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William E. Click
clickwe(a)ml.wpabf.af.mil
In attempt to send you the descendant chart your address failed, error was
"unknown host". If you still want the file let me know where to send it.
bill
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From: Bethylou14(a)aol.com
Return-path: <Bethylou14(a)aol.com>
To: Bethylou14(a)aol.com
Subject: click 1880 census
Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1999 01:41:06 EST
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HAWKINS, TN Enum. Dist. 79 Reel 1261 Page 239 Date: 06/11
--
CLICK, GEORGE W M 38 Head M Tennessee
Virginia Tennessee
CLICK, SURMANTHIA W F 33 Wife M Tennessee
Tennessee North Carolina
CLICK, WILLIAM W M 12 Child S Tennessee
Tennessee Tennessee
CLICK, SALLIE W F 9 Child S Tennessee
Tennessee Tennessee
CLICK, KATIE W F 8 Child S Tennessee
Tennessee Tennessee
CLICK, NANNIE W F 6 Child S Tennessee
Tennessee Tennessee
CLICK, BETTIE W F 3 Child S Tennessee
Tennessee Tennessee
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AOL users. Anyone interested in starting a CLICK genealogy chat on AOL?
We could even use some other server that would be open to everyone if there is
interest.
Grant
In a message dated 1/23/99 3:07:17 PM Pacific Standard Time, Grant6666 writes:
<<
Forwarded Message:
Subj: [MIDDLETON-L] MIDDLETON, War of 1812
Date: 1/23/99 6:48:31 AM Pacific Standard Time
From: mid(a)direct.ca (Robert J. Middleton)
Reply-to: MIDDLETON-L(a)rootsweb.com
To: MIDDLETON-L(a)rootsweb.com
Greetings:
I found the URL included in this letter, for a monthly feature at SIERRA.
Type in MIDDLETON to search War of 1812. I printed out 100 MIDDLETON names.
If it is only a monthly feature, you better do it FAST, or they might want
money. I see my GA>IL Middletons in there.
As follows:
http://www.sierra.com/sierrahome/familytree/records/
Regards, Robert.
Robert John Middleton
4044-A Apsley Ave.
Nanaimo, B.C.
CANADA V9T 2C6
Fax/Phone (250) 751-8624
email mid(a)direct.ca
The ILGenWeb Project Washington Co. co-ordinator.
My GENEALOGY home page URL is: http://mypage.direct.ca/m/mid/northam.html
Member, St. Clair County Genialogical Society
Member, Marissa Genialogical and Historical Society, serving St. Clair,
Washin >>
Howdy kinfolk,
In the process of cleaning up my computer/genealogy desk, I ran across a
"Descendancy Chart on Baltas GLUCK." Folks I am sorry, I haven't the slightest
clue where it came from or who/whom to give credit to for it. I do feel sure
that who ever it was will be pleased that I have at last passed it on to
others for possible help.
I've scanned it into a text file, using HP ScanJet 5p and Visioneer Paperport
as the OCR conversion. I did no editing to the document at all. The file is 19
pages, over a thousand names, with file size 52kb, takes around 2 minutes to
download according to your system.
Some of the surnames listed are: GLUCK, CLEEK, CLICK, MIDDELTON, WALKER, just
to mention a few of them. There are numerous given names that I've seen
mention on this and the Middleton list here also. The chart only has names
birth and death years, no months or places. It covers a good time frame from
early 1700s into the 1980s.
If you would like to have this chart please help me out by following these
instructions, I have created an alias screen name on my AOL account to handle
this.
If you want me to upload this file to you, please send a message to
BILLMC7754(a)AOL.COM
subject line Baltas GLUCK Descendancy Chart
and add your address to the text area to help me with the cutting and pasting
operation. I think that over the next week any and all that want the file will
have requested it, so with that in mind I plan on sending the chart out to all
that want in at one time. I have set a deadline for request to be Saturday Jan
30, 1999.
On Sunday, Jan 31 I will attempt to get the message sent to ever one.
Thank you for your cooperation.
