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2470 results for "Kammerer, Roger"
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Record #:
32710
Author(s):
Abstract:
On Oct. 12, 1888, Halsey Branch and Bud Venters beat Calvin Cox with a plank and a stick and Cox died from his injuries.
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Record #:
32711
Author(s):
Abstract:
John Butler by Will dated 1799, left property to his wife and two daughters, Elizabeth and Mary. Mary died intestate and Elizabeth died in 1810 with two illegitimate children.
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Record #:
32712
Author(s):
Abstract:
William Taylor Record (1798-1849); Briley Record (1833-1837); Samuel S. Smith Bible Record (1817-1967) (includes Worthington, Ward, Averett, Gaskins, Wilson, Heath, Franks, McCaffety); Robert Worthington Bible Record (1808-1880) (includes Kittrell, Nelson); Jonathan Perkins Record (1787-1810) slave record.
Subject(s):
Record #:
32713
Author(s):
Abstract:
Surnames include Franklin, White, Galloway, Taylor, Tyson, Sheffield, Coward, Sutton.
Subject(s):
Record #:
32714
Author(s):
Abstract:
In June 1840, Edwin Gorham, Esq., of Tranter’s Creek District, owned a slave named Boston, who was 107 years old. He served in the Army in the Revolution as a servant to Major McClure.
Record #:
32715
Author(s):
Abstract:
Advertisement stating that Guilford Gaskins, of Swift Creek, would not pay any debts of his wife Betsy.
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Record #:
32716
Author(s):
Abstract:
In August 1845, the 16 year old daughter of John Tyson, of Anson County, NC, committed suicide by drowning herself, after a slight reproof received from her mother for a trivial offense.
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Record #:
32717
Author(s):
Abstract:
In March 1911, Henry Sermons, who moved from near Rountrees to Ft. Barnwell, is visiting in Ayden.
Subject(s):
Record #:
32719
Author(s):
Abstract:
Anthony Dawson, b. July 25, 1832 in Pitt County, NC, was a slave of Levi Dawson and his wife, Susan (Isler) Dawson. The Levi Dawson plantation was 18 miles from Greenville, NC. The Levi Dawson house was a one story log cabin, of square adzed logs, all weather boarded on the outside and planked and plastered on the inside. There was a long porch across the front with big brick pillars and plastered over. It sat so high that a buggy could drive under it. The house had a cluster of four rooms on two sides with a wide hall in between. The house sat a quarter of a mile off the big road and all the fences around the big house and along the front was made of barked poles, rider style, and all whitewashed. Anthony Dawson gives a wonderful description of plantation life, Civil War, KKK, medicine, and the difference between house servants and regular slave workers. Dawson left Pitt County in 1900 and was living in Tulsa, OK in 1937, age 105 years.
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Record #:
32720
Author(s):
Abstract:
This Will was originally recorded on Oct. 8, 1825 in Will Book A, Haywood Co., TN.
Subject(s):
Record #:
32721
Author(s):
Abstract:
Zachariah Pinkett Estate, 1801 John Phillips Estate, 1793…his heirs included: William Hardy, Jamima Phillips, John Hardy, Abram Hardy, and Claracy Browning, being the children of Mary Hardy; Argent Stephens, the child of Sarah Wetherington; John Hooker, William Hooker, Thomas Hooker, Ahimelick Hooker, Jr., Nathan Hooker and Mary Hooker, the children of Elizabeth Hooker; and the heirs of Elizabeth Lassiter, the daughter of Argent Lassiter.
Subject(s):
Record #:
32722
Author(s):
Abstract:
Absolum Buck 1840; Johnnie Stokes 1883; William Cleve, Sr. 1897; Lizzie Pollard, dau. of John O. Pollard 1883; James Oxley 1883.
Subject(s):
Record #:
32724
Author(s):
Abstract:
These are abstracts of military service for local soldiers in the War of 1812 with Surnames beginning with E, M, N, O, R, S, T.
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