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Quellen-Verweis NF08249 :
Personen : Eaton Virginia, Politte Franke
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. April 3, 1936.
MARRIAGE LICENSES:
April 2 -- Franke Politte, St. Louis and Virginia Eaton, Elvins.
Quellen-Verweis NF08252 :
Personen : O'Bryan Lona, Wright Frank
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. April 3, 1936.
MARRIAGE LICENSES:
March 28 -- Frank Wright, Caledonia and Lona O'Bryan, Caledonia.
Quellen-Verweis NF08253 :
Personen : Eaton Wendell G., Wilson Goldie M.
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. April 3, 1936.
MARRIAGE LICENSES:
March 28 -- Wendell G. Eaton, Desloge and Goldie M. Wilson, Desloge.
Quellen-Verweis NF08254 :
Personen : Turpin Ruby, Woodard Leonard
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. Sept. 4, 1936.
MARRIAGE LICENSES:
August 29 -- Leonard Woodard, Farmington and Ruby Turpin, Elvins Route One.
Quellen-Verweis NF08255 :
Personen : Elvins Raymond, Moore Viola
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. Sept. 4, 1936.
MARRIAGE LICENSES:
August 29 -- Raymond Elvins, Elvins and Viola Moore, Elvins.
Quellen-Verweis NF08256 :
Personen : Bush Harry, Seawell Almeda
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. Sept. 4, 1936.
MARRIAGE LICENSES:
August 29 -- Harry Bush, Pilot Knob and Almeda Seawell, Pilot Knob.
Quellen-Verweis NF08257 :
Personen : Huff Everett L., Smith Wilma
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. Sept. 4, 1936.
MARRIAGE LICENSES:
September 1 -- Everett L. Huff, Doe Run and Wilma Smith, Doe Run.
Quellen-Verweis NF08258 :
Personen : Curlee Mary N., McFarland Delbert
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. Sept. 4, 1936.
MARRIAGE LICENSES:
September 1 -- Delbert McFarland, Elvins Route One and Mary N. Curlee, Elvins.
Quellen-Verweis NF08259 :
Personen : Jarvis Linnie H., Summers Virginia
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. Sept. 4, 1936.
MARRIAGE LICENSES:
September 2 -- Linnie H. Jarvis, Potosi and Virginia Summers, Potosi.
Quellen-Verweis NF08289 :
Personen : (Unknown) Tempa or Tempe J., Hubbard Joseph
The 1880 census has Joseph, Tempa & their first 4 children living in Big River Twp, Jefferson Co. MO. The 1880 census also says that Joseph was originally from North Carolina, and Tempa was originally from Illinois.
Quellen-Verweis NF08301 :
Personen : Blankenship Elvira, Watson John W.
St. Francois County, Missouri
Volume: 3, 1876 -1881
Page: 49
John W. Watson and Elvira Blankenship all of St. Francois Co., Mo. married on 11 April 1878 by W. M. Barry, JP at St. Francois Co., Mo. the hand written index has Miss Elvira Blankenship.
Quellen-Verweis NF08308 :
Personen : Houser William Henry "Clay", Jones Amanda Josephine
Source Information: 1880 Census, Golden Valley, Rutherford, North Carolina:
Census Place Golden Valley, Rutherford, North Carolina
Family History Library Film: 1254981
NA Film Number: T9-0981
Page Number: 526C
Household listed by: Name, Relation, Marital Status, Gender, Race, Age, Birthplace, Occupation, Father's Birthplace, Mother's Birthplace.
Henry C. HOUSER Self M Male W 33 NC Farmer NC NC
Amanda HOUSER Wife M Female W 26 NC Keeping House NC NC
Robert L. HOUSER Son S Male W 8 NC NC NC
Julia V. HOUSER Dau S Female W 6 NC NC NC
Mary A. HOUSER Dau S Female W 4 NC NC NC
Huldah L. HOUSER Dau S Female W 2 NC NC NC
Quellen-Verweis NF08309 :
Personen : Blankenship Thomas C., Kendall Mary Catherine
St. Francois County, Missouri
Volume: 4, 1881 -1887
Page: 300
Mr. Thomas C. Blankinship of St. Francois Co., Mo. under 21 Miss Mary C. Kendall of St. Francois Co., Mo. over 18 Hampton Blankinship The Father of the above Thos. C. Blankinship sent to the undersigned Recorder his written consent to the above Marriage.
