Genealogy Society Of Craighead County, Arkansas

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Genealogy Society Of Craighead County, Arkansas Our meetings are held at he Jonesboro Public Library on the third Sunday of each Month at 2:00 pm. Next meeting: Sunday, November 16, 1997 ISSUE NUMBER THREE, VOLUME NUMBER ONE NOVEMBER 1997 MEETING HAPPENINGS: The November meeting was held on the 16th. We entertained 20 people with a program led by Joyce Whitten. Joyce talked about the records at the Latter Day Saints Library here in Jonesboro. She gave us a handout of the file cabinet that is housed there with the contents that are available for research. There is much to be gained by a trip to their library. We will not have a December meeting since it will be too close to the Holiday. Our next meeting will be January 18, 1998. This will also be the meeting to vote for new officers, so please have someone in mind that you would like to initiate and we welcome volunteers...we have gained five new members, making a total of 20 as of this writing, WELL DONE!!!!! The new members are: Gail Lies; Chris A. Johnson; Janice Porter; Betty Woodall; and Joyce Warren. WELCOME to you all. We had one visitor Jeanine Saunders. Everyone have a peaceful and blessed Christmas and a Happy New Year. DUES will be $15.00 per year, the dues paid for this year (1997) will carry through to December of 1998. Members may place as many queries or items as they like (re.genealogy) throughout the year, also if you would like to have your pedigree chart (short form) published, please send one. Please send any query or item to: Jeanette Henson McClure, 1500 Garland Dr., Jonesboro, AR 72401. DUES should be sent to : Hilda Wilcox, P.O. Box 2401, Jonesboro, AR. 72402. (E-mail stretch@insolwwb.net) If you have any questions or need information, please write or call our President, Mr. Mike Garner, 1204 Arrowhead Farm Rd., Jonesboro, AR 72401 (870) 974-5621. There is also voice mail on this phone number. (E-mail mwgarner@insolwwb.net) NEWSLETTER: Anyone attending our meeting for the first time will receive one complimentary copy of our newsletter. I want to thank Nancy Matthews and others for correcting my English and my typos and for doing all the hard copy work and the mailing, and both of them for being great friends...we NEED QUERIES, please let us know who, when, and where you are stuck or lost, there MAY BE someone out there who can help... 1

SURNAMES: The fixed surname began to appear in France around the year 1000. The 11th and 14th century brought a gradual shift to the use of a family name. Elsdon Smith, expert in Onamatology, says most of Americas surnames derived their origins from four (4) basic sources: a Father's name (Patronymics), an Occupation, a Nickname or a Place name. The 20 most common surnames in 1790: 1 Smith 2 Brown 3 Johnson 4 Jones 5 Davis 6 Clark 7 Williams 8 Miller 9 Wilson 10 White 11 Taylor 12 Thompson 13 Allen 14 Moore 15 Hall 16 Hill 17Adams 18 Reed 19 Baker 20 Green The 20 most common surnames TODAY: 1 Smith 2 Johnson 3 Williams 4 Brown 5 Jones 6 Miller 7 Davis 8 Wilson 9 Anderson 10 Taylor 11 Moore 12 Thomas 13 Martin 14 Thompson 15 White 16 Harris 17 Jackson 18 Clark 19 Lewis 20 Walker THE TEN BEST GENEALOGICAL SOURCES IN THE WORLD: 1) Judicial Court Records; not just the courthouse. The court records themselves, the plaintiff, defendant, and criminal records. 2) Property records; deeds, mortgages, taxes and plat maps. 3) Probate records. 4) Vital Records: births, deaths and marriages. 5) Church Records. 6) Fraternal Records, almost 70% of our ancestors were lodge members, mostly Masons. 7) Alliance Records ; all of our ancestors, colonial and federal, joined an alliance in the old country and came to America under the sponsorship of that alliance. 8) Life Insurance Companies ; for the last 150 years people have bought life insurance, almost everyone. Write to the insurance commissioner of the state you are searching in. 9) Newspapers; since the 1600's, every country, by law, must have a weekly newspaper, in order to publish legal notices. 10) Military Records: both service and pension. One of the most helpful overviews for American military history is the book, Alphabetical Lists of Battles, by Newton A. Strait.. If anyone would like a more in-depth description of any of these sources, please send a SASE to me.--- Jeanette 2

