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Topic: James McBride (pioneer)


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In the News (Fri 1 Jan 10)

  
  James McBride (pioneer) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James McBride (1788 1859) was a prominent pioneer statesman in Butler County, Ohio.
James McBride married the daughter of Judge Lytle, of the Lytle family of the Ohio River Valley, and was through her kinsman with Sen. Homer T. Bone, and Governor of Ohio Andrew L. Harris.
McBride's son in law was Roger N. Stembel, a commander of the Pacific Fleet.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/James_McBride_(pioneer)   (186 words)

  
 Pioneer Preacher Profile: Dr. James McBride
James McBride descended from a line of men and women that were in the forefront of developing America.
James McBride was vigorously opposed to slavery and became one of the founders of the Republican Party in Oregon.
James McBride may have helped one of his sons-in-law by minding the store because the 1870 census lists him as a merchant while his son James was a teacher that year.
ncbible.org /nwh/ProMcBrideJ.html   (2246 words)

  
 Beers: McBride p. 860
James McBride, with Thomas Biggert and several others of those ejected, settled in what is now Robinson township, Washington Co., Penn. These sturdy pioneer settlers felt that they were not justly treated by Gen. Washington, believing that they were entitled to their lands by improvement of them according to the custom of the country.
McBride's family was one of the three that first formed the organization of the Associate Presbyterian Church of Clinton, Rev. William Wilson, pastor.
James McBride died October 6, 1827, aged eighty-four years, his wife died March 6, 1838, aged eighty-one years, and both are buried in the Clinton Church cemetery.
www.chartiers.com /beers-project/articles/mcbride-860.html   (1468 words)

  
 Beers: McBride p. 1292
James McBride (the grandfather) left the Emerald Isle in early manhood, and coming to Washington county, Penn., settled near Miller's run, on some land which legally belonged to George Washington.
James McBride was married in Washington county to Miss Sarah Sprowls, and they settled on the farm in a small house which had been previously erected, but which was afterward burned by the Indians while the family were on a visit to their old home.
McBride passed his entire life on the home farm, engaged in general agriculture and stock raising, proving an enterprising and progressive man. In his political affiliations he was a Democrat.
www.chartiers.com /beers-project/articles/mcbride-1292.html   (587 words)

  
 Pioneer Preacher Profile: Thomas Crawford McBride
McBride was a highly respected frontier preacher with ties to Barton W. Stone and reformer John Mulkey of Kentucky.
Thomas McBride came under the teaching of B. Stone in Kentucky, moved to Missouri in 1816, and was the first Christian preacher who crossed the Mississippi River to preach the Bible alone as the basis of Christian union.
The deceased was born in Virginia in 1777, and emigrated to Oregon from Missouri in 1847.
ncbible.org /nwh/ProMcBrideTC.html   (2965 words)

  
 [No title]
She was the daughter of James and Martha McGary of Madisonville, Kentucky, and came to Oregon with her mother and brother with the emigration of 1843.
His grandfather, James McBride, was one of the patriot soldiers of the Revolution; and his grandmother, Mary Crawford, was a sister of the mother of Andrew Jackson, and a woman of more than ordinary ability and force of character.
Actuated by that spirit of enterprise and discovery that everywhere distinguishes the true pioneer, the father of the subject of this sketch removed in 1814 from Tennessee to the neighborhood of St. Charles, Missouri; and there James McBride was reared and educated.
www.usgennet.org /usa/or/county/union1/1889vol2/volumeIIpage431-450.htm   (18639 words)

  
 Wellington County, Ontario GenWeb - Pioneer - McKAY, James McBRIDE
Wellington County, Ontario GenWeb - Pioneer - McKAY, James McBRIDE
The pioneer of the McKay family in Canada was the late Angus McKay, b.
Bottineau, N.D.; James McBride, Angus Ross (d.), formerly a barrister at Winnipeg; Mary, m.
www.rootsweb.com /~onwellin/pioneers/mckay_james.htm   (566 words)

