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Telegraph
Mrs. Frances Colegrove was taken
from a burning house in Richard
Street, Cortland. She had a bullet
wound in her head and one near her
heart but was alive and talking.
Physicians said she told them she
shot herself. Neighbors said she
had been ordered to leave her
house and had said she would never
leave it alive.
New York | Syracuse | Syracuse Herald | 1930-03-21
source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=oGlAByn/BU6KID/6NLMW2iflm...
Sentenced to Jail
In Default of Fine
For Fictitious Name
Wesley Colegrove. 35, of this city
was fined $10 when arraigned be
fore Justice of Peace Johnson at.
Portville today on a charge of giv-
ing a fictlcious name in application
for an automobile operator's
license. In default of payment of
the fine, Colegrove was sentenced
to 10 days in Little Valley jail.
Colegrove was arrested at l.4O
a m today by Corporal Doddy and
State Trooper Hoit, stationed at
Franklnville.
Justice Johnson said that Cole-
grove already had an operator's
license under his own name and
was at loss to explain why he
should have wanted another license
under an alias. The justice said
that other licenses under assumed
names had in all probability been
issued to Colegrove and an investi-
gation would be made to determine
if such was the case.
New York | Olean | Olean Herald, The | 1931-02-24
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=NUCC4daB2aKKID/6NLMW2l+Pu...
TWO FIRE ALARMS
sounded within a few minutes of
each other at the local high school
Tuesday caused considerable ex-
citement in classes The first was
a legitimate fire drill premeditated
and run in good order The second
was an accident Bud Colgrove,
popular student attempting to lean
on the wall between periods poked
his elbow through the glass of a
hallway fire alarm box and the
cling of the bells sent the won-
dering pupils scurrying from the
building again.
California | Van Nuys | Van Nuys News, The | 1934-04-30
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=MSL63G2EslCKID/6NLMW2jhcT...
Bretz to Be Arraigned
For Colegrove Murder
(By Valley News Alliance)
YUBA CITY An information
charging Nestor Bretz, 36, with murder,
has been filed in Sutter county
superior court by the district attorney
and the confessed slayer of Fred Cole-
grove, Live Oak rancher, is expected
to be arraigned before Judge Arthur
Coats on Friday.
California | Woodland | Woodland Daily Democrat | 1934-02-09
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=oGlAByn/BU6KID/6NLMW2mzY9...
Live Oak Man Held
On Murder Charge
(By Valley News Alliance)
YUBA CITYNestor Bretz, 36,
was held to answer in Sutter county
superior court this morning by Judge
Moncur when a murder complaint
signed by Mrs. Rose Colegrove was
placed on file. Bretz is accused of the
murder Monday of Fred Colegrove,
Live Oak district rancher.
California | Woodland | Woodland Daily Democrat | 1934-02-03
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=oGlAByn/BU6KID/6NLMW2mzY9...
Probably Fred James Colegrove, b. 13 Aug 1891, in CA -- a brakeman with
Southern Pacific RR in WWI draft reg. (4F for hernia) and 1920 and dairy milker
in Sutter in 1930. Draft reg. said wife and one child, with Kate, dau. of
Portuguese immigrants in 1920, still married but no Kate in 1930.
hmmmm
YUBA CITY, March 8 Trial of
Nestor Bretz, 36-year-old Live Oak
ranch hand, for the murder of Fred
Colegrove, 44, a neighbor rancher,
last January 29, opened yesterday
California | Oakland | Oakland Tribune | 1934-03-08
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=j91JOupTOn+KID/6NLMW2vggc...
Happy End To Romance
Broken 63 Years Ago
MORRISON, Ill., April 6 (AP)
An 89-year-old Universalist minister
married his former sweetheart
on Easier Sunday to write a happy
end to a quarrel that broke their
engagement 63 years ago.
The Rev. Osgood Colegrove. 89
and Isabel Jacobs. 90. exchanged
vows while seated before the altar of
the First Baptist church here. At
the end of the single-ring ceremony,
the bridegroom planted a kiss
soundly on his bride's lips.