Lee Sylcox, the Corresponding Secretary of the Reynolds County Genealogical and Historical Society in Ellington, Missouri has just asked us to begin a newsletter exchange with their organization on a regular basis. We will begin exchanging data with their group with this newsletter. INDIAN RESEARCH: All the American Indian tribe records that have been extracted are centralized in the Indian archives in Oklahoma City. That is always where you start. How about the ones in Fort Worth??? Those are the federal records, not the Indian archives records themselves, but the federal records, of which there are two main types. The records are in the Federal Records Center in Fort Worth, Texas. If you have say -- a Cherokee line, many of us have a Cherokee line!!!! S0 - for example, in Oklahoma the Cherokee records are in the Western Band headquarters, in Tahlequah, OK. The North Carolina; the Eastern Band headquarters, is in Cherokee, North Carolina. The Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, OK also has a lot of Indian records. LOST PLACE NAMES: Write for location of Lost Towns/Place Names to: U.S. Board of Geographic Names, Domestic Geographic Names, 523 National Center, Reston, VA 22092. Also, there are maps and there are MAPS!! Just received one: 1885 map of Missouri with Alphabetical list of towns and counties. This booklet lists every county, city, town, village, and post office in the state with their population using the census of 1880 as a basis. This company has all states, countries, railroad maps, Civil War maps, Historic reproduction maps, etc., etc. Starting prices are $.75 Order their catalogs from: The Gold Bug, P.O. Box 588, Alamo, CA 94507-0588. This is the most inexpensive map place that I have seen in awhile. LIBRARY RESEARCH -- A GENTLE REMINDER Spend the extra dime or two and also copy the title page of any book/journal you used. It usually gives all of the data you'd want to copy by hand. Then very nicely ask the librarian if you can borrow the rubber stamp with the library's address, and stamp the title page with it. Thus, if you have been on a lengthy research trip, you will know which library owns which books that you copied from, and you'll have their addresses handy if you find that you left out a page or made a copy with illegible areas. Now, in some institutions, rubber stamps are guarded like gold, so don't hassle someone who cannot easily supply one for you. Members with an e-mail address or a Home Page who would like to have their addresses posted need to contact Nancy Matthews <nlmatthews@insolwwb.net>. NEWSLETTER ON-LINE: Our monthly newsletter is on-line and can be accessed at <http://www.insolwwb.net/~nlmatthews/newsletter.htm>. Your contributions are greatly appreciated. 3

Arkansas Territorial Restoration Meet Living History Characters on Guided Tours 200 East Third Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201-1608 (501) 324-9351 Guided tours of four restored early 19th-century houses are offered daily on the hour, except noon. Trained professional tour guides lead each small group of visitors into a personal understanding of the restored structures and their outbuildings, and the time periods they represent. Tours last approximately one hour and begin with a brief narrated slide show introduction to Territorial Arkansas. Tours between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. encounter at least one original resident or composite historical character portrayed by an actor. Tours are offered hourly: Monday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. except noon, and Sunday from 1 to 4 p.m. (the last tour of the day begins at 4 p.m.). The Territorial Restoration is closed New Year's Day, Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve, and Christmas. Tour Fees: Adults $2.00, Senior Citizens $1.00, Children $.50. Special student rates with advance group reservations. Tours are free the first Sunday of each month. A Prayer For Genealogists Lord help me dig into the past And sift the sands of time That I might find the roots that made This family tree of mine Lord, help me trace the ancient roads On which my fathers trod, And led them through so many lands To find our present sod. Lord, help me find an ancient book or dusty manuscript, That's safely hidden now away in some forgotten crypt. Lord, let it bridge the gap that haunts my soul when I can't find, The missing link between some name that ends the same as mine Whoever said, "Seek and Ye Shall Find", was NOT a genealogist!!! Anon. 4

QUERIES IRWIN / LATANDEAU -- W Bartlett IRWIN was born abt 1841 in either NY or OH. (Census records differ) He married Katherine LATANDEAU in Battlecreek MI in the 1860s according to family legend. Is there anyone who can do lookups for this marraige. Also I can't find anyone who has or has seen this name before. I have a picture of "Grandma and Grandpa Latandeau" but whoever wrote the name on it may have not known how to spell the name! Any ideas? Contact Gail Lies at nglies1@ibm.net or my snail mail address: 2208 Parkside Dr Jonesboro, AR 72401 GIBSON, Shadrack -- Would like to connect with other researchers of the Shadrack GIBSON and Sarah DUTTON GIBSON. Both were born in VA in abt 1807, possibly Scott and Russell counties respectively. They and their children moved to Washington county AR by 1837. Would like to share information. Contact: Gail Lies at nglies1@ibm.net or 2208 Parkside Dr. Jonesboro AR 72401 DAVIS, Stewart/Stuart Patterson/Patrick -- Located in Benton, Saline, AK & Little Rock, Pulaski, AK from 1870 to 1920. I am looking for the names of Stewart Patterson Davis (he is my g-grandfather) parents. Stewart was born 29 March 1891 in Benton, Saline, AK and died 11 July 1920 in North Little Rock, Pulaski, AK. All I have are the initials A.H. and I need to know what they stand for to further my research. I do not know what his mother s first & maiden names are. I also need to know their ancestry, when & where they were born & died, when & where they married and if they had previous marriages. Stewart Patterson Davis was a member of W.O.W. and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen No. 49. He married Mary Katherine De Clerk on 5 November 1914 in Little Rock. Their children were William Stuart (my grandfather) born 21 September 1915 in Little Rock. Robert Anderson born 28 September 1918 in Benton, Stuart Patrick born 6 January 1921 in Pocahontas, AK. Stewart Patterson Davis was a switchman for the Missouri Pacific Railroad. He was run over by a switch engine and his legs were severed. He died two or three hours later of shock and loss of blood. Contact: Chris A. Johnson at chrisajohnson@hotmail.com or 744 Craighead, Jonesboro AR 72401 (870) 935-6750. MERRY CHRISTMAS & HAPPY NEW YEAR Wishing you and your family a safe and happy Holiday Season. 5

The Genealogy Society of Craighead County, Arkansas 1204 Arrowhead Farm Road Jonesboro, AR 72401 Newsletter Staff Jeanette McClure Nancy Matthews OFFICERS President: Mike Garner Vice President: Jeanette McClure Secretary/Treasurer: Hilda Wilcox 6