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Martha you had sent me some Caldwell information before on the Caldwells
and it was this Martha and the right one but i at that time did not know her
birth date . I have corresponded with you before . They are descendents of
William Caldwell . Also includes Joseph Caldwell , Stacy Whitehead , Samuel
and Idress ( Brock ) Caldwell . I have some information you had sent me
before but not enough .. I hope i can get more on background and family
information and hopefully pictures somewhere of these Caldwells . It is sad
to have family and not be able to find out anything about them or even get
to know a thing .... I have tried very hard to do this and i am still
searching. I won't give up because it is my natural true Grandmother and i
want to know all i can about her and their family .. Lorene
-------Original Message-------
From: Mplamkin(a)aol.com
Date: 12/11/05 13:45:03
To: CALDWELL-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: [CALDWELL-L] Martha Caldwell, d/o Ephraim D. Caldwell and Lucinda
Short
Lorene,
Sorry, I don't have any information on those folks.
Hope you find some soon!
Martha
donaldandlorene(a)comcast.net writes:
Martha do you or anyone else here have any information on a Martha Caldwell
that was the daughter of Ephraim D. Caldwell and Lucinda Jane Short ??
They
called him ( Ephie ) ??? Martha Caldwell married a man named Philip Halcomb
and had my mother . They lived in Wise County Virginia in 1921 . Pocahontas
or Tazewell ?? Can anyone help me here ??? This Martha is my Grandmother
and i know nothing about her . No pictures of her no information at all ,
nothing so i really need help on her ... Thanks ... Lorene
==============================
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Lorene,
Sorry, I don't have any information on those folks.
Hope you find some soon!
Martha
donaldandlorene(a)comcast.net writes:
Martha do you or anyone else here have any information on a Martha Caldwell
that was the daughter of Ephraim D. Caldwell and Lucinda Jane Short ?? They
called him ( Ephie ) ??? Martha Caldwell married a man named Philip Halcomb
and had my mother . They lived in Wise County Virginia in 1921 . Pocahontas
or Tazewell ?? Can anyone help me here ??? This Martha is my Grandmother
and i know nothing about her . No pictures of her no information at all ,
nothing so i really need help on her ... Thanks ... Lorene
Lorene,
This might be them:
1910 census Virginia, Wise County, part of Roberson Magisterial District
SD 9, ED 138, Sheet 5A
Caldwell, Ephram D., head, m, w, 44, married 24 years, Kentucky, Kentucky, Kentucky
Lucinda J, wife, f, w, 39, ", Virginia, Virginia, Virginia
Henry, son, m, w, 22
Samuel, son, m, w, 16
Margaret, daughter, f, w, 14
James, son, m, w, 13
Corbit?, son, m, w, 11
Martha, daughter, f, w, 9
Mary B., daughter, f, w, 4
Heather
lorene <donaldandlorene(a)comcast.net> wrote: Martha do you or anyone else here have any information on a Martha Caldwell
that was the daughter of Ephraim D. Caldwell and Lucinda Jane Short ?? They
called him ( Ephie ) ??? Martha Caldwell married a man named Philip Halcomb
and had my mother . They lived in Wise County Virginia in 1921 . Pocahontas
or Tazewell ?? Can anyone help me here ??? This Martha is my Grandmother
and i know nothing about her . No pictures of her no information at all ,
nothing so i really need help on her ... Thanks ... Lorene
Looking for a current email address for Peggy Reed as pegaree(a)msn.com keeps bouncing.
I have lost contact with I believe Sharon Wilson who was connected to the Caldwells down in AR and OK.
Also, Cesear Mae Johnston if you get this my email to you is bouncing. I may have a wrong address.
Also looking for Desiree Davis. I believe we are connected thru the Caldwell line. I need your currect email address.
Thanks for the help!
Jane Foley
Dear jacaldwell:
These comments are to the point and well-made. I do wish that those
persons you mention who know the true ancestral background would be willing to
share the "true" information and sources online with those of us who are unable
to travel and do exhaustive research ourselves. I think that would help put
to rest the spreading of the "untrue" accounts. How greatly it would
benefit all concerned if those researchers and genealogists who are fortunate
enough to find reliable and verified information would post it to the lists in
order to stop the proliferation of false or unreliable data.
When I began my genealogical research four years ago, I was able to
travel and do my own research. However, my health deteriorated quickly and I
have been unable to do so for the past few years. I have to depend upon online
sources and research to continue with this hobby, to which I am addicted.