Bill McAllister
Florence, SC
for your Click data-
Date: 1/16/99 11:01:01 PM Pacific Standard Time
From: GVRICHARDS
To: Grant6666
Not for the list-
I remembered that you had done some "Click" geneology, and I found some in the
Hempstead County, Arkansas census. You may have it already, but in case you
do not, and someone needs it, here it is.
Hempstead County, Arkansas
year 1830
page 129
Mathew or Mathiah Click - total in house - 10, no slaves listed.
males- two under age 5, two age 5-10, two age 10-15, one gae 40-50.
females- one age 10-15, one age 15-20, one age 40-50
(note, the name right under is suspiciously written as LICK, Henry Lick. I
will be happy to scan this if anyone wants the info and to see it)
page 130
Enoch Click - 2 in household
Males, one between 20 and 30
females, one between 15 and 20
year 1840
page 173
Enoch Click - total in household - 5 , no slaves listed, 1 person employed in
agriculture
males- one under age 5, one age 30-40
females- one under age 5, one age 5-10, one age 20-30
(note, the Henry Lick is still in Hempstead in 1840, but the Click family
listed just before them are not listed) The index has Henry listed as Lick,
but I do wonder)
__________________________________________________________________
By the way, we are making in-roads in our Middleton line- but I have not seen
any matches on rootsweb. So keep a look out please.
* Jesse Rowen Middleton was Irish, red-headed, freckled, and a stocky man
according to what has been told. He served in the civil war, Louisiana, and
suffered a hearing impairment from the war. Later he went blind (was blind in
the 1920's) and was living with his son Tom during those years in Ida,
Louisiana. Also, my grandmothers brother (Allen Thatcher) told his daughter
that his grandfather was blind.
*Jesse Rowen married the first time before the civil war, at about age 19, to
*Cynthia Rice who died in childbirth while he was away, no mention of the
child surviving.
He came home from the war and stayed single for a time, then married Martha
Anne Bailes/Bayles. Her parents were W. Bailes/Bayles and Mary Brown
(supposedly from Ireland-I do not know how long this family had been in the
country))
*Jesse Rowen and *Martha were in Caldwell Parish, Louisiana. He then bought
the land in Ouichita Parish, Louisiana.
They had the following children- *Thomas, *Willis, *Martha Ann, and *Mary.
*Martha Anne Middleton was born February 27, 1877.
*Thomas Middleton lived around Ida, La. with his family and had a blacksmith
shop.
He had sons, but we have no names.
*Willis Middleton ran a machine shop in Shreveport, La. and was killed in an
accident at the shop in 1936, when he was 64 years old. He was married and
had children, but again, no names.
* Mary Middleton -was married first to unknown, and her second husband was
Shim Sharplin and they had four children. (she died in the Pineville
sanitarium, Pineville, La. in 1932. We do not know why she was there.) No
names for her children.
*Martha Anne Middleton was my g-grandmother. B. 1877, in Ouichita Parish d.
1965 in Texarkana, Arkansas. She married Levi Thacker in Ouichita Parish,
Louisiana, when she was 14 years old. (I have her marriage certificate) They
never owned any land, but I have copies of census records now showing them
living in different places in Louisiana, and Atlanta, Texas, as well as south
Arkansas on the Louisiana border close to Ida. He had been married before and
had two daughters before their marriage. Martha Anne was called "Dolly" by
her family, but she did not like that, so had everyone call her "Della".
*Martha Anne Middleton Thatcher had seven children, (and the youngest just
died last week in Dallas, Texas.)
*Inez Marie (my grandmother) b. September 10, 1894, d. March 03, 1982.
*Emitt, *Hardy, *Allen, *Nola Mae, *Verna Ray, and *L.V.
(Verna Ray's obit is below)
I have histories on each of these people, and decendents.
Martha (Della), and daughter Inez, are buried together in Texarkana, Arkansas.
**Jesse Rowen Middleton died 1925 and is buried in the Bethdsaida Baptist
Cemetary in Ida, La. No headstone, but there was an eye witness account
recorded. His wife, **Martha Bailes Middleton is supposedy buried in Fouke,
Arkansas, reported by a granddaughter.
