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!MARR: Allen Co.,Ks mar. records
William was in the Civil War, Co A,12th Regiment, Kansas Volunteer Infantry. He was apparently stationed for at least 3 months at Ft. Scott, Kansas, then marched to Ft. Smith,AR.
William settled and filed homestead papers for the west half of tenorthwest quarter of section twenty-two in township twenty-five ofrange seventeen east in the district of lands subject to sale atIndependence, Kansas. The land contained 80 acres. His homesteadcertificate no. 965 application 2852. The homestead certificate wassigned by Ulysses S. Grant on the twentieth of February in the year1875.
!BIRTH & DEATH: Iola, ks,cemetery
William was in the Civil War Company A. 12th Kansas Infantry. | William ELLIS
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Census 1900, 1910, and 1920. Sarah was alone in 1900 as a widow. She had 4 children only one living. In 1910 and 1820 Albin was with his Mother, He was38. | Sarah A ELLIS
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!BIRTH & DEATH: Iola, ks,cemetery
!MARR: Allen Co.,Ks marr. records
Edgar was on the 1880 and 1900 census, and on a tomstone in Iola cemetary in Allan Co. Kansas. Cora was on 1880 census. Chester's name was on a tomestone in Iola with the note that his parents were F. C. and H. A. Ellis. He was 3 months and eight days old. Ralph was on 1900 census. Also in the same graveyard. Marriage date for Francis C. Ellis and Harriet A. Osborn found in Allan co. Courthouse. On the 1900 census it was stated that Harriet had four children and three living. | Frank C ELLIS
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!BIRTH ,DEATH & MARR.: PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE OF RUBY HEIMLICH | Dorothy Carrie ELLIS
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!BIRTH,DEATH AND MARR., personal knowledge of wife, Frances Elizabet hLucas!BIRTH,DEATH AND MARR., personal knowledge of wife, FrancesElizabet h Lucas
!BIRTH,DEATH AND MARR., personal knowledge of wife, Frances Elizabeth Lucas
Asa Sylvester Ellis was born 9 Sept 1860 in , Athens, Ohio. The family moved to Allen Co., Kansas in a covered wagon shortley after that. They bought a homestead of 80 acres, north west of Hombolt Kansas. Asa and Francis Elizabeth Lucas married 9 april 1891 in Marion co, Kansas. She called him Vessie and she was called Lizzie. In 1900 census they were in Creek Nation, Indian Terrirory, which became Oklahoma. They moved there about 1895 or1896 and stayed until 1907. Asa was a good friend to the indians and was a gun lover at one time he traded for a new gun, and the indians wanted to trade Him for it He refused. The family spent the night with friends when they returned the next day the door was full of bullet holes. Asa worked at many jobs over the years farmer, the zinc smelters, on the railroad, made and sold salve door to door. In his older days he was night watchman in the oil fields. He was injured while trying to save someone's life while he was working on the railroad. He didn't get an education but was good at working with numbers. He loved stories and poetry. He was a great story teller and entertainer. When tte comunity had corn husking, spelling bees, or dances people would help him with his work to get him to entertain. My sister said when she was a teenager all her friends would gather around to hear him tell stories. He had redish hair and pale blue eyes. He wore a mustache.Asa died in Turnertown, Texas 30 Sept 1935. I was 6 months old. | Asa Sylvester ELLIS
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!BIRTH,MARRIAGE,AND DEATH:Personal knowledge of Mrs. Frank Ellis | Frank R. ELLIS
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!BIRTH,MARRIAGE,AND DEATH:Personal knowledge of Mrs. Wallace Ellis | Wallace Earl ELLIS
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!BIRTH: 1850 census,Decatuar twp.,Washington, Ohio
Marriage for parents Athens courthouse in Ohio. 1960 census Carthage, Athens, Ohio. Census 1700, 1900, and 1910. In 1900 census Catharine had 4 children 2 had passed away. | Catherine ELLIS
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!BIRTH: 1850 census,Decatuar twp.,Washington, Ohio
!MARRIAGE: Marr. records of Athens Co.,Oh.
!BIRTH: 1850 census,Decatuar twp.,Washington, Ohio
!MARRIAGE: Marr. records of Athens Co.,Oh.!BIRTH: 1850 census,Decatuartwp.,Washington, Ohio
!MARRIAGE: Marr. records of Athens Co.,Oh.
