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Report: Document changes

         Description: Veranderingen van de laatste 90 dagen in documenten, ZONDER de gelinkte personen.
Documents/histories changed within the last 90 days (listing *without* linked individuals)


Matches 1001 to 1051 of 1051  » Comma-delimited CSV file

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# mediaID mediatypeID Description Notes Last Modified Date
1001 683  documents  Payne, William Bertram Family Bible (Births)  Close up of Birth's from the Family Bible  2007-04-21 18:44:49 
1002 683  documents  Payne, William Bertram Family Bible (Births)  Close up of Birth's from the Family Bible  2007-04-21 18:44:49 
1003 683  documents  Payne, William Bertram Family Bible (Births)  Close up of Birth's from the Family Bible  2007-04-21 18:44:49 
1004 683  documents  Payne, William Bertram Family Bible (Births)  Close up of Birth's from the Family Bible  2007-04-21 18:44:49 
1005 683  documents  Payne, William Bertram Family Bible (Births)  Close up of Birth's from the Family Bible  2007-04-21 18:44:49 
1006 360  documents  McLemore, Keton Jones Family info pg4  Rosa McLemore Dunkerly (1869-1954) dictated this family history to a grandson in 1941. She was the youngest daughter, and fifteenth child, born to Keton Jones McLemore. Census and other records confirm her recollections to be very accurate. Page 4 of 4.   2007-04-21 14:24:43 
1007 360  documents  McLemore, Keton Jones Family info pg4  Rosa McLemore Dunkerly (1869-1954) dictated this family history to a grandson in 1941. She was the youngest daughter, and fifteenth child, born to Keton Jones McLemore. Census and other records confirm her recollections to be very accurate. Page 4 of 4.   2007-04-21 14:24:43 
1008 359  documents  McLemore, Keton Jones Family info pg3  Rosa McLemore Dunkerly (1869-1954) dictated this family history to a grandson in 1941. She was the youngest daughter, and fifteenth child, born to Keton Jones McLemore. Census and other records confirm her recollections to be very accurate. Page 3 of 4.   2007-04-21 14:23:51 
1009 359  documents  McLemore, Keton Jones Family info pg3  Rosa McLemore Dunkerly (1869-1954) dictated this family history to a grandson in 1941. She was the youngest daughter, and fifteenth child, born to Keton Jones McLemore. Census and other records confirm her recollections to be very accurate. Page 3 of 4.   2007-04-21 14:23:51 
1010 358  documents  McLemore, Keton Jones Family info pg2  Rosa McLemore Dunkerly (1869-1954) dictated this family history to a grandson in 1941. She was the youngest daughter, and fifteenth child, born to Keton Jones McLemore. Census and other records confirm her recollections to be very accurate. Page 2 of 4.   2007-04-21 14:23:06 
1011 358  documents  McLemore, Keton Jones Family info pg2  Rosa McLemore Dunkerly (1869-1954) dictated this family history to a grandson in 1941. She was the youngest daughter, and fifteenth child, born to Keton Jones McLemore. Census and other records confirm her recollections to be very accurate. Page 2 of 4.   2007-04-21 14:23:06 
1012 357  documents  McLemore, Keton Jones family info pg1  Rosa McLemore Dunkerly (1869-1954) dictated this family history to a grandson in 1941. She was the youngest daughter, and fifteenth child, born to Keton Jones McLemore. Census and other records confirm her recollections to be very accurate. Page 1 of 4.   2007-04-21 14:22:17 
1013 357  documents  McLemore, Keton Jones family info pg1  Rosa McLemore Dunkerly (1869-1954) dictated this family history to a grandson in 1941. She was the youngest daughter, and fifteenth child, born to Keton Jones McLemore. Census and other records confirm her recollections to be very accurate. Page 1 of 4.   2007-04-21 14:22:17 
1014 660  documents  Stamper, Jaska Bland, Funeral Notice  Funeral Notice for Jaska Bland Stamper, Born November 6, 1912 and Died February 12, 1913

This notice was among a group of Stamper family photos purchased at an estate sale in Prescott, Arizona.

