Saturday, October 23, 2021

Cahoun, Abigail - 1809

MARRIED.
At Jamestown, by the Hon. John Rimington, Mr. John Eldred Jun. To Miss Abigail Cahoun, daughter of the late Capt. Charles Cahoun of this town.
~ The Rhode Island Republican, 22-Mar-1809, Page 3, Column 3

Eldred, John Jr. - 1809

MARRIED.
At Jamestown, by the Hon. John Rimington, Mr. John Eldred Jun. To Miss Abigail Cahoun, daughter of the late Capt. Charles Cahoun of this town.
~ The Rhode Island Republican, 22-Mar-1809, Page 3, Column 3

Rimington, John (Hon.) - 1809

MARRIED.
At Jamestown, by the Hon. John Rimington, Mr. John Eldred Jun. To Miss Abigail Cahoun, daughter of the late Capt. Charles Cahoun of this town.
~ The Rhode Island Republican, 22-Mar-1809, Page 3, Column 3

Schrodder, Peggy - 1804

Date:  June 5, 1804
Groom:  Martin Peil
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:  Peggy Schrodder
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Peil, Martin - 1804

Date:  June 5, 1804
Groom:  Martin Peil
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:  Peggy Schrodder
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Rhinehart, Peggy - 1804

Date:  May 28, 1804
Groom:  Martin Meese
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:  Peggy Rhinehart
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Meese, Martin - 1804

Date:  May 28, 1804
Groom:  Martin Meese
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:  Peggy Rhinehart
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Fisher, Hannah - 1804

Date:  May 20, 1804
Groom:  Samuel Johnston
Groom's Residence:  Half Moon
Bride:  Hannah Fisher
Bride's Residence:  Spring Township
Married By:  Friends

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
{It is possible that this record is actually for Hannah [Fisher] Johnson.}

Johnston, Samuel - 1804

Date:  May 20, 1804
Groom:  Samuel Johnston
Groom's Residence:  Half Moon
Bride:  Hannah Fisher
Bride's Residence:  Spring Township
Married By:  Friends

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
{It is possible that this record is actually for Samuel Johnson.}

Stuart, William (Rev.) - 1804

Date:  February 7, 1804
Groom:  Alexander Johnson
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Watson
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
 
Date:  May 28, 1804
Groom:  Martin Meese
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:  Peggy Rhinehart
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  June 5, 1804
Groom:  Martin Peil
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:  Peggy Schrodder
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  June 7, 1804
Groom:  Samuel Breckinridge
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:    Jane Metlam
Bride's Residence:   
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  June 7, 1804
Groom:  John Rankin
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:     Isabella Dundas
Bride's Residence:   
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  August 9, 1804
Groom:  Hugh Gallaugher
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:     Mrs. Eliza Sankey
Bride's Residence:   
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  November 6, 1804
Groom:  William Watson
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:     Sally Johnston
Bride's Residence:   
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  December 20, 1804
Groom:  David Whitehill
Groom's Residence:  
Bride:     Sally Brisben
Bride's Residence:   
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


You can visit the memorial page for Rev. William Stuart.

Watson, Margaret - 1804

Date:  February 7, 1804
Groom:  Alexander Johnson
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Watson
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
{It is possible that this record is actually for Margaret [Watson] Johnston.}

Johnson, Alexander - 1804

Date:  February 7, 1804
Groom:  Alexander Johnson
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Watson
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
{It is possible that this record is actually for Alexander Johnston.}

McBeath, Margaret - 1803

Date:  December 27, 1803
Groom:  James James
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret McBeath
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

James, James - 1803

Date:  December 27, 1803
Groom:  James James
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret McBeath
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Borland, Mary - 1803

Date:  December 20, 1803
Groom:  Joseph Rye
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary Borland
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Rye, Joseph - 1803

Date:  December 20, 1803
Groom:  Joseph Rye
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary Borland
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Barr, Jane - 1803

Date:  December 10, 1803
Groom:  Joseph Whitehill
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Jane Barr
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Whitehill, Joseph - 1803

Date:  December 10, 1803
Groom:  Joseph Whitehill
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Jane Barr
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Ross, Margaret - 1803

Date:  November 22, 1803
Groom:  Alan Williams
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Ross
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Williams, Alan -1803

Date:  November 22, 1803
Groom:  Alan Williams
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Ross
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

McEwen, Eliza - 1803

Date:  November 22, 1803
Groom:  Marinus King
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Eliza McEwen
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Elizabeth [McEwen] King.

King, Marinus - 1803

Date:  November 22, 1803
Groom:  Marinus King
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Eliza McEwen
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Marinus King.

