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1

Henry grew up in Fayette and possibly Gonzales Counties. He must have had a better education than usual on the frontier. He became a country school teacher, a farmer and later a rancher. He was also known for being a great one for reading history, especially Roman history. He came with his family to western Llano county in the early 1800's from Coleman County. His father purchased land in November of 1883. This community later became known as Esbon Community. He met there the girl he was to marry. Martha Lee Harlow, who had arrived earlier with her family from Illinois, by way of Burnett County. 
Family: F168
 
2 (additional information on the Chenowith family can be found here:http://chenowethsite.com/ch6t2t.htm) Family: F6
 
3 (based on information on the 1930 census) Family: F190
 
4 *Additional information on the Breshear family can be found here http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~irhpmuh/pafg20.htm Family: F45
 
5 1903 Polk County, MO Platt Book

The subject Plat Book shows A. A. Tuckness (Albert Andrew 1865-1939) with 88 acres of land in Mooney Township 32 N., Range 21, Section 9. The land was just north of the Pomme de Terre River near the Dallas Co line where the river takes a sharp bend to the south NE of Pleasant Hope.

Just to the north and a touch to the west was Albert Andrew' s brother, J. W. Tuckness. John Wesley and Albert's mother was Nancy Dodd. Nancy's brother Moses R. Dodd and Henry B. Dodd were living just to the south of their nephew, Albert A. Tuckness. The land of of a third brother, J. J. (John J. Dodd b. ca 1841) which is located between Moses and Henry is shown as his "estate".

To the west about one mile is 19 acres belonging to C.O.J. Dodd. I'm not sure who that is........anyone else have a clue? A little less than a mile to the east is 60 acres belonging to M. C. Dodd. I cannot identify that one either.

A few miles to the NE of Albert Andrew and his brother, John Wesley Tuckness and just across from Schofield Church and Cemetery in Benton Township33, Range 21, Section 26 is J. Tuckness (James Segal 1862-1938). He was also a son of John Wesley, Sr. and brother of Albert Andrew. He was living just to the south of William M. C. (Billie) Barnett who was the grandfather of Esther Eve Nicodemus who married the son of Albert Andrew Tuckness, James Roscoe b. 1899.
So, James Roscoe was the nephew of James Segal. The Nicodemus family was living just to the east in Dallas Co and like the Tuckness families attended the Schofield Baptist Church. All of the above are buried in the Schofield Cemetery. It is a small country cemetery that is well kept although it reportedly has a few snakes. Be careful if you visit. I plan to be buried there too, but hopefully no time soon.

About 10 miles to the north in Green Township 34, Range 21,Section 2 we find John Anderson Tuckness (1837-1939) on 40 acres. He later went to Idaho where he died. He was the son of Francis Asbury Tuckness and Charlotte Keith.
John’s wife was Sarah Nancy Breshears. Her brother Reuben J. Breshears had 80 acres next to John and Sarah. Just to the south were Andrew J. b. 1848 and George W. Breshears b. 1858 who were the uncle and 1st cousin of Sarah.
Another 1st cousin was about a mile and one half to the NW was Jesse C. Breshears on about 120 acres.

Jerry 
Family: F180
 
6 Allie A. Tuckness married Freda Kohn 11 Jan 1917 Dawson Co. TX Family: F26
 
7 Bonney Family Geneology Site http://home.att.net/~j-rfritz/bonney.html Family: F13
 
8 Bonney Family Geneology Site http://home.att.net/~j-rfritz/bonney.html Family: F13
 
9 Bonney Family Geneology Site http://home.att.net/~j-rfritz/bonney.html Family: F13
 
10 Bonney Family Geneology Site http://home.att.net/~j-rfritz/bonney.html Family: F13
 
11 Childrens names come from the 1900 & 1910 Census Family: F9
 
12 Dec 13 or 15 Family: F97
 
13 Elvin Elliot Ohlhausen

This section on Elvin Elliot Ohlhausen and his descendants was researched, compiled and written by Marcylee Marie Ohlhausen Ludwig, the third child of Samuel Albert Ohlhausen and Bertha Callie Baker. I (BH) have only edited and integrated this section into our format and onto computer disk for storage and printing. Elvin Elliot and his wife Maggie Bell Carson had ten children, so this will be a very long, interesting and educational section.

