Paul's Family Genealogy Pages

Discovering our American and European Ancestors

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501 12/11/2010
Requested copy of death certificate of Paul Webert via snail mail and $10.00 check

-----Original Message-----
From: Mary Smith [mailto:LerayClerk@nnymail.com]
Sent: Thursday, December 09, 2010 12:05 PM
To: rootsdigger10@comcast.net
Subject: Re: Death Certificate: Paul Webert

On 12/5/2010 1:53 AM, Paul Kelly wrote:
> December 4, 2010
>
> Mary C. Smith, RMC
> Donna L. Drake
> Town Clerk of LeRay
> 8650 LeRay Street
> Evans Mills, NY 13637-3191
>
> Hello,
>
> Please find attached a request for the Death Certificate for my great uncle,
> Paul Webert who died sometime between 1920 and 1930 in LeRay, Jefferson
> County, New York.
>
> Please advise of cost of the copy.
>
> Thank you.
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Paul F. Kelly
We have the death certificate. For a copy you must sent us $10.00
payable to the Town of LeRay, 8650 LeRay St., Evans Mills, NY. You must
give us a name and address to mail the copy to, it must be a physical
address not a P O Box. Thank you.


--
Mary C. Smith, RMC
Town Clerk
8650 LeRay St.
Evans Mills, NY 13637
315-629-4052
lerayclerk@nnymail.com 
Webert, Paul A. (I62)
 
502 12/2/2004
I just realized that the petition was missing from this document. Now I must write to Ben Cobb and Jefferson County Court in Watertown to get a copy. 
Source (S216)
 
503 12/4/2012: Sent check #2498 for $5.00

This issue contains an article titled "The Staiges and their Pond" which discusses the Staige family history.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Historical and Genealogical Library Pickaway County [mailto:pkwyhist@pchgl.org]
Sent: Monday, December 03, 2012 9:53 AM
To: rootsdigger05@comcast.net
Subject: Re: Pickering Quarterly, Summer Issue, 1976

Our Pickaway Quarterly for the 1976 date costs $4.00 plus $1.00 p&h - Please send your check to PCHS, 210 North Court St., Circleville, OH 43113
On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 7:21 PM, wrote:
I would like to order a copy of the Pickering Quarterly, Summer Issue, 1976.
How much will it cost?
Please advise.

Submitted By:
Name:: Paul Kelly
Email:: rootsdigger05@comcast.net
 
Staige, Ann (I10476)
 
504 1704 6 Jul SHORTER John Hayly EATON Anne Hayly





1767 31 Aug SHORTER John wid COLLIER Rachel wid Lic
Wits: William SMITH, Suckey SMITH
1769 31 Dec SHORTER Joseph s. John & Rachel
1771 20 Mar SHORTER Ann d. John & Rachel
1772 16 Aug SHORTER Elizabeth d. John & Rachel
1776 26 Apr SHORTER William s. John & Rachael
1776 26 Apr SHORTER Joseph s. John & Rachael




1769 7 Oct SHORTER Joseph Blanketweaver SEELY Mary sp Lic
Wits: Sarah (X) SHUFFREY, Jno: Junr: EARLY





1798 17 Nov SHORTER Joseph RAWLINS Sarah Lic
Wits: Mary HERNE, Devonport BUSSELL
1799 6 Dec SHORTER Mary d. Joseph & Sarah
1802 28 Feb SHORTER Elizabeth d. Joseph & Sarah
1805 10 Feb SHORTER William-Rawlins s. Joseph & Sarah
1806 5 Dec SHORTER William-Rawlins s. Joseph & Sarah
*1809 1 Mar SHORTER Rachel d. Joseph & Sarah

1811 21 Apr SHORTER Sarah d. Joseph & Sarah
1813 9 Jun SHORTER Ann d. Joseph & Sarah, Tailor
1815 17 May SHORTER Martha d. Joseph & Sarah, Tailor
1818 30 Jan SHORTER Jane d. Joseph & Sarah, Tailor
1821 21 Feb SHORTER John s. Joseph & Sarah, Tailor



1801 30 May SHORTER Joseph St. James Clerkenwell SHORTER Mary
Wits: Mary SHORTER, Wm: SHORTER Lic

 
Shorter, Rachel (I1075)
 
505 1810 census, Frederick County, Virginia

Males:
Under 10: 3
Of 10 years and under 16: 1
Of 16 and under 26: 1
Of 26 and under 45: 1
Of 45 and upwards: ~

Females:
Under 10: 1
Of 10 years and under 16: ~
Of 16 and under 26: 1
Of 26 and under 45: 1
Of 45 and upwards: ~
 
Routt, Daniel (I11078)
 
506 1813 Jul 27 Miller, Susana and John Hedges (license date), Pickaway Co.
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ohpickaw/vital_records/marriage/early_pickaway_co__marriage_m_n.htm 
Family F10358
 
507 1835 Census Notes: (Number to the left is column number)
1.The name of the head of each family. Peter Hoover
2.The number of male persons in the family, (the name of whose head is in
the first column) including its head, if male. 2
3.The number of female persons in the same family, including its head, if
female. 3
5.The whole number of male persons in the same family entitled by the
constitution of this state to vote for all officers elective by the
people. 1
12.The number of unmarried female persons in the same family, between the
ages of sixteen and forty-five years. 1
17.The number of acres of improved land occupied by the same family. 65







 
Huber, Adam (I361)
 
508 1835 Census Notes: (Number to the left is column number)
1.The name of the head of each family. Peter Hoover
2.The number of male persons in the family, (the name of whose head is in
the first column) including its head, if male. 2
3.The number of female persons in the same family, including its head, if
female. 3
5.The whole number of male persons in the same family entitled by the
constitution of this state to vote for all officers elective by the
people. 1
12.The number of unmarried female persons in the same family, between the
ages of sixteen and forty-five years. 1
17.The number of acres of improved land occupied by the same family. 65
 
Huber, Adam (I361)
 
509 1835 New York State Census


1.The name of the head of each family.
John Besa
2.The number of male persons in the family, (the name of whose head is in
the first column) including its head, if male. 1
6.The number of male persons in the same family who are aliens not
naturalized. 1
14.The number of marriages occurring in the same family, where the female
married resided during the year preceding. 1
17.The number of acres of improved land occupied by the same family. 3

 
Bichet, Jean Baptiste (I393)
 
