Indiana and Indianans


Book Description




Shoemaker Pioneers


Book Description

Lineage of the various Shoemaker immigrants to Atlantic coastal states, with their descendants in the midwest and elsewhere. Includes the author's immigrant forefathers, George and Sarah Shoemaker and their family, who immigrated from Germany to Philadelphia in 1686, and settled in Philadelphia (now Montgomery) County, Pennsylvania. Des- cendants lived in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Indiana, Florida and elsewhere. Includes genealogical data on Shoemakers where no lineage is traced, showing census data, Revolutionary War data, etc.







Subject Collections


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Classified bibliography of special collections of documentation and subject emphases as reported by various library services and museums in the USA and Canada.




Subject Collections


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Llewellyn Traces


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The Ancestors and Allied Families of Walter Lafayette Bell and Ruth Rankin


Book Description

Walter LaFayette Bell (1889-1976) was born in Butterfield, Missouri, son of Jonas Bradley Bell (1843-1931) and Martha Ann Cooper (1865-1890). He married Ruth Rankin (1900-1975), born in Jonesboro, Arkansas, daughter of James Lewis Rankin (1854-1928) and Mary Elizabeth Dawson (1860-1912). Ancestry traced to John Bell (1668-1713) who died in Surry County, Virginia and Robert Rankin (1749-1816) of the Carolinas and Kentucky, as well as many other ancestors. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived in Illinois, Missouri, Utah, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, Arkansas, Texas, Indiana, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Iowa, Mississippi, South Carolina and elsewhere.







The Dustman Family of Trumbull and Mahoning Counties, Ohio


Book Description

Johan Martin Dostmann was born in 1730 in Nassig, Germany, and today his descendants can be found throughout the United States of America. One of them is Roy C. Ritter III, and he traces his family’s origins in this detailed history. Dostmann immigrated to Pennsylvania in 1752 with his sister and several friends and cousins, and so began the story of an enduring German-American family. After some time in Frederick County, Maryland, and Washington County, Pennsylvania, the family, which became known as Dustman, took advantage of the settlement opportunities in the newly formed Connecticut Western Reserve of Ohio, joining the state’s earliest pioneers. Johan Martin Dostmann died before that journey, but his surviving children and grandchildren made their mark in Ohio, particularly in Trumbull and Mahoning counties, where they prospered. Covering the first four generations of the Dustman family, this book will be a valuable resource for the descendants of Johan Martin Dostmann.