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Forwarded with Sandi's permission.
Deah
----- Original Message -----
From: "Sandi Gorin" <sgorin(a)glasgow-ky.com>
To: <KYBIOGRAPHIES-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Friday, January 31, 2003 6:31 AM
Subject: BIOS #7996 THRU 8000 - BELL, WALKER, THRELKELD, EVANS, CHISM
> Another milestone - 8,000 bios posted over the years. Perhaps one of these
> will help you! I have no connection and no further info. Sandi
>
> 7996 FAYETTE CO - BELL, JAMES FRANKLIN - Bell, Henderson, Mills,Wilson,
> Allen, Venable, Cowan, Logan, Hardin, Adair, Buford, Bowers, Davis,
> Garlington, Halley
> 7997 BOYLE CO - WALKER, DANIEL - Daniel, Greenup
> 7998 LIVINGSTON CO - THRELKELD, M H - Threlkeld, Rice, Foster, Glenn,
> Sansberry
> 7999 MADISON CO - EVANS, G W - Evans, Quisenbury, Baker, Combs, Chenault,
> Harris
> 8000 MONROE CO - CHISM, WILLIAM A - Chism, Hammer, Marrs
>
> #7996: HISTORY OF KENTUCKY AND KENTUCKIANS, E. Polk Johnson, three
volumes,
> Lewis Publishing Co., New York & Chicago, 1912. Common version, Vol. III,
> pp. 1258-59-60. [Full page photograph of Mr. Bell included with bio.]
> [Fayette County] MAJOR-GENERAL JAMES FRANKLIN BELL--Of the many notable
> Kentuckians who have been conspicuous in the naval and military service of
> their country, there is none, whether volunteer or regular, who has
> achieved higher distinction as a soldier than Major-General James Franklin
> Bell, late Chief of Staff of the Untied States army. His rise to eminence
> was not the result of fortuitous circumstances or of personal or official
> favoritism, but was the assured reward of thorough preparation, hard and
> faithful work, patient waiting, and proved capacity. His elevation of the
> chief command of the army of the United States caused no envious
murmurings
> and no adverse comment, open or suppressed, because of the unanimously
> recognition, throughout all branches of the service, of his superior merit
> and of his absolute fitness. Moreover, his frank, open nature and sunny,
> warm-hearted, generous disposition have won and bound to him a host of
> friends, both in the army and out of it. To such friends and to this
> numerous kindred and "cousins" throughout Kentucky, his official title and
> trappings are of far less moment than his own loyal, lovable, big-hearted
> manhood, and with these, his own home people, he is even to this day
simply
> but affectionately plain "Frank Bell." General Bell comes of a race of
> warriors. His great-great grandfather, Captain David Bell, of Augusta
> County, Virginia, served both in the French and Indian war and in the War
> of the Revolution. His son, John Bell, in all likelihood, also saw service
> in the Revolutionary army of Virginia, and many of their kindred in
Augusta
> County and throughout the Valley of Virginia went forth to swell the
> patriot forces in the field. William Bell, the immigrant ancestor, and
> father of Captain David Bell, mentioned above, was a member of the large
> Scotch-Irish colony settled in the North of Ireland. Here he was born
about
> the year 1685. With many of his name and kindred, he emigrated to America
> about 1735, probably entering the Delaware Bay and river and landing first
> in Pennsylvania. He settled in Augusta county, Virginia, about eight miles
> northeast of the site of Staunton, in 1738-40, certainly prior to 1746.
Was
> a staunch Presbyterian and founded the family locally known as "The Stone
> Church Bells," by which name they have always been distinguished from
other
> families of the same name in Augusta county. The Bell family was closely
> allied, by blood and marriage, to the Andersons, Allens, Craigs, Trimbles,
> Henderson, Millses and other prominent Augusta county families. John Bell,
> son of Captain David Bell by his wife, Florence Henderson, and grandson of
> William, the progenitor of the family, was born in Augusta county,
> Virginia, about 1758; married in Botetourt county, Virginia, about 1788,
> Jane Mills, a daughter of John Mills, Sr., and sister of Captain John
> Mills, of the Revolutionary army. John Bell removed from Virginia to
> Fayette county, Kentucky, about 1790. By the will of his father, Capt.