510 1835 New York State Census

1.The name of the head of each family.
David Hoover
2.The number of male persons in the family, (the name of whose head is in
the first column) including its head, if male. 4
3.The number of female persons in the same family, including its head, if
female. 3
5.The whole number of male persons in the same family entitled by the
constitution of this state to vote for all officers elective by the
people. 1
13.The number of female persons in the same family, unmarried, under the
age of sixteen years. 2?
17.The number of acres of improved land occupied by the same family. 1
 
Hoover, David (I362)
 
511 1835 New York State Census

1.The name of the head of each family.
Moses Hoover
2.The number of male persons in the family, (the name of whose head is
in the first column) including its head, if male. 3
3.The number of female persons in the same family, including its head,
if female. 1
4.The number of male persons in the same family subject to militia
duty. 1
5.The whole number of male persons in the same family entitled by the
constitution of this state to vote for all officers
elective by the people. 1
11.The number of married female persons in the same family under the
age of forty-five years. 1
17.The number of acres of improved land occupied by the same family.
1/4
 
Huber, Moses (I367)
 
512 1880 census shows he was married. McKenny, Francis T. (I592)
 
513 1881 Census
http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=view&r=an&dbid=7572&iid=OXFRG11_1511_1515-0435&fn=Henry&ln=Biggers&st=d&ssrc=&pid=17967455 
Biggers, Henry (I1077)
 
514 1881 Census
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&rank=1&gsfn=&gsln=biggers&=&f1=Oxfordshire&f2=&f3=&f18=&f12=&rg_81004011__date=&rs_81004011__date=0&f29=&_82004011=&_82004013=&_82004014=&_8000C002=&_80008002=&_80018002=&f7=&f8=&f9=&gskw=&prox=1&db=uki1881&ti=0&ti.si=0&gss=angs-d&fh=23&recid=2210303&recoff=3+22 
Biggers, William Henry (I1082)
 
515 1900 Census says they were married 0 years.
 
Family F34
 
516 1915 Census

Name: 
Brown, Merrill B. (I628)
 
517 2 males (total)

2 females (total)
1 married and under 45
1 single and under 16

3 males - aliens, not naturalized

12 acres of land, 2 cows, 5 sheep, 4 hogs
Census Surety:3 
Fitzpatrick, John (I354)
 
518 2 males (total)
1 between 18 and 45, subject to militia duty
1 male alien, not naturalized

2 females (total)
1 married and under 45
1 single and under 16

5 acres of land, 1 hog 
Fitzpatrick, Daniel (I355)
 
519 221 E. Fayette Street (the Manhattan Hotel) Sixbury, Clarence (I10119)
 
520 2:1
4:1
5:1
14:35
15:6
16:2

1.The name of the Head of each Famil
2.The whole number of male persons in the family, (the name of whose
head is in the first column) including its head, if
male.
3.The whole number of female persons in the same family, including its
head, if female.
4.The whole number of male persons in the same family, subject to
militia duty, and being between the ages of 18 and 45
years.
5.The whole number of male persons in the same family, qualified to
vote at elections for state and county officers, by
virtue of the constitution of this state.
6.The whole number of male persons in the same family, who are aliens,
not naturalized.
7.The whole number of persons in the same family who are paupers.
8.The whole number of persons in the same family, who are persons of
colour, not taxed.
9.The whole number of persons of colour, in the same family, who are
taxed.
10.The whole number of persons of colour in the same family, who are
taxed and qualified to vote at elections for state and
county officers. (and not to be included in 9th column.)
11.Whole number of married female persons in the same family, under the
age of 45 years.
12.Whole number of unmarried female persons in the same family, between
the ages of 16 and 45 years.
13.Whole number of female persons in the same family, unmarried, under
the age of 16 years.
14.Whole number of marriages occuring in the same family where such
female married person resided during the year
preceding.
15.Whole number of births in the same family, during the year
preceding. (Male and Female)
16.Whole number of deaths in the same family, during the year
preceding. (Male and Female)
17.Whole number of acres of improved land occupied by the same family.
18.Whole number of neat cattle owned by the same family.
19.Whole number of horses owned by the same family.
20.Whole number of sheep owned by the same family.
21.Whole number of hogs owned by the same family.
22.Whole number of yards of fulled cloth manufactured in the domestic
way, in the same family, during the preceding year.
23.Whole number of yards of flannel and other woollen cloth not fulled,
manufactured in the domestic way, in the same
family, during the year preceding.
24.Whole number of yards of linen, cotton, or other thin cloths,
manufactured in the domestic way, in the same family,
during the year preceding.
25.Whole number of Grist Mills owned by same family.
26.Whole number of Saw Mills owned by same family.
27.Whole number of Oil Mills owned by same family.
28.Whole number of Fulling Mills owned by same family.
29.Whole number of Carding Machines owned by same family.
30.Whole number of Cotton Factories owned by same family.
31.Whole number of Woollen Factories owned by same family
32.Whole number of Cotton and Woollen Factories owned by same family.
33.Whole number of Iron works owned by same family.
34.Whole number of Trip hammers owned by same family.
35.Whole number of Distilleries owned by same family.
36.Whole number of Asheries owned by same family. 
Huber, Adam (I361)
 
521 3 children in 1918 Biche, Laurence J. (I532)
 
522 3/7/2005
I sent this request on this web page.

http://www.olshparish.org/contact.html

Hello!

Mary Besha, my great-grandmother was born on August 6, 1880, LeRay, NY. She was baptized in Sept. 1880 in St. Mary's church, Evans Mills, Diocese of Ogdensburg. (according to a marriage record in St. James Church, July 1, 1908)
I would like to have a copy of her baptism and birth records if they are available. I have already written to the Town of LeRay and requested the birth record, however, their records begin 1882. I also understand that the Albany birth records (State of New York Dept. of Health) begin in 1881, so they most likely will not have her birth record.
Can you help?
Sincerely,
Paul F. Kelly 
Besha, Mary Lillian (I17)
 
523 4 or 5 Jan 1904, about 72 yrs. Petrie, Eva (I275)
 
524 4/24/2013 6:45am
Gail - St. Crils parish secretary
Gave her all info. and my contact info over the phone. She will research today and get back to me.

From: Father Douglas G Comstock [mailto:pastor@stcyrils.org]
Sent: Wednesday, April 24, 2013 10:28 AM
To: rootsdigger05@comcast.net
Subject: RE: Search

Paul,
I spoke on the phone with you this morning regarding your desire to search for information on a relative Cornelia Walts. I have been unable to get to this task today but will do a search for the information next week when I am back in the office. I did not want you to think that I was ignoring your request.