Neither would discuss the spat that
interrupted their romance on
Easter Sunday in 1890
Michigan | Saint Joseph | Herald Press, The | 1953-04-06
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=Rvj45z7SpqiKID/6NLMW2rmtf...
Happy End To Romance
Broken 63 Years Ago
MORRISON, Ill., April 6 (AP)
An 89-year-old Universalist minister
married his former sweetheart
on Easier Sunday to write a happy
end to a quarrel that broke their
engagement 63 years ago.
The Rev. Osgood Colegrove. 89
and Isabel Jacobs. 90. exchanged
vows while seated before the altar of
the First Baptist church here. At
the end of the single-ring ceremony,
the bridegroom planted a kiss
soundly on his bride's lips.
Neither would discuss the spat that
interrupted their romance on
Easter Sunday in 1890
Michigan | Saint Joseph | Herald Press, The | 1953-04-06
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=Rvj45z7SpqiKID/6NLMW2rmtf...
Good afternoon everyone.
Rootsweb has been upgrading their mail server, which has various network
providers banning mail from rootsweb..
Anyhow, here's the latest surnames I've updated.
Foil
Leach
Hotchkiss
Martin
Erickson
McWhirter
Brown
Pike
Colgrove (Nebraska, Coloraldo & California)
Colegrove (Nebraska, New York (western part of state) and California)
http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=tcolegrove1
Terry Colegrove
Saved Fifteen in Runaway.
Erie, Pa.Morris Colgrove, aged 15,
an orphan, risked his life to rescue 15
children in a runaway at West Spring-
field. The children were being taken
to their homes from school in a large
wagon. When the horses ran away
young Colgrove leaped on to the rear
end of the wagon, crawled to the front
and brought the horses to a stop.
California | Placerville | Mountain Democrat | 1911-04-15
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=wUP6BEk4rpmKID/6NLMW2mjIy...
For those interested.. This is just 1 of 17 articles on the "Colegrove
Park" dating from July 1895 to Dec 1901. The articles have the name spelled
both ways, Colegrove and Colgrove.
SEEN AND HEARD.
Should the bones of the Colgrove cemetry
colony come to life again just now
they would awake to find themselves
famous. In the newly mowed, newly
cleaned, much revisited plot of land
below the bluff hill of the Drury
grounds, they would recognize a renewed
Interest in themselves, as well
as in their resting place. It is probable
that not in all the last 20 years together
have there been more visitors to the
little cemetery than there have been
this summer, since the agitation for a
park brought the long neglected spot
into prominence once more. Perhaps
good reason why, since until the recent
"cleaning up" which the place under-went,
entrance was almost impossible
from the heavy growth of weeds that
blocked the gate and hid the graves.
There has been so much said and written
about the cemetery of late that
isn't so, that it is of interest to recall
here some of the intersting bits of history
suggested by the present situation
* * *
One who visits the cemetery now
would not recognize in it the dreary
waste of misplaced tombstones, over-grown
weeds and worn out tin cans
that greeted the eye there a year ago.
Then the place was given over to every
brand of devastation known to the
living or to the dead.
* * * *
There was no need to seek there for
the left hind foot of a cross-eyed rabbit
caught at midnight on a murderer's
grave in order to receive a nervous
shock. Looking over the cemetery
fence would do it. There in keeping of
the neglected dead reposed the most
motly collection of refuse that ever
adorned the final homes of men. There
were broken bed springs, empty cans,
overused furniture, skeletons of various
once living things, empty whiskey
and beer bottles, everything that the
world regards as the last end of nothingness.
All this was mingled with the
long, unkempt grass, the rank weeds,
the overthrown gravestones, and the
poison ivy. The cemetery as it was a
few months ago was an unanswerable
argument in favor of cremation.
* * *
As it is today it is an unanswerable
argument in favor of a public park.
* * *
Viewed as a cemetery, as a silent history
of former human activity, there
are probably not more than two or
three people in the city today who understand
the old cemetery at all. Its
story is not told to every casual stranger
who may curiously try to deciper
the inscriptions. The weather of the
years has effaced so much that many
names can not be read without the aid
of memory to fill in the missing spaces.
* * *
There are in the cemetery between
140 and 150 gravestones, but we do not
know how many graves. Some stones
bear half a dozen names, and many
graves are unmarked. The oldest
stone is that which bears the name of
Nabby Darling, who died. March 9, 1802
in the 2d year of her age. Next comes
William, son of David and Abigail
Darling, who died March 15, 1802, in the
4th year of, his age. A period of over
70 years is included between the date
of the first and last stones, the last
being that which bears the name of
Jeremiah Colgrove 2d, who died August
18, 1873.
* * *
One centenarian is buried there, Peter
Mallery, who died March 2, 1842, at the
age of 101 years. As a boy he saw the
royal governor of Massachusetts and
the royal governor of New York uniting
their wits to prepare to resist the expected
invasions of the French into
their colonies, long before the Revolution
was dreamed of.
* * *
Three revolutionary soldiers are buried
there, Jeremiah Colgrove, Thomas
Waterman, and Salmon Temple. On
the grave of the latter is a marker
authorized by the Sons of the American
Revolution but the other graves are
not thus designated.
* * *
Many stones are there bearing names
of families which in the early days did
much for the growth of the community,
and some of which stand today for
men of local prominence. Merely to
name them is almost to give a brief
history of North dams. There are Cady
and Daman, Darby, Darling, Gould,
Hawks, Manchester, Parker, Pierpont,
Bmilh, Stearns, Colegrove, Temple,
Tinker, Walley, Waterman, and Wilbur.
There are 23 stones bearing the
name of Darling, representing four
generations of the family.
* * *
The number of the quaint epitaphs
that mock the visitor to many old ceme-
teries is small, but there are a few
which carry the sardonic humor or
literal faith peculiar to Revolutionary
perioc epitaph-writers. Here are a
f«w that can still be deciphered on the
worn stones.
* * *
"All you that read with little care
And walk away and leave me here.
Must not forget that you must die
And be entombed as well as I."
* * *
" No terror has the dark, cold grave,
No fear for her had death,
She knew her Saviour's power to save,
And calm resigned her breath."
* * *
"Friend nor physician could not save
His mortal body from the grave;
Nor can the grave confine it here,
"When Jesus calls, it must appear."
* * *
"Go home my friend and dry your
tears,
For I shall rest till Christ appears."
Massachusetts | North Adams | North Adams Transcript, The | 1900-07-28
source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=WSgtrs8BeYeKID/6NLMW2mWRx...
LIVED TOGETHER TWO DAYS,
Colegrove Then Left His Wife, Who
Saw Him No More, Until She
Had Him Arrested.
Russell Colegrove, a son of James B.
Colegrove, President of the Washington,
Westminster and Gettysburg Railway, was
a prisoner in the Yorkville Police Court
yesterday charged with having abandoned
his wife, Ollie T. Colegrove. Mrs. Colegrove
is about twenty-three years old and
her husband Is about thirty.
They were married secretly on Aug, 15,
1897, by the Rev. Mr. Blewitt of Thirty-second
Street, near Ninth Avenue. Colegrove,
it Is charged, left home a day or two after the
marriage and the wife did not see him again until
yesterday. Two weeks ago she heard he was in the
city, and secured a warrant for his arrest.
Colegrove was arrested late Saturday night at the
Lehigh Valley Railroad station as he was about to
leave for Cleveland. His father was with him in
court yesterday, accompanied by his counsel.
George Robinson of 99 Nassau Street. The wife was
represented by Herman A. E. Heydt of 27 William
Street. Mrs. Colegrove told Magistrate Cornell
how her husband left her two days after the
marriage. "He said he was employed on a Government
vessel," she said. "and that the vessel was
ordered to Boston. He said he would send for me,
but he never did so, and I heard no more of him
until I read in the newspapers last September
that he was ill in California. I wrote to him.
but received no answer. His father came to see
me and said he was willing that his son should
take me home and care for me. I paid I would not
go. because he, the father, had said that the
son couldn't marry me, and had warned me not to
marry him, as he was a pauper. He said if I did
marry he would make my life miserable. Because
of his father's opposition, we were married
secretly.
