Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!

Crawford-Selleck Family Genealogy

What We Provide On Our My Family.Com Research Site:

There are currently more than 2800 names of ancestor's in the database and growing daily. Crawford, Selleck, Wetzel, Volbright, Sherman, Peebles, Mead, St. John, DeMil are just a few that are represented. From farmer's to Kings. Come and join the fun. Contact us at my personal e-mail: bob_craw2000@yahoo.com -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I118793959 Name: David SELLECK Given Name: David Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Birth: Abt. 1614 in Overstowey, Somerset, England Death: 1 Oct 1654 in Accomak, VA Occupation: Soap Boyler Note: Note 1: He arrived from Weymouth, England on July 24, 1633 and settled at Dorchester, MA. He moved to Boston in 1641; "Boston Soape boyler", ship owner, & coastal trader. David was a prominent businessman. The profession of soap boiler required a lot of capital and ability. David supported a direct tax to support the first public school in America. He died on an expedition to VA.ID: I1 Name: David SELLECK Sex: M Death: 1654 Baptism: 1613 Overstowey, Sommerset, England Religion: members of the First Church of Boston 1644 Note: The latest research reveals David Selleck was baptized in 1613 at Overstowey, Somerset, England. The young man Puritan David Selleck arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony's township of Dorchester in the county of Suffolk in July of 1633 most probably from Bristol in Somersetshire, England. The town of Dorchester was settled three years earlier in 1630 and has since become a ward (in 1868) of the city of Boston. Its borders originally extended nearly to the Rhode Island boundary. The first emigration from England to Dorchester sailed from the Isle of Wright on 6 April 1630 on the ship Mary and John. The second emigration sailed from Weymouth, England and arrived in Dorchester in July 1633 with eighty-five passengers, including David Selleck. He arrived from Weymouth, England. John Winthrop mentioned in his journal the arrival of this ship on 24 July 1633, with about eighty passengers and twelve cows, setting down at Dorchester. The trip took about twelve weeks, for the ship was forced into the western islands by a leak. These islands were occupied by the Portuguese who treated the passengers favorably. They stayed here three weeks, but the extreme heat and continuous rains brought sickness and about twenty passengers died of pestilent fever. Note: An interesting piece of information in the New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, 1911, reads: Note: Note: 8 September 1653, I Nicholas Sellecke of Clatworthy in the Countye of Sommersett, yeoman, being sicke of body. . . doe give to the poore of Clatworthye 2s.; to my sonne John Sellecke £5 and £3 I must pay his brother William for his debte; to my daughter Charity Upton 50s. which she oweth me; to me sonne Robert Sellecke 3s. 4d.; to my sonne David 3s. 4d.; to my daughter Merab Eames 3s. 4d.; to my sonne Simon Sellecke 3s. 4d.; to my sonne William Sellecke the beddstedd which was brought from Clatworthye to his howse; and all the of my goodes to my sonne Nicholas Sellecke, whome I make my whole Executor. Witnesses: Sarah Blinman, John Venson, John Welsh. Proved 17 February 1653/54, by the executor names. Note: Note: Though no relationship to Nicholas Sellecke has been proved, this information still presents some curious parallels. First and foremost is that fact that Nicholas was a seaman, and that David, who was skilled as a soap-boiler, would pursue developing a sea coastal trading operation. Note: About four years after arriving in the colony, David Selleck married Susannah Kibby, daughter of Henry and Rachel Kibby, on 1 October 1636 however they were married at Taunton St. Mary Mary Magdalene, Somerset, England. Note: The first record of David Selleck, senior in Dorchester appears in the Town Records: Note: Note: "21 10 mo: 1639. md. That the Daye abouve written David Sellecke sold unto Mr. Thomas Makepeace 16 acres of Land Lyeinge and bounded accordinge to a deed bearinge Date with these presents." Note: Note: His signature appears in the records of the First Church at Dorchester where he was a signer to the Articles of Faith on 20 September 1640. Note: The first free public school, free for all children of the town, and supported by a direct tax, is claimed by the town of Dorchester. The agreement was signed by seventy-five inhabitants of Dorchester with David Selleck's signature appearing on that petition dated 7 December 1641. Note: The firs Father: Robert SELLOCK b: Abt. 1575 in England Mother: Elizabeth UNKNOWN b: Abt. 1575 in England Marriage 1 Susannah KIBBY b: 1616 in England Married: 1 Oct 1636(?) in St. Mary Magdalene Church, Taunton, Sommerset, England Children Capt. John SELLECK b: 21 Feb or Apr 1643 in Boston, MA David SELLECK b: 11 Oct 1638 in Dorchester, Sufforlk Co., MA Major Jonathan SELLECK b: 20 May 1641 in Dorchester, Suffolk Co., MA Nathaniel SELLECK b: 18 May 1645 Joanna SELLECK b: 11 Oct 1647 Elizabeth SELLECK b: 1 Dec 1651 Susannah SELLECK b: 1652/53 in Boston, Suffolk Co., MA -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Edit Individual Given Name: Surname: Gender: Male Events: | Date | Place Birth: Death: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Military Service: Description: Social Security Number: Description: Notes: Born at home. Delivered by father. Wt. - 9# 10oz. Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I117640146 Name: Capt. John SELLECK Given Name: Capt. John Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Birth: 21 Feb or Apr 1643 in Boston, MA Father: David SELLECK b: Abt. 1614 in Overstowey, Somerset, England Mother: Susannah KIBBY b: 1616 in England Marriage 1 Sarah LAW b: Abt. 1644 in Milford, CT Married: 28 Oct 1669 in Stamford, CT Children Nathaniel SELLECK b: 7 or 17 Apr 1678 in Stamford, CT Sarah SELLECK b: 22 Aug 1670 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT David SELLECK b: 27 Dec 1672 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT John SELLECK b: 7 Jun 1681 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Susannah SELLECK b: 2 Feb 1683 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Johanna SELLECK b: 31 May 1686 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 . ROBERT OF GAULDON => B: Abt. 1550 P: M: 4 Robert SELLOCK P: B: Abt. 1575 D: Abt. 1623 P: England P: M: Abt. 1600 P: England 9 D: B: P: P: D: P: 2 David SELLECK 10 B: Abt. 1614 B: P: Overstowey, Somerset, England P: M: 1 Oct 1636(?) M: P: St. Mary Magdalene Church, Taunton, Sommerset, England 5 Elizabeth UNKNOWN P: D: 1 Oct 1654 B: Abt. 1575 D: P: Accomak, VA P: England P: D: P: 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Capt. John SELLECK B: 21 Feb or Apr 1643 12 P: Boston, MA B: D: P: P: M: 6 Henry KIBBY P: B: Abt. 1590 D: P: England P: M: Abt. 1615 P: England 13 D: 10 Jul 1661 B: P: P: D: P: 3 Susannah KIBBY 14 Richard LINDON B: 1616 B: Abt. 1570 P: England P: England D: M: P: 7 Rachel LINDON P: B: Abt. 1590 D: P: England P: D: 16 Jul 1657 P: Dorchester, MA 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I117640141 Name: Nathaniel SELLECK Given Name: Nathaniel Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Birth: 7 or 17 Apr 1678 in Stamford, CT Death: 14 Aug 1712 in Stamford, CT Father: Capt. John SELLECK b: 21 Feb or Apr 1643 in Boston, MA Mother: Sarah LAW b: Abt. 1644 in Milford, CT Marriage 1 Sarah LOCKWOOD b: Abt. 1698 in Greenwich, CT Married: Abt. 1687 in Greenwich, CT Children Nathaniel SELLECK David SELLECK b: 23 Dec 1700 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Sarah SELLECK b: 14 Aug 1702 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT John, Sr. SELLECK b: 3 Jan 1706/07 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Martha SELLECK b: 19 Apr 1710 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Ebenezer SELLECK b: 20 Mar 1712 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Marriage 2 Sarah LAW -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I117640132 Name: Nathaniel SELLECK Given Name: Nathaniel Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Father: Nathaniel SELLECK b: 7 or 17 Apr 1678 in Stamford, CT Mother: Sarah LOCKWOOD b: Abt. 1698 in Greenwich, CT Marriage 1 Mary DEMILL b: 24 Aug 1707 in Stamford, CT Married: 25 Jan 1699/1700 in Stamford, Delaware City, New York Children Peter Sr. SELLECK b: 2 May 1729 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT David SELLECK b: 23 Dec 1700 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Mary SELLECK b: 13 Jul 1727 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Sarah SELLECK b: 12 Mar 1731 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Elizabeth SELLECK b: 6 Jan 1733 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Abraham SELLECK b: 3 Dec 1735 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Catherine Ann SELLECK b: 28 Mar 1739 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Anthony SELLECK b: in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Hannah SELLECK b: in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Marriage 2 Mercy WATERBURY b: 27 Jan 1705/1706 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I117640126 Name: Peter Sr. SELLECK Given Name: Peter Sr. Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Birth: 2 May 1729 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Residence: 1764, 1787 Pound Ridge, Westchester Co., NY MARR: Note: Sources: 1. Title: Barbour Collection-Connecticut Vital Records prior to 1850 Author: Lucius B. Barbour (1878-1934) Publication: Microfilm of original records at the Connecticut State Library in Hartford, CT by The Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; 1949. Page: Vol. 1, p 53. Page: Vol. 1, p 130-1 by Rev. Moses Mather Father: Nathaniel SELLECK Mother: Mary DEMILL b: 24 Aug 1707 in Stamford, CT Marriage 1 Martha (Mary) WHITING b: 2 Apr 1728 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Married: 18 Jan 1753 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Children Joseph SELLECK b: 14 Feb 1759 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Jane SELLECK b: 23 Sep 1753 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Mary SELLECK b: 5 Mar 1755 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Peter SELLECK b: 8 Dec 1756 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Hannah SELLECK b: 29 Mar 1761 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Stephen SELLECK b: 20 Jan 1763 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Isaac SELLECK b: 18 Jan 1765 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Jesse SELLECK b: 7 Mar 1767 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Betsey SELLECK -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! Help? Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I117640123 Name: Joseph SELLECK Given Name: Joseph Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Birth: 14 Feb 1759 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Death: 14 Mar 1846 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Baptism: 26 Aug 1759 Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Religion: Methodist Episcopal Burial: 16 Mar 1846 North Street Cemetery, Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Note: Note 1: Served as a teamster in Captain Isaac Lockwood's Company of Sea Coast Guards from 1 Jan 1781 to 1 Jan 1782; enlisted in the army during the War of 1812 and served as a teamster. Note 2: "His ancestors were Puritans, and Joseph and Phebe were brought up in the Congregational belief. In middle life they were converted to the Methodist faith, and were among the first to join the first Methodist Episcopal organization in the town of Stamford. Their house was for many years the home of the weary and worn iterinerants of early Methodism, and they also entertained some of the most eminent preachers in the connection, among whom was Bishop Asbury, first bishop of the church. They lived many years honored and beloved, and died in the fullness of time, worthy members of the church of their choice." - History of Fairfield County, Connecticut, page 742. Father: Peter Sr. SELLECK b: 2 May 1729 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Mother: Martha (Mary) WHITING b: 2 Apr 1728 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Marriage 1 Phoebe CLOCK b: 17 Nov 1771 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Married: 31 Dec 1786 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Children Jesse SELLECK b: 8 Jun 1795 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Mary (Polly) SELLECK b: 22 Jul 1788 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT John SELLECK b: Abt. 1790 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Hannah SELLECK b: 23 Apr 1793 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Joseph SELLECK b: 1803 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Isaac SELLECK b: Abt. 1805 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115790620 Name: Jesse SELLECK Given Name: Jesse Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Birth: 8 Jun 1795 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Death: 13 Apr 1837 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Burial: Mill River Yard, Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Father: Joseph SELLECK b: 14 Feb 1759 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Mother: Phoebe CLOCK b: 17 Nov 1771 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Marriage 1 Tammy MEAD b: Abt. 1799 in CT Children Hanford Mead SELLECK b: 1822 in Hart Island, Long Island Sound, NY Jesse SELLECK b: 1827 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CY -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115790620 Name: Jesse SELLECK Given Name: Jesse Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Birth: 8 Jun 1795 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Death: 13 Apr 1837 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Burial: Mill River Yard, Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Father: Joseph SELLECK b: 14 Feb 1759 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Mother: Phoebe CLOCK b: 17 Nov 1771 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Marriage 1 Tammy MEAD b: Abt. 1799 in CT Children Hanford Mead SELLECK b: 1822 in Hart Island, Long Island Sound, NY Jesse SELLECK b: 1827 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CY -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115790620 Name: Jesse SELLECK Given Name: Jesse Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Birth: 8 Jun 1795 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Death: 13 Apr 1837 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Burial: Mill River Yard, Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Father: Joseph SELLECK b: 14 Feb 1759 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Mother: Phoebe CLOCK b: 17 Nov 1771 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Marriage 1 Tammy MEAD b: Abt. 1799 in CT Children Hanford Mead SELLECK b: 1822 in Hart Island, Long Island Sound, NY Jesse SELLECK b: 1827 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CY -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115477854 Name: Hanford Mead SELLECK Given Name: Hanford Mead Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Birth: 1822 in Hart Island, Long Island Sound, NY Death: 28 Aug 1891 in Monticello, Green Co., WI Occupation: Carpenter Census: 1880 Mt. Pleasant, Green Co., WI Burial: Monticello, Green Co., WI Note: Note 1: Familysearch.com shows his birth to be 20 Aug 1820 Father: Jesse SELLECK b: 8 Jun 1795 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT Mother: Tammy MEAD b: Abt. 1799 in CT Marriage 1 Catalina G. CUNNINGHAM b: 16 May 1825 in New York City, NY Married: 8 Oct 1842 in Keyport, Monmouth Co., NJ Children Alfred Perry SELLECK b: 28 Dec 1846 in New York City, NY George Gordon SELLECK b: 27 Jul 1844 in New York City, NY Georgianna M. SELLECK b: 6 May 1848 in Nashville, Davidson Co., TN Lucian L. SELLECK b: 12 Jun 1853 in Pittsburg, PA Guy M. SELLECK b: 12 Jun 1853 in Pittsburg, PA Catalina G. SELLECK b: 7 Apr 1856 in Janesville, Rock Co., WI Joshua C. SELLECK b: 20 May 1859 in Monticello, Green Co., WI Charles B. SELLECK b: 16 Feb 1865 in Monticello, Green Co., WI Marriage 2 Sara Jane HILL b: 5 Oct 1844 in Lycoming, PA Married: 11 Dec 1874 in Mount Pleasant, Green Co., WI Children Ernest Mead SELLECK b: 4 Jul 1877 in Monticello, Green Co., WI Floyd H. SELLECK b: 10 Jun 1882 in Monticello, Green Co., WI -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115389473 Name: Alfred Perry SELLECK Given Name: Alfred Perry Surname: SELLECK Sex: M Birth: 28 Dec 1846 in New York City, NY Death: 31 Jan 1926 in Evansville, Rock Co., WI Census: 1920 Wisconsin, Rock Co., Union Twsp, Census: 1880 Clarno, Green Co., WI Occupation: Farmer Event: Civil War - Co. D, 36th WI Infantry, Rank - Private Military Service Feb 1864-Jul 1865 Enlisted from Monticello, Green Co., WI Father: Hanford Mead SELLECK b: 1822 in Hart Island, Long Island Sound, NY Mother: Catalina G. CUNNINGHAM b: 16 May 1825 in New York City, NY Marriage 1 Mary Elizabeth SHERMAN b: 1848 in Elks Creek, Erie Co., PA Married: 13 May 1866 in Green Co., WI Children Laura Givens SELLECK b: 2 Apr 1867 in Green Co., WI Emma M. SELLECK b: Abt. 1872 in WI Luella L. SELLECK b: Abt. 1875 in WI -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115389470 Name: Laura Givens SELLECK Given Name: Laura Givens Surname: SELLECK Sex: F Birth: 2 Apr 1867 in Green Co., WI Death: 22 Apr 1925 Father: Alfred Perry SELLECK b: 28 Dec 1846 in New York City, NY Mother: Mary Elizabeth SHERMAN b: 1848 in Elks Creek, Erie Co., PA Marriage 1 John William CRAWFORD b: Abt. 1864 in WI Married: 25 Feb 1885 in Green Co., WI Children Archie Burr CRAWFORD b: 13 Sep 1906 in near Brooklyn or Magnolia Corners, Rock Co., WI LaVerne Dell CRAWFORD b: 2 May 1886 in Dayton, WI William John CRAWFORD b: 1 Aug 1888 in Rock Co., WI Maud Mary CRAWFORD b: 3 Nov 1891 Pearle Serena CRAWFORD b: 4 Feb 1895 in Evansville, Rock Co., WI Darrell Orlo CRAWFORD b: 23 Nov 1901 in WI Roy Douglas CRAWFORD b: 22 Sep 1904 in WI -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115389444 Name: Archie Burr CRAWFORD Given Name: Archie Burr Surname: CRAWFORD Sex: M Birth: 13 Sep 1906 in near Brooklyn or Magnolia Corners, Rock Co., WI Death: 20 Dec 1997 in Janesville, Rock Co., WI Burial: Brandon Cemetery, Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Occupation: Automobile mechanic and shoe repairman Event: 396-09-2437 Social Security Number Burial: Sec. F; Row 7; Plot 3 Father: John William CRAWFORD b: Abt. 1864 in WI Mother: Laura Givens SELLECK b: 2 Apr 1867 in Green Co., WI Marriage 1 Edith Lourine WETZEL b: 15 Jun 1920 in Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Married: 28 Mar 1942 in Evansville, Rock Co., WI Children Living CRAWFORD Marriage 2 Anna E. KLUTTERMAN b: 18 Sep 1910 Children John William CRAWFORD b: 22 Nov 1928 in Evansville, Rock Co., WI Helen Mary CRAWFORD b: 10 Oct 1930 in Evansville, Rock Co., WI Living CRAWFORD Bernice Elaine CRAWFORD b: 11 Oct 1933 in Evansville, Rock Co., WI Living CRAWFORD* -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Subscribe | Help? Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115389446 Name: Edith Lourine WETZEL Given Name: Edith Lourine Surname: WETZEL Sex: F Birth: 15 Jun 1920 in Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Death: 10 Jan 1977 in Sun Prairie, Dane Co., WI Burial: Brandon Cemetery, Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Event: 395-12-6820 Social Security Number WI Burial: Sec. F; Row 7; Plot 4 Father: Otto WETZEL b: 1878 Mother: Theresa VOLBRIGHT b: 19 Jul 1880 in Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Marriage 1 Archie Burr CRAWFORD b: 13 Sep 1906 in near Brooklyn or Magnolia Corners, Rock Co., WI Married: 28 Mar 1942 in Evansville, Rock Co., WI Children Living CRAWFORD Marriage 2 Spouse Unknown -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Subscribe | Help? Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115389446 Name: Edith Lourine WETZEL Given Name: Edith Lourine Surname: WETZEL Sex: F Birth: 15 Jun 1920 in Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Death: 10 Jan 1977 in Sun Prairie, Dane Co., WI Burial: Brandon Cemetery, Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Event: 395-12-6820 Social Security Number WI Burial: Sec. F; Row 7; Plot 4 Father: Otto WETZEL b: 1878 Mother: Theresa VOLBRIGHT b: 19 Jul 1880 in Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Marriage 1 Archie Burr CRAWFORD b: 13 Sep 1906 in near Brooklyn or Magnolia Corners, Rock Co., WI Married: 28 Mar 1942 in Evansville, Rock Co., WI Children Living CRAWFORD Marriage 2 Spouse Unknown -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Subscribe | Help? Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115389446 Name: Edith Lourine WETZEL Given Name: Edith Lourine Surname: WETZEL Sex: F Birth: 15 Jun 1920 in Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Death: 10 Jan 1977 in Sun Prairie, Dane Co., WI Burial: Brandon Cemetery, Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Event: 395-12-6820 Social Security Number WI Burial: Sec. F; Row 7; Plot 4 Father: Otto WETZEL b: 1878 Mother: Theresa VOLBRIGHT b: 19 Jul 1880 in Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Marriage 1 Archie Burr CRAWFORD b: 13 Sep 1906 in near Brooklyn or Magnolia Corners, Rock Co., WI Married: 28 Mar 1942 in Evansville, Rock Co., WI Children Living CRAWFORD Marriage 2 Spouse Unknown -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Subscribe | Help? Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115389446 Name: Edith Lourine WETZEL Given Name: Edith Lourine Surname: WETZEL Sex: F Birth: 15 Jun 1920 in Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Death: 10 Jan 1977 in Sun Prairie, Dane Co., WI Burial: Brandon Cemetery, Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Event: 395-12-6820 Social Security Number WI Burial: Sec. F; Row 7; Plot 4 Father: Otto WETZEL b: 1878 Mother: Theresa VOLBRIGHT b: 19 Jul 1880 in Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Marriage 1 Archie Burr CRAWFORD b: 13 Sep 1906 in near Brooklyn or Magnolia Corners, Rock Co., WI Married: 28 Mar 1942 in Evansville, Rock Co., WI Children Living CRAWFORD Marriage 2 Spouse Unknown -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 B: P: M: 4 William F. WETZEL P: B: 8 Mar 1852 D: P: Prussia P: M: P: 9 D: 27 Dec 1911 B: P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI P: D: P: 2 Otto WETZEL 10 B: 1878 B: P: P: M: 25 Sep 1901 M: P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI 5 Amelia UNKNOWN P: D: 1948 B: 7 Nov 1857/58 D: P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI P: Prussia P: D: 12 Apr 1926 P: Brandon Cemetery, Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI D-10-5 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Edith Lourine WETZEL B: 15 Jun 1920 12 Carl W. VOLBRECHT P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI B: 29 Nov 1823 D: 10 Jan 1977 P: Germany P: Sun Prairie, Dane Co., WI M: 6 Herman VOLBRECHT P: B: 14/24 Apr 1854 D: 24 Mar 1895 P: Germany P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI M: 25 Apr 1877 P: 13 Wilhelmine UNKNOWN D: 21 Jun 1902 B: 9 Feb 1830 P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI P: Germany D: 5 Mar 1902 P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI 3 Theresa VOLBRIGHT 14 B: 19 Jul 1880 B: P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI P: D: 2 Feb 1949 M: P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI 7 Amelia PROCTNOW P: B: 24 Jun 1856 D: P: Germany P: D: 3 Mar 1924 P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Subscribe | Help? Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I115389427 Name: Living CRAWFORD Sex: M Father: Archie Burr CRAWFORD b: 13 Sep 1906 in near Brooklyn or Magnolia Corners, Rock Co., WI Mother: Edith Lourine WETZEL b: 15 Jun 1920 in Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI Marriage 1 Dawn Ardelle (Marie) ALLEN b: 27 Jul 1943 in Seattle, King Co., WA Children Living CRAWFORD Michael Allen CRAWFORD b: 22 Sep 1964 in Sacramento, Sacramento Co., CA Living CRAWFORD Marriage 2 Rita Marie SMITH b: 21 Sep 1948 in Madison, Dane Co., WI Children Living CRAWFORD Marriage 3 Living MINNER Marriage 4 Living NEIS (ZIMMER) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 B: P: M: 4 Don BRABEC P: B: D: P: P: M: 11 Sep 1929 P: 9 D: B: P: P: D: P: 2 Living BRABEC 10 Henry Smith HINES => B: B: 27 Mar 1910 P: P: Hopkins, MO M: M: P: 5 Beverly HINES P: D: B: D: 20 Aug 1975 P: P: P: D: P: 11 Florence Edith KISTLER B: P: D: P: 1 Living BRABEC B: 12 Archie Burr CRAWFORD => P: B: 13 Sep 1906 D: P: near Brooklyn or Magnolia Corners, Rock Co., WI P: M: 28 Mar 1942 6 Living CRAWFORD P: Evansville, Rock Co., WI B: D: 20 Dec 1997 P: P: Janesville, Rock Co., WI M: P: 13 Edith Lourine WETZEL => D: B: 15 Jun 1920 P: P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI D: 10 Jan 1977 P: Sun Prairie, Dane Co., WI 3 Living CRAWFORD 14 Archie Delmer ALLEN JR. => B: B: P: P: D: M: P: 7 Dawn Ardelle (Marie) ALLEN P: B: 27 Jul 1943 D: P: Seattle, King Co., WA P: D: 25 Dec 1977 P: Napa, Napa Co., CA 15 Mable (Joann) Pearl BLAINE B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 B: P: M: 4 Don BRABEC P: B: D: P: P: M: 11 Sep 1929 P: 9 D: B: P: P: D: P: 2 Living BRABEC 10 Henry Smith HINES => B: B: 27 Mar 1910 P: P: Hopkins, MO M: M: P: 5 Beverly HINES P: D: B: D: 20 Aug 1975 P: P: P: D: P: 11 Florence Edith KISTLER B: P: D: P: 1 Living BRABEC B: 12 Archie Burr CRAWFORD => P: B: 13 Sep 1906 D: P: near Brooklyn or Magnolia Corners, Rock Co., WI P: M: 28 Mar 1942 6 Living CRAWFORD P: Evansville, Rock Co., WI B: D: 20 Dec 1997 P: P: Janesville, Rock Co., WI M: P: 13 Edith Lourine WETZEL => D: B: 15 Jun 1920 P: P: Brandon, Fond du Lac Co., WI D: 10 Jan 1977 P: Sun Prairie, Dane Co., WI 3 Living CRAWFORD 14 Archie Delmer ALLEN JR. => B: B: P: P: D: M: P: 7 Dawn Ardelle (Marie) ALLEN P: B: 27 Jul 1943 D: P: Seattle, King Co., WA P: D: 25 Dec 1977 P: Napa, Napa Co., CA 15 Mable (Joann) Pearl BLAINE B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 William HINES => B: 23 Feb 1824 P: Hampshire Co., VA M: 6 Feb 1848 4 Smith HINES P: Peoria, Peoria Co., IL B: 9 Dec 1865 D: 17 Nov 1900 P: Warren Co., IA P: Warren Co., IA M: 28 Jul 1889 P: Cass Co., IA 9 Clarissa Jane CHAPIN => D: 26 Apr 1948 B: 29 Apr 1830 P: Omaha, Douglas Co., NE P: D: 22 Nov 1896 P: 2 William Henry HINES 10 Henry Avarn BARTON B: 15 Jul 1892 B: P: Cass Co., IA P: M: 7 Feb 1909 M: P: 5 Katherine Mary BARTON P: D: 22 Feb 1968 B: 8 Jun 1866 D: P: Phoenix, Maricopa Co., AZ P: P: D: 7 Jan 1930 P: 11 Harriet Eliza UNKNOWN B: P: D: P: 1 Henry Smith HINES B: 27 Mar 1910 12 P: Hopkins, MO B: D: 20 Aug 1975 P: P: M: 6 John C. PRATHER P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 13 D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 Bessie Lodema PRATHER 14 B: B: P: P: D: M: P: 7 Sophia UNKNOWN P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 B: P: M: 4 P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 9 D: B: P: P: D: P: 2 Joseph CHAPIN 10 B: 17 Aug 1801 B: P: P: M: M: P: 5 P: D: 24 Apr 1880 B: D: P: P: P: D: P: 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Clarissa Jane CHAPIN B: 29 Apr 1830 12 P: B: D: 22 Nov 1896 P: P: M: 6 P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 13 D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 Maria Maribaum BLAKESLEY 14 B: 28 Feb 1808 B: P: P: D: 23 Jan 1897 M: P: 7 P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 B: P: M: 4 John HINES P: B: 1776 D: P: Berkeley Co., VA P: M: 9 Mar 1795 P: Frederick Co., MD 9 D: Bet. 1815 - 1820 B: P: Hampshire Co., VA P: D: P: 2 John HINES 10 Ludwig RODERICK => B: 1 Oct 1799 B: 1723 P: P: Leiselheim, Germany M: 8 Feb 1820 M: 1763 P: Hampshire Co., VA 5 Mary RODERICK P: MD D: 15 Feb 1883 B: 16 Jan 1775 D: 28 Oct 1797 P: P: Frederick Co., MD P: Wp, Hagerstown, Washington Co., MD D: 16 Sep 1868 P: OH 11 Catharine UNKNOWN B: Abt. 1727 P: Leiselheim, Germany D: 1795 P: 1 William HINES B: 23 Feb 1824 12 P: Hampshire Co., VA B: D: 17 Nov 1900 P: P: Warren Co., IA M: 6 P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 13 D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 Eleanor BELFORD 14 B: 25 Jan 1799 B: P: Hampshire Co., VA P: D: 16 Oct 1877 M: P: Richwood Twsp., Peoria, IL 7 P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 B: P: M: 4 John HINES P: B: 1776 D: P: Berkeley Co., VA P: M: 9 Mar 1795 P: Frederick Co., MD 9 D: Bet. 1815 - 1820 B: P: Hampshire Co., VA P: D: P: 2 John HINES 10 Ludwig RODERICK => B: 1 Oct 1799 B: 1723 P: P: Leiselheim, Germany M: 8 Feb 1820 M: 1763 P: Hampshire Co., VA 5 Mary RODERICK P: MD D: 15 Feb 1883 B: 16 Jan 1775 D: 28 Oct 1797 P: P: Frederick Co., MD P: Wp, Hagerstown, Washington Co., MD D: 16 Sep 1868 P: OH 11 Catharine UNKNOWN B: Abt. 1727 P: Leiselheim, Germany D: 1795 P: 1 William HINES B: 23 Feb 1824 12 P: Hampshire Co., VA B: D: 17 Nov 1900 P: P: Warren Co., IA M: 6 P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 13 D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 Eleanor BELFORD 14 B: 25 Jan 1799 B: P: Hampshire Co., VA P: D: 16 Oct 1877 M: P: Richwood Twsp., Peoria, IL 7 P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 Hans ROTHROCK B: Abt.. 1602 P: Germany M: 10 May 1625 4 Hans Conradt ROTHROCK P: Goppingen, Wuerttemberg, Germany B: 1639 D: P: Leiselheim, Baden, Germany P: M: P: 9 Anna ENGEL D: 1702 B: P: Leiselheim, Baden, Germany P: D: P: 2 Johannes ROTHROCK 10 B: 1684 B: P: Leiselheim, Baden, Germany P: M: 1712 M: P: Germany 5 Agnes UNKNOWN P: D: 1744 B: D: P: York Co., PA P: P: D: P: 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Ludwig RODERICK B: 1723 12 P: Leiselheim, Germany B: D: 28 Oct 1797 P: P: Wp, Hagerstown, Washington Co., MD M: 6 P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 13 D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 Anna Margaretha KRACKEL 14 B: 1682 B: P: Lieselheim, Germany P: D: 1731 M: P: 7 P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 Hans ROTHROCK B: Abt.. 1602 P: Germany M: 10 May 1625 4 Hans Conradt ROTHROCK P: Goppingen, Wuerttemberg, Germany B: 1639 D: P: Leiselheim, Baden, Germany P: M: P: 9 Anna ENGEL D: 1702 B: P: Leiselheim, Baden, Germany P: D: P: 2 Johannes ROTHROCK 10 B: 1684 B: P: Leiselheim, Baden, Germany P: M: 1712 M: P: Germany 5 Agnes UNKNOWN P: D: 1744 B: D: P: York Co., PA P: P: D: P: 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Ludwig RODERICK B: 1723 12 P: Leiselheim, Germany B: D: 28 Oct 1797 P: P: Wp, Hagerstown, Washington Co., MD M: 6 P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 13 D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 Anna Margaretha KRACKEL 14 B: 1682 B: P: Lieselheim, Germany P: D: 1731 M: P: 7 P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Subscribe | Help? Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 Samuel WHITING I => B: P: M: 4 Joseph WHITING P: B: 6 Apr 1641 D: P: P: M: P: 9 Elizabeth ST. JOHN => D: B: 12 Jan 1604 P: P: Bletsoe, County Bedford, England D: 3 Mar 1676/77 P: Lynn, CT 2 Joseph WHITING 10 Rev. John BISHOP => B: 1692 B: 3 May 1610 P: Southampton, Long Island, NY P: Holway Manor, Chattistock, Dorset, England M: 21 Apr 1720 M: 1645 P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT 5 Rebecca BISHOP P: Cattistock,,,England D: 6 Aug 1757 B: 26 Feb 1663 D: 16 Nov 1694 P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT D: 26 Apr 1726 P: Southhampton, Long Island, NY 11 Rebecca GOODYEAR => B: 1626 P: St. Mary, Woolnoth Parish, London, England D: 1679 P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT 1 Martha (Mary) WHITING B: 2 Apr 1728 12 John HOLLY => P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT B: 1618 D: P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT P: M: Abt. 1643 6 Elisha HOLLY P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT B: 6 Mar 1658/59 D: 25 May 1681 P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT M: 2 Dec 1686 P: 13 Mary WAITSILL D: 28 Oct 1719 B: Abt. 1620 P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT D: 1 Apr 1714 P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT 3 Abigail HOLLY 14 Stephen HOLMES => B: 8 Jun 1700 B: Abt. 1632 P: P: York Co., England D: 2 May 1733 M: WFT Est. 1649-1684 P: 7 Martha HOLMES P: B: WFT Est. 1648-1670 D: 15 May 1710 P: P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT D: 4 Aug 1721 P: 15 Martha UNKNOWN B: WFT Est. 1626-1653 P: D: 13 Mar 1727/28 P: Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 Alexander ST. JOHN => B: P: M: 4 Henry ST. JOHN P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 9 Jane DALYSON D: 1598 B: P: P: D: P: 2 Sir Oliver ST. JOHN 10 B: Abt. 1580 B: P: England P: M: M: P: 5 Jane NEALE P: D: Abt. 1643 B: D: P: P: P: D: P: 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Elizabeth ST. JOHN B: 12 Jan 1604 12 Thomas DE BULKELEY P: Bletsoe, County Bedford, England B: 1515 D: 3 Mar 1676/77 P: Buntingsdale, Shropshire,England P: Lynn, CT M: 6 Edward BULKELEY P: B: 1540 D: 1591 P: Woore Shropshire, England P: England M: P: 13 Elizabeth GROSVENOR => D: 5 Jan 1620 B: Abt. 1515 P: Odell, Bedfordshire, England P: Bellaport, Salop, England D: 1591 P: England 3 Sarah BULKELEY 14 John IRBY B: 1580 B: 1520 P: Odell, Bedfordshire, England P: Odell, Bedfordshire, England D: 1611 M: P: Keysoe, England 7 Olive IRBY P: B: 1547 D: P: Kirton, Bedfordshire, England P: D: 10 Mar 1614/15 P: Odell, Bedfordshire, England 15 Rose OVERTON B: 1526 P: Clerkenwell, Middlesex, England D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 B: P: M: 4 Raandall GROSVENOR P: B: 1450 D: P: England P: M: P: 9 D: 1 Mar 1521/22 B: P: England P: D: P: 2 Randall GROSVENOR 10 B: 1480 B: P: Shropshire, England P: M: M: P: 5 Margaret MAINWARING P: D: 1559 B: Abt. 1460 D: P: England P: Carincham, England P: D: P: 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Elizabeth GROSVENOR B: Abt. 1515 12 Robert CHARLTON => P: Bellaport, Salop, England B: D: 1591 P: P: England M: 6 Richard CHARLTON P: B: 1450 D: P: P: M: P: 13 Mary CORBET => D: 1522 B: P: P: D: P: 3 Anne CHARLTON 14 William MAINWARING B: 1482 B: P: Apley, Shropshire, England P: D: 1560 M: P: 7 Anne MAINWARING P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 Richard DE KNIGHTLEY B: P: M: 4 William DE KNIGHTLEY P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 9 D: B: P: P: D: P: 2 Thomas DE CHARLTON (DE KNIGHTLEY) 10 Thomas DE CHARLTON => B: 30 Mar 1394 B: 1345 P: P: OfAppleby, County Salop M: M: P: 5 Anne DE CHARLETON P: D: 14 Jan 1460 B: Abt. 1379 D: 6 Oct 1387 P: P: P: D: Abt. 1399 P: 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Robert CHARLTON B: 12 P: B: D: P: P: M: 6 Robert FRANCIS P: B: D: P: Of Foremark P: M: P: 13 D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 Elizabeth FRANCIS 14 B: B: P: P: D: M: P: 7 P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 B: P: M: 4 Alan DE CHARLETON P: B: D: P: Of Apley, Shropshire P: M: P: 9 D: 3 Dec 1360 B: P: P: D: P: 2 Alan DE CHARLETON 10 Alan LA ZOUCHE => B: Abt. 1318/19 B: 9 Oct 1267 P: P: M: M: P: 5 Elena (Eleanor) LA ZOUCHE P: D: 3 May 1349 B: 1288 D: 25 Mar 1314 P: P: P: D: P: 11 Eleanor SEAGRAVE B: P: D: P: 1 Thomas DE CHARLTON B: 1345 12 P: OfAppleby, County Salop B: D: 6 Oct 1387 P: P: M: 6 P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 13 D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 Margery FITZ AER 14 B: 4 Apr 1314 B: P: P: D: 1349 M: P: 7 P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 Roger LA ZOUCHE => B: Abt. 1182 P: M: 4 Alan LA ZOUCHE P: B: Abt. 1203 D: P: P: M: P: 9 D: B: P: P: D: P: 2 Roger LA ZOUCHE 10 B: 1240 B: P: P: M: M: P: 5 P: D: Bef. 15 Oct 1285 B: D: P: P: P: D: P: 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Alan LA ZOUCHE B: 9 Oct 1267 12 William LONGESPEE (PLANTAGENET) => P: B: 1176 D: 25 Mar 1314 P: P: M: 6 Stephan LONGESPEE P: B: D: 7 Mar 1225/26 P: P: M: P: 13 Ela FITZPATRICK COUNTESS OF SALISBURY => D: 1260 B: Abt. 1190 P: P: D: Abt. 1261 P: 3 Ela LONGESPEE 14 B: B: P: P: D: M: P: 7 Emmeline DE RIDDLEFORD P: B: D: P: P: D: 1276 P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 Foulques V "Le Jeune" COUNT OF ANJOU => B: P: M: 4 Geoffrey V "Le Bon" PLANTAGENET P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 9 Ermengarde (Ermentrude) DU MAINE D: B: P: P: D: P: 2 Henry II KING OF ENGLAND 10 Henry I "Beauclerc" KING OF ENGLAND => B: 5 Mar 1132/33 B: P: Le Mans, Sarthe, France P: M: M: P: 5 Matilda (Maud) EMPRESS OF GERMANY P: D: 6 Jul 1189 B: D: P: Chinon, Indre-et-Loire, France P: P: D: P: 11 Matilda "Aethling" PRINCESS OF SCOTLAND => B: P: D: P: 1 William LONGESPEE (PLANTAGENET) B: 1176 12 Richard FITZPONS P: B: D: 7 Mar 1225/26 P: P: M: 6 Walter DE CLIFFORD P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 13 Maud FITZWALTER D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 Rosamond Joan DE CLIFFORD 14 Ralph DE TONEY B: B: P: England P: D: M: P: 7 Margaret DE TONI P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 Alice CHENEY B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions 8 . RICHARD II THE GOOD" B: Abt. 958 P: M: 4 . ROBERT I "THE MAGNIFICENT" "THE DEVIL" P: B: 1000 D: P: P: M: P: 9 D: B: P: P: D: P: 2 William I "The Conqueror" "The Bastard" KING OF ENGLAND 10 B: 14 Oct 1024 B: P: Falaise, Calvados, France P: M: M: P: 5 Harlette Arlette (Harleva) UNKNOWN P: D: 10 Sep 1087 B: Abt. 1003 D: P: Hermentruvilleby, Rouen, Seine-Maritime, France P: P: D: P: 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Henry I "Beauclerc" KING OF ENGLAND B: 12 P: B: D: P: P: M: 6 P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 13 D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 14 B: B: P: P: D: M: P: 7 P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Login | Subscribe | Help? Home Search Records Family Trees Message Boards Learning Center Shop R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Entries: 2288 Updated: Sat Jun 7 11:48:04 2003 Contact: Robert Crawford -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in text format 8 Ethelred II "The Unready" KING OF ENGLAND => B: Abt. 968 P: Wessex, England M: 4 Edmund II "Ironside" KING OF ENGLAND P: B: D: 23 Apr 1016 P: P: London, Middlesex, England M: P: 9 Alfgieu (Aelflaed) QUEEN OF ENGLAND D: B: P: P: D: P: 2 Edward "Atheling" PRINCE OF ENGLAND 10 B: B: P: P: M: M: P: 5 Ealdgyth (Algitha) QUEEN OF ENGLAND P: D: B: D: P: P: P: D: P: 11 B: P: D: P: 1 Matilda "Aethling" PRINCESS OF SCOTLAND B: 12 P: B: D: P: P: M: 6 P: B: D: P: P: M: P: 13 D: B: P: P: D: P: 3 Agatha VON BRUNSWICK PRINCESS OF ENGLAND 14 B: B: P: P: D: M: P: 7 P: B: D: P: P: D: P: 15 B: P: D: P: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Printer Friendly Version Search Ancestry Search AWT Join Ancestry.com Today! About Ancestry | Affiliate Program | Privacy Statement | Contact Us Copyright © 1998-2003, MyFamily.com Inc. – Terms and Conditions Ribs - Samara's << Previous Next >> Bob Crawford - Mar 18, 2003 View | Edit | Delete | Viewers | Reply to this item Title: Ribs - Samara's Description: Ingredients: 1-2 Country Ribs Boneless Packages 2 c.Ketchup 2 c.Water 1/3 Jar BBQ sauce 1 tlb sp.Worcester sauce 1/2 c.Sugar 1 1/2 tsp. Dry Mustard 1 tsp.Salt 1/2 tsp.Pepper 1 1/2 tsp.Onion powder 1 tsp.Season Salt 1/4 tsp.Dill weed 1/2 tsp.Basil Brown Sugar to taste(if tangy add more) Stir all together - add ribs -cover & bake at 350 for 1 1/2-2 hours Use a pan that you would use for a turkey You must eat these with REAL MASHED POTATOES!!!!!! This will take a few times to master at, but once you do you'll have them all the time!!! This is my grandmas recipe so its been passed down to alot of people,someday when you come to visit me i'll make them for you!!!!Love,Samara Directions: Stir all together - add ribs -cover & bake at 350 for 1 1/2 Use a pan that you would use for a turkey You must eat these with REAL MASHED POTATOES!!!!!! This will take a few times to master at, but once you do you'll have them all the time!!! This is my grandmas recipe so its been passed down to alot of people,someday when you come to visit me i'll make them for you!!!!Love,Samara Number Of Servings: Preparation Time: Reply: << Previous Next >> About Us | Help/FAQ | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Tell A Friend | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions | Advertising Copyright © 1998-2004 MyFamily.com, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All rights reserved. Bourbon Pecan No-Cook Ice Cream << Previous Next >> Bob Crawford - Jun 27, 2003 View | Edit | Delete | Viewers | Reply to this item Title: Bourbon Pecan No-Cook Ice Cream Description: No custard to make and only five ingredients! Ingredients: 3 Cups Half and half 1/2 Cup Light brown sugar 1/4 Cup Sugar 1-1/4 Cup Broken pecan pieces 3 Tbls Bourbon Directions: Combine half and half and sugars and blend or mix until sugars are disolved. Stir in the pecan pieces and refrigerate until chilled, about an hour. Pour the mixture into an ice cream maker and freeze according to manufacturer's directions until moderately set. Stir in the bourbon and continue freezing until the ice cream is firm. Serve immediately or pack the ice cream into an airtight container, cover tightly with plastic wrap and freeze up to three days. Number Of Servings:Makes about 1 quart Preparation Time: Reply: << Previous Next >> About Us | Help/FAQ | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Tell A Friend | Affiliate Program | Terms Sweet & Sour Refrigerator Pickles << Previous Next >> Bob Crawford - Dec 10, 2002 View | Edit | Delete | Viewers | Reply to this item Title: Sweet & Sour Refrigerator Pickles Description: Easy to make Ingredients: 4to6 Large cucumbers, thinly sliced 2 Medium onions, thinly sliced 1 Medium green pepper, thinly sliced 1/4 c. Salt 1 Tbsp Pickling spice 1 1/2 tsp Celery seed Directions: Wash cucumbers and slice thin. Place all ingredients in a large bowl; mix well and let stand for 2 hours. Drain carefully, keeping as much of the spices as possible. Pack loosely into sterilized jars. Pour syrup over top. Turn jars over occasionally to mix spices. Ready to eat in three days. Keep refrigerated. Syrup: 2 Cups Sugar 2 Cups White Vinegar Combine and let stand for 2 hours or until sugar is disolved. Number Of Servings:Makes 4 Pints Preparation Time: Reply: Rice Pudding << Previous Next >> Bob Crawford - Dec 9, 2002 View | Edit | Delete | Viewers | Reply to this item Title: Rice Pudding Description: Baked Rice Pudding Ingredients: 2-1/2 cups Cooked Rice 2 Tbls. Butter 2 cups Milk 1 cup Sugar 1 tsp. Vanilla 1/2 cup Raisins 1/8 tsp. Salt 5 Eggs Cinnamon Directions: In a mixing bowl, combine the rice with 1/2 cup of sugar, the vanilla, and the raisins. In another bowl, beat together the eggs, milk, salt and remaining sugar. Stir in the rice and raisin mixture and pour the combined ingredients into a buttered 2-quart baking dish. Bake at 350 degrees for 40 minutes or until it is firm and lightly browned. Remove from the oven and sprinkle lightly with cinnamon (or nutmeg). Put in refrigerator and serve cold. Number Of Servings: Preparation Time: Reply: Refrigerator Pickles (3-Day) << Previous Next >> Bob Crawford - Dec 9, 2002 View | Edit | Delete | Viewers | Reply to this item Title: Refrigerator Pickles (3-Day) Description: Quick to make Ingredients: 6 Cups Cucumbers, thinly sliced 2 Cups Onions, thinly sliced 1 1/2Cups White vinegar 1 Cup Sugar 1/2 tsp Salt 1/2 tsp Mustard seed 1/2 tsp Celery seed 1/2 tsp Ground tumeric Directions: Place half of cucumbers in a large glass bowl and top with half of the onions. Repeat procedure with remaining cucumbers and onions. Combine vinegar and remaining ingredients in a saucepan; stir well. Bring to a boil; cook 1 minute. Pour over cucumber mixture; let cool. Cover and marinate in refrigerator for at least 3 days. Pickles can be stored in refrigerator for up to 1 month. Number Of Servings: Preparation Time: Reply: Waldorf Astoria Red Satin Cake << Previous Next >> Bob Crawford - Dec 9, 2002 View | Edit | Delete | Viewers | Reply to this item Title: Waldorf Astoria Red Satin Cake Description: Expensive Cake Ingredients: Directions: Number Of Servings: Preparation Time: Reply: << Previous Next >> About Us | Help/FAQ | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Tell A Friend | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions | Advertising Copyright © 1998-2004 MyFamily.com, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All rights reserved Hot German Potato Salad << Previous Next >> Bob Crawford - Sep 11, 2002 View | Edit | Delete | Viewers | Reply to this item Title: Hot German Potato Salad Description: Family recipe from Wisconsin Ingredients: 1/4 lb. Bacon slices 1/4 cup Onion, chopped 1 Tbls. Flour 2 tsp. Sugar 1/8 tsp. Salt 1 dash Pepper 1/2 cup Water 3 Tbls. Vinegar 1 1/3 c. Cooked, sliced potato (peeled) - about 2 medium Directions: 1. Cook bacon in frying pan until crisp. Remove from pan and drain on paper towel. Crumble bacon. Discard bacon fat. 2. Cook onion in frying pan until tender. 3. Mix flour, sugar, salt, and pepper. Stir into onion. 4. Gradually stir in water and vinegar. Cook, stirring constantly, until thickened - about 3 minutes. 5. Add potatos and bacon. Mix gently. Heat to serving temperature over low heat - about 5 minutes. Number Of Servings:2 - 1 cup servings. Preparation Time: Reply: Bob's Meatloaf << Previous Next >> Bob Crawford - Sep 11, 2002 View | Edit | Delete | Viewers | Reply to this item Title: Bob's Meatloaf Description: Great meatloaf hot also good for cold for sandwiches. Ingredients: 2# Hamburger (the cheap stuff will do fine) 1 Egg 1/2c. Corn Flake Crumbs (Kellog's) 1Tbls Ketchup (Heintz) 1 1/2 tsp Salt 1 tsp Sugar 1-3 tsp Horseradish (Morehouse) 1 Med. Onion 1 cup Milk (scalded) GLAZE: 1/4 cup Ketchup 3 Tbls. Lt Brown Suger 1 tsp Dry Mustard 1 tsp Nutmeg Directions: Mix all meatloaf ingredients thoroughly by hand . Put into 9" loaf pan. Add glaze on top. Optional - add 3 slices bacon during last 45 min. of baking. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 1/2 hrs. NOTE: All measurements must be exact!! Number Of Servings: Preparation Time:2 Hrs. Reply: << Previous Next >> E=mc << Previous Next >> Bob Crawford - Mar 12, 2004 View | Edit | Delete | Viewers | Reply to this item CIPA Home | Popular Articles BEYOND E=mc2 A first glimpse of a postmodern physics, in which mass, inertia and gravity arise from underlying electromagnetic processes Bernard Haisch, Alfonso Rueda & H.E. Puthoff published in THE SCIENCES, Vol. 34, No. 6, November / December 1994, pp. 26-31 copyright 1994, New York Academy of Sciences (posted with permission) The most famous of all equations must surely be E=mc2. In popular culture that relation between energy and mass is virtually synonymous with relativity, and Einstein, its originator, has become a symbol of modern physics. The usual interpretation of the equation is that one kind of fundamental physical thing, mass (m in the equation), can be converted into a quite different kind of fundamental physical thing, energy (E in the equation), and vice versa; the two quantities are inextricably intertwined, related by the factor c2, the square of the velocity of light. The energy of the sun, for instance, comes from nuclear fusion, in which the nuclei of hydrogen atoms fuse together to become the nuclei of helium atoms. In the prevailing view, mass is lost in the fusion reaction, and as one popular astronomy textbook puts it, "The small fraction of mass that disappears in the process is converted into energy according to the formula E=mc2." Recent work by us and others now appears to offer a radically different insight into the relation E=mc2, as well as into the very idea of mass itself. To put it simply, the concept of mass may be neither fundamental nor necessary in physics. In the view we will present, Einstein's formula is even more significant than physicists have realized. It is actually a statement about how much energy is required to give the appearance of a certain amount of mass, rather than about the conversion of one fundamental thing, energy, into another fundamental thing, mass. Indeed, if that view is correct, there is no such thing as mass-only electric charge and energy, which together create the illusion of mass. The physical universe is made up of massless electric charges immersed in a vast, energetic, all-pervasive electromagnetic field. It is the interaction of those charges and the electromagnetic field that creates the appearance of mass. In other words, the magazine you now hold in your hands is massless; properly understood, it is physically nothing more than a collection of electric charges embedded in a universal energetic electromagnetic field and acted on by the field in such a way as to make you think the magazine has the property of mass. Its apparent weight and solidity arise from the interactions of charges and field. Besides recasting the prevailing view of mass, this idea would address one of the most profound problems of physics, the riddle of how gravity can be unified with the other three fundamental forces of nature. The electromagnetic force and the weak force, which is responsible for nuclear decay, have been shown to be two manifestations of a single force, appropriately called the electroweak force. There are tantalizing hints that the strong force, which binds nuclei together, will someday be unified with the electroweak force. But until now gravity has resisted all attempts at unification. If the new view is correct, however, gravity would not need to be separately unified. Just as mass would arise from the electromagnetic force, so would gravity. What is mass? Two key properties define the concept of the mass of a given amount of matter, namely, its inertia and the gravitation to which the matter gives rise. Inertia was defined by Galileo as the property of matter that keeps an object in uniform motion once given an impetus, until the object is acted upon by some further impetus. Galileo's idea was generalized and quantified by Newton in his Principia. The tendency of an object to remain in uniform motion, and the tendency of the motion to change when impetus is applied, Newton expressed in one compact equation. The equation states that the acceleration a, or change of velocity, is proportional to the force F applied, where the constant of proportionality is the inertial mass m of the object in question: thus, F=ma. In other words, inertial mass is the resistance an object offers to being accelerated when it is subjected to a force. In Newton's equation of motion, when the application of a force ceases, the acceleration goes to zero, and the object remains in uniform motion. Objects are assumed to resist acceleration, because that resistance is an innate property of matter. But try as he might, Newton could not explain the origin of inertia. Imagine, he suggested, that the universe is empty except for a bucket partly filled with water. Furthermore, imagine the shape of the surface of the water: Is it flat? Then the water must be at rest. Is it curved, shaped in cross section like a parabolic reflector? Then the water must be rotating. But rotating with respect to what? That was the profound dilemma that Newton identified. If the universe were truly empty, as his thought experiment required, there would be no background against which the rotation could be measured. But because the shape of the water surface signals whether a rotation is taking place, Newton concluded that there is a fundamental spatial frame of reference, an "absolute space." Some 200 years later the nineteenth-century Austrian physicist and philosopher Ernst Mach took a contrary view. To Mach, Newton's thought experiment demonstrated the absurdity of the idea of absolute space. The shape of the water in a rotating bucket, Mach held, was conferred, somehow, through the presence of all the other matter in the universe. Thus Mach agreed with Newton that the property of inertia creates the need for a reference frame; he simply disagreed that such a reference frame could exist as a distinct, absolute entity. Distant matter, however, could define the reference frame. Unfortunately, his conjecture, which has come to be known as Mach's principle, remains more of a philosophical statement than a testable scientific proposition. In the early twentieth century a number of investigators, including Max Abraham, Hendrik Antoon Lorentz and Henri Poincare, suggested that inertial mass might arise from an effect called electrostatic self-energy. Any charged particle-the electron, for instance-possesses a certain quantity of electric charge. The charge is the source of an electric field, which carries energy-the electrostatic self-energy. It was proposed that the electrostatic self-energy might correspond to the inertial mass of the charged particle, through the equation E=mc2. But the theoretical mass of the electrostatic electron derived from the equation is many orders of magnitude larger than the actual observed mass of the electron, and the self-repulsion of the electrostatic forces would quickly disperse the electrostatic electron. Hence the theory fails. Our work suggests inertia is a property arising out of the vast, all-pervasive electromagnetic field we mentioned earlier, which is called the zero-point field (ZPF). The name comes from the fact that the field is held to exist in a vacuum-what is commonly thought of as "empty" space-even at the temperature of absolute zero, at which all thermal radiation is absent. The background energy of the vacuum serves as the reference, or zero point, for all processes. To understand how the ZPF might give rise to inertia, one must understand something about the nature of the field itself. Theoretical considerations indicate that the ZPF should be a background sea of electromagnetic radiation that is both uniform and isotropic (the same in all directions). The reader may already be familiar with a somewhat similar concept: the remnant radiation from the big bang. According to big bang cosmology, the universe began with a titanic explosion, which gave rise to hot, energetic radiation distributed throughout the infant universe. As the universe expanded and cooled, the radiation became much less energetic, but it still pervades space as a faint and nearly isotropic background of microwave radiation. Like the cosmic microwave background, the ZPF is a sea of radiation that fills the entire universe. There is a major difference, however. The cosmic microwave background has a rather feeble spectrum identical with the spectrum of an object in thermal equilibrium at a temperature of only 2.76 degrees Celsius above absolute zero. In contrast, the ZPF is a highly energetic emission whose predicted radiation spectrum departs radically from the spectrum of an object in thermal equilibrium. Instead of trailing off at high frequencies, the energy of the ZPF continues to rise sharply with the frequency of