> David Bell, a military survey of 2,000 acres, for services in the French
> and Indian war, located on Shannon's Run, a branch of Elkhorn Creek, in
> Fayette (originally Fincastle) county, was devised to him and his brother,
> James Bell. They secured this land almost in its entirety, and James Bell
> continued to reside on a portion of it until about the year 1840. John
Bell
> farmed on an extensive scale and raised a large family of children. He
died
> in March, 1835, at "Stoneleigh," his handsome estate near Lexington, and
> his widow, Jane (Mills) Bell, also died there in 1836. James Franklin
Bell,
> son of John was born in Fayette county, Kentucky, September 13, 1803, and
> died near White Sulphur, in Scott county, Kentucky, November 13, 1866. He
> farmed successfully in Fayette, Franklin, Scott and Woodford counties,
and,
> like his father before him, was long a Ruling Elder in the Presbyterian
> church. His wife, Mary Jane Wilson, was a native of Scott county,
Kentucky,
> a daughter of Captain John Wilson, and granddaughter of Richard Wilson, of
> Pennsylvania, a near kinsman of Hon. James Wilson, the "Signer" and
Supreme
> Court Justice. John Wilson Bell, the eldest son of James Franklin Bell,
> became the father of General James Franklin Bell, the subject of this
> sketch. Born in Franklin county, Kentucky, on May 8, 1829, he died at
> Shelbyville, Kentucky, on January 3, 1904. He was twice married. His first
> wife, Sarah Margaret Allen, mother of General Bell, was a daughter of Dr.
> Joseph Fawcett Allen, by his wife, Sarah Anne Venable, both of Shelby
> county, Kentucky. Sarah (Venable) Allen was a granddaughter of Colonel
John
> Cowam of Lincoln and Mercer county, Kentucky. Colonel Cowan was of
> Scotch-Irish descent and was a prominent leader among Kentucky pioneers.
He
> came from Pennsylvania to Kentucky at a very early day, was a captain of
> militia in Lincoln county, Virginia, now Kentucky, during the Revolution
> and later held the rank of Colonel in the Kentucky militia. John Wilson
> Bell married, secondly, Jane Hardin Logan, a granddaughter of Mark Hardin
> and a great-granddaughter of Governor John Adair of Kentucky. Preserving
> the traditions of his family, John Wilson Bell, for many years before his
> death, was a Ruling Elder of the Presbyterian church at Shelbyville. His
> long and honorable career was devoted to the engrossing activities of farm
> and country life. Two of his brothers, Captain Joseph Nelson Bell and
> Captain David Brainard Bell, served during the Civil war, in the
> Confederate army, as also did their brother-in-law, Henry Simpson Halley.
> All three were ideal soldiers. James Franklin Bell, the Major-General was
> born near Shelbyville, in Shelby county, Kentucky, on January 9, 1856.
Only
> a meager summary of his arduous and eventful career can be given here. He
> received his preparatory education in the public schools of Shelbyville,
> and, in 1874, entered as a cadet the United States Military Academy at
West
> Point, New York. From this historic institution he graduated with honor in
> 1878. Was at once commissioned Second Lieutenant and, later, as First
> Lieutenant of Cavalry. He served on the plains in the Seventh U.S.
Cavalry,
> Custer's old command and a crack regiment, from 1878 to 1894. Captured a
> band of half-breed Cree Indians, near Fort Buford, South Dakota, in 1883.
> Served in the Sioux Campaign, around Pine Ridge, South Dakota, in 1891.
Was
> Adjutant of regiment and Secretary of Cavalry and Light Artillery School,
> 1891-1894, and Aide to General J. W. Forsyth, in California, Arizona, and
> the state of Washington, in 1895-1898. Served with marked distinction in
> the Spanish-American Campaign in the Philippine Islands and in the
> Philippine insurrection. Was promoted to Captain, U.S.A., in March 1899.