Obit that ran in the Dallas paper this week. (she was the only one in our
family that was Catholic, I do not know about her kids)
**BAKER, VERNA RAY, survived by children, Gene and Lynn Baker, Barbara and
Dave Koegl, Tom and Jeanne Baker; 13 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren.
Recitation of the Holy Rosary 7:00 PM Friday, Laurel Land Memorial Chapel.
Mass of Christian Burial 11:00 AM Saturday, January 16, 1999, St. Elizabeth
Catholic Church, 4015 S. Hampton Road. Rev. Fred Sidler officiating,
interment Calvery Hill Cemetery.
(And I got this promising letter last weekend-)
Vicki,
I just located your entries searching for your Middleton line on the
Middleton Family Tree Page. My earliest Middleton ancestor that I have
been able to trace is William Middleton. He married Mary H Elliot in
Amite County, Mississippi in 1828. They lived in Franklin and Amite
counties until the late 1830's when they moved to Caldwell Parish,
Louisiana. They had at least seven children including a Mary who
married James M Dickerson. Mary and James were my great-great
grandparents. William Middleton also had a son Jesse born about 1841.
Could your Jesse be the son of William and Mary? All of the folks in my
direct line that I mentioned are buried in marked graves in the Old Union
cemetery in Caldwell Parish. I have other Middleton "stuff" .
I hope we're related and can do some online research together.
Brenda Reynolds,
Longview, TX
All for now, I hope the census copies were needed.
Vicki Richardson, Texarkana, Texas
Betty Lou,
Thank you for that list. When thiis posting arrived all the names were
jumbled together. I seperated them the way that seemed right. (See below) If
this is incorrect let me know. Also, where did these names come from? Are
the 2 George's, 2 Henry's, etc. seperate people or the same people in
different units?
Grant
Subj: [CLICK-L] Fwd: click
Date: 1/21/99 7:42:00 PM Pacific Standard Time
From: Bethylou14(a)aol.com
To: CLICK-L(a)rootsweb.com
Name Additional Info
GEORGE CLICK BUNCH'S REG'T (1814), E. TENNESSEE MIL.
GEORGE CLICK WILLIAMS' MTD. REG'T, E. TENNESSEE VOLS.
HENRY CLICK WILLIAMS' MTD. REG'T, E. TENNESSEE VOLS.
HENRY CLICK 2 REG'T (LILLARD'S) EAST TENNESSEE VOLS.
JACOB CLICK RUSSELL'S BATTALION, OHIO MILITIA.
JOHN CLICK 2 REG'T (RITSCHER'S) PENNSYLVANIA MIL.
LEWIS CLICK RUSSELL'S SEPARATE BATT'N, MTD. GUNMEN, TENNESSEE
VOLUNTEERS.
MATHIAS CLICK BUNCH'S REGIMENT, MOUNTED (1813-14), EAST TENNESSEE
VOLS.
MATHIAS CLICK5 REG'T (BOOTH'S) EAST TENNESSEE MILITIA.
MICHAEL CLICK K RATZER'S COMMAND, OHIO MILITIA.
MICHAEL CLICK 1 REG'T (METCALFE'S) W.TENNESSEE MILITIA.
WILLIAM CLICK SUMNER'S REGIMENT VERMONT MILITIA.
==== CLICK Mailing List ====
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The following is the text of a letter sent to my grandmother, Mina Evelyn
Cohee Davis. Her grandmother, Mina Jane Click Cohee, was the daughter of
Nicholas Click and Sarah Pavey, b. 1822 in Washington Co. IN. David Dunlap
Cohee, Mina Jane (Jenny) Click's husband kept a diary every day for 62
years and gathered together quite a bit of Click family history as well as
Cohee family history. The letter ( xerox of an original) is somewhat
difficult to decipher; question marks denote questionable transcription. In
transcribing I just figured out that the "cousin John Daniel" referred to
in the letter is the author of the letter, JD Hodges.
I'd enjoy hearing from anyone connected to the Click families referred to
in the letter.