Marriage of Henry and Deliah in Athens Co. Ohio court house. Have 1860 and 1870 censesof Iola, Kansas. Henry was a Plasterer. | Henry M ELLIS
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!BIRTH: 1850 census,Decatuar twp.,Washington, Ohio | Elizabeth ELLIS
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!BIRTH: Peter P Freeman's pension papers
!MARRIAGE: Allen Co., KS records
!DEATH: personal knowledge of dau., Nellie Nola Griffith
!BIRTH: Peter P Freeman's pension papers
!MARRIAGE: Allen Co., KS records
!DEATH: personal knowledge of dau., Nellie Nola Griffith | Mary Jane FREEMAN
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!BIRTH:Personal knowledge of Alice M. Gillis
!MARRIAGE:License in poss. of Clark Ellis
History: Alice Marguerite Gillis (Margie) and her family first moved to Florida in 1916. They lived then in
Tillman (which is now Palm Bay) for two years and then moved back to Iowa as per her story written
below. The next time they moved to Florida in 1923 then lived out on a street just off Dairy Road. She
was 14. Margie met Clifford Ellis age 12, he lived on a dairy on Dairy Road. Five years later when
Margie was 19 and Clifford was 17 they got married.
Tribute to the Town With a Heart
By Marguerite Roberts
Crash! Bang! We heard the scraping of metal and felt a huge jolt. We were flung on top of each
other as the car went over on its side. Luckily, none of us were thrown through the windshield. Our
Guardian Angels must have been with us that day!
We crawled out, dazed and shaken, but not damaged physically, except for Papa. He had a badly
bruised arm, but it didn’t seem to be broken.
The year was 1922. My father, younger brother Raymond, and I, fourteen but little for my age, were
on our way from Iowa to Florida. Older brother, Clyde, wasn’t with us. He had left home earlier in the
year and we didn’t know where he was now. He had been restless since mother had died four years ago.
The last time we heard from him, he was with a threshing crew in South Dakota. Papa had written to him
there to tell him we were moving.
Previously, we had lived in Florida from 1916 to 1918. We had returned to Iowa because of the war.
Papa might be called in the next draft and Mama wanted to be near her family. The war ended in 1918,
just a month after Mama’s death from Pneumonia and two weeks after we returned to Iowa.
Papa loved Florida! He believed his health was better in the sunny clime, so our motto was,
“Florida or bust”. Well, we busted there along the Indiana highway!
The roads were narrow in those days and some of the bridges narrower. Another car had been
coming from the opposite direction and both drivers had underestimated the width of the bridge. Both
Papa and the other driver had thought there was enough room to pass. There wasn’t. And now, our car
was on its side in the ditch. By some miracle, the other fellow’s car was still upright. He was not hurt.
While we were surveying the damage, a man came along and said he would contact the garage in
Memphis, Indiana. There didn’t seem to be any police or lawmen to notify in those days.
The other fellow’s car was slightly damaged and he soon had it running and he went on home,
which was not far from there. However our old Reo was in bad shape. The garage owner and his son
towed it in and discovered that it needed parts, which they didn’t have. They would have to be ordered
from a larger city.
In the meantime we had to stay somewhere. There were no motels for travelers back in 1922.
There were tourist-courts with parking spaces and perhaps, a large, central building for cooking and
eating, but they were few and far between. Memphis was too small for a hotel and there wasn’t a
rooming house. So what to do?
The first night an elderly couple, living on the edge of town, took us in, but we understood it was
only for that night, as they wished to keep their quest room ready for their company. The next day, the
garage man and his wife, Mr. And Mrs. Biggs, agreed to keep me, if I didn’t mind sharing a bed with their
teenage daughter, Lola. They didn’t have room for Papa and Raymond, as their son and his wife were
living with them. The son was in partnership with his Dad in the garage. It was a good arrangement,
especially since the two women got along well together.
Papa and Raymond found lodging with a women and her two daughters, who sometimes took in
boarders. Since it would take a while to get the parts for the car and we needed the money, papa got a
job in the local sawmill.
“Why don’t you take Marguerite to school with you?” Mrs. Biggs suggested to Lola. “She might
like it and I believe the teacher wouldn’t mind.”
I visited the school with Lola and liked it so well I decided to enroll as a pupil. They scrounged
up some books for me and for Raymond, too. We made friends and even went to Sunday School with
them.
