Line in Record @I15253@ (RIN 15246) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RESI
PLAC lived in Parke County, Indiana
Jonathan and Sibitha had eight children, and then in the second marridge Jonathan and Elizabeth had seven children. Jonathan Millikan was a pioneer in Indiana, having moved in 1816, traveling with his wife and two children all the way with a single horse and wagon. Two of his brothers and a sister went to Indiana and settled the same year. The red soil farms in Randolph County, N.C. had become worn out and unproductive, and finding good land at a moderate price in Indiana, many families "pulled up stakes" and migrated. When he reached his destination he had but twenty-five cents left , and bought a Dutch oven for the bread baking. His family domiciled in a shanty built on" forks" until he built a log house . All the floorings were split with an ax or handsaw. Grain was carried to the mill on horse back by blazed trees. Ten acres of land were cleared in winter for cultivation the following summer. In the year 1845, he built a two storied timber house, which was weather-boarded and ceiled, four miles from the Wabash river. On the north was the road from Howard to Annapolis: on the east was the Montezuma and Covington road: and near the town of Sylvania. Nearly all who composed the community were Quakers, and a meeting house was built for worship. Peace and harmony prevailed.
Line in Record @I15471@ (RIN 15464) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EVEN
TYPE Fact
PLAC died in childhood.
Line in Record @I15472@ (RIN 15465) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EVEN
TYPE Fact
PLAC died in childhood.
Jonathan and Sibitha had eight children, and then in the second marridge Jonathan and Elizabeth had seven children. Jonathan Millikan was a pioneer in Indiana, having moved in 1816, traveling with his wife and two children all the way with a single horse and wagon. Two of his brothers and a sister went to Indiana and settled the same year. The red soil farms in Randolph County, N.C. had become worn out and unproductive, and finding good land at a moderate price in Indiana, many families "pulled up stakes" and migrated. When he reached his destination he had but twenty-five cents left , and bought a Dutch oven for the bread baking. His family domiciled in a shanty built on" forks" until he built a log house . All the floorings were split with an ax or handsaw. Grain was carried to the mill on horse back by blazed trees. Ten acres of land were cleared in winter for cultivation the following summer. In the year 1845, he built a two storied timber house, which was weather-boarded and ceiled, four miles from the Wabash river. On the north was the road from Howard to Annapolis: on the east was the Montezuma and Covington road: and near the town of Sylvania. Nearly all who composed the community were Quakers, and a meeting house was built for worship. Peace and harmony prevailed.
Line in Record @I15279@ (RIN 15272) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EVEN
TYPE Moved to
DATE 7 FEB 1835
PLAC Parke County, Indiana, Bloomfield MM.
Line in Record @I15252@ (RIN 15245) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EVEN
TYPE Fact
PLAC had eight childern
Line in Record @I15256@ (RIN 15249) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EVEN
TYPE Get Certifcate to
DATE 7 OCT 1866
PLAC Hamilton County, Indiana, Richland-Carmel MM.
Milton and Hannah had nine children, and lived on a farm in his native place until March 19, 1865, when, to avoid joining the Confederate army, his sympathy being with the union cause, he went to Indiana. His family, consisting of his wife and six children, followed in Sept.1965. They had two more childern born in after they moved to Indiana. He rented a farm for seven years near Carmel, Hamilton County, Indiana. And the in 1872 he purchased a farm near Sherdian, Indiana, where he spent the rest of his years. He served as a Justice of the Peace in Randolph County, North Carolina for 15 years.
Line in Record @I15520@ (RIN 15513) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EVEN
TYPE Condemned
DATE 2 AUG 1851
PLAC Mcd