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Does anybody know anything about these people?
From: The Journal of the Records of Peter E. Gumaer 1771-1869
10 September 1833: Abraham Cuddeback and Catharine his wife conveyed by
deed several lots and pieces and parcels of land to Daniel Hilferty.
Said conveyance of land situated in the town of Lumberland, Sullivan
County, in the seventh division of the Minisink Patent. The conveyance
states "Whereas Wilmot Clark, Henry Crawford and a widow with her family
are now living on said conveyed lands "
>From Joe ARLT........joearlt@juno.com......CLARK Clearing House...
Compulsive Genealogy Searcher, (NY of particular interest),
ARLT, CLARK, COSTELLO, COVERT, FALANGA,
GUIDETTI, HIGGINS, KONEN, PARISI, RIDER, TOMPKINS,
Van AUKEN & WAGNER
____________________________________________________________
Child Support
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http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL2141/c?cp=aScxPHT89IiQJJJ3d5UH0wAAJ1C...
Hi, Jim,
I know many Clarks started out in CT and moved to NY, but I might as
well ask. Do you have any of these Clarks in your tree -- Russel
(father, from CT); Alford or Alfred, Clarice, James Madison (seems to
have gone by Madison), or George (all possible children)? They all
ended up in Ashtabula County, Ohio, starting about 1828, but lived in
NYS (somewhere) for a while.
Susan
Searchxr(a)aol.com wrote:
> I know the frustration of the search. I am sorry but none of what you sent
> was familiar. My Clarks were originally in Connecticut then moved to NYS
> about 1805. Jim Clark
>
> -------------------------------
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>
I know the frustration of the search. I am sorry but none of what you sent
was familiar. My Clarks were originally in Connecticut then moved to NYS
about 1805. Jim Clark
Hello CLARK NY!
I'm new to this list and a friend was kind enough to suggest this might be
the correct place for me to seek out my specific CLARK/E family. It seems
that in Ireland, they kept the final "E,"
but in NYC, they thrived without it.
Three CLARK brothers owned a small chain of shoe shops in NYC; originally
they were shoemakers. The eldest and first to arrive was Andrew, next was
James [first to die in NYC], and the youngest was Patrick.
All appear in NYC Directories circa 1850s and beyond. Their sister, Annie
was my great, great grandmother. Two additional sisters came to NYC and I am
unsure of their names, but one may be Catherine.
The four siblings who definitely rooted in NYC, appear in NYC's Emigrant
Savings Bank records, with Annie married to Daniel O'CONNELL. The siblings
emigrated from County Cavan, Ireland, from a section called Killeen. It is
possible that the two remaining sisters may have emigrated first to French
speaking Canada.
Their parents were Andrew CLARK/E and Margaret FARLEY.
Their mother was noted as deceased about 1856, but I am unsure when she
died.
If this sounds familiar, please email me.
Barb
N or NYC
Mlle. Joy Rich, NYC Genealogist, Editor of "Dorot" and NYC researcher par
excellence, asked me to forward this email message to lists she did not
forward to, today. Barb
Schedule of fall 2009 workshops at NARA-NYC
http://www.archives.gov/northeast/nyc/public/workshops.html#workshops