In March of this year Mr. Robinson called on me
and tried to get me to go home and live with my
husband. I would not agree to any such course, after
being deserted for four years. I wrote Mr. Colegrove
several letters later, but he never replied."
Mrs Colegrove said she was Ollie Wynne before
her marriage. The husband told the Magistrate that he
was sent to Boston by the Government,and from there
was ordered to Washington, and thence to California,
where he was taken ill. He sail that since then he
had been to Honolulu and to the Philippines. He was
ill in both places, he said. He asserted that he was
willing to take his wife with him and to provide her
with a home. He said he was living with his father
at Bath Beach. The wife's counsel wanted the husband
put under bonds to provide for the wife, but
Magistrate Cornell said that he would not do this.
He thought that the woman would be looked after If
she would go to her husband's home. Colegrove was
discharged.
New York | New York | New York Times, The | 1901-07-16
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=oGlAByn/BU6KID/6NLMW2s0TR...
PURPLE, SAMUEL; S.The People .of the State
of New York, by the grace of God free and
independent. to MARY C. CHAFFEE, Amella
G Purple. Frances M. Purple, Mary Purple, and
Albert L Colegrove. the heirs and next of kin of
SAMUEL S. PURPLE, deceased, send granl;g:
Whereas, Mary Frances Purple, of the City
of New York has lately applied to the Surrogates'
Court of our County of New York, to have,
& certain instrument in writing, relating to both
real and personal property, duly proved as the
last will and testament of Samuel S. Purple,
late of the County of Mew York, deceased, there-fore
you and each of you are cited to appear
before the Surrogate of our County of New York,
at his office in the County of New York, on the
18th day of December, one thousand nine hundred
at half-past ten o'clock in the forenoon of
that day, then and there to attend the probate
of the said last will and testament. And such of
you an are hereby cited as are
under the ago of twenty-cne years, are required
to appear by your guardian, If you nave one, or
If vou have" none, to appear and apply for one
to be appointed, or in the event of your neglect
or failure to do so. a guardian will be appointed
by the Surrogate to represent and act for you in
the proceeding.
In testimony whereof, we have caused the seal
of the Surrogates' Court of the said
County of New York to be hereunto af-
[L. S.] fixed. Witness. Hon. Abner C. Thomas,
a Surrogate of our said-County of New
York, at said county, the 20th day of
October, in the year of-our Lord one thousand
nine hundred.
J. FAIRFAX McLAUGHLIN,
Clerk of the Surrogates' Court
New York | New York | New York Times, The | 1900-11-14
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=oGlAByn/BU6KID/6NLMW2s0TR...
THE PARK PROJECT
It must be pleasing to every citizen,
the newr that decisive steps are being
taken towards the acquirement of
what will really be something of a public
park. There is nothing of which
this city stands so much in need, and
it is necessary that we move in the
matter now so that the great expense
the future would entail be avoided. In
fact we should have moved long ago
and probably would have done so had
we not been engaged in practically rebuilding
the city. Those who have
taken an interest in the public park
question have fully understood this,
and several years ago when the present
project was first suggested and worked
upon it was with full faith in its revival
that it was for a time set aside.
The warm thanks of the community
are due the men who seem to have
brought the matter close to successful
issue by themselves assuming considerable
responsibility in a public
spirited way. It is additional proof
that North Adams has men who are always
willing to unite to further an important
matter of public interest.
There is no spot in the city so available
and so well situated for a small
public park, as the old Colegrove cemetery.
It has been abandoned for years
as a burial ground, and there is nothing
in support of preserving it in its
present state of uselessness but some
sentiment attaching to it concerning
the people whose bodies repose in it.
This sentiment is not to be lightly regarded,
but it should yield before the
higher sentiment that considers the
pressing want of the living. We know
of no nobler use to which this plot of
ground could be put than the use of
a spot for public rest and enjoyment.
