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"Labor Related Events of the Period
1790
Population of the young nation is counted at 3,929,214 in the first national
census.
Cabinet and chairmakers in Philadelphia fight an attempt by employers to
blacklist union members.
First textile mill is established in Pawtucket, Rhode Island by Samuel
Slater for Ezekial Carpenter. All the workers are under age 12 -seven boys
and two girls. "
The above was taken from a website concerning labor and conditions. This
seems to have been
the first textile mill in America proper. Ezekial and immediate relatives
were old hands at cloth
making. A few years later in 1817 weaving itself became mechanized. My
Vermont weaver Carpenters
move to Worcester and start making shoes and boots. The end of a three
hundred and fifty year
tradition!
Don't fret about child labor. Kept the kids off the streets.
BC
Dear Bruce E.,
I must have missed something ... other than the area ...
Do you think that this deed is related to Richard Carpenter-669 of
Amesbury, Wiltshire, England? Or another?
Curious!
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
SEE: Web page at:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/library/special/collections/manuscripts/deeds/...
Deeds 492
Bargain and sale, 1617, May 24. 15 James I. 1 item : parchment ; 29.5 x
64 cm.
SUMMARY: Bargain and sale by William Potter of Banburie (Oxon.),
shoemaker, and Thomas
Halded of the same, woollen-draper, to Henry Halhed of the same,
woollen- draper, of a moiety or
halfpart of a messuage, etc., lying at the south side of Highe Street
or Bowlting street, Banburie,
purchased lately by the grantors of Robert and Richard Parrett of
Lathberry(Berks.), yeoman, and now
in the tenure of Gyles Yvetoe, Ambrose Hall, and Richard Carpenter or
their assigns with details of the
division of the messuage. Given on 24 May, 15 James I. Signed: William
Knyght, John Nichollas,
Daniell Sherwood, Thomas Sherwood. With 2 seals (1.5 & 1.7 cm.) of red
wax; the first seal, bearing
a device; the second seal, bearing a beast.
NAMES: I. Potter, William. II. Halhed, Thomas. III. Halhed, Henry. IV.
Parrett, Robert. V. Parrett,
Richard. VI. Sherwood, Daniell. VII. Andley, Richard. VIII. Yvetoe,
Giles. IX. Hall, Ambrose. X.
Carpenter, Richard. XI. Knight, William. XII. Nichollas, John. XIII.
Sherwood, Thomas.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Oxfordshire. 2. Deeds--England--Banbury.
3. Oxfordshire
(England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Banbury (England)-
-Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -AQG6916
CARPENTER-D-request(a)rootsweb.com wrote:
>
> Subject:
>
> CARPENTER-D Digest Volume 01 : Issue 74
>
> Today's Topics:
> #1 [CARPENTER] Richard Deed ["carpenter" <carp(a)tezukayama-u.ac.]
>
> Administrivia:
> To unsubscribe from CARPENTER-D, send a message to
>
> CARPENTER-D-request(a)rootsweb.com
>
> that contains in the body of the message the command
>
> unsubscribe
>
> and no other text. No subject line is necessary, but if your software
> requires one, just use unsubscribe in the subject, too.
>
> ______________________________
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Subject: [CARPENTER] Richard Deed
> Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2001 12:55:29 -0400
> From: "carpenter" <carp(a)tezukayama-u.ac.jp>
> To: CARPENTER-L(a)rootsweb.com
>
> The following deed is of interest. The geographical area is
> important for Rehoboth and providence Williams.
> BC
>
> "Deeds 492
> Bargain and sale, 1617, May 24. 15 James I. 1 item : parchment ; 29.5 x 64
> cm.
>
> SUMMARY: Bargain and sale by William Potter of Banburie (Oxon.), shoemaker,
> and Thomas Halded of the same, woollen-draper, to Henry Halhed of the same,
> woollen- draper, of a moiety or halfpart of a messuage, etc., lying at the
> south side of Highe Street or Bowlting street, Banburie, purchased lately by
> the grantors of Robert and Richard Parrett of Lathberry(Berks.), yeoman, and
> now in the tenure of Gyles Yvetoe, Ambrose Hall, and Richard Carpenter or
> their assigns with details of the division of the messuage. Given on 24 May,
> 15 James I. Signed: William Knyght, John Nichollas, Daniell Sherwood, Thomas
> Sherwood. With 2 seals (1.5 & 1.7 cm.) of red wax; the first seal, bearing a
> device; the second seal, bearing a beast.