Gail Graham
Parish Secretary
 
Cornelia (I446)
 
525 Family F478
 
526 5 males in the household:
1 is between 18 and 45 and "subject to militia duty"
1 qualified to vote

4 females:
1 married and under 45
3 unmarried and under 16

40 acres of land
3 cows
2 horses
18 sheep
6 hogs
20 yards of fulled cloth "manufactured in the domestic way" during the
preceding year
35 Yards of flannel, not fulled

 
Sixbury, Cornelius (I353)
 
527 8/28/2018
Searched Ronchamp marriage records from 1866 to 1870 and did not find one for this couple.

http://archives.haute-saone.fr/ark:/77977/vta36a07687bd7b2b52/daogrp/0/15 
Family F10923
 
528 ?b?Description:?/b?
This database is a listing of men mustered into the American armed forces between 1812 and 1815 for the War of 1812. Taken from records in the National Archives, each record includes the soldier's name, company, rank at time of induction, rank at time of discharge, and other helpful information. It provides the names of nearly 600,000 men. 
Source (S461)
 
529 ?b?Description:?/b?
This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1851 Census for England. The census contains detailed information on each individual who spent the night in each household including name, relationship to the head of the family, marital status, age at last birthday, gender, occupation, and birthplace. Additional information about the dwelling and property was collected. Each name in this index is linked to actual images of the 1851 England Census.
Source: Ancestry.com 
Source (S470)
 
530 ?b?Description:?/b? "On 1 July 1837 a civil registration system for births, marriages and deaths was introduced in England and Wales. Registration was undertaken by civil registrars who reported to the Registrar General at the General Register Office (GRO) in London, now part of the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Copies of anyone's birth, marriage or death certificates can be obtained by the public. They are vital to family historians because of the genealogical information that they include." (Mark D. Herber, ?i?Ancestral Trails?/i?, Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1998) Since the original birth, marriage and death registers are not open to the public, getting access to the information on one of these certificates is done by first searching the national birth, marriage and death indexes, that have been created by the GRO for this purpose. The indexes for the three events are each divided into quarterly volumes, with the names for each quarter listed alphabetically. Once an entry in one of the indexes is found, you are then able to use that information to order of copy of a death, marriage or birth certificate from the GRO/ONS. The other information that can be obtained from the index includes: Year Record type (in this database this will always be "Birth") Quarter (March, June, September, and December) District (each county in England and Wales was divided up into registration districts) Volume Page number ?b?Note:?/b? Names were entered into the volume of the quarter in which notification of the event was received, not necessarily the quarter in which the event actually occurred. This database is an index to the ?b?births?/b? only and was last updated March 2006. ?b?Extended Description:?/b? The massive task of digitising and, making searchable, the names contained in the GRO indexes has been underway for a few years now. This database is made available to Ancestry.com users, courtesy of the volunteers of the FreeBMD organization. The leadership of FreeBMD have organized the permissions and tools necessary to enable thousands of volunteers to convert to electronic text, and publish online, searchable indexes to the civil registrations in England and Wales. FreeBMD, has already indexed more than 111 million names between the years of 1837 and 1983, and more names continue to be added everyday. Ancestry will add to this database as FreeBMD provides more names. It is estimated that more than 50% of the names between 1837 and 1983 have been indexed. Because of the nature of the index you will note that not all of the fields have been indexed all of the time. Until 1866, most of the indexes were handwritten, making the task of conversion sometimes difficult.
?b?Source Information:?/b? FreeBMD. ?i?England and Wales, Birth Index: 1837-1983?/i? [database online]. Provo, Utah: MyFamily.com, Inc., 2006. Original data: Microfilm and microfiche of the England and Wales, Civil Registration Indexes created by the General Register Office, in London, England. ? Crown copyright. Published by permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Office for National Statistics. You must not copy on, transfer or reproduce records without the prior permission of ONS. Database Copyright ? 1998-2003 Graham Hart, Ben Laurie, Camilla von Massenbach and David Mayall. 
Source (S447)
 
531 ?b?From:?/b? tezlahall [mailto:tezlahall@hotmail.com]
?b?Sent:?/b? Thursday, January 04, 2007 7:27 AM
?b?To:?/b? pkelly126
?b?Subject:?/b? Jane Biggers family tree
Hi
My Name is Terry Hall and I live in Essex, England, UK and I beleive that we share the same family tree as Jane Biggers was my g/g grandmother whose daughter Ellen Louise Robinson was my g grandmother whose daughter Elizabeth Grace Cooke was my grandmother whose daughter Grace was my mother and I am interested in hearing about your connection, I have been researching off and on for over 10 years but always drew a blank on the Biggers.
I hope that you will contact me at tezlahall@hotmail.com
Kind regards
Terry
-------
This message was sent to you by ?u?tezlahall ?/u? through Ancestry. If you prefer to be contacted anonymously in the future, please click ?u?here ?/u?. 
Source (S509)
 
532 ?b?PR2.123 Marriage Licenses and Certificates
?/b?1871-1960
300 vols.
Records contain names, residence, nativity and age of the bride and groom, along with
the date of the ceremony, and the name and profession of the person who performed the
ceremony. Numbered volumes are arranged chronologically by date. Some volumes are
indexed by the name groom.

--

The Archives currently has over half a mile of shelf space of San Diego City and County public records. We are not the official repository for either San Diego City or County, but we have been fortunate over the years to have received from them donations of original records. Included are court case files, minutes of the City Council and Board of Supervisors, local ordinances, Coroner's inquest reports, probate records, tax lists, school reports, deed records, marriage licenses and mining records.
http://www.sandiegohistory.org/document_archives.html 
Source (S1103)
 
533 ?b?Source Information:?/b?
Ancestry.com. ?i?Paris, France & Vicinity Births, 1700-1899?/i? [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.
Original data: Maurice Coutot, comp. ?i?Etat civil reconstitu? 1798-1860: Mariages, naissances, d?c?s?/i?. Paris: ARFIDO S.A., 2006. ? ARFIDO S.A.
?b?Description:?/b?
This database contains birth extracts from the historic department of Seine, France from 1700-1899. It also includes some records as early as 1661. However, the majority of the records cover the year range 1798-1860. The department of Seine encompassed Paris and vicinity. Today it is divided into the departments of Paris, Hauts-de-Seine, Seine-Saint-Denis, and Val-de-Marne. 
Source (S674)
 
