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I'm related to Job but don't see these names on the branches.
Good luck. There are other Job Camp's too.
I'm from the Camptown guy.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Sue" <naturegirl(a)cyber-quest.com>
To: <CAMP-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Monday, February 19, 2001 2:04 PM
Subject: [CAMP-L] Lewis Orlando Camp
> I'm looking for The parents of Lewis Orlando Camp. His wife's name was
> Sybil. They had at least the following children that I know. Lewis jr.
> married to Emma Bailey, Orrin, Maisy, Hazel, and Daniel. I am looking
> for the connection to the Job Camp.
>
> I am looking for this for a friend! Any help would be greatly appreciated!
> Thank you!!!
>
>
No connection that I have.
-----Original Message-----
From: Sue [mailto:naturegirl@cyber-quest.com]
Sent: Monday, February 19, 2001 11:04 AM
To: CAMP-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: [CAMP-L] Lewis Orlando Camp
I'm looking for The parents of Lewis Orlando Camp. His wife's name was
Sybil. They had at least the following children that I know. Lewis jr.
married to Emma Bailey, Orrin, Maisy, Hazel, and Daniel. I am looking
for the connection to the Job Camp.
I am looking for this for a friend! Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Thank you!!!
Hello everyone,
Well now and I thought my Allen's, Gibson's, Kimball's, Smith's and
Thompson's were a "puzzle". You will have to pardon me sometimes I get
"confused." If any one has a cure for this thing they call the "genealogy
bug" please let me know....LOL
I took all 5 of the Camp files I have and compared them for the
following people, so here are the results of 5... LOL.
John Camp, 1743 m. Mary Tarpley got 3 votes
m. unknown got 2 votes
son James (John)Camp m. Mary Berry got 3 votes
m. Ragsdale got 2 votes
son John (James, John) Camp m Winifred Mattox got 5 out of 5 votes.
No mention of an Oldham in any of the files I have.
I guess it is time to plan a trip to Atlanta and see what the state of Ga.
has on this line of Camp's. Nina
My information shows that John (b. 1743, d. 1818) was married to Mary
Tarpley, b. 1740, d. 1789). That's my direct line, through Thomas Camp V
and Susan Wagoner, to Elizabeth Camp who married Joseph Camp, and their
daughter, Delilah P. Camp (my great great grandmother). I don't know
whether John had a second wife.
Also see the following message that was posted in the past day or so by
Jalmer Dixon -- it indicates Mary Berry married James Camp.
George Nelson
------------------------
Hello List,
Well, I finally feel like I am getting closer to connecting with "for
sure" kin. I only have proof of my family back to Starling Camp
1793-1836
who m. Mary Fish 1805-1862 and had a daughter Evalina Camp 1823-1903 m.
John
Beacham McRight 1813-1899. I have been assured by several sources that
Starling was the son of James Camp and Mary Berry which would make him a
brother to Mary Ann who m. Whit Allen and to John Camp 1785-1877who m.
Winifred Mattox. I sure would like to be able to untangle the Camp roots
Linda Dixon in Southeast Texas
------
On Sat, 17 Feb 2001 15:13:08 EST BrtMoon96(a)aol.com writes:
> Hi list,
> I have a question on the wife of John Camp b 1743 d. 1818. (Father
> was Thomas
> Camp, mother was Winifred Starling). I have been sent information
> from other
> researches that say his wife was Mary Berry and others say his wife
> was Mary
> Tarpley. Or was he married to both of these ladies ? Can anyone
> clear this
> up?
> Thanks, Nina
>
>
Hi list,
I have a question on the wife of John Camp b 1743 d. 1818. (Father was Thomas
Camp, mother was Winifred Starling). I have been sent information from other
researches that say his wife was Mary Berry and others say his wife was Mary
Tarpley. Or was he married to both of these ladies ? Can anyone clear this
up?
Thanks, Nina
Good Morning Camp List~
I have some information that I know is wrong. I just don't know what part of it is wrong. Can anyone please help me....
This is the information that I have:
Susan CAMP (my gr-gr-grandmother) was born in 1831 in Leon, NY. She married Robert DICKINSON. Susan's parents were Joel (b. 1798, d. 1872 in Buckley Ill.) Joel was married to Gratia BAILEY. Joel's parents were Jonas CAMP (b.1782, Durham, CT, d. 1842, Stamford, VT), and Pamelia WILCOX (b. 1770, d. 1830).