>
> NAMES: I. Potter, William. II. Halhed, Thomas. III. Halhed, Henry. IV.
> Parrett, Robert. V. Parrett, Richard. VI. Sherwood, Daniell. VII. Andley,
> Richard. VIII. Yvetoe, Giles. IX. Hall, Ambrose. X. Carpenter, Richard. XI.
> Knight, William. XII. Nichollas, John. XIII. Sherwood, Thomas.
>
> SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Oxfordshire. 2. Deeds--England--Banbury. 3.
> Oxfordshire (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Banbury
> (England)- -Charters, grants, privileges.
>
> HOLLIS number: -AQG6916
>
> Deeds 493"
Dear Will,
I have not been able to prove that Adelaide or a daughter of Bouchard
Vendome was the spouse of William "the carpenter" De Melun.
Adelaide de Anjou was the sister of Bouchard Vendome "the old" of Anjou.
His grandfather was Foulques I "le Roux" (the Red) b. about 870 AD.
Further down in time was Torquat (Tortulfe) of Rennes b. abt 800 AD.
Rennes is part of Anjou. He was a Viking.
Foulques I "le Roux" ANJOU-167
B: Abt 870 of,,Anjou,France
M: 5 Jul 905 --90
D: 938
1st 2nd 3rd 4th
+Torquat T RENNES
+Tertulle, ANJOU-¦
¦ +----------------
+Ingelger I ANJOU¦
¦ ¦ +HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE*
¦ +Petronilla ANJOU¦
¦ +Mrs-Hugo FRANKS-
Foulques I ANJOU
Roscille LOCHES +----------------
¦ +----------------¦
¦ ¦ +----------------
+Aelinde AMBOISE-¦
* Hugo "L'Abbe" Bastard b. abt 794 of Aachen,Rhineland,Prussia.
His father was Charlemagne Emperor of HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE [KING OF THE
FRANKS]. Hugo's daughter was married off to a Viking about 844 (Some
say after 845 AD after the Vikings sacked Melun) to help settle one of
the raiding Viking groups.
I would really like to see the sources you have from Michael Jobe.
Your Cousin,
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
Subject:
WELAND
Date:
Sat, 14 Apr 2001 23:24:44 -0400
From:
"demelun" <demelun(a)email.msn.com>
To:
"John Carpenter" <jrcrin001(a)home.com>
WELAND
DANISH VIKING
D850
1 OF 2 SONS ROOTS TO HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE
JOSSELIN I HUGH CAPET
B920 KING OF FRANCE
HERVE ROBERT I
B950 KING OF FRANCE
URSION = ADELAID+ HENRY I = ANNE OF KIEV + ARLETTE = ROBERT
B995 KING OF FRANCE DUKE OF
NORMANDY
GUILLAUME = ? + AGNET PHILIP I + HUGH WM. LE BASTARD
LE B1045 B1052 THE GREAT WM THE CONQUEROR
CHARPENTIER MELUN LINE KING OF COUNT OF KING OF ENGLAND
B1042 FRANCE VERMANDOIS
+ = siblings
= = marriages
The information I obtained on Henry I, stated that he helped his nephew
Wm the conqueror. This is what got me thinking of Henry I as an uncle
to Wm. LeCharpentier considering he is known to be a cousin to Hugh the
Great. This is where I begin to put the puzzle together. We know
both Williams fathers, they were not as a fact Henry I siblings. What
we didnt know is who Henry I sisters were, this would relate the two
Williams as nephews The first came as Arlette found in the Falaise
Rolls as being the daughter of Robert I.
The only thing we didnt know is who William LeCharpentiers mother was.
This is where you came in and gave me the name Adelaid. Now even if we
did not have the mothers name, it wouldnt change the fact that
Henry I was his uncle. And if Henry is his uncle then Robert is his
Grandfather thus placing William LeCharpentiers maternal side back to
the holy roman empire. You see John you are related to, lets see Julia
Caesar Julius Caesars mother., Mark Anthony ( before he hooked up with
Cleopatra) Charlemaagne. Etc. Etc. I have this information in detail
( by Michael Jobe) He is related to us by the Kings of Mass.
Dear Phoebe,
Yes I am still collecting Carpenter genealogical and Family History
data.
I do not know when another update will come out.
I do know that people will correct the errors, add more names and talk
about what is in there!
Thank You for helping so many people with your contributions to the
Carpenter Forum.
Sincerely,
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
MzCortez(a)aol.com wrote:
>
> Hi John,
> OK, the check is in the mail. Are you still collecting Carpenter info., or
> done, fini!!!!!!!!!!!