  
 [No title]
Wright McBride is the grandson of James McBride, The American Revolutionary patriot and soldier born August 17, 1756, at St. James-Goose Creek Parish (Charleston) South Carolina and died June 11, 1808.
The biographical account of the Wright McBride family of war participants during World Wars I and II is to exemplify the family patriotism from the American Revolution with the Civil War as a pivot point of honor and loyalty.
There were grandsons of Ann and Wright McBride whom fought in both World War I and World War II from the same parental family entity of sons born to Ann and Wright McBride which consisted of the Hiram Albertus McBride family, the Henry Wright McBride family and the Walton Andrew McBride family.
gen.1starnet.com /civilwar/mcbridew.htm   (2895 words)

  
 Hays
This is one of the constituent churches of the Saline association and was organized at the house of James Crosslin, with eight members, by David Anderson and A. Gwinn June 26, 1842.
James Hays grandfather, Nathaniel Hays was a South Carolinian and died while serving his country as a Revolutionary War soldier.
James Hays was born in Tennessee Jan 29, 1807.
www.wilhite.info /hays.htm   (4859 words)

  
 Bibliographical Notes
McBride's speech arguing that the University was permanently fixed in Oxford is included in The James McBride Manuscripts Relating to Miami University, pp.
James H. Rodabaugh's The History of Miami University from its Origin to 1845 (Miami University, 1933) is a close study of the first Miami years.
James H. Rodabaugh's "Miami University, Calvinism and the Anti-Slavery Movement" in the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly, XLVIII (1939), 66-73, gauges winds of doctrine in early Miami.
www.lib.muohio.edu /my/bibs.html   (4863 words)

  
 Mercer Chapter 15
James Duncan, whose diary of the Revolutionary War is now in the possession of A.L. Duncan, of Greenville, was a settler four miles northwest of Clarksville.
David Hayes, one of the pioneer pedagogues of the county, was a neighbor of Mr.
William Gill was a resident of Liberty Township, James Williamson was an early settler of Otter Creek and Martin Carringer of Perry Township.
www.accessible.com /amcnty/PA/Mercer/Mercer15.htm   (3398 words)

  
 James McBride - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James McBride (pioneer) (1788-1859), American settler and amateur scientist
James McBride (writer) (born 1957), Jewish/African American writer and musician
This is a disambiguation page: a list of articles associated with the same title.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/James_McBride   (92 words)

  
 Pioneer Obits K
James McBride Kay, 50, pioneer of the West End of Clallam County and port commissioner for 2 terms, or 12 years from 1931 to 1943, died at Seattle Sunday after being in failing health for the past 18 months.
The Nylund family were pioneers of the Lake Ozette area, and she was one of the first white children born at Lake Ozette.
Knoph was the daughter of a pioneer Dungeness family born Mar 4, 1892 at Dungeness to Frank and Alice Lotzgesell.
www.olypen.com /rfoss/pioneerobitk.html   (11754 words)

  
 Little Stranger Cemetery
Such pioneer families as the McBrides and Seymours close to settle in the west central township, raise their families close to the steady stream and bury their dead in the cemetery next to the church, where they worshiped.
James McBride came to America from the Emerald Isles in 1850.
The senior McBrides had one son, her grandfather, and after he married the two couples lived in the stone house.
skyways.lib.ks.us /genweb/leavenwo/library/cemeteries/LTLSTRAN.htm   (779 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
She was the last member of the oldest Jaco pioneers, a Christian woman who went about doing good because her mind was possessed by the peace of God and she lived and loved and served in such a way as to bring about a portion of Kingdom of Heaven on earth.
James H. Ramsey, pastor of Madison Street Baptist Church, and Judge R. Smartt officiated and burial was in Mt. Zion cemetery.
Walker was the wife of J. Walker, former mayor of McMinnville, leading manufacturer for almost half a century and a pioneer in the public roads movement in Tennessee as one of the founders of the Broadway of America Association.
home.att.net /~lschil1533/LynnsTree/OBITwar1953.HTM   (9876 words)

