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Bill[_12_] September 12th 18 07:56 PM

Not quite as advertised..
 
Tim wrote:

11:35 AMBill
- show quoted text -
My wife had an adopted cousin who published a genealogy book on the
Clark’s.

........
My first wife’s 7th generation grandmother was a sister to Clark,


One of the signers of the Declaration of Independence was a Clark.


Bill[_12_] September 12th 18 08:00 PM

Not quite as advertised..
 
wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 13:35:25 -0400, Keyser Soze
wrote:

On 9/12/18 12:35 PM, Bill wrote:
Keyser Soze wrote:
On 9/12/18 1:28 AM, Bill wrote:
wrote:
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 20:02:20 -0400, Keyser Soze
wrote:

Nearly a dozen of my high school buddies live in the DC area.

DC is one of those places where most of the people living there came
from somewhere else. My father was from "dust bowl" Oklahoma but my
mother's side was all from somewhere in Maryland, going back to
colonial times.
My grandfather's people go back to the Hessians from Baltimore and
Anne Arundle and my grandmother's people all came from St Mary's or
Calvert county somewhere, up to ~250 years back.

I just dug up a bunch of stuff for my niece down at the marina in
Ridge.


My mom’s people were in New Haven in the 1650’s.


Virtually all of my immigrant ancestors arrived in this country from
Europe between 1890 and 1920. At least one of my wife's ancestors
arrived here from England in the early 1600s to explore North America.
I'm not much into "ancestry," as it were, but my wife is


My wife had an adopted cousin who published a genealogy book on the
Clark’s.


One of my wife's ancestors was Henry Hudson. That and about $4.00 will
get you a cup of burnt coffee at Starbuck's. :)


My mother's father was related to E.A. Poe too but we don't get any
royalties ;-(


EA Poe’s relatives seemed to be nuts also. The house I grew up in was
built on a lot where supposedly Poe’s niece committed suicide by stacking
old tires under the house and burning up the house and her.


John H.[_5_] September 12th 18 08:17 PM

Not quite as advertised..
 
On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 14:49:07 -0400, wrote:

On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 16:43:38 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:

wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 06:30:12 -0700 (PDT), True North
wrote:

On Wednesday, 12 September 2018 08:32:43 UTC-3, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 9/12/18 1:28 AM, Bill wrote:
wrote:
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 20:02:20 -0400, Keyser Soze
wrote:

Nearly a dozen of my high school buddies live in the DC area.

DC is one of those places where most of the people living there came
from somewhere else. My father was from "dust bowl" Oklahoma but my
mother's side was all from somewhere in Maryland, going back to
colonial times.
My grandfather's people go back to the Hessians from Baltimore and
Anne Arundle and my grandmother's people all came from St Mary's or
Calvert county somewhere, up to ~250 years back.

I just dug up a bunch of stuff for my niece down at the marina in
Ridge.


My mom’s people were in New Haven in the 1650’s.


Virtually all of my immigrant ancestors arrived in this country from
Europe between 1890 and 1920. At least one of my wife's ancestors
arrived here from England in the early 1600s to explore North America.
I'm not much into "ancestry," as it were, but my wife is

Oldest son sent me the Ancestry DNA kit for Father's Day.
Got the results back in July. No big surprises but some small ones.
Results
55 percent Great Britain
18 " Ireland/Scotland/Wales
9 " Iberian Peninsula
Low confidence regions...
4 percent Europe East
4 " Europe West
1 " Asia South

It shows migration patterns for the colonial time period with one side
of my mother's family making a wrong turn left to America but they
corrected that after the ungrateful rabble bit King George's hand that
had fed and protected them. ;-)

I have been curious what mine would say but my guess is England
Ireland Germany and a trace of American Indian. The real wild cards
are on my father's side of the family because there are so many holes
in the records. The people west of the Mississippi in the mid to late
19th century were not big on paperwork.


Wondered about your family this morning. A Mrs. Fretwell of Danville, Ca
was in the Obituary this morning. 88 years.
https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/na...?pid=190192266


People with my name used to call me a lot when the ancestry.com thing
was getting started and we compared notes. Nobody has my Great Great
Grandfather in their list. I really think there was something
nefarious going on, probably referring to the Civil War or something
else around that time. That seems to be a guy who landed in Missouri
from a space ship.