Mocksville, NC
Aug 15, 1930
Dear little cousin: your splendid letter of the 13th (unreadable word)
received today-15th-a quick trip. I was, indeed, delighted to get such a
nice letter and that, too, from a young lady. I always did like to get
letters from pretty girls. It pleases me yet. It was all the more pleasing
because it was written by a grand-daughter of Jane Click--my mother was
Mary Magdalene Click--and her fine husband D.D. Cohee who has written me
many interesting letters during the past few years. I am very much enamored
with the Click name. This because of the careful training of a widowed
mother and her heroic efforts on behalf of her son, during the war of the
States and the trying period of reconstruction that followed the war.
Mighty few mothers like her. Wish I could tell you about her.
Being young and enthusiastic, you may be interested in knowing something of
the Click ancestry.
In the early years of the 17th century there was a young officer in the
German army. His name was Nickalaus Kluck. Fancying that he had been
insulted by a superior officer, he promptly challenged this officer to a
mortal combat. The challenge was promptly accepted. Seconds were chosen,
terms were agreed upon. These terms were that stript to waists, they were
to fight with short swords. At the hour appointed the parties met, stript
to the waist, with sword in hand. They were just about to engage in combat,
when the German police ran upon them, the combatants scampered off to the
neighboring forests. Kluck never went back to his home, but by night
marches--concelaing himself in the day time--he sought a seaport town and
sailed thence to America.
On landing in America, he sought a German settlement, near the Maryland
Pennsylvania line. Here, he married a German girl whose name was Elizabeth
Herman(transcribers note: my records say Rebecca Harmon, not confirmed
however). Soon thereafter they joined a great crowd of German emigrants,
who were making their way to North Carolina. This colony of Germans settle
in this immediate community where I live.
This Nickalaus Kluck raised a large family of children, among whom were
Daniel Kluck, my grandfather, and Jacob Kluck, Jane Click Cohee's
grandfather. This Daniel Kluck married Mary Ann Ratts and this Jacob Kluck
married Margaret Ratts. These two girls were sisters and the boys, Daniel
and Jacob, were brothers. So you see that the descendants of Daniel Click,
here in North Carolina, are double cousins to the descendants of Jacob
Click in Indiana.
Now, at the close of the Revolutinary war, the German people
in this community, all of them wanted to change their names--Americanize
them. the Kluck's changed "Kluck" first to "Klick" then to "Click."
You doubtless remember, or have read that, in "the World War," General Von
Kluck was in command of the German army when they got so close to Paris,
within 25 miles, I believe. Well, I have no doubt, that this General Von
Kluck was a member of the "Kluck" family discussed above.
The original "Kluck" was an educated man, had a large library, perhaps one
of the largest in the NC colony. They were all German books, of course, and
mostly religious.
These NC Clicks have all been noted for good citizenship, minding their
own business, avoiding lawsuits, and all sorts of troubles. None of them
very rich, none of them very poor. None of them have ever been in the poor
house, or in jail.
At first, they were all Lutherans, getting their religion out of the
Catachism. now, they are represented in about all the churches--though none
of them are Catholics.
In politics they are democrats, every last "rascal" of 'em--have been so,
since Thomas Jefferson formed the party.
We North Carolina Clicks are intense Southerners--were so in the war of
the States. With heart and soul, we put our all--life, property, everything
into the conflict. Your cousin, John Daniel, was into it, up to his eyes,
with heart and soul. When you read of the daring of Stuart and Hompstone
(?), you may know that your cousin was there, there, in all and the wildest
of their pranks, for he was never sick a moment, during the war. Yes, "I
was in it" to the last ounce, of pride and energy that was in me.
We went home from Appomatox, weary, hungry, and footsore to our dilapidated
homes, many of them in ashes--our fields, too, were wasted. In despair, we
set about rebuilding these homes, and repairing the worst places. And we
have succeeded, beyond our own expectations, until now we are a happy,
loyal people, glad that we are again in our father's house, and that the
flag of our fathers is our flag now and forever.
The heroism and devotion of the soldiers on both sides "of the late
unpleasantness" is the common heritage of the great American people. This
common heritage will constitute an inspiration to our children as the years
come and go.