Friday, October 22, 2021

Neil, Susanna - 1803

Date:  September 7, 1803
Groom:  Samuel Sankey
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Susanna Neil
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Sankey, Samuel - 1803

Date:  September 7, 1803
Groom:  Samuel Sankey
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Susanna Neil
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Robison, Eliza (Mrs.) - 1803

Date:  April 27, 1803
Groom:  John Barber
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mrs. Eliza Robison
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Barber, John - 1803

Date:  April 27, 1803
Groom:  John Barber
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mrs. Eliza Robison
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Kearsley, Jane - 1803

Date:  March 31, 1803
Groom:  John Cooper
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Jane Kearsley
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Cooper, John - 1803

Date:  March 31, 1803
Groom:  John Cooper
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Jane Kearsley
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

King, Sarah (Mrs.) - 1803

Date:  March 8, 1803
Groom:  John Watt
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mrs. Sarah King
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Watt, John - 1803

Date:  March 8, 1803
Groom:  John Watt
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mrs. Sarah King
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

McCommon, Jenny - 1803

Date:  March 1, 1803
Groom:  Jonathan Ross
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Jenny McCommon
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Ross, Jonathan - 1803

Date:  March 1, 1803
Groom:  Jonathan Ross
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Jenny McCommon
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Thursday, October 21, 2021

Allison, Mary - 1803

Date:  March 1, 1803
Groom:  John McCormick
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary Allison
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

McCormick, John - 1803

Date:  March 1, 1803
Groom:  John McCormick
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary Allison
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Lowrey Nancy - 1803

Date:  February 1, 1803
Groom:  George Miles
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Lowrey
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Miles, George - 1803

Date:  February 1, 1803
Groom:  George Miles
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Lowrey
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Stuart, William (Rev.) - 1803

Date:  January 4, 1803
Groom:  John Prior
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Hanna Lovel
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
 
Date:  February 1, 1803
Groom:  George Miles
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Lowrey
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  March 1, 1803
Groom:  John McCormick
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary Allison
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  March 1, 1803
Groom:  Jonathan Ross
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Jenny McCommon
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  March 8, 1803
Groom:  John Watt
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mrs. Sarah King
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  March 31, 1803
Groom:  John Cooper
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Jane Kearsley
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  April 27, 1803
Groom:  John Barber
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mrs. Eliza Robison
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  September 7, 1803
Groom:  Samuel Sankey
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Susanna Neil
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  November 22, 1803
Groom:  Marinus King
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Eliza McEwen
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  November 22, 1803
Groom:  Alan Williams
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Ross
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  December 10, 1803
Groom:  Joseph Whitehill
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Jane Barr
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  December 20, 1803
Groom:  Joseph Rye
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary Borland
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  December 27, 1803
Groom:  James James
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret McBeath
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Rev. William Stuart.

Lovel, Hanna - 1803

Date:  January 4, 1803
Groom:  John Prior
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Hanna Lovel
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Prior, John - 1803

Date:  January 4, 1803
Groom:  John Prior
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Hanna Lovel
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

McCommon, Mary - 1802

Date:  December 7, 1802
Groom:  Thomas McKee
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary McCommon
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

McKee, Thomas - 1802

Date:  December 7, 1802
Groom:  Thomas McKee
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary McCommon
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

Harbison, Eliza - 1802

Date:  December 7, 1802
Groom:  Thomas McCommon
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Eliza Harbison
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

McCommon, Thomas - 1802

Date:  December 7, 1802
Groom:  Thomas McCommon
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Eliza Harbison
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Williams, Job - 1802

Date:  October 14, 1802
Groom:  Job Williams
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary Kelley
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Kelley, Mary - 1802

Date:  October 14, 1802
Groom:  Job Williams
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary Kelley
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Waggoner, Nancy - 1802

Date:  September 14, 1802
Groom:  David Love
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Waggoner
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Love, David - 1802

Date:  September 14, 1802
Groom:  David Love
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Waggoner
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Reynolds, Charity - 1802

Date:  July 13, 1802
Groom:  George Welch
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Charity Reynolds
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Welch, George - 1802

Date:  July 13, 1802
Groom:  George Welch
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Charity Reynolds
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Neil, Margaret - 1802

Date:  May 25, 1802
Groom:  George Reynolds
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Neil
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Reynolds, George - 1802

Date:  May 25, 1802
Groom:  George Reynolds
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Neil
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Monday, October 18, 2021

Brisben, Nancy - 1802

Date:  March 30, 1802
Groom:  John Marens
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Brisben
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Marens, John - 1802

Date:  March 30, 1802
Groom:  John Marens
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Brisben
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Johnson, Nancy - 1802

Date:  March 16, 1802
Groom:  Charles Hagin
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Johnson
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Hagin, Charles - 1802

Date:  March 16, 1802
Groom:  Charles Hagin
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Johnson
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Stuart, William (Rev.) - 1802

Date:  March 11, 1802
Groom:  Francis Dunlop
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Crosswight
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania.
 
