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Ken,
The 1840 census, without the names of the householders, is a tough one to
deal with. Washington Co. was a destination/resting spot for a lot of
families coming out of the South.
Perhaps if someone has a family in Indiana in 1850 but don't know where they
are in 1840 they could correlate that family with the composition of the
1840 Washington Co. family.
Sharon
----- Original Message -----
From: <Kenbower(a)aol.com>
To: <CLENDINEN-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Monday, June 27, 2005 5:24 PM
Subject: Clendenin in Indiana
>I was looking for some one else, but found a John Clendinen (Not sure of
>the spelling because of the handwriting) in 1840 in Washington County,
>Gibson Township.
>
> Does anyone know who this might be, and to who it might be related?
>
>
> ==== CLENDINEN Mailing List ====
> For those of you participating in the Clendenin Surname DNA project there
> is a new mailing list, Clendenin-dna-l(a)rootsweb.com, for discussion of the
> results.
>
> ==============================
> Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records.
> New content added every business day. Learn more:
> http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx
>
>
I was looking for some one else, but found a John Clendinen (Not sure of the spelling because of the handwriting) in 1840 in Washington County, Gibson Township.
Does anyone know who this might be, and to who it might be related?
This from a Reeder list. It concerns a gravemarker that some landscapers
found inside a 4 foot diameter tree they were removing after it had wind damage.
So when you are searching for that elusive gravemarker may be you should look
inside the tree.
Folks,
I think all of us have had the frustration of trying to find a missing
tombstone or tiny cemetery. Please go to this link:
http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=14755961&BRD=1719&PAG=461&dept_id=
25271&rfi=6
This came for the Knox Co, OH list (Ken Reeder sent it to me).
Linda
Here is a letter that came through yesterday on the County Tyrone group.
I have already extended an invitation to Mr. Glendenning to join us, if he
isn't already a member.
Cece
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My Greatgrandfather`s sister was Eliza (Lizzie) Glendinning. She married
Thomas Collins. They married and lived in Coagh, Co. Tyrone.Here is the
family of Eliza Glendinning and Thomas Collins;
1.Catherine" Cassie" Collins born 18 Nov 1889- died 21 March 1970. She
emigrated to Lincoln, Rhode Island and married William Walker.
2.Thomas William Collins born 2 jan 1892- died 7 May 1960. He was a
policeman in Belfast. He married Anna Wilson and they had 3 kids. Wilson,
Elsie and Louise.
3. Charles Collins born 13 June 1894- died 1985. He married my
grandmothers aunt, Edith Wright. They had 2 children ; Cecil and Eileen.
4. James Collins. born 27 Jan 1897- died 29 Dec 1969. He emigrated to
Maine, USA and married Mildred Regina Wassmur who was born 15 Aug 1902 and
died 6 Dec 1998.
5. Mary Collins 30 Sep 1899 - 15 Dec 1985. she married William Patrick and
lived in Castlederg, Northern Ireland. they had 3 children Mary, William
and Dorothy.
6. Rachel Martha Collins Born 30 Mar 1902. she married Ernest Currell and
had a daughter, doreen and son Ernest jr. Both children died at the age of
18 of TB. Rachel remarried Sammy Kernaghan in 1947 and she died in 1985.
7. Margaret Collins born 16 July 1905. She married Ted Jenkins and they
ended up in Australia. They had a son called Arthur Jenkins.
8. John Collins 16 July 05 - 3 Mar 1979.... Johnny married Annie Meneely
and they lived in Coagh, in his parents home. They had 2 daughters; Madge
and Patricia.
9. Arthur Collins born 28 Sept 1908 He also went to Australia with his
brother Charlie Collins. he had planned to join the Royal Ulster
Constabulary and had been accepted but chose a new life in Australia
instead. He married Maude Fardell b1910 d1994, and they had 2 daughters
Ellen and Elizabeth.
10. Elizabeth Collins born 17 May 1911. Lilly married Robert Buick. They
had 4 children; Roberta, Yvonne, Fred and Sadie. they still live in the
Coagh area.
Their parents......
Thomas Collins born 1854 and died 28 Sept 1924 and Eliza "Lizzy"
Glendinning born 22 Dec 1868 and died 9 Dec 1945 in Omagh Hospital.She was
baptised at Coagh Presbyterian Church on 7 March 1869. She was educated in
Coagh National School. She travelled to the USA several times before she
married Thomas Collins and settled in Coagh They lived in a small cottage
on the Ballinderrybridge Road in Coagh, County Tyrone. Their son Johnny
Collins lived there after they died up until 1979. The house is still
there, although an extension has been added to it.
William Glendinning
County Down, Northern Ireland
'All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do
nothing'
The following information was sent yesterday to the Culpeper Mail list.
Just thought that I would add this to the archives in case it is
interesting to anyone. marsha in WV
Jaley/Jalee, etc. is a given name, the diminutive for Jael. This name runs in
my SHIPPEY, REEDS, DUNCAN families of Virginia 1600s and 1700s.
