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As a best-selling author and teacher, Katie draws on her two passions-art studies and art quilts-to create abstract quilts that are inspired by still life compositions. In this book you'll learn how you can assemble a still life arrangement from your favorite items at home and transform it into an art quilt, even if you've never considered yourself to be an artist. With Katie by your side, you will succeed!
Benjamin Doxey Barker (1810-1898) married Margaret Warren in 1838, and immigrated in 1848 from Ireland to Frontenac County, Ontario, and about 1851/1852 immigrated to Will County, Illinois, moving in 1867 to Livingston County, Illinois. Descendants lived in Illinois, Ohio, Kansas, Arkansas, Utah and elsewhere. Some descendants were Mormons. Includes many ancestors in Ireland and some ancestors in England.
This compilation was originally undertaken at the request of the Board of Supervisors of Brunswick County, who suggested that Miss Fothergill copy and index the Brunswick County marriage bonds from 1752, when they first appear among miscellaneous papers, until the commencement of vital records in 1852. When once she set to the task, Miss Fothergill discovered that she could improve the basic list of marriages by adding inferential marriage proofs from estate settlements, wills, and deeds. The resulting compilation, running from 1730 to 1852, is a composite of more than 3,000 marriage records. As is customary in such compilations, men are listed in alphabetical order, with an index of brides comprising a separate section. Incidental information found among the records, and employed here, includes references to places of residence and to guardians, sureties, and parents. All told the work indentifies 7,500 brides, grooms, parents and sureties, and the exact date of the marriage or bond. With an improved index.
This is the eighth volume of Dr. Justin Glenn’s comprehensive history that traces the “Presidential line” of the Washingtons. Volume one began with the immigrant John Washington, who settled in Westmoreland Co., Va., in 1657, married Anne Pope, and became the great-grandfather of President George Washington. It continued the record of their descendants for a total of seven generations. Volume two highlighted notable members of the next eight generations, including such luminaries as General George S. Patton, the author Shelby Foote, and the actor Lee Marvin. Volume three traced the ancestry of the early Virginia members of this “Presidential Branch” back to the royalty and nobility...
Richard Whittington Wright (1633-1663) immigrated in 1655 from England to Northumberland County, Virginia, and married Ann Mottrom in 1657. Francis Wright (1659/1660-1713), a son, married twice, first to Ann Washington, then to Martha Cox. He died in Westmoreland County, Vir- ginia. Descendants and relatives lived in Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky, Illinois, Missouri, Iowa qand elsewhere. Includes much genealogical data about various ancestral lines, chiefly in England, to 1066 A.D. and beyond.
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Joel Blackburn (1794-1873) and Anna Fry (1796-1871) were married in 1814 in Tennessee. They were parents of fourteen children, two of whom were stillborn.
James Key (ca. 1750-ca. 1800) lived in Orangeburg, North Carolina and, according to family tradition, married Betty Barnes. He was father to the Rev. Warren Key (ca. 1784-1843), who was born in either North or South Carolina. He married Mary Ann (Polly/Nancy) Beasley (b. ca. 1791) ca. 1808 in South Carolina. Warren Key was a Methodist minister and founded Key's Church in Emanuel County, Georgia in 1820. Descendants and relatives lived chiefly in Georgia, and also South Carolina, North Carolina, Florida, Illinois, Colorado, California, Alabama, Virginia, Massachusetts, Maryland, Texas, and elsewhere.
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