 
Date:  March 16, 1802
Groom:  Charles Hagin
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Johnson
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
 
Date:  March 30, 1802
Groom:  John Marens
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Nancy Brisben
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania 


Date:  May 25, 1802
Groom:  George Reynolds
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Neil
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania


Date:  July 13, 1802
Groom:  George Welch
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Charity Reynolds
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart
~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
 
You can visit the memorial page for Rev. William Stuart.

Crosswight, Margaret - 1802

Date:  March 11, 1802
Groom:  Francis Dunlop
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Crosswight
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Dunlop, Francis - 1802

Date:  March 11, 1802
Groom:  Francis Dunlop
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Crosswight
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Sunday, October 17, 2021

Rodey, William V. - 1850

1850 Mortality Schedule recorded between 01 Jun 1849 and 31 May 1850.

District No.:  11
File Page No.:  1
Page No.:  93
Line No.:  15
Last Name, First Name, Middle Initial:  William V. Rodey
Age:  52
Sex:  Male
Color:  .
F/S:  .
M/W: Widower
Birth Place:  Tennessee
Month:  March
Occupation:   Farmer
Cause of Death:  Pneumonia
No. Days Ill:  3 weeks
Transcriber' Remarks:  . 

~ Cocke County Tennessee 1850 Mortality Schedule, Microfilm #T655, Roll #26

Davis, William Sr. - 1849

1850 Mortality Schedule recorded between 01 Jun 1849 and 31 May 1850.

District No.:  11
File Page No.:  1
Page No.:  93
Line No.:  14
Last Name, First Name, Middle Initial:  William Davis Sr.
Age:  50
Sex:  Male
Color:  .
F/S:  .
M/W: Married
Birth Place:   Tennessee
Month:  August
Occupation:   Laborer
Cause of Death:  Cramp
No. Days Ill:  1 day
Transcriber' Remarks:  .

~ Cocke County Tennessee 1850 Mortality Schedule, Microfilm #T655, Roll #26

Costello, Mary - 1850

1850 Mortality Schedule recorded between 01 Jun 1849 and 31 May 1850.

District No.:  11
File Page No.:  1
Page No.:  93
Line No.:  13
Last Name, First Name, Middle Initial:  Mary Costello
Age:  38
Sex:  Female
Color:  .
F/S:  .
M/W: Married
Birth Place:  Tennessee
Month:  February
Occupation:  
Cause of Death:  Consumption
No. Days Ill:  
Transcriber' Remarks: 

~ Cocke County Tennessee 1850 Mortality Schedule, Microfilm #T655, Roll #26

Stuart, Rev. William - 1801

Date:  October 8, 1801
Groom:  Samuel Rodgers
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary James
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Rev. William Stuart.

James, Mary - 1801

Date:  October 8, 1801
Groom:  Samuel Rodgers
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary James
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Rodgers, Samuel - 1801

Date:  October 8, 1801
Groom:  Samuel Rodgers
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Mary James
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  Rev. William Stuart

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Shimp, Margaret - 1801

Date:  June 18, 1801
Groom:  Samuel Stiver
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Shimp
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Margaret [Shimp] Stiver.

Stiver, Samuel - 1801

Date:  June 18, 1801
Groom:  Samuel Stiver
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Margaret Shimp
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Samuel Stiver.

Ingles, Mary - 1801

Date:  May 14, 1801
Groom:  John Wister Miles
Groom's Residence: Milesborough, {Milesburg} Centre County, Pennsylvania
Bride:  Mary Ingles
Bride's Residence:  Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania
Married By:  

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Mary [Ingles] Miles.

Miles, John Wister - 1801

Date:  May 14, 1801
Groom:  John Wister Miles
Groom's Residence: Milesborough, {Milesburg} Centre County, Pennsylvania
Bride:  Mary Ingles
Bride's Residence:  Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania
Married By:  

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for John Wister Miles.

Gray, Agnes - 1801

Date:  February 7, 1801
Groom:  Hudson Williams
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Agnes Gray
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Agnes [Gray] Williams.