One day some kids came running up to us at recess shouting, “Your Dad was carried into Doc’s
office! We saw them carry him in!”
Our teachers kindly excused us and we walked the short distance to the Doctor’s office as fast
as we could. Sure enough, Papa was there. A plank had slipped from his grasp at the sawmill and broke
his ankle. Of all the luck!
Now, we were there to stay for a long time. Raymie and I didn’t mind. We were practicing for
Christmas programs at school and at church. We were having a great time and we felt right at home.
I liked Lola. We had become good friends. There were a couple boys we liked and they seemed
to like us, too. No dates. We were too young to date, but they would walk us home in the evenings after
practicing for the program at church. Just before Christmas, we sneaked home from church without
them. Lola said something to me about not liking her friend as much as she did at first.
A few days later, her Dad said he had heard that the boys had become interested in a couple of
other girls and had given them boxes of candy! “So you girls missed out. You gave up too soon”, he
teased, “and the other girls got the candy.” We felt badly for a while, but we soon recovered.
Christmas came and the people in that little town saw that we had a good Christmas. People
gave us all kinds of gifts. One dear lady made me a dress. I remember it to this day. It was plaid in
shades of green, yellow, blue and orange on a white background. So pretty! Others gave us hose,
mittens, candy, fruit and cookies. Some gave us money, a dollar or two, and money wasn’t plentiful in
those days. A dollar seemed a lot to us. Those people were sharing and caring people, “the salt of the
earth”.
The time came when our car was ready and Papa’s ankle had healed, so he could drive again.
We packed, said our goodbyes and took off for Florida, again. We promised to write and we did. For
years I corresponded with Lola and her sister-in-law, Blanche.
Lola married and I married and we exchanged pictures. Through the years, though, we
gradually quit writing except for Christmas cards. I learned that Lola’s mother had passed on and, later,
that Blanche had died from a heart attack. I grieved for them. They were both wonderful women.
I’ve lost track of the families for many years now, but I’ll never forget that friendly town and
those dear people who showed such love and kindness to two motherless children and their father. We
were in a strange place, far from home, relatives and friends. We were in trouble and they took us into
their lives and their hearts. I often think of Christ’s words, “I was a stranger and ye took me in”. The Bible,
Matthew 25:35
Remembering Marguerite Roberts
I came to the Melbourne Church in January 1958, and Marguerite was there. She was one of
the warm loving members who made me feel so welcome. She has been a member here for so many
years. She started attending our church when it was still a society in the 1930s and her children attended
Sunday School then. She became a member in the 1940s.
When I met her, she was a quiet unassuming woman, slender, dainty, with innate goodness
shining from her expressive eyes making her radiantly beautiful. She remained that way all her years
here.
She was always willing to help, not only willing but eager to help someone in need and did help
take care of several Christian Scientists who needed her for a time. One of these people was my mother.
While I was Reading Room Librarian, I needed to be at the Reading Room all day one day a
week and mother needed to be with someone. Marguerite invited her to visit and have lunch with her in
her home on those days. Mother enjoyed it immensely and apparently Marguerite did also. For there
were two happy women when I went to pick up mother.
With all her quietness, she was not wishy washy, she was firm in standing for Principle and
would not allow herself to deviate from it. She was also firm in the raising of her children but always
loving.
Marguerite never drove a car and walked to church and to the reading room when she served
there. She used to say she liked to walk and I thought maybe that was one way she stayed so slender.
I can't tell you much about her family life but I could see she was a good wife and mother. She
never spoke of anyone including her family, in a negative or critical way. She always seemed to be able
to see them as God's Perfect Ideas.
Marguerite served the church in many capacities. She was the Second Reader, Reading Room
Librarian and worked many years as an attendant. She was Sunday School Superintendent, taught in
the Sunday School for many years and served as clerk and on the board of directors several times,
served in the Children's room for years and on almost all the committees at one time or another. For
quite a few years, when the Christian Science Monitor had local advertising reps, she fulfilled that job.
In the 1970's she had primary instruction from Florence C. Southwell while Mrs. Southwell was
in Miami. After that we attended many association meetings together. The trips there and back were
filled with friendly visiting, discussions of problems and how they had been or could be healed.