Elvin Elliot Ohlhausen was born in Llano or Mason Co., TX 2 June 1886. He married ca 1908 to Maggie Belle Carson who was born 30 Dec. 1890 in Gonzales (Gonzales Co.) TX, (east of San Antonio on US Highway 90A). They had ten children: Samuel Albert, James Carson, Elbert Elvin, Lillie Marie, Dorman Darrell, Maggie Mae, Elvina Modine, Anne Elizabeth, Elmon Doyle, Melvin Wayne. Elvin died in San Antonio, TX in 1951 from a cerebral brain hemorrhage. Maggie Bell died 3 Nov. 1969 while living in the Lytle, TX Nursing Home. (Lytle sits in three counties: Atascosa, Medina and Bexar). Both are buried at Macdona (Bexar Co.) TX in Hermann Sons Cemetery.

Elvin Elliot fell in love with Maggie Belle Carson in Pontotoc (Mason Co.), TX and wanted to make sure she would be his. He bought a locket for her but first showed it to all the men in town and said, "Who ever you see wearing this locket leave her alone. SHE'S MINE!" It has been said he thought she was quite pretty for she had beautiful black hair and a complexion like peaches and cream. She was the daughter of Hazel Albert and Margaret Carson living in Pontotoc, TX. The parents of Elvin Elliot, Samuel Alexander and Sarah (nee Teague) Ohlhausen and Maggie Belle's parents, Hazel Albert and Margaret (nee Nary) Carson are buried in the Pontotoc, TX Cemetery.

While in Mason and McCulloch Counties, Elvin Elliot farmed cotton, hand dug water wells, worked in Jessie Lee "Doc" Ohlhausen's (see section 6, Jessie Lee "Doc" Ohlhausen) cotton gin in Lohn (McCulloch Co.), TX, and the Lohn Oil Refinery. While working at the oil refinery, both of his hands were badly burned. Once, when looking for the old home place in Lohn, TX with my uncle James Carson Ohlhausen, I got to see one of the hand dug water wells Elvin Elliot had dug.

Elvin Elliot's daughters, Lillie Marie and Maggie Mae, remember some of their life in Lohn. They recall living in a small wood frame house and later they moved into a big rock house that had belonged to Elvin's older brother, Jessie Lee "Doc" Ohlhausen. (Probably in 1915 when Jessie Lee moved his family to Taylor Co., TX see section 6.) This rock house was at the foot of a mountain and had a water tank that the boys used for swimming. It also had many scorpions and Black Widow Spiders. Samuel Albert, the oldest son, was bitten on the toe by a Black Widow Spider. He became deathly sick and the toe shrunk to only half of normal size.

The older boys, Samuel Albert (S.A.), James Carson (JC or Carson), and Elbert Elvin (Bert) had to quit school and do the cotton farming. At cotton picking time, the girls would help by going ahead of the boys, picking cotton and laying it on the side of the row for the boys to pick up and put in their cotton sacks. Samuel A., the eldest, would drive the loaded wagon to the cotton gin (Jessie Lee's), sell the cotton, and bring the money home to the family.

Grasshoppers could devastate a cotton patch in those days and there was not insecticide to control them. So Elvin Elliot made a grasshopper control unit of his own design. He built a wooden frame about 4 to 5 feet high and slanted it down. On the bottom he had a pipe on two wheels, one on each end, and fixed a trough underneath with crude oil in it. He covered the frame with oil cloth (then used for table cloths). They would hitch the horses to the grasshopper control unit and pull it through the cotton patch. As the grasshoppers came up off the cotton stalks they would hit the oil cloth, slide into the oil and die. Ingenious.

Lillie Marie became seriously ill with a bone infection (Osteomylitis) in her back. She hated to wake her Mama and Daddy so she asked her little sister, Maggie Mae, to heat up some salt in the frying pan. When the salt was hot she filled one of her Daddy's socks, tied the sock, and put it on her back. She was about ten years old at the time. Her back still hurt so bad the next morning her daddy took her to the hospital in Santa Anna (Coleman Co.), TX. After some time the Doctor said that he had done all he could do and that they should take Lillie Marie to Scott and White Hospital in Temple (Bell Co.), TX. Lillie Marie was so bad off that she was not expected to live. She stayed at Scott and White for a year, having one surgery after another. In those days there was no penicillin or antibiotics so surgery was the only thing they could do. The doctors said she might get better if they moved her to a dryer and hotter climate. So Elvin Elliot and Maggie Belle moved their family to Gardendale (La Salle Co.), TX, just north of Cotulla on I-35. Lillie Mae was on crutches and the doctors thought she would never walk again. The family belongings and livestock were shipped by train with Elvin Elliot escorting them. Samuel A. and Carson took turns driving their mother and the seven other children in their new Chevrolet to Gardendale. Their last child, Melvin Wayne, was born there 22 Dec. 1928 and died 5 Oct. 1932 from a rattlesnake bite.

