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John Brown and Elizabeth McCrary grew up in Laurens County, South Carolina. They married in 1807, then moved to Indiana. They later returned to the South, and settled in Lawrence County, Alabama. After Elizabeth's death, John Brown (who was an uncle of General Ambrose Burnside) moved to Warren County, Illinois, where he remarried, and spent the rest of his life. John and Elizabeth's descendants included doctors and lawyers, farmers and ranchers, soldiers, bankers, scientists, and engineers. Many bore other surnames-among them Dobbins, Cogdell, Wilson, Dandridge, Otwell, Davidson, and Glenn. They were a varied and mobile family, whose lives were intertwined with many major events of American history-the Gold Rush, the Civil War, the westward movement of the American population, and the nation's transformation from an agrarian and rural to a more industrialized and urban society. This book makes use of a variety of sources, including previously unpublished correspondence, to tell their story.
Among Kansas’s many wheat fields lie secrets and hidden stories of heroes and villains that even a fiction author could never devise. It wasn’t just Dorothy Gale of the Wizard of Oz who roamed The Wheat State. Secret Kansas: A Guide to the Weird, Wonderful, and Obscure will introduce you to a true cast of characters along with the little-known history of their inventions, deeds, and fame. Learn about the first indigenous woman to argue before the Supreme Court to save her ancestors’ graves from greedy developers. Discover how Frank Bellamy from Cherryvale wrote the Pledge of Allegiance, only to lose his claim to its authorship. Inventions abound in Kansas history such as Mentholatum which had a small role in ending World War II. From Capt. Emil Kapaun who is headed for sainthood to the fraudulent Goat Gland Doctor whose tonics started many entertainers’ careers, there’s no shortage of fascinating anecdotes to choose from. Add to that the countless examples of courageous captains, game-changing women, along with a few ne'er-do-wells whose biographies are chronicled here. Longtime Kansan Roxie Yonkey will unearth the hidden roads and secret passages to unearth the state’s buried treasures. Visitors and lifelong residents alike will find a surprise on every page.
Discovering family satisfies a curiosity. One learns of the challenges faced by ancestors, struggles endured, accomplishments shared, the good and sometimes the bad. In this writing, the author spent years researching, documenting and writing to absorb the wealth of Rhea family ancestors. The Rheas of what was Augusta County, Virginia, which later became Bath County and other counties, included in this writing descended from Robert, Archibald, and William Rhea who first settled in Augusta County in the mid-1700s and those of Margaret Rhea, a cousin to the brothers. These three Rhea brothers and Margaret are thought by researchers to be grandchildren of Matthew Campbell Rhea of Scotland and Ireland. And, so, the author’s story begins with him.
Genealogical histories of the Forkner/Fortner/Faulkner/Falkner surnames.
Vol 47, No 1 First Pres Church Membership List, Nov 1926, Pt I: Alcorn-Fox James Robert Thomas (1838-1909) The Henry Blake Family of Boulder Left Hand United Brethren Church (Niwot United) Vol 47, No 2 First Pres Ch Membership List, Nov 1926, Part II: Fraser-Matthews Present at both Gettysburg and the Siege of Vicksburg? Confirming the Accuracy of a Family Story Tourism in Early Eldorado Springs Boulder County's Civil War Soldiers, Part I: A-B Vol 47, No 3 First Pres Church Membership List, Nov 1926, Part II: Matthieson-Smith Letters to Percy: from Edyth and Ida The Lost Ancestor: A Book Review Boulder County's Civil War Soldiers, Part II: C-E John Kinion, Civil War Soldier Vol 47, No 4 First Presbyterian Church Membership List, Nov 1926, Part IV: Smithies-Zinser Affiliated Members: 10 Oct 1926 Boulder County's Civil War Soldiers, Part III: F-H Letters to Percy from Jenny Lee Six Barker Brothers of the Cumberland Hills of Virginia A House Divided