534 ?b?The following was taken from Acenstry.com website:

Description:?/b?
The 1841 Census for England was taken on the night of 6 June 1841. The following information was requested:
?tab? Name of street, place, road, etc.
?tab?House number or name
?tab?Name of each person that had spent the night in that household
?tab?Age*
?tab?Sex (indicated by which column the age is recorded in)
?tab?Profession or occupation
?tab?Where born**
*The ages of people over 15 years old were usually rounded down to the nearest 5 years. Therefore, someone who was actually 24 years would have their age listed as 20, and someone who was actually 27 years old would have their age listed as 25.
**The "Where Born" column only asked two questions - 1) whether born in same county, and 2) whether born in Scotland, Ireland, or Foreign Parts. Possible answers and abbreviations to question #1 include: Yes (Y), No, (N), or Not Known (NK). For question #2, the following abbreviations were used: Scotland (S), Ireland (I), and Foreign Parts (F).
Enumeration forms were distributed to all households a couple of days before census night and the complete forms were collected the next day. All responses were to reflect the individual's status as of 6 June 1841 for all individuals who had spent the night in the house. People who were traveling or living abroad were enumerated at the location where they spent the night on census night. All of the details from the individual forms were later sorted and copied into enumerators' books, which are the records we can view images of today. The original householder's schedules from 1841 to 1901 were destroyed.
The clerks who compiled and reviewed the census data made a variety of marks on the returns. Unfortunately, many of these tally marks were written over personal information and some fields, such as ages, can be difficult to read as a result. More useful marks include a single slash between households within a building and a double slash separating households in separate buildings.
?b?Extended Description:?/b?
?b?How the census forms are organized:?/b?
For the 1841 census parishes were organized into hundreds (and into wapentakes in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire) rather than registration districts as in the later censuses. The 1841 census returns were organized alphabetically according to county, hundred, and parish names. Consecutive piece numbers were assigned to hundreds or parts of hundreds for reference purposes. You will find the piece number on a paper strip on the side or bottom of every image, following the PRO class number (HO 107). There may be hundreds of pieces within a county.
Pieces are comprised of books which in turn are comprised of enumeration districts. It is the book number, rather than the enumeration district number that is important to researchers for referencing. The book number is shown on the paper strip on the side or bottom of every image following the piece number.
In addition to the piece and book numbers, each page of the returns includes a folio number and/or a page number. The folio number was stamped onto every other page before microfilming and is located in the upper right hand corner of the image. Folio numbering usually starts over at the beginning of each book. The page number is part of the printed form and is found on every page, usually at the top centre. The page numbers start over at the beginning of every enumeration district. A full reference number for a record in the 1841 census includes the PRO class number (HO 107), the piece number, the book number, and the folio number.
Some of the above information was taken from "Chapter 6: Census Returns," Ancestral Trails: The Complete Guide to British Genealogy and Family History by Mark D. Herber (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc, 1998) and Using Census Returns, Pocket Guides to Family History by David Annal (Richmond, Surrey: Public Record Office, 2002). 
Source (S443)
 
535 ?b?The Irish Ancestor 1969-1986 ?/b?
?b?Ref:?/b? ENEC009
?b?Author:?/b? Rosemary ffolliott
?b?ISBN:?/b? 0-9537557-9-7
?b?Series:?/b?
This publication is a reproduction of the successful series The Irish Ancestor, which was published from 1969 to 1986. The aim of the journal, which was produced on a non-profit making basis, was the collection and publication of original source material and other items of interest concerning Irish genealogy, biography and domestic history.
The Irish Ancestor was predominantly published twice yearly, in spring and autumn. Plus in several of the earlier years a supplemental edition was produced. For example in 1969 as well as the usual two issues, a third volume, An Index to Raphoe Marriage Licence Bonds, 1710-1755 and 1817-1830, was also published.
Articles contributed to the main volumes varied from Christian Names in Ireland by Brian de Breffny (1969 Vol. I No. 1) to Some Irish Weddings in Nova Scotia 1834-1840 by Terrence M. Punch (1976 Vol. VIII No. 2) to Tombstones in Killbride Graveyard, Callan Parish, Co. Kilkenny, edited by Joseph Kennedy (1986 Vol. XVIII No. 1).
This publication is in an easy to use PDF format making each volume effortlessly accessible and each page is reproduced in its original format. Through the Table of Contents you can browse the publication or simply jump straight to the article you want. The journals have also been fully indexed allowing users to search for the names and places they are interested in throughout.
In total there are::
33 issues over 18 years
4 supplements
Over 2,500 pages
Over 320 pages with images or photographs
These journals have long been an essential tool for Irish genealogical and historical reserach. Now in CD-ROM format, this publication is a must for all Irish genealogists and social historians.

?u?System Requirements ?/u?

?u?See a full table of contents for all issues and volumes ?/u?
?b?
Price: ?61.90 (?76.14 Including VAT at 23%) VAT is only charged on customers in the European Union?/b? 
Source (S789)
 