Maggie Mae Ohlhausen Taylor has fond memories of growing up in Gardendale and Cotulla, Tx with her father, Elvin Elliot Ohlhausen and mother, Maggie Belle Carson. A family with ten children meant a lot of hard work and everyone had their chores to do. They knew that if they worked hard to finish them they could play. They all worked together and it really didn't seem so much like work. When they moved to Gardendale from Lohn in 1928, they lived two or three miles out of town on a farm. Those children in school had to walk to school together, one behind the other just like a bunch of little Indians.

Elvin Elliot grew cotton on this farm and all the kids did the cotton picking. They weren't use to picking cotton in grass burrs and there were more grass burrs than cotton. Their socks would get full of the grass burrs and baby sister, Anna, couldn't pull them out with her fingers because it hurt too bad. So she would pull them out with her teeth. One day she swallowed a grass burr and it stuck in her throat. Their mother gave her bread to eat to try and get the grass burr to go down. Several months later one day Anna gave a big cough and up came the grass burr in a clump of blood. What a miracle she did not suffocate.

One afternoon, Elmon Doyle (Mike) and Melvin Wayne (Wayne), about three or four years old, decided to cook themselves some potatoes to eat. There was a hay stack in the yard so they made a hole in the stack, put potatoes in, took coals from a fire under a black wash pot, and made a fire. That was the end of the hay stack.... 
Family: F162
 
14 Email From Luke

I think I have solved the mystery of who Jennie Pipes, the wife of James Siegal Tuckness is.

In Polk Co. Marriage Book E Page 200 I found a marriage for Stonewall J. Pipes to Jennie (I.) J. Sanderson
Mr. Wm. H. Pipes and Mrs. Saphronia Sanderson each gave their permission for their children to get married.

In a transcribed copy of Polk Co. Deaths 1883-1891 I found the following: Pipes, Harrison Jackson, M,22y,1m,3d,farmer, d. Oct. 1, 1884, md, B. Howard Co., Mo., d. Polk Co. of Acute inflamitary phthisis,7 or 8 weeks, gangreen righ(t) lung, 5 or 6 day. bur. Schofield Chapel Oct. 2, 1884,W. H. Cowden Md, Goodnight, Mo. #223,Oct.25,1884
This had been transcribed by The Polk County Genealogical Society. It and the 1883-1891 Polk Co. Missouri Births and Still Births transcription can be located on the Internet through http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/mo/polk/polk.htm

In the transcribed Volume of the Polk Co. Births and Still Births I mentioned I found the following:
Piper, Wm. Harrison, M.B. Feb. 9,1885,Benton Twp.,1st ch., father Wm. Harrison Piper,22,Mo.(dead), Jennie I. Sanderson, 16,Mo. ma/rt A. M. Jones, MD Halfway, Feb.9,1885 #1018

Also, found in Polk Co. Marriage Book F Page 98 was Levi Atkison and Mrs. Sophronia Ann (S)Anderson April 2,1886 She had been listed in the 1900 Polk Co. Census as Sophronia Adkison.

While I was at the Polk Co. courthouse I checked if I could look at the originals of the Birth and Death Books and after serious convincing, got them and checked the Piper entry and found that I believe the name is really Pipes. The s looks like an r.
I also believe that "Stonewall" was a nickname and his real name was William Harrison Jackson Pipes.

I may have left out something but I think I have solved
this.