That's interesting. I can trace my father's side, Herring, back to my great-grandfather. My
grandfather was born in 1865, three miles west of Marshall, Saline County, Missouri, to a John and
Lucy Allen Herring (great-grandparents).

And that's it. None of the ancestry folks have been able to find out any more about them.

Might be that damn space ship after all.

Bill[_12_] September 12th 18 09:04 PM

Not quite as advertised..
 
John H. wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 14:49:07 -0400, wrote:

On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 16:43:38 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:

wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 06:30:12 -0700 (PDT), True North
wrote:

On Wednesday, 12 September 2018 08:32:43 UTC-3, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 9/12/18 1:28 AM, Bill wrote:
wrote:
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 20:02:20 -0400, Keyser Soze
wrote:

Nearly a dozen of my high school buddies live in the DC area.

DC is one of those places where most of the people living there came
from somewhere else. My father was from "dust bowl" Oklahoma but my
mother's side was all from somewhere in Maryland, going back to
colonial times.
My grandfather's people go back to the Hessians from Baltimore and
Anne Arundle and my grandmother's people all came from St Mary's or
Calvert county somewhere, up to ~250 years back.

I just dug up a bunch of stuff for my niece down at the marina in
Ridge.


My momÂ’s people were in New Haven in the 1650Â’s.


Virtually all of my immigrant ancestors arrived in this country from
Europe between 1890 and 1920. At least one of my wife's ancestors
arrived here from England in the early 1600s to explore North America.
I'm not much into "ancestry," as it were, but my wife is

Oldest son sent me the Ancestry DNA kit for Father's Day.
Got the results back in July. No big surprises but some small ones.
Results
55 percent Great Britain
18 " Ireland/Scotland/Wales
9 " Iberian Peninsula
Low confidence regions...
4 percent Europe East
4 " Europe West
1 " Asia South

It shows migration patterns for the colonial time period with one side
of my mother's family making a wrong turn left to America but they
corrected that after the ungrateful rabble bit King George's hand that
had fed and protected them. ;-)

I have been curious what mine would say but my guess is England
Ireland Germany and a trace of American Indian. The real wild cards
are on my father's side of the family because there are so many holes
in the records. The people west of the Mississippi in the mid to late
19th century were not big on paperwork.


Wondered about your family this morning. A Mrs. Fretwell of Danville, Ca
was in the Obituary this morning. 88 years.
https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/na...?pid=190192266


People with my name used to call me a lot when the ancestry.com thing
was getting started and we compared notes. Nobody has my Great Great
Grandfather in their list. I really think there was something
nefarious going on, probably referring to the Civil War or something
else around that time. That seems to be a guy who landed in Missouri
from a space ship.


That's interesting. I can trace my father's side, Herring, back to my great-grandfather. My
grandfather was born in 1865, three miles west of Marshall, Saline
County, Missouri, to a John and
Lucy Allen Herring (great-grandparents).

And that's it. None of the ancestry folks have been able to find out any more about them.

Might be that damn space ship after all.


My dad’s grandfather came from Antrim, Ireland about 1860. They were
Scot/Irish. Which makes tracing them back into Scotland near impossible.
The English shipped the trouble makers to Ireland and destroyed the records
in Scotland.


John H.[_5_] September 12th 18 09:44 PM

Not quite as advertised..
 
On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 20:04:38 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote:

John H. wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 14:49:07 -0400, wrote:

On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 16:43:38 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:

wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 06:30:12 -0700 (PDT), True North
wrote:

On Wednesday, 12 September 2018 08:32:43 UTC-3, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 9/12/18 1:28 AM, Bill wrote:
wrote:
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 20:02:20 -0400, Keyser Soze
wrote:

Nearly a dozen of my high school buddies live in the DC area.

