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I was wondering where the heirs to the Clibborn properties in Moate are
living now. This is my attempt to show the direct heirs - see below.
I have just tried to update the rootsweb Clibborn family tree (more data and
known errors corrected) but cannot access it at the moment - will try again
tomorrow. You can download this family tree but only if your computer has
software which uses gedcom files. I think all genealogical software uses
this format.
Heirs of Moate Castle
John Clibborn 1623-1705 purchased castle in 1656
Joshua 1665-1727/8 (James his tenth child built Moate View)
John 1697- abt 1758
George 1736-
John 1764-
Cuthbert John 1803-1847
Thomas Strettle Clibborn 1837- 1910
George Holmes Clibborn 1869- (his heir may be in Australia)
Heirs of Moate View
James 1709-1780(or 1783) built Moate View in 1762
Son James 1741- died without issue
Nephew James (son of Barclay) 1765-1849
Brother William Cooper Clibborn 1768-1847
William Cooper Clibborn 1800- 1876
William Cooper Clibborn - 1926
Henry Cooper Clibborn
Celia
Hello to all CLIBBORN Listers,
If your interest extends to other spellings of the CLIBBORN name, and
there are many variants, please consider subscribing to one of my two
lists.
Thank you
Rod Clayburn
******************************************************************
* Guild of One-Name Studies # 0713. http://www.clayburn.co.uk *
* List owner: CLAYBURN-L(a)rootsweb.com *
* plus CLAYBORN-L(a)rootsweb.com & CLASPER-L(a)rootsweb.com *
******************************************************************
Hello All CLIBBORN family researchers and friends
Here are two interesting web-sites for Genealogists and family historians alike.
http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/
It is well worth a visit.
There is so much information that you will keep going back for more.
www.old-maps.co.uk
For old maps
Best wishes, Ron in Hong Kong, China
______________________________________________________________________________
CLIBBORN family history Latest updates
A Big vote of thanks to Celia and other family sources quoted
for the following write-ups now available on the CLIBBORN family
Community on MSN illustrated with copies of original Photographs
from Ann Murray Clibborn's Album.
For James Clibborn go to:
http://communities.msn.com/ClibbornFamily&naventryid=106
From this URL you can get to the others by clicking on
the names in the blue column on the left, once you access.
For Arthur Sydney Clibborn - later Booth-Clibborn go to:
http://communities.msn.com/ClibbornFamily&naventryid=107
For Percy James Clibborn go to:
http://communities.msn.com/ClibbornFamily&naventryid=108
__________________________________________________________
Don't forget to visit Celia's excellent CLIBBORN family Tree that may be found
directly at the following URL:
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=Clibborn&I11.x=31&I11...
Just highlight, Copy and paste to your Browser and click return.
Select a name to see the List.
The archived messages on this e-mail list can be viewed by visiting this URL:
http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/clibborn
______________________________________________________________________________
Hello All CLIBBORN family researchers and friends
It gives me great pleasure to welcome cousin Bramwell Booth to our List.
As an introduction I trust Bramwell you will not mind if I quote from what
you have
written of yourself in a recent e-mail to my sister Eleanor in the Andes of
Colombia:
My grandfather (the eldest of William Booth) was given the name Bramwell
after a fine Scottish preacher and writer whom W.B. much admired. Since
that time it has become a very well known name within the Salvation Army.
My aunt Catherine Bramwell-Booth hyphenated the name after her father's
death (She was the eldest child of Bramwell Booth and Florence (Soper)
and lived to 104) My father Wycliff was the youngest child of seven.
My full name is Ian Bramwell William (can you believe it?) Booth. Born
19/09/1928 - makes me about 73 in September I think, but feel about 35.
Have been a Salvation Army officer all my life, served in the UK, the Congo,
Italy and Germany and have three children, five grandchildren! (Two girls in
Rome, three boys in London)
We live in South London and we are mostly busy looking after three little
boys (two families) which keeps us young and active.
________________________________________________________________________________
We are gradually building a community of cousins in far off places of the world
with a shared interest in our common roots.
This is your list, so feel free to share with us your family anecdotes,
photographs
and other matter of interest that will help to bind us all in one large
family community.
Best wishes, Ron in Hong Kong, China
____________________________________________________________________________
_____________
CLIBBORN family history Latest updates
A Big vote of thanks to Celia and other family sources quoted
for the following write-ups now available on the CLIBBORN family
Community on MSN illustrated with copies of original Photographs
from Ann Murray Clibborn's Album.