Thanks for listening,
Luke in Springfield 
Family: F194
 
15 February 11,1919
Springfield Missouri Republican
Arrived Home To Late
Dow Allison Tuckness a second-class fireman on a United States warship, returned home Saturday in response to a cablegram announcing the critical illness of his mother. Through the efforts of Congressman C. W. Hamlin, who visited Josephus Daniels, secretary of the Navy.
Mr. Tuckness obtained a furlough. He met his brother in New York and learned that his mother had died. 
Family: F188
 
16 I noticed that Tessa Nee (Tuckness), daughter of Richard Henry, had not been included on the group sheet on the Tuckness Website. The following information is located in the Alma Lohmeyer-Jewell E. Windle Funeral Home Records 1919--!932 Page 21 Published by Ozark Genealogical Society.

Mrs.Tessa Nee B--May 2,1891 D--April 10,1921 at Burge Hospital of Septicema Service at Sacred Heart Church Buried--St. Mary's Cemetery married religion--Catholic residence--Crane, MO chg to James Nee father H. R. Tuckness mother Tiddie --

________ Her mother listed as Tiddie must be Tennessee (also known as Tennie) Stafford. I have an obituary listing Tessa (also known as Tessie) as wife of James Nee but I am not able to find it right now. St. Mary's Cemetery is about 3 blocks away from my house here in Springfield. She is buried there with husband and other extended family members.

Also on Page 21 is--- Infant of James Nee D--March 23,1921 Service and Burial Critic (should be Crickett) Ark. Residence Omaha, Ark. informant Mrs. Nee, grandmother father James Nee B. Thayer, MO religion Catholic Hope this info helps. I'll look and see what else I have that can be added. Luke

The following information is located in the Alma Lohmeyer -Jewell E. Windle Funeral Home Records 1919--!932 Page 21 Published by Ozark Genealogical Society.

Submitted by Luke McCurdy 
Family: F189
 
17 Marriage book "D", page 4, #841, marriage license dated 15 Apr 1876, Sophronia, age 18, Rodney Jones 21. Married at the house of W. J. Tuckness. Witnesses: Thomas Adams and George Bailey (George married to her sister Harriett Tuckness: Thomas Adams is a first cousin, common ancestor John (Jehue) Baker, their grandfather. George Bailey was the husband of Saphronia's sister Harriett.

contributed by Marcia Dee Oriet 
Family: F41
 
18 Marriage Record Charles Tuckness & Georgia A. Teague July 1, 1883 in Llano County, Texas Family: F27
 
19 Marriage record for Elam Elvin Tuckness (Henry Elvin) to Lela Patterson 20 May 1903 in Taylor County, Texas Book 3 Page 298 Family: F169
 
20 Marriage record for H.E. Tuckness & Daisy Bell Hudgins August 29, 1915 Dawson County, Texas Family: F172
 
21 Marriage record for J.H. Tuckness & Claudie Puckett 20 December 1904 in Taylor County, Texas Book 4 Page 066 Family: F144
 
22 Marriage record for J.L. Tuckness to Mrs. M.E. Berry June 15, 1898 in Llano County, Texas. Family: F22
 
23 Marriage Record for R. Coleman Tuckness & Mrs. Daisy Bell Hudgins Tuckness Abt 1927 Out of State Family: F25
 
24 Marriage record http://www.rootsweb.com/~oklogan/marr/brides.htm for Della and James Walter Mills Family: F148
 
25 Marriage Record of A.J. Tuckness & M.L. Carter June 13, 1910 Glasscock County, Texas

Contributed by: DeBarbieris, LaJuan 
Family: F155
 
26 Marriage Record of Albert A. Tuckness & Olivia A. Fullerton, August 24,1886, Polk County, Missouri, Book F, page 126. Contributed by Luke McCurdy Family: F180
 
27 Marriage Record of Clara J. Tuckness & Robert L. Burns, March 17,1885, Polk County, Missouri, Book F, Page 10. Contributed by Luke McCurdy Family: F197
 
28 Marriage Record of Henry R. Tuckness and Sophronia McPheeters, July 20,1879, Polk County, Missouri, Book C, page 185. Contributed by Luke McCurdy Family: F181
 
29 Marriage record of J.L. Tuckness to Nancy Jane Cain February 15, 1880 Llano County, Texas Family: F21
 
30 Marriage Record of James S. Tuckness & Miss Jennie Pipes, Oct 10,1889, Polk County, Missouri, Book F, page 398. Contributed by Luke McCurdy Family: F194
 
31 Marriage Record of John A. Tuckness & Sarah N. Bresheres, Oct 10,1880, Polk County, Missouri, Book C, Page 250. Contributed by Luke McCurdy Family: F47
 