On
> March 7, 1899, was wounded in action at San Juan del Monte, P.I. On July
5,
> 1899, was appointed Colonel of Volunteers, and organized the 36th
Infantry,
> U.S. Volunteers, in the Philippine Islands during the same month. He
> continued in command of this regiment until December, 1899. In 1899 he was
> awarded a congressional medal of honor for gallantry in action, near
Porac,
> P.I. December 5, 1899, was appointed Brigadier-General of Volunteers.
> Commanded the Fourth Brigade, Second Division, Eighth Army Corps, and 3rd
> District, Department of Northern Luzon, to July, 1900. Was Provost
> Marshal-General of the City of Manila, P.I., to February, 1901. Appointed
> Brigadier-General, U.S.A., in February, 1901. Commanded 1st District,
> Department of Northern Luzon, to November, 1901, and the Third Brigade,
> Department of Southern Luzon, to December, 1902. Returned to the United
> States in 1903. Was Commandant of the Infantry and Cavalry School, Signal
> School and Staff College, to April, 1906. Became Major-General, U.S.A., on
> January 3, 1907. Received the degree of LL.D. from the State University of
> Kentucky,, at Lexington, on June 6, 1907. From April, 1906, to April,
1910,
> was Chief of Staff and, next to the President, the virtual head of the
> United States Army. In the spring of 1910, by his own request, he was
> relieved from this responsible and very exacting position by President
> Taft, and since December, 1910, he has been assigned to duty in the
> Philippines, over the military establishment of which he has supreme
> command. On January 5, 1881, General Bell was married to Sarah Buford,
> daughter of Thomas Jefferson and Grace (Bowers) Buford, of Rock Island,
> Illinois. Their married life has been an ideally beautiful and happy one,
> and Mrs. Bell, who is a woman of exceptional intellectual and social
> attractions, has been to her husband at all times both an aid and an
> inspiration. Her sister, Ann Buford, is the wife of Brigadier-General
> Ernest A. Garlington of the regular army. The Bufords, like the Bells, are
> a vigorous and valiant old Kentucky family of the best Virginia stock.
> Besides the large infusion of Scotch-Irish blood which fills his veins,
> General Bell may also claim sturdy English lineage. This comes through the
> Venables, the Fawcetts, the Pollocks (or Polks), the Mortons and the
> Woodsons. Through the marriage of Abraham Venable to Martha Davis, a
> granddaughter or great-granddaughter of the Indian "Princess" Niketti
("She
> sweeps the dew from the flowers") it is possible for General Bell to claim
> descent from Opechancanough, the celebrated Chief of the Powhatans and
> uncle of Pocahontas. The prominent and powerful Virginia families who
trace
> their descent in part from Niketti are, most of them, as proud of the fact
> as are the numerous descendants of Pocahontas of the high-bred Indian
> strain which they owe to her. To the list of Scotch-Irish families found
in
> general Bell's pedigree and already mentioned should be added the names of
> the Millers, McClellands, Hunters, Montgomerys, Gilchrists and Wilsons.
> Certainly from the happy commingling of such sturdy and heroic ancestral
> strains, it is not strange that so perfect a specimen of physical manhood,
> so fine a soldier, and such a whole-hearted, genuine Kentucky gentleman,
> clothed invariable with the modesty, which one finds so becoming in an
> acknowledged master of the art of war, should have been produced. Kentucky
> has furnished to the nation no son of whom she has more reason to be
justly
> proud.
>
> #7997: HISTORY OF KENTUCKY, by Lewis Collins, and J.A. & U.P. James,
> published 1847. Reprinted by Henry Clay Press, Lexington, Ky., 1968, pp.
> 207-208 [Boyle county]. WALKER DANIEL, a young lawyer from Virginia, came
> to Boyle, then Lincoln, in 1781, and entered upon the practice of his
> profession. His only competitor at that period, was Christopher Greenup,
> afterwards governor of the State. Mr. Daniel was the original proprietor
of
> the town of Danville, and succeeded in laying the foundation of an
> extensive fortune. He was killed by the Indians in August, 1784, after a
> short residence of three years. From an old pioneer of Mercer, we learn
> that Mr. Daniel was a young gentleman of rare talents, and gave promise of
> great distinction.
>
> #7998: Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, Kniffin 2nd ed.,
> 1885 Livingston Co. M.H. THRELKELD was born in the Dyers Hill Precinct,
> Livingston County, November 8, 1818, and is a son of Gabriel and Mary A.