Williams, Hudson - 1801

Date:  February 7, 1801
Groom:  Hudson Williams
Groom's Residence:
Bride:  Agnes Gray
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

Gregg, Margery - 1800

Date:  November 25, 1800
Groom:  Roland Curtin
Groom's Residence: Bellefonte, Centre County
Bride:  Margery Gregg
Bride's Residence:  Cumberland County
Married By:  

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Margery [Gregg] Curtin.

Curtin, Roland - 1800

Date:  November 25, 1800
Groom:  Roland Curtin
Groom's Residence: Bellefonte, Centre County
Bride:  Margery Gregg
Bride's Residence:  Cumberland County
Married By:  

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania

You can visit the memorial page for Roland Curtin.

Spohn, Mary - 1800

Date:  January 8, 1800
Groom:  Paul Lingle
Groom's Residence: Centre County
Bride:  Mary Spohn
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Mary [Spohn] Lingle.

Lingle, Paul - 1800

Date:  January 8, 1800
Groom:  Paul Lingle
Groom's Residence: Centre County
Bride:  Mary Spohn
Bride's Residence:  
Married By:  

~ Marriages 1800-1850, Centre County, Pennsylvania
 
You can visit the memorial page for Paul Lingle.

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Hoar, E. R. (Hon.) - 1856

We learn that a mass Convention of the opponents of Slavery is to be held at Keene, N. H., on the 8th of October.  Hon. R. H. Dana, of Boston, and Hon. E. R. Hoar, of Concord, Mass., have positively engaged to be present-- both are capital speakers.  Others are also engaged.  There will be a torch light procession in the evening.  Let us have a large delegation there from Bellows Falls.
~ The Bellows Falls Times, 01-Oct-1856, Page 2, Column 1

Dana, R. W. (Hon.) - 1856

We learn that a mass Convention of the opponents of Slavery is to be held at Keene, N. H., on the 8th of October.  Hon. R. H. Dana, of Boston, and Hon. E. R. Hoar, of Concord, Mass., have positively engaged to be present-- both are capital speakers.  Others are also engaged.  There will be a torch light procession in the evening.  Let us have a large delegation there from Bellows Falls.
~ The Bellows Falls Times, 01-Oct-1856, Page 2, Column 1

Gale, L. C. - 1856

We publish a pretty full report this week of the christening meeting held here on the 23d ult, and would acknowledge our obligations to J. P. Lane, Esq., of Amherst, chairman of the committee of arrangements, and others for facilities in making out our report.  Also to our young friend, Mr. L. C. Gale, of this place, whose report of the doings on the mountain, would do credit to those more experienced.
~ The Bellows Falls Times, 01-Oct-1856, Page 2, Column 1

Lane, J. P. - 1856

We publish a pretty full report this week of the christening meeting held here on the 23d ult, and would acknowledge our obligations to J. P. Lane, Esq., of Amherst, chairman of the committee of arrangements, and others for facilities in making out our report.  Also to our young friend, Mr. L. C. Gale, of this place, whose report of the doings on the mountain, would do credit to those more experienced.
~ The Bellows Falls Times, 01-Oct-1856, Page 2, Column 1

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Jeffries, A. - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902

Hill, Stephen - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902

Horton, Mr. - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902

Hottell, William - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902

Hicks, Peter - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902

Hallman, Solomon - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902

Hasley, Peter - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902

Hasley, John - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902

Herring, Joseph - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902

Herring, Lewis - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902

Hayden, William - 1852

Barnett Township, Forest County, Pennsylvania.
Barnett Township juts out to the border of Jefferson county between Elk and Clarion.  Millstone creek flows through the northwest corner, and, apart from this, the eastern half of the township boasts of only a few rivulets.  The western half is a region of small rivers.  Maple creek heads up north of Marienville, but assumes some pretensions in the northwest corner of this township, whence it flows south to Clarington, where it enters the Clarion river, receiving Huling's run and a few rivulets in its course.  Paralleling it on the west are Coleman and Troutman runs, each the drainer of beautiful valleys.  At Redclyffe the elevation is 1,615 feet-- high enough to warrant the existence of coal; but up to 1884 little or nothing was done toward developing its deposits.  Sandstone is found here, as in other sections.  In 1889 the oil fever reached this township, when experienced oil men were sincere in their opinions that petroleum existed in commercial quantities.

The population of 1880, including the inhabitants in Cooksburg, was 615.  in 1888 there were 105 Republicans, 79 Democrats, and 1 Prohibitionist recorded as voting, or a total of 185, representing a population of 925.