What data I was able to find when I traveled, I was always more than happy to
share with anyone else who had not had access to what I found. We should
all be willing to share our verified information and thereby benefit the
field in general.
I plead with those whom you mention below to post to this list their
verified information to counter the "false" account in the Waltman book.
I would be very grateful, and I'm sure many other CALDWELLs would also.
Thank you.
Martha
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------
_jacaldwell(a)vel.net_ (mailto:jacaldwell@vel.net) wrote:
Please, please, please stop propagating the time-and-again debunked stories
of Caldwells being Norman-French from Toulon, who were Muslim pirate
Huguenots who rode with Oliver Cromwell and are related to the Queen of
England.
It's just not so and easily provable with a couple of simple Google
searches. So please, stop doing this. Look at the number of replies to
this nonsense and tell me that this doesn't distract people in search of the
truth from it.
All it does is send people who are truly interested in wild goose chases,
and those who want romantic stories will make up their own anyway.
There are few, if any, who can tell you more about the Rev. David than David
A. Caldwell, who posts frequently at the http://CaldwellGenealogy.com
Discussion Forum. Along with David A., others such as David from Manitoba,
Brian, Tom from Australia, Plunkett from North Ireland, and
new-to-the-forum, Rozanne, will take you to levels of discussion on the
origins of Caldwell that most could not image.
And for the "romantics" in search of noble and colorful stories, you are
more likely related, albeit distantly, from Templar Knights than you are
Muslim pirates....
Seek the truth, don't just keep spreading the same old garbage because you
are not helping kith nor kin.
Martha,
Thank you for your response. Yes, I agree it would be helpful and provide information for all, if people would "stick" to facts.
Thanks again, Jo Ann Clark Caldwell
Mplamkin(a)aol.com wrote:
Dear jacaldwell:
These comments are to the point and well-made. I do wish that those
persons you mention who know the true ancestral background would be willing to
share the "true" information and sources online with those of us who are unable
to travel and do exhaustive research ourselves. I think that would help put
to rest the spreading of the "untrue" accounts. How greatly it would
benefit all concerned if those researchers and genealogists who are fortunate
enough to find reliable and verified information would post it to the lists in
order to stop the proliferation of false or unreliable data.
When I began my genealogical research four years ago, I was able to
travel and do my own research. However, my health deteriorated quickly and I
have been unable to do so for the past few years. I have to depend upon online
sources and research to continue with this hobby, to which I am addicted.
What data I was able to find when I traveled, I was always more than happy to
share with anyone else who had not had access to what I found. We should
all be willing to share our verified information and thereby benefit the
field in general.
I plead with those whom you mention below to post to this list their
verified information to counter the "false" account in the Waltman book.
I would be very grateful, and I'm sure many other CALDWELLs would also.
Thank you.
Martha
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------
_jacaldwell(a)vel.net_ (mailto:jacaldwell@vel.net) wrote:
Please, please, please stop propagating the time-and-again debunked stories
of Caldwells being Norman-French from Toulon, who were Muslim pirate
Huguenots who rode with Oliver Cromwell and are related to the Queen of
England.
It's just not so and easily provable with a couple of simple Google
searches. So please, stop doing this. Look at the number of replies to
this nonsense and tell me that this doesn't distract people in search of the
truth from it.
All it does is send people who are truly interested in wild goose chases,
and those who want romantic stories will make up their own anyway.
There are few, if any, who can tell you more about the Rev. David than David
A. Caldwell, who posts frequently at the http://CaldwellGenealogy.com
Discussion Forum. Along with David A., others such as David from Manitoba,
Brian, Tom from Australia, Plunkett from North Ireland, and
new-to-the-forum, Rozanne, will take you to levels of discussion on the
origins of Caldwell that most could not image.
And for the "romantics" in search of noble and colorful stories, you are
more likely related, albeit distantly, from Templar Knights than you are
Muslim pirates....
Seek the truth, don't just keep spreading the same old garbage because you
are not helping kith nor kin.
==============================
Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the
last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Surnames: CALDWELL
Classification: Cemetery
Message Board URL:
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Message Board Post:
CALDWELL_Novell_W_and_Ross_H.JPG
I photographed this gravestone in the Mount Olivet Cemetery - Stephan Austin Section, Fort Worth, Tarrant Co., Texas. Feel free to use the picture for your personal records.
