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06/08/2010
Where to Find Genealogical Documents
In case you're wondering where the proof is to knock down your brick walls, it's probably in a place
like this
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Jun 8, 2010 5:53:44 PM
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Tombstone Tuesday: Benjamin Cleveland 1701-1784
From the Scotland Burying Ground in Scotland, Conn. This is a case where the town was Windham at the time, but since has broken off. The Clevelands could be my most successful gravestone line. Benjamin's father Aaron is at Woburn, Mass. His grandson and great-grandson are in New Brunswick. And I have everyone in between the last Cleveland and me. So, that's six generations (starting with my grandmother, the last two generations of us don't have gravestones yet) back to Nathan Cleveland, then I'm not sure about his father Benjamin Cleveland in Nova Scotia. Then two generations thereafter. Cool.
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The Ancestry of Anne Eure - Generation Seven, Part I
At this point, the numbers per generation rapidly increase. I will be giving just short information on couples found in this reliable secondary source: Magna Carta Ancestors: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families by Douglas Richardson (Baltimore, Md.: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2005) [abbreviated as MCA]. This work and Richardson's accompanying work on Plantagenet Ancestry are being re-published this year, but have been delayed thus far. To see generations one to six, please go to the categories listing on the right and click on medieval genealogy. 64. Sir William EURE, born about 1396 (aged 26 in 1422), died between 12...
Martin Hollick
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