The heroism of the Confederate General Wheeler, at Santiago, and
the breaking of "the blasted(?) Hindenburg line", gloriously attests the
loyalty and devotion of the Southerners to the flag of our reunited country.
The brightest pages of recorded history are the pages that tell of the
herosim, devotion, and endurance of the Northern and Southern soldier,
alike. In that memorable struggle, the union of the states were cemented by
the best blood on both sides.
The union now and forever is the common hop and purpose of a great people,
whom God, in his infinite wisdom and goodness overruled the destinies of
the warring sections to the end that rememberance should be a beacon light,
pointing the way to peace and happiness to all the nations of the Earth.
Please remember me kindly to your Grandpa Cohee. I think he must be a
pretty good old fellow. I was pleased to see the recognition the newspaper
gave him. These newspaper folks are the greatest people in the world. They
do more for nothing, in the behalf of the country, state, and every good
cause than any other class of people--more in fact, than every body else.
I have now taxed your patience too long and will only add that I am 86
years old, every vital organ functioning normally, but cataract is getting
its work on my eyes. It is with great difficulty that I can read or write.
In behalf the "Tar Heel" Clicks and their friends, I extend cordial
greetings and good wishes to the "Hoosier" Clicks and friends.
Our reunion is always on the fourth Sunday in August. We all would be glad
to see any of our kin of the great west.
Cordially, and kindly, yours, JD Hodges
PS We are expecting your Grandpa and others to be with us at our reunion.
Kathey wrote,
>Found in Rowan County NC 1790 Census
>
>Nicholas CLICK
>1 male over age 16
>4 males under age 16
>4 females
>net worth $521.00
>
>Hope this helps someone....
I have more information on this family, would be happy to exchange data.
Elizabeth Harris
ncgen(a)mindspring.com
state coordinator for NCGenWeb: http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncgenweb/
In a message dated 1/7/99 4:24:27 PM Pacific Standard Time, Weavertrk(a)aol.com
writes:
<< lick, ca 1860 in Savier Co.. (That part of
Savier Co. is in present day Howard Co., ) Marcellus C. Click, b Dec. 1832,
Ala.. Died ca 1925.
Savier Co. is in Ark., just a county or two north of the LA line. The western
border is the Red River and across the river is Texas or Oklahoma. That makes
genealogy research interesting. The rivers were super hiways of the day. The
list of CLICK in TX ca 1836 were not ver far - maybe 100 miles -- from Savier
Co. Ark.. I think they went up and down the rivers, maybe in canoe's. about
1855 several CLICK's moved into Lafayette Co. Ark. That is literally across
the river from Red River Co., TX
Bill, you are my wife's cousin. Bird BREWER was one of my father-in-laws
sisters. My wife (Darla BREWER) has a phone number for the descendents of
the New Hampshire branch of the family. She will e mail you with info.
Grant
More computer desk clean up discovery's. Received from Ruth Standifer via her
brother Jack Cunningham.
bill
<<A Mathias Click received a first class headright of land of 1 labor + 1
acre of land in Red River County. A first class headright of land was
given to those persons who were in Texas when Texas declared a Republic
in Mar. 1836.
An Andrew J. Click received a second class headright of 1280 acres on
10-4-38. It was also in Red River Co. Second class headrights were
given to those persons who arrived after the declaration of independence
and before 1 Jan 1937.
A Wm. Carrol Click received a 3rd class headright in Red River co. of 320
acres on 12-28-1838. Third class was given to those who arrived after
10-1-1837 and before Jan. 1, 1842.>>
This is some information that I found while trying to clean up this 'puter
desk of mine, hope its of some value to someone. The first part is Lamar
County Texas Census.
I received this info from Jack Cunningham a couple of years ago.
bill
<<The 1870 census shows:
Beat #2, 22-22, Farmer 3500/1000:
Click, Jno. D., wm, 37, Ark.