> (Rice) Threlkeld. The parents were born in Virginia, and came to this
> county in about 1817. The father settled on the farm now occupied by
> William Threlkeld where he purchased 400 acres. There he resided until his
> death, which occurred in 1835; his widow died in 1847. Subject is the
sixth
> in a family of nine children, and of this number five are now living:
Mary,
> wife of Robert Foster; Nancy, wife of J.C. Foster; Lucinda, wife of David
> Glenn; James and Moses H. At about the age of thirty-two years, Moses H.
> Threlkeld made a settlement about one mile from his present farm, and in
> December 1864, came to where he now resides. Here he owns about 260 acres,
> of which there are 225 in cultivation. Mr. Threlkeld was married in
> November, 1864, to Miss Anna Sansberry, a daughter of George Sansberry, of
> Kentucky. This lady was the mother of one child, since deceased, and died
> in July, 1867. Mr. Threlkeld is a member of the Cumberland Presbyterian
> Church.
>
> #7999: Kentucky: A History of the State, Perrin, Battle, Kniffin, 4th ed.,
> 1887, Madison County. G. W. EVANS, M.D., was born February 5, 1843, in
> Clark County, Ky., and is a son of Dr. Peter and Lettie (Quisenbury)
Evans,
> to whom three sons and one daughter were born: James E., Peter E., Mary
and
> G. W. Dr. Peter Evans was born in Clark County in October 1808; his wife
in
> September 1814, in the same county. The Doctor practiced his profession
> over fifty-five years, perhaps longer than any man ever practiced in the
> State and died in 1884. He was a son of Peter Evans, who was born in
> Culpeper County, Va.; came to Kentucky about 1785, and became a wealthy
> farmer and owner of a large family of slaves. He married a Mrs. Baker,
> whose maiden name was Combs. She had given birth to two children by her
> first husband, and had five sons and one daughter by her second. Mr. Evans
> died in 1845, and was in turn a son of Peter Evans, who was born in
> Scotland, and who came to America before the war for independence, in
which
> he took part as captain. The family still have possession of his equipage.
> He settled in Culpeper County, Va., and became a prosperous planter. The
> Evans family were all stanch Whigs up to 1860. They held to the Methodist
> Episcopal faith, but Dr. Peter Evans became a Baptist. Mrs. Lettie
> (Quisenbury) Evans was a daughter of Rev. James Quisenbury, who was a
> Baptist minister, and who had married two women, each giving him birth to
> twelve children, making him the father of twenty-four children. He was of
> French descent and was an early settler in Clark County. Dr. G. W. Evans
> was raised on a farm, and received but a common-school education. At
> nineteen he began the study of medicine with his father, and in 1865
> graduated from Jefferson Medical College, Penn. He served in the United
> States service at Fortress Monroe for five months, and then came to
Madison
> County and located at White Hall, where he established a large and
> lucrative practice. In 1881 he located in Richmond and continued his
> practice. The Doctor is a member of the State and county medical
> associations, and is also president of the board of examiners for the
> United States Pension Department. He was united in marriage, May 30, 1867,
> to Nannie Chenault, of Madison County, daughter of Waller and Talitha
> (Harris) Chenault. To this union nine children were born: Waller
> (deceased); George; Lettie (deceased); Peter (deceased); Miller
(deceased);
> Leslie; Joseph; Overton and Mary. The Doctor and wife are members of the
> Baptist Church; and he is a member of the F. & A. M. His first
presidential
> vote was for Seymour.
>
> #8000: Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, & Kniffin, 3rd
> ed., 1886. Monroe County. WILLIAM A. CHISM was born November 1, 1830, in
> Monroe County, Ky., where he grew to manhood and now resides. His father,
> Nathan B. Chism, a native of Virginia, was one of the early settlers in
> Kentucky, and died in May, 1884. William Chism, father of Nathan B., was
by
> birth a native Virginian, and on moving from his native State to Kentucky
> settled on the Kentucky River; he was of Scotch and Irish descent. William
> R. obtained a limited education at the early subscription schools; the
time
> spent in school was short, but through perseverance and self-teaching he
> obtained a fair education. He maried, December 26, 1854, Emily V.,
daughter
> of Henry B. and Mary (Hammer) Marrs. To them have been born thirteen
> children: Armilda D., Alice A., Harriet E., Mary B., Martha E., John C.,
> William T, Kitty V., Phebe T., Sarah F., Samuel H., Eva B., Queenny R. Mr.