DC is one of those places where most of the people living there came
from somewhere else. My father was from "dust bowl" Oklahoma but my
mother's side was all from somewhere in Maryland, going back to
colonial times.
My grandfather's people go back to the Hessians from Baltimore and
Anne Arundle and my grandmother's people all came from St Mary's or
Calvert county somewhere, up to ~250 years back.

I just dug up a bunch of stuff for my niece down at the marina in
Ridge.


My mom?s people were in New Haven in the 1650?s.


Virtually all of my immigrant ancestors arrived in this country from
Europe between 1890 and 1920. At least one of my wife's ancestors
arrived here from England in the early 1600s to explore North America.
I'm not much into "ancestry," as it were, but my wife is

Oldest son sent me the Ancestry DNA kit for Father's Day.
Got the results back in July. No big surprises but some small ones.
Results
55 percent Great Britain
18 " Ireland/Scotland/Wales
9 " Iberian Peninsula
Low confidence regions...
4 percent Europe East
4 " Europe West
1 " Asia South

It shows migration patterns for the colonial time period with one side
of my mother's family making a wrong turn left to America but they
corrected that after the ungrateful rabble bit King George's hand that
had fed and protected them. ;-)

I have been curious what mine would say but my guess is England
Ireland Germany and a trace of American Indian. The real wild cards
are on my father's side of the family because there are so many holes
in the records. The people west of the Mississippi in the mid to late
19th century were not big on paperwork.


Wondered about your family this morning. A Mrs. Fretwell of Danville, Ca
was in the Obituary this morning. 88 years.
https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/na...?pid=190192266


People with my name used to call me a lot when the ancestry.com thing
was getting started and we compared notes. Nobody has my Great Great
Grandfather in their list. I really think there was something
nefarious going on, probably referring to the Civil War or something
else around that time. That seems to be a guy who landed in Missouri
from a space ship.


That's interesting. I can trace my father's side, Herring, back to my great-grandfather. My
grandfather was born in 1865, three miles west of Marshall, Saline
County, Missouri, to a John and
Lucy Allen Herring (great-grandparents).

And that's it. None of the ancestry folks have been able to find out any more about them.

Might be that damn space ship after all.


My dad’s grandfather came from Antrim, Ireland about 1860. They were
Scot/Irish. Which makes tracing them back into Scotland near impossible.
The English shipped the trouble makers to Ireland and destroyed the records
in Scotland.


On my mother's side, Catholics from Holland, I can trace back to the 1200's.

Alex[_15_] September 13th 18 12:30 AM

Not quite as advertised..
 
True North wrote:
Alex

True North wrote:
10
- hide quoted text -
On Mon, 10 Sep 2018 19:51:08 -0400, Alex wrote:

True North wrote:
On Monday, 10 September 2018 10:46:46 UTC-3, justan wrote:
True North Wrote in message:
Cruise ship from Boston supposed to head to Bermuda diverted to Halifax and other Maritime ports.
Good thing they're mostly hardy New Englanders rather than Nancy Boys from way down south. It was 7 degrees C when I got up yesterday morning.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-...ence-1.4816356

How disappointing for the cruise ship passengers. 7C is something
above freezing, right? It doesn't take a McCain style hero to
endure such cold weather. Buck up sissy boy.
--
x


----Android NewsGroup Reader----
http://usenet.sinaapp.com/
Buck up??
I love this weather..warms up to around 20 C during the day and nice cool nights for sleeping. The best of both worlds. It isn't any country for girliemen thou.
7C is still shorts weather for me.

"Yeah some of us southern boys are tough. It was more like -10C here.
http://gfretwell.com/ftp/Florida%20boy%20in%20Michigan.jpg"



Thought you claimed to be from upstate New York.......or am I confusing you with Wayne?

"Check your dossier."



Speaking about dossiers....let's get yours upgraded.
Way back there was a Ditzy Dan Kruger in this group. In the boat registry started by Lee ? I remember a picture of a long, pencil necked, string bean type of guy standing in front of a non descript motorboat.
I also saw the State of Florida LLC documents referring to Dan Kruger and Margaret K. For Elite Contractor Supply.
Now y'all claim your name is Jorge or similar.
I'm thinking y'all gave Harry a phony name to avoid scrutiny.