For James Clibborn go to:
http://communities.msn.com/ClibbornFamily&naventryid=106
From this URL you can get to the others by clicking on
the names in the blue column on the left, once you access.
For Arthur Sydney Clibborn - later Booth-Clibborn go to:
http://communities.msn.com/ClibbornFamily&naventryid=107
For Percy James Clibborn go to:
http://communities.msn.com/ClibbornFamily&naventryid=108
__________________________________________________________
Don't forget to visit Celia's excellent CLIBBORN family Tree that may be found
directly at the following URL:
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=Clibborn&I11.x=31&I11...
Just highlight, Copy and paste to your Browser and click return.
Select a name to see the List.
The archived messages on this e-mail list can be viewed by visiting this URL:
http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/clibborn
______________________________________________________________________________
Hello CLIBBORN researchers,
Another useful web-site from the Cornish List:
"Hi fellow researchers,
I wanted to find out when Easter was in 1857, so I did a search for a web
site which would give an ecclesiastical calendar for any year. This is it:
http://www.smart.net/~mmontes/ec-cal.html
Not only does it work very well, it also gives the dates for the Julian and
Gregorian Calendars and for the Western and Orthodox Churches.
Hope you get some use out of it."
Best wishes Ron in Hong Kong
I have borrowed M J Wigham's book 'The Irish Quakers' (1992) from the
library. The Clibborn's are only very briefly included. One paragraph on the
well known episode when John Clibborn went to a Quaker meeting with the
intention of burning it down. And one paragraph on how John Clibborn helped
Edmondson to be released from prison and how John was threatened with
decapitation whilst he helped Quakers in dire straits (around 1680s). I have
kept copies of Wigham's bibliography. The best description of John
Clibborn's efforts can be seen in the writings of Edmondson. I was unable to
obtain a photocopy of this text in Quaker Library in London because the
copyright is held by the US Quaker Archives (not sure where this is). If
someone in the States is able to contact the appropriate Quaker Library to
see if permission for a copy can be obtained I can let them have the volume
and page references in the 'Friends Book'.
If requested I am happy to look up other surnames or places in Wigham's book
which I only have for 2 weeks.
Celia
Hello J. Leonard,
Would you care to write a little to introduce yourself to the Clibborn
Community.
I will ask our cousins on the Rootsweb CLIBBORN [of Moate] List if they can
help you.
Good Luck in your quest,
Ron in Hong Kong, China
"J. Leonard" <leonard(a)engr.uconn.edu> wrote on the Cliburn list:
My great grandmother is listed as Eliza CLIBBORN [b. Pr.Edw.Isl. 1849 d.
Norton, Massachusetts 1875] child of George CLIBBORN [b. unk. date in
England(?) d. unk. date & location] and Elizabeth (maiden name unk.)
CLIBBORN [b. 1814 England(?) d. 1876 Norton]. Do you have any info on this?
____________________________________________________________________________
___________
Hello there Family and Fellow Clibborn researchers.
LATEST NEWS
The web-page http://www.census.pro.gov.uk/news.htm has just
been updated in the last few days to provide the latest news
on the 1901 Census. Transcription has been completed and they
are now finishing the checking and loading of the data.
As a result of feedback from the 1891 Pilot, they are working
on a forename-only search, have streamlined the home page and
search pages for easier access, and are working on the option
of a basic place name search and advanced place name search.
So that the unit prices add up easily to £5, an image of the
census page has been reduced to 75p, and the transcription of
the details for an individual will cost 50p. Transcription of
others in the same household as the individual remains at 50p.
The minimum charge period for credit cards has been extended
from 24 to 48 hours.
VOUCHERS
Those users who do not wish to use credit cards will be able
to buy vouchers to use the service in units of £5, £10 & £50.
The expiry time for £5 and £10 vouchers has now been extended
from 2 weeks to 6 months, in line with the £50 vouchers. No
minimum charge per session will be applied and users will be
free to use up credits in one or more subsequent sessions.
The vouchers can be used at home or anywhere giving Internet
access. Details for institutions, societies and others buying
vouchers in bulk for resale to users are available on the
separate web-page http://www.census.pro.gov.uk/vouchers.htm
The minimum purchase will be £100 but bulk purchasers will be
entitled to a range of discounts:-
Orders valued £100 - £499 10% discount
Orders valued £500 - £999 15% discount
Orders valued £1000 and above 20% discount
Here is an opportunity for you to make some money! Vouchers
will not have a shelf life. Family History Societies may wish
to join together and just have one point of ordering to ensure
the best possible discount. It is planned to take orders in
October and dispatch them in November
If you would like to register your interest in purchasing
vouchers you may do so using the Bulk Voucher Purchase Survey
form to which there is a link from the <vouchers.htm> web-page.