> Chism is a farmer, now owning a good farm of 176 acres. He is a member of
> the Methodist Episcopal Church South. Politically he affiliates with the
> Democratic party.
>
> Col. Sandi Gorin
> Publishing: http://ggpublishing.tripod.com/
> GORIN worldconnect website: http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/~sgorin
> SCKY resource links: http://www.public.asu.edu/~moore/Gorin.html
>
---
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Thanks Sandi, and CONGRATUATIONS ON HITTING 8000
Jeff
#8000: Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, & Kniffin, 3rd
ed., 1886. Monroe County. WILLIAM A. CHISM was born November 1, 1830, in
Monroe County, Ky., where he grew to manhood and now resides. His
father,
Nathan B. Chism, a native of Virginia, was one of the early settlers in
Kentucky, and died in May, 1884. William Chism, father of Nathan B., was
by
birth a native Virginian, and on moving from his native State to
Kentucky
settled on the Kentucky River; he was of Scotch and Irish descent.
William
R. obtained a limited education at the early subscription schools; the
time
spent in school was short, but through perseverance and self-teaching he
obtained a fair education. He maried, December 26, 1854, Emily V.,
daughter
of Henry B. and Mary (Hammer) Marrs. To them have been born thirteen
children: Armilda D., Alice A., Harriet E., Mary B., Martha E., John C.,
William T, Kitty V., Phebe T., Sarah F., Samuel H., Eva B., Queenny R.
Mr.
Chism is a farmer, now owning a good farm of 176 acres. He is a member
of
the Methodist Episcopal Church South. Politically he affiliates with the
Democratic party.
Col. Sandi Gorin
Publishing: http://ggpublishing.tripod.com/
GORIN worldconnect website: http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/~sgorin
SCKY resource links: http://www.public.asu.edu/~moore/Gorin.html
--
Jeffery Scism, http://blacksheep.rootsweb.com/
InternationalBlacksheep Society of Genealogists
Homepages: http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~scismfam/
\_/
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/ \ |> v-v-v-v |>
, , /_\ | | /_\
|\_/| | |'''''''''''| | |\
(q p),-| | || _ || | |'-._ ))
\_/_(/| | |#| | | ) '-.___//
--w-w---'-'----'-'----'-'----------'-----------
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Classification: Query
Message Board URL:
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/3gI.2ACIB/214
Message Board Post:
Does anyone have anything on a William Chism born about
1875 in Texas, County unknown?
Harold Gosnell
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Surnames: CHISM, SWEEDEN, SWEETEN, SUEDEN
Classification: Query
Message Board URL:
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/3gI.2ACIB/213
Message Board Post:
I am seeking more info or other researchers/relatives of a SUEDEN, SWEEDEN/SWEETEN family or any other spelling variation.
In the 1880 Logan Co. AR soundex there is a white 8 year old male named ?SUEDEN, Harvey b. AR living with a Ben CHISM as a boarder in ?Casin/?Crainville?Chismville? Twp.,city of ?Rogerville, ED 97.
Harvey?/Harry SWEETEN is first found in Franklin Co AR in 1870 with parents (Thomas & Rachel) listed as white, who die before the 1880 census.
I wuld like to know how the SWEETEN and CHISM family connect, if they do.
Any help appreciated.
Thanks,
Carolyn
Does anyone have anything on a John
Chism born 1917 unknown, died 1978
in Victoria, TX.?
Was his father named John W.?
Harold Gosnell
gosnell(a)wnonline.net
Is anyone researching the Chism
surname in Muhlenberg Co., KY.?
I'm looking for a Wade Chism b. 1886 in Muhlenberg Co., KY. He
married Delia Reed/Reid 1906.