The township officers chosen for 1890, are as follows:  Constable and collector, J. B. Campbell; treasurer, Jacob Mays; clerk, J. E. Cosgrove; road commissioner, E. A Kuhn; judge of election, Wm. Crossman; overseer of the poor, A. Cook; auditor, James Gray; school directory, Clarence Pratt and R. W. Brenneman.

The owners of personal property in Barnett township in 1852, were John Agnew, J. M. Adams, William and W. A Arthurs, Alphonzo Vaubiot, W., W. Andrews, Isaac Attlebarge, T. Anderson (carpenter), Anderson {Agnew}, (mason), George Agnew, Thady Armstrong, William Allen, Jacob Braden, Arch. Black, Oran Butterfield, D. Burk, James Brandon, John Brandon, Jesse Burchfield, Horace Byham, Robert Black, James Black, John Blacklock, Daniel Black, Daniel Berlin, Daniel {Cook}, John Jr.{Cook}, William {Cook}, Andrew {Cook}, Jeremiah {Cook}, George {Cook}, David {Cook} and John Cook, Simon and William Chapman, W. R. and James Coon, Samuel Consanus, Adam Cupler, A. Coventry, E. Cline, C. Smith, Patrick Kearney, Wm. and Ed. Collins, Alex. Craig, R. Custard, James U. {Daniels}, Jeptha {Daniels}, Henry {Daniels} and W. R. Daniels, Elijah Davis, W. M. Davis, John Dodge, J. Donaldson, Joseph Dunlap, Hiram Drake, John C. David, R. H. and William Downey, Y. Eshelman, John Fitzgerald, E. Forsyth, Jesse Ferry, Sam Fulton, James Forest, John Grant, Milton Gibbs, John Gordon, W. L. Gould, John Houston, W. P. Hutcheson, Nelson Haight, Robert Huling, William Hayden, Lewis Herring and son, Joseph Herring, John Hasley, Peter Hasley, Sol. Hallman, Peter Hicks, William Hottell, Squire Horton, Stephen Hill, A. Jeffries, James Irwin, John Irwin, Chas. C. and Henry Johnson, Christian Kuntz, John and Peter Knight, Phil. Keller (blacksmith), Thomas Kerr, William Kerr, John Kellogue, F. Kennedy, Sam. Long, James Law, A. Lucas, Noble Lucas, D. Motherell, Dave Munn, John Andrew, William and Thomas B. Maze, Henry Moody, Jr., John Moore, John McNaughton, Tom McKay (tailor), Sam Mitchell, Moses McCallum, Alex. Murray, David Munn, Jr., Joseph Martin, John McNeil, R. Moodie, Pascal Moodie, John McMichael (millright), W. P. Miller, John McKenney, H. Mimm, William Martin, A. McCutcheson, Sylvester Nolton, John Nolton, George Nealy, J. C. Nolton, Asa Nichols, James Phipps, George Painter, G. W. Pratt, Sedate Porter, A. J. Platt, Dave Powell, Dan. Poff, J. R. Reynolds, James Rogers, Joseph and William Reynolds, Grove Reed, Rets & Co., Rust & Co., Amos Richards, the Ralstons (3), Ellis Russel {Smith}, William Roberts {Smith}, Eli {Smith} and Amos Smith (carpenters), Shippen, Morrison & Co., John Snyder, W. J. Spence, D. Stowe & Co., John Spafford, Jonah Slocum, R. Smith, George Swarm, W. Stewart, William Shields, A. Strominger, James Truby, William Titus, Dan. Titus, David K. Torney (one watch), Oramill Thing, W. H. Thompson, Elihu Wing, Homer Wing, Charles Wing, Joseph Wallace, Dan. Wolford, Robert Wallace, Dan. Whitman, Jo. Wagoner, James Wallace, Lenni Weaver, (cabinet maker), Sam. N. Warren, James Wing, Benj. Wing, Palmer Worden, John Wright and Charles Yeomans.  In March, 1852, William Titus was appointed collector.  The value of unseated lands was $72,516, and of seated lands, $40,304.

The pioneers, many of whom are named above, came into this wilderness to hew out homes for their families, and win from the forest that independence which an older civilization denied.  Many of them succeeded in this peculiarly American design, and around Cooksburg and Clarington, names connected closely with the first development of this section are found to-day.

Clarington, twelve miles from the railroad at Brookville, is the market town of Barnett township.  J. B. Pearasll & Co. and the Shields brothers were general merchants in 1884, and Peter Hesley was grocer.

~ History of McKean, Elk and Forest Counties, by M A Leeson, J.H. Beers & Co, 1890, Pages 901-902