  
 JS Online: James McBride 'Takes Five'
But James McBride, author of the award-winning memoir "The Color of Water" and his latest novel, "Miracle at St. Anna," is now making an attempt to meld his two artistic sides together, the written word and song.
McBride, 45, is a former staff writer for the Washington Post, the Boston Globe and People magazine.
His memoir, "The Color of Water: A Black Man's Tribute to His White Mother," is now required text in a number of school districts across the nation.
www.jsonline.com /onwisconsin/music/aug03/165074.asp?format=print   (670 words)

  
 F82
McBride made a special study of photographing finger-prints made on innumerable objects in every conceivable position, and the result was that he skillfully brought into full photographic light a variety of finger-prints which had formerly been regarded as impossible of being copied by the camera.
McBride is survived by his widow, two sons, John of Santa Anna, Cal., James of the home; three daughters, Mrs.
Emerson Lawrence McBride was born in 1906, married Elsie Louise Clark in 1924.
www.gregg1a.freeserve.co.uk /BarrGreggs/f82.htm   (3102 words)

  
 John Cleves Symmes, Jr. - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Symmes himself never wrote a book of his ideas (too busy on the lecture circuit) but others did.
His follower James McBride wrote Symmes' Theory of Concentric Spheres in 1826.
Another follower, Jeremiah Reynolds apparently had an article that was published as a separate booklet in 1827: Remarks of Symmes' Theory Which Appeared in the American Quarterly Review.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Cleves_Symmes,_Jr.   (364 words)

  
 Articles
The home of James Monroe McBride, son of Peter McBride of the "Eastern Shore" of Virginia and Olive Ann Conklin of New York City, was located on the Little Bayou Black between Ardoyne and Rebecca Plantations.
McBride, son of Peter McBride of Virginia and Olive Ann Conklin of New York, had purchased Belle Grove from the estate of Marcellus Daunis, father of his first wife, Emily Daunis.
McBride they would get dinner, or they would get a horse, maybe, and then they could put up a horse, especially if it was night time.
www.eatel.net /~meme/Articles.html   (5028 words)

  
 Newcastle
St. James’ church was erected at a cost of $2,000.00 on a lot leased from the coal company for ninety-nine years.
Rev. James McBride served from September, 1933, to October, 1938, when Rev. J.J. Mullins, the present pastor, assumed charge.
Since 1925, the following improvements mere made in the parish: the foundation of the church of Corpus Christi was repaired and rebuilt in places; furnaces were installed in the church and rectory; a cement floor was placed in the cellar of the house.
www.dioceseofcheyenne.org /history/Newcastle_1941_McG_142-147.html   (1113 words)

  
 (Some Marriages involving surname Pendroy - Jasper and Marion Co. Ia. in 1800's
Especially in view of the fact that it appears these old pioneer families that were related or neighbors migrated to new territories together in large numbers.
The same old pioneer family surnames seem to found together across many decades, and in numerous states.
James and Mary Ann (Wiseman) Pendroy were here parents.
home.att.net /~pendroy/marriage.html   (441 words)

  
 George Charles Gillespie
They were married by the famous pioneer Minister James McBride, as documented on their record of marriage.
The Indian wars were reaching their highest levels and massacres of pioneer families and Indian villages were continuously headlining the Newspapers of the major U.S. cities.
They will always remain in our hearts as the true pioneers that they were, pioneers who founded the west and this great country of ours.
kjgillespie.com /George.html   (1602 words)

