Hey, Neal...
<snip>did you notice the bunch of Carriels listed?<snip>
I sure did!
<snip>It's a variation i've never heard of before. A lot of them seem to
have
been in the Salem area in the late 1600's and then spread into Mass.<snip>
Yep. I grabbed a WHOLE lot of info for the FTM, not only Carriers, but
spouses & in-laws, too.
One Bummer...I couldn't pinpoint the "Thankful Brown" who became Richard
Carrier's second wife...
Actually, I didn't find a reference to that marriage or their children ...
<snip> I doubt that they were French as the French were more unwelcome in
Salem
than Thomas & Martha were.<snip>
Now THAT"S what I'd call UNWELCOME! (LOL)
<snip> It's got my curiosity aroused......'<snip>
I imagine there's aBUNCH of us "Cousins" that feel that way! I do, too!
Bob (Thomas-Richard-Amos-Amaziah-John M.-Daniel S.-George H.-GeorgeL.-Joan
Carrier Smith)
Neal
On Sun, 16 Jul 2006 09:01:08 -0400, Linda Soloski <lsoloski(a)earthlink.net>
wrote:
> Thank goodness for fiber optics and DSL - what a site.
> Thanks for sharing
>
> Linda Carrier Soloski
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Neal F. Carrier
> To: CARRIER-L(a)rootsweb.com
> Sent: Saturday, July 15, 2006 5:15 PM
> Subject: [CARRIER] Steve Condarcure's New England Genealogy
>
>
> If you're researching New England ancestors in the 1600-1800 time
> frame,
> take a look at this site
>
> These web pages contain 575,827 Individuals 182,510 Families 6995
> Surnames
>
>
http://newenglandgenealogy.pcplayground.com/sjc.htm
>
> There's a lot of names including Carrier. The only problem, it's a
> bear to
> search on dial-up.
>
> Neal
>