She may have been a daughter of William Clint Stamper and Marie Audrey Bush. 
2007-04-14 10:00:49 
1015 599  documents  St. Elizabeth's Academy, Established 1888, Purcell, Oklahoma  Founded in February, 1888, one year before Oklahoma was opened to settlement and barely a year after Purcell was established as a junction point on the Santa Fe, St. Elizabeth is one of Oklahoma's most famous old schools. The spacious, roomy, two-storied frame building, set in a grassy plot with a peaceful background of slender poplars, elms and cedars, is still a thing of considerable beauty. For many years it was the only educational landmark in an unsettled area, and the sight of students playing about its grounds, supervised by the black-robed nuns, against the bright southwestern skies, has become familiar to nearly all Oklahomans who have lived here any length of time. When St. Elizabeth's convent was founded, in 1888, Purcell was a part of the Chickasaw nation of the old Indian territory, and the gateway to the great ranching empire which lay to the west and south. The country then was all pastureland, heavily wooded and a ranch of 10,000 to 20,000 acres was commonplace. Most of the settlers were Chickasaws, but here were also Choctaw families, and a good many white settlers. All were eager to send their children to school and the news that St. Elizabeth's convent had opened in Purcell was welcomed far and wide. Families packed their children and brought them to board and room at the convent, or if there was no space there, boarded them in homes and they attended day school. Three eager young nuns, all now dead, of the Order of St. Francis, made their way west from Philadelphia and arrived in Purcell on Feb. 14, 1888. At the time there was under construction a three-room frame building on the same lot where the Benedictine priests had built a one-room church. Sunday services were conducted in the church which on week days was converted into two school rooms by hanging a heavy carpet to form a partition. By November, however, the new three-room frame building was completed and enrolment consisted of 120 pupils. Ages of these pupils ranged from 6 to 18 years. Soon, there were 25 boarders, then 50. Money for the grounds, buildings and teachers was paid for by Miss Katherine Drexel of the wealthy Philadelphia Drexel family. She had become interested in educating the Indians through the efforts of Father Vincent Jolly, O.S.B., who taught at the Sacred Heart academy situated in unsettled wilderness in what is now Pottawatomie county. Father Jolly, accompanied by Father William Capital, took turns in coming to Purcell to hold services. Father Jolly told Miss Drexel of the Indian boys and girls who needed educational opportunities, and described the great wilderness, which pioneers were still to conquer. One church was unable to bear the expense. But Miss Drexel could and did for 60 years. Miss Drexel furnished money for the grounds, buildings and early support, and a new building site was selected in 1891 by the Very Rev. Ignatius Jean, Benedictine priest, while Rev. F. Steven, director of the Indian bureau, gave the plans of the building to Miss Drexel. At her instigation, Archbishop Ryan of Philadelphia designated the Sisters of St. Francis of the Philadelphia Foundation, Mother House in Glen Riddle, Pa., to take charge of the mission. Miss Drexel also offered to pay of the sister's support. In an area known as Love's pasture, named for the late Robert Love, Purcell's founder, who proved to be very helpful to the new school, ground was broken and the building erected which still stands today. On the second floor near the chapel is a bronze plaque dedicated to the founder, the late Father Vincent Jolly. Government support by which the Indian girls' tuition was paid in part by the government was withdrawn in 1932......(Causing the sisters) to run the institution on practically no income except from Miss Drexel. For some time the sisters kept the girls without government aid from their own slender resources as teachers. Continued maintenance soon became impossible. The school shut its doors for good in 1948. (Excerpted from an August 15, 1948 article in the Daily Oklahoman about the closure of St. Elizabeth's)  2007-03-12 10:10:27 