Quellen-Verweis NF08320 :
Personen : Blankenship Eliza Olivine, Moore Jamer Wesley
Family history by Steve Dalton:
There has been some disagreement over whether Wesley Moore's first name was John or James. Census records list him as James, while both his death certificate and his obituary use the name John. Regardless of his true first name, he usually went by his middle name, Wesley, and that is what name will be used in this history.
Wesley Moore grew into manhood in Wilkes County at Brushy Mountain Township, and he became a farmer, like his father and grandfather before him. His military records describe him as 5'10" with "fair" complexion, blue eyes, and "black" hair; in 1862, he could not write, as he signed his name with an "X" on a military document. On June 12, 1861, at age 20, he volunteered for the Confederate Army at Wilkesboro (Wilkes County) to fight for the South in the Civil War, enlisting in Company C, 26th North Carolina Infantry Regiment. The state of North Carolina was the last of the states to secede from the Union, on May 20, 1861, and Wesley promptly joined, just 23 days later.
Company C, known as the "Wilkes Volunteers", was raised in Wilkes County and enlisted at Wilkesboro, departing from there on July 8, 1861 and arriving at Raleigh, North Carolina, on July 12; there, the company was ordered to the Crabtree instructional camp (3 miles west of Raleigh), called Camp Carolina, and formed into the 26th North Carolina Regiment under General Lawrence O'Bryant (a former North Carolina congressman, later killed by a sniper at the Battle of Antietam), with Zebulon B. Vance (later, in 1862, to be elected first and only governor of the Confederate state of North Carolina) and Henry K. Burgwyn (at 19, youngest colonel in the Confederacy; killed at the Battle of Gettysburg in July, 1863) as the Regimental Colonels.
After leaving Raleigh on September 2, the regiment marched to Morehead City and then to the barrier islands off the coast of North Carolina. The regimental camp, named Camp Burgwyn in honor of its youthful colonel, was set up six miles from Fort Macon on the long, narrow barrier island (Bogue Banks, south of Cape Hatteras) on the Atlantic coast; later, on October 6, Camp Wilkes was established two miles from Fort Macon.
The regiment stayed on Bogue Banks through October and during most of November, the new recruits keeping busy with constant drill and guard duty. Outbreaks of measles and typhoid fever erupted in the wet, swampy, unsanitary camps, and many men died that winter, especially from the typhoid fever. The only incident worthy of note during that time was on November 3, when a Union steamer ran aground off the coast. Some of the men of the 26th North Carolina were semt out to salvage supplies from the wreck and were met with some shelling from nearby Federal gunboats; no casualities were sustained, but it was the green recruits' first taste of enemy fire. On November 28, the regiment moved back to the mainland and established winter quarters at Camp Vance, near Carolina City. They left there on January 26, 1862, and traveled by train to Camp Branch, four miles below New Bern, North Carolina, near the Neuse River. There they pitched their tents and stayed until March, when the Battle of new Bern would force them out.
The 11,000 man Federal amphibious force under Union General Ambrose E. Burnside had assaulted the islands of the Outer Banks area in February and had taken Roanoke Island. Now, in early March of 1862, they were advancing up the Neuse River toward New Bern, intent upon taking that city and thereby controlling all of Albermarle Sound and the rivers that empties into it, plus the important railroads nearby at Kinston. The Conferates were under the command of General Branch, and all he had at his disposal was 4,500 green troops, including Wesley Moore. Branch, in an attempt to prepare for Ambrose's coming assault, placed torpedoes (as floating mines were then called) in the river, as well as various sunken obstructions. But the Federal gunboats made it through with little difficulty, and Ambrose's troops landed just below New Bern and prepared to attack the entrenched Confederates in front of them.
But instead of experiencing his first Civil War combat, Wesley Moore was discharged two days before the battle, on March 12, 1862, "by reason of disability", according to his military records. It is not know for certain what this disability was, but it very well could have been a result of all of the diseases spreading through the damp, filthy, swampy camps that winter, most notably typhoid fever (contaminated water was another health problem in the camps) and measles. Wesley's military records indicated that he had been "absent on sick leave" in August of 1861, so he must have caught one of the diseases around that time. Later, he was "absent without leave" from September 28 to October, 1861 and again in November and part of December of that year. One reason may have been that he had not yet been paid for his service from the time of his enlistment to September 28, 1861 (his pay was stopped when he was reported absent without leave); another may have been the illness that might have eventually led to his disability.