There is absolutely no commitment to purchase at this stage -
the PRO just need some indication of quantity for planning
purposes. Details will be announced well before the online
service goes live of how to place a real order.
TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS
If your Society has a research centre or similar facilities
and are thinking of providing an online service for your
members, you will be interested in the computer settings
required to provide full use of the website.
This remaining information isn't on either of the web-pages
above, but has been received from Margaret Brennand, 1901
Census Project Communications Co-ordinator, and supplied by
her technical colleagues in QinetiQ.
Please contact the Census Helpdesk (telephone 01684 585299)
if you need further advice:-
1. http and https access (https is an extension of http
which provides secure transmission for encrypted data);
2. Cookies and SSL enabled;
3. A browser providing support for JavaScript 1.2, Java 1.1
and HTML 4.01;
Note: the website has been optimised for use with Microsoft
Internet Explorer 5.0 and Netscape Navigator 4.5 and above
4. Users will also need to be able to download and run Java
applets;
5. A minimum connection speed of 28.8 kbps is recommended.
Facilities required to provide full use of the service:-
1. The facility to print information and document images.
The images are best printed on A3 paper.
2. The need to type their credit card or voucher details
into the system
3. They may wish to download information from the website.
4. They may wish to save downloaded information and images
onto a disk to take away.
Geoff Riggs
Webmaster of the Federation of Family History Societies
www.ffhs.org.uk
__________________________________________________________
CLIBBORN family history Latest up-dates
A Big vote of thanks to Celia and other family sources quoted
for the following write-ups now available on the CLIBBORN family
Community on MSN illustrated with copies of original Photographs
from Ann Murray Clibborn's Album.
For James Clibborn go to:
http://communities.msn.com/ClibbornFamily&naventryid=106
From this URL you can get to the others by clicking on
the names in the blue column on the left, once you access.
For Arthur Sydney Clibborn - later Booth-Clibborn go to:
http://communities.msn.com/ClibbornFamily&naventryid=107
For Percy James Clibborn go to:
http://communities.msn.com/ClibbornFamily&naventryid=108
Has anyone got a photo of PERCY?
If so, please send it to as a .jpg of around 25 KB to Eleanor
as an attachment in an e-mail to <ekuribe25(a)hotmail.com>
Many Thanks, Ron & Eleanor.
____________________________________________________________
Congratulations Celia on your excellent CLIBBORN family Tree.
For the convenience of CLIBBORN List members this may be found directly at
the following URL:
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=Clibborn&I11.x=31&I11...
Just highlight, Copy and paste to your Browser and click return.
Select a name to see the List.
Cheers Ron,
_____________________________________________________________________________
At 05:30 PM 8/8/01 EDT, you wrote:
I have put the Clibborn family tree on-line - see it in Rootsweb family
trees. There are 213 people with Clibborn surname and not counting the
Booth-Clibborns. Many thanks to David L who has done some magnificent and
very sound research into the early origins of the family line. This is based
on the 1599 will of a John Cleoburne of Hyendon (name of his farm/household?)
in Cockfield, Durham. Over the next 50 years the name appears in the church
records as Clibborn, Clibbronne, Clibburne, Clibbone, Clibburn, Clibbourne.
Two entries also mention the Hyendon/Heygh Row/Hye Row address. This family
tree does not have all the name I know of yet - much more information to add.
Please let me know of any errors you see.
Celia
______________________________________________________________________________
I have put the Clibborn family tree on-line - see it in Rootsweb family
trees. There are 213 people with Clibborn surname and not counting the
Booth-Clibborns. Many thanks to David L who has done some magnificent and
very sound research into the early origins of the family line. This is based
on the 1599 will of a John Cleoburne of Hyendon (name of his farm/household?)
in Cockfield, Durham. Over the next 50 years the name appears in the church
records as Clibborn, Clibbronne, Clibburne, Clibbone, Clibburn, Clibbourne.
Two entries also mention the Hyendon/Heygh Row/Hye Row address. This family
tree does not have all the name I know of yet - much more information to add.
Please let me know of any errors you see.
Celia
Does anyone have an Edward Clibborn of Banbridge in their family ancestry? I
have not yet been able to add him to the main Clibborn family tree.