536 ?b?WITNEY (OXFORDSHIRE) PARISH REGISTERS.
?/b?ST. MARY'S CHURCH.
INTRODUCTION.
Witney is a West Oxfordshire market town on the old road from London to Gloucester, and is
renowned for its blanket industry. It was a centre of Quaker Meetings, and a stronghold of
Nonconformity. During the period of certificates of Burial in Woollen, Quaker certificates
are included in the Parish Register while, after the 1783 stamp duty on Births etc., Namings
in the Meeting House are also recorded. Two Baptisms in 1787 and one in 1789 are recorded
by John Wes(t)ley.
St. Mary's, Witney, Baptismal Registers commence in 1581 ?i?[1551] ?/i?and are continuous from
1685; before that there are four gaps of some two to three years each, and a blank for the ten
years 1615-1625. Marriages do not start until 1605 and there are gaps 1615-1625 and 1652-
1676. Burial Registers begin in 1583, with gaps 1615-1625 and 1652-1676. The Registers
are generally in good condition owing to excellent repair and rebinding of the earlier volumes
in 1888, but very few entries throughout appear to be original except for a rough register of
Burials and certificates 1680-1708 (duplicated as a fair copy). Handwriting and ink suggest
that material was copied two or three years after the event, by which time original notes
could not always be deciphered - there are many obvious errors. Generally entries are
minimal and uninformative, occupations not being given until 1813. There are few Bishops
Transcripts before 1745, with large gaps, and there are numerous omissions compared with
the Registers, e.g. the base-born.
The Parish included the hamlets of Crawley, Curbridge (including Carswell) and Hailey
(including Whiteoak Green). At times, parts of the town are specified i.e. Middlefield, New
Yatt, West End, and Wood Green.
A Chapel was built at Hailey in 1760 with a Burial Ground, and a Perpetual Curate was
appointed in 1796. Until 1812, all Baptisms and Burials at this Chapel were entered once a
year in the Witney Register, but in this year all entries from 1796 were copied into a rough
book, in one handwriting which appears to be that of Revd. John Hyde, the Curate.
Thereafter this remains the sole record, and there are no formal registers on printed pages
until after 1843. Understandably, after 1760 numerous Hailey residents still came to Witney
for baptism or Burial, and in order to bring all information together, the 1812-1837 Hailey
entries have also been included in these typescripts ?i?[Omitted from this version of the
transcript].
?/i?The use of a surname as a second Christian name, and of two Christian names, seems to
occur earlier and more frequently than in other local Registers, and not to be confined to the
gentry. There is a `Walter George' in 1679 (George was a local surname) and in 1686 the
Rector named a son `George Rodolph'. From 1693 to 1696 there are `Francis-Henry',
`Elizabeth-Martha' and `Mary-Ann'. Later the combination with a surname becomes fairly
frequent, e.g. in Feb. 1708 the Baptism of `Richard-Simmons GROVE', a Grove-Simmons
marriage being recorded for 1702.

The Burial Registers from 1583 to 1652 have periods in which the initials `g' and `b', or a
combination, are entered in the margin - e.g. `gg bb'. The meaning is not clear - the Great
Bell is specifically recorded as first tolled in 1588. The abbreviation `P' seems first to have
been used for `Plague', but later for `Pauper'.
Fly-leaf information, and interpolations in the Registers, have been collated as a further
appendix, to the Baptisms.
I record my gratitude to the Librarian, Society of Friends (Mr. Edward H. Milligan), to the
Oxford Diocesan Archivist (Dr. M. Barrett), to the Vicar of Hailey (Revd. T.G.O. Jenkins),
and above all to Revd. John Cook, the Rector of Witney, who for nearly a year has always
made himself available to open his safe at short notice, for an exchange of volumes. I am
delighted that Mr. A. H. Noble has undertaken the mammoth task of indexing these
typescripts, amounting to perhaps 50,000 entries.
Standlake F.R.L.Goadby
May 1973
---------------------------------------------------
As the present re-transcriber, I would like to record my gratitude to the present Rector of
Witney, Revd. Cameron Butland, who has generously permitted the almost-irreplaceable
transcripts to be removed from the church for extended periods.
Macclesfield D.B.Beames
2002
Note:
This transcript faithfully reproduces errors or possible errors made by Brig. Goadby, Bartlett
Taylor or the Minister or his Clerk.
The transcript was keyed into a spreadsheet and the present index was produced directly from
it.
Hugh Kearsey
Minchinhampton March 2002

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following is the original Introduction (by J Neville Wood) to his 1979 transcript of the
Hailey Registers.
HAILEY (WITNEY)
(OXFORDSHIRE)
PARISH REGISTERS
(INCLUDING CRAWLEY)
Judging from the high number of deaths in the Witney Workhouse (and later at
"Hensington House", Woodstock), the poverty of the hamlets must have been
abnormal.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Baptisms 1797 to 1900 (Crawley to 1954)
Burials 1797 to 1932
Index Locorum
Index Nominum
DISTRIBUTION
Copy no. 1 Diocesan Archives c/o Bodleian Library, Oxford
2 Society of Genealogists, 37 Harrington Gdns, London SW7 4JX
3 P.C.C. Hailey
4 County Archivist, County Hall, Oxford
5 Central Library, Westgate, Oxford
Transcribed and typed by J Neville Wood Esq for the Oxfordshire Family History
Society, who record their thanks to the Vicar, Rev. T.G.O. Jenkins, for making the
registers available. The originals are now deposited with the Diocesan Archives.
Abingdon 31 Dec 1979
===========================================================


These are the notes written by J Neville Wood for his 1979 transcription.
HAILEY (OXFORDSHIRE) NOTES
Hailey was part of the parish of Witney until its present church was
consecrated in 1861.
A chapel was built there in 1760 with a burial ground, the remains of which
lie between the present Vicarage and the road. The chapel was not licensed
for marriages.
From 1760 to 1812 all baptisms and burials were entered annually en bloc in
the Witney Parish Register, and when these registers were transcribed in
1973 the only Hailey record was a rough notebook kept by the Curate, the
Revd. John Hyde. Since then, the original Hailey registers have come to
light.
In 1847 a chapel was built at Crawley, with its own burial ground and
registers. Occasional entries relating to persons who lived in Hailey were
entered in the Crawley registers and vice versa, and from 1873 the Crawley
burial register was also used for Hailey. In this transcript the entire set have
been amalgamated into a single record, with the letter H or C indicating the
place of abode.
HAILEY PARISH REGISTERS
Vol 1 A plain book with baptisms and burials starting at opposite ends.
These are original
records from 1797 to 1812 inclusive; thereafter, the clerk's "rough
book".
Vol 2 Baptisms 1813-1843
Vol 3 Hailey Baptisms 1843-1900 } amalgamated
Vol 4 Crawley Baptisms 1847-1954 }
Vol 5 Hailey Burials 1813-1873 } amalgamated
Vol 6 Crawley Burials 1847-1873 }
-ditto- Hailey and Crawley Burials 1873-1932
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CONCATENATION & RETRANSCRIPTION, 2002
When these registers were retranscribed in 2002 as part of the Oxfordshire
Baptisms project, the opportunity was taken to bring together the two sets of
entries which refer first to Hailey Chapel and later to its Church.
As was briefly stated by Mr Wood in the notes to his 1979 transcription, from 1761
until 1837 the Hailey registers were annually copied en bloc into the Witney
registers.
The Hailey records therefore fall into three sections:
1. 1761-1799: Witney version only is available, the Hailey register being lost.
2. 1797-1837: Both versions are available.
3. 1837-1954: Hailey version only, the Witney copy having been discontinued.
The Witney copy was transcribed by Brigadier Goadby in 1973 as part of his
Witney transcription, the Hailey registers by Mr Wood in 1979.
Section 2 requires some explanation.
It is probable that the Hailey clerk made his initial records in a rough book, which
was then copied separately into the main Hailey registers and the Witney registers.
There seems no other way to explain the fact that some scattered records appear
either in the Hailey version or in the Witney version, but not both. These records
are flagged as [H only] or [W only].
Apart from that, there are very many discrepancies between the two versions.
Most are simple spelling differences, but since it seems likely that Mr Wood
standardised many spellings in his 1979 transcription there is little point in noting
them individually.
Others are minor forename differences, eg Mary/Mary Ann, and differences in
occupation or place. The Hailey version is usually taken as standard, and these
differences are flagged as [W=] and occasionally [H=], thus:
Mary Ann [W=Mary] d John, farmer [W=lab]
Finally there are some serious differences in names, especially in surnames, and
here both records are included -- always in pairs as with aliases -- and are flagged
as [H] or [W].
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

EYNSHAM, OXFORDSHIRE.

