Notizen |
- G-Bachmann-wwwrootsweb.ancestry:
DATENSATZ:
1. 1830 Federal Census, Montgomery County, Missouri Page 209, Line 10. 1 TYPE Census
1 LOCA www.ancestry.com.
GEBURT:
2. #80. "Steven Williams, All World Tree, ancestry.com
srw@wjblawyers.com." 1 TYPE Web Site.
TOD:
3. #616. "Jackson Co., MO records show John Haun died w/out a will. Administrators app'd were Nathan and Mathias Haun on 2-21-1846. Heirs listed: Jacob, Peter, Mathias Nathan, Ann Linn, Polly Linn and Elizabeth King.".
4. #80. "Steven Williams, All World Tree, ancestry.com
srw@wjblawyers.com." 1 TYPE Web Site.
John Haun, a German, was among he first wave of pioneers of the great western expansion, arriving in 1799 and settling nearby the future village of La Charrette. In 1807 a schoolhouse was erected and John Haun, as well as new village landholders Bryan and Callaway, enrolled their children. However, children of the original French families of La Charrette Village would not attend. At the time of its founding, La Charrette Village School Number 1 was the westernmost school in existence on the Missouri frontier.
He applied for a land grant in 1799 (patented Dec. 9, 1833 - Survey #288). There are records at the Missouri State Historical Lib. (in Columbia) in the Pa. Archives of Hauns coming to the U.S. on the Ship Neptune on 9/30/1754 from Rotterdam. They were apparently German.
In 1817, he is enumerated in the Femme Osage census, along with his sons Jacob, Peter and John Jr. Also enumerated are the Boone, Bryan and Callaway families and that of Joseph Moody.
In the 1830 Montgomery County, Missouri, census on the same page are listed: John Haun, James Lynn, Daniel Lynn, James Moody, Peter Haun, Jacob Haun, John Moody; on the following page Isaac Lynn is listed.
G-Bachmann-wwwrootsweb.ancestry:
DATENSATZ:
1. 1830 Federal Census, Montgomery County, Missouri Page 209, Line 10. 1 TYPE Census
1 LOCA www.ancestry.com.
GEBURT:
2. #80. "Steven Williams, All World Tree, ancestry.com
srw@wjblawyers.com." 1 TYPE Web Site.
TOD:
3. #616. "Jackson Co., MO records show John Haun died w/out a will. Administrators app'd were Nathan and Mathias Haun on 2-21-1846. Heirs listed: Jacob, Peter, Mathias Nathan, Ann Linn, Polly Linn and Elizabeth King.".
4. #80. "Steven Williams, All World Tree, ancestry.com
srw@wjblawyers.com." 1 TYPE Web Site.John Haun, a German, was among he first wave of pioneers of the great western expansion, arriving in 1799 and settling nearby the future village of La Charrette. In 1807 a schoolhouse was erected and John Haun, as well as new village landholders Bryan and Callaway, enrolled their children. However, children of the original French families of La Charrette Village would not attend. At the time of its founding, La Charrette Village School Number 1 was the westernmost school in existence on the Missouri frontier.
He applied for a land grant in 1799 (patented Dec. 9, 1833 - Survey #288). There are records at the Missouri State Historical Lib. (in Columbia) in the Pa. Archives of Hauns coming to the U.S. on the Ship Neptune on 9/30/1754 from Rotterdam. They were apparently German.
In 1817, he is enumerated in the Femme Osage census, along with his sons Jacob, Peter and John Jr. Also enumerated are the Boone, Bryan and Callaway families and that of Joseph Moody.
In the 1830 Montgomery County, Missouri, census on the same page are listed: John Haun, James Lynn, Daniel Lynn, James Moody, Peter Haun, Jacob Haun, John Moody; on the following page Isaac Lynn is listed.
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