I think that this is where the incorrect information is, but I'm not sure where. I had an email saved which explained it, but I lost it when my old computer bit the dust.
Can anyone help me solve this confusion?
Thank you.
Dixie
My Great Grandfather was William Anderson Camp.
His middle name may indicate the family name of a predecessor. Does anyone have information of a "Camp" who married a lady by the name of "Anderson" prior to 1800???
Dear List:
I have reached a brick wall with my Samuel Camp's and hope someone can
provide a lead. Here goes:
1. Samuel A. Camp - Pvt. First Rifleman PA War of 1812
+ Margaret (maybe?)
2. Samuel A. Camp (Jr.?) b: 1829 Berks Co. PA; d: 12 APR 1887 Macon
Co. IL
+ Emily Jane Long 27 FEB 1861 Macon Co. IL; b: 22 Sep 1831
Ohio; d: 19 MAR 1909 Macon CO. IL
3. Francis Marion Camp Sr. b: 6 Jan 1862 Macon Co. IL d: 29 DEC
1939 Macon CO. IL
+ Nellie Roney 27 DEC 1887 DeWitt Co. IL
+ Minnie H. Riggs 14 Apr 1924 Spencer, Owen Co. IN
3. Stephen A. Douglas Camp b: 6 JUL 1863 Macon Co. IL; d: 6 JAN
1965 (age 102)Grangeville, ID
+ Bessie (unknown) Idaho Co. Idaho - Divorced
+ May (unknown) - divorced
3. Clara L. Camp b: 1 APR 1865 Macon Co., IL; d: 8 DEC 1867 -
age 2
3. Etna C. Camp b: 12 FEB 1867 Macon Co. IL; d: 12 APR 1954 CA
+ ______ Abbott. He was killed getting out of cab after
their wedding in Chicago.
3. Margaret (Maggie) Camp b: 13 DEC 1869 d: 2 JAN 196_? CA;
never married
3. John A. Logan Camp b: 8 NOV 1872 Macon Co., IL; d: 24 Aug
1958 CA; never married
3. Grace Camp b: 4 APR 1873 Macon Co., IL; d: 12 Aug 1873 age 4
mo.
The only one that had children that I know of was Francis Marion Camp Sr.;
Francis and Nellie had 8 children and 32 grandchildren.
Judith in South Dakota
Hello List,
Well, I finally feel like I am getting closer to connecting with "for
sure" kin. I only have proof of my family back to Starling Camp 1793-1836
who m. Mary Fish 1805-1862 and had a daughter Evalina Camp 1823-1903 m. John
Beacham McRight 1813-1899. I have been assured by several sources that
Starling was the son of James Camp and Mary Berry which would make him a
brother to Mary Ann who m. Whit Allen and to John Camp 1785-1877who m.
Winifred Mattox. I sure would like to be able to untangle the Camp roots
Linda Dixon in Southeast Texas
Hi list, Carole, and Larry,
Wow !! This is my family, also. Though Mary Ann Camp, daughter of John
Camp and Winfred Mattox. I cannot be of much help as I have just started
this line of my family but am interested in figuring this out. Carole,
thanks for posting this. Nina
<< Hi List,
I've just purchased _Gone to GA_ by William C. Steward off of eBay.
This will probably open up a whole new can of worms, but I thought
those of you with Georgia connections might be interested in what
is in the book. The subtitle to this book is "Jackson and Gwinnett
Counties and their Neighbors in the Western Migration". >>
Hi list and Carole,
Thanks for that valuable information. Now let us consider that according to Elias'
obit in Oct of 1901 it mentioned that his father James was born in 1740 and that
Elias moved to Paulding (later Polk) at a young age from Gwinnett County, Ga. The
obit also mentioned that Elias was the last surviving son of a Revolutionary War
veteran in the state of Georgia. I am becoming more and more convinced that the
Obit is correct and that the James you mention was indeed the father of Elias and
did conceive Elias at the age of 85. Sounds remarkable but all roads lead to this
and your 1820 Census records and land reports add some creedence. Still all this
is not proved and may never be. But, family tradition has it that Elias and my
ggrandfather Columbus M Camp were Sons of the Revolution through James. And
downward my grandfather Columbus D Camp was a son of the confederacy through
Elias and Columbus M.
So you did open up a new can of worms. The pot is stirred. lol.
Larry Camp
Carole Johnson wrote:
> Hi List,
> I've just purchased _Gone to GA_ by William C. Steward off of eBay.