PARISH REGISTERS.

Eynsham Parish is some six miles west of Oxford and once had a Benedictine Abbey. It has been a dormitory and refuge from Oxford ever since; the spelling was 'Ensham' up to 1848.

Until recent years, the incumbancy seems to have been jointly held witht hat of the neighboring parish of Stanton Harcourt, with the Chapelry of Southleigh, in both of whose registers, Eynsham entries are found.

The parish included the Hamlets of Barnard Gate (spelt 'Barnet' until 1853), Freeland (now a separate parish), and Swinford, while some residences are entered as 'Ensham Heath' and 'Ensham Wharf'. Many Barnard Gate affairs are registered at Southleigh. The parish also included the mansion 'Ensham Hall' now in the modern Freeland parish, whose owner was Lord of the Manor and had his pew in the Church.

Contents.

Miscellaneous Entries and statistics 5 pp.
Baptisms 1653- 1900 111 pp.
Marriages 1653-1900 36 pp.
Banns 1754-1780 only 1 p.
Burials 1653-1900 88 pp.
Vicars and Church officers 1 p.

Distribution.
Copy No. 1 Diocesean Archivist, c/o/ Bodleian Library, Oxford
2 Society of Genealogists, 37 Harrington Gardens, London, S57 4JX
3,4 The Vicar of Eynsham

Transcribed and typed by Brigadier F. R. L. Goadby, thanks to the cooperation of the Vicar, Rev. J. W. G. Westwood, who is now depositing the copied volumes in the Diocesean Archives.

Standlake
Easter 1975

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

EYNSHAM
ST. LEONARD
OXFORDSHIRE

PARISH REGISTERS

Eynsham (formerly usually spelt 'Ensham') is a town 6 miles NW of Oxford, 5 miles E of Witney, situated on the Oxford-Witney-Cheltenham road. The river Thames separated the parish from Berkshire until 1974 when there were county-boundary changes as a result of local Government Reorganisation. The parish is bounded by the River Evenlode on the east. Historically it lay on Wooton Hundred and in Witney Poor Law Union. The registers date from 1653. The ecclesiastical parish included the hamlets of Barnard Gate and Freeland, the latter becoming a separate ecclesiastical parish with its own registers in 1869. The following transcript is a continuation of the one by the late Brigadier F. R. L. Goadby, covering baptisms 1653-1858.

CONTENTS

Baptisms 1841-1900
Marriages 1837-1900
Burials?tab? 1858-1900

Distribution

1) Oxfordshire Archives, County Hall, Oxford.
2) Society of Genealogists, London.
3) Eynshamm P.C.C.
4) Bodleian Library, Oxford.
5) Oxford Central Library Local Studies Library.
6) Eynsham History Group.

Transcribed, indexed and typed by Mrs. Edna Manson.
Thanks are recorded to the Revd. R. F. Key Vicar of Eynsham and Cassington, for allowing the registers to be withdrawn temporarily for transcription and to Miss Shirley Barnes, formerly County Archivist, and Mr. Carl Boardman, Acting County Archivist, for making them readily available for this purpose.

Oxford, 1989.
----------------------

EYNSHAM (OXFORDSHIRE) PARISH REGISTERS. misc 1

1. The first volume covers Baptisms and BUrials from 1653 to 1756, and Marriages 1665 to 1755. It is prefaced by a long Latin introduction of which the following is a translation:
"The Day Book or Register to be kept in the archives of the parish church of Evansham alias Eynsham in the county and diocese of Oxford, made from parchment, in the year of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ 1664, and in the seventh year of the reign of our most serene Lord Charles II by the grace of God King of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, Defender of the faith, etc., Edmund Meyericke M.A. being perpetual Vicar there, and Thomas Wise and James --uatersan Guardians or Churchwardens of the aforessaid church; containing not only the names of those (transcribed from a certain paper book, and diligently and accurately collected from other lists, written in the handwriting of the last Vicar) who, from 27 August 1653 born washed with water of baptim, and who from 8 September 1653 were joined in matrimony and also were given the benefit of church burial at Eynsham aforesaid, from 19 June 1653 until the day of purchase of this book: but also the names of those baptised, joined in matrimony and buried at Eynsham aforesaid placed together in order after the making of this book."

The copy by Edmund Mayricke ceases after the year 1664/5, and despite the above, there are no mariages in his handwriting - the first entrty on 17 June 1665.

2. All entries up to 1747 are in Latin, and have been translated for this transcript. Up to 1776 the register appears to have been entered annually - the ink being well-mixed or poor in alternate years. Until 1668 the Regnal year is given as well as the Calendar year.

3. At some period the first volume has been carefully ruled to show the 'New Style' year thoughout.

4. During the period 1643 to 1776 there are some 2,500 Baptisms and 1950 Burials, but only 450 Marriages. It may be that many Marriages have been recorded in the Registers of Oxford Colleges and this register shows that between 1743 and 1754, eleven of 18 Marriages were celebrated in NEw College


Chapel (10) or Trinity College Chapel (1), banns having been read at Eynsham unless the Marriage was by License.

5. In addition to practice handwritings, the flyleaf includes: -
(a) "Christian ROGERS 1703, daughter of John ROGERS Vicker."
(this may refer to a burial, but it is not in the Register).
(b) 'Collection at Easter Day 1766 - 11a-4d'.
(c) 'In the year 1725 Ye Parish went ye Perambulation'
'In the year 1750 the Parish went the Perambulation.'

6. High mortality years were 1662-3, 1669-70, 1683-4, 1701-2, 1704-5, 1714 (pox), 1727-30, 1743, and 1763-4 (these recorded small pox.)