To reverently remove the revered
bones that rest in that old burial place
and to make the ground a place of
public relief from rapidly congesting
conditions of life will be a change that
is striking in its appropriateness as
well as highly useful, and a change
that surely would not be objectionable
to the pioneers whose bones hallow the
ground and whose activities helped
largely to direct North Adams along
the line of rapid progress on which she
is now moving. It should, likewise, be'
a change acceptable to the descendants
of those pioneers. We may go about
this matter of a public park In a way
that the accomplished thing may be
a monument In commemoration of the
dead that gave up their resting place
to be a place of rest for the weary liv-
ing. It would be highly suitable to
erect and engrave a tablet to make
known to future generations the persons
who were committed to earth in
the ground reclaimed for the benefit
of those who are toiling on to the end.
So far as we know it is not within
the intention of the parties interested
to acquire more property than the parcels
already referred to in the news
columns of the Transcript. But it
might be wise to go further.
Would it not be well to secure if posssible
that none of the so-called "flatiron,"
the extreme end of the triangle
which divides Eagle from North
Church street? That piece of property
should be acquired by the city,
the building removed and a tier of
granite steps erected connectinf the
upper and lower streets. So long as it
remains it will mar the entrance to the
park by its unsigtliness St. Francis
parish, the city corporation and the
Methodist church should be interested
in its removal. It is never likely
to be occupied by a building of pleasing
lines, and is more than likely to
be a good deal of an eyesore for years.
| North Adams | North Adams Transcript, The | 1900-05-14
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=WSgtrs8BeYeKID/6NLMW2mViL...
THE HORSE JUMPED THE TABLE.
A runaway at Ithaca, N. Y.. Dashes
Through a House Like a Cyclone.
ITHACA, N Y , March 13 The horse of
Highway Commissioner L F Colegrove
became frightened at the approach of an
electric car on State street and threw the
commissioner, breaking his collar bone and
bruising his head in five places. Mr Cole-
grove's recovery is doubtful. The horse
dashed on and through the front door of a
house an Meadow street, leaving the car
rage at tbe portal. The house in occupied
by a family named Wright, who were at
Breakfast. The horse cleared the table,
turned the cook stoke bottom side up, and
plunged through a chamber door upon the
sick bed of a 13 year-old girl very sick
with scarlet fever. Crawling between the
prancing legs of the thoroughly frenzied
animal the girl managed to reach the street
in her night-dress unharmed. The interior
of the house attacked by the horse looks as
though it had been visited by a cyclone.
Massachusetts | Fitchburg | Fitchburg Daily Sentinel | 1888-03-12
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=lrCUoQlefzKKID/6NLMW2nP6c...
GREENWICH COUPLE WHO
FLED, MARRIED IN TEXAS
GREENWICH, Sept. 37.(By Asso-ciated
Press) Miss Daisy Miner, deputy
registrar of vital statistics, and William
L. Colegrove, pharmacy manager,
who disappeared simultaneously in
July and tendered their resignations
to their respective employers by mail
from New York state, were married on
Sept. 14, In San Antonio, Texas, It was
learned here today, when they returned
to town.
Colegrove left a wife behind him
when he departed In July and Is said
to have secured a divorce In Mexico.
Connecticut | Bridgeport | Bridgeport Telegram, The | 1927-09-28
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=WSgtrs8BeYeKID/6NLMW2nSkl...
There is more to this story too..... Seems after the trial, James was
kidnapped, beaten and left for dead along the road in MI.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Colegrove, Gollogher
Under $20,000 Bond Each
Case of Accused Taylorville Bankers Will Go Di-
rectly To Grand Jury At January Sitting.
Taylorville, Dec. 4At 7 o'clock Tuesday night, John B. Cole-
grove, under arrest on state's warrants charging receiving of
deposits when he knew his bank, the John B. Colegrove &
Company state bank of this city, to be Insolvent, furnished
bond of $20,000 in the court of Justice of the Peace S. C. Mull,
and was released from the custody of sheriff's deputies who
had served the warrant upon him Tuesday afternoon.
An hour later Harvey Gollogher, cashier of the defunct in-
stitution, which was closed Oct. 11,
this year, also lurnished a bond of
$20,000. His arrest had been made an
the same charge as that preferred
against his chief.
