Laclede County, Missouri


Book Description




John Gant of Colonial Virginia & North Carolina


Book Description

John Gant was born in about 1713 in Virginia. His father was John Gent. He married in about 1732 and had five sons. He died in about 1783. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived in Virginia, North Carolina, Texas, Tennessee, South Carolina, Kentucky, Indiana, Alabama, Mississippi and elsewhere.




American Boyers


Book Description

Michael Boyer (1690/1700-ca.1761) lived near Richmond, in Fredericksburg in Frederick County, and then in Augusta County, Virginia. He was father to at least twelve children. Descendants and relatives lived in Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Missouri, Tennessee, and elsewhere. Includes some history of the Association of American Boyers, Inc.













Dark Canyon


Book Description

Some secrets are better left buried. A long hot summer is wearing thin when an old diary is discovered in an abandoned hotel. With deceiving promise, it triggers a chain of events that will touch the lives of every single person living in the isolated small town of Decora, Idaho. With the good ole boy network interpreting instructions from beyond the grave, the sanctity of the Amity mine is desecrated, unleashing a terror that will infect the very fabric of life in the picture perfect valley, creating conditions that few will survive. even if they want to.




A Few Descendants of John and Elizabeth Simpson Smith


Book Description

Family history and genealogical information about the descendants of John Smith who was born 23 January 1752 in Virginia. He was the son of William Smith and Jean (surname unknown). John married Elizabeth Simpson (daughter of John Simpson) ca. 1772 in South Carolina. They lived in South Carolina and were the parents of three sons and six daughters. Descendants lived in South Carolina, Tennessee, Missouri, Texas, Oklahoma and elsewhere.







From Worlds Apart


Book Description

This is a story of two families ? ordinary people intertwined with the dates, places, and extraordinary events of world history. Their names are not found in history books. Many, in the 18th century, could neither read nor write their names, but the Neeses and Falcons, despite any illiteracy, were part of the great movement of peoples from around the world who came to the New World to build the most powerful country on this planet. They established freedom as the bedrock upon which America stands. Our people endured much hardship and privation, but they did not give up in their determination to build America. Our people were among the pioneering immigrants who laid the foundation of our country ? the ideals of our country are steeped in the sweat and blood of these early Americans ? the Neeses and Falcons.