Presenting The Genealogies Of

Including Several Collateral Family Lines


 

A Request ---

     This genealogy allows for a "Note" to be associated with every individual but for many of them it is either blank or very skimpy.

     I welcome anyone to write a biographical sketch or memoir about any person appearing herein (or yourself). Send it to me and I will include it with the person's genealogical entry. This may seem like an unrewarding task but consider how much you would love to read a paragraph, or just a sentence, written by one of your great grandparents about their life and times or that of their mother or father.

     If you send something but do not want it on my web site I will place it only in my master file from which an update of this CD will occasionally be made and mailed out.

     Remember, there is nothing so utterly lost as the chance to ask a question of someone who has died, especially a question to which only they would know the answer.

     So please write something now - Time so quickly passes!

Thanks,
Lynn

P.S.: If you don't wish to write a finished piece, send me the relevant facts and I'll apply my miserable talents to writing something suitable.

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Genealogy Work Assignments

     If anyone wanted to continue working on this genealogy, one place to start is with the end-of-line individuals. These are the ancestors for whom I have either not found the parents, have not found credible records or just decided to quit with them because enough is enough.
     There are many of them, about 330 on the Gallup side and 80 on the Miles side. To think of tracing all of them is a daunting prospect to say the least so the list has to be pared down. The ancestors with whom I would start would be those most recently living. These are usually the less difficult to trace and would also be people who might be interesting for having had a hand in the pioneering of America. Let's say those who were probably living in the 1700's or later. Here they are:

Gallup side:
     Mrs. Edward Allen Sr., "Sarah", b. abt. 1650, d. abt. 1720
     Margaret Boehm, born abt. 1749
     John Enos,d. abt. 1798
     Joseph Fuller, b. 1780, d. 1862
     Mary Hickey, d. 1783
     Phebe Holmes, b. abt. 1744, d. 1828
     Mrs. Joseph Latham, "Mary", b. abt. 1646, d. abt 1727
     John Marcy, b. abt. 1662, d. 1724
     Mary Morrill, b. 1623, d. 1703/04
     Seymour Sherwood, b. abt. 1776, d. 1853
     Mrs. Seymour Sherwood, "Elizabeth", b. 1783, d. 1864
     Deborah Stallyon, b. 1649/49, d. 1729
     Elizabeth Stone, b. abt. 1733
     Marjorie Stuart, b. 1731/32, d. 1807
     Mary Wyatt, b. 1717, d. 1761

Miles side:
     Elizabeth Baker, b. 1776, d. 1863
     Joseph Curran Sr., b. abt. 1777
     Catherine Dill (or Dillin), b. 1737, d. 1805
     Fanny Ward, b. 1789, d. 1846

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About the Music:

     The music you might be hearing is totally familiar yet somehow different, isn't it. It is a variation on the familiar work by Franz Schubert written by Catherine Rollin. She names it "Ave Maria for a New Millennium".  So far as I know, it is available only in this MIDI rendition which comes with the sheet music.

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The compiler of this genealogy supports the free exchange of genealogical information.
  Please give credit to any referenced sources for material used.