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knoxcotn-digest Saturday, March 11 2000 Volume 01 : Number 070
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 06 Mar 2000 11:11:13 -0800 From: "Billie R. McNamara" <knox@tngenweb.org> Subject: [KnoxCoTN] Scary, but a great genealogy resource.... I wasn't in this database, thank goodness, or I'd probably be screaming right now. I did, however, find a couple of old boyfriends and about 1000 people in a one-name research that I coordinate. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 06 Mar 2000 11:37:29 -0800 From: "Billie R. McNamara" <knox@tngenweb.org> Subject: [KnoxCoTN] Cranial methane eruption.... Left the URL off.... I wasn't in this database, thank goodness, or I'd probably be screaming right now. I did, however, find a couple of old boyfriends and about 1000 people in a one-name research that I coordinate. www.anybirthday.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 08 Mar 2000 19:48:34 -0800 From: "Billie R. McNamara" <knox@tngenweb.org> Subject: [KnoxCoTN] Upcoming noteworthy lectures in Knoxville Dr. Michael Toomey, resident historian for the East TN Historical Society, will speak at the ETHS "great hall" at 2 p.m. on Sunday. His topic will be "The Blessings of Government" -- he'll discuss the way the Southwest Territory combined the fragmented governments of Tennessee from 1790-1796. The lecture is free and open to the public. It will be followed by a reception. Also, if you're in Knoxville on April 14, there'll be a brown-bag lecture at ETHS on how Knoxvillle transformed following the Civil War up to about 1900. The Sanford, Chamberlain, and Albers Drug Company museum display will also be unveiled that day in the Museum of East Tennessee History (same building as ETHS) -- this is an awesome collection of bottles and other 19th Century pharmaceutical artifacts. ETHS' website is http://www.east-tennessee-history.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 11 Mar 2000 06:12:20 -0800 From: "Billie R. McNamara" <knox@tngenweb.org> Subject: [KnoxCoTN] George Nathaniel King and Maggie Smith These are my sister's husband's great-grandparents. They were married in 1898 in Knox County and lived in the eastern section, near the Sevier/Jeff/Knox border. Anybody kin? ------------------------------ End of knoxcotn-digest V1 #70 ***************************** |