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Topic: Plew, Missouri


In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Descendants of Jesse B. Dodson
Mary Nancy Dodson was born on 20 Aug 1866 in Lawrence, Missouri and died on 20 Sep 1919 in Mercy Hospital, Des Moines, IA at age 53.
Florence Emma Dodson was born on 21 Feb 1878 in Lawrence, Missouri and was buried in Boyer Cemetery, Carter County, Missouri.
Loyd William Jones was born on 27 Mar 1921 in Carter County, Missouri, died on 27 Oct 2001 in Ukiah, Umatilla County, Oregon at age 80, and was buried on 2 Nov 2001 in Ukiah Cemetery, Ukiah, Umatilla County, Oregon.
zeiglers.tripod.com /Familytree/Dodson/d1.html   (5832 words)

  
 The Descendants of Jacob Sortore - Person Page 32
Aldest Plew and Elizabeth Combs, circa 1852 at Shelby Co, Kentucky.
Marthia Jane Plew married Henry Robertson, son of James Robertson and Diana Sortore, circa 1852 at Shelby Co, Kentucky.
Marthia Jane Plew died on 12 August 1906 at Sullivan Co, Indiana, at age 80.
www.sortore.com /database/p32.htm   (2798 words)

  
 Otto Brodie
This firm was owned by James Plew who was one of the first men in Chicago to become interested in aviation, and one of the founders of the Aero Club of Illinois.
After a short period of practice at Hammondsport Brodie returned to Chicago and a plane was delivered to Plew during the early Spring of 1910.
In February, 1911 Plew sold this early Curtiss plane to James Ward and that month Brodie was one of the founder members of the Franco-American Aviation Company of Chicago.
www.earlyaviators.com /ebrodot1.htm   (1425 words)

  
 Player Bio: Joyce Compton :: Softball
Her career at Missouri was highlighted by an overall record of 115-77 and a berth in the Women's College World Series.
While at Missouri, Compton became the all-time winningest coach in UM history, a record which stood until the 1991 season.
From a small college in Connecticut, to the University of Missouri, to the University of South Carolina, she has left her mark on them all.
uscsports.cstv.com /sports/w-softbl/mtt/compton_joyce00.html   (1235 words)

  
 The American Spectator
Born in Richmond, Virginia, of a large, poor family, Bridger was orphaned at 13 when both his parents died not long apart after the clan had emigrated to Missouri.
This left him as sole support for a number of younger siblings for a few years, and he apprenticed himself to a flsmith for a living, the future "pilot" of large, roving fur brigades learned his leadership skills young.
Sex was a big deal, of course, as Indian fathers and husbands prostituted their daughters and wives to the white trappers.
www.spectator.org /dsp_article.asp?art_id=6284   (1148 words)

  
 PLEW cemetery records - documents 1 to 8
Documents 1 to 8 of 8 matching the query " PLEW " in all cemetery transcriptions.
Newspaper obituaries containing the surname " PLEW ".
Uploaded family histories based on the " PLEW " surname.
www.interment.net /data/query_select.idq?CiRestriction=PLEW&select=/&SUBMIT=Search&CiScope=/&CiMaxRecordsPerPage=30&TemplateName=query_select&CiSort=rank[d]&HTMLQueryForm=search.htm   (230 words)

  
 Bucker/Booker, Chapter VIII, part 1
Louisa Jane Plew, daughter of Simon Plew and Elizabeth Jones, was born 7 November 1827.
Catherine Greene's notes state that Elizabeth Jones Plew Gott was born in Virginia in 1796, and she died in Carlisle, Indiana in November 1880, age 84.
C, 59 Indiana Infantry] half-brother to Louisa Jane Plew, moved his family to Long Creek, Illinois in the 1870's, and is buried there in the Point Pleasant Cemetery, along with his wife, Casandra and three children.
www.digisys.net /users/frdmyrdu/Booker/chap_8-1.htm   (8574 words)