Colegrove's bond was signed by himself. Miss Ethel Abell,
whose father was a heavy stockholder in the bank,
Mrs, Florence Shatnel. daughter of Colegrore and Mr, and
Mrs. Joe Wallace.
Gollogher's bond bore the signatures himself, his sister,
Mrs. John Scott his brother, Clarence Gollogher, and the
latter's wife. The waiving of preliminary examination of
the two men who'have been prominent in banking and other
circles for many years, puts their case directy up to the
grand jury, which will reconvene to consider this and
other matters pertaining to the closing of six banks in
Christian county within a week this fall. In the mean-
time the investigation launched by
State's Attorney Harry B. Grundy, will go ahead
vigorously, according to a statement by that official.
NOT UNEXPECTED..
The arrest of Colegrove and Gallegher Tuesday afternoon
was not unexpected. Rumors of that Impending action had
been rife lor some time. The arrests were made under a
warrant issued on the authority of four depositors of the
Colegrove bank, one of them L. D. Grundy, father of the
state's attorney, who claims to have deposited the sum of
$50 on Oct. 10. The others are: Mrs. H. M Solliday, who
deposited $126.49 on the 8th of that month, three days
before the bank closed, Elmer Spindel, with a deposit of
$75 on the 10th and Albert Deeren with a deposit of
$200 on the 8th.
Since soon after the closing of the
Colegrove bank, to which is attributed an unrest that
resulted in the closing of five other state and national
banks In Taylorvllle and the county within a couple of
days. Robert G Early has been in charge ot the bank as
receiver.
SIGNIFICANT STATEMENT.
In the early report of State Auditor Oscar Nelson to the
circuit court when presenting a petition for the
appointment of the receiver, appeared
this significant line in substance: "It probably will be
impossible to collect more than $400,400 of the
assets"
In that statement the liabilities ere listed at $1,578,513.49.
Mr. Colegrove, head of the defunct bank which bore his
name, has been one of the foremost business men in the
city for many years. He Is about sixty-five years old,
and shares his home with his daughter, Mrs. Shamel.
His wife to dead.
GOLLOGHER ALSO ACTIVE.
Mr. Gollogher is perhaps half the
age of Mr. Colegrove, and has a wife and two young
children, one of them being but two or three months old.
He has been president of the Association of Commerce,
resigning since the bank trouble broke, was former
Scoutmaster, is a member of the Lions club and Masonic
lodge, and is an official member ot the
Methodist Episcopal church, in which he is active.
Several weeks ago Mr. Colegrove was adjudged a bankrupt
at Springfield.
Source: Illinois | Decatur | Decatur Daily Review, The | 1929-12-04
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=MHMeTXbgRjuKID/6NLMW2r9Ci...
DIES IN EAST
Word was received here Thursday of the
death of J.G. Colegrove ninety-four,
father of J.B. Colegrove of the
Colegrove State bank and former
resident of this county at New London,
Conn. at 2:30 o'clock Wednesday. J.B.
Colegrove left at once to attend the
funeral.
In 1903 Mr. Colegrove returned to
New London from this county and resided
there until his death.
He was born in Lisbon, New London county
Conn. March 2, 1830.
He was married when a young man to
Elizabeth Mason.
Mrs. Colegrove was the daughter of John
Mason. Indian fighter. Who was given
Mystic Island by the King of England for
his bravery during the Pequot war.
Elizabeth Colegrove, a daughter now resides
there.
Surviving are the following children:
J.B., Ed. and James Colegrove of Taylorville:
Ella/Brownell. Colorado; Elizabeth Colegrove
of Mystic Conn; Dave Colgrove of Ohio: together
with several grandchildren and a number
of great Grandchildren.
Illinois | Decatur | Decatur Review | 1924-04-04
Source:
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/Viewer.aspx?img=olJOpJH/3rKKID/6NLMW2iVC/...
Morning everyone,
I've added information on the following surnames;
Fountain
Brackenridge
Rymer
Baker
Irvin
Smith
Potter
Brownell
Mathews
Colegrove (IL & CT)
Web page link:
http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=tcolegrove1
I've sent out some newspaper articles to the mail list. Is there any
interest in me posting more?
Terry Colegrove