Whatever the case, Wesley was discharged from the Confederate Army at Camp Branch on March 12, 1862, appearing "on a Roll of Honor" from the 26th NC Regiment, which apparently was an honorable discharge. He was paid $38.86 for the three months (at $11 a month) owed him for 1861 and for "traveling allowance..being furnished in kind" to Wilkes County.
In the Battle of New Bern that Wesley narrowly missed, General Branch's troops were routed by the Union forces and sent in a disorganized retreat through the town of New Bern. The 26th NC later distinguished itself as part of the Army of Northern Virginia under General Robert E. Lee in battles in Malvern Hill, Gettysburg, the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, and in the South's final hour at General Lee's surrender at Appomattox Court House.
After Wesley returned home, four of his brothers, along with his cousin, Robert (son of Robert "Robin" Moore), enlisted in the Confederate Army.
Although Wesley returned home early in the war with his disability, life had to be difficult for him and his family, as it was for most civilians in the Confederacy during the Civil War; in fact, that difficulty might have been the reason both he and his brothers had deserted to come home, as their families as well as their property was in dire need of protection. All semblance of Confederate government control had disappeared in the mountains of western North Carolina by 1864, and most men of military age were either in the service or in hiding as deserters. So, in addition to plundering and raids by Union troops moving through the area, "robbers and bushwhackers" became more violent and aggressive. The infamous Church brothers committed every type of crime possible, roaming almost at will in Wilkes County, and killing became frequent; it was reported that a state of anarchy existed in Wilkes County toward the end of the war.
As if the brutal harrassment by the Union troops and outlaws was not enough, the Confederate War Department had men and horses from Longstreet's command "eat out the country". There were complaints from Wilkes County in 1863 that soldiers were "frequently plundering everything, driving off cattle, breaking open granaries, drinking, insulting citizens, and making themselves a terror to the whole population." One resident wrote Governor Vance that the countryside was overrun with artillery and calvary horses "consuming what little provisions are left. Scarcely a week passed without a new and hungrier group showing up." A witness described the movement of one particular calvary unit through western North Carolina: "The whole command (some seventeen or eighteen hundred men) just disbanded, and turned loose, to pillage the inhabitants, and thoroughly did they perform their work. It was not merely stealing but open and above board highway robbery. They would enter houses, violently breaking open every door, and helping themselves to what suited their various fancies; not provisions only, but everything, from horses down to ladies' breast pins." The commanding officer reported that he did indeed regret the actions of his men, blaming their excesses on "the brandy which they found in many homes."
In March of 1865, as the Civil War was winding down to an end, Federal General George H. Stoneman's calvary left Tennessee fro a raid through southwest Virginia and western North Carolina, his mission being to disrupt the railroads and supplies of that area while General William T. Sherman marched through eastern North Carolina and destroyed everything else. On March 29, 1865, Stoneman's calvary troops arrived at Wilkesboro, "carrying off all the horses and mules, and buring the factories." Several houses were seized as headquarters for the officers, and widespread stealing and plundering of the town and surrounding area began once again. Some Union calvary deserters stayed active in the area even after the war, forming outlaw gangs that continued to harass the local citizens. In Wilkes County6, a lawless band led by two desperate men named Wade and Simms terrorized the countryside for some time after the Civil War had ended.
Life was not to be much easier after the war. As part of the Reconstruction policy following the Civil War, and as an attempt to severly punish the states for seceding from the Union, a new tenancy system was initiated in North Carolina, whereby farmers were forced to give up their lands to tenants, many of them newly-freed slaves. So it is probable that Wesley, his father, Jesse, and the rest of the Moores lost what was left of their property (and what had not yet been destroyed) in Wilkes County in the late 1860's. They most likely could continue to make their living as farmers, but not on their own farmland, which had to be humiliating and demoralizing for them.
Either because of their loos of land, or because of the destruction of the are by the war, or because they simply wanted to move on to new opportunities, Wesley and his brother, Riley, moved to St. Francois County, Missouri, in the late 1860's. Riley settled down in Knob Lick (near Libertyville, where his uncle, James Wesley Moore, had been established since the 1820's), while Wesley farmed in the Hazel Run area east of Bonne Terre.