> This will probably open up a whole new can of worms, but I thought
> those of you with Georgia connections might be interested in what
> is in the book. The subtitle to this book is "Jackson and Gwinnett
> Counties and their Neighbors in the Western Migration". I have been
>
Hi List,
I've just purchased _Gone to GA_ by William C. Steward off of eBay.
This will probably open up a whole new can of worms, but I thought
those of you with Georgia connections might be interested in what
is in the book. The subtitle to this book is "Jackson and Gwinnett
Counties and their Neighbors in the Western Migration". I have been
to Jackson County to research and got pretty confused with the sheer
numbers of land records involving CAMPs, particularly Hosea. Also,
since the county boundaries shifted there is some duplication. I
will attempt to type this verbatim, so if something doesn't agree
with what you have, let's DISCUSS it. I am very anxious to find more
information regarding John Camp, married to Mary (supposedly) Tarpley
and their son James. Here goes:
"559. Nathan Camp 000001_10001_4
Thomas Camp Sr. was born in Virginia c1717, married Winifred Starling,
was a Revolutionary soldier, and died in North Carolina 1798: he had son
John, also a Revolutionary veteran, born in Brunswick County, Va., married
Mary
Tarpley, and died in Jackson County, Ga., 1818; and son Thomas Jr., married
Susannah Wagner, was a Revolutionary soldier, died in South Carolina. Thomas
Jr., had a daughter Elizabeth who married Joseph Camp (1779-1854) in 1799.
Joseph was son of still another Revolutionary soldier, Benjamin Camp, born
1757 in Virginia, married 1776 Elizabeth Dykes, and died in Jackson County,
Ga., 1832. (Georgia Roster, p.46) Benjamin and Nathan Camp were enumerated
1790 in Laurens district, S.C., where the Rev. Hosea Camp was born 1774.
William Camp of Jackson County sold Jan. 3, 1801 to Philip Awtrey of
South Carolina, land on the Middle Fork of Oconee River. A deed from
John Shields to John Evans Oct. 12, 1801, noted that Shields' land adjoined
that of Nathan Camp on the Big Pond Fork of Oconee. Hosea came to Georgia
as a youth and settled on the Mulberry Fork. He bought land of Drury
Strickland later, in 1807. In 1803, Thomas, Benjamin and John Camp had
land together in Capt. Joseph McConnell's Mulberry Fork district, Hosea's
land at that time adjoining Spruce's in Capt. Alexander Reed's company. In
1804, Hosea's
Mulberry land was in Capt. Key's district. Thomas obtained headright land
in 1804. In the 1805 lottery, Burwell, Joseph, Abner, Sterling, John, Thomas,
Sherwood, Andrew, Hosea, Hosea Jr., Benjamin, Benjamin Jr., Thomas and Nathan
were listed. Abner, Hosea Sr., Benjamin Jr. and Sherwood were in Cochran's
district in the 1807 lottery. Benjamin married Rachel Hogg. In 1820,
besides Nathan above, these member of the family were enumerated in Jackson
County: Hosea (No. 641); Hosea (Sr). (No.656): Mary (No. 724; William
(No. 910); and Aramis Camp (No. 1010) In Gwinnett County 1820 were Abner
(No. 615), Andrew (No. 427), James (No. 447), John (No. 449), John Sr.
(No. 601), Robert B. (No. 417) and Solomon (No. 54); in Hall County, Abner
and Susannah: in Walton County, Burrell (who appears to have lined in Jasper
County in 1815 and Henry County in 1827), John, Joseph, Sherwood and
Thomas; in Clarke County, Edmund; and in Warren County, Gerrard, Samuel and
Shadrack. In 1820 James, a Revolutionary soldier in Gwinnett County, drew
Gwinnett and Early Counties land granted April 6, 1826 and Sept. 1, 1831.
The Rev. Hosea, a Methodist minister, moved to Gwinnett County shortly
after 1820 and lived there until his late years, when he moved to Polk
County, Ga.,. He had 12 children. Joseph, a Revolutionary soldier, was
living in Franklin County, Ga., in 1827, and drew Muscogee County land
granted Oct. 2, 1827."
I attempted to type this as written, with typos and punctuation errors and
all. There was no seperation of paragraphs.
Which brings the questions I have: Was the John Jr. my "Big-Headed"
John? Was the James enumerated in the Gwinnett 1820 census "my" James,
the son of John and Mary Tarpley Camp?
