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Genealogy of the Gann, Donaldson, Laubacher, McDowell and related families
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351 Ancient Burying Ground Gage, Nathaniel (I3496)
 
352 Ancient Burying Ground Runnels, Samuel (I3515)
 
353 Andrew Logan was born December 5, 1831, Marion County, Alabama to Robert "Bob" Logan and Virginia Jane "Jennie" McCaleb. The Logans were staunch Republicans and Church of Christ believers. Robert had been raised as a Presbyterian but was supposedly converted by Andrew Campbell.

The eight brothers, born between 1823 and 1847 all supported the Union cause although the oldest, Daniel Lapsley "Lap" Logan could not enlist for medical reasons. Because of a hernia, he was unable to serve in the Union Army with his brothers but he helped build bridges for the Union forces. It is possible Lap died from tuberculosis although it is rumored he was murdered and his body tied on the back of horse, taken home, and thrown into the yard.

Andrew voluntarily enlisted with the Union Army, July 24, 1862, at Huntsville, AL, as a private, by Captain Bankhead for three years, with Company K, 1st Regiment of Alabama volunteers. He was sick with typhoid fever and in Number 13 hospital, Nashville, Tennessee, from November 1, 1862 until January, 1863. After he was discharged from the hospital, he was assigned February 1, 1863 to Company E, 1st Regiment of Middle Tennessee Calvary. He was captured at Rome, Georgia, on May 3, 1863 and confined at Richmond, Virginia on May 9, 1863. He was paroled at City Point, Virginia on May 15, 1863 and reported to Camp Parole, Massachusetts on May 18, 1863. Andy was sent to C.C.O. on May 19, 1863 and then reassigned to Company K, 1st Regiment, Alabama Calvary on June 9, 1863, which was commanded by Col. George E. Spencer. He was promoted to Sergeant on November 1, 1963 by order of Col. Spencer and was on daily duty as commanding sergeant of Company K, 1st Regiment, Alabama Calvary until June of 1865. On June 15, 1865, Andrew entered Number 4 hospital, Nashville, Tennessee with symptoms of malaria fever and mumps that he had contracted at Huntsville, Alabama. After being in the hospital 20 days, he was released upon request and since he was not fit for service, he desired to be mustered out with the Regiment in order to be assisted home by his comrades. He was honorably discharged with the rank of sergeant on July 19, 1865, at Nashville, Tennessee by reason of termination of the war. He was an Alabama Torie after the war.

Andrew had been a farmer before the war and had received a land grant for a farm in Fayette County, Alabama in 1857. In 1868, he purchased a farm near Yampertown and the Luxapallila Creek in Guin, Marion County, Alabama near his parents. He also moved his widowed sister, Betty Elizabeth Logan Hunt and her four children there to live with him.

He married Catherine Elizabeth "Cathern" Cothern on March 12, 1876 in Gold Mine, Marion County, Alabama. Cathern was the daughter of Gabrial Cothern and Mary Jane Clement, born June 27, 1847 in Spartanburg, South Carolina.

In the fall of 1881 Andy moved his family, Cathern's mother and her grandson Ben to another farm near the Buttahatchee River. It was located east of where the Old Haley Post Office stood years ago on what was then called the Tuscaloosa-Russellville Road in Marion County, Alabama. They stayed there and worked the land for about ten years.

Andy then purchased another farm in the New River area, still in Marion County and moved his family there in 1891. By then he and Cathern had seven children of his own along with several family members living with them. He donated land from this farm to build the Gold Mine Church of Christ building, the cemetery and the school building that once stood at a corner of the cemetery.

As a result of exposure and illness during the war, Andy became disabled in his later years. He walked with a limp and had to use a cane. His last home was only a quarter of a mile from Gold Mine, where he would walk to pick up his mail. He would walk to the road and sit down in the shade, waiting until someone came along to give him a wagon ride to town. A few days before he died, he realized his time was short and told Cathern to stay where they were living and not move from place to place. On the day he died, he called her to him and asked her to "stay close by me today" shortly before he passed on. Andy and Cathern were buried in the family plot of the Gold Mine Church of Christ Cemetery, Marion County, Alabama.