In August of 1869, Wesley married Eliza Olivine Blankenship, Eliza's father, Hampton, a farmer, was born on August 6, 1827 in Rutherford County, North Carolina; Hampton married Sarah "Sallie" Taylor on May 22, 1847 in Rutherford County, North Carolina. Sarah was born on September 22, 1827 at Golden Valley (20 miles southeast of Rutherfordton in Rutherford County), North Carolina. Her father, Joseph Taylor, was born at Golden Valley on July 25, 1791; he died at Doe Run (St. Francois County), Missouri, on March 6, 1859, and was buried in the cemetary at Doe Run Baptist Church.
Wesley and Eliza Moore may have lived in Mine La Motte (Madison County), Missouri, for a while, but they ended up living east of Bonne Terre in the Hazel Run area.
Wesley Moore, in addition to working as a farmer, was also Justice of the Peace and Overseer of Roads in St. Francois County. Eliza died on September 5, 1907 in St. Francois County, probably at their home near Bonne Terre. Wesley died in his sleep of heart failure on February 13, 1917 at the home of his son, Joseph Perry Moore, at Elvins (St. Francois County, now incorporated into Park Hills, along with Flat River), Missouri. Both Wesley and Eliza Moore are buried at Marvin Chapel Cemetary, six miles east of Bonne Terre, Missouri.
Quellen-Verweis NF08322 :
Personen : Blankenship Hedgeman B. Graves, Hunt Eliza Ann
St. Francois County, Missouri
Volume: 3, 1876 -1881
Page: 54
Hedge B. Graves Blankenship and Miss Eliza Ann Hunt.
Married on 21 November 1878 by David Matkin, MG at St. Francois County, Missouri.
Quellen-Verweis NF08332 :
Personen : McFarland James, Taylor Susannah
James and Susannah migrated to St. Francois County, Missouri from North Carolina with their family.
Quellen-Verweis NF08337 :
Personen : Blankenship Albert J., Ritter Sarah
St. Francois County, Missouri
Volume: 4, 1881 -1887
Page: 123
Albert Blankenship of St. Francois County, Missouri over 21, Miss Sarah Ritter of St. Francois County, Missouri over 18.
License Issued: 3 May 1883.
Married on 3 May 1883 by Revd. Joseph Rutter at DeLassus, St. Francois County, Missouri.
Quellen-Verweis NF08341 :
Personen : (Unknown) Arina, Wilkins Hugh
Both are listed in the Dent County, Missouri Ozark Heritage Book, Volume III, page 470.
Quellen-Verweis NF08343 :
Personen : Parks Mary Elizabeth Ellen, Wilkins Joseph
Joseph married William Parks sister, Mary Elizabeth Ellen Parks.
Quellen-Verweis NF08361 :
Personen : Blankenship Mary S., Latimer William R.
St. Francois County, Missouri
Volume: 6, 1893 -1897
Page: 222
Wm. R. Latimer of Flat River, St. Francois County, Missouri over 21.
Mary S. Blankenship of Boyer Prairie, St. Francois County, Missouri over 18.
License issued: 26 August 1895
Married on 28 August 1895 by R. C. Martin, MG at Joseph Blankenship, St. Francois County, Missouri.
Quellen-Verweis NF08375 :
Personen : Denowski Leo, Hoffman Viola
They had 12 children.
Quellen-Verweis NF08377 :
Personen : (Unknown) Sarah, Hoffman Edward Thomas
Married when Edward was about 45 years old.
No children were born from this union.
Quellen-Verweis NF08378 :
Personen : Denowski Frank, Hoffman Anna Lucille
They were married when Anna was in her 40's. They had one girl named Mary Jane Denowski.
Quellen-Verweis NF08379 :
Personen : Anderson Carrie, Hoffman David
They had 9 children.
Quellen-Verweis NF08380 :
Personen : Hoffman Benjamin Frankin, Wartner Evelyn
They had two children, and Evelyn about lost her mind when Dale left her. They didn't hear from him for years.
Quellen-Verweis NF08381 :
Personen : McKinney William Doyle, Williams Edith May
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. July 5, 1929.
MARRIAGE LICENSES:
Wm. Doyle McKinney, Esther and Edith Mae Williams, Esther.
Quellen-Verweis NF08382 :
Personen : Hoffman LeRoy Charles, Pope Athea
They had seven children.
