged in ' the extensive ironworks of Messrs Levick and Simpson'.
Blaenavon, 5 miles to the south west of Abergavenny, was 'situated in a
mountain district near the head (Blaen) of the river Afon-Llwyd'. Then,
coal and iron were abundant there and the iron works were of great extent.
'The inhabitants are chiefly employed in the mines, which are worked by
means of horizontal shafts, and yield about 400 tons of iron a week. Some
of the dwellings are cut in the sides of the rocks'.
As for Monmouthshire being in England or Wales, I can say that as one
travels down the A40 into Monmouth from Gloucester, there's a big
bilingual sign saying 'Welcome to Wales' and from then on the road signs
are in English and in Welsh.
Josephine
Researching James BAKER buried at St Peter's Church, Blaenavon, on 29th
September 1858 aged 25.
John HANCOCK/HANDCOCK buried St Peter's Church, Blaina on 20th
December 1869.
--
___ _|______________________:_ __________________________
\___|___Glas y Dorlan________|____ /
|________________________________/ / Josephine Jeremiah
http://www.argonet.co.uk/users/ianandjo ianandjo(a)argonet.co.uk
My great aunt told me that her grandfather Jeremiah BIRD was born in
"Blyna", Wales. I searched what poor maps I have of Wales and only found
Blaenavon. Through the list here a town of "Blaina" is mentioned.
Are Blaenavon and Blaina the same place? Whether these are different places
or the same, what county and parish are they in? Gwent or Monmouthshire? I
can find Monmouthshire on the older England map but not on my newer England
map. The IGI states that my Jeremiah BIRD was born in Monmouthshire,
England yet my aunt said that Jeremiah was born in Wales. What's going on?
Also if someone has access to the 1861 census, would you please look for the
Jeremiah BIRD family? Thank you.
Ed McMillen
Geographically confused in New Mexico
RESEARCHING:
BIRD; Blaina, Abersychan, Trevithin
STIFF; Usk & Trevithin
JENKINS; Panteg
In article <200006261159.XAA15278(a)smtp4.ihug.co.nz>,
Pam Thornbury <pthorn(a)ihug.co.nz> wrote:
> Hello Josephine and Melissa.
> This may provide some information for both of you.
> 1891 Census:
> 28 Hope Street, Blaina
> VEATER, Thomas, HD, M, 69, Driller in Fitting Shop, SOM Farmborough
> Mary, Wife, 65, GLA Rumney
> James, Boarder, Widr, Waterman (Barge), SOM Farmborough
> CHAMBERLAIN, James, Boarder, U, 21, Coal miner, MON Blaina
Hi Pam,
Many thanks for this. You've come to my help yet again! Magic!
I am really excited with these new additions to my family tree. I can't
wait until my husband comes home from work to tell him that I have a
boatman, James VEATER, in my family! (Canals are Ian's particular hobby.)
James VEATER, the widowed boarder who was listed as Waterman (Barge),
would have worked on the Monmouthshire & Brecon Canal. To me, that's one
of the most scenic peaceful canals in this country though not doubt in its
heyday it would have been a hive of industry.
Lots of information, too, on the family of Thomas, the son of Thomas
VEATER, and Fanny VEATER (nee WEBB), Melissa's great-aunt.
In just a few days, an excellent profile of this family is emerging, which
I can add to my own research and pass on to a number of VATER/VEATER
researchers.
All the best,
Josephine
--
___ _|______________________:_ __________________________
\___|___Glas y Dorlan________|____ /
|________________________________/ / Josephine Jeremiah
http://www.argonet.co.uk/users/ianandjo ianandjo(a)argonet.co.uk
Hello Josephine and Melissa.
This may provide some information for both of you.
1891 Census:
28 Hope Street, Blaina
VEATER, Thomas, HD, M, 69, Driller in Fitting Shop, SOM Farmborough
Mary, Wife, 65, GLA Rumney
James, Boarder, Widr, Waterman (Barge), SOM Farmborough
CHAMBERLAIN, James, Boarder, U, 21, Coal miner, MON Blaina
and at:
131 High Street
VEATER, Thomas, HD, M, 39, Fitter, MON Blaina
Fanny, Wife, 26, GLOS Cinderford
Lewis, SO, 3 1/2, MON Blaina
Wilfred Llewellyn, SO, 1 1/2, MON Blaina
WEBB, George, FIL, Widr, 66, Annuitant, HEF - (Blind)
Pam
in New Zealand
Hi Listers,
I have had an amazing response to my request for information about the
surname VEATER and have found two new relatives overnight! Thank you to
all concerned. I will reply privately to those who responded and send
additional information on the VEATERs to family members.