Caldonia, wf, 25, TN
Creed, wm, 13, TX
William, wm, 10, TX
The 1860 census shows:
Prec. #6, 420-424, Farmer /2,500
Clicke, Jno,. 26, m, TN
Mary, 24, f, TN
Cread, 3, m, TX
Wm. Thos, 1/12, m, TX
421-425, Farmer 70,000/3,500
Click, Matthias, 75, m, TN
Lucy, 70, f, TN
Terrell, 35, m, AR
1850 census shows:
#164, Farmer, 17,250
Click, Mathias, m, 64, TN
Lucy, f, 60, TN
Terrell, m, 26, AR, farmer
Henry, m, 24, AR/TX, farmer
Eldridge, m, 20, AR/TX, farmer
John, m, 17, AR/TX, farmer
The rest is from information supplied by
M. Louise (Click) McPherson
Star Rte. 2
Box 277A425
Canyon Lake, TX 78133
Phone: 210-935-4506
John Daniel Click
b. 26 Apr 1833, Hempstead Co, AR
m. 13 Jul 1854, to Mary N. Wortham, Lamar Co., TX
m. 20 Feb 1866, to Mary Caledonia Jackson, Lamar Co., TX
d. 2 Nov 1912, in Austin, Travis Co., TX
buried - TX State Cemetery, Austin, Travis Co., TX
He was the son of Matthias Click
b. 16 Aug 1786, in Washington Co., VA
m. abt 1810, to Lucinda Betsy Cox, in Hawkins Co., TN
d. 15 May 1861, in Lamar Co., TX
buried, Cick Family Cemetery, Viewpoint, Lamar Co., TX
s/o John Peter Click and Catherine Whitner
Lucinda Betsy Cox
b. 15 Aug 1790, Washington Co., VA
d. 13 Apr 1875, Lamar Co., TX
buried, Cick Family Cemetery, Viewpoint, Lamar Co., TX>>
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Message-ID: <369571C2.22CA192(a)pop.omah.uswest.net>
Date: Thu, 07 Jan 1999 20:47:30 -0600
From: gdlewis(a)pop.omah.uswest.net
Reply-To: gdlewis(a)uswest.net
X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.04 [en] (Win95; U)
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To: Click-L@rootsweb
Subject: Ohio Clicks
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Hello,
It is great to see a Click area of the country closer to my line as
well. My gggg-grandfather Samuel Click (married to Mary Garber) came to
Stark Co., OH, from Virginia (I've seen Rockingham and Buckingham
Counties listed as origin) about 1838. He had several brothers there
also. His father was Christian Click. Samuel is buried in German
Township in Stark Co., OH, along with his wife and one or two brothers.
My ggg-grandfather Samuel M. Click went on to Wells County, IN, and
married Hannah M. Tharp. The old Click history I have seen has several
errors concerning my line. They list her as Harp, and their daughter
Mary Catherine as a sister of Samuel M. More if interested.
Galen
--------------0E1D066F649E3448A3E2BA0A--
Hi,
So far I have not seen any familiar names on my Click line. Mine did
not come from Texas
My Greatgramdfather Daniel Click born in 1845 probably in Pa. or around
Stark CountyOhio.
He married Catherine Strawser born in 1845. Daniel died in 1918 and
Catherine in 1908.
Children were Emanuel ( called E.M. or Manny)
He was my grandfather. Born in 1868
Wm. H. 1865-1867. Darius 1866, John 1870-1899, Emma 187? , Della S.
1874-1903,
Clara 1879 and Sam 1881.
They were German and I have no Idea where they came from. Any
information would be welcomed. My grandfater did not learn English until
he was 12. I have the names of the original Clicks from Germany but not
available at this time. Oh yes , my parents and their family all lived
in Michigan just across the Indiana state line. They were both in
their late 90's when they died. My grandmother was Elizabeth Alice
Cleveland (Click) Direct line from Moses Cleveland (1635 to America from
England)
Hope to hear from someone. SUNNI
Looking for info on Lewis CLICK, son Henry CLICKE 1780-1856 and wife
------, Henry's daughter Rachel Clicke 1807 TN-1899MO married to Jeremiah
MURR
Colleen Nickerson nmama(a)pacificonline.net
Sunni,
I was quite excited to see your email about Stark Co. OH Clicks. I've been
looking for my Stark Co. Clicks for quite some time now, but no one else seems
to claim them!