The Elias Camp of Larry's ancestry was in Polk County and according to his
obituary, the son of James Camp, a Revolutionary soldier. Elias was the
minister at Bethleham BAPTIST church at Fish Creek, Polk County (which land
for
the cemetery another of my lines donated). That Hosea would be a Methodist
minister would make sense, seeing that John and Mary Tarpley Camp, and I
believe Benjamin, helped found the first Methodist Church in S.C. (Lebanon).
I have seen a copy of Abner (later of Clayton County) Camp's will and know
that he owned slaves. John Wesley (who with his brother, Charles, began the
Methodist Church) and his American Bishops, Asbury and Coke, condemed
slavery. Is this what caused the seperation from Methodist to Baptist? Or
was it
just due to a change in geography?
Sorry for the ramblin', but my head is spinning. Any discussion?
Carole
Hi List,
I've just purchased _Gone to GA_ by William C. Steward off of eBay.
This will probably open up a whole new can of worms, but I thought
those of you with Georgia connections might be interested in what
is in the book. The subtitle to this book is "Jackson and Gwinnett
Counties and their Neighbors in the Western Migration". I have been
to Jackson County to research and got pretty confused with the sheer
numbers of land records involving CAMPs, particularly Hosea. Also,
since the county boundaries shifted there is some duplication. I
will attempt to type this verbatim, so if something doesn't agree
with what you have, let's DISCUSS it. I am very anxious to find more
information regarding John Camp, married to Mary (supposedly) Tarpley
and their son James. Here goes:
"559. Nathan Camp 000001_10001_4
Thomas Camp Sr. was born in Virginia c1717, married Winifred Starling,
was a Revolutionary soldier, and died in North Carolina 1798: he had son
John, also a Revolutionary veteran, born in Brunswick County, Va., married
Mary
Tarpley, and died in Jackson County, Ga., 1818; and son Thomas Jr., married
Susannah Wagner, was a Revolutionary soldier, died in South Carolina. Thomas
Jr., had a daughter Elizabeth who married Joseph Camp (1779-1854) in 1799.
Joseph was son of still another Revolutionary soldier, Benjamin Camp, born
1757 in Virginia, married 1776 Elizabeth Dykes, and died in Jackson County,
Ga., 1832. (Georgia Roster, p.46) Benjamin and Nathan Camp were enumerated
1790 in Laurens district, S.C., where the Rev. Hosea Camp was born 1774.
William Camp of Jackson County sold Jan. 3, 1801 to Philip Awtrey of
South Carolina, land on the Middle Fork of Oconee River. A deed from
John Shields to John Evans Oct. 12, 1801, noted that Shields' land adjoined
that of Nathan Camp on the Big Pond Fork of Oconee. Hosea came to Georgia
as a youth and settled on the Mulberry Fork. He bought land of Drury
Strickland later, in 1807. In 1803, Thomas, Benjamin and John Camp had
land together in Capt. Joseph McConnell's Mulberry Fork district, Hosea's
land at that time adjoining Spruce's in Capt. Alexander Reed's company. In
1804, Hosea's
Mulberry land was in Capt. Key's district. Thomas obtained headright land
in 1804. In the 1805 lottery, Burwell, Joseph, Abner, Sterling, John, Thomas,
Sherwood, Andrew, Hosea, Hosea Jr., Benjamin, Benjamin Jr., Thomas and Nathan
were listed. Abner, Hosea Sr., Benjamin Jr. and Sherwood were in Cochran's
district in the 1807 lottery. Benjamin married Rachel Hogg. In 1820,
besides Nathan above, these member of the family were enumerated in Jackson
County: Hosea (No. 641); Hosea (Sr). (No.656): Mary (No. 724; William
(No. 910); and Aramis Camp (No. 1010) In Gwinnett County 1820 were Abner
(No. 615), Andrew (No. 427), James (No. 447), John (No. 449), John Sr.
(No. 601), Robert B. (No. 417) and Solomon (No. 54); in Hall County, Abner
and Susannah: in Walton County, Burrell (who appears to have lined in Jasper
County in 1815 and Henry County in 1827), John, Joseph, Sherwood and
Thomas; in Clarke County, Edmund; and in Warren County, Gerrard, Samuel and
Shadrack. In 1820 James, a Revolutionary soldier in Gwinnett County, drew
Gwinnett and Early Counties land granted April 6, 1826 and Sept. 1, 1831.