the radiation. Quantitatively, the energy density is proportional to the cube of the frequency; double the frequency, and the energy increases by a factor of eight. At what frequency the ZPF spectrum finally cuts off or loses its ability to interact with matter are important and still unresolved issues. A more profound difference between the cosmic microwave background and the ZPF is a result of the origin of the two emissions. When you switch on a lightbulb, the source of the light emission is clear; it is the heat produced by an electric current in the filament. The source of the cosmic microwave background can also be traced to known physical phenomena, namely, the heat radiation associated with the big bang, as modified by the later expansion and cooling of the universe. The origin of the ZPF is more esoteric. In fact, two distinct views about it exist today. The conventional view traces the ZPF to the laws of quantum mechanics, the theory forged early in the present century to describe the atom. Any electromagnetic field is characterized by the frequency, polarization and direction of propagation of its radiation. A set of values for those three quantities defines a single so-called mode of the field. Every possible mode can be populated by an arbitrary number of photons, the fundamental quanta of electromagnetic radiation. But according to the probabilities calculated in quantum mechanics, even at its minimum energy, each mode will contain one photon half the time and no photons the other half the time. In a field of zero energy each mode would, with certainty, contain no photons, but that is impossible because of the equal probability that each mode also contains one photon. Thus every mode acts, on average, as if it were populated with at least one-half photon (in addition to whatever other natural or man-made radiation happens to be present). All such modes add up quickly. Since the energy density of the ZPF increases as the cube of the frequency, the amount of energy making up the ZPF is enormous. That energy, in the conventional view, is simply forced into existence by the laws of quantum mechanics. Not surprisingly, it is regarded in quantum fashion as sometimes real and sometimes virtual, depending on the problem at hand. The competing theory for the origin of the ZPF comes from what has heretofore been an obscure discipline within physics known as stochastic electrodynamics, a modern version of much earlier twentieth-century investigations by Einstein, Max Planck, Walther Nernst, Ludwig Hopf and Otto Stern. Stochastic electrodynamics postulates that the ZPF is as real as any other radiation field. In such a view the existence of a real ZPF is as fundamental as the existence of the universe itself. The only difference between stochastic electrodynamics and ordinary classical physics is the single assumption of the presence of this all-pervasive, real ZPF, which happens to be an intrinsic part of the universe. One justification for making such an assumption is that by adding the ZPF to classical physics many quantum phenomena can be derived without invoking the usual laws or logic of quantum mechanics. It is premature to claim that all quantum phenomena could be explained by stochastic electrodynamics (that is, classical physics plus the ZPF), but that claim may one day turn out to be the case. In that event, one would have to make a choice. One could accept the laws of classical physics as only partly true, with a wholly different set of quantum laws required to complete the laws of physics; that is essentially what is done in physics now. Or one could accept the laws of classical physics as the only necessary laws, provided they are supplemented by the presence of the ZPF. Whether the ZPF arises from quantum laws or is simply an intrinsic part of the universe, an important question remains: Why do people not sense the presence of the radiation if indeed it is made up of real electromagnetic waves spanning the spectrum of radio waves, light and X rays? The idea that space could be filled with a vast sea of energy does seem to contradict everyday experience. The answer to the question lies in the utter uniformity and isotropy of the field. There is no way to sense something that is absolutely the same everywhere, outside and inside everything. To put the matter in everyday terms, if you lie perfectly still in a tub of water at body temperature, you cannot feel the heat of the water. Motion through a medium almost always gives rise to asymmetries, which then makes it possible to detect the medium. But in the case of the ZPF, motion through space at a constant velocity does not make the field detectable, because the field has the property of being "Lorentz invariant." (Lorentz invariance is a critical difference between the modern ZPF and nineteenth-century concepts of an ether.) The field becomes detectable only when a body is accelerated through space. In the mid-1970s the physicists Paul C. W. Davies, now at the University of Adelaide in Australia, and William G. Unruh, now at the University of British Columbia, showed that as a moving observer accelerates through the ZPF, the ZPF spectrum becomes distorted, and the distortion increases with increasing acceleration. Can the distortion be seen? Yes indeed, but not with one's eyes, because the energies involved are minute. Although the distortion is small, it is extremely important: our analysis shows that it is the origin of inertia. In an article published last February in Physical Review A, we showed that when an electromagnetically interacting particle is accelerated through the ZPF, a force is exerted on the charge; the force is directly proportional to the acceleration but acts in the direction opposite to it. In other words, the charge experiences an electromagnetic force as resistance to acceleration. We interpret the resistance associated with the charge as the very inertia Newton regarded as an innate property of matter. Note that we do not say, "associated with the mass of the particle." In our formulation, the m in Newton's second law of motion, F=ma, becomes nothing more than a coupling constant between acceleration and an external electromagnetic force. Thus what we are proposing is that Newton's second law can be derived from the laws of electrodynamics, provided one assumes an underlying zero-point field. Our work suggests that the conventional Newtonian idea of mass must be boldly reinterpreted. If we are correct, physical theory need no longer suppose that there is something called mass having an innate property, inertia, that resists acceleration; what is really happening, instead, is that an electromagnetic force acts on the charge inside matter to create the effect of inertia. Indeed, it appears that the more parsimonious interpretation is not even that there is charge lurking "inside matter," but that there is only charge. The presence of charge and its interaction with the ZPF creates the forces we all experience and attribute to the existence of matter. Our interpretation would apply even to an electrically neutral particle such as the neutron, because the neutron, at the most fundamental level, is thought to be made up of smaller particles called quarks, which do carry electric charge. We have had little to say so far about the second key property for the concept of mass, the gravitation to which matter gives rise. But experimental evidence shows that an object's inertial mass, or its resistance to acceleration, is equivalent to the object's gravitational mass, or its mass in a gravitational field. Einstein's general theory of relativity is based on the assumption that inertial and gravitational mass are equivalent and indistinguishable-the so-called principle of equivalence. Hence it stands to reason that if the ZPF gives rise to the phenomenon of inertia, it must also in some way generate the effect of gravity. This audacious idea was proposed as early as 1968 by the Russian physicist and dissident Andrei D. Sakharov, but he never fully developed the concept into a scientific theory. In 1989 the idea was taken up by one of us (Puthoff) and formulated within the framework of stochastic electrodynamics into a preliminary but quantifiable, nonrelativistic representation of Newtonian gravitation. The underlying principle is remarkably intuitive. If a charged particle is subjected to ZPF interactions, it will be forced to fluctuate in response to the random jostlings of the electromagnetic waves of the ZPF. Moreover, since the ZPF is all-pervasive, charged particles everywhere in the universe will be forced to fluctuate. Now a basic result from classical electrodynamics is that a fluctuating electric charge emits an electromagnetic radiation field. The result is that all charges in the universe will emit secondary electromagnetic fields in response to their interactions with the primary field, the ZPF. The secondary electromagnetic fields turn out to have a remarkable property. Between any two particles they give rise to an attractive force. The force is much weaker than the ordinary attractive or repulsive forces between two stationary electric charges, and it is always attractive, whether the charges are positive or negative. The result is that the secondary fields give rise to an attractive force we propose may be identified with gravity. It is important to note that the fluctuations are relativistic — that is, the charges move at velocities at or close to the speed of light. The energy associated with the fluctuations — which for historical reasons is given the German name zitterbewegung, or trembling movement — is interpreted as the energy equivalent of gravitational rest mass. Since the gravitational force is caused by the trembling motion, there is no need to speak any longer of a gravitational mass as the source of gravitation. The source of gravitation is the driven motion of a charge, not the attractive power of the thing physicists are used to thinking of as mass. To interpret Einstein's equation E=mc2, we would say that mass is not equivalent to energy. Mass is energy. Naturally there are a host of objections that have been or can be raised to our radical interpretation of mass. One important objection is that for gravity our model so far is nonrelativistic, whereas the zitterbewegung motions are relativistic. Another possible objection is that we treat the ZPF as real, not virtual, as conventional quantum theory does-even though real, measurable forces can be attributed to it. One such force is the so-called Casimir force between two parallel plates. It is also claimed that if the ZPF really exists, it would be such an enormous source of gravitational force that the radius of curvature of the universe would be several orders of magnitude smaller than the nucleus of an atom. Of course, such a conclusion directly conflicts with everyday experience. The fallacy in the argument is that in the Sakharov-Puthoff model the ZPF as a whole would not itself gravitate. The gravitational force results from perturbations of the ZPF in the presence of matter. In the Sakharov-Puthoff model, then, the uniform ZPF is not a gravitational source and hence would not contribute to curving the universe. A third large question also remains to be answered. How can our theory of Newtonian-like gravity be reconciled with twentieth-century measurements of effects predicted only from general relativity? How, for example, can our theory account for the gravitational deflection of light, the measurement of which in 1919 served as the first proof of general relativity? On that point we can only conjecture. Sakharov suggested accounting for the effects of general relativity by introducing the concept of an "elasticity of space," analogous to the well-known curvature of space-time. The answer could also lie in the proper treatment of the so-called Dirac sea of particle-antiparticle pairs. The question of general relativistic effects, however, is a valid concern that legitimately challenges the interrelated ZPF concepts of gravity and inertia. Serious as the objection appears to be, we propose that it is prudent to suspend judgment. A great deal of work lies ahead to test and refine our concepts. We and others will continue to study the problem, and in due course the theoretical foundations of those proposals will either be verified or be shown to contain some irreparable flaw. As controversial as the ideas and their implications might be, however, we are encouraged that we are on the right track because of a second analysis now being carried out by one of us (Rueda). In the new analysis it appears that you obtain the same electromagnetic relation between force and acceleration as you get in the original analysis, yet the approach is entirely different. We also submit that a theory that offers new insights with elegance and simplicity is a compelling approach to reality, and we suggest that our view of inertial and gravitational mass has a certain elegance and simplicity. If our ideas prove to be correct, they will point to revisions in the understanding of physics at the most fundamental level. Even if our approach based on stochastic electrodynamics turns out to be flawed, the idea that the vacuum is involved in the creation of inertia is bound to stay. Perhaps even bolder than the concepts themselves are their implications. If inertia and gravity are like other manifestations of electromagnetic phenomena, it might someday be possible to manipulate them by advanced engineering techniques. That possibility, however remote, makes a compelling case for pressing on with the work. Bernard Haisch is a staff scientist at the Lockheed Martin Solar and Astrophysics Laboratory in California and a regular visiting fellow at the Max-Planck-Institut fuer extraterrestrische Physik in Garching, Germany. Alfonso Rueda is a professor of electrical engineering at California State University in Long Beach. H. E. Puthoff is director of the Institute for Advanced Studies at Austin, Texas. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CIPA Home | Popular Articles Reply: << Previous Next >> Extend your family history. Search over 2 billion names: First Name: Last Name: History: Energy << Previous Next >> Bob Crawford - Mar 12, 2004 View | Edit | Delete | Viewers | Reply to this item Prospects for an Interstellar Mission: Hard Technology Limits but Surprising Physics Possibilites How can we reach another star in a timely fashion? Extrapolating our best current technology into the future is like trying to somehow soup-up Magellan’s sailing ship to circumnavigate the globe in ninety minutes. The concept of interstellar missions of exploration, discovery, and, let’s be honest, sheer adventure, took hold of our cultural imagination with the advent of the Star Trek television series in 1966. Dressed up in clever, quasi-scientific language like "warp drive" and "impulse engine," the idea had a certain air of plausibility for the public. Indeed, the notion of interstellar travel has probably come to seem inevitable to the public at large. Once upon a time it would have seemed like a miracle to cross the ocean…but Columbus did that by and by (even though long after the Vikings!). So why not assume we will one day sail the ocean of space? Unfortunately, the problems are more fundamental. They have more to do with basic physics than with "mere" technology. But a sea change has occurred nonetheless. Although there are no known or plausible technologies that would make interstellar travel possible, the concept of an interstellar mission has become a legitimate topic for scientific discussion in NASA circles. In the first part of this two-part discussion, we present some of the ideas and the limits to ideas based on current technology. In the second part, which will appear in the next issue of Mercury, we will move beyond technology to possible new physics based on our work on the electromagnetic zero-point field. That Vision Thing NASA has not just recovered from the dark days of the mid 1980s-when the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded and grounded NASA and its dreams for more than a year-it is again formulating an inspirational path of exploration for a new millennium. Planet after planet is being discovered around nearby stars using ground-based telescopes (see "Prowling for Planets," p. XX), and the NASA Administrator is determined to challenge and goad and coax astronomers into designing space-based observatories that will eventually photograph these worlds. This would take huge telescopes linked together in arrays that are hundreds of kilometers across, perhaps located in the outer parts of the Solar System. One of us (BH) personally heard him issuing the challenge to astronomers at a national meeting to come up with ways to photograph clouds and mountains on planets in other solar systems. Naturally, alien cities would be even more exciting! These are grand visions. For now they are impossible; in a few more years they will still be nearly impossible; and in a few more years beyond that they will transition to merely difficult and challenging. There is no doubt in my mind that the NASA space program is the best thing our government does. This is one agency of the federal government that actually succeeds in being a source of inspiration. Once upon a time it would have seemed like a miracle to cross the ocean... In 1996 NASA initiated a very modest but intellectually ambitious Breakthrough Propulsion Physics Program whose goals were to "seek the ultimate breakthroughs in space transportation." It serves as a way to formally bring together researchers working on such concepts as wormholes and other distorted space-time metrics (Consider, for example, the "warp drive" metric proposed in 1994 by Mexican general-relativity expert Miguel Alcubierre—then working on his doctorate at the University of Wales and now a researcher at the Max-Planck-Institut für Gravitationsphysik—which effectively suggests superluminal motion should be a possibility owing to theoretically allowed, space-time-metric distortions within general relativity. In this model, motion between two locations could take place at effectively hyperlight speed without violating special relativity because the motion is not through space at speeds greater than the speed of light, but rather within a space-time distortion: somewhat like the "stretching of