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This extraordinary compilation, first published to commemorate the 200th anniversary of Hopewell [Friends] Monthly Meeting in 1934, is divided into two parts. The historical section is a broad survey of Hopewell Meeting from its origins nine years before the creation of Frederick County. Of far greater importance to genealogists, the documentary section encompasses 200 years of Quaker records: births, marriages, deaths, removals, disownments, and reinstatements, a good many of which cannot be found in public record offices. (For example, Virginia counties were not required to report to the state until 1825.) The vital records themselves have been supplemented by rare documents, letters, diaries, and other private records. Many thousands of individuals are identified in these records, the index to which runs 225 pages and contains thousands of entries.
Dr. Gabrielle Michaels, a 4th year residency of oncology at Northwestern University hospital in Chicago Illinois, has a feeling she is being watched, that her life is under a microscope, and she has every reason to believe her mild obscurity of paranoia because unfortunately for Gabrielle, she’s right. Somone has a disturbing watchful eye on Dr. Michaels. The past has a dreadful way of reoccurring again. For Gabrielle’s sake, circumstances of the death of a childhood friend and love who is locked away in her heart and she refuses to let go, somehow lingers to unsolved murders of two Chicago police officers. Those unsolved murders of two Chicago police officers are reopened when a promine...
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Daniel Payne was born in about 1770 in Spotsylvania County, Virginia. He married Nancy Paine in about 1790. He died in 1839 in Maury County, Tennessee. Includes Austin, Fox, Teague and related families.