Download Free Gilchrist Family Papers Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Gilchrist Family Papers and write the review.

Also including autograph album, 1861, of D[avid] E. Gilchrist, presented to grand niece Jessie Gilchrist Ham, containing profession, motto, signature, and remarks of friends at Wofford College and Spartanburg Female College with notations re their experiences during the Civil War.
Warren and Hamilton County, Ohio, families. Papers consist primarily of correspondence of three related families: Andersons, Wilsons, and Gilchrists. Also included are newspaper clippings, diaries, journals and scrapbooks. Family genealogies are included.
Neill Gilchrist was born 25 June 1804 in Campbeltown, Argyll, Scotland and died 1889 in Leamington, Utah. His parents were Neill Gilchrist and Mary MacCallum. He married Mary Blair 9 January 1843 in Campbeltown. Neill, Mary and three of their five surviving children joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the 1850's in Scotland. They immigrated to the United States in 1861 and in 1864 settled in Utah. Their son, Neil, was born 7 April 1844 in Drumlemble (near Campbeltown), Argyle, Scotland. He married Elizabeth Scorey, daughter of George Scorey and Ann Light, 2 June 1867 in Lehi, Utah, Utah. They moved to Idaho in 1884. Neil died 10 September 1910 in Lewisville, Fremont (Jefferson), Idaho. Descendants have lived mainly in Utah, Idaho, Oregon, Washington and California.
Correspondence, business papers, estate and legal papers, plantation journals and diaries, literary compositions, recollections of life on various Ball family properties, and photographic images of individuals, family gatherings, and homes and buildings ranging from daguerreotypes to snapshots.
"Gilchrist, located in Klamath County, is Oregon's most recently constructed company town and is also one of the most successful towns of its type ever established"--P. [4] of cover.
A thorough inventory of research resources in American repositories, the Guide lists collections in the history of chemistry and chemical engineering, the chemical and pharmaceutical industries, and a number of related chemical process industries and businesses, from personal and professional papers of chemical scientists and engineers to business records of the chemical process industries.
The process of exploring your family history and roots is a moving and meaningful quest. It affects heart and soul, as well as providing an intellectual challenge to piece all the information together. GROWING YOUR FAMILY TREE is the first book to promote the experiential aspects of family history. It gives sound, practical advice on researching your family history, but also promotes the emotional, spiritual and creative elements of the task, helping to lift genealogy out of its earlier dry an formal setting, into a more meaningful and accessible activity which can enrich a person's identity. Advice and information includes: * How to write up your family history * How to make a heritage corner or trail in your home * A consideration the nature of ancestry, family lines and our inner connection with our ancestors * How to organise your research and keep moving forward