The Rev. Hosea, a Methodist minister, moved to Gwinnett County shortly
after 1820 and lived there until his late years, when he moved to Polk
County, Ga.,. He had 12 children. Joseph, a Revolutionary soldier, was
living in Franklin County, Ga., in 1827, and drew Muscogee County land
granted Oct. 2, 1827."
I attempted to type this as written, with typos and punctuation errors and
all. There was no seperation of paragraphs.
Which brings the questions I have: Was the John Jr. my "Big-Headed"
John? Was the James enumerated in the Gwinnett 1820 census "my" James,
the son of John and Mary Tarpley Camp?
The Elias Camp of Larry's ancestry was in Polk County and according to his
obituary, the son of James Camp, a Revolutionary soldier. Elias was the
minister at Bethleham BAPTIST church at Fish Creek, Polk County (which land
for
the cemetery another of my lines donated). That Hosea would be a Methodist
minister would make sense, seeing that John and Mary Tarpley Camp, and I
believe Benjamin, helped found the first Methodist Church in S.C. (Lebanon).
I have seen a copy of Abner (later of Clayton County) Camp's will and know
that he owned slaves. John Wesley (who with his brother, Charles, began the
Methodist Church) and his American Bishops, Asbury and Coke, condemed
slavery. Is this what caused the seperation from Methodist to Baptist? Or
was it
just due to a change in geography?
Sorry for the ramblin', but my head is spinning. Any discussion?
Carole
Yes, the move of Nicholas to CT has been shown fairly definitively, but
getting his brother Thomas to VA requires more conjecture. That's why I'm
asking whether anyone on the Camp e-mail list (which appears to have a good
bit of turnover) knows whether the will referred to in the abstract exists
and has been examined it. Just this afternoon in the Library of Congress I
saw for the first time "John Steel Camp and his Descendants" (Paul W. Camp
and Paul K. Camp, 1980, Camp Family Association, Evansville, IN), a wonderful
volume that spells out the prospects and uncertainties about various Thomas
Camps in Essex and elsewhere at about the right time to be "our" emigrating
Thomas. The authors, from a branch of the "Thomas" family that went through
the Cumberland Gap and along the Wilderness Road to settle in Indiana, said
in their 1980 book that they were continuing to work the issue in an attempt
to eliminate various Thomases and perhaps narrow in on the best prospects.
Are the authors perhaps on the list or does anyone know of updating of their
information?
Also at the LC this afternoon, I happened on information that may add context
for some advanced Camp researchers. "South Carolina Immigrants 1760 to 1770,"
(Jones, Warner abstractors, Heritage Papers, Danielsville, Ga.) lists six
arrivals in Charleston (Charles Town) of vessels captained by an Abial/Abiel
Camp. They were taken from various contemporaneous editions of the South
Carolina Gazette. He arrived with the sloop Betsey on 11/28/1761 (listed as
Abiel) from Providence (presumably RI); 2/9/1762 (Abiel, which is the form of
the name in this and subsequent listings) from Providence; 5/11/1762 from
Providence; 7/15/1762 from Providence; 10/13/1762 from New York; with the
schooner ("scooner") Harietta 8/26/1763 from Philadelphia.
Hi list, any information on the Camp line below would greatly be
appericated. When and where was John camp born, any information on Winifred
Mattox. Any help is greatly appericated. Thanks, Nina
Descendants of John Camp
1 John Camp b: Bef. 1785 d: July 1877
. +Winifred Mattox
... 2 Mary Ann Camp b: 1815 in , , Ga d: Aft. 1870 in Smith Co., TX.
....... +Whitmill P. Allen b: 1812 in , , Ga. m: January 11, 1833 in
Henry Co., Georgia d: January 1868 in Smith Co., TX.
........ 3 Elijah S. Allen b: 1833 in , , Georgia
........ 3 John C. Allen b: 1835 in Henry, Ga
............ +Ophelia Johnson b: 1839 in Ga. m: December 03, 1857
in Fayette, Ga
........ 3 William C. Allen b: 1836 in , , Ga
............ +Jane C. Unknown b: 1836 in Ga. m: 1858
........ 3 James Marion Allen b: January 18, 1838 in Fayette Co.,
Georgia d: January 25, 1914 in Mineola, Wood Co., Tx.
............ +Mary Ann Gay b: 1843 m: October 07, 1858 d: March 27,
1880 in Smith Co., TX.
