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Lewis A. Coleman was 9yrs old when he lived this story(1867) and was descendant
of
Robert Coleman and Elizabeth Fry of SC. John Mobley Feaster was 62. J. Norris
Feaster was 45. They were descendants Peter and Andrew Pfister of Canton Berne,
Switzerland. I am looking for the parents of David N. Carlile (I think they came
from
the same area of PA as the Colemans and Feasters). Also Eliza Carlile (she may
have
been a Feaster,Stone,Coleman or ect.)
>
> EAST COAST ADVOCATE, TITUSVILLE, FLA, DECEMBER 27, 1918.
>
> REMINISCENCES OF AN OLD SETTLER
> Crossola, LaGrange, Titusville, Fla, December 17, 1918
> Editor East Coast Advocate: Written by: Lewis A. Coleman
> Fifty-one years ago today, at 11 a.m., the inhabitants of the
> first Indian River colony after the war rolled up the crest of Carlisle Hill
> drawn by one 4-mule team and one two 2-mule team of wagons, led by our
> Great Uncle John Mobley Feaster and his son, Cousin John Pickett Feaster,
> riding Black Hawk and Roda, their saddle horses. They came from Feasterville,
> Fairfield District, S.C., and Micanopy, Alachua County, Florida. The road, an
> old Indian war trail, was so dim in many places between Enterprise and Sand
> Point, on Indian River, that Uncle Johnnie and son had to locate it by the
> blazes on the pines, placed there by riders on horses ahead. This was the
> Enterprise branch of old Fort Capron trail.
> Old Uncle David Nathaniel Carlisle's faithful wife, Aunt Eliza, met
> us at their gate with a big dishpan of luscious oranges. The oranges came
> from their small pine-land grove. The trees were 7 year old Herman seedling
> buds on wild sour and bitter sweet stock, from Turnbull hammock near where
> Pace Landing was founded by John W. Harvey and neighbors in 1868.
> David N. Carlisle, his son-in-law, John Harrison, and son, Lawrence J.
> Carlisle, and John B. Ridditt families having moved from Spring Garden,
> Valosia County, in fall of 1868, by oxen and horse carts, were the only
> settlers except William S. Abbott, who preceded us two month from Okanakee
> Swamp, Ga. Their palmetto shanty was green as we passed it just on this side
> of the old ford of Six-Mile Branch. Capt. Douglas Dummitt, founder of Dummitt
> Grove, lived ten miles distant by water.
> After enjoying Aunt Eliza Carlisle's generous treat of oranges, we made
> for the Spring Head, one mile south, a place selected for our camp by Uncles
> John M. and J. Norris Feaster, as they explored the country with headquarters
> at Mr. D. N. Carlisle's in June, 1867. They saw all this territory being
> surveyed by the U.S. surveyorwho acted as their guide. They could remember
> the plat numbers of the land, which was of great advantage to us. Pitching
> two large tents, eating dinner and feeding eleven head of horses and mules,
> was dispatched in a jiffy.We were going to take our first sight of the
> beautiful Indian River, about two miles nearby, due east.
> The two 2 mule team wagons took us by plain road to foot of where
> is now the city dock, and Charlie Carlins 10 x 12 log cabin and his little
> sloop anchored out in front proved his lordship over all the territory of
> Sand Point, which is now Titusville.
> Charlie, an ex-sailor of Old Ireland was the lucky winner of Miss
> Mary Joyner's hand and full heart, Wesley's oldest half sister, born near
> Ocala, Fla., in the 1850's, made us excellent helpers in laying Titusville's
> mud sills. James. A. Armour married Uncle David N. Carlisle's youngest
> daughter Almets, about two months before our arrival, He succeeded Captain
> Davis as keeper of Jupiter Light, and our friend Charles Carlin succeeded the
> worthy James A. Armour, who proved an aid in cultivating the natural high
> intellect of Mrs. James A. Armour's brothers, Andrew and Bob Carlisle, and
> their nephews, David K. Harrison, Alfred and Josh Smith, who were assistants
> under this great benefactor of isolated pioneer young men's education. This
> camp located about 75 yards northwest of the big Gulf Refining Co.'s sign,
> nearly two miles from the foot of Titusville dock.
--
Fred Carlile,Researching David Nathaniel Carlile,Char.SC 1830 Census
Words used for the search: (homepages genealogy)
I do quite a lot of surfing for info in various fields of interest, and I
have gone into these particular sites and looked - they look pro, maintained,
have multiple links, and I would say that the range is from beginner to
intermediate researcher ...
Any number of the links given may be familiar to you, a number were not to
me, but then I'm not haring across Ireland and other "furin" places - USA is
more than enough to stump me ...
As you can see, I only viewed what the first 80 sites, and these below are
what I pulled out.
Susan Gillberg
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--http://192.41.11.174/distantc/Links/Ethnic/Irish/
Richland, WA Public Library Genealogy Page - Genealogy Richland Public
Library Census Department Cyndi's List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet
Over 19,250 links, categorized & cross-referenced, in over 60 categories
Civil War Soldier & Sailors System SF180 Request Pertaining to Military...