This is one of the 132,883 cemetery photos free at http://teafor2.com
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Surnames: CALDWELL
Classification: Cemetery
Message Board URL:
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/DRH.2ACIB/2734
Message Board Post:
CALDWELL_Irene_Grace_and_Chester_S.JPG
I photographed this gravestone in the Mount Olivet Cemetery - Stephan Austin Section, Fort Worth, Tarrant Co., Texas. Feel free to use the picture for your personal records.
This is one of the 132,883 cemetery photos free at http://teafor2.com
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Classification: Query
Message Board URL:
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/DRH.2ACIB/2733
Message Board Post:
Does anyone have the lineage of how John Caldwell Bloomfield, founder of Beleek Company in Ireland, ties into the Caldwell family? Just curious if he is of the same lineage as the Cub Creek Caldwells.
Thanks
Doug
Thanks for that tip, Joy. I went right to HeritageQuest and printed out
the pertinent Caldwell information!
Martha
The book on sale at E-Bay, "The House of Waltman and Its Allied
Families." Is at HeritageQuest Online.
Joy
Marianne,
Heritage Quest Online is an available website through many of the public
librarys. All I need to open it at my county library's site is my
library card number,
Joy
-----Original Message-----
From: Marianne Gilbert [mailto:wildblueyonder@earthlink.net]
Sent: Tuesday, December 06, 2005 8:54 PM
To: CALDWELL-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: RE: [CALDWELL-L] 1928 genealogy book on eBay w/CALDWELL family
in it
Joy, do you mean the book is for sale at Heritage Quest Online? Or is
the book actually online at that site? I went to Heritage Quest
Online, but couldn't find it listed. One place said I needed a
password but it didn't tell me how to get one. I subscribe to HQ
Magazine, but I've never checked them out online.
I put in an order at my Interlibrary Loan today for the book. Thanks
to Jamie for bringing it to our attention, because I have searched
for my James P. CALDWELL's parents in Maryland where they were
supposedly from, and can't seem to find them. This book gives me some
hope because his sister Anna Maria married Samuel D. WALTMAN in
Christian Co. KY. I'm hoping the book will shed some light on her
family.
Marianne
>The book on sale at E-Bay, "The House of Waltman and Its Allied
>Families." Is at HeritageQuest Online.
>
>Joy
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Heather [mailto:eponalady@yahoo.com]
>Sent: Tuesday, December 06, 2005 11:46 AM
>To: CALDWELL-L(a)rootsweb.com
>Subject: Re: [CALDWELL-L] 1928 genealogy book on ebay w/CALDWELL family
>in it
>
>Jo Ann,
>
> This person is spamming the boards to sell her books.
>
> This book does not seem to be rare at all. 55 libraries in the US
>have a copy of it. The book is called "The House of Waltman and Its
>Allied Families." If you contact one of the libraries, they would
>probably photocopy the few pages of Caldwells for you for less than a
>dollar.
>
> Heather
> list-admin Caldwell-L
>
>Jo Ann Caldwell <snoopygram(a)sbcglobal.net> wrote: Jamie,
>
> I'm interested in the book about the Caldwell's, however, I can't
seem
>to get to the book using the link you put in your e-mail. I keep
>getting Erskine Caldwell when I search.
>
> Thanking you in advance,
> Jo Ann Caldwell
> snoopygram(a)sbcglobal.net
>
>
>
>
>==============================
>Census images 1901, 1891, 1881 and 1871, plus so much more.
>Ancestry.com's United Kingdom & Ireland Collection. Learn more:
>http://www.ancestry.com/s13968/rd.ashx
>
>
>==============================
>Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the
>last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more:
>http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx
==============================
Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records.
New content added every business day. Learn more:
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Joy,
Thanks for pointing out that the book is online. Since it is in the public domain, I typed up an article the author wrote on her Caldwell line. I believe the first part of it has been debunked. One of the members of the this list has an excellent web site discussing the points raised in the beginning of the article. I will post the link later when I find it.
The full title of the book is:
The house of Waltman and its allied families : Alderson, Baker, Bowman, Bierly, Brittain, Caldwell, Campbell, Charleton, Craighead, Erwin, Fowler, Fox, Greene, Hampshire, Harmon, Kuder, LaMance, Lutz, Lytle, McLane, Miller, Minnich, Newton, Nichols, Noble, Parsley, Ruckle, Schmoyer, Shaffer, Tuck, Wallace, Watkins, Wilson, Yonce, Zarfess and others
It was written by Lora S. La Mance and published by The Record Company, St. Augustine, Florida, 1928.