Quellen-Verweis NF08384 :
Personen : Hoffman Clara Louise, Wilson Donald Bud
Lived one year with Harriet Wilson. They had 11 children, and Clara began studying the Bible in 1941 when her son Glen was about 6 months old.
Quellen-Verweis NF08419 :
Personen : Berger John, Eschmann Anna Maria
Listed in the Illinois Statewide Marriage Index: (1763 - 1900)
Marriage License Number: 00004434
Quellen-Verweis NF08428 :
Personen : Eschmann John A., Thoma Catherine
The family is listed in the 1918 Prairie Farmers Directory, Monroe County, Illinois.
Quellen-Verweis NF08430 :
Personen : Coombs Marvin, Haney Ida Mae
[Lead Belt News, May 3, 1935]
The marriage of Miss Ida Mae Haney of Flat River and Marvin Coombs of Fredericktown, which took place at Ironton, Missouri on September 9, 1934, was recently announced. Rev. Fred Stotler, pastor of the Methodist Church performed the ceremony. The couple was unaccompanied.
Mrs. Coombs is the youngest daughter of the late Dr. and Mrs. T. L. Haney. She is a graduate of Flat River High School of the class of 1934. Mr. Coombs is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Coombs of Fredericktown and graduated from high school with the 1933 class.
At present they are residing in Flat River.
Quellen-Verweis NF08431 :
Personen : McKinney James Otis, Owens Nellie Irene
LEAD BELT NEWS, Flat River, St. Francois Co. MO, Fri. Dec. 8, 1933.
McKINNEY - OWENS:
Miss Nellie Irene Owens of Farmington Route 1, and Otis McKinney of Farmington Route One, was united in marriage November 30, on Thanksgiving in the afternoon at 4 o'clock at the home of the officiating minister, Rev. Neal Deweese. The couple were attended my Miss Lois E. Randolph and A. H. Klob of Farmington Route 1.
Quellen-Verweis NF08436 :
Personen : Elder Ilon, Ward Bernell
[The Lead Belt News, January 29, 1943]
Miss Bernell Ward, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Ward of Flat River, formerly of Greenville, Mo., was united in marriage to Pfc. Ilon Elder of San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, January 17th by Justice of Peace Claude Wilkerson.
The bride was attired in blue velvet with assessories to match. The groom was dressed in military uniform.
They were attended by Sgt. and Mrs. Warren Wagner of Farmington.
Mrs. Elder is a graduate of the Greenville High School and is now employed with the Southeast Missouri Telephone Co., where she has been working for the past two years.
Pfc. Elder is stationed at Camp Weingarten but is expecting a call to a paratroop training school soon.
Quellen-Verweis NF08441 :
Personen : Alexander Faye, Rumburg Timon
[The Lead Belt News, March 8, 1935]
Announcement is being made this week of the marriage of Miss Faye Alexander of Leadwood, and Timon Rumburg, of Ellington, Mo., which occurred nearly fifteen months ago. The ceremony was performed on December 22, 1933, at the Methodist parsonage in Potosi, by Rev. Walt E. Hill, pastor of the Potosi Methodist Church.
Mrs. Rumburg is the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Alexander, of Leadwood. She has taken an active part in social and church activities in the county and is well and favorably known. She is a graduate of the Leadwood High School with the class of 31.
Mr. Rumburg is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rumburg of Ellington. He is a graduate of the Ellington schools and is favorably known in that community.
Quellen-Verweis NF08462 :
Personen : Perrett Paul, Saffold Edna
[The Bonne Terre Star, October 14, 1921]
HAZEL RUN COUPLE IS MARRIED IN FARMINGTON:
Miss Edna Saffold and Mr. Paul Perrett, both of Hazel Run, were married at the resident of Rev. Maynard in Farmington Friday, September 30 [1921]. They were attended by the sister and brother of the bride, Miss Bertha Saffold and Mr. Riley Saffold.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Saffold and is well known in Bonne Terre as well as in her home community.
The groom is a prosperous young farmer and is very much liked for his excellent traits of character. They will make their home on the farm.
Quellen-Verweis NF08505 :
Personen : Ketcherside William Woodson, Moses Lavina
Joyce Nash wrote on December 31, 2007:
Woodson Ketcherside and Melvina Moses both of St. Francois County, Missouri; married on 11 October 1868 by George W. Murphy, JP at St. Francois County, Missouri. (Her name is listed as Melvina on the marriage record, but is actually LAVINA).