--Donna W Collins 
Logan, Sgt Andrew W (I373)
 
354 Animas City Cemetery Fulcher, John W (I4003)
 
355 Animas City Cemetery Nichols, Samuel T (I0979)
 
356 Animas City was later annexed into the city of Durango Donison, Richard Fleming (I0899)
 
357 Anna Adelheid Grünning married in Neuenkirchen on 20 May 1754 to Johann Heinrich Kramer of Damme. (22 Dec 2021) Family F2051
 
358 Anna Catharina Flöttels, of Rüschendorf, aged 70, bur. in Damme on 15 Apr 1752. (23 Jan 2022) Family F2059
 
359 Anna Maria Elisabeth Kotte's burial record: "Sie war 50. Jahre, 3. Monate verhieratet mit Gerhard Weglage..." Family F2085
 
360 Anne Bradstreet (born Anne Dudley; March 20, 1612 ? September 18, 1672) was the first poet and first female writer in the British North American colonies to be published. Her first volume of poetry was The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America, published in 1650. It was met with a positive reception in both the Old World and the New World. Dudley, Anne (I3697)
 
361 Anne Margueritte Süson b. 3 Mar 1714 and bap. 4 Mar 1714 in Schalbach, dau. Charles Süson and Marie Elisabeth Chartier
Anne Margueritte Süson mar. Christian Bieter on 23 Oct 1719 in Schalbach, dau. late Jean Nicolas Süson and Eve Chrisman; children in Schalbach
Ettienne Süson mar. Anne Marguerite Reeb in 1720 (date not legible) in Schalbach, son Ettienne Süson and Anne Marie Marsloff
Ettienne Süson d. 19 Jan 1722 in Metting, age 26
Anna Catharina Sison, dau. Stephan Sison and Anna Maria of Metting, bap. 31 Aug 1683 in Weyer 
Family F2145
 
362 Anne Marie Kindig, dau. Tobias Kindig and Marie Ackerman of Veckersviller, bap. 6 Sep 1663 in Lixheim
Nicolaus Kindig, son of Tobias Kindig and Marie Ackerman of Veckersviller, bap. 27 Nov 1664 in Lixheim; mar. Elisabeth Siterlet/Ziderin in Veckersviller (Weyer registry) on 10 Jan 1693 and lived in Schalbach; several children 1695-
Beatrix Kündick, dau. Tobias Kündick and Marie Nachtman, b. 15 May 1669 in Veckersviller
Antony Kundic, son Tobias Kundic and Marie, b. 1 Mar 1673 in Veckersviller
Melchior Kindicg and Susanna Kindicg appear as godparents to Thomas Nicolaus Schneider in Veckersviller, 6 Dec 1673
Susanne Kindich, wife of Jean Thibault Marchal of Veckersviller d. 21 Dec 1710
Thiebault Kindich, age 22, unmarried, d. 4 Mar 1721 in Schalbach
Susanne Kindich of Hilbeshiem godmother to Jean Henry Lambin of Schalbach, 20 Feb 1722
Elisabeth Kindich, dau. late Nicolas Kindich and Elisabeth Siterlet, mar. 10 Nov 1722 in Schalbach to Henry Schneider, son Jean Pier Schneider and Heléne Schnitzer of Diedendorf
Anne Lucie Kindich of Metting with husband Paul Chartier, mother of Paul Chartier, bap. 11 Dec 1722 in Schalbach
Patricia Köntig of Veckersviller godmother to a daughter of Mathaeus Droll of Seeviller, 2 Apr 1687 in Weyer
Clementine Lucia Kinding and Catharina Christina(?) Kinding, twin daughters of Tobias Kinding and Maria, b. 14 Dec 1666 and bap. 16 Dec 1666 in Veckersviller (Lixheim, record partially missing) 
Kindich, Sebastienne (I2668)
 
363 Annie Maye Stone Robinson, wrote this story in her "History of the Stones":

John Stone was born in 1782 in Virginia and married Annie Lyle in 1804. Over the years they had 13 children and became pioneers from Virginia to South Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama. John and Annie first settled on a farm near Spartanburg, South Carolina. In addition to being a farmer, John became a hat maker and pioneer. In the fall of 1814, he enlisted six of his neighbors to join the army to help bring to a conclusion the War of 1812. They secured the best horses and flintlock rifles available in the community and with a supply of gun powder, bullets, and clothing started a journey to New Orleans to join General Andrew Jackson's army. John Stone was twenty-nine years of age at the time and left a wife and seven children to join the army.