It looks like Melissa Brinkley's great-aunt Fanny WEBB married Thomas
VEATER, the son of the 39-year-old Thomas VEATER whom Dot found for me in
the 1861 Blaina census. The latter had a brother James, 42, at the time of
the 1861 census who is the ancestor of another BlaenauGwent lister, Rae
Edwards.
Thomas and James VEATER, the two brothers of the 1861 Blaina census, are
very likely to have been the nephews of my 3x great-grandfather, Jonathan
VEATER, of Temple Cloud, Cameley, Somerset.
The VEATERs who still live in Monmouthshire may well be descendants of
this pair and, if not, are more than likely to be the descendants of the
VATERs/VEATERs who hailed from the area around Clutton, High Littleton and
Cameley in Somerset.
Just over a year ago, I didn't even know that VEATERs were among my
ancestors but through the mailing lists, censuses and parish registers I
have amassed a considerable amount of information about them.
A little information about the Temple Cloud VEATERs is on my website but I
can see, in the light of further information coming in, that I must update
it very soon!
Josephine
Researching VEATER/PAYNE/VOKES in Temple Cloud, SOM and Pontycymmer, GLA
Jenkin HARRIS and Charlotte HARRIS (formerly BAKER nee NORMAN)
in Six Bells, Abertillery, MON in 1861
--
___ _|______________________:_ __________________________
\___|___Glas y Dorlan________|____ /
|________________________________/ / Josephine Jeremiah
http://www.argonet.co.uk/users/ianandjo ianandjo(a)argonet.co.uk
Hi! I have a great aunt named Fanny Webb who married a Thomas Veater in
Bethel Baptist Chapel, Blaina, Wales on February 16, 1884. The name was
spelled Vater on their original marriage certificate, according to a cousin
who has the certificate in her possession. There was her mother, Eliza, and
her brother, Lewis, in attendance at the wedding. They had several
children, Lewis, Wilfred, Maryann, Elise May, Gladys, a second Elise May,
Mary Ellen, Doris, Stanley, Frederick James, Phoebe and Gladys Lillian,
along with two other sons whose names are unknown to me. They immigrated
with some of the children in 1904 on the SS Freeman. According to the
information obtained from a cousin, Thomas had a brother named James. Also,
it is believed that Thomas was married before but there is no information on
another wife or children. I am related to this family on the Webb side so
this is all I know about the Veaters. If this rings any bells for any one I
would be interested to hear of it. I obtained this information from a cousin
who is a great-granddaughter to Thomas Veater. I have personally been
looking for information on my Webb family and as a result found myself
looking for information on my great-aunt Fanny Webb Veater. I have been in
touch with a gentleman in Utah who is also a Veater but I haven't gotten it
clear whether he is related to this particular branch of the family.
Anyway, that is the information that I have to share and would be interested
to know if this was of any use to you.
Kindest regards
Melissa Brinkley
Fort Worth, Texas
-----Original Message-----
From: Ian and Jo Jeremiah <ianandjo(a)argonet.co.uk>
To: BlaenauGwent-L(a)rootsweb.com <BlaenauGwent-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Date: Saturday, June 24, 2000 4:28 PM
Subject: [BlaenauGwent] VEATER in Blaina
>Hi Listers,
>
>I'd be very grateful if anyone has links to or more information concerning
>brothers James and Thomas VEATER who lived in Blaina in the 19th century.
>They were both born in Farmborough, Somerset. James was baptized at the
>parish church of Clutton in 1819 and Thomas was baptized in the same
>church in 1821.
>
>Their name could be spelt VATER, VATOR, VEATOR or VEATORS!
>
>Dot has kindly provided me with their 1861 Blaina census details. Then,
>James VEATER was 42, his wife Mary A. was 34 and their daughter Ann was 1
>year old. Thomas was 39 and his wife Mary was 36 while daughter Mary A.