........ *2nd Wife of James Marion Allen:
............ +Isom Jane Davis b: Abt. 1850 in Ga. m: December 28,
1881 in Smith Co., Texas d: January 1885 in Texas
........ *3rd Wife of James Marion Allen:
............ +Saphronia Frances Quarles b: 1845 in Lowndes Co., Al
m: August 05, 1885 in Wood Co., Texas d: January 06, 1922 in Quitman, Wood
Co., Tx.
........ 3 Abner C. Allen b: 1840 in , , Ga
........ 3 Sarah E. Allen b: 1846 in , , Ga
........ 3 Thomas B. Allen b: 1849 in , Fayette, Georgia
........ 3 Joseph Polk Allen b: May 1851 in , Fayette, Georgia
d: 1902 in Mineola, Wood, Texas
............ +Ella E. Stell b: August 06, 1852 in La. m: May 13,
1869 in Smith Co., Texas d: March 26, 1906 in Mineola, WoodCo., Tx.
........ 3 Columbus E. Allen b: June 12, 1853 in , Fayette, Georgia
d: May 10, 1941 in , Smith, Texas
............ +Samantha Thurman b: February 19, 1855 in Mo. m: July
28, 1871 in Smith Co., Texas d: May 10, 1941 in Smith Co., TX.
........ 3 Catherine Allen b: 1854 in , , Ga.
A Google search has turned up interesting Campe references from the records of the Commissary Court of London, Will Abstracts, Volume 26 (1629-1634), and I'm wondering if anyone on the list has explored them, including an attempt to determine if there are actual documents to which the abstracts refer.
The main entry of note says: "CAMPE, John, senr - Nazeing, Essex yeo ([pounds sterling sign] 42)/chldr Jr, Geo, Nichls, Thos, Mary & Sarah; grandchldr Jn & Eliz Campe; grandson Jn Elott; wife Mary exec; overs Rich & Wlm Camp; wtns Jms Fale."
A separate Google hit in the same document has a Wlm Campe as overseer in the will of a George Shippie which also has Jms Fale as witness.
Although Nazeing is in Essex, the London court (a probate operation) handled matters from a few southern Essex towns.
Could (repeat, could) this be a breakthrough document for some of us "Southern" Camp(e)s who are from the great line of Thomases and would like to buy into the Nazeing link but have never been able to find documentary proof? Not that it clears up missing-links, such as wispy Culpeper ties, once our Thomases are in Virginia, but I (abd probably several others on the list) would like to hear from anyone who has explored the above-mentioned documents.
Thanks, Carole,
Yes it helped. I appreciate knowing about the book. Credit card would be
the way to go, sounds like. Just easier, even though I DO live in a
city with a large airport, it's not exactly close to get to. :-)
Can you give us any CAMP quotes from the book?
Val
Further to the recent messages on Nazeing Church, listers may be interested
in the following book which was listed in the Essex Family Historian
Magazine of November 2000:
Five Miles From Nowhere by Nazeing History Workshop
I quote "This is the story of Nazeing, Part 1. The village's long history is
given in detail from early times to 1914. Nazeing had a long association
with Waltham Abbey and was mentioned in the Domesday Survey (1066). The
various chapters cover periods in the history, 1547-1660, 1660-1778,
1778-1851, etc.
Many families are mentioned notably those of Palmer, Bury and Pegrum.
Numerous photographs and other illustrations are included in the text. There
is an extensive Glossary and Bibliography and the Index contains many family
names.
Part 2, covering the 20th Century, is planned for 2001. An excellent
production."
Available from: Nazeing History Workshop, c/o John Dauris, Goodalls, Middle
Street, Nazeing,Essex, EN9 2LP, United Kingdom.
UK price is £10 plus £3 post and packing.
Kind regards
David
A number of you have inquired as to the cost of the book. I am
quoting the price from Mrs. Day, NOT the book store. (I sent
British sterling directly to Mrs. Day and she was gracious to
trek to the bookstore on my behalf).
The cost of the BOOK is 10 with 6.50 for postage and handling. This
is a total of 16.50 pounds sterling. I don't know the current exchange
rate, but I THINK this is somewhere in the neighborhood of $35 US cash.
I would recommend using a US credit card to purchase the book. This
would eliminate the need to exchange currency PLUS give you recourse
in the event something happens to the book between the charge and
your receiving it. Mrs. Day assures me that the book store is local
and family owned and that they are anxious to please.
Another alternative would be to purchase an international money order,
which oddly enough may be purchase from large grocery stores, but not
a US post office. You would still have to know the current exchange
rate.
This book covers up to 1914. I do not know if there is a part II in
print, yet.
Hope this helps,
Carole