  
 Dr. Lewis S. Owings: A Brief Biography
According to his biographer, he ran for reelection in 1857 on a platform to amend the state constitution to permit the establishment of banks.
Owings was vilified in the newspapers as being “pro-bank” and as a “jockey for the bank horses.” A very “anti-banking” mentality prevailed among pioneer Texans, and as a result, he was defeated.
He was authorized to appoint a roster of officials to create judicial districts and to convene a bicameral legislature.
www.wtblock.com /wtblockjr/lewis_s_owings.htm   (2778 words)

  
 Thermopolis
The trip by stage to Worland was indeed a pioneer experience.
To replace him came Rev. James McBride of Pine Bluffs.
McBride was transferred to Newcastle and was succeeded by Rev.
www.dioceseofcheyenne.org /history/Thermopolis_1941_McG_225-234.html   (2030 words)

  
 [No title]
The account by James Smith may also be found in an abridged form in the Historical Collections of Ohio, by Henry Howe (Cincinnati, 1902), 2:580-590.
James Wickes Taylor, History of the State of Ohio, 1650-1787 (Cincinnati, 1854), 358.
James Wilkinson (1793), in Wayne Papers, microfilm collection, Ohio State Museum Library (Columbus, Ohio), vol.
www.gbl.indiana.edu /archives/miamis9/M46-48_4c.html   (3316 words)

  
 Elam Wells McBride and Urilda Janette Todd
Mcbride, Elam Wells, Bishop of the Oakley 3rd Ward, Cassia Stake, Idaho, from 1901 to 1904, was born Sept. 18, 1854, in Grantsville, Utah, the son of James McBride and Olive Cheeney.
Elam W. McBride was chosen as Bishop of the Oakley 3rd Ward.
Bishop McBride was succeeded in 1904 by Oliver B. Pickett, who was succeeded in 1914 by Benjamin Franklin Wilson, who was succeeded in 1917 by John Adams, who was succeeded in 1929 by Lewis R. Critchfield, who presided Dec. 31, 1930, at which time the ward had a membership of 234, including 40 children.
www.hannahdustin.com /elammcbride.htm   (909 words)

  
 [No title]
James McBride wrote in his journal, "The first Mormon sermon preached on the Red Haw of the forks of the Mohican River, was preached in father's house..."
The McBride family sold their lease and started to Missouri in August 1833.
Thomas McBride, always a mild and now a harmless old man, and 17 others, some children, were murdered because of their religious belief.
www.jwha.info /mmff/rlando.htm   (1896 words)

  
 McBride's chief fund-raiser reinvents himself again [McAuliffe's father-in-law]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
Facing bad loans and debt, Swann's American Pioneer Savings Bank was taken over by federal regulators in 1990 at a time when large numbers of savings and loans were going under.
McBride said he knew of Swann's experience with American Pioneer but acted surprised when told that Swann had filed for personal bankruptcy several years ago.
MCBRIDE CAMP MEMO - "If you have not sent in your General Election contribution (again -limits are renewed for those of you that gave in the Primary), please send it today - we need to buy the television time to refute Jeb’s false attacks immediately!"
www.freerepublic.com /focus/f-news/759389/posts   (2672 words)

  
 Find in a Library: Pioneer biography : sketches of the lives of some of the early settlers of Butler County, Ohio
Find in a Library: Pioneer biography : sketches of the lives of some of the early settlers of Butler County, Ohio
Pioneer biography : sketches of the lives of some of the early settlers of Butler County, Ohio
WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries.
www.worldcatlibraries.org /wcpa/ow/ced539f7146adeea.html   (98 words)

  
 Historical Sketch
The tradition that this church was built on the James Hutcherson Survey is supported by the fact that the land of Mary Hutcherson, his daughter, bounds the property on almost all sides; and also by the fact that additional land was given by Mary's estate to the Church.
James McBryde to determine upon a plan of procedure; none being agreed upon, a meeting was next appointed at Cedar Springs, when a majority present resolved to divide the charge.
James A. Wilson, died April 20, 1863, in Richmond, Virginia hospital.
www.longcanearp.org /noradavis.html   (6705 words)

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