1016 599  documents  St. Elizabeth's Academy, Established 1888, Purcell, Oklahoma  Founded in February, 1888, one year before Oklahoma was opened to settlement and barely a year after Purcell was established as a junction point on the Santa Fe, St. Elizabeth is one of Oklahoma's most famous old schools. The spacious, roomy, two-storied frame building, set in a grassy plot with a peaceful background of slender poplars, elms and cedars, is still a thing of considerable beauty. For many years it was the only educational landmark in an unsettled area, and the sight of students playing about its grounds, supervised by the black-robed nuns, against the bright southwestern skies, has become familiar to nearly all Oklahomans who have lived here any length of time. When St. Elizabeth's convent was founded, in 1888, Purcell was a part of the Chickasaw nation of the old Indian territory, and the gateway to the great ranching empire which lay to the west and south. The country then was all pastureland, heavily wooded and a ranch of 10,000 to 20,000 acres was commonplace. Most of the settlers were Chickasaws, but here were also Choctaw families, and a good many white settlers. All were eager to send their children to school and the news that St. Elizabeth's convent had opened in Purcell was welcomed far and wide. Families packed their children and brought them to board and room at the convent, or if there was no space there, boarded them in homes and they attended day school. Three eager young nuns, all now dead, of the Order of St. Francis, made their way west from Philadelphia and arrived in Purcell on Feb. 14, 1888. At the time there was under construction a three-room frame building on the same lot where the Benedictine priests had built a one-room church. Sunday services were conducted in the church which on week days was converted into two school rooms by hanging a heavy carpet to form a partition. By November, however, the new three-room frame building was completed and enrolment consisted of 120 pupils. Ages of these pupils ranged from 6 to 18 years. Soon, there were 25 boarders, then 50. Money for the grounds, buildings and teachers was paid for by Miss Katherine Drexel of the wealthy Philadelphia Drexel family. She had become interested in educating the Indians through the efforts of Father Vincent Jolly, O.S.B., who taught at the Sacred Heart academy situated in unsettled wilderness in what is now Pottawatomie county. Father Jolly, accompanied by Father William Capital, took turns in coming to Purcell to hold services. Father Jolly told Miss Drexel of the Indian boys and girls who needed educational opportunities, and described the great wilderness, which pioneers were still to conquer. One church was unable to bear the expense. But Miss Drexel could and did for 60 years. Miss Drexel furnished money for the grounds, buildings and early support, and a new building site was selected in 1891 by the Very Rev. Ignatius Jean, Benedictine priest, while Rev. F. Steven, director of the Indian bureau, gave the plans of the building to Miss Drexel. At her instigation, Archbishop Ryan of Philadelphia designated the Sisters of St. Francis of the Philadelphia Foundation, Mother House in Glen Riddle, Pa., to take charge of the mission. Miss Drexel also offered to pay of the sister's support. In an area known as Love's pasture, named for the late Robert Love, Purcell's founder, who proved to be very helpful to the new school, ground was broken and the building erected which still stands today. On the second floor near the chapel is a bronze plaque dedicated to the founder, the late Father Vincent Jolly. Government support by which the Indian girls' tuition was paid in part by the government was withdrawn in 1932......(Causing the sisters) to run the institution on practically no income except from Miss Drexel. For some time the sisters kept the girls without government aid from their own slender resources as teachers. Continued maintenance soon became impossible. The school shut its doors for good in 1948. (Excerpted from an August 15, 1948 article in the Daily Oklahoman about the closure of St. Elizabeth's)  2007-03-12 10:10:27 
1017 599  documents  St. Elizabeth's Academy, Established 1888, Purcell, Oklahoma  Founded in February, 1888, one year before Oklahoma was opened to settlement and barely a year after Purcell was established as a junction point on the Santa Fe, St. Elizabeth is one of Oklahoma's most famous old schools. The spacious, roomy, two-storied frame building, set in a grassy plot with a peaceful background of slender poplars, elms and cedars, is still a thing of considerable beauty. For many years it was the only educational landmark in an unsettled area, and the sight of students playing about its grounds, supervised by the black-robed nuns, against the bright southwestern skies, has become familiar to nearly all Oklahomans who have lived here any length of time. When St. Elizabeth's convent was founded, in 1888, Purcell was a part of the Chickasaw nation of the old Indian territory, and the gateway to the great ranching empire which lay to the west and south. The country then was all pastureland, heavily wooded and a ranch of 10,000 to 20,000 acres was commonplace. Most of the settlers were Chickasaws, but here were also Choctaw families, and a good many white settlers. All were eager to send their children to school and the news that