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Newtons of Butler County, Alabama This webpage is about Amos Newton of Butler County, and his descendants with many records.
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My Pearson Family Tree My Pearson family tree including surnames such as Ater, Hollingsworth, Hogan, Strawn, Walker, Woodall and many more.
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Skidmore, Who was Elizabeth R Barnett Skidmore? Focus of site is our search for the maiden name of Elizabeth R (McMillan?) Barnett Skidmore, who was born in 1821, possibly in Madison or Morgan County. A section of the site looks at the probate of the estate of Moore Barnett, Elizabeth's father-in-
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SPARKS FAMILY ASSOCIATION SPARKS FAMILY ASSOCIATION -- has info on Alabamians, including a former Governor of Alabama, Chauncey Sparks. He was governor between 1943 to 1947.
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Spivey Family Tree This tree has the descendants of Richard Bird of Alabama.
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The Stacy Legacy Over 11,000 documents and pictures downloaded related to the Stacy Surname in Alabama. See Newslettts in Pioneers Resource Library as an example of some of Becky Madruga's hardwork.
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The Wallaces of Moore Co., NC This website includes census and documents from Bibb and Perry County Wallaces.
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WEAVER, James Lee family This is the home page of over 200 family databases with over 38,000 surnames. All free.
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Whisnant Surname This web site is provided as a central resource for people researching the Whisnant surname, and all its variations.
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WITT FAMILY SURNAME Rev. Witt, born in 1790 in East Tennessee, began preaching sometime after the War of 1812, during which he served with Tennessee volunteers in the Escambia River campaign. He moved his family from McMinn County, Tennessee, to Cherokee County, Alabama, about 1833. In Benton County in 1834 he became the pastor of New Hopewell Church, and he helped organize Zion Hill Baptist Church and Cane Creek Church that year. In Cherokee County he helped found Pisgah Baptist Church at Gnatville, also in 1834. He preached, conducted weddings and funeral services, and held an important place in most of the meetings of the Tallasahatchee Baptist Association from 1837 to 1869, when at age seventy-nine it appears he began to slow down. His sons William Carroll Witt and John Witt were also Baptist preachers in the area.
Although the Witts, including Silas and Susanna, their children's families, and many inlaws, moved to Texas by wagon train in the fall of 1871, their many years in early northeastern Alabama, and their influence in the communities of that region, make them deserving of recognition as a true Alabama pioneers.
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