Beginning March 2nd, 2020 the Mailing Lists functionality on RootsWeb will be discontinued. Users will no longer be able to send outgoing emails or accept incoming emails. Additionally, administration tools will no longer be available to list administrators and mailing lists will be put into an archival state.
Administrators may save the emails in their list prior to March 2nd. After that, mailing list archives will remain available and searchable on RootsWeb
Hi
This is my family tree so far. There is a Robert listed in my family but in
1850 he is in the Coffee County Census. I haven't moved back much farther
either. I think I found the right family in 1840, but I just have my
fingers crossed. There are 2 Carlisle families living in Coffee County,
maybe you need to see if anybody sounds familiar. I think that our
Carlisle's moved up from Hall County Ga, so maybe that is another option for
you.
Wanda
----- Original Message -----
From: <LouveniaS(a)aol.com>
To: <CARLISLE-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Thursday, May 02, 2002 4:13 PM
Subject: Re: CARLISLE--TN
> Hi Wanda. It is very possible that my Carlisle is the same family.
Please
> e-mail me and I'll tell you what I have.
> Louvenia
>
>
> ==============================
> To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records,
go to:
> http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237
>
>
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Surnames: Carlisle, Goodall, Lawrence
Classification: Query
Message Board URL:
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/khH.2ACIB/82.2
Message Board Post:
I am descended from their son William Pearl Carlisle b 1873 in Iowa. Have only recently started researching this line. Have sketchy information...not verified as yet.
From pp. 123-124, Chapter 4, "The Leeward Islands," the last reference to
James Hay CARLISLE as the "earl of CARLISLE:"
*****************
In the 1660s the Leeward planters began to make sugar in earnest and put
aside the mutinies and mini-wars that had kept the four islands in turmoil
during the preceding two decades. Like the Barbados planters they had long
since thrown off their proprietary allegiance to the earl of CARLISLE. At
the Restoration the Leeward planters made the same bargain with Charles II
as the Barbadians: in exchange for royal government and confirmation of
land titles, the four island assemblies consented in 1664 to a 4.5 percent
duty on commodities exported from the islands. In one important respect,
however, it was a poorer bargain. The king appointed Francis Lord WILLOUGBY
as commander in chief of the Leeward Islands in addition to Barbados. The
Leeward colonists chafed at this arrangement, for the Barbadians were their
chief economic competitors and they wanted a separate administration.
Certainly the union with Barbados soon ended disastrously.