  
 Oregon Country Mountain Man Indian Fur Trade History Explorers Facts Maps Pictures
It is interesting to note that the largest tributary of the Colorado, Columbia, and Missouri rivers head within a sixty-eight mile radius of the Grand Teton peak on the western Wyoming border.
An angry Joshua Pilcher, head of the Missouri Fur Company, declared that by Leavenworth’s ineffectual action to teach the Indians a lesson, he had destroy commerce on the Missouri River for years to come.
In 1826, a prime beaver plew in the mountains had an approximate value of $3.00, by 1833 the value was $3.50, and by 1840, the value was $2.00 (Wishart).
www.thefurtrapper.com /oregon_country.htm   (4334 words)

  
 Missouri Route 66 Maps
Route 66 entered Missouri at St Louis and followed the path roughly described by today's Interstate 44, and passed out of the state in the southwest corner.
Parts of U.S. 66 in Missouri utilized portions of the old Ozark Trail system of roadways and the infamous Cherokee Trail of Tears.
Below are some inset maps of Missouri cities from the Route 66 era.
www.route66university.com /maps/missouri.php   (738 words)

  
 SUVCW Missouri Department
There were a total of 594 G.A.R. Posts that existed in Missouri at some time between 1866 and the early 1940’s.
Much like the Graves Registration program, the Department of Missouri has an aggressive goal to complete research of all 594 G.A.R. posts by the year 2010.
Room 614 of the Victoria Building served as HQ for Missouri in 1931 and possibly more years.
www.suvcwmo.org /garposts.php   (1686 words)

  
 Stumbo2007b - pafg127 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Richard William Stumbo was born on 17 Oct 1903.
on 17 Jun 1907 in Carl Junction, Missouri.
Mary Dietrich was born on 06 Oct 1860.
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~stumbo/pafg127.htm   (472 words)

  
 Missouri to Kansas:
We left Palace, Greene County, Missouri (Palace was a country store and post office [1888-19051 about fifteen miles southeast of Springfield, Mo.) on Wednesday morning, May 31, about eight o’clock--two wagons, four horses and one dog.
It is not as large a town as Springfield, Missouri.
We came over some mounds and when we were on top of them we could see ever so far all around us.
thelibrary.springfield.missouri.org /lochist/periodicals/wrv/v35/n3/w95d.htm   (3386 words)

  
 Missouri to Kansas: Ramsey Diary, 1899
We left [Greene County] Missouri with two covered wagons, four horses, and a dog.
The wagons were equipped with "overjets" which we made for the purpose.
Came on through the city of Plew where two crawled and one flew.
thelibrary.springfield.missouri.org /lochist/periodicals/wrv/v35/n3/w96d.htm   (2951 words)

  
 Goods From the Woods, Pinenut.com press release and News Page -
If the huckleberry is the much-lusted-after belle of the ball when it comes to wild food, then pine nuts are a hard-luck version of Cinderella who missed the dance entirely because she was locked in her stepmother's basement.
The Fraziers have been the first in Missouri to harvest and distill these native trees for their phyto chemicals which are becoming highly prized ingredients in the organic health and beauty industry.
Echoing the resilient qualities of Missouri’s native plants, one of summer’s hottest days couldn’t keep several land and forest owners, natural resources professionals, hobbyists and researchers from gathering in Licking, Mo., in late July to do something good for the land.
www.pinenut.com /pressroom.htm   (2210 words)

  
 Bill Cook files 2/21/2007
Eva Malinda PLUMB was born on Jan 10 1910 in Squires, Douglas Co., Missouri.
She was married to Bennie Denton WELLS on Jan 11 1928 in Squires, Douglas Co., Missouri.
He was married to Amy Elizabeth BELL about 1846 in Newton Co., Missouri.
cookshangout.com /database/d372.html   (821 words)

  
 Tribune-Star Online/Special Series/METHod of Madness/January 19, 2003
Across Nebraska, Iowa and Missouri, police were encountering a new version of methamphetamine that could be produced in a matter of hours.
It wasn't until a man from Missouri relocated to the Crawfordsville area that meth labs became a common occurrence in Indiana.
Phelps of the State Police said many states, including Missouri, have not seen a plateau in the number of meth labs.
specials.tribstar.com /methodofmadness/January19A.html   (1594 words)