Excerpt begins:
Caldwell Section
Caldwell. The Caldwells were originally Norman-French. In the Historical Collections of Joseph Habersham, D. A. R., Volume I, the story is thus told:
There were two Norman brothers, John and Alexander, seaman, travelers and warriors. They operated largely on the Mediterranean Sea. They were natives of Toulon, France. After a twenty-years absence they returned to France. Political troubles loomed up in the latter part of the 1300s, and the brothers were mixed up in it and obliged to flee from France to keep their heads upon their shoulders.
They went to Scotland and received an estate near Solway Frith. James I granted it on these conditions: Their estates should be called the Caldwell (cauld well, meaning a cold spring,) manors. If the king became involved in a war, each brother should send a son with a retinue of twenty men of sound limbs with him to battle for the king. A silver cup is yet preserved that is engraved with the design of a chieftain and twenty men, all armed, behind them a fire on a hill; under it the words Mount Arid, (the hill where their estates lay,) and a further addition of a vessel surrounded by high waves.
At the Reformation the Caldwells became Protestants of the strongest kind. Ann Cauldwell of this Scotch line was the mother of Oliver Cromwell. In the Cromwell wars John, Joseph, David and Andrew Caldwell went with Cromwell to Ireland. After Cromwells death and the restoration of King Charles II, John and Andrew fled to America for safety. (Joseph and David had already died.) Nearly all of the Pennsylvania and the southern Caldwells are from these two brothers, or from Davids son John. They landed at Newcastle, Delaware. From there they went to Lancaster County, Pa. Several of John and Mary Caldwells sons went south, as did several sons of Andrew Caldwell. No attempt will be made to trace but one of these, Rev. Dr. David Caldwell from whom sprang the LaMance and Watkins families of this book.
Andrew Caldwell1 landed at Newcastle, Del., December 10, 1724. He went to Lancaster County soon after. His wife was Ann Stewart, whom he married in Ireland six years before. Ann was a Stewart, and from the fourteen kinds that were Stuart (the French form of Stewart), through high and mighty dukes, lords, earls and down to basrons and gentles, that line never forgot that they were Stewarts, on the the greatest families in all Scotland or England.
Alan, a younger son of the Count of Dol, in Brittany (France), crossed over to England, and was given high honors by Henry I. Alans second son, Walter Fitz-Alan, went to Scotland and by David I was made dapifer, or seneschal or steward of all Scotland. For seven successive generations they were stewards. Hence the surname. Three of the seven were regents over the kingdom. Walter, the sixth steward, married Margery, the daughter of King Robert Bruce, and thus eventually brought the crown to the family.
Rev. David Caldwell2, D. D., was the most famous son of the many famous descendants of Andrew and Ann (Stewart) Caldwell. David was born March 22, 1723. He lived to be 99 years and 8 months old, and preached 63 years. He was trained for a carpenter, but studied, half clothed, half starved, through great difficulties, until he graduated as Bachelor of Arts form Princeton, in 1761, when passed 36 years of age. He often spent the whole night studying without undressing.
He was sent as a missionary to Alamance County, N. C. Then in his 38th year he married Rachel Craighead. Many have joined the D. A. R. on both his record and her record.
Rachels great grandfather was a noted and persecuted clergyman, -- Rev. Robert Craighead, persecuted for his rigid Presbyterianism by the royal Stuarts. Her grandfather, Thomas Craighead, was a minister of Ireland. Her father, who came to the Land of the Free, was Alexander Craighead, who was ordained in 1736. He was popular, a leader, rather radical and decidedly hot-headed. He was tried for heresy and cleared. Admiral Whitefield got him to go as the first missionary to North Carolina, to Mecklenburg County, in 1753. He died in 1766. Rachel was proud of him, far in advance of his age, and a believer in civic liberty and independence. He preached in a log church. His grave is by it, unmarked by any stone, but nature marked it in a way peculiarly her own. When his coffin was lowered into the grave, the two sassafras poles that bore it were stuck down, one at the head and one at the foot of his grave. Both took root and made trees!