This is what I know:
James Clibborn married Mary Ann Courtney and they had 11 children - Edward
Courtenay (spelling variant) Clibborn born 5 Feb.1767 in Warrington, Down,
Ireland (also James and Jane). Edward died in 1847 in Banbridge aged 80
(source: Quaker Annual Monitor). James was a linen mill owner in Banbridge in
1783 and later after taking in a nephew into partnership it became Clibborn,
Hill and Co.
There is a lot of interesting information about the Clibborn linen business
at Banbridge including the fact that Edward C Clibborn is listed in Slater's
1846 Directory as a flour miller, linen merchant and bleacher. Also in the
1852 Great Exhibition held in London, the first prize for diapers went to
Clibborn & Co. of Banbridge. A prize I think all we Clibborns should be proud
of! A word of caution though - at that time meant a fabric having a pattern
of small repeating design especially diamonds. In Britain the cloth which is
used for babies is called a nappy. For more information about linen business
in Banbridge see
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~donaghmore1/banpiggots.html
The other Edward Clibborn I found on the internet was a curator in Dublin who
presented some watercolours done by a Danish antiquarian, Worsaae,
"These consist of a collection of twelve large drawings, each measuring
c.67cm by c.100 cm, and numbered I to XII. On the lower margin of each in
written: 'Presented to the Royal Museum of Northern Antiquities of Copenhagen
by the Royal Irish Academy. Dublin 11th January 1847. E. Clibborn, Curator of
Museum." Source: http://doi.ucc.ie/archcoll/worsaae.html. I am not quite
sure if I can place him correctly on the tree. I think this Edward was
secretary of the Royal Irish Academy and died 1880. His parents were Edward
Clibborn (son of Barclay Clibborn and Sarah Cooper) and Mary Clibborn
(daughter of George Clibborn b 1736 who succeeded to Moate Castle and his
second wife Anne Homan). If anyone thinks I have made the wrong links here
please let me know!
Celia
Hello again Bill,
Compared to you I still haven't got my knees brown, and am still wearing shorts.
I was born on 9th October 1940 during the Battle of Britain with Spitfires
and Hurricanes zooming around the skies above us in Surrey, England.
Your web-page by the way only comes up for me with this URL:
http://community-2.webtv.net/AWAYBACKTHAR/BoothClibbornUSA/index.html
The one at the end of your messages seems to be short of a few dollars to
make it work.
Thanks for the advice on explaining the lists to the computer deprived - I won't
use the word illiterate - because I'm in that category myself.
I would love to read your notes on your early life and those memories of the
Atlantic and North Sea Convoys. I have always been fascinated reading books
about them and I remember seeing a film on those convoys - the name of which
ecapes me.
The poem below is dedicated to all the Clibborns that ended up in Far Off Places
The Younger Son
If you leave the gloom of London and you seek a glowing land,
Where all except the flag is strange and new,
There's a bronzed and stalwart fellow who will grip you by the hand,
And greet you with a welcome warm and true;
For he's your younger brother, the one you sent away
Because there wasn't room for him at home;
And now he's quite contented, and he's glad he didn't stay,
And he's building Britain's greatness o'er the foam.
When the giant herd is moving at the rising of the sun,
And the prairie is lit with rose and gold,
And the camp is all abustle, and the busy day's begun,
He leaps into the saddle sure and bold.
Through the round of heat and hurry, through the racket and the rout,
He rattles at a pace that nothing mars;
And when the night-winds whisper and camp-fires flicker out,
He is sleeping like a child beneath the stars.
When the wattle-blooms are drooping in the sombre she-oak glade,
And the breathless land is lying in a swoon,
He leaves his work a moment, leaning lightly on his spade,
And he hears the bell-bird chime the Austral noon.
The parrakeets are silent in the gum-tree by the creek;
The ferny grove is sunshine-steeped and still;
But the dew will gem the myrtle in the twilight ere he seek
His little lonely cabin on the hill.
Around the purple, vine-clad slope the argent river dreams;
The roses almost hide the house from view;
A snow-peak of the Winterberg in crimson splendor gleams;
The shadow deepens down on the karroo.
He seeks the lily-scented dusk beneath the orange tree;
His pipe in silence glows and fades and glows;
And then two little maids come out and climb upon his knee,
And one is like the lily, one the rose.
He sees his white sheep dapple o'er the green New Zealand plain,
And where Vancouver's shaggy ramparts frown,
When the sunlight threads the pine-gloom he is fighting might and main
To clinch the rivets of an Empire down.