EYNSHAM (OXFORDSHIRE) PARISH REGISTERS. misc 2

6 cont. High mortality rates continued in 1789/90, 1800 (an epidemic fever, 1819/20 (smallpox), 1832 (cholera), 1833/34 (smallpox), 1839/40 and 1849/50.

7. Dissenters.
Baptisms took place in 1824 and again in 1840, of children of 'Disenting Ministers'.

8. Special Burial.
The burial entry in 1822 of Colonel Patrick Hay, described as 'of Ensham Hall', records that he was buried in a vault under the sept in the church belonging to the Lord of the Manor. The Lordship is still with the owner of this property.

[Misc. pages 3,4 and 5 not shown here. They contain statistics. -Paul Kelly] 
Source (S448)
 
537 A 'tissier' (French word) means clothier.
tisseur = weaver (of fabric)
tissier = not in my dictionary, but must be related to woven material

Source:
http://frenchcanadianfamilytrees.blogspot.com/2008/08/french-to-english-translations-of.html 
Bichet, Jean Jacques (I1855)
 
538 A 'tissier' (French word) means clothier.
tisseur = weaver (of fabric)
tissier = not in my dictionary, but must be related to woven material

Source:
http://frenchcanadianfamilytrees.blogspot.com/2008/08/french-to-english-translations-of.html 
Bichet, Claude Francois (I229)
 
539 A BRIEF HISTORY OF WINTERBOURNE
(Ecclesiastical Parish comprising Winterbourne and Watleys End)
PREFACE
This Booklet is not intended to be a complete History. It is simply a reproduction, in book form, of the
Articles which have appeared in the Community Association's Magazine "New Look" from June to
December 1967.
The writer wishes to emphasize the fact that far from being an Author, he has written in his own
"Amateurish Way", a few facts concerning Winterbourne hoping that they might be of some interest to
Readers.
Much of the information has been acquired during his long and happy life in Winterbourne. Sincere and
grateful acknowledgment, however, is made for the kind permission given to refer to the writings of the
late Dr CHB Elliott and the late Henry G Ludwell. Also for information and statistics so willingly supplied
by Mr A C Dunn, the offices of the Gloucestershire County Council, Sodbury RDC, and Church
Records.
HWN Ludwell
2nd December 1967.
Editorial Note - a series of articles which Mr Ludwell later wrote between March 1968 and April 1971
has been combined with the original booklet described above to form this tribute to his unbounded
interest in the history of Winterbourne.
A History of Winterbourne: H W N Ludwell 1972 
Source (S989)
 
540 A child of John Huber's sister was buried on the same day [March 27, 1774] that Henry Huber and Elizabeth Frank were married. Huber (I748)
 
541 a cousin to her spouse Vanbrocklin, Nancy (I497)
 
542 A half-dozen Catholic families were residing in the village of Watertown in 1830, but the first Mass in Watertown was not celebrated until 1831 in the home of one such family. Then part of the Diocese of New York, which encompassed the entire state, the few Catholic families of Watertown were served intermittently by priests from Utica, Rome and Syracuse. Later, they formed the Catholic Society of Watertown, and began to hold services more regularly in rented space, such as the Beebee Schoolhouse near the Depot behind the Woodruff House.
As the faith community grew, a more permanent location was sought. In 1838, Father Michael Gilbride purchased the 10-year-old Baptist Church on Factory Street, where Morrison's Furniture store now stands, for $1,300 and renamed it St. Mary's. The first Mass celebrated on Oct. 29, 1838.
Watertown was a mission of St. James Church, Carthage, until it became an independent parish in 1851. Five years later, reflecting ethnic and cultural differences of the growing immigrant population, Irish Catholics began construction of their own church, St. Patrick's, leaving the French-speaking Catholics to worship on Factory Street. They purchased St. Mary's Church and on July 7, 1857, the parish was incorporated. It was served by priests out of Cape Vincent, starting with Father Louis Lapic.
In 1872, the Diocese of Ogdensburg was created out of the Diocese of Albany, which had included all of Northern New York. Bishop Edgar P. Wadhams became the first bishop of the new diocese and began seeking priests to minister to Northern New York Catholics and requested the bishop of Montreal, Canada, to send a French-speaking priest to take up permanent residence in Watertown.
Father Jean-Baptiste Chappel, MSC, was assigned to St. Mary's Parish in December 1875, marking the beginning of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart in the United States. Since St. Mary's did not have a rectory, he took up residence at the "vast house" on Thompson Street. Father Chappel also became pastor of St. Mary's Parish in Evans Mills.
The following May, Father Joseph Durin, MSC, and two seminarians arrived from France and in June 1876, the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart purchased the "vast house" for $8,000 to establish the oldest MSC community in the New World. It is now the second oldest MSC community in the world outside Issoudon, France, where the order was formed in 1854 by Father Jules Chevalier.
The small but energetic MSC community devoted itself to several ambitious projects which continued to serve the parish, Catholics in surrounding communities and the order down through the past 121 years. On Dec. 8, 1876, they established the Association of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart to foster devotion to the Blessed Mother through a magazine published by the priests and brothers in Watertown. It was made an Archconfraternity by Pope Pius IX in March 1877, with its headquarters in Watertown until it was moved to the provincial offices in Aurora, 111., in 1987.
Also in 1877, the parish organized its first strawberry festival, later called Lawn-Fete, to raise money, which continued until 1935. It was the precursor of today's annual parish festival.
In 1878, Father Durin (pastor, 1878-1881) established Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Parish and began construction of a church next to the MSC residence on Thompson Street to replace St. Mary's Church. The first mass was celebrated in the new church on July 28 of that year.
Father Durin was also responsible for the start of formal Catholic education in Watertown. He prevailed upon the bishop to permit three Sisters of St. Joseph from Buffalo to open a school in the parish. In January 1881, Father Durin purchased the frame house at 114 West Main St. to serve as Immaculate Heart convent and motherhouse for the Sisters of St. Joseph in Watertown and as a boarding school.
In the next few years, the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart would also serve missions in Chaumont, Belleville, Lorraine, LaFargeville, Rosiere, Felts Mills, Redwood and Rutland. In 1903, they began a mission for Italian-Americans on the west side of the city, which later became St. Anthony's Parish.
The MSC community in Watertown also began a novitiate to train seminarians and in 1885 Father Benjamin Grom began construction of St. Joseph Apostolic School adjoining the rectory. For the next 20 years, it would train about 20 priests to serve the society that was expanding in the United States and the Province of Quebec, Canada. One of its students, Father Pierre Lesperance was the first American to be ordained a Missionary of the Sacred Heart and served as pastor from 1893 to 1900.
The school was closed in 1905, but reopened in 1928 to provide education for seminarians until a new seminary was built in Quebec City in 1960. The Apostolic School became a high school seminary (Sacred Heart Prep Seminary) until it closed in 1976.
For almost 30 years, the wooden church on Thompson Street served the new parish until 1906 when Father Stephen Royet began plans for a new church at the corner of Thompson and West Lynde streets. The new church built in Gothic style with its many spires and vaulted ceilings was dedicated on the feast of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart on May 31, 1906. The old church was moved to Davidson Street, where it has served as the location of the North Side Improvement League and later the Odd Fellows Hall. Today it is occupied by the Disabled Persons Action Organization.
In 1923. the parish opened Sacred Heart School with six grades, adding one grade each year until it served students through eighth grade in 1925. It was also during this time, under the pastorate of Father Amedee Lacasse that the parish was legally incorporated and became territorial, rather than ethnic, to serve Catholics on the north side of the Black River.
With the parish continuing to grow, a kindergarten was opened on Thompson Street in 1950. From the mid-1950s to 1960. during the pastorate of Father J. Arthur Francoeur, several expansions took place to add a cafeteria, gymnasium, classrooms, offices and library to serve students through ninth grade. Today, the school provides instruction from pre-school through grade eight with high school students attending Immaculate Heart Central School.
Tragedy struck the parish the night of Feb. 13, 1969, when fire of unknown origin destroyed the beautiful church on West Lynde Street. Despite being saddened and shocked by their loss, parishioners under the leadership of the pastor Rev. Benoit Dostie quickly set about the task of replacing their place of worship. A building committee was formed and a funding drive organized, including a parish festival which was held in June 1969. It has continued every year since then to bring together parishioners in a spirit of friendship and cooperation for one of the parish's most important yearly events. Nearly 2,000 people attended the dedication of the new church on Nov. 7, 1971.
Although the parish is served by two members of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart, the order is also represented by several active and retired priests and brothers in residence at the monastery on Thompson Street. Since 1986, the order has again been responsible for St. Mary's Parish in Evans Mills. In their concern for the poor and needy, members of the order serve as chaplains at Genesis Healthcare center (formerly Mercy Hospital) and at New York State correctional facilities, with the assistance and support of parishioners in both ministries. The interrelationship between the parish and the MSC order is particularly evident in the Sacred Heart Foundation, a not-for-profit organization headquartered at the monastery. The Foundation raises funds to provide scholarships to MSC seminarians in the United States and abroad. While the order serves the parish in many ways, their very presence is an example of love and service to the community in fulfilling the mission of the Church.
Through the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart the parish also has special ties to the mission of Papua New Guinea. Father Durin led the first group of MSC priests to the missions in 1881. Two former priests served in the missions prior to coming to Watertown, and a former parochial vicar and brother at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart are presently serving there. Through their efforts and the work of the parish Mission Animation Committee, individuals and organizations in the parish have developed and promoted stronger ties between the missions and the parish in financial and other forms of support.
Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Parish has an active lay congregation of 1,200 families involved in every aspect of church life. As the following pages will show, the parishioners share in the ministerial and sacramental life of the church in preparing children and adults for the sacraments, in the many aspects of the liturgy, in outreach to the poor and to senior citizens and especially in the evangelizing mission of the Church.