>was 7 and son Thomas was 11.
>
>I have the 1881 Aberystruth census information on James and his brother
>Thomas who were then living in the same household under the name VEATORS.
>
>I am in touch with the descendants of James who live in the U.S.A. They
>will be visiting the U.K next month and I'd like to be able to pass on
>some information about their family.
>
>The father of Thomas and James was Thomas VEATER. He was born about 1787
>and died on 7th September 1857 in Blaina. He was buried on 18th
>September 1857 in St Peter's, Blaina. He was the brother of my 3x
>great-grandfather Jonathan VEATER who stayed in Somerset.
>
>Mary, the wife of the elder Thomas, had previously been buried at St
>Peter's Church.
>
>Josephine
>
>Researching VEATER/PAYNE/VOKES in Temple Cloud, SOM and Pontycymmer, GLA
> VATER/VATOR in Clutton, SOM
>
>--
> ___ _|______________________:_ __________________________
> \___|___Glas y Dorlan________|____ /
> |________________________________/ / Josephine Jeremiah
>http://www.argonet.co.uk/users/ianandjo ianandjo(a)argonet.co.uk
>
>
>==== BlaenauGwent Mailing List ====
>
>
>
Hello all,
First my apologies for posting this to 7 lists, and secondly, my
apologies for the length of this message. Friday, 23 June, Gary Hodge
of the MidMarch List very kindly posted information about the Landmark
site that offers online viewing of old ordnance maps of most of the
UK. I posted this to all of the lists (I think) that I'm on, in case
some would be interested.
Today, the subject came up about purchasing copies of these old
ordnance maps. The Landmark site does offer a CD-ROM that contains all
of the old ordnance maps, but I'm only looking for certain maps and
probably have no need of an entire set on CD.
The Landmark site did show its sources for information and this led me
to a site that offers individual copies of old ordnance maps. Many of
you are probably aware of this site, but others, like me, may not know
of it. Their advertising reads:
"Ordnance Survey holds an extensive archive of Historical mapping,
dating from the early nineteenth century and offers a full range of
scales from 1:500 to 1:625 000 on both County Series and National Grid
sheet lines.
>From this archive, individual black and white copies can be produced
on high-quality chart paper or film, depending on what you require.
Historical mapping is invaluable for recording the development of
towns and villages, depicting everything from old quarries and pits to
grand country houses. Historical mapping reveals the history of every
town and village. Schools and other educational establishments
throughout the country, can gain a snapshot in time, adding visual aid
to history lessons!
Historical mapping is ideal for those who wish to trace their family's
ancestral past.
Historical Mapping is available for different editions. These are
generally:
First Edition: first County Series survey, published dates 1843 to
1893
Second Edition: first County Series revision, published dates 1891
to1912
Third Edition: second County Series revision, published dates 1904 to
1939
Fourth Edition: third County Series revision, published dates 1919 to
1943
First National Gird Edition: first National Grid resurvey, published
dates from 1945. Not all areas will have mapping available for each
edition, as the number of revisions for each County varies. Generally,
the third and fourth editions are only available for urban areas.
All of Great Britain was mapped between 1844 and 1896. Up to three
revised editions of these maps were produced before 1939.
Towns
Most towns were mapped between 1844 and 1888 at one of the following
scales:
1:500
1:528
1:1056
1:2500
London was mapped at 1:1056 scale in 1862-71 and revised in 1893-95.
Most revisions of town maps and the later revisions of London were at
1:2500 scale.
Rural areas
Rural areas (excluding uncultivated areas) were mapped between 1853
and 1896 at 1:2500 scale. Up to three revisions were published.
Six-inch maps (1:10 560)
These were produced from 1841 onwards to cover the whole country. Most
first editions were produced as full sheets and most revisions as
quarter sheets."
The URL is: http://www.ordnancesurvey.gov.uk/
Once there, click on "Maps, Guides & CDs" on the left sidebar. Then
click on "Historical Mapping" near the bottom of the listing.
Near the bottom of the page, prices are quoted for paper copies and
film.
Hope this helps some of you looking for old maps that show landmarks,
house names, pub names, coal pits, churches and chapels, bridges, etc.