--http://www.richland.lib.wa.us/genea.htm
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Useful Genealogy Web Resources - 100's of Genealogy Links! Useful links to
free genealogy stuff. Family name pages and web resources.
--http://www.castlephotographic.com/genealogy_castle5.html
MormonLinks - LDS Internet Directory - Find LDS information you are looking
for on the Internet @ Mormonlinks.com. Search by Keyword, by Category, or
even Alphabetically. Links in directory are all about The Church of Jesus
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--http://1800pharmacy.com/
Brenda's Guide To PA Genealogy - PA Genealogy Homepages - PA Genealogy
Homepages BY COUNTY Berks Co. - Donna's Genealogy Homepage Crawford Co. -
Betty Kovac's Ancestry Page Crawford Co. - Pat Vedner's Ancestry Page
Crawford Co. - The Grannies' World Erie Co. - Corry, PA-- History & Genealogy
Franklin Co..
--http://www.key-net.net/users/oron/homepages.htm
Other Sites Of interest - Other Sites Of Interest Genweb Projects By State
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Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts.
--http://conovergenealogy.com/my05000.htm
Genealogy Sites Online - Genealogy Online AL Dept. of Archives and History
Rand Genealogy Club AlGenWeb Traveller Southern Families Tracking your Roots
GenServ Homepage Genealogy Homepages The Genealogy Home Page National
Archives and Records The National Genealogical...
--http://www.sonet.net/southnet/gene.htm
Tennessee Genealogy at its best -- TNGenWeb - Tennessee Genealogy at its
best. THE site to start and continue your research for your ancestors in TN.
Individual county sites, post/view queries, history, links, FREE information.
--http://www.tngenweb.org/
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RAYMALENE'S Genealogy Pages North America Genealogy Resources Roots Surname
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GENEALOGY resources from Nerd World Media - Large Index of GENEALOGY related
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Fred,
I think my Carlile's qualify for what you are looking for.
1. William Carlisle b: 1710 d: May 1769 Edgecomb Co, NC
+ Sarah b: 1714 married: abt 1739 d: Dec 1775 Edgecombe Co, NC
2. Milia Carlisle
2. Sarah Carlisle m: Jonathan Baldwin
2. Elizabeth Carlisle m: John Bradley
2. Robert Carlisle b: 1734 NC d: Nov 1786 Edgecombe Co, NC
+ Sarah Coleman m: Jan 5, 1763 Edgecombe Co, NC d: bef. 1790
3. Sarah Carlisle
3. Edward Carlisle b: 1764 Edgecombe Co, NC
d: abt 1830 GA
+ Elizabeth Whatley m: 1797 they had 9 children.
3. Rhoda Carlisle b: 1766
3. Susannah Carlisle b: 1768
3. Coleman Carlisle b: 8-15-1770 d: 11-18-1824 Laurens Co. SC
+Hannah Thompson Glenn b:1771 VA m: 1792 d: 1811 Union Co, SC. They
had 8 kids. I am descended from this line.
+ Joannah Lewis Brown m: 5-4-1813 in SC they had 4 kids.
+ Sarah Leak m: 5-30-1822
3. Simon Carlisle b: 1772
3. Mary Ann Carlisle b: 1774
2. William Carlisle, JR. b: 1736 (I'd like to find out more about this
William--my husband's line has a William Carlisle that fought in the Rev
War--maybe they are one and the same William.)
Coleman Carlisle was an early Methodist minister who was a circuit
rider. He married the daughter of another Methodist minister (Glenn).
There were several others who were Methodist ministers also.
Send some names and dates, I'll see if anything matches up at this end.
Maybe we can fill in some blanks for each other.
Diana Carlile Oxenford
oxenford(a)backinsf.com
CARLILE-D-request(a)rootsweb.com wrote:
>
> Subject:
>
> CARLILE-D Digest Volume 99 : Issue 24
>
> Today's Topics:
> #1 Calile from ? [fred carlile <capncar(a)iamerica.net]
>
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> Subject: Calile from ?
> Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 12:46:08 -0500
> From: fred carlile <capncar(a)iamerica.net>
> To: CARLILE-L(a)rootsweb.com
>
> I would like correspond with Carlile/Carlisle researchers with South
> Carolina ancestors who were NOT the ABBEVILLE Carliles.My Carliles were
> in South Carolina by 1800,
> but I think they were from NY,VA,NC or all three.
> Fred
> --
> Fred Carlile,Researching David Nathaniel Carlile,Char.SC 1830 Census
I would like correspond with Carlile/Carlisle researchers with South
Carolina ancestors who were NOT the ABBEVILLE Carliles.My Carliles were
in South Carolina by 1800,
but I think they were from NY,VA,NC or all three.
Fred
--
Fred Carlile,Researching David Nathaniel Carlile,Char.SC 1830 Census