Believe what you want.

Jorge

[email protected] September 13th 18 02:40 AM

Not quite as advertised..
 
On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 15:17:40 -0400, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 14:49:07 -0400, wrote:

On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 16:43:38 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:

wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 06:30:12 -0700 (PDT), True North
wrote:

On Wednesday, 12 September 2018 08:32:43 UTC-3, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 9/12/18 1:28 AM, Bill wrote:
wrote:
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 20:02:20 -0400, Keyser Soze
wrote:

Nearly a dozen of my high school buddies live in the DC area.

DC is one of those places where most of the people living there came
from somewhere else. My father was from "dust bowl" Oklahoma but my
mother's side was all from somewhere in Maryland, going back to
colonial times.
My grandfather's people go back to the Hessians from Baltimore and
Anne Arundle and my grandmother's people all came from St Mary's or
Calvert county somewhere, up to ~250 years back.

I just dug up a bunch of stuff for my niece down at the marina in
Ridge.


My mom’s people were in New Haven in the 1650’s.


Virtually all of my immigrant ancestors arrived in this country from
Europe between 1890 and 1920. At least one of my wife's ancestors
arrived here from England in the early 1600s to explore North America.
I'm not much into "ancestry," as it were, but my wife is

Oldest son sent me the Ancestry DNA kit for Father's Day.
Got the results back in July. No big surprises but some small ones.
Results
55 percent Great Britain
18 " Ireland/Scotland/Wales
9 " Iberian Peninsula
Low confidence regions...
4 percent Europe East
4 " Europe West
1 " Asia South

It shows migration patterns for the colonial time period with one side
of my mother's family making a wrong turn left to America but they
corrected that after the ungrateful rabble bit King George's hand that
had fed and protected them. ;-)

I have been curious what mine would say but my guess is England
Ireland Germany and a trace of American Indian. The real wild cards
are on my father's side of the family because there are so many holes
in the records. The people west of the Mississippi in the mid to late
19th century were not big on paperwork.


Wondered about your family this morning. A Mrs. Fretwell of Danville, Ca
was in the Obituary this morning. 88 years.
https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/na...?pid=190192266


People with my name used to call me a lot when the ancestry.com thing
was getting started and we compared notes. Nobody has my Great Great
Grandfather in their list. I really think there was something
nefarious going on, probably referring to the Civil War or something
else around that time. That seems to be a guy who landed in Missouri
from a space ship.


That's interesting. I can trace my father's side, Herring, back to my great-grandfather. My
grandfather was born in 1865, three miles west of Marshall, Saline County, Missouri, to a John and
Lucy Allen Herring (great-grandparents).

And that's it. None of the ancestry folks have been able to find out any more about them.

Might be that damn space ship after all.


That was a pretty wild and wooly place around the time of the Civil
War. It was a place where a lot of people went to disappear. Of course
during the war itself there were plenty of bad guys operating out of
there, under both flags. After the war I am not surprised a lot of
people's records are "incomplete", to say the least.

Tim September 13th 18 03:09 AM

Not quite as advertised..
 
Bill
- hide quoted text -
Tim wrote:

11:35 AMBill
- show quoted text -
My wife had an adopted cousin who published a genealogy book on the
Clark’s.

........
My first wife’s 7th generation grandmother was a sister to Clark,


One of the signers of the Declaration of Independence was a Clark.

......

I was meaning the explorer, William Clark . You’re thinking of Abraham Clark. I should have specified I suppose...

Bill[_12_] September 13th 18 05:30 PM

Not quite as advertised..
 
Tim wrote:
Bill
- hide quoted text -
Tim wrote:

11:35 AMBill
- show quoted text -
My wife had an adopted cousin who published a genealogy book on the
Clark’s.

........
My first wife’s 7th generation grandmother was a sister to Clark,


One of the signers of the Declaration of Independence was a Clark.

.....

I was meaning the explorer, William Clark . You’re thinking of Abraham
Clark. I should have specified I suppose...


Same family. Mom said we were related to William Clark. Go back far
enough and a lot of interrelated families. Not that many people.



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