This journey carried the party of volunteers through Northern Georgia (then the Cherokee Nation), into Mississippi Territory (through many other Indian tribes). After weeks of travel through various unsettled areas during the winter of 1815 and before reaching New Orleans, the party met members of General Jackson's victorious battle of New Orleans returning to their homes in Tennessee with news of defeat of the British. The return trip to South Carolina in the spring of 1815 by a different route carried the volunteer party through other sections of the unsettled lands of what is now Mississippi, Alabama, and northern Georgia.

John Stone reached his family and home in Spartanburg with a vivid impression of the rich lands, forest of giant trees, and numerous broad streams he had traveled through. He and his neighbors soon sold their farms in South Carolina and prepared to move southwestward. John and his family first settled in northern Georgia where new land was cleared and a farm was improved, but after a few years upon hearing that Alabama had been made a State, he sold this farm and with his family and friends started westward. They next settled in St. Clair County, Alabama. Another farm was cleared and a homestead established. After only a few years of farming on the hills of St. Clair County, the pioneer spirit and the desire for economic improvement prompted another venture. The St. Clair homestead was sold and with his family and friends, John Stone moved to the low lands of the Cahaba River in Bibb and Perry County, Alabama. Family stories have been repeated over the years of the entire family cutting away the cane break and planting corn without cultivation of any kind and producing thirty bushels of corn per acre. Fish and wild game were available in abundant quantities.

Following a several overflows of the Cahaba River and the appearance of illness from typhoid and malarial fevers, another move was planned. John Stone heard of a new treaty between the U.S. government and the Chickasaw and Choctaw Indians on Dancing Rabbit Creek in Mississippi whereby a large tract of land in Alabama west of Gaine?s Trace was open to settlement. With their family and relatives, John and Annie Stone left the low lands of Bibb and Perry County for Northwest Marion County, Alabama. In the fall of 1936, they reached a place on Papaw Creek, now Bull Mountain Creek, in Northwest Marion County. Here they found a few white settlers, many of them known as squatters, who had perhaps moved in on the Indians before the treaty was made. John Stone purchased the squatters right from Henry Lockridge and also cleared additional land rights with the Government Land Agents. On October 6, 1836, they were among the first buyers of Chickasaw Indian land in west Marion County, Alabama. Their first 160 acres being Southwest fourth (SE1/4), Section 20, Township 9, Range 15, west Huntsville Meridian, the present site of Shottsville, Marion County, Alabama. Lockridge had built a log cabin and deadened timber on six acres of the land. This was John Stone?s last pioneer move.

With his sons, son-in-laws, other relatives, and friends, John Stone bought squatters rights or entered into government land adjoining his tract. He and members of his family in addition to clearing land, building houses and roads, operated a blacksmith shop, shoemaking shop, and hat makers shop.

A church was built nearby and named New Bethel, but the community soon took on the name of Stonetown and carried that name for other thirty years before it was changed to Shottsville for the Post Office that was established by that name.

Annie Lyle Stone was a short, energetic woman and a great talker. She was widely and affectionately known the in the frontier communities where she lived as a midwife, practical nurse, and home remedy pioneer doctor. She made syrups, liniments, poultices, and plasters from herbs, barks, and other native ingredients available.

Enthusiastically joining her husband and neighbors in all of their westward pioneer moves and adventures, Annie Lyle Stone made it her responsibility to see that the covered wagon was properly stocked with clothing, herbs for medicine, powder and bullets for the flintstocks to insure food from wild game during periods of hardships and disappointments. Seed for growing the next year?s crops on the new farm was an important part of the covered wagon cargo. The cows, sheep, and dogs were cared for by the women while the men were hunting game or clearing the route for travel. Annie, her daughters, and other women of the community took the seed from the cotton, the burrows from the wool, spun the thread, wove the fabric, and made clothing for all members of their families. They also knitted the socks, stockings, gloves, shawls, caps and jackets for all members of their families.