  
 Lawrence County Missouri History and Genealogy including Mount Vernon, Peirce City, Marionville, Verona, Aurora, Logan, ...
An informative and historical overview of Lawrence County, Missouri including three separate books on one CD which include 6 historical maps (1851, 1902, 1904, 1913, 1920's and 1929), plus the full Lawrence County section from the book: Goodspeed's History of Lawrence County, Missouri originally published in 1888.
Some of the facts contained are the number of farms and their acreages, number of cows, horses, mules, pigs, sheep, goats, poultry, colonies of bees, how many farms had mortgages and how many were free of debt, the amount of butter produced, the number of bushels of apples, peaches, pears, etc.
Since we sell many different Missouri and Arkansas County History CDs, please be sure to specify that you wish to see the sample from the Lawrence County, Missouri history.
www.hearthstonelegacy.com /lawrence.htm   (1069 words)

  
 Kick HD on Route 66 - Daily Message
The 15 mile stretch of Rooute 66 from Joplin to Carthage was the first section of paved road laid in Missouri.
Rolla is on a natural passageway to SW Missouri midway between St. Louis and Springfield.
Cuba is re-inventing itself as "the city of murals." Passed the quaint Wagon Wheel Motel, with cottages made from rock.
www.bikeforthecure.org /daily_message_2004_W3.htm   (3345 words)

  
 [No title]
The family also had lived in Laurence County, Missouri and later in McDonald County, Missouri.
Thomas was married near Bethpage, Missouri on September 20, 1894 to Annie Durbin.
Their next move was to Cowskin Prairie, that is between Grove, Oklahoma, and the Missouri State Line.
www.dunhamtree.homestead.com /files/np3.htm   (1399 words)

  
 Projectile Points Bibliography -- Tennessee Archaeology Net
In The Archaeology of Missouri II, University of Missouri Press, Columbia.
Morrow, Juliet E. 1996 The Organization of Clovis Lithic Technology in the Confluence Region of the Mississippi, Illinois, and Missouri Rivers.
Plew, Mark G., and Daniel S. Meatte 1986 Comments on the Distribution of Folsom Points in Eastern Oregon and Southern Idaho.
www.mtsu.edu /~kesmith/TNARCHNET/Pubs/pointbib.html   (11342 words)

  
 CAAS Faculty
Mark Plew holds a Ph.D. in anthropology from Indiana University.
During the past 25 years he has had primary responsibility for numerous cultural resource management projects in Idaho and surrounding states.
Plew is a Professor and Chair of the Department of Anthropology at Boise State University.
anthro.boisestate.edu /CAAS/CAAS_faculty.htm   (435 words)

  
 The Mountain Man
In order to obtain “Prime” beaver plew, it was necessary for the trapper to wade knee or waist deep in freezing mountain streams late in the fall and after breakup of the ice in the spring to set traps.
Most arrived at their destination in the mountains through St. Louis and thence up the Missouri River and its tributaries, the Platte and Yellowstone Rivers.
Others arrived through Mexico, as it then existed, and were based out of Mexican Santa Fe and Taos.
home.att.net /~mman/MountainMan.htm   (1383 words)

  
 MOYER FAMILY TREE
Their children were Alta born 1902; Owen born 1904; Fred born 1907; Ruby born 1910, John born 1913.
James M. Merry husband of Ella dies 1923 in New London, Missouri.
New Jersey Census for 1930 shows Ella and her children living in Newark, N.J. Ella (Moyer) Merry dies April 15, 1970 in Beliot, Wisconsin.
home.insightbb.com /~fselvaggio/franks/MOYER_FAMILY_TREE.html   (552 words)

  
 Route 66 and ATV Trails Through Kansas and Missouri - Associated Content
Traveling across Kansas and Missouri on the historic Route 66 can be an adventure, especially if it is combined with the up and coming sport of ATV riding.
With this small amount of Kansas covered by Route 66, there is no ATV riding areas available until reaching Missouri.
Route 66 continues in Missouri on MO-66E to Joplin.
www.associatedcontent.com /article/30123/route_66_and_atv_trails_through_kansas.html   (543 words)