>
> And a BIG THANK YOU.
>
> Phoebe
Dear Folks,
Some people have asked how to access the rest of the CE CD. If you
think of the CD as another hard drive, you will be able to use it as a
resource.
To navigate the rest of the CE CD, use the "My Computer" icon to open
(or see) the CD drive (D: or E:). Often it has an icon of a drive with a
picture of a CD to indicate it.
(Hint: Click on "View" then "as a Web page" to preview graphics and
such!)
You will see some folders. For Example: Click on "Misc. Pics"
This will lead you to pictures and graphics. You will be able to view
Carpenter pictures, Coats of Arms, and other items.
By exploring other folders you will find books and pictures related to
those books. CE CD #2 has the Carpenter Memorial (1898) and my Logbook
(unconnected and semi related genealogy section) section.
This is a brief explanation of one way to explore the CE CD.
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
Dear Folks,
I have been asked of how much a hard bound copy of the CE CD would cost.
They would not be cheap ...
The estimated cost per hard bound set of 37 - 500 page volumes is
estimated at about $650.00. I am trying to figure out a way to do this
cheaper but the cost of paper, copying, imprinting and binding is not
cost effective for only a few copies.
The $12.48 per each CE CD is more cost effective. Using PAF4 (or
another genealogy program) would allow you to generate specific written
reports you can tailor to your needs. You then can add graphics to
customize your report.
Thank You to ALL who have sent their congratulations and how much they
like the CE CD!
Most Sincerely,
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
The following deed is of interest. The geographical area is
important for Rehoboth and providence Williams.
BC
"Deeds 492
Bargain and sale, 1617, May 24. 15 James I. 1 item : parchment ; 29.5 x 64
cm.
SUMMARY: Bargain and sale by William Potter of Banburie (Oxon.), shoemaker,
and Thomas Halded of the same, woollen-draper, to Henry Halhed of the same,
woollen- draper, of a moiety or halfpart of a messuage, etc., lying at the
south side of Highe Street or Bowlting street, Banburie, purchased lately by
the grantors of Robert and Richard Parrett of Lathberry(Berks.), yeoman, and
now in the tenure of Gyles Yvetoe, Ambrose Hall, and Richard Carpenter or
their assigns with details of the division of the messuage. Given on 24 May,
15 James I. Signed: William Knyght, John Nichollas, Daniell Sherwood, Thomas
Sherwood. With 2 seals (1.5 & 1.7 cm.) of red wax; the first seal, bearing a
device; the second seal, bearing a beast.
NAMES: I. Potter, William. II. Halhed, Thomas. III. Halhed, Henry. IV.
Parrett, Robert. V. Parrett, Richard. VI. Sherwood, Daniell. VII. Andley,
Richard. VIII. Yvetoe, Giles. IX. Hall, Ambrose. X. Carpenter, Richard. XI.
Knight, William. XII. Nichollas, John. XIII. Sherwood, Thomas.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Oxfordshire. 2. Deeds--England--Banbury. 3.
Oxfordshire (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Banbury
(England)- -Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -AQG6916
Deeds 493"
If anyone has a connection to this, I live in Longmont and can do more research
if you need.
-Kim
Paul Dale wrote:
> Unsolved murder of Thomas R. Carpenter at the following web page:
> http://www.longmontfyi.com/Unsolved/2-15/2-15.html
>
> I am not related, it just so happens that his wife's name was Phyllis, my ex
> sister-in-law name, and this murder in 1973 in CO was the same area that I
> was living at in 1973.
>
> Paul
Unsolved murder of Thomas R. Carpenter at the following web page:
http://www.longmontfyi.com/Unsolved/2-15/2-15.html
I am not related, it just so happens that his wife's name was Phyllis, my ex
sister-in-law name, and this murder in 1973 in CO was the same area that I
was living at in 1973.
Paul
Dear Sharon,
I added your E-mail message to the family notes for Wyatt W.
Hallmark-51787.
Thank You for letting us know.
God Bless,
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
>
> Subject: [CARPENTER] Descendent of Carpenter and Dean
> Date: Sun, 8 Apr 2001 16:31:49 EDT
> From: Mhbthor(a)aol.com
> To: CARPENTER-L(a)rootsweb.com
>
> Margaret Boyd Hallmark is the daughter-in-law of Eula Elizabeth Carpenter.
> Eula was the daughter of John Warren Carpenter and Irena Viola Dean. All
> were from Clay County, Alabama. The obituary notice is from the Florida
> Times Union, Jacksonville, Florida.
