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The 1810 census was copied from a print-out from the National Archives.
Johan Georg Emig was born in Germany on July 13, 1715. He married Maria Elisabeth in Germany around 1735. They had two children in there, the first, Johan Heinrich, was born about 1737, the second, Johan Philip was born about 1741. Johan Georg, with his wife and two young children, took the ship Christian from Rotterdam and arrived in Philadelphia on the September 13, 1749. Georg Emig took the oath of allegiance upon his arrival. Most of the passengers were from the Palatine region or Rhine Valley. Georg built a grist mill on Tohickon Creek in Bucks County outside of Philadelphia. Georg passed the mill down to his son Henry when he died. Henry Emig, son of Henry who was the son of Georg, was also a miller, inherited his father's grist and saw mill on Tohickon Creek in Bucks County.
George Sites Sr. (1717-1790), probably a German immigrant, lived in Pennsylvania, Virginia and in Grant County, West Virginia, served in the Revolutionary War, and married twice. Descendants and relatives lived in Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, Michigan, Illinois and elsewhere. Components include obituaries, maps, newspaper articles, and a listing of more than six generations of descendents.
Previous editions titled: Genealogical books in print
The ancestors of Laura Kay Amundson (b.1963) and Eric Allen Amundson (b.1966), the two children of James Allen Amundson (b.1936) and his wife, Marilyn Mae (McKay) Amundson, of Brandon, Mississippi. Ancestors lived in Wisconsin, Michigan, New York, New England, Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Mississippi and elsewhere. Some ancestors lived in England and elsewhere.
Charles Fulk (ca. 1794-1881), son of John and Eve (Biller?) Fulk, married 1826 Sarah "Sally" Custer in Rockingham Co., Va. She was the daughter of Richard Custer, Sr. and Jane Humble. She was born ca. 1794 and died 1869 of old age in Brocks Gap, Rockingham Co., Va. Charles and Sarah lived on a farm which she had inherited from her father in Brocks Gap in what is now the Riverside Church area of Fulks Run. Descendants live in Virginia, Maryland, Illinois, North Dakota, Georgia and elsewhere
Michael Honinger was the emigrant ancestor. He arrived in Pennsylvania in 1729. He was the father of Conrad Honinger (d.1804) who married Catherine Kutz. Conrad anglicized the name by changing it to Hottinger. Early in their marriage Conrad and Catherine moved to Rockingham County where they were the parents of nine children. One of their sons married Elizabeth Yankey while a daughter, Magdaline, married Michael Yankey. The Yankey family descends from a Michael Jenghe I (1690-?) who traveled from Berlin, Germany and settled in Virginia. His only known son, Michael Yankie II settled in Shenandoah County where he was the father of five children, one of whom was Michael Yankey (1775-1830) who married Magdaline Hottinger. Michael and Magdaline moved to Brocks Gap about 1800. Descendants live in Virginia and West Virginia.