You will find him toiling, toiling, in the south or in the west,
A child of nature, fearless, frank, and free;
And the warmest heart that beats for you is beating in his breast,
And he sends you loyal greeting o'er the sea.
You've a brother in the army, you've another in the Church;
One of you is a diplomatic swell;
You've had the pick of everything and left him in the lurch,
And yet I think he's doing very well.
I'm sure his life is happy, and he doesn't envy yours;
I know he loves the land his pluck has won;
And I fancy in the years unborn, while England's fame endures,
She will come to bless with pride -- The Younger Son.
Robert Service
http://www.mochinet.com/poets/service/
____________________________________________________________________
At 04:16 PM 8/6/01 -0700, you wrote:
Dear Ron the Cop!!
I want to thank you for the happy birthday greeting that will take place
at 8:35 on this August 21 at which time I will have completed my 79th year
and will then begin my 80th. However back on June 17 you asked when exactly
was my birth date and now you know but why don't you come clean and tell us
your age and birth date and while we are on this subject don't bother to send
me anything for my birthday under $50.00 american OK?
You also were in doubt about my being Patriarch of the Booth-Clibborn clan when
you asked in that letter if there was anyone older than I which natural there
couldn't be if I was and had been for 14 years.
Now I know that it would have been a disappointment to all those in the UK
that delighted in the fact that when his father who also was my Uncle
Theodore passed
away their Arch Bishop Stanley was recognized as the Patriarch while I was very
much alive and more than 2 years older.
They also said in his epitaph that he was The Grandson of General Booth which
again was false for he was the same as I a Great Grandson. I could tell you a
lot more about Stanley and his insecurity complex when I visited the family in
the 40's.
As to the attached I feel we may have many not understanding the procedure
example when we say subscribe the person may think "how much" cost can scare
so lets make it clear also we are dealing with many who don't know the lingo
like my GGandson 12 years and new at this or many older who just send E-mail
so we have to explain mode Clibborn L & D
00000 The results of your research are appreciated ! Bill 00000
http://community.webtv.net/AWAYBACKTHAR/BoothClibbornClan
________________________________________________________________________________
Hello Cousins and everybody I know who is interested in or connected with
research into the ancestry of the CLIBBORN family of Moate, County
Westmeath, Ireland.
This is to announce that I have organized a mailing list for anybody who is
interested in researching our common CLIBBORN ancestry.
It is a place for sharing what we have discovered already, and for getting
in contact with other members of our extended family who share the same
interests.
If you wish to become a part of this mailing list then simply send an e-mail
message to the one of the two addresses below with the subject line and the
message text bearing only the one word - Subscribe
If you know of any other members of the CLIBBORN family who would be
interested in receiving this message, please either pass it on to them, or
let me have their e-mail address.
I have sent this message to 22 [twenty two] addressees whose addresses I
will keep to myself until the recipients indicate their willingness to be
known to other List members.
Best wishes to you all, and I am sure you will all wish to join me in
wishing cousin Bill a Happy Birthday this month - August 2001
William Carroll Booth-Clibborn [born 1922]
Best wishes, Ron Clibborn-Dyer in Hong Kong, China
Grandmother Ann Murray Clibborn, daughter of James Clibborn of Moate.
_____________________________________________________________________________
Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2001 15:03:29 -0600
To: CLIBBORN-admin(a)lists2.rootsweb.com
From: listmaster(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: CLIBBORN-L and CLIBBORN-D mailing lists have been created
I. Your new RootsWeb mailing list:
OK, good news: your mailing list is ready to roll. Briefly (very),
people can subscribe to your list in mail mode by sending a message
to CLIBBORN-L-request(a)rootsweb.com that contains the word
subscribe
and nothing else. If they prefer digest mode, they should send the
command instead to CLIBBORN-D-request(a)rootsweb.com.
To unsubscribe, they should send the command "unsubscribe" to
CLIBBORN-L-request(a)rootsweb.com
(if in mail mode) or CLIBBORN-D-request(a)rootsweb.com (if in digest mode.)
To switch from one mode to the other, they should unsubscribe from one
and then subscribe to the other. There is no "no mail" mode -- if they
want messages to stop, they should simply unsubscribe.
To post to both CLIBBORN-L and CLIBBORN-D, messages should be sent to
CLIBBORN-L(a)rootsweb.com. Messages sent there will appear both places.
_________________________________________________________________________
From: AWAYBACKTHAR(a)webtv.net (William Carroll Booth-Clibborn)
Date: Sat, 4 Aug 2001
To: Clibborn researchers
Subject: So Finally its out of the Bag?
