Notes


Note    N2314         Index
Listed as a daughter in 1920 Census.

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Note    N2315         Index
Wonder if this person was somehow confused with Ammon Francis?

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Note    N2316         Index
A merchant of Shrewsbury, whose descendant was Doctor Millington, the founder of Millington Hospital in 1774 and who endowed a scholar ship trnable at Oxford University for boys bred at Shrewsbury School of much renown.

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Note    N2317         Index
Said to be of the Island of St. Christopher, West Indies.

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Note    N2318         Index
"History of Dauphin County" gives 1775 as the birth year.

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Note    N2319         Index
Buried in Carter's Run Valley, 5 miles west of Warrenton, county seat of Fauquier County.

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Note    N2320         Index
This guy Alexander wrote out an affidavitt which is in the posession of Ken Dice, which confirms his father's siblings and parents.

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Note    N2321         Index
On Highway 379.

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Note    N2322         Index
In the affidavitt by Judith's nephew Alexander, son of George, he states that Juda and William Jackman started West in an earlier day adn we have never had any tiding from them since and it seems to be the general opinion that they were killed by Indians.

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Note    N2323         Index
Daughter is implied by the source.

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Note    N2324         Index
Son Charles' census entry.

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Note    N2325         Index
Left Yarmouth, England in the ship "Dorset" in September, 1636, and settled at Salem, Massachusets, where the record shows as follows: "At a towne meeting 11th of ye 5th monneth, 1636, its agreed that Thomas Moore soone to Widowe Moore and his wife are received for inhabitents and may have one fishing lot on the neck." Fishing lots have water fronts. He engaged in building small vessels.

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Note    N2326         Index
Was a lawyer and farmer and spent his life in Hardinsburg, KY, serving as County Judge, Commonwealth Attorney and US Congressman. He also operated a farm near Hardinsburg. He served in the Spanish American War and in World War I. He was one of the organizers of the American Legion and Hardinsburg Post No. 1 was named in his honor.

"Henry DeHaven Moorman (June 9, 1880 - February 3,1939) was a U.S. Representative from Kentucky.

Born on a farm near Glen Dean, Kentucky, Moorman attended the public schools. He studied law. He was admitted to the bar in 1900 and commenced practice in Hardinsburg. He also engaged in agricultural pursuits and in banking. County judge of Breckinridge County 1905-1909 and Commonwealth attorney of the ninth judicial district 1914-1927. He served in the Spanish-American War as a private in Company C, First Regiment, Kentucky Volunteer Infantry, with service in Puerto Rico. During the First World War he enlisted in the United States Army on January 14, 1918, and was assigned to Headquarters Company, Tenth Field Artillery. He was promoted to corporal and assigned to duty with the Judge Advocate General, Headquarters, Service of Supply, and was discharged April 1, 1919.

Moorman was elected as a Democrat to the Seventieth Congress (March 4, 1927 - March 3, 1929). He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1928 to the Seventy-first Congress. He resumed his former professional and business pursuits in Hardinsburg, Kentucky. He died while on a visit in Hot Springs, Arkansas, February 3, 1939. He was interred in Ivy Hill Cemetery, Hardinsburg, Kentucky.

Hardinsburg, Kentucky, in rural Breckinridge County, carries a great distinction when the subject of the American Legion arises. The name Henry DeHaven Moorman is remembered with pride, and veterans in this bucolic place stand a little taller as conversation turns to those fateful days in 1919.

During the winter of that year, Moorman attended a series of discussions in Paris concerning servicemen and their futures. By march 1919, The American Legion was formed an ananswer to those needs presented by individuals who had fought in the world war.

In may, thousands of former servicemen gathered in St. Louis to concentrate their efforts on caring for windows and orphans who had lost their husbands and fathers in the war effort. During the caucus, a preamble was drafted for The American Legion Constitution]ution, which was used as a "statement of purpose" at the first national convention held in Minneapolis in November.

Moorman, a Spanish-American War veteran, was there during these formative days of The American Legion, first serving as Kentucky Chairman and later as State Commander. Due to his abiding interest and participation, Hardinsburg was the first post to apply for a charter and received the designation of American Legion Post #1.

Moorman continued his support and interest in the American legion through his career endeavors as an attorney, farmer and civic leader. He died February 3, 1939 in the Army-Navy Hospital in Hot Springs, Arkansas."-- Breckinridge County, Kentucky: History and Families