In her later years, I was privileged to be able to visit with her in her home on a few evenings. She
had a love for fun and a good sense of humor. Sometimes when she thought something was funny, and
didn't think it proper to laugh, her mouth would purse up just slightly and her eyes would twinkle. We
read together, both Christian Science literature and fiction, discussed recipes, and told each other stories
of the old days. She loved a good game of dominos and we whiled away many hours playing to my rules.
Once in a while she, with her mouth slightly pursed and her eyes twinkling, she would slip in one of her
rules, which I believe, were real ones.
The last few years, she didn't seem to be able to meet a problem that made her seem different
but I know in my heart and mind that she is still good, standing for Principle, loving, kind, generous, fun
loving and strong in the truth.
I shall always remember you that way, Marguerite.
Written by Sylvia Anne Hendry Porter July 31, 2004
According to a note by Margie Gillis on February 22, 1928, She, Clifford Ellis and his mother, Emma
Jane and a friend, Fred Barwell, they went for an ride in an open cockpit bi-wing airplane!
Gates Flying Circus was west of Melbourne and Major Brooks was the pilot. The trip cost $1.00 a person
but it was glorious! It was a short ride. We went up circled around and came down again.
!BIRTH:Personal knowledge of Alice M. Gillis
!MARRIAGE:License in poss. of Clark Ellis of Orem, Ut. | Alice Marguerite GILLIS
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!BIRTH:Personal knowledge of Alice M. Gillis
!MARRIAGE:License in poss. of Clark Ellis
!DEATH: Personal knowledge of Alice M. Gillis
Clifford Orville Ellis, the third child of Emma Jane (Clark) Ellis and George Washington Ellis, was born
February 4th, 1911 in Iola, Kansas. When he arrived, his father bought a mantel/wall clock, which
traveled with the family to Florida in 1916, when the family sold most of their earthly possessions and
moved to escape the drought and poverty then prevalent in the Midwest. Living in Melbourne, George
worked at the sawmills, which were used to build the Cypress Railroad. He later started a dairy on what is now known as Dairy Road in Melbourne. About the same time, his brother Wallace opened a dairy and named the access to it Ellis Road after their family name. This is now the Ellis Road, an industrial area of Melbourne.
Clifford played with his younger sisters Ruby and Dorothy, both closer to his age, as the middle brother had died early after birth, and his older brother, Willis, was seven years ahead of him. He became close friends with a school chum, Fred Barwell. Fred eventually became part of the Ellis family. The boys had many adventures together. Clifford’s parents thought that he was too adventurous
growing up.
Clifford and Fred built a cut-down car. Sometimes they would take off for a day or two, without telling
the family where they were. Once, he heard that a hurricane was coming in with huge waves in Miami
Beach, so he traveled there. He said he wanted to help people. That car must have had a top, because
when he returned to Melbourne, the top had been blown off, and he had had quite a wild experience. He decided he would never do that again.
He had many interests, though he did not finish high school. He got a book by the magician
Blackstone, and practiced some of the techniques in it. He took a correspondence course in cartooning.
At one time, he had a motorcycle, and when he was dating his future wife, Marguerite Gillis, they would
ride together on it. Clifford liked music and learned to play the French horn. He performed with a local
group for various celebrations in the county. As adults, he and Fred became volunteer firemen for the
city of Melbourne. His daughter, Janet, recalls that he had a small telescope and would take her outside at night to look at the stars.
When Marguerite Gillis’ family moved out to Dairy Road, there was no water on the property, so she and her younger brother had to walk down the road and ask the Ellis neighbors for water. She told her granddaughter that when she first saw Clifford, she thought that, in her own words, “ He looked like a golden god.” They immediately were attracted to each other. Later, they dated, became engaged, and married in June of 1928. Clifford was only seventeen. Marguerite was not quite two years older than Clifford.
He worked at several service stations, primarily for the Sunoco Oil Co. At one time, he became manager of a Sunoco station in downtown Melbourne. Clifford and Marguerite lived in a small wooden Florida house in June Park on U.S. Highway 192, five or six miles west from the center of Melbourne. The tiny house had three rooms and a porch. Two years after their marriage, their first child, a girl, was born in that home, July 3rd, 1930. She was named Janet Eileen Ellis.