Quellen-Verweis NF08519 :
Personen : Bender Friederike "Frieda", Schifferdecker William
1930 U.S. Census, St. Clair County, Illinois.
ED82-2, sheet 7B
Belleville City, Ward 1 (part), Belleville Township.
SCHIFFERDECKER, William, 49
SCHIFFERDECKER, Frieda, 42
SCHIFFERDECKER, Sylvia, 21
SCHIFFERDECKER, Violet, 19
SCHIFFERDECKER, Aurelia, 16
SCHIFFERDECKER, Lillian, 6
Quellen-Verweis NF08521 :
Personen : (Unknown) Celia, Schifferdecker Oliver
1930 U.S. Census, St. Clair County, Illinois.
ED82-19, Sheet 7B
Belleville City, Ward 6 (part), Belleville Township.
SCHIFFERDECKER, Oliver, 31
SCHIFFERDECKER, Celia, 36
Quellen-Verweis NF08522 :
Personen : (Unknown) Olga, Schifferdecker Walter
1930 U.S. Census, St. Clair County, Illinois.
ED82-6, sheet 5B
Belleville City, Ward 3(part), Belleville Township.
SCHIFFERDECKER, Walter, 40
SCHIFFERDECKER, Olga, 37
SCHIFFERDECKER, Ruth, 14
Quellen-Verweis NF08523 :
Personen : Scherr Hilda, Schifferdecker Edward "Ed"
1930 U.S. Census, St. Clair County, Illinois.
ED82-19, Sheet 9A
Belleville City, Ward 6 (part), Belleville Township.
SCHIFFERDECKER, Edward, 50
SCHIFFERDECKER, Hilda, 48
SCHIFFERDECKER, Joseph, 19
SCHIFFERDECKER, Arthur, 22
SCHIFFERDECKER, Minerva, 20Listed in the (1763-1900) Illinois Statewide Marriage Index:
Groom: Ed Schifferdecker
Bride: Hilda Scherr
County: St. Clair
Date: May 10, 1905
Marriage Licence: 1570
Quellen-Verweis NF08524 :
Personen : (Unknown) Mary, Schifferdecker William
1930 U.S. Census, St. Clair County, Illinois
ED 82-28, sheet 2B
Caseyville Township, Caseyville Village.
SCHIFFERDECKER, Wm, 69
SCHIFFERDECKER, Mary, 64
SCHIFFERDECKER, Louise, 42
Quellen-Verweis NF08525 :
Personen : (Unknown) Mary, Schifferdecker William
1930 U.S. Census, St. Clair County, Illinois.
ED82-76, sheet 10A
Freeburg Village, Freeburg Township.
SCHIFFERDECKER, William, 64
SCHIFFERDECKER, Mary, 62
Quellen-Verweis NF08526 :
Personen : (Unknown) Opal, Schifferdecker Wyman P.
1930 U.S. Census, St. Clair County, Illinois.
ED82-76, sheet 11B
Freeburg Village, Freeburg Township.
SCHIFFERDECKER, Wyman, 26
SCHIFFERDECKER, Opal, 26
SCHIFFERDECKER, Loyd, 8
SCHIFFERDECKER, Eileen, 4
Quellen-Verweis NF08527 :
Personen : (Unknown) Anna, Schifferdecker Gustave Adolph
1930 U.S. Census, St. Clair County, Illinois.
ED82-76, sheet 13A
Freeburg Village, Freeburg Township.
SCHIFFERDECKER, Gust, 45
SCHIFFERDECKER, Anna, 40
SCHIFFERDECKER, Florence, 20
SCHIFFERDECKER, Ruby, 17
Quellen-Verweis NF08537 :
Personen : Clinton Lizzie, Gregor George
[The Banner, March 21, 1879]
MARRIED: Thursday, March 13, 1870, by J. Sergeant Esq., Mr. George Gregor, to Miss Lizzie Clinton, all of Hazel Run, this county.
Quellen-Verweis NF08538 :
Personen : Boyer Charles, Small Mollie
[The Banner, Bonne Terre, Missouri, March 14, 1879]
Married: March 2nd, 1879, by Esq. Geo. Crump, Mr. Charles Boyer to Miss Mollie Small, all of Fullertown.
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