Sincerely,
Diane Butler
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
djbutler(a)dellnet.com
Researching:
Wales
Rev. Evan EVANS (1804 - Llanddewi Brefi, Cardiganshire>Clark Co.
Arkansas)
John HUTCHINGS (1838 - Llanddowror, Carmarthenshire>?>Clark Co.
Arkansas)
Mary Valentine WILLIAMS (1810 - Parish Goetre, Monmouthshire>Clark Co.
Arkansas)
Margaret EVANS (1839 - Brynmawr, Breconshire>Clark Co. Arkansas)
England
DUNCOMBE (1600 - ?>Old Rappahanock Co., VA)
STOUT (1850s - ?>Dent Co., MO>Pulaski Co. Arkansas)
TOONE (1600s - Osgathorpe, Leicestershire>Old Rappahanock Co., VA)
USA
CONN (1780s - NC>Cherokee Co., GA)
FLANAKIN (GA>1850s - AR)
INGRAM (1800s - NC or SC>Cherokee Co., GA)
VAUGHN (1800s - SC>AR)
----- Original Message -----
From: <BlaenauGwent-D-request(a)rootsweb.com>
To: <BlaenauGwent-D(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2000 11:00 PM
Subject: BlaenauGwent-D Digest V00 #177
Hi There,
Does anyone have information on Henry Edward Perry
Born Blanau(or is the name Blaina,as I always thought or are there both
places?)
In 1883 or1884
Served in Royal Welch Fuseliers,Sgt/Major,and Drum Major.
Church of England
Married ElizabethThicket,who's family owned Mecca Cafe in Bristol,UK
Brother Earnest and other brothers(3)
Served in India
had malaria, was gassed, shellshocked,and was discharged in 1918
Died in Yorkshire April /6/1936
Hello Josephine,
I have had contace before with a lady researching this name in High
Littleton (right next door to Clutton)....her name is Tina, email
tinna(a)pacbell.net
Vater is not a name I am researching but I have interests in Clutton,
being Evans, Carter, Perry, Collier, Hillman, Adams, Blacker, Cook,
Windmill
I'd love to hear from you if these names connect to yours in any way
Ian and Jo Jeremiah wrote:
>
> Hi Listers,
>
> I'd be very grateful if anyone has links to or more information concerning
> brothers James and Thomas VEATER who lived in Blaina in the 19th century.
> They were both born in Farmborough, Somerset. James was baptized at the
> parish church of Clutton in 1819 and Thomas was baptized in the same
> church in 1821.
>
> Their name could be spelt VATER, VATOR, VEATOR or VEATORS!
>
> Dot has kindly provided me with their 1861 Blaina census details. Then,
> James VEATER was 42, his wife Mary A. was 34 and their daughter Ann was 1
> year old. Thomas was 39 and his wife Mary was 36 while daughter Mary A.
> was 7 and son Thomas was 11.
>
> I have the 1881 Aberystruth census information on James and his brother
> Thomas who were then living in the same household under the name VEATORS.
>
> I am in touch with the descendants of James who live in the U.S.A. They
> will be visiting the U.K next month and I'd like to be able to pass on
> some information about their family.
>
> The father of Thomas and James was Thomas VEATER. He was born about 1787
> and died on 7th September 1857 in Blaina. He was buried on 18th
> September 1857 in St Peter's, Blaina. He was the brother of my 3x
> great-grandfather Jonathan VEATER who stayed in Somerset.
>
> Mary, the wife of the elder Thomas, had previously been buried at St
> Peter's Church.
>
> Josephine
>
> Researching VEATER/PAYNE/VOKES in Temple Cloud, SOM and Pontycymmer, GLA
> VATER/VATOR in Clutton, SOM
>
> --
> ___ _|______________________:_ __________________________
> \___|___Glas y Dorlan________|____ /
> |________________________________/ / Josephine Jeremiah
> http://www.argonet.co.uk/users/ianandjo ianandjo(a)argonet.co.uk
>
> ==== BlaenauGwent Mailing List ====
--
Regards
Pat Stedman
Queensland, Australia
============================================================
See my webpage at http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Lane/8397
One name studies for Kiellor and Rawden
============================================================