Harold Gosnell
gosnell(a)wnonline.net
Harold
I know you post on the Cooper CO., Missouri list. Who are your CHISM folks from
Missouri. I'm tracing slaves in the CHISM family in Morgan, Cooper, Howard, &
Moniteau counties... they're all connected.. kin of James Chism from Halifax CO., VA
and Kentucky.
traci wilson-kleekamp
gosnell wrote:
> Does anyone have anything on the
> following?
>
> John William Chism born unknown.
> married Della ? unknown: Children:
> Lewis, John William(Bill), Elizabeth
> Judy Mae, Ozell Cook, Jesse
> Edward b. 1914 in Texas.
> As far as I know all the children was
> born in Texas.
>
>
I have a "Wade" Chism, whose first name was John born in Ky. married a Delia
Reid then moved west. I have a pic of him and his son. On the pic he sent my
grandmother he wrote this is J.W.
Jackie
Does anyone have anything on the
following?
John William Chism born unknown.
married Della ? unknown: Children:
Lewis, John William(Bill), Elizabeth
Judy Mae, Ozell Cook, Jesse
Edward b. 1914 in Texas.
As far as I know all the children was
born in Texas.
Any help will be appreciated.
Harold Gosnell
gosnell(a)wnonline.net
Does anyone have anything of John
W. Chism b. 1889 in Washington DC? He was the s.o. Edward Chism
Who was his children? Did he ever
live in Texas?
Harold Gosnell
gosnell(a)wnonline.net
anyone have any information on a James and Jesse "Chisom" (Chism) living in
Calhoun Co. Ms. in 1880 I believe the Jesse "Chisom" is my gr grandfather, he
m Sarah Sturdivant, and lived in Ark. and Tx. i think he may be connected to
the Lauderdale Co. Tn. Chism/Chisum families. Any help appreciated, he is my
brick wall--Evelyn
In a message dated 1/15/03 4:17:27 PM Eastern Standard Time,
Scismgenie(a)adelphia.net writes:
> http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~scismfam/scissum/
>
>
Hi Jeffery,
Thanks for the information that you sent me, I will really be crazy now
trying to find black Chisholms/Scissum with that spelling.:)
Antoinette J. Russell
O Lord my God , in thee I put my trust....... Psalm 7:1
Dear List:
I am searching for African American Chisholms, my story starts in Louisa
County Virginia, my family was once owned by David Chisholme, Jr., David
moved from Louisa County into Chester District, South Carolina around
1809/1810, along with him he took his slaves which included my great great
great-grandmother Bridgett. In 1814 my great greaat grandfather Edward "Ned"
chisholm was born, his father was unknown. By 1816 David Chisholme Jr. . was
dead and the slaves were passed on to his brother Thomas and then to his wife
after his death and then to Suprey Chisholme who was his nephew and twice his
son-in law.Suprey died around February 1834 and there was an estate sale
where fifty-two slaves were listed. They slaves were still in the Chisholme
family as far as 1844. I find them again in Gainesville, Florida as early as
1855. I use the date 1855 because on the death certificate of my grandfather
Thomas he was born there in October 1855 and his brother Henry was born there
in June of 1856. I have been trying to find who brought them to Florida, did
the slaves have to be registered as they passed different states. What have
been the route that they traveled? Who did they belong to in Florida and
where would I look. I have documents where they bought land, but I am missing
a lot of information. Can anyone help me with this quest. Any help will be
appreciated. Thank you.
Antoinette J. Russell
O Lord my God , in thee I put my trust....... Psalm 7:1
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Classification: Query
Message Board URL:
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/3gI.2ACIB/201.2
Message Board Post:
Do you have anything on a John W. Chism? Hew was
living with his uncle Alexander Crawford in the 1880 Census
of Grayson Co., Texas.
He was 13 years old: He was supposly born in Beaumont,
Jefferson Co., TX. He had a son Jesse Edward Chism born
1914 in same place.
Jesse married my wife's aunt Nelca Goodman Alford
Harold Gosnell
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Classification: Query
Message Board URL:
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/3gI.2ACIB/95.1.1.2
Message Board Post:
Dear Harold,
Just received your note. I am a realitive of Wanda Brewers. She and I are related to the same Jessie Chism. Sorry I could not further assist you in your search.
Sincerely,
Lori