space" itself implied by the Hubble expansion. Alcubierre’s concept would, indeed, be a "warp drive." Unfortunately, Michael Pfenning and Lawrence Ford at Tufts Institute of Cosmology in 1997 and, more recently, Chris van den Broeck at the private Starlab think-tank in Brussels demonstrated that, while the theory may be correct in principle, the necessary conditions are physically unattainable.), quantum tunneling, vacuum zero-point fluctuations, and the possible coupling between gravitation and electromagnetism. The Breakthrough Propulsion Physics Program (see Marc Millis’s BPPP website at www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/bpp/) is designed to address the most visionary end of the scale of concepts within NASA’s Advanced Space Transportation Program: the ideas and speculations that might be cultivated now to lead in the future to the possibility of interstellar travel. The program objective is to produce near-term, credible, and measureable progress toward revolutionary space travel by organizing and cultivating a network to foster collaboration among established researchers. Incremental advances in existing technology, and most likely even existing physics, will not suffice. The requirement is that researchers need to be both visionary and credible, a difficult combination. Naturally what we want is a starship, an Enterprise-class Federation vehicle complete with warp drive…cloaking device optional. There are three small problems: propulsion mass, energy, and the speed of light. The goal of the Breakthrough Propulsion Physics Program is to look for ways to conquer all of these. This may, of course, prove to be impossible, and that is acknowledged right up front. But the program cleverly turns impossibility into a thinking tool via a technique called "Horizon Mission Methodology." While this does begin to sound a bit like bureaucratic jargon, the intention is good. It simply means setting such impossible hypothetical mission goals to keep the mind from falling into the trap of assuming that better fill-in-the-blanks will solve the problem. A better anything will not do: you need something completely different. Naturally what we want is a starship, an Enterprise-class Federation vehicle complete with warp drive—yet three small problems are propulsion mass, energy, and the speed of light Pushing Tin (and fuel) Looking for a better rocket to get us to the stars would be like trying to upgrade Columbus’s Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria with wings to speed up the Atlantic crossing time. A jet airliner is not a better sailing ship. It is a different thing entirely. A typical car weighing perhaps 3000 pounds carries about 100 pounds of gasoline in its fuel tank. The fuel is a small percentage of the total mass, in this case under four percent. The ratio of fuel to vehicle is much less than one (1/30), and that works fine because you can stop and "fill ’er up" anytime. For a 747 jumbo jet leaving San Francisco for London, the ratio of fuel to dry weight of the airplane is much higher: the jet fuel may amount to as much as 1/3 of the mass of the unfueled aircraft because you want to make the trip without refueling. This ratio of fuel to vehicle gets larger and larger for a rocket. The propellant weighs more than the rocket itself, making the ratio greater than one. And that is the beginning of a major problem. Once the ratio gets to be greater than one, you quickly enter a no-win situation. If you wanted to put the Space Shuttle into a higher orbit, you could-in principle anyway-use more propellant, but you have to then launch more propellant and a bigger rocket to carry the additional propellant. Pretty soon you are using your additional propellant almost exclusively to launch more propellant. Your gain in either more payload or longer range gets less and less the higher the ratio of propellant to rocket. And it just keeps getting worse. The other killer is that it takes as much propellant to slow down as to speed up. Slowing down is just speeding up in reverse. Now, there may be mitigating circumstances. The Moon trips were possible because the Moon’s gravity is much less than Earth’s, so it took much less energy (per unit mass) to fight the Moon’s lower gravity and achieve a soft landing than it took to launch off Earth. You gain twice this way because leaving the Moon is also easy in the same proportion. Then, finally, the astronauts used Earth’s atmosphere to achieve braking. All of these mitigating circumstances enabled the Moon landing and return adventure to succeed, but we still had to launch a mighty, multi-stage Saturn rocket as tall as a 35-story building…just to get back one little capsule and three guys splashing down in the ocean. How much conventional propellant would you need to launch the Space Shuttle to a speed that would carry it in 100 years to Alpha Centauri, the nearest star system and a mere 4.3 lightyears away? The answer is that a rocket the size of Earth filled with chemical fuel would be insufficient. Even a rocket the size of the Sun would not do. And that is for only a flyby. If you want to slow down, land on a planet—which one hopes is there to land on—and then launch back home again finally to land safely on Earth, you are totally out of luck. A rocket the size of the entire visible Universe would be too small. The problem of adding more and more propellant just to propel the propellant skyrockets to infinity. A better chemical rocket is simply not an interstellar option. This exemplifies the propulsion-mass problem. Indeed, even within the Solar System, if you want to visit and return from other planets, the problem with rockets looms large. However, here it is at least possible to consider refueling by somehow processing material to be found at or near the destination. Carrying your propulsion fuel with you, like a turtle and his shell, becomes a show stopper, though, for interstellar exploration. But moving beyond chemical propulsion, what if such an efficient propellant could be found that, like a car with its gas tank, the ratio of fuel to rocket mass were again well below one? It is the fact that the propellant to rocket ratio is over one that sends the problem soaring out of contral. Where can we look to find the real world analogs of Captain Kirk’s maneageable-sized dilithium crystals (which must be pretty compact since there always seems to be plenty of room left over for Commander Scotty to be tinkering and frantically running around in his engine room)? A better chemical rocket is simply not an interstellar option Propellant Matters A survey of ideas took place in July 1998. The Advanced Concepts Office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the Office of Space Science at NASA headquarters jointly sponsored a workshop at Caltech entitled "Robotic Interstellar Exploration in the Next Century" (at which one of us, BH, presented an invited talk). Essentially all known, credible, interstellar, propulsion ideas were discussed. In broad terms there are four possible types of onboard engines: chemical, fission, fusion, and antimatter. Rocket-type propulsion works in the vacuum of space because you do not need to push or pull on any medium the way a propeller does in air or water. You carry along your own matter (this becomes the problem of course) which you expel out the back of the rocket to push it forward. The vacuum not withstanding, you could push yourself forward by throwing bricks out the rear; naturally this is not very efficient. There are two properties that characterize a propellant: for each kilogram of the stuff, how much force do you generate when it is expelled? This is measured by a quantity called specific impulse which tells you how much acceleration you can get over how long a period of time from a given propellant. And the second important fuel property: how much energy can you extract from each kilogram of propellant? Call this the energy content. You need both a high specific impulse and a high energy content to have an efficient rocket. They do not necessarily go together: a fuel with a relatively low energy content may give a relatively high specific impulse and vice versa. It is instructive, though, to take the absolutely best possible case and see where that leaves the possibility of interstellar travel when you have to carry your fuel along as in a rocket. No matter what your specific impulse, you cannot do better than to convert all of your available propellant energy into the kinetic energy of the rocket. That is, of course, wildly optimistic, but it simplifies things by letting us concentrate solely on energy. A benchmark for discussion at the NASA/Caltech meeting was a forty-year mission. To get to Alpha Centauri in this time would require a speed of about one-tenth the speed of light (0.1 c), since Alpha Centauri is just over four lightyears distant. At that modest speed you can still calculate the kinetic energy of your starship using ordinary Newtonian physics. It is simply mv2, where m is the mass and v the speed of the starship. There is no more energy-efficient fuel than antimatter. Letting matter and antimatter combine gives you up to 100 percent energy efficiency, so the available energy from the E=mc2 relationship is just mpc2, where mp is the mass of the matter-antimatter propellant combination. When you equate the rocket kinetic energy and the mass energy of the antimatter, you find that an amount of matter-antimatter fuel that is only 0.5 percent of the mass of the starship is all you would need to get to 0.1c. Of course, if you want to slow down at the end of your forty-year mission, you would need just as much again. So the bottom line appears to be that a starship with one percent matter-antimatter fuel could reach a speed of 0.1c, get to Alpha Centauri in forty years, and brake at some planet—that one hopes is there—in that star system. At first glance this seems remarkably encouraging. Unfortunately ugly details quickly loom large. First of all, just because the matter-energy conversion is 100 percent efficient does not mean that you can give that energy with 100 percent efficiency to the starship. This goes back to specific impulse considerations. There is at least a factor of ten loss in efficiency, so raise the matter-antimatter fuel to rocket percentage from one percent to ten percent. Being about the same ratio as that of full gas tank to car, ten percent still looks acceptable, but next you have to consider how much antimatter this really amounts to and its implications. an amount of matter-antimatter fuel that is only 0.5 percent of the mass of the starship is all you would need to reach a speed of ten percent the speed of light Since the plan is to be as optimistic as possible to find out where there is a true hard limit, a show-stopper no matter what, let us also assume that we will know how to put the crew into suspended animation so that we can use a starship the size of the Space Shuttle rather than the size of an aircraft carrier (and who would even want to live on the latter for four decades?). Assume a 100-ton vehicle, and we now have a requirement of ten tons of matter-antimatter fuel, or five tons of pure antimatter as a requirement. Double that to ten tons of antimatter for a round-trip. There are no free sources of antimatter. Since it annihilates on contact with matter, there is clearly no supply around to tap; you cannot just go mine for it like uranium. But antimatter can be manufactured in particle accelerators and there are techniques to store small amounts of it. With some upgrading to tailor the facility to do this, the United States’s Brookhaven National Laboratory could turn out one-tenth of a billionth of a gram of antiprotons per year. Similar capabilities exist at the Center for European Nuclear Research (CERN) near Geneva and the Institute for High Energy Physics in Russia. But the required ten tons of antiprotons would be equivalent to about ten million grams. The difference between what we can manufacture in a year of production and what we would need for a single roundtrip becomes an enormous factor of 1017 (i.e., a hundred million billion). This is more than a big gap. Even if we could easily manufacture the required quantity of antimatter, however, we would have a tremendous problem on our hands. The huge amount of energy contained in five tons of antimatter-which is great for propulsion-is, of course, a disastrous storage problem here on Earth. It would be equivalent to about 200,000 Megatons of TNT, which is ten million Hiroshima-energy bombs. For comparison, the largest (then) Soviet hydrogen bomb tests in the 1960s involved explosions of a mere 100 Megatons or so. In terms of designing a starship for a single, one-way trip based on rocket-style, onboard propulsion, this is as good as it gets! Rocket-style, carry-your-fuel propulsion is the wrong approach for a starship. Leave the Fuel Behind An alternative to carrying your engine and fuel along is to leave both behind. This way you do not get into the exponentially losing situation of having to accelerate your propellant. A tiny fraction of the same energy supply will get the same job done if all you have to accelerate is the vehicle itself. The problem now, of course, is to transmit the propulsion from the source to the vehicle. Two such schemes have been proposed and were discussed at the NASA/Caltech workshop: lasers and particle beams. When you are sitting next to a window with sunlight shining on you, you feel the energy of the light in the form of heat, but you do not notice any force or pressure from the light. But light does carry both energy and momentum. When sunlights lands on a small particle in space and is absorbed, the momentum of the light is transferred to the particle and that creates a measurable force on the particle. This is the very process that forms a comet’s tail. As the snowy iceball that is the comet’s nucleus approaches the Sun and begins to evaporate, radiation pressure from the sunlight pushes the evaporating gas and dust outward, creating the tail that is millions of miles long. A powerful laser can exert a great deal of force, and that is the basis of the laser sail concept. Instead of carrying vast amounts of propellant to power an onboard engine, a laser-beam starship would literally sail off into space with no need for an engine at all. It would ride on the force provided by a beam of light from a giant laser that never has to leave the Solar System. A perfectly reflecting sail is even more efficient—by a factor of two—than one that absorbs the light, and this could be made out of very flimsy material, something like super high-tech aluminum foil, if constructed in Earth orbit. Rocket-style, carry-your-fuel propulsion is the wrong approach for a starship A major problem with this concept for interstellar considerations is size. A laser can focus a beam of light to its maximum theoretical concentration. If we assume that a sail could be assembled and held in place that was as large as 10 km in diameter, we would want the laser to still concentrate virtually all of its light on the sail even when that sail is halfway to the nearest star, otherwise we lose more and more of the force. If the light beam spreads to only ten times the size of the sail, the loss of force is 99 percent since it is area that matters. Yet to keep this high degree of focus, the laws of optics dictate that the laser must effectively be a lens or mirror 1000 km in diameter to achieve this for visible light (5000 Å). You can trade off the sail diameter against the laser lens diameter. Make the sail ten times bigger and you can use a laser with a ten-times smaller lens. You then have a 100-km sail and 100-km laser lens. So we see that all possible combinations stretch credibility. Apart from the problem of requiring vast sails or gigantic lasers, there is a good reason to get worried even if you could manage to concentrate all the laser power on the sail even at the halfway point to Alpha Centauri. And that is, what do you do for the next half of the trip to slow down? It is a one-way push. You can jettison your sail and coast, but you cannot stop. Even if that were not problem enough, there is a time-delay feedback problem that gets worse and worse. Taking the laser-driven sail as an example, let us assume that a mission propelled by a 10-km diameter light sail is halfway (2 x 1013 km) to Alpha Centauri when a beam problem reaches the vehicle. A misalignment of the laser of no more than one part in a trillion, which occurred back on Earth two years ago, is now reaching the vehicle causing the beam to miss the light sail. Owing to the speed-of-light limitation, it will be another two years before any news of this problem transmitted by the spacecraft can reach Earth. It will be yet another two years before the correction from Earth will reach the spacecraft. But by then the vehicle may have drifted out of its trajectory sufficiently, owing to the effects of interaction with the interstellar medium (or other causes), that it is still out of the beam. Indeed, any drift of the vehicle from a line-of-sight trajectory will cause the same uncorrectible problem in the first place since there is no way to know where the vehicle is "now" (in the sense of where the beam is supposed to hit). This illustrates the inherent problem of speed-of-light caused time delay in any feedback loop. It would be all too easy—in fact, probably unavoidable—to have a mission using this propulsion mechanism "lost in space without a paddle" due to the slightest error. Although a laser beam does exert a force, it is a very inefficient force in comparison to the energy required. The ratio of energy to momentum for a light beam is equal to the speed of light, c. The ratio of energy to momentum for an ordinary object is v/2, where v is the object’s speed. Force results when you transfer momentum. In other words, if one has a tough enough sail, one can throw tennis balls at it and transfer momentum from the tennis balls to the sail when the balls bounce off and thereby generate a force. Because of the energy to momentum ratio, a tennis ball going 80 km/hr is 27 million times more efficient than a beam of light of the same energy in generating a force on a sail. For this reason, beams of particles have also been considered in place of a laser beam. A particle moving one-tenth the speed of