Doctor David married Rachel late in 1766. This is obviously a misprint, and intended for 1762. Five different histories tell us that a few days before they had bene married two years, they were the parents of five children! Wiseacres have shook their heads over the statement, but the riddle is easily solved. There were twins born in ten months, and in thirteen months more there were triplets!
Dr. Caldwell preached, studied, drained and ditched a farm, and at Guilford started an academy, college and theological seminary. He was given $200.00 a year salary, and worked his farm to eke out. Five of his pupils became governors, and fifty became ministers, and there were lawyers and doctors galore. He never expelled a pupil. It used to be said that Doctor Caldwell makes the scholars and Mrs. Caldwell makes the preachers. She was a woman of extraordinary influence and power.
Dr. Caldwell went his whole length to stir up North Carolina for the American side during the Revolution. His famous was text was, Gird thy sword upon thy thigh. Psalms, xlv, 3. Cornwallis offered $1000.00 for his capture or betrayal. The British hunted him like a rabbit. He hid in the woods. March 11, 1781, his house was burned down and his library destroyed; the books and the Bible were burned by Cornwallis officers themselves in the great brick oven. By Cornwallis deliberate orders, all provisions were destroyed except one old goose that got away. They were angry at Rachel because when they searched for him she contrived to outwit them and warned him. So they turned the family out to starve. Rachel gathered her children together in an old smokehouse, and they lived for three days on some wormy and dried peaches that they found. She and the children were sworn at and insulted in every way. Then a British surgeon demanded that some!
thing be
done for the delicate wife and little children. The higher officers, ashamed, gave them provisions, and a few cooking utensils.
Mrs. Caldwell outlived her husband a year. Five sons lived. Out of this familys descendants have come over thirty ministers of the gospel! See the Sketch of N. C. by Rev. William Henry Foster. On pages 235-6 and page 274 he gives a vivid sketch of her sufferings. She is officially listed as a patriot by the D. A. R. See D. A. R. Lineage Book, Vol. XXI, page 252, Nos. 20722 and 18885, which were granted on her own record. Very few women have ever had this honor conferred upon them.
We trace only one son, a mere boy in the war, John Craighead Caldwell. Her died in Winnsboro, S. C., after 1800. He was only 15 or 16 when he became a soldier. He served under Captain Joseph C. Smith in 1780 in the Third Continental Line. In October, 1780, he was a prisoner at Hadrills Point. He enlisted again in 1782, and for this last service was granted a land bounty in South Carolina. His health was so injured by his war experience that he was granted a pension in 1788. See pages 426, 468 and 422-3 of Vol. IV, of S. C. Historical and Genealogical Magazine. Also Vol. V, page 152, Vol. VI, pages 60 and 123, and page 102 of Vol. IV, of Bounty Grants of South Carolina. Also see pay roll of Captain Towle.
He married Lily Henderson, the daughter of James and Harriet (Wallace) Henderson. See WALLACE. Her fathers grandfather, Thomas Henderson1, came from North Ireland in 1717. (Thomas1, Thomas2, Dr. Kearns Henderson3, James4, then Lily5.) Her grandfather married Eliza Robinson. Meanwhile the family had gone south. Harriet Wallace brought in the blood of the Youngs, a very brainy family, and of the Wallaces, the very last of those descended from the Scotch patriot William Wallace.
So Lily married this semi-invalid soldier, John C. Caldwell3. Again we trace but one son, Adam4, who married Jane Givens, of another Scotch-Irish line. James Givens1 came from Ireland with four sons, John2, Samuel2, James2, and Edward2. All four of these sons served in the Indian disturbances of 1742, in Virginia, and were given land bounties afterwards. See page 92 of Virginia Colonial Militia. Also Annals of Augusta County, Va., pages 122-3. From the namesakes this James2 is supposed to be next on the tracing line. Then Thomas3, and then Jane4 his daughter. James Givens2 served under Col. Campbell at Kings Mountain. See page 38 of January, 1926, D. A. R. Magazine. North Carolina gave him a land bounty of 640 acres for his services. It was granted August 27, 1784.
Adam Caldwells daughter Cynthia Hannah5, usually called Cynthia, was married in Spring Place, Georgia, in 1841, to James Preston LaMance of Huguenot descent. See LA MANCE. Their oldest son, who was born and died in Pineville, Missouri, was Marcus Newton Wallace La Mance, who married the author of this book. He signed his name Marcus N.