>
> HALLMARK - Margaret Boyd Hallmark, 74, passed away April 4, 2001. Born in
> Lineville, Alabama, she was a resident of Jacksonville for over 50 years.
> Mrs. Hallmark was a very dedicated and longtime member of the Heckscher Drive
> Baptist Church, a devout wife mother and grandmother. Survivors include her
> husband of 56 years, Wyatt W. Hallmark; son and daughterinlaw, Ronald G. '
> Ron' and Trish Hallmark; daughter, Sandra Hallmark Sargent; 2 granddaughters,
> Kimberly and Kristin Sargent; 1 niece and 1 nephew. Funeral service will be
> held 2:00 PM Saturday in the chapel of HardageGiddens Rivermead Funeral Home,
> 127 Blanding Blvd., Orange Park with Rev. Scotty Langsford, officiating.
> Burial will follow in Jacksonville Memory Gardens. The family will receive
> friends from 12:30PM until the hour of service at the funeral home.
>
> Sharon
Margaret Boyd Hallmark is the daughter-in-law of Eula Elizabeth Carpenter.
Eula was the daughter of John Warren Carpenter and Irena Viola Dean. All
were from Clay County, Alabama. The obituary notice is from the Florida
Times Union, Jacksonville, Florida.
HALLMARK - Margaret Boyd Hallmark, 74, passed away April 4, 2001. Born in
Lineville, Alabama, she was a resident of Jacksonville for over 50 years.
Mrs. Hallmark was a very dedicated and longtime member of the Heckscher Drive
Baptist Church, a devout wife mother and grandmother. Survivors include her
husband of 56 years, Wyatt W. Hallmark; son and daughterinlaw, Ronald G. '
Ron' and Trish Hallmark; daughter, Sandra Hallmark Sargent; 2 granddaughters,
Kimberly and Kristin Sargent; 1 niece and 1 nephew. Funeral service will be
held 2:00 PM Saturday in the chapel of HardageGiddens Rivermead Funeral Home,
127 Blanding Blvd., Orange Park with Rev. Scotty Langsford, officiating.
Burial will follow in Jacksonville Memory Gardens. The family will receive
friends from 12:30PM until the hour of service at the funeral home.
Sharon
Dear Sir,
Twenty four Americans Citizens and the property of the United States is
being held hostage.
I have started my own economic war by NOT BUYING ANYTHING MADE IN CHINA.
This will continue until the twenty four American Citizens and the
property of the United States is returned.
If International Law is violated again in such a manner, I will boycott
again. I will also incite others to do the same.
It may be only a hundred or so American dollars by me, but I will
encourage everyone I can.
An American Consumer.
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
USA
Dear Bruce E.,
I got your letters today. Thank You.
Comments regarding the Tournament of Anchin ...
Roger, Sire De Gouy was born about 1120 to about 1132 AD.
To have participated in the Tournament of Anchin in 1096 AD he would
have had to have been at least 20 years old. Born circa 1076 or earlier.
Do you have any data on his date of birth? Or other details?
Could it have been his grandfather (b. abt 1066) who was at the
Tournament of Anchin?
Curious.
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
!BOOK: GENEALOGY OF THE DE CARPENTIER FAMILY OF HOLLAND BY EDWIN JAQUETT
SELLERS. Printed in PHILADELPHIA, PA in 1909.
EDITION LIMITED TO ONE HUNDRED COPIES.
PRESS OF ALLEN, LAMB & SCOTT PHILADELPHIA.
INTRODUCTION
Although the family treated of In this work has not
been definitely traced beyond Pierre de Carpentier of
Messen, Flanders yet its origin - appears in " Histore
dc Cambray et du Cambresis, par Jean le Carpentier,"
published at Leyden, 1664, vol. II, page 369:
"Since the year 1166 the family is known in the archives of
the Abbey of Vauchelles to which much assistance was
rendered by Barthelemy and Renaud Carpentier issue of Roger,
Sire de Gouy, as we learn from the Tournament of Auchin in
the year 1096. Siger Carpentier and Godefroy, descended
from the said Renaud, were held in high esteem in Cambray and
adjacent parts about 1200. (partial)
Subject:
[CARPENTER] Tournament of Anchin
Date:
Tue, 3 Apr 2001 13:26:41 -0400
From:
"carpenter" <carp(a)tezukayama-u.ac.jp>
To:
CARPENTER-L(a)rootsweb.com
Jean Carpentier the Dutch historian informed us that Roger de Gouy the
father of the first
surnamed Carpentiers, Renaud and Barthelemy, appeared in the Tournament
of
Anchin.
