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Two uncles in WWII

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The story begins I suppose with the marriage of my aunt, Hazel Schneider, to Nelson Apple in Winslow, Az in March 1937.  I am not sure how they met.  Nelson was living in Gallup in 1935, and Hazel was in "rural San Juan County NM" in 1935, according to the 1940 US census.  After the wedding, they were living in Deming, NM in 1940, along with Hazel's sister Viola (Oly). Hazel and Oly are listed as being waitresses, Nelson is shown as Attendant.  I'm not sure what that was- maybe a gas station attendant.   Below is a photo of Nelson Apple with Hazel's (or Toots as she was known by family and friends) siblings Mable, Marie, Bill and Bobby.  When I looked at Nelson's enlistment date, I expected to see sometime soon after Dec.7, 1941.  What I saw was Sept.1, 1941, which surprised me.  I looked at the WWII timeline for the events in the end of August, and found these: 25: British and Soviet troops  invade   Iran  to save the...

Week 7 Uriah Hunt

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Uriah Hunt, born 1757, lived in North Carolina and applied for some of the first land grants in what would become Tennessee.   During the Revolutionary War, Dec.9,1778,  Uriah had an entry for 300 acres in Washington county on both sides of Boones Creek.   On Dec. 25, 1778, he had an entry for 250 acres in Washington county on Sinking Creek.  And in July 29, 1779, an entry for 200 acres in Washington county on Boones Creek. I thought the price he paid for this land was interesting: "  Washington Co. NC, No. 99; for 50 shillings for every 100 acres, grant to  Uriah Hunt  119 acres".   In "The History of Washington County TN" p.891, it says that Uriah Hunt at one time owned most of the land that currently comprises Sulphur Springs Community.   Above is a sign by the land he once lived on. Uriah is named in the book "Early Settlers of Washington County, Tennessee: (pre) 1768-1777", and also has a page in the book "Sketches of Tenne...

Week 6 McNees

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Rosanna McNees married John McCormick, probably about 1770.  She and John had three sons: James b.about 1771, William b.about 1773, and Adam b.about 1776. John and Rosanna's brother William McNees were in the Rangers and John died in 1779.  Rosanna was known as "widow McCormick". A document of her land warrant is below  A plat of her land in Westmoreland, Pennsylvania is below   Rosanna remarried to Adam Stott.    In 1794, the worst of the Whiskey Rebellion happened in western Pennsylvania, where Rosanna and Adam lived.  The government wanted to tax distilled liquors, and the local people didn't want the tax.  Many Scottish and Irish families moved away from this area at this time.  The family moved to Kentucky at least by 1794 possibly by the Ohio River, and then following the Limestone Trace westward, or by leaving Wheeling VA (now WV) down to Kentucky.  Rosanna and Adam Stott purchased 50 Bourbon Co. acres, adjacent to John ...

Week 5 "Invite to dinner"

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This week's prompt is "Invite to dinner", and it's pretty easy to guess I would choose one of my brick walls.  This guy has been pretty hard to find records on before 1803, when he moved from North Carolina to eastern Kentucky.  He died in about 1816, leaving no will or probate record, no headstone, no land records, no church records.  The only records we have are a few marriage records of his daughters and a couple tax lists.  I don't even know the first name of his wife, though I see an older female on the one census record in Kentucky. His name is Francis McIntire. According to a grandson, he fought all through the Revolutionary War, receiving 5 wounds, though no record of him in the war has been found.  One of his daughters reports in the 1850 census that she was born in Pennsylvania.  Younger children of the family report being born in North Carolina, including my ancestor Hugh.  So I think he probably fought from Pennsylvania, married and lived ...

Week 4 McCormick

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John McCormick, born about 1746, married Rosanna McNees about 1770.  They lived in Westmoreland county Pennsylvania.  They had three sons: James b.abt 1771 William b. abt 1773 Adam   b. abt 1775 John served in the Frontier Rangers in Pennsylvania with his wife's brother in George Baird's Company. George Baird was in 3rd Battalion, 2nd company, under Col. James Smith. I found this about the Colonel. Colonel James Smith has often been referred to as early even as in Braddock's march. He was, indeed, a very important factor in the early annals of our county. He remained in Washington's division of the army, and in 1778 was made a colonel, and sent to Western Pennsylvania, where he performed valuable services in the continuous warfare against the Indians. James Smith was the subject of the 1937 book  The First Rebel  by Neil F. Swanson.  He was portrayed by  John Wayne  in the 1939 movie  Allegheny Uprising ,  which was ba...

Week 3 "Favorite Photo"

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This week's subject is favorite photo.  I don't have very many photos, so each is dear to me.  I ended up choosing this one of my ancestors Benjamin Chapman and Samantha Bratton Chapman and their sons.  Benjamin and Samantha took a family photo every few years, which is unusual in my family lines! Benjamin Chapman immigrated from England with his mother and brother when he was 4 years old.  He arrived in New York in 1853, coming to meet with his father, Henry Chapman, who had come over a few years earlier and worked making shoes until he had saved enough for them to come.  The family lived in New York a few years, then moved to Iowa by 1856 where they stayed.  Benjamin married Samantha Bratton in 1869 in a family members home.  A cousin liked to tell that Benjamin was so excited he had to be reminded to put on his suit coat!  They ended up having seven sons and were married 53 years when Samantha died in 1922.  Benjamin passed in 1934....

Week 2 Malone

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The Malone story begins with John Sr. Malone, who is said to have been born in Maryland in 1723.  A land record in Maryland in 1764 says John Malone was a blacksmith.  John and his son John served in Dunmore's War.  The article below was shared on Ancestry: "Although we do not know from what country the Malones migrated, we suspect England. They settled first around the Baltimore MD area, migrated to VA, then NC, and finally to Sullivan Co. TN. JOHN and his son, John, served in the militia during the campaign known as "Lord Dunmore's War." The Earl of Dunmore, British governorof VA organized the VA militia in order to safeguard the VA frontier against the Indians and to push the VA state line northward to the Ohio River. In 1774, Fincastle VA was the western frontier, and many families had moved into the fertile valleys to establish homesteads. The Shawnee Indians, seeing the westward expansion, sought revenge on the settlements, and the summer and fall of 1...