St. Elizabeth's convent had opened in Purcell was welcomed far and wide. Families packed their children and brought them to board and room at the convent, or if there was no space there, boarded them in homes and they attended day school. Three eager young nuns, all now dead, of the Order of St. Francis, made their way west from Philadelphia and arrived in Purcell on Feb. 14, 1888. At the time there was under construction a three-room frame building on the same lot where the Benedictine priests had built a one-room church. Sunday services were conducted in the church which on week days was converted into two school rooms by hanging a heavy carpet to form a partition. By November, however, the new three-room frame building was completed and enrolment consisted of 120 pupils. Ages of these pupils ranged from 6 to 18 years. Soon, there were 25 boarders, then 50. Money for the grounds, buildings and teachers was paid for by Miss Katherine Drexel of the wealthy Philadelphia Drexel family. She had become interested in educating the Indians through the efforts of Father Vincent Jolly, O.S.B., who taught at the Sacred Heart academy situated in unsettled wilderness in what is now Pottawatomie county. Father Jolly, accompanied by Father William Capital, took turns in coming to Purcell to hold services. Father Jolly told Miss Drexel of the Indian boys and girls who needed educational opportunities, and described the great wilderness, which pioneers were still to conquer. One church was unable to bear the expense. But Miss Drexel could and did for 60 years. Miss Drexel furnished money for the grounds, buildings and early support, and a new building site was selected in 1891 by the Very Rev. Ignatius Jean, Benedictine priest, while Rev. F. Steven, director of the Indian bureau, gave the plans of the building to Miss Drexel. At her instigation, Archbishop Ryan of Philadelphia designated the Sisters of St. Francis of the Philadelphia Foundation, Mother House in Glen Riddle, Pa., to take charge of the mission. Miss Drexel also offered to pay of the sister's support. In an area known as Love's pasture, named for the late Robert Love, Purcell's founder, who proved to be very helpful to the new school, ground was broken and the building erected which still stands today. On the second floor near the chapel is a bronze plaque dedicated to the founder, the late Father Vincent Jolly. Government support by which the Indian girls' tuition was paid in part by the government was withdrawn in 1932......(Causing the sisters) to run the institution on practically no income except from Miss Drexel. For some time the sisters kept the girls without government aid from their own slender resources as teachers. Continued maintenance soon became impossible. The school shut its doors for good in 1948. (Excerpted from an August 15, 1948 article in the Daily Oklahoman about the closure of St. Elizabeth's)  2007-03-12 10:10:27 
1018 222  documents  Duncan, Oklahoma, Aerial view of Assumption Catholic Church, ca 1940's  Aerial shot of church, rectory, and St. Joan of Arc Catholic School, probably taken in the 1940's  2007-03-04 14:07:42 
1019 529  documents  McLemore, Sterling Estate Probate Records, Lexington, Kentucky, August 1815 p 1 of 3  Rebecca & Joel McElmore Act. and Adm.
In account current with the Estate of Sterling McElmore
To amount of sale of goods and chattles of the Estate $245.46; To cash paid by John Lewis 8.00; To (cash paid by) Richard Alsom 2.00; to (cash paid by) Rueben Cave/Carr 23.00; to (cash paid by) Sheriff of Fayette County 50.00; by balance 7.44; (Total Amount) $335.90. 
2007-02-28 14:01:01 
1020 530  documents  McLemore, Sterling Estate Probate Records, Lexington, Kentucky, August 1815 p 2 of 3  By cash paid H. Atchison $6.12; by (cash paid) A. Campbell 2.50; by (cash paid) J.P. Rucker 15.25; by (cash paid) Sterling McLemore, Jr. 6.87 1/2; by (cash paid) Aron McLemore 9.00; by (cash paid) Stephen Torry(sp?) 22.63; by (cash paid) Thos. Walker 31.71; by (cash paid) John Webber 19.00; by cash funeral expenses S. McL. Dec'd 16.87 1/2; by amt due M. Lewis U. ??? 9.74; by paid Joel McLemore 168.62.  2007-02-28 14:00:07 
1021 536  documents  Smith, W.B. Dry Goods Store Advertisement, 1907  Cash Bargain Store! It grows, it doesn't boom. The growth of this store reads like a fairy tale. Perhaps you were a little skeptical at first, but come in and look around. Observe the marvelous activity of this store; see what it offers you and your family; see how it differs from other stores and why it is easily the most money saving store in the city. Remember we save you twenty (20) per cent on all school supplies. And keep it fresh on your mind, that a five cent article sold for four, will save you many a dime. Dry goods, carpets, Ladies' and Gents' Furnishings, Hosiery, Shoes, and Hdw. W. B. SMITH