Below is material which sheds light on the list, which was an important
one.
"preparatory to the First Crusade, and Baldwin took part in this
crusade.
His wife was Alice de Tyrel, sister of Allard de Tyrel, Lord of Poix ,
in
the Land of Cambrfay, living at Calmbray.
The participation of Baldwin (I) des Marets in the First Crusade can be
proven historically. His name appears enrolled among the participaants
in
the Tournaaament of Anchin, in 1096. Anchin was a Convent situated on a
small island in the river Scarpe. Here Anselllm, Duke of Ribemont and
Valenciennes, called together the chief nobles of his vicinity for a
brilliant tournament, shortly after Peter of Aamiens had preached the
crusade. Aall participants in the tournament took solemn oath that they
would go on the crusade. The document of this oath still exists. Its
text
has been published in the original Latin, together with a French
translation, in : 1'Histoire Genealogique de la Maison de Neufville, by
A.
C. de Neufville, 1859. The French text can also be found in:
Dutilhoeul's
"Petites Histoires de Flandres et d'Artois."
BC
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
------=_NextPart_000_0074_01C0BF8C.16219480
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
This was sent me by another list - could be interesting so some Carpenter.
Audrey
------=_NextPart_000_0074_01C0BF8C.16219480
Content-Type: text/plain;
name="[RowanRoots] Some Names of Ohio Territory _Squatters_.txt"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Content-Disposition: attachment;
filename="[RowanRoots] Some Names of Ohio Territory _Squatters_.txt"
Warning, this is not pertaining directly to the regions of Northwestern =
NC,=20
Southwestern VA or Eastern TN but may have some names on it that are=20
familiar. It is short so that is why I will post it and risk the flak.
Some background: After the Revolutionary War, Congress was scrambling =
to=20
come up with ways to make money. The Articles of the Confederation did =
not=20
allow the central government to tax the populace directly so it had rely =
upon=20
the generosity of the states and whatever assets they could sell. One =
of the=20
largest assets was the Ohio territory land ceded to the Federal =
government by=20
VA. While Congress was trying to put a deal together to sell the land =
to=20
speculators (Indians be durned), except that reserved for veterans' =
claims, =20
they had to contend with a double whammy: the Indian tribes were not =
taking=20
the encroachment into their territories patiently and land hungry =
settlers=20
were squatting on Federal land raising the specter of tangled deeds and =
slow=20
payment by the purchasers. To put a band-aid on the situation while =
they=20
worked out a deal, Gen'l Hamars men when not building forts to protect =
the=20
frontier were also burning the illegal settler's home and improvements. =
Below is one of two I have giving a report with names and locations of =
one of=20
these expeditions.=20
Papers of the Congressional Congress 1775-1789
Report of Houses Burnt By Capt. Doughty
National Archives & Records Administration M247-164 i40 v1 pg. 161
Transcribed by Billy Markland
Report of the houses situated between Yellow creek and the mouth of=20
Muskinghum on the Ohio destroyed by the detachment under the Command of=20
Captain John Doughty
No. Inhabitants Names Where situated
1 Not known a little below Yellow creek
1 Ditto "
1 Ditto "
1 James Fry "
1 Isaac Edgington Harts rock
1 Joseph Edgington Along the shore below Cross Creek =
=20
1 Joseph Casey " =20
2 Walter Cain "
1 Francis Riley "
1 George Achinson "
2 John Carpenter "
1 George Nashan "
1 Aaron DeLong "
1 Barial Williams "
1 John DeLong "
1 Solomon DeLong "
1 William Huff "
1 John Castleman Mingo Bottoms
1 Joseph Ross "
1 Alceignos Baily "
1 William Sparks "
1 Jacob Laight "
1 John McDaniel A Compact village 8 miles above =
Weeling
1 John Tilton consisting of 8 houses and one block =
house=20
1 Abraham Davis within compass of one quarter of a =
mile
1 Thomas Johnson "
1 John Nickson "
1 Thomas Davidson "
1 Joseph Munster "
1 William Hogland "
1 Henry Hogland "
1 a block house "
1 a blacksmith "
5 Not Known between Weeling & Muskinghum
The house of John Carpenter with a sick family in it of George Norris's =
left=20
standing near the houses of his which were destroyed.