Later, they moved to property on Dairy Road. Clifford’s father deeded them a portion of his property,
located south of his home. Twenty-two months after their daughter’s birth, they had a son, Clifford Clark Ellis, born April 12, 1932. Twenty-two months after that another daughter, Wanda Jane Ellis, arrived on January 30, 1934. In 1933 the summer before Wanda’s birth, Clifford, Marguerite and the two children drove to Iowa with Joe Wickham. Marguerite was expecting their third child.
Marguerite and the children stayed there in Palo with her grandparents, while Clifford and Joe traveled
to the Chicago World’s Fair. After a few days, Joe traveled farther west, and Clifford returned to Florida.
Soon he moved to Miami to work for Sunoco, lived in a rooming house, and looked for a house that he
could afford to rent; one that would allow for his growing family. When he found it, he sent for his wife
and children. They were in Melbourne for the birth of the third child, January 1934, but went back to
Miami to live. Before the year ended, Clifford wanted to return to Melbourne to live near his parents. He was very close in heart to his mother. She was in poor health.
The Ellis family had been shocked, saddened, and devastated by the death of their oldest child,
Clifford’s brother, Willis, in 1931. Willis and his wife Hazel had been house sitting for his employer in a
remote area in Palm Bay. He had been shot in bed, as he, hearing someone enter the room, raised up
from sleeping, shortly after midnight. Their baby girl was sleeping in the room near them and their two
teen-age sisters (Dorothy Ellis and Gertrude Roberts) were sleeping in the next room. Everyone in the
Ellis family was so frightened that the men kept guns under their pillows for some time after Willis died.
Clifford wanted so much for the murderer to be caught, that he learned fingerprinting in order to assist
the sheriff with the investigation. However, the case was never solved.
His father had found a garage with restaurant for sale on south Dixie Highway. He wanted his family to go into the business together. They bought the business and all of the family members worked together, until Clifford died from complications of a ruptured appendix, January 16, 1935. Clifford would have been twenty-four years old had he lived a little more than two weeks longer. He had joined the Woodsmen, a branch of the Masons shortly before his illness. They provided the family with a special picture of their loved one.
According to a note by Margie Gillis on February 22, 1928, She, Clifford Ellis and his mother, Emma
Jane and a friend, Fred Barwell, went for a ride in an open cockpit bi-wing airplane. Gates Flying
Circus was west of Melbourne and Major Brooks was the pilot. The trip cost $1.00 a person but it was
glorious! It was a short ride. We went up circled around and came down again.
!BIRTH:Personal knowledge of Mrs. Ruby Heimlich, his sister.
!MARRIAGE:License in poss. of Clark Ellis of Orem, Ut.
!DEATH:Personal knowledge of wife, now Mrs. H.E. Roberts. | Clifford Orville ELLIS
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!BIRTHS,MARRIAGES AND DEATHS:Personal knowledge of Mrs. Nellie Ellis | Ethel Edna (Clair) ELLIS
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!BIRTHS,MARRIAGES AND DEATHS:Personal knowledge of Mrs. Nellie Ellis | Frederick Rufus ELLIS
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!BIRTHS,MARRIAGES AND DEATHS:Personal knowledge of Mrs. Nellie Ellis | Bert Albert ELLIS
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!BIRTHS,MARRIAGES AND DEATHS:Personal knowledge of Mrs. NellieEllis.