  
 SAA Bulletin 16(5): Wesley R. Hurt, 1917-1997
Over Museum), and assumed responsibility for the museum's involvement in the Missouri Valley River Basin Project.
In recognition of his extensive regional field research, publications, and general contributions to American archaeology, he was awarded the SAA 50th Anniversary Award for Outstanding Contributions to American Archaeology.
Mark G. Plew is professor of archaeology in the Department of Anthropology at Boise State University.
www.saa.org /publications/saabulletin/16-5/SAA18.html   (765 words)

  
 uExpress.com: Covering The Courts & The Writer's Art by James J. Kilpatrick -- (02/27/2005) WHEN THE WOMBATS PLEW THE ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
In a puckish moment he invented a character named Infield Ingersoll, a retired shortstop who had become a radio announcer for the Wescosville Wombats of some imaginary league.
In one interview, Ingersoll recalled "the day us Wombats plew the Pink Sox." After all, he reasoned, if the past tense of "slay" is "slew," the simple past tense of "play" should be "plew." In the same fashion, because the past tense of "teach" is "taught," the intrepid infielder raught for a hard liner.
Unfortunately, the sun blound him, because the verb "to blind" should follow the rule of the pocket watch: Today we wind our watch; yesterday we wound it.
www.uexpress.com /coveringthecourts?uc_full_date=20050227   (678 words)

  
 Route 66 Points of Interest in Missouri
This was the first used and last replaced (1981) 4-lane section of Route 66 in Missouri.
While the hotel and gas station faded into memory, the restaurant was reincarnated in the 1990's and became a "choice" place for the "meat lover in you".
If you are interested in seeing one of the great roadside attractions anywhere in the United States, stay on Gravois for 9 blocks or so and encounter, in the middle of St. Louis, a Dutch Windmill known as the Bevo Mill.
www.missouri66.org /points_of_interest.html   (5722 words)

  
 Modern Militiaman, Issue #1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
I would prefer that you form your own group and either place it under the 51st, or my militia, or better yet, to form your own group and then let it split apart and form their own subgroupings.
I would be happy to help you form a sort of militia, provided it is an open, politically active militia, as a survivalist militia is formed up of friends of long standing or kinship.
Or you can join my militia group, the 7th Missouri Militia, which is a communications, propaganda, and political agitation group.
users.joplin.com /~mlindste/mmmisu1.html   (9322 words)

  
 Lenora Sellers Janes (1979)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
She was married to Joseph H. Janes on June 8, 1919 in Des Moines, and they lived in Winterset until Mr.
She was also preceded in death by a daughter.
Surviving are two sons, Clifford of Des Moines and Donald of Indianola; three daughters, Marion Plew of Carlisle, Shirley Hugen of Sunrise Beach, Mo., and Betty Agan of Des Moines, and 31 grandchildren.
iagenweb.org /boards/madison/obituaries/index.cgi?read=124483   (167 words)

  
 Affton, Missouri Florists | Locate Affton Florists | Find Affton Florists
Flowers, bouquets, plants, balloons, delivered directly from a Affton, MO Missouri flower shop.
Also as a member of Teleflora, FTD and other flower-by-wire associations we have access to floral shops around the world and provide delivery through these networks.
Send flowers with a Affton, MO Missouri florist you know or one near your destination.
www.locateaflorist.net /send-flowers-affton-mo.html   (270 words)

  
 [No title]
Sometime in the 1870's they moved to Missouri and had a farm there.”  *(This info is provided on a user-submitted family tree on Ancestry.com, however there is no contact information provided with this tree).
Laclede County Missouri; born 1873; died 22 Feb 1967 in Franklin, Laclede County, Missouri.
Burial: 1941, Hough Cemetery, Franklin, Laclede, Missouri: Hough, Rebecca M (Mrs.
home.twcny.rr.com /billandnikki   (4822 words)

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