Fort Hamar
30 Novr. 1785
=3D=3D=3D=3D ROWANROOTS Mailing List =3D=3D=3D=3D
To unsubscribe from RowanRoots-L send a message from the address you =
subscribed from to RowanRoots-L-Request(a)Rootsweb.com with the word =
unsubscribe in the message body.
------=_NextPart_000_0074_01C0BF8C.16219480--
Any further information and I would be astounded, overjoyed, ecstatic
and just down right giddy.
-Kim
1860 Federal Census Macon Co ILS Macon P.O. 4 Aug
1860 p2651813-1833
Wm. H.H. Carpenter 37 M day laborer 150 Ohio
Ann 32 F NY
Theodore 8 M,
Addison 6 M & .
Mary 3 F all born Iowa,
Anna 1 F born IL, also in household
Amanda Wilson 14 F &
William H. Wilson 12 M both b Iowa.
Jean Carpentier the Dutch historian informed us that Roger de Gouy the
father of the first
surnamed Carpentiers, Renaud and Barthelemy, appeared in the Tournament of
Anchin.
Below is material which sheds light on the list, which was an important one.
"preparatory to the First Crusade, and Baldwin took part in this crusade.
His wife was Alice de Tyrel, sister of Allard de Tyrel, Lord of Poix , in
the Land of Cambrfay, living at Calmbray.
The participation of Baldwin (I) des Marets in the First Crusade can be
proven historically. His name appears enrolled among the participaants in
the Tournaaament of Anchin, in 1096. Anchin was a Convent situated on a
small island in the river Scarpe. Here Anselllm, Duke of Ribemont and
Valenciennes, called together the chief nobles of his vicinity for a
brilliant tournament, shortly after Peter of Aamiens had preached the
crusade. Aall participants in the tournament took solemn oath that they
would go on the crusade. The document of this oath still exists. Its text
has been published in the original Latin, together with a French
translation, in : 1'Histoire Genealogique de la Maison de Neufville, by A.
C. de Neufville, 1859. The French text can also be found in: Dutilhoeul's
"Petites Histoires de Flandres et d'Artois."
BC
Dear Jean,
Trying to locate families that relate to old pictures can be
frustrating. Hopefully someone on this list will know someone mentioned
below and pass it on.
Thank you for sharing this information!
Sincerely,
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
> Jean Carlson wrote:
>
> Hi John,
>
> I received your note on the CD that is available & thank you for
> keeping me on your list to receive your messages.
>
> I'm writing to share this with you. The Ireland caught my eye but I
> can connect it to no one.
> Taken from this website:
> http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/mlnews/20000902.txt
>
> I purchased in an antique store in McKinney, Texas a 3x5 picture of a
> large photograph evidently taken in the 1890s that had been damaged.
> Identified on the back of this reproduction are
> Emma Carpenter STRICKLAND,
> her father E. S. CARPENTER.
> Matilda Ireland CARPENTER,
> George CARPENTER,
> Pat Carpenter IRELAND.
> Gov. John IRELAND.
> J. W. GRAVES and son Ireland GRAVES.
> Amos and Viva PENN, nieces of Mrs. IRELAND.
> Judith Carpenter ANDERSON, niece of E. S. CARPENTER.
>
> All have passed on excepting Judith, Emma, George, Ireland and Viva
> PENN. Note written 25 Feb 1944. Made in Seguine, Texas in early 1890s.
> The picture is very clear and easy to distinguish features of the
> persons pictured. I would love to put this into the hands of one of
> the families.
> Wilma Lynch WLynch1714(a)aol.com
>
> PERMISSION TO REPRINT NOTICES FROM SOMEBODY'S LINKS is granted,
> PROVIDED: (1) the reprint is not used for a commercial purpose;
> and (2) this notice appears at the end of the message: Previously
> published by Julia M. Case juliecase(a)prodigy.net, SOMEBODY'S LINKS
> NEWSLETTER: Genealogical Treasures Found, Vol. 2, No. 15, 2 September
> 2000
>
> Jean
Dear John L.,
Good Question!
The CE CD is IBM or DOS format as used in Windows 95 & 98. I have not
tested it on MAC format.
The book portion is in HTML format. This means you open it like a web
page with your web browser.
The CE CD has a PAF4 data file and a GEDCOM version 5.5. Some 80,000
names are in the data.
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
Jack Frosty wrote:
>
> what kind of format will the CD use?
> will it have a browsable index ?
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com
Information
This is the Carpenter Cousins Rootsweb. Since many Zimmermans became Carpenters, Both are discussed here along with related DNA information.