Ad published in the 1907 Grand Ledge High School Annual, courtesy of Suzanne Schramski 
2007-02-17 11:58:55 
1022 337  documents  Gentry, Harold 1943 letter from his teacher, Gladys Payne,

Arthur School, Stephens County, Oklahoma  
Harold Gentry's Eighth Grade teacher at the Arthur School was Gladys (Powell) Payne, the wife of John Earl "Dukey" Payne. This is a letter she wrote to Harold on the occasion of his Eighth Grade Graduation in 1943. Lyn Cordell reports that Gladys was pretty and well liked, but appears to have been using her "stern teacher look" in this photo. The Payne's and Gentry's of Stephens County were related by marriage.  2007-02-02 00:00:00 
1023 337  documents  Gentry, Harold 1943 letter from his teacher, Gladys Payne,

Arthur School, Stephens County, Oklahoma  
Harold Gentry's Eighth Grade teacher at the Arthur School was Gladys (Powell) Payne, the wife of John Earl "Dukey" Payne. This is a letter she wrote to Harold on the occasion of his Eighth Grade Graduation in 1943. Lyn Cordell reports that Gladys was pretty and well liked, but appears to have been using her "stern teacher look" in this photo. The Payne's and Gentry's of Stephens County were related by marriage.  2007-02-02 00:00:00 
1024 405  documents  McLemore Sportatorium, 1953-2003, Dallas Texas  Home of both weekly wrestling shows and the Big D Jamboree, a country music showcase. The arena also held boxing events and concerts featuring up-and-coming rock stars (including, most notably, an early performance by Bruce Springsteen in 1974). In early 1966, McLemore's promotion was taken over by wrestler Jack Adkisson , who was known in the ring as Fritz Von Erich. Adkisson's promotion, which became known in the early 1980s as World Class Championship Wrestling and featured his sons (the Von Erich brothers) as its main stars, was the most famous and successful wrestling federation to run regularly at the Dallas Sportatorium.  2007-01-30 00:00:00 
1025 444  documents  McLemore, William P.  In addition to serving as an Episcopal priest in Florida, Georgia, and Alabama; McLemore is well-known for his cartoons which are published regularly. He has also been a Rotarian since 1969. This 1998 Christmas greeting card he sent was both designed and drawn by him.   2007-01-21 00:00:00 
1026 403  documents  Zion Hill Missionary Baptist Church and Cemetery (Jasper, Texas) Historical Marker  Local traditions and Baptist Church records indicate that the Zion Hill Missionary Baptist Church was organized in 1852 with the Rev. John BEAN as first pastor. The first church building on this site is thought to have been a small log house. On August 16, 1853, Aurin Goodgame HORN donated 3 acres including the graveyard to the Zion Hill Baptist Church. The oldest marker is that of Joseph WOOD, who was born in 1792 in North Carolina and died in Jasper County on September 16, 