Within their first ten years at Stonetown, Marion County, Alabama, all of Annie and John's thirteen children had married and were rearing their own families in the community. In 1846, at the age of sixty, Annie died leaving her husband, thirteen children, their spouses, numerous grandchildren and great grandchildren. Annie Lyle Stone was one of the first pioneers to be buried on the hill overlooking her last homestead in what is now Shottsville Cemetery. John Stone died in 1869 and was buried next to Annie in the Shottsville Cemetery.  
Family F027
 
364 Another John Ennis family is present in Pine Twp., Allegheny Co., Pennsylvania with two daughters born in the 1830s (1840 US Census) -- needs investigation (20190505)
This John Ennis does not appear in the index to Allegheny Co. estate records or the indexes to Allegheny Co. deed records (2019 Dec 02) 
Ennis, Sarah Anne (I2763)
 
365 Another Lubke Burlage, married to an Alheit Flederman, was having children baptized in Rieste during the same years as this one. Family F2097
 
366 Another man named Marin Joseph Perrollaz was b. in Magland in 1742 and d. there 10 Sep 1825, aged 83. And yet another man named Marin Joseph Perrollaz was b. in Magland in 1752 and d. there 26 Aug 1827, aged 75. There are also men b. around the same time named Marin Perrollaz, Joseph Perrollaz, Joseph Marie Perrollaz, and at least one woman named Marie Josephine Perrollaz. Extreme caution is required to avoid confusing any or all of them with this man. Perrolaz, Marin Joseph (I4739)
 
367 Another researcher has a date of death of 11 Mar 1966; he was alive as of Christmas 1965 Donaldson, Marvin Hazen (I0895)
 
368 Another researcher shows John as the son of Martin Clabaugh (1743 in Koblenz GER - 1822 in Huntingdon Co PA), a Revolutionary War veteran, and Mary Margaret Householder (1752-1848) of Georgetown, Maryland Clabaugh, John (I0934)
 
369 Another William C Nichols is probated in Clinton Co., Illinois in 1840; possible uncle to this man (4 Jan 2018) Nichols, William Cartwright (I1885)
 
370 Antioch Baptist Church Cemetery Kirk, William Jacob (I4335)
 
371 Antioch Baptist Church Cemetery Gann, Amelia C (I195)
 
372 Apparently a sister to Ann Maria Arnold, who married a brother to Margaret's husband Michael C Miller Arnold, Margaret (I2924)
 
373 Apparently a sister to Margaret Arnold, who married a brother to Simon Miller Arnold, Ann Mariah (I2928)
 
374 Apparently died while visiting a daughter and sister in New Mexico Eaton, Nancy Lynton (I0898)
 
375 Appear to have been married prior to arriving in Boston, which itself was prior to 27 Nov 1680 Family F1836
 
376 Appears as "Arrena" throughout her husband's CSA pension application paperwork; we use the name on her tombstone. Cagle, Irena (I4337)
 
377 Appears as an estate appraiser in Augusta Co., Virginia on 7 Mar 1745/6 McPheeters, William (I1846)
 
378 Appears in father Daniel Malone's will as an heir Malone, Brandeis (I307)
 
379 Appears in his uncle's will on this date Goolde, John (I3736)
 
380 Appears in the baptism record of daughter Catherine Susanna (I589)
 
381 Appears in the estate index of Clinton Co., Illinois but the box (92) is not available online (19 Jan 2017)
Does not appear in Clinton Co., Illinois Wills vol. A-C (19 Jan 2017) 
Clabaugh, John (I1125)
 
382 Arnoldt Blommenthal m. Margaretha Dickmans, a Lutheran, in Neuenkirchen on 14 Apr 1692. (30 Dec 2021) Blumendtaell, Johan (I4539)
 
383 Around 1785, John moved to Union County, South Carolina when he was 16 years old. He married Elizabeth Finley in 1794 in Union Co. SC.

John P Lyle then moved to Jackson County, Georgia around 1799-1800. He was a farmer and a builder and was in the War of 1812. His militia group was called up during the War of 1812 to fortify "Hog Mountain" in Jackson Co. for the purpose of building a blockade (stockade). The blockade built was called Fort Daniel and today there is a state marker at the site on State Route 124 between Braselton and Lawrenceville. In 1817, John was listed in the Jackson County, GA tax digest and was on the 1820 Census in Jackson Co, GA.

John was shown on the 1830 census Pg 195 in Campbell Co, GA with 3 sons. He is on the 1840 census in Paulding Co, GA and it is thought that he received land in the 1832 land lottery of the Cherokee lands of original Cherokee Co.