My line is:
Samuel Click b. c. 1786 PA or OH died after 1860 in Stark Co., OH, married to
Lana
? b 1783 in PA. d before 1860 in Stark Co. OH
Samuel Click b 1819 in PA or OH d. 1903 in Stark Co. OH,married to Julianna
Koontz b 1816 in PA
Adeline Click b 1839 in PA or OH, married to Daniel Weaver b 1834 in PA, d
1914 in
Stark Co. OH
Samuel & Julianna had the following children (that I've found so far in census
records)
Catherine Adeline b. 1839 in PA or OH
Sarah b. 1841 in PA or OH
Aaron b. 1842 in PA or OH
Daniel b. Nov. 16, 1843 in OH
Maria b. 1846 in OH
Clarissa/Eliza b. 1849 in OH
Samuel b. 1852 in OH
Susana b. 1855 in OH
It appears that your Daniel may have been the brother of my Adeline (Hurray!)
and the son of Samuel and Julianna. Since your Daniel had a son Samuel, I
think that is very likely.
There were at least two Daniels in Stark County at that time but the other was
older:
Daniel b. c 1831, the son of Lewis Click and Elizabeth?
Daniel b. 1843 in OH (probably Stark Co.), the son of Samuel Click and
Julianna Koontz.
One Daniel married Catherine Strowser in 1863, the other married May
Kelkenfuer in 1865.
I have collected a good bit of info on Clicks in Stark Co., but don't know how
it all fits together. Perhaps we can help each other with that! I'll be
happy to share what I have and hopefully you will have some bits and pieces
that would help me as well. So you have any idea where in PA your Clicks were
before they were in OH?
I look forward to hearing from you soon!!
Becky
Does anyone know which "branch" of the CLICK tree rooted off in GA?
I have a Michael V CLICK who listed his birthplace as GA on the 1880 &
1900 TX Collin Co Census. There is a George Washington CLICK in GA 1860
with a son Michael, who I believe is this Michael V.
Any Georgia Click Peaches out there?
Kathey
That is a great job and a huge contribution. Here are the children of Marsh
and Nancy Jane.
Nancy Jane Weaver m. Marcellus C. Click, ca 1860 in Savier Co.. (That part of
Savier Co. is in present day Howard Co., ) Marcellus C. Click, b Dec. 1832,
Ala.. Died ca 1925.
Children of Marcellus C. Click and Nancy J. WEAVER
Martha Ellen, b. Jan. 1, 1865 Bandara Co., TX
Perry C. b. April 1868 Bandara Co., TX
May (or Mary) b. May, 1871 Bandara Co., TX
Ida b. Oct. 4, 1874 Bandara Co., TX
Marian Arinia or Marian Josephine Dec. 4, 1877
Thad (died young) Bandara Co., TX
Perry C. Click m. Anna Shackelford, dau. of Thomas B. and Elizabeth C.
Shackleford in TX, April 1878. Moved to Oregon or N. Calif.
May Click m. Edwin "Don" M. Stipp b. ca 1862. They married Dec. 20, 1887
Bandara Co., TX . They lived in Texarkana, Ark. Don Stipp was a Dentist.
Children were
Bladen M. Stipp b. ca. Aug., 1889 Bandara Co., TX
Edwin A. or Dan b. ca. July 1891 Bandara Co., TX
Martha E. CLICK m. Erasmus Andrew BREWER, b. Beaumont, TX
Children include
Perry C. BREWER moved to New London, Conn.
Charles BREWER moved to Sergeantville, N. J.
Berta B. Grow Bakersfield, CA Berta & Bird were twins
Bird B. Click Sunapee, N. H.
Ida B. Leite Beverly Hills, CA
Edwin, Rollie J., Marcus, and William (Bill) all lived in Fort Klamath, OR.
I hope this helps untangle the mess.
Grant W. Johnston Chico, CA.