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This "Supplement to Genealogies in the Library of Congress" lists all genealogies in the Library of Congress that were catalogued between 1972 and 1976, showing acquisitions made by the Library in the five years since publication of the original two-volume Bibliography. Arranged alphabetically by family name, it adds several thousand works to the canon, clinching the Bibliography's position as the premier finding-aid in genealogy.
John William Martin, son of John Martin and Katherine, was born 15 Jan 1716/ 1717. He married Martha Metcalf about 1745. They had 8 children. John died 27 Feb 1824 in Halifax County, Virginia. Martha was born about 1719 and died about 1812 in Halifax County, Virginia. Their descendants have lived in Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, and other areas throughout the United States.
"Jno. Mackey, the first of the name in the country, was a Quaker of Irish or Scotch-Irish descent. He came between the Yrs. 1740/45, & after several yrs. spent in the southern part of the Co. in the vicinity of Cape May C.H. he located upon what is known as the Mackey Place in Petersburg [New Jersey]. ... Col. Mackey's w[ife] died of heart disease sometime prior to 1784. The Col. d[ied] in Sept. of that y[ear]. Both he & his w[ife] were buried in the in the family burying ground on the Mackey Place."--P. 12. "After the section dealing with the family of John Mackey, Sr., was compiled and ready for print, [the author] found [she] had accumulated so many valuable records which did not belong directly to [her] branch of the Mackeys, that [she] desired others to benefit from them."--Introd. Includes research on many different Mackey families, especially those of Pennsylvania and the southern United States. Also includes variant spellings of McKay, McCoy, McKee, McKey, McKie, Mackie, and others.
Marc E. Epstein provides a complete biography of Harrison Gray Dyar, Jr., one of the most influential biologists of the twentieth century. Epstein chronicles Dyar's impressive scientific accomplishments in the field of entomology, as well as his complicated personal life and many eccentricities.
The earliest known ancestor was David Leist (ca. 1734-1802). He lived in Pennsylvania and was the father of Andrew Leist (1755-1821) who was also born in Pennsylvania. He married Elizabeth Landman and they were the parents of thirteen children. They both died in Ohio. Descendants live in Ohio and neighboring states.