He appears with his family on the 1850 census of Paulding Co, GA in Dist 839, page 192, dwelling #661, and is noted to have owned $630.00 worth of real estate. 
Lyle, John P (I3294)
 
384 As of Sep 2009, the municipality of Picher, Oklahoma ceased to be; due to mining operations most buildings of the city were in danger of collapse and the land is too toxic to be livable Mashburn, Charlie Edward (I0896)
 
385 As of the 1940 census, he had never attended school Bozeman, George Franklin (I366)
 
386 As the city of Springfield grew a number of its citizens decided to establish another town forty miles to the east. In 1701 a committee, including David Morgan, surveyed the area. A site was chosen and several members of the committee, including David Morgan, moved into the area and established the town of Brimfield, MA, the first settlers allocated 120 acres of land per family. David Morgan was elected Deacon of the church and, in the records of the family, is usually referred to as "Deacon David." The Deacon and his family were among the leading citizens of the new town as evidenced by the fact that the seating order in the church, an indication of status in those days, listed Deacon David and his wife "...firstly, in the Pew next the Pulpit." Several generations of the Morgan family are associated with the town of Brimfield and, in tracing the family history, it is often necessary to differentiate the "Brimfield Morgans" from their cousins the "Springfield Morgans." Deacon David was town clerk in 1731 and held a number of civic posts until his death in 1760. Morgan, Deacon David (I1742)
 
387 Aside wife Isabell Smart
Masonic marker
Epitaph: They have gone beyond the wall 
Hutto, James Allison (I0955)
 
388 At Aultman Hospital Gann, William Ira (I891)
 
389 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Gibson, Milton Eugene (I4343)
 
390 At l'Hôpital Militaire de Douéra, a military hospital that, at the time, comprised the entire settlement Laubacher, Mathias (I2554)
 
391 At least four sons of Roling Hester (b. 23 Jan 1807 NC, d. 20 Jul 1882 AL) and Lucinda Richardson (b. 9 Dec 1805 GA, d. 9 Oct 1875 AL) served in the Confederate Army. Roling was the son of William "Buck" Hester (b. 27 Jan 1780 NC, d. 5 Oct 1847 Franklin Co., AL) and Amy Malone. "Buck" Hester and Amy Malone were married 18 Oct 1805 in Person County, North Carolina. Amy was born 17 March 1789 in North Carolina and died 23 Jan 1840 Franklin County, Alabama. She was the daughter of John Malone (b. abt 1763 North Carolina) and Anne Blackwell who married 25 Jul 1786 in Granville County, NC. John was a son of Daniel Malone (b. about 1725 Virginia). Buck Hester was the son of Robert Hester (will written 22 Aug 1820 and probated June 1827, Person Co., NC). Buck came to Franlin county in 1818, first settling east of Russelville, around Tharp Springs. He later moved near Frankfort along Tollison creek. Buck and Amy Hester were the parents of sixteen children, four of whom were known to have served in the Confederate army: Sgt. William Carroll Hester, Pvt. Roland Benton Hester, Sterling Richardson Hester (rank unknown) and Pvt. Wiley Robertson Hester. Hester, Roling (I030)
 
392 At least two of her children settled in Connecticut and though it is possible she joined them as a widow, no mention of her is found in the Norwich, Connecticut town records. Corliss, Martha (I3464)
 
393 At least two other Feldtmöller men had children baptized in Wallenhorst between 1685 and 1703. One was named Johann, he d. 1701, aged 31, but his baptism could not be found in Wallenhorst parish records. Another Johann Feltmühle was bur. in September 1701, aged 50. Feldtmöller, Amelinck (I4442)
 
394 At least two other researchers conclude that she was the daughter of Wiley and Mourning (Thompson) Hester, therefore a first cousin of Arthur M Hester. Louella (I790)
 
395 At Peoples' Corral in Durango, Colorado; he had been suffering from cancer Nichols, Samuel T (I0979)
 
396 At St Vincent Hospital Ries, Eva M (I3930)
 
397 At the colonial circuit court Kimball, Aaron (I2111)
 
398 At the end of his life he appeared to have been a resident of Hartford, Connecticut, though he still had significant estate in Essex Co., Massachusetts Gardner, George (I3672)
 
399 At the Massillon Asylum Walter, Frank (I4313)
 
400 At the Rosa Eaton residence, officiated by O L Waite. Family F1969
 

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