1854. The original church building was quickly replaced by a board-and-batten structure and int he 1880's a large frame building. This stood until 1967, when it was demolished and replaced by a modern brick edifice outside the cemetery's main fence. Of over 1,186 graves in Zion Hill Cemetery, 36 are unmarked or unknown. Several were citizens of the Republic of Texas, 75 war vetarans are interred on this site. The graves of 102 young children bear witness to the high infant mortality rate among pioneers. Another notable grave is that of the Rev. A.C. SIMS (1845-1920) who was born in the Republic of Texas, served in the Confederate Army, and was a pastor of the Zion Hill Baptist Church.  2006-09-25 00:00:00 
1027 403  documents  Zion Hill Missionary Baptist Church and Cemetery (Jasper, Texas) Historical Marker  Local traditions and Baptist Church records indicate that the Zion Hill Missionary Baptist Church was organized in 1852 with the Rev. John BEAN as first pastor. The first church building on this site is thought to have been a small log house. On August 16, 1853, Aurin Goodgame HORN donated 3 acres including the graveyard to the Zion Hill Baptist Church. The oldest marker is that of Joseph WOOD, who was born in 1792 in North Carolina and died in Jasper County on September 16, 1854. The original church building was quickly replaced by a board-and-batten structure and int he 1880's a large frame building. This stood until 1967, when it was demolished and replaced by a modern brick edifice outside the cemetery's main fence. Of over 1,186 graves in Zion Hill Cemetery, 36 are unmarked or unknown. Several were citizens of the Republic of Texas, 75 war vetarans are interred on this site. The graves of 102 young children bear witness to the high infant mortality rate among pioneers. Another notable grave is that of the Rev. A.C. SIMS (1845-1920) who was born in the Republic of Texas, served in the Confederate Army, and was a pastor of the Zion Hill Baptist Church.  2006-09-25 00:00:00 
1028 363  documents  O'Neill Home Duncan, Oklahoma  Born in Ireland, John O'Neill made his fortune in cattle and banking. He built an imposing house in Duncan in 1902. Much of the material used in this house, including the large cedar beams, was hauled by ox-pulled wagons from Gainesville, Texas. For a period of time the west upstairs bedroom was used as a Roman Catholic Mission. (Goins, C. R. & Morris, J. W. (1980) Oklahoma Homes Past and Present University of Oklahoma Press: Norman) At the time of the 1910 census, he was listed as having an "independent income." John and his wife, Sarah Elizabeth Payne, were the original occupants of the home, along withe their daughters, Byrd and Annie. Later it was owned by Annie Josephine O'Neill and her husband James Rufus Sparks. Later still it was purchased by the Pace family and called the Pace Mansion.
 
