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Hi, The CLOHESY is an ancestor. and the others are variations of them.
The heritage is that of Irish decent.
-Penny
On Fri, 19 Jun 1998, Stephanie Walker
wrote:
> At 06:58 PM 6/18/98 -0700, you wrote:
> >I was wondering .... what is the opinion of the group... Is CLOHESY,
> >CLOUSEY, CLOHESSY, CLOHISSY, CLOCHESY... originally from CLOYES?
> >-Penny
> >
>
>
> I hadn't heard any of these as connected to Cloyes, are these names French?
> Hadn't heard these names before - where did you find them?
> I have seen Clayes, Cloyse, Cloice, Cloise, Cloys, Cloy, Cloyd, Cloye
> possible Close, Clouse and Clays.
> Stephanie
> Shenandoah Valley, VA
> walkers(a)vaix2.net
>
> Currently most interested in adding to these databases;
> CLAYES/CLOYES(ME, MA, NY), CUPPERNALL(NY), CRISPELL (NY), FAIRBANKS(MA, CT,
> NY), GENT(ME, MA), GLEASON(MA, NY), LITTLEFIELD(ME, MA), MESSINGER(NY),
> PARKHILL(IRE, MA, VT, NY), PEPPER(MA, CT, NY), PHIPPS(ENG, ME, MA, CT, NY),
> STONE(MA), THOMPSON(MA, VT, NY), TOWNE(ME, MA, CT), UNDERWOOD(MA),
> WALKER(MA, NY), WATSON(MA)
>
> *************************************************************************
> "I've never been afraid of ghosts. I live with them daily, after all. When
> I look in a mirror, my mother's eyes look back at me, my mouth curls with
> the smile that lured my great grandfather to the fate that was me.
> We look in the mirror and see the shades of other faces looking back through
> the years; we see the shape of memory, standing solid in an empty doorway.
> How could I be afraid of those that molded my flesh, leaving their remnants
> to live long past the grave?
> Still less could I be afraid of those ghosts who touch my thoughts in
> passing.
> Look back, hold a torch to light the recesses of the dark. Listen to the
> footsteps that echo behind when you walk alone." (From Drums of Autumn by
> Diana Gabaldon)
> **************************************************************************
>
>
At 06:58 PM 6/18/98 -0700, you wrote:
>I was wondering .... what is the opinion of the group... Is CLOHESY,
>CLOUSEY, CLOHESSY, CLOHISSY, CLOCHESY... originally from CLOYES?
>-Penny
>
I hadn't heard any of these as connected to Cloyes, are these names French?
Hadn't heard these names before - where did you find them?
I have seen Clayes, Cloyse, Cloice, Cloise, Cloys, Cloy, Cloyd, Cloye
possible Close, Clouse and Clays.
Stephanie
Shenandoah Valley, VA
walkers(a)vaix2.net
Currently most interested in adding to these databases;
CLAYES/CLOYES(ME, MA, NY), CUPPERNALL(NY), CRISPELL (NY), FAIRBANKS(MA, CT,
NY), GENT(ME, MA), GLEASON(MA, NY), LITTLEFIELD(ME, MA), MESSINGER(NY),
PARKHILL(IRE, MA, VT, NY), PEPPER(MA, CT, NY), PHIPPS(ENG, ME, MA, CT, NY),
STONE(MA), THOMPSON(MA, VT, NY), TOWNE(ME, MA, CT), UNDERWOOD(MA),
WALKER(MA, NY), WATSON(MA)
*************************************************************************
"I've never been afraid of ghosts. I live with them daily, after all. When
I look in a mirror, my mother's eyes look back at me, my mouth curls with
the smile that lured my great grandfather to the fate that was me.
We look in the mirror and see the shades of other faces looking back through
the years; we see the shape of memory, standing solid in an empty doorway.
How could I be afraid of those that molded my flesh, leaving their remnants
to live long past the grave?
Still less could I be afraid of those ghosts who touch my thoughts in
passing.
Look back, hold a torch to light the recesses of the dark. Listen to the
footsteps that echo behind when you walk alone." (From Drums of Autumn by
Diana Gabaldon)
**************************************************************************
At 06:58 PM 6/18/98 -0700, Penny Gudgel wrote:
>I was wondering .... what is the opinion of the group... Is CLOHESY,
>CLOUSEY, CLOHESSY, CLOHISSY, CLOCHESY... originally from CLOYES?
>-Penny
>
Hi Penny,
>From what I've been able to find in the IGI, those names would all belong
to another family, and would not be related to the Cloyes name. I may be
wrong, but I don't think they're related.