My ancestress was Jael SHIPPEY--UNDERWOOD-REEDS c. 1690-aft 1750, do Richard
SHIPPEY and Eleanor "Ellen" MOTT (George MOTT and Eliz. PIGG)
Also have :
Jael DUNCAN b. 1751 Va. d. 1810 m Samuel STALLARD
Jael GLENDENING (desc. of Geo. Mott)b. aft. 1692 Va m David SEAL
Jael HARRISON(desc. of Eliz. Pigg-Mott) b. aft 1694 Va d. 1733 m William
WILLIAMS
Jael KAVANAUGH (grt grandaughter of Eliz. Pigg-Mott and grandaughter of Jael
HARRISON) b. aft. 1715 Va. bef. 1756 d. m Thomas COVINGTON
Jalee REEDS (dau of Jael Shippey) b. c. 1731 Va. m Lancelot (Lott) HACKLEY
Jalee REEDS (grandaughter of Jael Shippey) b. 1770 Culpeper m John Hackley
JAMESON
Jaley STIGLER (grt grandaughter of Jael Shippey) b. bef 1790 Ky m George
FREEMAN
Jaely UNDERWOOD (dau of Jael Shippey) b. 1720-1726 Va.
The following were found in a transcription of Friendship Cemetery, Morgan Co., IN at
http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/in/morgan/cemetery/frendsp2.txt
Clendenen Charles 1878 1952 A-1 13 Unmarried
Clendenen Sam 1856 1913 A-1 14
Clendenen Sarah Kate" 1859 1941 A-1 15
Clendenen Charles H. 1906 1990 A-1 16 Corporal, U.S. Army WW II
Next time you are at the LDS, this film might be of interest to you with
the
spelling of CLENDENING. If this has been posted before, forgive me.
Cece
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The following is a transcription by Peter Divine, July 2001, from LDS
Microfilm #17637. This is a microfilm of a handwritten transcript in
possession of the Holland Society of New York, New York City. The
transcription of original records (and translation from Dutch to English)
was done by Dingman Versteeg into a ledger book. Only the front-side of
each leaf was used (only the odd-numbered pages), except for the
frontispiece on page 152. The microfilming was done in reverse order,
beginning with page 231 and ending with page 152. Flatlands is now a part
of the Borough of Brooklyn in the city of New York.
Baptismal Records of the R. D. Church of Flatlands, L.I.
The following index appears to have been written on loose pages inserted
into the book by Dingman Versteeg (same handwriting), but it is incomplete
and unreliable. The handwriting in this index was worse than in the book
itself, and many of the entries were scratched out and scribbled-upon.
Furthermore, it refers to the page numbers in the original church book,
only
some of which he made reference to in his transcription (example: 40/41 to
separate the entries from pages 40 and 41 in the original). For these
reasons, I do not recommend including this index on your website. It would
only confuse people. I transcribed it because it may provide clues, such
as
helping me to finally decide between "Lelover" and "Selover". If you
choose
not to put this on the website, you may also want to delete the pagination
notes (example: 40/41), since these also would only confuse people.]
Flatlands Baptisms
Orderbook is MSS in L I Hist Soc
Index of Typewritten Copy
Clendening 42-45
Hello,
It was been a while since there has been traffice on these lists so I wanted to check in with you. We have 31 members, 29 tests have been completed, and we have one new member.
The results may be seen at
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~clendin/Comparison%20Chart%203.htm.
I also wanted to tell you about a new program which you may already be aware of. National Geographic has started a five-year DNA testing program in which they anticipate testing over 100,000 people all over the world. Why would this be important to you?
One of the uses of the haplogroup you were assigned -- R1b, I -- is the study of migration patterns around the world. I've told you that R1b is the most widely reported with nearly 2/3 of all men who have been DNA tested coming in with R1b. But there is a great deal of differing opinions about the origin of this haplogroup.
NGS hopes to be able to determine more closely where these haplogroups originated and then how they got to where they are today. The Group Administrators for the Y-DNA projects at FTDNA were notified yesterday that they were ready to set up a transfer of results from the current projects to be included in the NGS world-wide project.
This transfer must be requested by the participant who has already been tested. There is a fee required but it is very nominal. (I can tell you that it is less than the cost of a carton of cigarettes. ;>0 ) If you would like to have your results copied to the NGS database go to your personal page at FTDNA and click on the Genographic tab. There you will find other links and a form to order the transfer.
There is a caveat here! You may or may not be requested to order a SNP test to confirm your haplogroup. There doesn't seem to be a consensus of opinion yet on who these will be required from. But it looks as though it will only be required from those whose haplotypes don't match anyone that has been tested through the Genographic project.
At any rate, if you decide to go this route, please keep the rest of us informed. As I understand it, the FTDNA project group administrators will not have access to the information regarding the Genographic project.
Sharon