light bouncing off a sail is still twenty times more efficient than a photon of light of the same energy reflecting off a sail in terms of providing a propulsive push. Particle beams have problems of their own. Interstellar space may be empty by Earth standards, but there are both particles and magnetic fields filling the void. The easiest way to make a particle beam is to let the particles carry an electric charge so that electrostatic or magnetic forces can be used to provide the boost. But a charged particle beam will suffer deflections from the interstellar magnetic field. You somehow have to neutralize the particle beam, so that you wind up with uncharged particles that will not interact with the interstellar magnetic field. This is difficult to do. Moreover, even if you can get rid of the charge, a neutral beam will still tend to be dispersed when collisions take place with the interstellar medium. And finally, the problem of trying to collimate a particle beam and keep it pointed with such precision that it hits the target sail and spreads out only to the size of a sail at distances of trillions of kilometers makes the laser focusing problem seem like child’s play. One other scheme that is clever in principle was presented at the NASA/Caltech meeting: the use of giant tethers. Such a tether is simply a very long wire dangling in space. When a conducting wire is moved perpendicular to a magnetic field, a current is induced in the wire, which can be used as a source of electrical power. This has been the motivation for several space experiments in recent years. But a rather different application can be envisioned using the interstellar magnetic field to generate a propulsive force. Instead of using the interstellar magnetic field to originate a current, you use an onboard source of power to create your own current in a long tether. There is a law in electrodynamics that tells you that if you have a current flowing in a wire perpendicular to a magnetic field, there will be a (Lorentz) force perpendicular to both. A current plus the interstellar magnetic field gives you a potentially propulsive force. So what are the drawbacks to such a scheme? For one, the interstellar magnetic field is extremely weak. It would take a lot of very long tethers to create enough force to accelerate a tether-driven starship with even very small "g" acceleration. A 1000-km long by 1000-km wide venetian blind configuration with wires several centimeters apart was discussed at the meeting. Another problem is the direction of the force. Nature only provides it perpendicular to the interstellar magnetic field, and we are far from certain what the strength and direction of that field is. Crossing the Interstellar Sea Four spacecraft are already on their way out of the Solar System. Pioneer 10 and 11 were launched in March 1972 and April 1973, respectively, as missions to explore Jupiter. After Pioneer 10 successfully encountered Jupiter in December 1973, Pioneer 11, which was a backup mission, was redirected enroute to intercept Saturn via a Jupiter gravitational assist maneuver. Five years later, in August and September 1977, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 were sent on their way to Jupiter and Saturn, with Voyager 2 continuing on to Uranus and Neptune. The distances of these spacecraft are now six to seven billion miles from Earth, beyond the orbit of Pluto, headed in quite different directions from each other and destined to cross the heliopause-the abrupt transition between the outflowing solar wind and the interstellar medium-and, thus, leave the Solar System in another decade or two. While these distances sound impressive, they correspond to a mere ten or so lighthours, not the lightyears that separate stars from each other. At the rates at which these probes are now traveling (about 55,000 km/hr), it would them about 80,000 years to get to Alpha Centauri. But, in fact, none of the four spacecraft are heading toward any particular star. If we could settle for 100,000-year, unmanned missions, we could direct more sophisticated versions of spacecraft like Pioneer and Voyager to our nearest stellar neighbors using technology already in hand. But communication and mismatch with human and societal timescales would be huge limitations. If we were willing to risk accumulating twenty million Hiroshima-energy stockpiles of antimatter, we could perhaps accelerate and decelerate a single rocket-type vehicle to one tenth the speed of light or so. Confinement of the antimatter would be a huge environental issue, to put it mildly…and, of course, providing the energy to make the antimatter in the first place is daunting. The problem of trying to collimate a particle beam and keep it pointed with such precision that it hits the starship’s sail and spreads out only to the size of the sail at a distance of trillions of kilometers makes the problematic use of laser propulsion seem like child’s play. If we could construct enormous lasers and sails in space hundreds of kilometers across, we might shoot probes to other stars. Lack of a brake would be a major problem: with luck such a mission might gather an hour’s worth of data on an extrasolar planetary system as it races through at 0.1c after a hundred-year flight. None of these options, nor any of their cousins, look attractive or feasible. Studies of such possibilities make interesting exercises and are worth considering even if only to rule them out. In our view, none of these things will ever happen because it would be like trying to fly a sailing ship across the ocean; with enough brute force, jerryrigging, and engineering cleverness one could probably make a stunt like that work in some fashion. But that is definitely not the way to go. The electromagnetic zero-point field, or more generally, the quantum vacuum, offers four possibilities that may someday yield the technology to travel to other stars: extraction of energy, generation of forces, and, most intriguingly, perhaps even manipulation of inertia and gravitation. At present these are highly speculative possibilities, but the exploration of these ideas seems at least as worthwhile as trying to work around the formidable obstacles and insuperable limitations we’ve already discussed here. In the next issue, we will introduce the nature of the zero-point field and explore how it might be manipulated to power starships. Pricing the Production of Antimatter Let us say that you have chosen antimatter propulsion for your interstellar spaceship, and now it is time to get the fuel. Where do you turn? The manufacture of antiprotons is extremely inefficient. Techniques for creating antiprotons at the Center for European Nuclear Research (CERN) require approximately two and one-half million protons each accelerated to an energy of 26 GeV to create a single antiproton. This amounts to an energy efficiency of 1.5 x 10-8. There is no more energy-efficient fuel than antimatter This is further reduced by a factor of ten or so for the efficiency of the proton accelerator, leaving a net efficiency of perhaps 1.5 x 10-9 — i.e., about one part in a billion! At a cost of five cents per kilowatt-hour of electricity, the cost of ten tons of antiprotons would be 8 x 1021 U. S. dollars. The best way to express this amount of money might be to say that it represents the total current U. S. federal budget (approximately $1.2 trillion per year) spent every year for the next seven billion years. Reply: << Previous Next >> Extend your family history. Search over 2 billion names: First Name: Last Name: About Us | Help/FAQ | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Tell A Friend | Affiliate Program | Terms | Member List Search Addresses: Addresses listed by last name Show All|A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M|N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z Current Address Book: Ancestor's and Descendant's of Personal Sort By: First Name Last Name Family Location Name (Last, First) Address Phone E-mail Photo 2003, bob bob_craw2003@yahoo.de Babel, Fish altavistababelfish@altavista.com Babel, Fish Baker, Donna dbupnorth@aol.com Brabec, Bruce Dean bbrabec@jps.net Brabec, Deborah Lee bbrabec@jps.net Brogna, Carmine brogna@genfamily.com Brudno, Daniel danbrudno@earthlink.com Circles, Gen Clerk of the Superior Court, Pima County Crawford, Robert Lee 702 S. 6th Ave. Tucson, AZ 85701 United States of America bob_craw2000@yahoo.com Crawford, Bob bobcrawford@lycos.co.uk Crawford, Bob Crawford, Jeffrey Scot 135 Principal Ct. Radcliff, KY 40160 United States of America 270-272-1153 jeffreyjff99@aol.com Crawford, Jeffrey Scot jeffreyjff99@aol.com Dex, Gen Dixon, Sharon Kaye 2960 W. Talara Ln. Tucson, AZ 85742 United States of America 520-297-3256 chinadixon@aol.com Fire, Angel Genealogy, Italian Genealogy, Susan's Family Golden, Theresa Sacramento, CA Th_golden@yahoo.com Grave, Find A Gregory, Patti Benson Hwy. Tucson, AZ United States of America 520-320-1242 Gullett, Samara Rebekah 350 N. Union Rd. #7 Manteca, CA 95337 United States of America 1-209-825-0955 samaragullett@earthlink.com Gullett, Samara samaragullett@yahoo.com Henke, Donna Joan 7044 Aetna Ct. Milwaukee, WI 53213-3708 United States of America 414-774-0704 Island, Ellis Jeeves, Ask Kaveney, Peggy 3440 Nathan Ct. Rocklin, CA 95677-2351 United States of America 916-624-0012 Verona@psyber.com Kohl, A.R. ar_kohl@yahoo.com Lac County, Fond du Line, Netron Nikolaus, Kay jonquil501@aol.com On, Pass It Page, My Web Path, Return Peebles, Mark peebles_mark@hotmail.com Records, Ellis Island Reeves, Sue 814 Alturas Tucson, AZ United States of America SReeves1@ci.tucson.az.us Reeves, Sue Puddintane303@aol.com Search, Family Spawner, Web Translation, Free Web, Roots Yahoo, Yahoo [Select All] [Select None] Check the boxes next to the names you wish to delete. << Prev 1 Next >> About Us | Help/FAQ | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Tell A Friend | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions | Advertising Copyright © 1998-2004 MyFamily.com, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All rights reserved. Name Birth Date Birth Place John Farwell 25 Oct 1635 Boston, Lincoln, England +Sarah Wheeler UNKNOWN UNKNOWN B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Richard Thimbleby B: 1458 P: England D: 24 Apr 1522 P: Elizabeth Hilton B: 1455 P: England D: 1522 P: Add Father B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Add Mother B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Add Father B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Add Mother B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Robert Tailboys B: 1451 P: Kyme, Lincolnshire, England D: 30 Jan 1495 P: England Elizabeth Heron B: 1453 P: Kyme, Lincolnshire, England D: P: B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined John Thimbleby B: 1470 P: England D: P: Margaret Boys B: P: D: P: Robert Tyrwhitt B: 1482 P: England D: 4 Jul 1548 P: England Maud Tailboys B: 1477 P: England D: P: Add Father B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Add Mother B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Richard Thimbleby B: Abt 1507 P: England D: 28 Sep 1590 P: Katharine Tyrwhit B: P: England D: P: Thomas Welby B: P: Moulton, Lincolnshire, England D: 1570 P: Bath, England Elizabeth Thimbleby B: P: England D: 1570 P: Bath, England +Richard Welby B: 1564 P: Moulton, Lincolnshire, England D: P: Join a Genealogy Training Website for help! Extend your family history. Search over 700 MILLION names: First Name: Last Name: About Us | FAQ | Help | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions Copyright © 1998-2001 MyFamily.com, Inc. and its su to the Ancestry View with the chosen individual at the root position.) Name Birth Date Birth Place Sarah Buckley 1580 Cayshoe, Odell, Bedfordshire, England Dorcas Bulkeley 1577 UNKNOWN Edward Bulkeley Abt 1540 , England Elizabeth Bulkeley 1579 UNKNOWN Elizabeth Bulkeley Abt 1588 UNKNOWN Frances Bulkeley Abt 1568 Odell, Bedfordshire, England Martha Bulkeley 1572 UNKNOWN Peter Bulkeley 31 Jan 1582/83 Odell, Bedfordshire, England Rebecca Bulkeley 1572 Cranfield, Bedford, England Olive Irby 1547 UNKNOWN Elizabeth Willard UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Simon Willard UNKNOWN UNKNOWN B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Add Mother B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Oliver Saint John B: 1575 P: Keysoe, Bedfordshire, England D: 23 Mar 1625/26 P: Keysoe, Bedfordshire, England Sarah Buckley B: 1580 P: Cayshoe, Odell, Bedfordshire, England D: 1611 P: Keysoe, Bedfordshire, England B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Samuel Whiting B: 20 Nov 1597 P: Boston, Lincolnshire, England D: 11 Dec 1679 P: Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts Elizabeth St. John B: 1605 P: England D: 1677 P: Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts Add Father B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Add Mother B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Samuel Whiting B: 25 Mar 1633 P: Skirbeck, Lincolnshire, England D: 28 Feb 1712/13 P: Salmon Brook, Massachusetts Dorcas Chester B: 5 Nov 1637 P: Wethersfield, Hartford , Connecticut D: 15 Feb 1712/13 P: Billerica, Massachusetts Add Father B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Add Mother B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Samuel Whiting B: Between 1662-1663 P: Billerica, Middlesex, Massachusetts D: Between 1714-1715 P: Billerica, Middlesex, Massachusetts Elizabeth Read B: Abt 1665 P: Billerica, Massachusetts D: P: +Mary Whiting B: P: D: P: Join a Genealogy Training Website for help! Extend your family history. Search over 700 MILLION names: First Name: Last Name: About Us | FAQ | Help | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions Copyright © 1998-2001 MyFamily.com, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All ri Name Birth Date Birth Place Elizabeth Farwell 27 May 1630 Boston, Lincoln, England +Joseph Wildbore 1629 , Essex, England individual's name will take you back to the Ancestry View with the chosen individual at the root position.) Name Birth Date Birth Place +Henry Farwell Abt 1605 Boston, Lincolnshire, England Elizabeth Farwell 27 May 1630 Boston, Lincoln, England John Farwell 25 Oct 1635 Boston, Lincoln, England Joseph Farwell 26 Feb 1640/41 Concord, Middlesex, Massachusetts Mary Farwell Abt 1643 Concord, Middlesex, Massachusetts Olive Farwell 1645 Concord, Middlesex, Massachusetts Samuel Farwell 9 Jun 1633 Boston, Lincoln, England Olive Welby 1604 Moulton, Lincolnshire, England B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Thomas Grosvenor B: Abt 1415 P: D: P: Drayton, England Isabella Peshall B: P: D: P: Randle Mainwaring B: P: D: P: Margaret (Dau. Of Hugh) Davenport B: P: D: P: Robert Charlton B: Abt 1415 P: Apley, Shropshire, England D: 1471 P: Apley, Shropshire, England Mary Corbet B: Abt 1418 P: Morton, Salop, England D: 18 Aug P: Apley, Shropshire, England William Mainwaring B: Abt 1430 P: Ightfield, Salop, England D: P: Margaret Warren B: Abt 1430 P: Ightfield, Salop, England D: P: B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Randall Grosvenor B: Abt 1450 P: Bellaport, Shropshire, England D: 1 Mar 1521-1522 P: Bellaport, Shropshire, England Margaret Mainwaring B: Abt 1455 P: Carincham, Cheshire, England D: P: Richard Charlton B: 1450 P: Apley, Shropshire, England D: 1522 P: Apley, Shropshire, England Anne Mainwaring B: P: D: P: Add Father B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Add Mother B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Randall Grosvenor B: 1480 P: , England D: 1559 P: Bellaport, Shropshire, England Anne Charlton B: Abt 1480 P: , England D: 1560 P: Thomas Bulkeley B: Abt 1515 P: , England D: Abt 1591 P: Woore, Shropshire, England Elizabeth Grosvenor B: Abt 1515 P: , England D: 1591 P: Woore, Shropshire, Eng. +Edward Bulkeley B: Abt 1540 P: , England D: 1621 P: Odell, Bedfordshire, England Join a Genealogy Training Website for help! Extend your family history. Search over 700 MILLION names: First Name: Last Name: About Us | FAQ | Help | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions Copyright © 1998-2001 MyFamily.com, Inc Name Birth Date Birth Place Margaret Fitz Aer 4 Apr 1314 England Anne Fitz Alan UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Alianore (Eleanor De Blancminster Abt 1231 UNKNOWN Thomas Boothe UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Christian Britles UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Sarah Buckley 1580 Cayshoe, Odell, Bedfordshire, England +Edward Bulkeley Abt 1540 , England Dorcas Bulkeley 1577 UNKNOWN Elizabeth Bulkeley 1579 UNKNOWN Elizabeth Bulkeley Abt 1588 UNKNOWN Frances Bulkeley Abt 1568 Odell, Bedfordshire, England Martha Bulkeley 1572 UNKNOWN Peter Bulkeley 31 Jan 1582/83 Odell, Bedfordshire, England Rebecca Bulkeley 1572 Cranfield, Bedford, England Thomas Bulkeley Abt 1515 , England Alan De Charlton UNKNOWN Apley, Shropshire Anne Charlton Abt 1480 , England Richard Charlton 1450 Apley, Shropshire, England Robert Charlton Abt 1415 Apley, Shropshire, England Thomas De Knightley Charlton 30 Mar 1394 UNKNOWN Amice Corbet Abt 1330 UNKNOWN Edward Corbet Abt 1352 UNKNOWN Eleanor Corbet Abt 1340 UNKNOWN Eleanor Corbet Abt 1370 UNKNOWN Elizabeth Corbet Abt 1350 UNKNOWN Fulk Corbet Abt 1336 UNKNOWN Isolda Corbet Abt 1342 UNKNOWN Joan Corbet Abt 1342 UNKNOWN Joane (Johanna Corbet Abt 1332 UNKNOWN Joane (Johanna Corbet Abt 1368 UNKNOWN Joanna Hawys Corbet Abt 1305 , Moreton Corbet, Salop, England John Corbet Abt 1344 UNKNOWN Juliana Corbet Abt 1348 UNKNOWN Margaret Corbet Abt 1354 UNKNOWN Mary Corbet Abt 1418 Morton, Salop, England Robert Corbet 1383 , Moreton Corbet, Shrops, England Robert Corbet 25 Dec 1304 Wattlesboro, Shropshire, England Robert Corbet Abt 1346 UNKNOWN Roger Corbet Abt 1412 , Moreton Corbet, Shrops, England Roger Corbet Abt 1330 , Moreton Corbet, Shrops, England Thomas Corbet Abt 1334 UNKNOWN Thomas Corbet 25 Dec 1281 Shropshire, England Margery Cotton Abt 1335 Rudheath, Cheshire, England Mary Darce Abt 1255 UNKNOWN Henry Davenport Abt 1335 Macclesfield, Cheshire, England Margaret (Dau. Of Hugh) Davenport UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Mary Davenport Abt 1287 UNKNOWN Agnes De Arderne UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Hugh II De Audley 1289 Stretton, Audley, Oxfordshire, England Margaret De Audley Abt 1318 , Stafford, Staffordshire, England Clemence De Banastre Abt 1260 Mollington, Banastre, Cheshire, England Alan De Charlton Abt 1318 England Anna De Charlton Bef 1380 England Thomas De Charlton Abt 1345 UNKNOWN Margaret De De Clare Abt 1292 England, Tunbridge Castle, Kent, England Maud De Clifford Between 1235-1240 UNKNOWN Roger De Davenport UNKNOWN Macclesfield, Cheshire, England Alice De Driby Abt 1340 Wokefield, K, Lancashire, England John De Driby Abt 1310 , Wokefield, Berks, England Amy De Gaveston Sh aft 6 Jan 1312 UNKNOWN Joan De Gaveston UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Piers De Gaveston Abt 1284 UNKNOWN Adam De Hocton Abt 1260 Houghton, Lancashire Richard (Houghton) De Hocton Abt 1290 Houghton, Lancashire, England William De Knightley UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Isabel De Langton Abt 1342 UNKNOWN Sybil De Lea Abt 1295 Mollington, Banastre, Cheshire, England William De Lea Abt 1245 Amounderness, Lancashire, England Roger De Leycester Abt 1335 Nether Tabley, Chester, England William De Mobberley Abt 1335 Mobberley, Cheshire, England Hugh De Venables Abt 1298 Kinderton, Cheshire, England Hugh De Venables Abt 1254 Kinderton, Chester, England Richard De Venables 1336 Kinderton, Cheshire, England William De Venables 1245 Kinderton, Cheshire, England Agatha De Vernon Abt 1275 UNKNOWN Ralph De Vernon Abt 1250 UNKNOWN Roesia De Vernon UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Eleanor De Whitechurch 1231 Blancminster, Norfolkshire, England Maud Downes Abt 1335 UNKNOWN Robert Downes UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Alice Driby 1284 UNKNOWN Robert De Driby Abt 1290 Wokefield, Co Ber Kansas Margaret Dutton Abt 1225 Kinderton, Cheshire, England Margaret Dutton Abt 1300 Nether Tabley, Chester, England Margaret Erdington 1353 UNKNOWN Robert De Felton Strange Abt 1253 UNKNOWN William De Felton Strange Abt 1257 UNKNOWN Margaret Fitton UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Elizabeth Francis UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Eleanor Giffard 1275 UNKNOWN Katherine Giffard 1272 Brimsfield, Gloucestershire, England Maud Giffard 1277 UNKNOWN John Gifford 19 Jan 1231-1232 Broughton Gifford, Wilts, England Ralph Grosvener Abt 1407 UNKNOWN Robert Grosvener Abt 1405 Hulme, Cheshire, England Elizabeth Grosvenor Abt 1515 , England Joan Grosvenor Abt 1416 Hulme, Cheshire, Eng. Margery Grosvenor Abt 1414 Hulme, Cheshire, Eng. Randall Grosvenor Abt 1412 Hulme, Cheshire, Eng. Randall Grosvenor 1455 Bellaport, Shropshire, England Randall Grosvenor 1480 , England Randall Grosvenor Abt 1450 Bellaport, Shropshire, England Raufe Grosvenor Abt 1407 UNKNOWN Thomas Grosvenor Abt 1410 Hulme, Cheshire, Eng. Thomas Grosvenor Abt 1415 UNKNOWN Katherine Houghton Abt 1360 Haughton, Lancaster, England Aurelia Hourick UNKNOWN , Lancashire, England Olive Irby 1547 UNKNOWN Robert Le Grosvenor Abt 1405 UNKNOWN Fulke Le Strange Abt 1303 Longor, Shropshire, England John VIII Le Strange 25 Jan 1305-1306 Blackmere, Cornwall, England Maud Le Strange UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Elizabeth Leicester Abt 1385 Nether Tabley, England Nicholas Leicester UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Nicholas Leycester Abt 1360 Nether Tabley, Chester, England Margaret Longespee UNKNOWN UNKNOWN William Longespee Abt 1228 UNKNOWN Robert Le Strange Lord Wrockwardine Abt 1232 Hunstanton, Norfolk, England Agnes Mainwaring Abt 1406 Over Peover, Cheshire, England Agnes Mainwaring Abt 1431 UNKNOWN Anne Mainwaring UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Cecily Mainwaring Abt 1401 Over Peover, Cheshire, England Elizabeth Mainwaring 1395 Over Peover, Cheshire, England Ellen Mainwaring Abt 1404 UNKNOWN Joan Mainwaring Abt 1402 Over Peover, Cheshire, England John Mainwaring Abt 1460 Ightfield, Salop, England John Mainwaring Abt 1394 Over Peover, Cheshire, England Margaret Mainwaring Abt 1455 Carincham, Cheshire, England Margaret (Margery) Mainwaring 1434 Ightfield, England Margery Mainwaring Abt 1396 UNKNOWN Mary Mainwaring Abt 1419 UNKNOWN Randall Mainwaring Abt 1405 Salop, England Randle Mainwaring UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Randle Mainwaring Abt 1398 Over Peover, Cheshire, England Roger Mainwaring 1263 Over Peover, Chester, England Thomas Mainwaring Abt 1437 UNKNOWN William Mainwaring Abt 1276 UNKNOWN William Mainwaring 1316 Over Peover, Chester, England William Mainwaring 1286 Over Peover, Chester, England William Mainwaring Abt 1430 Ightfield, Salop, England Anketil Mallory Abt 1340 Kirkby Mallory, L, England Ela Mallory UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Margaret Mallory 1387 , Shawbury, Salop, England William Mallory Abt 1375 Shawbury, Salop, England Nicholas St. Maur UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Elizabeth Mobberley UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Mary Mobberley Abt 1360 Mobberley, Cheshire, England William Mobberley Abt 1300 Mobberley, Cheshire, England Isabella Peshall UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Mary Salemon UNKNOWN Willington, Cheshire, England Margaret Savage UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Elizabeth Le Strange Abt 1308 , Shawbury, Shropshire, England Fulk Le Strange Abt 1267 UNKNOWN Hamo Le Strange Abt 1305 UNKNOWN John Le Strange Abt 1251 UNKNOWN John Le Strange UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Maude Le Strange Abt 1321 UNKNOWN Joan Tattershall Abt 1250 UNKNOWN @I481833@ UNKNOWN Abt 1415 Moreton Corbet, S, England Amice UNKNOWN Abt 1281 UNKNOWN Joyce (Isabell) UNKNOWN Abt 1335 UNKNOWN Alice Venables UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Angella Venables UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Hugh Venables Abt 1350 Kinderton, Cheshire, England Hugh Venables Abt 1380 Kinderton, Cheshire, England Joan Venables 1334 Kinderton, Cheshire, England Joan Venables Abt 1384 E. Kinderton, Cheshire, England Margery Venables 1369 Kinderton, England Richard Venables Abt 1370 Kinderton, Cheshire, England Richard Venables Abt 1330 Kinderton, Cheshire, England Margaret Warren Abt 1430 Ightfield, Salop, England Elena La Zouche 1288 UNKNOWN New... Open... Properties... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Print... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Close Edit Individual... Edit Marriage... Delete Individual Add Spouse... Add Father... Add Mother... Add Child... Ancestry View Descendant View Family View Family Story Ancestry.com... Ancestry World Tree... AutoSearch -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- List All Individuals Find Individual... Go to Start Person Make Start Person Member Permissions... Online Family Tree Help... Send Feedback to MyFamily.com... Tips... Four Generations Five Generations Six Generations Seven Generations Search Ancestry.com... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Edit Individual... Edit Marriage... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Move to Root -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Add Spouse... Add Father... Add Mother... Add Child... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Help... William De Knightley B: P: D: P: Anna De Charlton B: Bef 1380 P: England D: 1399 P: Add Father B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Add Mother B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Roger Corbet B: Abt 1330 P: , Moreton Corbet, Shrops, England D: Jan 1396 P: Margaret Erdington B: 1353 P: D: 14 Nov 1395 P: William Mallory B: Abt 1375 P: Shawbury, Salop, England D: Abt 1445 P: Papworth, England Add Mother B: P: D: P: William Mainwaring B: 1316 P: Over Peover, Chester, England D: P: Elizabeth Leicester B: Abt 1385 P: Nether Tabley, England D: P: Hugh Venables B: Abt 1350 P: Kinderton, Cheshire, England D: 1383 P: Margery Cotton B: Abt 1335 P: Rudheath, Cheshire, England D: After 1398 P: Wilbraham, Chester, England B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Thomas De Knightley Charlton B: 30 Mar 1394 P: D: 4 Jan 1459-1460 P: Elizabeth Francis B: P: D: P: Robert Corbet B: 1383 P: , Moreton Corbet, Shrops, England D: 12 Aug 1440 P: England Margaret Mallory B: 1387 P: , Shawbury, Salop, England D: Jan 1438 P: Moreton Corbet, Shropshire, England Randall Mainwaring B: Abt 1405 P: Salop, England D: 1456 P: Margery Venables B: 1369 P: Kinderton, England D: 1459 P: Add Father B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Add Mother B: P: undefined D: undefined P: undefined Robert Charlton B: Abt 1415 P: Apley, Shropshire, England D: 1471 P: Apley, Shropshire, England Mary Corbet B: Abt 1418 P: Morton, Salop, England D: 18 Aug P: Apley, Shropshire, England William Mainwaring B: Abt 1430 P: Ightfield, Salop, England D: P: Margaret Warren B: Abt 1430 P: Ightfield, Salop, England D: P: Richard Charlton B: 1450 P: Apley, Shropshire, England D: 1522 P: Apley, Shropshire, England Anne Mainwaring B: P: D: P: +Anne Charlton B: Abt 1480 P: , England D: 1560 P: Join a Genealogy Training Website for help! Extend your family history. Search over 700 MILLION names: First Name: Last Name: Click on photo to view the original size. View | Edit Info | Edit Photo | Delete | Viewers Share Your Thoughts About This Photo: Owner Actions Sarah Wheeler Robert Crawford Richard Welby Robert Crawford Olive Irby Robert Crawford Mary Whiting Robert Crawford Joseph Wildbore Robert Crawford Henry Farwell Robert Crawford Edward Bulkeley Robert Crawford Anne Charlton Robert Crawford Hugh Le Bigod Robert Crawford Margaret Braose Robert Crawford Walter De Lacey Robert Crawford Ela Fitzpatrick Robert Crawford Rohesia Le Despencer Robert Crawford Stephen De Segrave Robert Crawford Helen Galloway Robert Crawford Walter II De Ridelsford Robert Crawford Alan De Columbers Robert Crawford Cicily De Waleton Robert Crawford Cospatrick De Samlesbury Robert Crawford Roger De Quincy Robert Crawford Eleanor De Holand Robert Crawford Henri Champagne Robert Crawford Svyatoslav Robert Crawford Thyra Blauzahn Robert Crawford Thyra Blauzahn Robert Crawford Yolande Robert Crawford James I Robert Crawford Beatrice Von Hohenstaussen Robert Crawford Rodrigo De Lara Robert Crawford Ferdinand III Robert Crawford Isabel Le De Spencer Robert Crawford Rolf Kraki Robert Crawford Lodbrock Robert Crawford Gilbert Count of Brienne Robert Crawford William Fitzrichard Lord Robert Crawford William Beauchamp-1 Robert Crawford Robert I Robert Crawford Malahule Haldrick Eysteinsson Robert Crawford Herbert Robert Crawford Bertha De Morvis Robert Crawford Beatrice De Vermandois Robert Crawford Alice D'Albigny Robert Crawford Isabel De Warenne Robert Crawford William De Perigod Robert Crawford Tierga Tetrisca of Robert Crawford Sulpice Robert Crawford Sigisbert VII Robert Crawford Regilinde Robert Crawford Eldegaire De Limoges Robert Crawford Hameline Plantagenet Robert Crawford Wialdruth De Toulouse Robert Crawford Rutbert III Robert Crawford Pepin De Senlis Robert Crawford Olaf Robert Crawford Herfast De Crepon Robert Crawford Gilbert (Sigibert) Robert Crawford Eve De Roussilon Robert Crawford De Neustria Robert Crawford Bertha Auba Robert Crawford Rudolf II Robert Crawford Rognvald I Eysteinsson Robert Crawford Louis Robert Crawford Hugh Robert Crawford Hilda Robert Crawford Giselbert Hainaut Robert Crawford Gerberge Robert Crawford Ermentrude Robert Crawford Ermengarde Robert Crawford Daughter of Thibaut Robert Crawford Charles Robert Crawford Bertha Robert Crawford Gilbert De Lacey Robert Crawford Beatrice De Burgandy Robert Crawford Simon De Joinville Robert Crawford Jean De Brienne II Robert Crawford Ingelram Fiennes Robert Crawford Isabel De Conde Robert Crawford Eva Marshall Robert Crawford William De Braose Robert Crawford Gwladus Robert Crawford Ida Gertrude Hainut Robert Crawford Roger III De Toeni Robert Crawford Robert De Ferrers Robert Crawford Margaret Peverel Robert Crawford Cicily De Rumiliy Robert Crawford Maud Lusignan Robert Crawford Humphrey V De Bohun Robert Crawford Petronilla De Lacey Robert Crawford Ralph De Toeni Robert Crawford Maud Matilda Marshall Robert Crawford Hugh Le Bigod Robert Crawford Avaline De Clare Robert Crawford Geoffrey Fitz Piers Robert Crawford Alice De Newberg Robert Crawford Wiliam Mauduit Robert Crawford Joane Mortimer Robert Crawford Walcheline Beauchamp Robert Crawford Elizabeth (Joan) Beauchamp Robert Crawford Aud Gyrita Robert Crawford Roger I Robert Crawford Richard Moodeye Robert Crawford Margaret Kilbourne Robert Crawford Hines Robert Crawford Hans Rothrock Robert Crawford Abraham Selleck Robert Crawford Pierre De Capetian Robert Crawford Neklan Duke of Bohemia Robert Crawford Matilda Beauclerc Robert Crawford Geoffrey Anjou Robert Crawford Elizabeth Goushill Robert Crawford Elizabeth De Courtenay Robert Crawford Edmund Eriksson Robert Crawford Benjamin Wellington Robert Crawford George Bush Robert Crawford Zouche Robert Crawford Seagrave-2 Robert Crawford Rognvaldosson Robert Crawford Meschines Robert Crawford Mercia Robert Crawford La Zouche Robert Crawford Seagrave Robert Crawford Fergant Robert Crawford Grosvenor Robert Crawford Belmeis Robert Crawford Avaranches Robert Crawford De Charlton Robert Crawford Sarah Beauchamp Robert Crawford Robert II Robert Crawford Richard Talbot Robert Crawford Mabel Grandison Robert Crawford John Patshul Robert Crawford Henry St. John Robert Crawford Henry I Robert Crawford Catherine Bures Robert Crawford Baldwin IV Robert Crawford Angharad Robert Crawford Allen Basset Robert Crawford Aline Gal Robert Crawford Alfgar Robert Crawford Adela of Aquitane Robert Crawford John Younges Robert Crawford Joan Herringt Robert Crawford Deborah Scofield Robert Crawford Alexander Robert Crawford Elizabeth St. John Robert Crawford Roger De Beauchamp Robert Crawford Wetzel-1 Robert Crawford Wetzel Robert Crawford Meshullemeth Robert Crawford Mattathias Robert Crawford Manasseh Robert Crawford Juda Robert Crawford Damaris Robert Crawford Childeric I Robert Crawford Jesus Robert Crawford William IV De Say Robert Crawford Anslecd De Bastemburg Robert Crawford Thomas Fiennes Robert Crawford William Fitz Osbern Robert Crawford Thomas Budd Robert Crawford The Sea King Robert Crawford Sir Robert Crane Robert Crawford Roger Lestrange Robert Crawford Roger De Grey Robert Crawford Reynald, Lord of Croy Robert Crawford Oliver Calthorpe Robert Crawford Mary Sparhawk Robert Crawford Elizabeth Hastings Robert Crawford Margaret West Robert Crawford John Willoughby Robert Crawford Isabel Bacon Robert Crawford Cicily Ufford Robert Crawford Alice De Toeni Robert Crawford William Hobby Robert Crawford Thomas Lyon Robert Crawford John Hoyt Robert Crawford Jean Stewart Robert Crawford William Mead Robert Crawford Hanford M. Selleck Robert Crawford Greystoke Robert Crawford Caesar Robert Crawford Elizabeth St. John Robert Crawford Crimthann Robert Crawford Cambria Robert Crawford Bertrade Robert Crawford Assaracus Robert Crawford Alreksson Robert Crawford Geoffrey I Robert Crawford Richard I Robert Crawford Eticho Robert Crawford Beauchamp-4 Robert Crawford Test-2 Robert Crawford Beauchamp-2 Robert Crawford R. L. Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant Robert Crawford Create a New Online Family Tree: Create by uploading a GEDCOM You have an Online Family Tree being prepared for download. Join a Genealogy Training Website to create your family tree! Join Ancestry.com Today! Get complete access to over one billion names and more when you sign up for an Ancestry Premium Membership. My Relatives This feature allows you to add individual records to your "My Relatives" page on Ancestry.com. You can use this feature as a bookmark to help easily find records of your ancestors again. Ancestry World Tree The Ancestry World Tree is a huge database containing the research efforts of thousands Page 5Page 4Page 3Page 2Page 1 Title Posted By Post Date Size File Name xbar2 Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 51 Download xbar Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 49 Download vbar Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 56 Download theta Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 47 Download table Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 29.6K Download rho Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 49 Download rbar Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 48 Download psi Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 45 Download pi Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 47 Download phi Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 51 Download nu Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 58 Download mu Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 48 Download greater Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 48 Download fig5 Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 17.1K Download fig4 Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 13.7K Download fig3 Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 21.8K Download fig2 Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 6K Download fig1 Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 17.1K Download eq3-4 Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 28.3K Download eq1 Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 24.5K Download cover Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 40.8K Download The Speed of Gravity - What the Experiments Say Bob Crawford Nov 07, 2003 64.8K Download Ancestry_com - Connecticut Men in the Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 Bob Crawford Oct 31, 2003 13.2K Download Ancestry World Tree Ancestors of Lynda Hetzel Saterfield Bob Crawford Oct 22, 2003 27K Download John Clock Bob Crawford Oct 22, 2003 18.2K Download Woodcutter Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 28.6K Download Tropin Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 22K Download Trojans Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 22K Download Thomas Bulkely Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 5.4K Download Rethel Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 1.8K Download Olafsson Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 27.7K Download Nahor Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 12.1K Download Murdach Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 10.2K Download Lucius Julius Caesar II Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 13.9K Download Laura Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 4.5K Download Lamech Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 6.2K Download Frostesson Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 4K Download Freysson Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 7.1K Download Ferch Lucius Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 102.1K Download Eyesteisson Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 27K Download Eochadah Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 10.5K Download Elizabeth St. John Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 25.9K Download Crimthann Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 11.5K Download Cambria Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 117.8K Download bertrade Norway Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 251K Download Assaracus Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 32.8K Download Alreksson Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 20.5K Download John St. John Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 589.1K Download Greystoke Bob Crawford Oct 06, 2003 954K Download Test Bob Crawford Sep 30, 2003 1.3M Download Page 5Page 4Page 3Page 2Page 1 About Us | Help/FAQ | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Tell A Friend | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions | Advertising Copyright © 1998-2004 MyFamily.com, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All rights reserved. Page 5Page 4Page 3Page 2Page 1 Title Posted By Post Date Size File Name daveanthes Bob Crawford Sep 30, 2003 17.7K Download Rethel Bob Crawford Sep 30, 2003 9.7K Download Montlhery Bob Crawford Sep 30, 2003 10.2K Download Monteleherico Bob Crawford Sep 30, 2003 9.8K Download Lorraine Bob Crawford Sep 30, 2003 181.8K Download Billung Bob Crawford Sep 30, 2003 54.3K Download Bertrade of Norway Bob Crawford Sep 30, 2003 36.8K Download Aquataine Bob Crawford Sep 30, 2003 85K Download Albert II Bob Crawford Sep 30, 2003 126.3K Download Bavaria Bob Crawford Sep 29, 2003 30.5K Download Conteville Bob Crawford Sep 29, 2003 144.1K Download De Macon Bob Crawford Sep 29, 2003 81.2K Download Doda Falaise Bob Crawford Sep 29, 2003 13.9K Download Falaise Bob Crawford Sep 29, 2003 52.8K Download Hisdai Bob Crawford Sep 29, 2003 11.3K Download Inglid Bob Crawford Sep 29, 2003 22.9K Download Vermendos Bob Crawford Sep 29, 2003 147K Download Abbe nocher Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 9.9K Download Bayeux Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 25.8K Download De Ponthieu Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 20.8K Download Soissons Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 9.5K Download Adela de Anjou Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 97.5K Download Crepon Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 24.9K Download De Gouy Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 77K Download Eliseg Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 17.1K Download Maredudd Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 25.8K Download Mercia-1 Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 23K Download Richard I Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 79.6K Download Senlis Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 45.4K Download Ednywain Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 11K Download Bastembourg Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 52.7K Download Bretagne-1 Bob Crawford Sep 26, 2003 92.1K Download Von Saxony Bob Crawford Sep 25, 2003 85.2K Download Tencred Bob Crawford Sep 25, 2003 9.9K Download Taillefer Bob Crawford Sep 25, 2003 96.9K Download Hugh Capet Bob Crawford Sep 25, 2003 107.7K Download Harcourt Bob Crawford Sep 25, 2003 9.6K Download Ermengarde Bob Crawford Sep 25, 2003 128.2K Download Bretagne-1 Bob Crawford Sep 25, 2003 92.1K Download Anjou-1 Bob Crawford Sep 25, 2003 53.6K Download Hlodversson Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 10.3K Download Hawise Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 79.4K Download Emilia of Germany Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 139.2K Download Duke of Brittanie Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 117.7K Download Conan Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 50.2K Download Blois Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 134.2K Download Anleta Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 13.8K Download Sigurdsson Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 14.6K Download Mercia Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 22.9K Download Godiva Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 9.7K Download Page 5Page 4Page 3Page 2Page 1 About Us | Help/FAQ | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Tell A Friend | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions | Advertising Copyright © 1998-2004 MyFamily.com, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All rights reserved. *Video and Sound Files are now kept in the File Cabinet. Page 5Page 4Page 3Page 2Page 1 Title Posted By Post Date Size File Name Fulco Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 128.1K Download Anjou Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 53.6K Download Alfgifu Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 9.7K Download Aethelred I Bob Crawford Sep 22, 2003 45K Download Sudeley Bob Crawford Sep 19, 2003 66.4K Download Joan Beauchamp Bob Crawford Sep 19, 2003 13.6K Download Joan Beauchamp - 1 Bob Crawford Sep 19, 2003 203K Download Gwladys verch Eurgen Bob Crawford Sep 19, 2003 33.1K Download Eurgen Bob Crawford Sep 19, 2003 14.3K Download Claudia of Rome Bob Crawford Sep 19, 2003 34K Download Ancestry World Tree Project Anthes-Fluth and many others Bob Crawford Sep 19, 2003 94.5K Download Van Der Heul Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 33.4K Download Van Brugh Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 32K Download Kype Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 31.4K Download Thomas Roper Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 32.2K Download Plovier Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 31.8K Download Peter De Mill-1 Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 34.8K Download Peter De Mill Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 14.1K Download Liphorst Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 31.7K Download John Roper-1 Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 33K Download John Roper Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 16K Download Jan De Mil Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 31.7K Download Edmund Roper Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 14.8K Download d'Oyley Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 30.9K Download Apuldore Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 31K Download Antonius De Mil Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 33K Download Adam Roper Bob Crawford Sep 18, 2003 32.3K Download Norse-14 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.9K Download Norse-13 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.3K Download Norse-12 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.2K Download Norse-11 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.9K Download Norse-18 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 31.3K Download Norse-17 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 31.3K Download Norse-16 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 31.3K Download Norse-15 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 31.3K Download Norse-10 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.8K Download Norse-9 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.6K Download Norse-8 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.7K Download Norse-7 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.6K Download Norse-6 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.4K Download Norse-5 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 31K Download Norse-4 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.9K Download Norse-3 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 31K Download Norse-2 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 30.8K Download Norse-1 Bob Crawford Sep 17, 2003 31.2K Download Robert Knappe Bob Crawford Sep 16, 2003 891 Download Ralph Basset-1076 Bob Crawford Sep 16, 2003 899 Download Pierre De Grandison Bob Crawford Sep 16, 2003 32.7K Download Osmond De Centville Bob Crawford Sep 16, 2003 905 Download Matilda Bob Crawford Sep 16, 2003 33.2K Download Page 5Page 4Page 3Page 2Page 1 About Us | Help/FAQ | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Tell A Friend | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions | Advertising Copyright © 1998-2004 MyFamily.com, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All rights reserved. *Video and Sound Files are now kept in the File Cabinet. Page 5Page 4Page 3Page 2Page 1 Title Posted By Post Date Size File Name Katherine De Grandison Bob Crawford Sep 16, 2003 34.1K Download Aimon Bob Crawford Sep 16, 2003 30.6K Download Abraham Selleck Bob Crawford Sep 11, 2003 23.5K Download David Selleck Genealogy Bob Crawford Sep 11, 2003 21K Download Descendants of Richard Scofield Bob Crawford Sep 11, 2003 109.2K Download Huntington's Registration, Stamford, April 6, 1797 Bob Crawford Sep 11, 2003 21.6K Download 1862plat-met Bob Crawford Sep 10, 2003 131.2K Download metomen_patentmap Bob Crawford Sep 10, 2003 42.8K Download iexec-3 Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 61.8K Download iexec-2 Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 69.4K Download iexec-1 Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 73.2K Download iexec Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 69.2K Download Ancestry World Tree Project Southard and Others Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 16.7K Download Selleck Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 32.8K Download Sherman Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 32.6K Download Volbrecht Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 31.3K Download Samara Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 31.6K Download Prather Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 28K Download Potter Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 33.4K Download MyFamily_com - Online Family Tree Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 37.4K Download Hines Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 32.3K Download Crawford Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 31.2K Download Brabec Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 31.7K Download Ancestry World Tree Project R_ L_ Crawford Ancestor's and Descendant's Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 39.7K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Mead Family Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 43.6K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View More and more Lockwood Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 61.1K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View More Lockwood Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 60.4K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Pennoyer Family Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 43.6K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Scofield Family Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 58.5K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View William Longespee Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 47K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Stephan Longespee Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 43.8K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Peter Selleck Sr Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 42.1K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Pedegree Chart Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 45.6K Download powered Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 958 Download p Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 43 Download MySitesHead1 Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 1.7K Download myfamilyred Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 8.7K Download myfamilyred(1) Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 8.7K Download HISTtools Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 586 Download cookiemonster Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 2.6K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Henry II Bob Crawford Sep 05, 2003 40.6K Download Online Family Tree-5 Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 23.9K Download Online Family Tree-4 Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 20.8K Download Online Family Tree-2 Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 28.7K Download Online Family Tree-1 Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 24.4K Download Online Family Tree Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 24.6K Download FamilySearch Internet - Search Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 930 Download FamilyEdit Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 17.2K Download Crawford-Selleck Family Genealogy Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 9K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Selleck Family Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 76.4K Download Page 5Page 4Page 3Page 2Page 1 About Us | Help/FAQ | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Tell A Friend | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions | Advertising Copyright © 1998-2004 MyFamily.com, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All rights reserved. . Page 5Page 4Page 3Page 2Page 1 Title Posted By Post Date Size File Name MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Password Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 42.2K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View ore Lockwood Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 41.8K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Mead Family - 2 Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 42K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Me Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 39.5K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Lockwood Family-3 Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 42.1K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Lockwood Familky- 4 Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 38.1K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Law Family Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 39.8K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Edwin Selleck Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 42.3K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View David Selleck Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 40.1K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View David Selleck History Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 39.9K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Dad Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 37.6K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Copy of your Yahoo! Greetin Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 41K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View David Selleck - 2-1 Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 72.3K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View getimage Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 35.3K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View P0310927 Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 37K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Re sherman family - 1 Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 43.5K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View Robert Sellock Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 40.6K Download MyFamily_com - Ancestor's and Descendant's of Robert Lee Crawford - View The History of Robert Lee C Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 42.4K Download Brandon Cemetery Section I Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 5.1K Download Brandon Cemetery Section H Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 49.7K Download Brandon Cemetery Section G Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 27.1K Download Brandon Cemetery Section F Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 41.8K Download Brandon Cemetery Section E Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 25.1K Download Brandon Cemetery Section D Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 94.9K Download Brandon Cemetery Section C Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 122.7K Download Brandon Cemetery Section B Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 68.3K Download Brandon Cemetery Section A Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 18.7K Download Russian Transliteration Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 22.1K Download how do I swear in spanish from insults_net Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 20.7K Download how do I swear in russian from insults_net Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 20.5K Download how do I swear in persian from insults_net Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 20.3K Download how do I swear in japanese from insults_net Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 21K Download how do I swear in german from insults_net Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 21.5K Download Cyrillic Script Bob Crawford Sep 04, 2003 10.1K Download Selleck-2 Bob Crawford Sep 03, 2003 34.5K Download Crawford-Selleck Family Genealogy Bob Crawford Mar 07, 2003 9K Download Page 5Page 4Page 3Page 2Page 1 About Us | Help/FAQ | Support/Feedback | Privacy Policy | Tell A Friend | Affiliate Program | Terms and Conditions | Advertising Copyright © 1998-2004 MyFamily.com, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All rights reserved.

My Favorite Web Sites

My Family.Com Free Web Site
Family Search.Com
Ancestry.Com
RootsWeb.Com
Susan's Family Genealogy
UsGenWeb
Ellis Island Records