32 Marriage record of Lessie Burns & W.W. Eastburn, March 3, 1909, Pleasant Hope, Polk County, Missouri, Book K, page 300. Contributed by Luke McCurdy Family: F198
 
33 Marriage record of Myrtle C. Tuckness & Louis W. Criddle, August 6, 1902, Springfield, Greene County, Missouri, (letter) O/289/302. Contributed by Luke McCurdy Family: F187
 
34 Marriage Record of Rosa Tuckness & C.W. Skinner, December 24, 1911, Polk County, Missouri, Book L, page 75. Contributed by Luke McCurdy Family: F77
 
35 Marriage Record of Rosa Tuckness & Tom Gladden, Nov 29,1914, Polk County, Missouri, Book L, page 363. Contributed by Luke McCurdy Family: F78
 
36 Marriage Record Thomas A. Tuckness & Hannah P. Cain June 26, 1882 in Llano County, Texas Family: F18
 
37 Marriage record: Raymond Tuckness & Alice Hudgins April 18, 1918 Dawson County, Texas Family: F24
 
38 Marriage Records extracted by the Yamhill Co. Genealogical Society.
Nelson was living in Clackamas, Oregon. Located as case number 0291 in Oregon State Archives website 
Family: F31
 
39 Married at Benton Beckley's Family: F86
 
40 Married Carrie Cornelia Patterson October 17, 1903 in Abilene, Taylor County Marriage record Book 3, Page 328 Family: F23
 
41 Married Parmelia (Baker) 1846, MO., Aff Henry Baker (MA) Henry is Parmelia's brother.
Marriage: from Gen. Material in Oregon Donation Land Claims, Polk Co., MO marriage records Vol A, 1836-65 is copy of Co. records -- their marriage registry is not in the book. Brother Henry's and sisters Henrietta's are there LDS Film #0944885 
Family: F2
 
42 Maury Co, TN Marriages 1808-1852":
*Page 69: Sarah Tuckness to Isaish Holder, 22 Oct 1836 (Note: Obviously not Sarah J., dau of Old Henry. Could be the dau of Jordan Tuckness???) 
Family: F1
 
43 Much of this information comes from the Texas Birth index for Nathan's relationship with Jodie Tuckness. Who is she??? Family: F154
 
44 My great grandmother was Lessie May Burns, daughter of Clara Jane Tuckness. Clara died shortly after giving birth to her second child, Homer, who isn't listed in your info. Lessie was five years old at the time of Clara's death. As far as I know, Lessie only had one picture of Clara, which she showed us many times. It was truly wonderful to find another picture on your site! We never had the family stories from the Tuckness side, though I did know that her mother was
Nancy Dodd.

I'll have to put together all the dates, but I have lots of Clara Jane's descendent info if you would like to include it in your site.

Again, thank you for your work.

Donna Culbertson
all6cf@yahoo.com 
Family: F197
 
45 My name is David Holt, and my mother's Grandfather was William Henderson Potter, born 1857 in (best information is Ozark, Greene county, Missouri).
The info we have on W.H. Potters parents was Ellison Henderson Potter (my mother remembers the Henderson, but not the Ellison) and Eliza (Elizabeth?) Jane Hall. Very similar to Elizabeth Jane Tuckness and Ellison Potter.
The other similarities are the names of the children are the same for the union of Ellison Potter and Eliza Jane Hall, through the ones listed for Tuckness. My mother remembers the names listed for both Tuckness and Hall, but there were actually more children.
Do you know the reliability of the Tuckness marriage and children? My
mother is named Zedith Winona (Helmer) Holt and her mother was Maggie Potter, daughter of William Henderson Potter and Ella Mae Boyles, both of Missouri. The family names for both Tuckness and Hall is disturbing and we would like to research more info on Ellison Potter. We were in Missouri a month ago and found census information relating to all of the children born before 1860 and 1870 (the two census data we looked at). Also, the best we can deduce from the info (land records, census, and internet info, Ellison Potter and wife were probably buried on a farm or homestead owned by a Breshears in Polk County Missouri. My mother remembers a Potter marrying a Breshears and coming to some of their reunions in Nash, Oklahoma. Do you have any information relating to any of this?
I would appreciate talking to you or getting email from you relating to
your information and data.

