The Ancestors and Descendants of Reuben Ball

The Ancestors and Descendants of Reuben Ball

Author: Ronald Ames Hill

Publisher:

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 416

ISBN-13:

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Reuben Ball, son of Benjamin Ball, was born in about 1780, probably in Fauquier County, Virginia. He married Mary Harding in 1801 in Green County, Kentucky. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived mainly in Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan, Missouri and Nebraska.


Genealogy of a Sullivan Family

Genealogy of a Sullivan Family

Author: Odessa Morrow Isbell

Publisher:

Published: 1996

Total Pages: 586

ISBN-13:

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John Sullivan, parents unknown, was born about 1720 in either Ireland or Maryland. His wife is also unknown, but he had two sons born in Maryland. John died in North Carolina between 1789 and 1796. His children and descendants have lived in Maryland, Tennessee, North Carolina, Texas, and other areas in the United States.


Mingo

Mingo

Author: Cletis R. Ellinghouse

Publisher: Xlibris Corporation

Published: 2008-10-15

Total Pages: 418

ISBN-13: 9781436364768

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Tribesmen regarded Mingo Swamp as a rare wildlife haven and made it a favored hunting ground long before white settlers discovered it, but in even earlier times, the storied Mississippi River passed through it moving to Arkansas. The soggy countryside around it made a good part of the neighborhood virtually inaccessible and therefore sparsely settled at the time of the Civil War; but Mingo, nevertheless, became one of Missouri’s more hotly contested battlegrounds. Guerrillas fighting for the Lost Cause made its cypress and water tupelo forests their hideout, and it is identified to this day with one of the state’s bloodiest encounters, the Battle of Mingo Swamp. The treacherous swamp’s abundance of natural resources first attracted hardy backwoodsmen, but the entire countryside remained commercially undeveloped until arrival of the railroad and the founding in 1883 of Pucksekaw, now Puxico, which quickly became the base of a great logging and tie operation headed by newcomer Thomas J. Moss, the town’s esteemed merchant prince who quickly became the largest tie contractor in the state. After the great timber boom ended in the early 1900s, newly organized Mingo Drainage District, encompassing 39,786 acres in Stoddard and Wayne counties, sought to clear the stumpage and drain the swamp to enhance agricultural pursuits and control costly St. Francis River overflows. After that glorious adventure failed in the 1930s, the federal government stepped in to acquire land for construction of two ambitious projects that changed the countryside forever, the 21,676-acre Mingo National Wildlife Refuge and, just beyond it to the west, a dam on the St. Francis River that created sprawling Lake Wappapello, which, in both land and water, encompasses more than 44,000 acres. Shortly thereafter, in the early 1950s, the Missouri Conservation Commission acquired the rest of the swamp to establish what now is Duck Creek Conservation Area, which encompasses 6,234 acres in Wayne, Bollinger, and Stoddard counties. Though obviously vastly different now and managed today by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Mingo remains one of America’s premier wildlife havens. It is home to tens of thousands of waterfowl, three distinct ecosystems, and an incredible diversity of plants and animals. A great number of rare species, such as the swamp rabbit and the alligator snapping turtle, still strive at Mingo.


Fuller-Button Family Genealogy

Fuller-Button Family Genealogy

Author: Mary Alice Benedict Grindol

Publisher:

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 476

ISBN-13:

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History of the interrelated Button and Fuller families who descended from George William Fuller and James Ambrose Button. Their families united in the marriage of William Rufus Fuller (1851-1914) and his wife, Marietta (Mary) Eveline Button, of Michigan. William Rufus and Mary had ten children: George Ambrose, Grover Button, William Orange, Lucius LeRoy, Robert Pingree, Cora Violet, Henry Howard, Lottie Mae, Sanford Alonzo, and Truman Lester Fuller, all born from 1891-1911. Later descendants also lived in California, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, North Carolina, Texas, Virginia, Washington and elsewhere.