Adam and his wife followed Cynthia to Missouri, where Jane (Givens) Caldwell died in 1848. When the California gold rush was on, their son-in-laws family went overland and stayed in California for a time. Adam, now a widower, went with them. On the plains he died of cholera, May 10, 1849. There was a strange fatality that followed the La Mances on this California sojourn. Cynthia buried her father and a three-year-old daughter on the plains as they went. J. P.s father, Jacob La Mance, undertook to visit them in 1852, and the ship went down after it left San Blas, Mexico, and all perished. When the family returned to Missouri in 1853, crossing the Isthmus of Panama, they contracted a tropical fever and two of their children and an adopted boy died in two days.
Excerpt ends.
Jo Ann,
This person is spamming the boards to sell her books.
This book does not seem to be rare at all. 55 libraries in the US have a copy of it. The book is called "The House of Waltman and Its Allied Families." If you contact one of the libraries, they would probably photocopy the few pages of Caldwells for you for less than a dollar.
Heather
list-admin Caldwell-L
Jo Ann Caldwell <snoopygram(a)sbcglobal.net> wrote: Jamie,
I'm interested in the book about the Caldwell's, however, I can't seem to get to the book using the link you put in your e-mail. I keep getting Erskine Caldwell when I search.
Thanking you in advance,
Jo Ann Caldwell
snoopygram(a)sbcglobal.net
Jamie,
I'm interested in the book about the Caldwell's, however, I can't seem to get to the book using the link you put in your e-mail. I keep getting Erskine Caldwell when I search.
Thanking you in advance,
Jo Ann Caldwell
snoopygram(a)sbcglobal.net
jamiesue42(a)earthlink.net wrote:
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Classification: Query
Message Board URL:
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/DRH.2ACIB/2732
Message Board Post:
I don't have time for lookups, but, I have this book they are selling which is very rare and in the book these Caldwell's descend from two brothers John and Alexander, they were norman-French from Toulon, France. Other Caldwell's noted in this genealogy are: John, Joseph, David, Andrew and more.
Nearly all of the Pa. and the southern Caldwell's descend from these two brothers.
There is almost 3 full pages of genealogy on them in this book.
You would be amazed what your allied families find on your direct lines that you don't. I know they have helped me alot.
It is not my book so I can't answer questions you would need to email the seller from the page. They also have more old family histories in their store.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dllViewItem&item=5642627067
Or you can go to ebay and do a search for item number 5642627067
Hope it helps,
Jamie
==============================
Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the
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This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Classification: Query
Message Board URL:
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Message Board Post:
I don't have time for lookups, but, I have this book they are selling which is very rare and in the book these Caldwell's descend from two brothers John and Alexander, they were norman-French from Toulon, France. Other Caldwell's noted in this genealogy are: John, Joseph, David, Andrew and more.
Nearly all of the Pa. and the southern Caldwell's descend from these two brothers.
There is almost 3 full pages of genealogy on them in this book.
You would be amazed what your allied families find on your direct lines that you don't. I know they have helped me alot.
It is not my book so I can't answer questions you would need to email the seller from the page. They also have more old family histories in their store.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dllViewItem&item=5642627067
Or you can go to ebay and do a search for item number 5642627067
Hope it helps,
Jamie
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Surnames: Caldwell,Jones
Classification: Query
Message Board URL:
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/DRH.2ACIB/2731
Message Board Post:
Searching for descendants of Connie and Nois Jones Caldwell,know they had a son David,who did at one time work for Ford,anything would help,Thanks
I am currently looking for any information on Sarah LITTLE. She was born
about 1811 in NY. I do not know where. She married an Isaac Coman CALDWELL
before 1835. Isaac CALDWELL was born June 22 1811, Arlington, Vermont.
They both died in Sunderland, Vermont. Isaac in 1856 and Sarah after 1880.
They had one son (that I have ever been able to find) his name was James
Franklin CALDWELL. James was born May 23, 1835, Arlington, Vermont. He died
1910, Cambridge, Washington Co., NY. He is buried at Woodland Cemetery,
Cambridge, Washington Co., NY. James married an Amy Weaver ANDREW before
1860
I would like to find out who Sarah LITTLE'S parents, siblings and
grandparents were.
Any help is greatly appreciated. Many thanks in advance.
Cindy Donovan
Nova Scotia
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Message Board Post:
I am searching for Andrew CALDWELL who married Margaret Hind and had Mary Ann CALDWELL in Abercorn in 1844.