My email address is: DHOLT@SATX.RR.COM 
Family: F5
 
46 On the Anawalt Ranch Family: F70
 
47 Property Tax information, Arch, Roosevelt County, New Mexico:

Nathan received a land patents for his homestead in New Mexico the 22 of April 1914. The Patent reads:
"Fort Sumner 09304. To all to Whom these Presents Shall Come-Greeting:
Whereas, a Certificate of the Register of the Land Office at Fort Sumner, New Mexico, has been deposited in the General Land Office, whereby it appears that, pursuant to the Act of Congress of May 20, 1862, "To Secure Homesteads to Actual Settlers on the Public Domain," and the Acts supplemented thereto, the claim of Nathan E. Hallford has been established and duly consummunated, in conformity to law, for the Southwest Quarters of Sections Fifteen and the Northwest Quarters of Section Twenty-Two in Township, Three south of Ranger, Thirty-seven East of the New Mexico Meridian, New Mexico, containing Three Hundred Twenty acres, according to the Official Plat of the Survey of the said land, returned to the General Land Office by the Surveyor-General. Patent Number 399856." Around the same time Nathan's brother, William Franklin, and his father William Wallace, also homesteaded in the area and received Land Patents. William, the father, died in 1912, before he could complete the 5 year holding period, so his land was granted to his heirs in 1917.

In 1914, Nathan is listed in school district 99, on government land with improvements, 320 acres valued a $120.00. He had 5 horses and 3 cows. His tax was $2.60, which he paid on January 25, 1915.
In 1915, Claudia appears on the tax roll with a personal property value of $600.00. Nathan's land is now listed as owned, 320 acres with a value of $3.75 per acre. He still has 5 horses, but now has 4 cows and 5 hogs. His land is now valued at $1,760.00, on which he paid property tax of 20.75 on February 15, 1916.
In 1916, William W.'s land is no longer listed on the tax rolls and Nathan's land is now 640 acres, so my assumption is that Nathan now owns his father's land. Nathan now has 8 horses, 3 cows and 7 hogs. His land is assessed at $1,270.00. This is not long after the drought hit New Mexico, and the land is beginning to decline in value. He paid a tax of $21.52 on April 30, 1917. His wife Claudia is still listed on the tax rolls with some personal property.
In 1917, Claudia disappears from the tax rolls, and Nathan's land is again 320 acres. My assumption is that Williams land has been sold by this time. Nathan now has no horses, 25 cows and 3 hogs. The land is assessed at $2,411.00, with a tax of $38.33. Nathan paid $19.40 on January 21, 1918 and does not appear on the 1918 tax rolls. He probably sold his land in late 1917 and left for Oklahoma early in 1918. His brother Frank does not pay any taxes due in 1917 and is not listed in 1918, so probably left just before Nathan did. By 1918, there are no Hallfords left in Roosevelt County, New Mexico. 
Family: F152
 
48 Roy W. Tuckness age 19yr, 1mo, 13 da. b. 17 Sep 1909 MO d. 30 Oct 1928 1943 N. Boulevard (Springfield, MO) pneumonia
bur Pleasant Hope Cem
occup: barber
inf: A.A. Tuckness, 1943 N. Boulevard.
father: A.A. Tuckness b. MO, mother: Olivia Fullerton b. AR

A.A. Tuckness is of course, Albert Andrew Tuckness b. 29 August 1865 s/o John Wesley Tuckness b. 1835.

Roy W. was the younger brother of my grandfather, James Roscoe Tuckness who was accidentally shot and killed 01 February 1925 (three years prior to Roy's death). Roscoe like his brother was a barber. It was Roscoe's younger brother and Roy's older brother, Henry Orville Tuckness who was holding the gun when it went off.

In addition their mother Olivia Angeline (Angie) Fullerton had just passed away in January 1924.
Jerry Rogers 
Family: F180
 
49 She was married to Nelson Perry JONES (son of Levi White JONES and Mary Jane CRAFT) on 28 March 1898 in Silverton, Oregon. Nelson was living in Howell, Oregon and Emma was living in Newburg, Oregon at the time of their marriage. Marriage was performed by Rev Runsby, JP. Witnesses: T. K. Bluchenby and Joseph Wright. Family: F42
 
50 She was married to William Edward BONNEY on 26 April 1874 in Yamhill Co., OR. Located on the Oregon Archives web site and listed as records #0718 Family: F32
 

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