Download Free 1870 Federal Census Index Atchison County Mo Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online 1870 Federal Census Index Atchison County Mo and write the review.

Offers a guide to census indexes, including federal, state, county, and town records, available in print and online; arranged by year, geographically, and by topic.
Volume 8 of 8. Sources & Index to a genealogical compilation of the descendants of John Jacob Rector and his wife, Anna Elizabeth Fischbach. Married in 1711 in Trupbach, Germany, the couple immigrated to the Germanna Colony in Virginia in 1714. Eight volumes document the lives of over 45,000 individuals.
Jacob Coslet was born ca. 1772 in Pennsylvania, probably the son of James Coslet. By 1810 he had moved to Allegheny County, Pennsylvania and by 1815 he was in Ohio. He later moved to Vermillion County, Indiana. William Coslet, his brother was born ca. 1774 and lived in Pennsylvania. Descendants lived in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma, Oregon, Montana, California, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Texas and elsewhere. Includes information on other various Coslet families.
Mordie Lee Woods was born in 1883 in Weston, Missouri, and Minnie Maude Pettegrew was born 1884 in Olathe, Kansas. Their ancestral and related surnames include Cave, Demarest, Gearhart, Graves, Gustin, Hardy, Howe, Lipscomb, Lower, Pettigrew/Pettegrew, Simpson, Soward, Springle/Sprenkle, Stevenson, Westerfield, Woods and Wright, among others. This is an informal narrative accompanied by family tables, and the lives of principal individuals and many related lines. It is one of the stories of the expansion of America.
With her fourth solo album, Michelle Williams takes listeners on a faith-filled journey. It also includes the single Say Yes, which features her fellow Destiny's Child members Kelly Rowland and Beyonce.
Little attention has been paid to the settlement of Germans in Kansas, and Roberta Reb Allen’s Once We Were Strangers helps to fill that void. It is both the saga of an immigrant family told within the larger social, political, and economic context of the day and a scholarly exploration of the settlement patterns and the diverse choices made by German pioneers. Starting in the small village of Ebhausen in the Black Forest of the Kingdom of Württemberg in what is now Germany, Allen follows the fortunes of the Lodholzes, who journeyed across the Atlantic and eventually settled on the plains of the Kansas Territory in Marshall County. Based on nearly 200 family letters and documents translated from Old German, Once We Were Strangers chronicles, through the pens of ordinary people, the conditions in Württemberg that led to emigration and the sweep of American history from the 1850s to the nominal end of the frontier in 1890. In addition, Once We Were Strangers provides the unusual opportunity to follow a German immigrant family for an extended period, almost from cradle to grave. Using remarkably rare documentary evidence, Allen explores the largely untold story of German assimilation, uncovering the pressures the Lodholzes faced and how they responded to the antebellum Midwest. This family’s story is full of hardship, endurance, joys, and sorrows, and is interwoven with the history of westward expansion, German migration, and Kansas, with a particular emphasis on German settlement patterns prior to the Civil War.