A record on the LDS shows death date as: 12 Mar 1978
This is a guess from SS records. SS number 511-32-5625 | Minnie May ELLIS
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!BIRTHS,MARRIAGES:Personal knowledge of Mrs. Nellie Ellis
DEATH:Personal knowledge of Clark Ellis | Nellie Nola ELLIS
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!DEATH:WANDA DIED AT HOME,PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE OF CLARK ELLIS | Wanda Jane ELLIS
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!MARRIAGE: Marr. record of Allen Co., Ks | Allura ELLIS
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"suddenly ... aged 49 years" | John ELLIS
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1 Year, 10 mos, 1 day | Sylvia A. Ellis
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1820 Sensus shows George of Stephen with the correct family size and approximate dates. | George Ellis
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1870 | Source: 1870 United States Federal Census
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1870 | Source: 1870 United States Federal Census
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39 SX#A VPB10p194 16June 1714 Jeremiah Ellis of S 150a S side Main blackwater Swamp s 40
Patent ref #061A VPB 10 p124 dat 13 Nov 1713 frm Alexander Spotswood to Nathaniel Phillips of Surry County re 100a S side Main Blackwater Swamp in Surry County con Import. of 2 pers. !Judeth Rule and Daniel Cammel loc 98464 -94848 F127 L0 P255 pt A) red oak a line tree of the Colledge Land !and a corner of Jeremiah Ellis's then by the Colledge Lines ln E; 324P; Colledge Lines pt B) hickory and ln N40E; 64P; pt C) red oak just over a branch and a little below a fork ln N71E; 60P; fm a br. below a fork pt D) hickory saplin a Line tree of the Colledge Land ln N19W; 68P; fm Colledge Land pt E) red oak ln S60W; 101P; pt F) red oak ln S49W; 96P; pt G) a stake ln W; 240P; pt H) red oak in Jeremiah Ellis's line lc S; 20P; Jeremiah Ellis end
478 SY D&WBk4p171 5-6 January 1690 John Rawlings and wife Jeremiah Ellis Sr
patent ID SY#294 ref VPB 8 p6-7 dat 20Oct1689 to John Rawlins re 455a SY Co. con import. of 10 pers. loc -20100 3267 F127 L0 P255 pt A) sweet gum in Jno.Chehocons Swamp Richd. Jordans corner tree ln NExN; 160P; Richd. Jordans pt B) great p ln N41W; 320P; pt C) blo saplin ln N63W; 165P; pt D) p ln SWxS; 160P; pt E) sd Swamp lm ; ; down sd Swamp end ! typ deed ref SY D&WBk4p171 dat 5-6 January 1690 frm John Rawlings and wife Mary Rawlings to Jeremiah Ellis Sr !wit. Richard Shokkey end !
From the Deed Data Pool-Internet www.ultranet.com/~deeds/pool.htm. | Jeremiah Ellis, I
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According to a note by Margie Gillis on February 22, 1928, She, Clifford Ellis and his mother, Emma
Jane and a friend, Fred Barwell, went for a ride in an open cockpit bi-wing airplane. Gates Flying
Circus was west of Melbourne and Major Brooks was the pilot. The trip cost $1.00 a person but it was
glorious! It was a short ride. We went up circled around and came down again. | Emma Jane CLARK
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aged 1 | Caroline MILLS
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aged 1 year & six months|| only daughter | Nora May MILLS
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aged 27 years | Georgina ELLIS
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aged 27 years | Elizabeth SPEARMAN
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aged 3 years and eight months | George Alfred ELLIS
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aged 31 | Hilda May ELLIS
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aged 4 months | Clyde Hamilton ELLIS
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aged 40 years | Hannah Iron PREEDY
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aged 5 years | Barbara ELLIS
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aged 53 in 1851 | Robert ELLIS
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aged 56, leaving a widow, son, two brothers and four sisters | Henry Maxwell BAKER
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aged 60 in 1861 | Harriet
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aged 64 years | Robert ELLIS
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aged 72 years | Susannah Fernley FISHER
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aged 74 | Holden C. MILLS
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aged 75, of cancer | Robert ELLIS
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aged 82 | Agnes ELLIS
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aged 83 | Elizabeth Caroline ELLIS
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aged 88 | Catherine Penelope GREEN
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aged 92 | Hannah DARBY
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Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT: MyFamily.com, Inc., 2004. Indexed by ProQuest from microfilmed schedules of the 1910 U.S. Federal Decennial Census. Data imaged from National Archives and Records Administration. 1910 Federal Population Census. T624, 1,784 rolls. Washington, D.C | Source: US Federal Census, Record Type: Census image, Location: Berkshire County, Massachusetts, Film: T623-633
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Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT: MyFamily.com, Inc., 2004. Indexed by ProQuest from microfilmed schedules of the 1910 U.S. Federal Decennial Census. Data imaged from National Archives and Records Administration. 1910 Federal Population Census. T624, 1,784 rolls. Washington, D.C | Source: US Federal Census, Record Type: Census image, Location: Berkshire County, Massachusetts, Film: T625-680
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Ancestry.com. 1930 United States Federal Census. [database on-line] Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2002. Indexed by Ancestry.com from microfilmed schedules of the 1930 U.S. Federal Decennial Census.1930 United States Federal Census. [database online] Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2001. Data imaged from National Archives and Records Administration. 1930 Federal Population Census. T626, 2,667 rolls. Washington, D.C. | Source: US Federal Census, Location: Dutchess County, New York, Film: T626-1421
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