Just an opinion,
Tom
This is to let you know that I have moved from Virginia. I am now in middle
Georgia. It is a very beautiful place and I am enjoying it.
New address:
Hugh Cloyes
502-B Village Circle
Dublin, GA 31021
>Resent-Date: Mon, 8 Jun 1998 22:55:14 -0700 (PDT)
>Reply-To: <ggohr01(a)mail.orion.org>
>From: "Glenn Gohr" <ggohr01(a)mail.orion.org>
>Old-To: <ballinger-l(a)rootsweb.com>, <littlefield-roots-l(a)rootsweb.com>,
> <sewell-l(a)rootsweb.com>, <swain-l(a)rootsweb.com>,
> <pyron-l(a)rootsweb.com>
>Subject: Privacy and the Web
>Date: Tue, 9 Jun 1998 00:10:23 -0700
>X-Mailer: Microsoft Internet Mail 4.70.1161
>To: LITTLEFIELD-ROOTS-L(a)rootsweb.com
>Resent-From: LITTLEFIELD-ROOTS-L(a)rootsweb.com
>X-Mailing-List: <LITTLEFIELD-ROOTS-L(a)rootsweb.com> archive/latest/405
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>
>Many Thanks to Michelle Ule for forwarding this information to me. This
>question has come up several times lately and is a warning to all of us
>genealogists.
>
>PRIVACY AND THE WEB
>
> by Myra Vanderpool Gormley, CG <myra_gormley(a)prodigy.com>
>
>Would you post personal information about your family -- like
>their birth dates and who they married and when -- on the local
>grocery store's bulletin board? You wouldn't? Then don't post
>it on your home page on the World Wide Web -- that's the world's
>bulletin board, says Carole Lane, author of "Naked in Cyberspace:
>How to Find Personal Information Online" (Pemberton Press, 1997,
>$29.95).
>
>Don't make it easy for thieves to steal your identity by posting
>your Social Security number, birthdate, address and mother's
>maiden name on the Web either. Of course, you wouldn't do that.
>However, if you want a real shocker take a look at the way some
>genealogists are exposing themselves and their relatives on their
>home pages.
>
>While gathering information for a book lately, I've examined
>hundreds of home pages of genealogists, and they are a pretty
>sight -- for cyber thieves, that is. In our eagerness to share
>our family history material and utilize the power of the Internet
>we have forgotten that not everyone is honest.
>
>Genealogists are not even thinking of the possible consequences
>when they take a GEDCOM from Cousin Clare (who got part of it
>from Cousin Billy, who got part of it from Cousin Bonnie, etc.)
>and post it on their home page. Oh, it's wonderful information
>for genealogists, right down to everyone's grandchildren's names,
>their spouses' names, and their birth dates and addresses. The
>fact that they have invaded the privacy of their relatives has
>not crossed their minds.
>
>Christine Gaunt <cgaunt(a)umich.edu>, co-compiler of Genealogy
>Resources on the Internet
><http://www-personal.umich.edu/~cgaunt/gen_int1.html>, shared her
>concerns and thoughts about this problem with me recently. They
>include these suggestions:
>
>-- You can post some information without posting what is an
>identifier. Instead of saying that Jane DOE is your mother, say
>that you are researching the Jane DOE line, and here is the
>information you have on her, and where you've looked. Don't post
>your (or living family members') birth dates and birthplaces.
>
>-- Don't post Social Security numbers at all. Ditto for other
>identifying numbers like driver's license numbers.
>
>-- Decide for yourself what information you want to give to
>cousins you have met online.
>
>-- Use a program such as GedClean to remove information about
>living individuals from your database before sending it to
>someone else, or to a repository. That way, your birth date and
>birthplace won't get into someone else's database.
>
>-- Ask permission before you send GEDCOMs you've received on to
>someone else. That way, the originators can keep track of who has
>their data.
>
>-- We may want to ask/tell our credit card companies that Mom's
>maiden name is NOT a good password to use and to ask for a PIN or
>other password instead.
>
>An article entitled "Home-page Snoops," by Margaret Mannix
>appears on the "U.S. News & World Report" magazine online edition
>at: <http://www.usnews.com/usnews/issue/980511/11mone.htm>
>Check out the related links at this site, particularly those
>regarding identity theft and advice from the Social Security
>Administration on what to do if someone else uses your number.
>
>Glenn Gohr (List Manager)
>ggohr01(a)mail.orion.org
>
>
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