HI ALL YOU COUSINS
Celia is starting to climb the tree and I have been waiting for
this but holding back because I felt that so far in our exchange there
was a dought of accuracy in my reports hence I held back the most
important of papers my Father left for fear that you because of dought
would want to disconnect me from this venture. I am aware that as a
family member arriving at his 80th in August one could consider him to
be one whose elevator stopped short of the top floor.
I have included an attached to show that I have been working on
this in internet since mid 1997 but even before back to my Fathers death
in 1969 when I saw these papers and mentioned this to family members the
reaction was one of dought. The B-C people in UK didn't want to consider
the fact that there were 2 Grub's in there tree etc.
However one paper he left was the Royal and Baronial Descent of The
National Society Magna Charta Dames which shows Ron, Eleanor, Myself and
Celia one less to be 14th in descent from King James IV 16th in descent
from King James I and his wife Joan Beaufort 19th in descent from King
Edward III of England and by the same lines descended in various ways
from Charlemagne, William the Conqueror
{of which I told Ron he was 29th in descent but he probably thought I had
gone off the deep end just like when I said his Gmother's name was not
Margaret Grubb but Margaret Grubb Murray} also Alfred the Great etc. Also
descended from Seven Sureties for the Magna Charta of AD 1215.
They are William de Lanvallei
Richard de Clare
Gilbert de Clare
Robert de Vere
Saire de Quincey
Roger Bigod
Hugh Bigod
First of all I would like to make a correction of part 3 where
> I listed James Clibborn & Margaret Grubb it should have been Margaret
> Grubb Murray by my recordes and so back from James Clibborn to John
> Barclay Clibborn to Barclay Clibborn then to Experience Barclay married
> to another James Clibborn and so back from there I have a John Barclay &
> Ann Strettle - Robert Barclay & Christian Molleson - Katherine Gordon &
> David Barclay - Robert Barclay & Louisa Gordon - Lady Janet Gordon &
> Alexander Gordon - George Gordon & Elizabeth Keith - John Gordon &
> Margaret Stewart who was daughter of King James IV and so on but enough
> for now but more I have found later and does this all sound familiar?
00000 The results of your research are appreciated ! Bill 00000
http://community-2.webtv.net/AWAYBACKTHAR/BoothClibbornUSA/index.html
Hello again folks,
Here are two more lists that may be of interest:
Rod Clayborn
CLAYBORN-L
Topic: A mailing list for the discussion and sharing of information
regarding the Clayborn surname and variations in any place and at any time.
Additional information can be found on Rod Clayburn's One-Name Studies at
http://www.clayburn.co.uk.
For questions about this list, contact the list administrator at
CLAYBORN-admin(a)rootsweb.com.
CLAYBURN-L
http://lists.rootsweb.com/index/surname/c/clayburn.html
Topic: A mailing list for the discussion and sharing of information
regarding the Clayburn surname and variations in any place and at any time.
Additional information can be found on Rod Clayburn's One-Name Studies at
http://www.clayburn.co.uk.
For questions about this list, contact the list administrator at
CLAYBURN-admin(a)rootsweb.com.
Hello folks, As far as CLIBBORN research goes for the UK side I append here
below
details of the two e-mail lists I have found so far that are of interest to us.
If you find any more please send the details to the List.
The Claiborne Clan in America has done a great deal of research for which we
are truly grateful, but it is very easy to become overwhelmed by the very
volume of traffic on their lists. So I will leave you to discover those on
your own.
Best wishes, Ron in Hong Kong, China
"CI-CN" SURNAME MAILING LISTS
URL: http://www.rootsweb.com/~jfuller/gen_mail.html
URL: http://www.rootsweb.com/~jfuller/gen_mail_surnames-ci.html
Last update: July 20, 2001 by John Fuller, johnf14246(a)aol.com
CLIBBORN. A mailing list for the discussion and sharing of information
regarding the Clibborn surname and descedents originating from Moate, County
Westmeath, Ireland, and any links to that family. To subscribe send
"subscribe" to clibborn-l-request(a)rootsweb.com (mail mode) or
clibborn-d-request(a)rootsweb.com (digest mode).
CLIBURN. A mailing list for the discussion and sharing of information
regarding the Cliburn surname and variations in any place and at any time.
To subscribe send "subscribe" to cliburn-l-request(a)rootsweb.com (mail mode)
or cliburn-d-request(a)rootsweb.com (digest mode).