2006-09-24 00:00:00 
1029 378  documents  McLemore Littlefield Marriage License  The marriage license issued to John Littlefield and Mollie McLemore, Christmas Eve, 1889. They were married by G. Or McCall, J.P on Christmas Day in Parker County, Texas.  2006-09-24 00:00:00 
1030 378  documents  McLemore Littlefield Marriage License  The marriage license issued to John Littlefield and Mollie McLemore, Christmas Eve, 1889. They were married by G. Or McCall, J.P on Christmas Day in Parker County, Texas.  2006-09-24 00:00:00 
1031 333  documents  Gentry, Harold, Diploma from Arthur School, Duncan, Oklahoma  Eighth Grade Diploma, June 1, 1943
Arthur School, Duncan, Oklahoma
Gladys Powell Payne, the students teacher, signed the bottom left of the diploma
 
2006-06-05 00:00:00 
1032 333  documents  Gentry, Harold, Diploma from Arthur School, Duncan, Oklahoma  Eighth Grade Diploma, June 1, 1943
Arthur School, Duncan, Oklahoma
Gladys Powell Payne, the students teacher, signed the bottom left of the diploma
 
2006-06-05 00:00:00 
1033 326  documents  McLemore, Thomas Eugene ca 1945

Eighth Grade Commencement
San Augustine, Texas  
Tom McLemore opened the ceremony with a prayer. Other graduates included Connie Markle, Bettie Markle, Alice Sue Mitchell, James Roy Brittain, Barbara Jasper, Ruby Cunningham, and Betty Lou Caldwell  2006-05-30 00:00:00 
1034 334  documents  Duncan, Oklahoma, Arthur School Eighth Grade Commencement, 1945  Eighth Grade Commencement
Friday, May 14, 1943
The Arthur School Graduating Class of 1943 consisted of only seven students, Ora Francis Davis, Harold Gentry, J.C. Easterwood, Neta Joyce Sanner, Frankie Ford, Elmer Moore, and Wesley Beavers. 
2006-05-19 00:00:00 
1035 275  documents  Michigan State University Yearbook   This is a copy of page 57 from the 1923 Michigan State University Yearbook, the Wolverine, showing Avis Augusta Smith and some classmates. Other individuals pictured are Charlotte Blanche Siebert, Earl Adam Sindecuse, Henry Franklin Small, Harry George Smith, Colonel Francis Snyder, Margaret Elizabeth Snyder, Carl Walter Soderbeck, John Franklin Spalding, and Robert Dugan Spencer.  2006-04-22 00:00:00 
1036 255  documents  Zahn, Bennie  July 4, 1986 Times-Picayune photo and article about Bennie Zahn's Liberty Tree, one in a series of Holiday Trees that she annually decorates.  2006-04-18 00:00:00 
1037 60  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 1 0f 6  This important genealogical document is a six page proof of heirship, and was filed in Stephens County, Oklahoma on October 18, 1920 by Thomas Hamilton Payne, and outlines in detail his father's family. Tom lists his father's parents, brothers and sisters, first and second wife, and other children. Tom's father, Thomas Bunker Payne, was an enrollee in the Chickasaw Nation by marriage; and this was filed to prove Thomas Hamilton's Payne eligibility to enroll in the Chickasaw Nation based on his father's initial application.  2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1038 61  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 2 0f 6    2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1039 62  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 3 0f 6    2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1040 63  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 4 0f 6    2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1041 64  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 5 0f 6    2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1042 65  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 6 0f 6    2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1043 44  documents  Payne, Thomas H. - Info Letter re TH Payne from Mrs Earle W Barry Palmer Alaska PG 1 of 3  This is the letter written by Mrs. Earle Barry of Palmer, Alaska to Anna Laura Strong. Mrs. Barry was responding to Anna Laura's inquiries about her father's whereabouts and activities over the past thirty years.   2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1044 60  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 1 0f 6  This important genealogical document is a six page proof of heirship, and was filed in Stephens County, Oklahoma on October 18, 1920 by Thomas Hamilton Payne, and outlines in detail his father's family. Tom lists his father's parents, brothers and sisters, first and second wife, and other children. Tom's father, Thomas Bunker Payne, was an enrollee in the Chickasaw Nation by marriage; and this was filed to prove Thomas Hamilton's Payne eligibility to enroll in the Chickasaw Nation based on his father's initial application.  2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1045 61  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 2 0f 6    2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1046 62  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 3 0f 6    2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1047 63  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 4 0f 6    2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1048 64  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 5 0f 6    2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1049 65  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Proof of Heirship Chickasaw Tribe 1920 PG 6 0f 6    2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1050 67  documents  Payne, Thomas H.- Alaska Hunting License  This was issued in 1956, one year prior to his death. He was listed as 5'9 1/2 inches tall, and weighing 145 pounds (unchanged from his 1943 departure permit to Alaska), with brown hair and blue eyes. Tom's love for the outdoors is apparent, as included among the handful of his personal effects returned to his family were this license, an NRA membership card, a photo of him in hunting gear, and a receipt for .22 caliber long rifle.   2006-02-25 00:00:00 
1051 68  documents  Payne, Thomas H. Civil Service Card  This card showed that Tom was retired from the Civil Service Administration, lists his annuity claim number, and shows that he began drawing his annuity in May, 1957, seven months prior to his death.  2006-02-25 00:00:00 


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