Source:
http://www.olshparish.org/history.html 
Source (S397)
 
543 A Jacques Bichet is her brother, a witness on the death record. Bichet, Jeanne Baptiste (I2196)
 
544 A James Ward (16 years old) was living with them in 1860. He is tool old to be Catharine's child, but may have been from a previous marriage of Sidner. See 1860 census.

------------

According to W. W. Higgins, Sid Ward had no children.
"Sid Ward had no children but owned a great deal of real estate, which passed on to various related families. His home on the Circleville-Groveport Road, south of the Red River Bridge Road, is now the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Everhart. It was one of the houses on the Historical Society's 1975 tour."
 
Ward, Sidner J. (I10459)
 
545 A message (from ) was received at 3 May 2007 5:17:32 +0000.

The following addresses had delivery problems:


Permanent Failure: Other address status
Delivery last attempted at Thu, 3 May 2007 05:17:32 -0000

---------------------------------
Hello,

One of my ancestor's brothers (Rudolf Webert) was one of the early members of the volunteer fire department of Trimberg.

I found this information on your web site:
http://ffwtrimberg.ff.funpic.de/index.html

However the web site has been removed. Is there a new web site on the internet?

Please help.

I am looking for more information about Rudolf Webert and his family.

Thank you for your help.

See this web page for more information about Rudolf Webert:
http://home.comcast.net/~rootsdigger05/GEDmill/indiI48.html


Sincerely,

Paul Kelly
http://home.comcast.net/~rootsdigger05/index.html





 
Webert, Johann Rudolph (I48)
 
546 a minor in 1849 Ward, Sarah Eve (I10350)
 
547 a minor in 1849 Ward, Betsey (I10351)
 
548 A nephew, William Brown, lived with George and Anna.
See person 10938
 
Family F269
 
549 A rendezvous was the recruiting station where the men enlisted in the Navy. Officers at the rendezvous kept a record of each man enlisted and reported the information weekly to the Navy Department. These documents are known as the "weekly returns of rendezvous reports."

The largest number of enlistments occurred during the Civil War. The number of men in uniform for these years is estimated at between 26,000 and 51,000.

This collection consists of these enlistment registers for the years 1855 to 1891. The original records are located in the National Archives Record Group 24 (NARA publication M1953): Records of the Bureau of Naval Personnel. The records were microfilmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah in 2003.

They are arranged in the following order:

Volume
Chronologically by week
Name of naval rendezvous
Date of enlistment
The indexes to these records, both arranged alphabetically, are available on microfilm from the National Archives in the following publications:

T1098, Index to Rendezvous Reports, Before and After the Civil War, 1846? 1861, 1865? 1884
T1099, Index to Rendezvous Reports, Civil War, 1861? 1865 
Source (S1266)
 
550 A static collection of genealogies submitted by users, prior to 2003, including 40 million ancestors. Entries include names, family relationships, and dates and places of events. Submissions were merged to eliminate duplication. Source (S1347)
 

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