Line in Record @I00592@ (RIN 87264) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU
PLAC Farmer
Sheila Jobman gives this name as only Jane Smith.
Marriage Notes for John Adams Shields and Hannah Jane SMITH-87235
Line in Record @F0210@ (MRIN 30455) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
Sheila Jobman reports this name as Eliza (Louisa).
Line in Record @I00592@ (RIN 87264) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU
PLAC Farmer
Was called Melvina.
Marriage Notes for John Adams Shields and Abigail O. Melville ROUNDS-87239
Line in Record @F0211@ (MRIN 30456) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
Line in Record @I00595@ (RIN 87267) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU
PLAC Farmer
Marriage Notes for Lewis William Shields and Laura Estella REDDICK-94688
Line in Record @F2805@ (MRIN 30457) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
Marriage Notes for Thomas Gibson Kelly and Sarah Catherine SHIELDS-87240
Line in Record @F2806@ (MRIN 30458) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
Marriage Notes for George Washington Meek and Nancy Catherine SHIELDS-87241
Line in Record @F0212@ (MRIN 30459) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
George W. Cooper was a teamster with Company G, 85th Illinois Infantry in the Civil War and was in battle at Nashville, Brentwood, Chattanooga and Murfreesboro, all in Tennessee. He received a pension for a severe back injury he suffered when he was thrown to the ground while catching mules, an accidental gunshot wound to the left wrist, severe injury to the breast caused by being kicked by a mule and a left-hip injury he suffered when he was thrown by a mule.
Marriage Notes for George W. Cooper and Martha SHIELDS-87250
Line in Record @F0213@ (MRIN 30460) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
An obituary in the Holly Chieftain September 1902 reported that Mary Cooper Clary died after an 18-day illness with typhoid. The obituary said in part: "The circumstances surrounding the illness and death of Mrs. Clary was extremely pitiable and calls for all the sympathy a Christian community can give. After working like a slave early and late in her endeavor to support her three children and a worthless husband, she was deserted by the husband at a time she most needed help, and assistance from relative who were amply able to make her comfortable was also denied to her." The newspaper reported that it was her dying wish that her children be cared for by her father and stepmother at Ipava, Illinois.
Marriage Notes for Robert Clary and Mary C. COOPER-87252
Line in Record @F2459@ (MRIN 30461) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
Line in Record @I07011@ (RIN 93683) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU
PLAC Farmer
Charles Clary never married. He was a veteran of Word War I.
Line in Record @I07013@ (RIN 93685) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU
PLAC Pressman, Macomb Daily Journal
Henry Clary was in the Army 8 October-12 December 1942, being discharged for disability. He did not marry.
Line in Record @I00611@ (RIN 87283) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU
PLAC Farmer
Leaving in March 1899, Charles Cooper went by horseback to Washington state, working for a time in a melon harvest in Colorado. He returned to Fulton County in 1900 but was in Colorado in 1902 when Mary Cooper Clary died and took his three nephews back to Illinois to live with George Cooper and Kate.
Marriage Notes for Charles Kinsey Cooper and Agnes Webster BROWN-93631
Line in Record @F2458@ (MRIN 30462) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
During the Civil War, Kinzey was a member of Company H, 3d Illinois Volunteer Cavalry and was in the Battles of Vicksburg, Perryville and Missionary Ridge. He reenlisted in Company B.
Herbert Blue shows Susan's surname as Klinger.
Marriage Notes for Kinzy Shields and Susan KINGERY-87255
Line in Record @F0214@ (MRIN 30463) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
Evelyn Hagenstein Shields Wheeler shows this name as Lottie Ellen.
Marriage Notes for Henry Clary and Laura SHIELDS-87256
Line in Record @F0759@ (MRIN 30464) from GEDCOM file not recognized: