Lola Daniels married John Wynn and had no children.
Hattie Daniels married Ambrous Sullivan and they had 2 children accordingto Patterson research by Mattie Hogan Hicks.
Mertie Daniels married Joe Horn and they had 4 children.
John Daniels married Eileen Whitman and they had 2 children.
Elston Hamlin Camp has the name Ekton appear on some genealogy records. It
appears to be in error as no documents have been found with that name.RESEARCH-LEAD: Elston Hamlin Camp, b. Aug 30, 1868, Wash. Co., Ohio; d. May 09, 1943, Seattle, King County, Washington.
Elston Camp married Hattie louise Greene July 13, July 13, 1895, daughter of Rev Suamuel Greene and Sarah Moor. She as b. March 25, 1864 and d. Nov 2, 1907 their children:
Mary Louise Camp b Nov 19, 1903 (my grandma) d April 1980 Seattle, WA.
Sherman Adam Camp, b Jun 6, 1901 died 2000 California.
Dorothy Foster Camp b June 5, 1899 and Margaret Elston Camp b November 19, 1903.
---------------------------------------
He (Elston Camp) married his housekeeper / Nanny Idell Williams after the death of Hattie. They had
Luther Camp (living).
NAME: (Hettie)
Margaret Elston Camp is a twin to Mary Louise Camp (RIN-1167). She Died in
1919 at the age of 16.
(5383.) MARGARET ELSTON CAMP (3282.) (1467.) (525.) (107.) (14.) (2.) (1.):
(twin of Mary Louise). d. 1919, aged 16 years. (R80, 158).
Elston Hamlin Camp has the name Ekton appear on some genealogy records. It
appears to be in error as no documents have been found with that name.RESEARCH-LEAD: Elston Hamlin Camp, b. Aug 30, 1868, Wash. Co., Ohio; d. May 09, 1943, Seattle, King County, Washington.
Elston Camp married Hattie louise Greene July 13, July 13, 1895, daughter of Rev Suamuel Greene and Sarah Moor. She as b. March 25, 1864 and d. Nov 2, 1907 their children:
Mary Louise Camp b Nov 19, 1903 (my grandma) d April 1980 Seattle, WA.
Sherman Adam Camp, b Jun 6, 1901 died 2000 California.
Dorothy Foster Camp b June 5, 1899 and Margaret Elston Camp b November 19, 1903.
---------------------------------------
He (Elston Camp) married his housekeeper / Nanny Idell Williams after the death of Hattie. They had
Luther Camp (living).
Died at age 24. (Had disabilities).
(5385.) GAYLE H. CAMP (3282.) (1467.) (525.) (107.) (14.) (2.) (1.):
d. aged 24 (not normal). (R80, 158).
Hiatt Hiett History, pages 383 thru 388
SIXTH GENERATION: DESCENDANTS OF JOHN HIATT, JR.
(1467.) GEORGE LOWE CAMP (525.) (107.) (14.) (2.) (1.):
b. 28 January 1835; d. 28 November 1918; m. (1st). SARAH H. PALMER; b. 1835;
d. 1861; m. (2nd). 5 July 1865, to ERNESTINE NANCY ADAMS, d/o Volney and Mary (Melchor). Adams; (she was a widow Deeble at time of the marriage).; b. 1832; d. 1915. (See sketch, below, for additional data.)CH: (By first wife). (3279.) Ruth Alice & (3280.) Elmer Ellsworth.
(By second wife). (3281.) Clarence Evans; (3282.) Elston Hamlin.(R80).HISTORY OF MY LIFE AND MY ANCESTORS BACK AS FAR I KNOW, BY George Lowe Camp, 1913: (Assembled from two separate and varying accounts, but retaining his wording, by Dorothy C. Bockmier).:
“My Great-Grandfather, Cornelius Grd, was born Oct. 30, 1749 O.S (Old Style - see article on the Calendar, elsewhere in this volume - editor). (in Morris Co., N. J., near Morristown - Bockmier)., was of English extraction, and married near Pughtown, Frederick Co., Virginia, Oct. 1st 1774, to Mary Hancher whose parents were from Wales. She was born June 22, 1754 O.S.
“Cornelius Gard came to Ohio from Frederick Country, Virginia in 1802, was a shoemaker by trade, lived in Washington Co., died in Palmer Township Nov. 2, 1841, aged 92 years. Great-Grandmother mary died Aug. 6, 1840, aged 86 years. Both were members of the Methodist Church.
David Gard, my Grandfather was born (to Cornelius and Mary Hancher Gard). April 18, 1782 in Hamsphire Country, Virginia, and on March 25, 1802 married Mary Hiett who was born August 20, 1784 in Hamsphire Country, Virginia. On the following day, they started for the Ohio River overland, then nearly 300 miles, and arrived at Vienna, six miles above Parkersburg on the Ohio River, the same spring, having crossed the Allegheny Mountains with their four-horse wagon and team. They finally settled at what was called the White Oak settlement, now palmer Township. In 1809, they bought 80 acres and put up a two-story hewed log house. The family were all away from home, the house took fire, and with all his papers and household goods, was destroyed, but fortunately the persons who deeded him the land lived near and the deeds were renewed. Grandfather erected another house some 40 rods nearer the State road in which he lived until his death, February 16, 1859, at 78 years of age. That house is still standing at this time. (1913.)
“My father, Edward Camp, was a descendant of the Mellors who came from England. They had bought land in Kentucky before they left England. When they came down the Ohio River on their way to Kentucky, they landed at Marietta. On learning the Indians were so hostile that it was unsafe to proceed, they were prevailed upon to settle near Marietta. The Ohio Company Purchase, owning quite a lot of land to be given to settlers, gave them land on Wolf Creek, near the mouth where it empties into the muskingum River, at the town called Waterford. They never went to Kentucky but they learned years after that lexington, Kentucky was on the land they bought of the King before leaving England.
“My grandfather Camp’s name was Jesse. I never saw him. He was mostly on the River from Pittsburgh, Penn. To New Orleans. He would come home once a year to see his two boys, Edward and Samuel, who lived with their Grandfather Mellor. When my father was about eight or nine years old, his father wrote to them that he would be home at a certain time to make them a visit. They never saw, or heard tell of, him after that.
“My father, born November 14th, 1811, and my mother, Rowena Gard (daughter of David and Mary Hiett Gard)., born December 20, 1810, were married October 3, 1833. My father was a tanner by trade, having learned his trade under Geroge L. Corner for whom I was named. My father had his Tanyard in what is now Palmer Township on the Marietta and Lancaster State road, about three quarters of a mile east of where the road crosses Wolf Creek. We lived at this place until I was ten years of age.
“Father owned about eight or ten acres around Tanyard and every year the thistles were very thick. My job was to keep them cut down but, boylike, I was so slow at it that many would ripen before they were cut. The consequences were the ground was reseeded every year. In 1846, father sold his home and Tanyard to Robert I. Danley, a shoemaker, who did not cut the thistles and they all went to seed and blew away and the lot was left clean, no thistles.
“Father owned a hundred acres on Wolf Creek, north of Grandfather’s and three quarters mile from the road and we moved into a log house on my Grandfather’s place near this one hundred acres on Wolf Creek. There was a good sugar orchard on the place which we tapped and made sugar and molasses every year.
“Father sold this one hundred acres and bought 160 acres, all woods, three or four miles further up the creek, cleared out two acres, and put up a round log house-raised it the day I was twelve years old. Wolf Creek ran into this land at the west end and for half a mile east, then out on the north side. There was a splendid mill site and so much timber on the place on both sides of Wolf Creek, that father let my Uncle Hiram Grad have it, with ten acres, to build a sawmill so as to get the timber sawed up. We had oak four feet in diameter and poplars that were five feet in diameter, also a good sugar orchard on the creek bottom.
“The first season we were ready to begin boiling sap, I was cutting wood to build the first fire. I had a mishap and the ax hit my foot, cut through the great toe joint, putting a stop to my sugar-making that year, so I stayed at home and kept house and let the others go to the camp.
“I was born January 26, 1835 in the hewed log, two-story house at the Tanyard, about Road leading from Marietta to Lancaster, Ohio. My brothers and sisters were as follows: (to avoid repetition these data will appear elsewhere in this volume, under their respective headings-editor.)
“Mother died April 10, 1887, aged 76 years, 3 months, 20 days. Father died August 26, 1888; aged 76 years, 8 months, 6 days. (See notes from E.M. Bates, appended hereto, regarding other incidents in Edward Camp’s life. - Dorothy C. Bockmier.)
“My Great-Grandfather Cornelius Grad was 92 years of age when he died. Grandfather David Grad died February 16, 1859, aged 76 years, 9 months, 28 days. Grandmother Grad died may 15, 1861, aged 76 years, 8 months, 25 days.
“I was kept busy helping father clear up his farm until I was about eighteen when one of father’s cousins came along, he being a carriage maker and on a tramp, and proposed to teach me the trade provided I would furnish the tools and materials (we having plenty of timber). and go halvers in the profits. So I became a carriage and wagon builder. Being at home, I could still help a good deal on the farm.
“I was married to Sarah H. Palmer on October 25th, 1855. She and I had always known each other, went to the same school, were members of the same M.E. Church. Her father and mother and mine were married about the same time. She was one month and one day both younger than I. When our parents first met after we were born, we were both put on the same blanket on the floor before the old-fashioned fireplace and the old folks betrothed us then and there, but we knew nothing of it until after we were married. Then they told us about it.
“Two weeks after we were married, the threshers were at work at Father-in-law’s barn, he was on the strawstack. When the cats were finished, he came down to help put away the oats before beginning on the wheat. There was a square pen of logs pinned together at he corners. A pin was left sticking up about six inches at one corner and as he slid down at that corner, the pin caught him between the legs and entered his body the whole length. He only lived a few hours and died in great agony. His estate was divided and Sarah received for her 5th share of the land, 51 acres with a double log house and barn. I used one end of the house for my shop. After a while I traded this tract off for a piece same size half a mile south of my father’s. I bought one hundred acres joining father’s on the north, then sold the piece I traded for and built a house on the piece I had bought.
“In 1856, I had my first vote, and the candidate on the Presidential ticket it was the first ticket out under the Republican Party was John C. Fremount, but the Democrat Candidate carried the day.
“On June 21, 1857, our first child was born, Ruth Alice. She is now living with her youngest boy up at Friday Harbor, Wash. (1913.) (Additional data given here will be found under No. (3279.) editor.)
“On June 13, 1861, our second child was born, a boy, Elmer Ellsworth. He died January 31, 1862. On December 10th, 1862, my wife Sarah H. died, and was buried in the Grad Cemetery on what was my Grandfather’s farm.
“In September 1861, my brother David enlisted in Co. F., 63d O. V. I. On the 14th of August 1862, two of my cousins came to see me and bid me goodbye as they were going to Marietta to enlist on the next day. I did not bid them goodbye but said, I will go with you, and did. We enlisted August 15, 1862 Pleasant, West Virginia, then marched up the Big Kanawha River to the falls (to Ganly Bridge)., where we spent part of the winter, then back to near town of Charleston, W. Va. (Coals Mouth.)
“On January 26th, we took steamers down the Kanawha to the Ohio, then to the Cumberland River, landed at Nashville, Tennessee where we camped for two weeks, then took steamers and went up the river to Carthage, Tenn. In February 1863. Here I had the measles, not very bad, but many of our Boys died with them. In June we started on the March to Murfreesboro. Then on the 24th of June, started again. It began to rain in the afternoon and rained on us for 16 days. I had to sit on the root of a tree to get out of the water to sleep. In due time we crossed the Tennessee River, then the range of Sand Mt. And Lookout Mt. To Chicamauga where we fought two days. We were surrounded, out our way out, and got back to Chattanooga where we lay all winter, but on November 25th, we charged Mission Ridge where I was hit by a ball which passed through six folds of my blanket and entered my watch, saving my life. It knocked me down but drew no blood. (Though under fire nearly 200 days, he was never wounded. At Mission Ridge a bullet passed through the blanket roll over his shoulder and lodged in the ring of his watch, knocking him down but drawing no blood. This winter we were sometimes very short of something to eat, sometimes drawing four crackers to last us three days.
“In the spring of 1864, we started on the campaign to Atlanta, which lasted 62 days and we were under fire 61 days. Then rebel Gen. Hood went back to Atlanta, which we left on November 15, 1864 on the March with Sherman to the Sea. We arrived at the city of Savannah, Ga. December 13th, lived eight days on rice in the sheaf, hulling it and eating it without salt.
“We left Savannah February 1, 1865, crossed the Savannah at Sisters Ferry, marched through South Carolina and North Carolina, were in the last battle at Bentonville, NC. March 19th and 20th. We rested a while at Goldsboro, NC.,then marched on the Washington, D.C. and went through the Grand Review. We were mustered out of the service June 10, 1865, went to Columbus, Ohio where we were paid off, and I reached home on June 24, 1865.
“My folks were eating supper, not knowing when I would reach home. (Clara Gard Cooper (d.s19 April 1950). remembers the return of her father, James Hiett Gard, George Camp’s maternal uncle, on this evening. - Dorothy C. Bockmier.) little alice did not know her soldier father at first. The next few days I spent in the wheat fields helping my father save his wheat.
“Then on July 1st, Sister Augusta and I went to Marietta, 20 miles away. Got there in the eve and met my older sister Emily Josephine and a Mrs. Deeble, a dressmaker with whom Josie was working. Mrs. Deeble was a wodow and she and I had been corresponding for two years but had never seen each other. Everything seemed favorable and both willing, so we struck a match and exploded the bomb and were married on July 5, 5:00 A. M in order to take the 6: o’clock train out to the country where father lived. We are still living together at this date, Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 27, 1913. Of this union, we have two sons, Clarence Evans in California, and Elston Hamlin of Seattle, Wash.
“When I was fifteen, I joined the Methodist Church of which all my people and my first wife’s people were members. After my second marriage, I moved to the Country seat, Marietta, and for two or three years worked at carpentering. Then my brother-in-law, D. P. Adams, and I bought machinery and started a machine shop. After four or five years, I sold out to him and moved to Columbus, Ohio and started a repair carriage shop, built myself a two story brick house, sold that to R.P. Wooddruf but never got all my pay. In 1879, I went to London, O. and a saw mill cut out material enough for 10,000 buggies for the Columbus Buggy Co.
“In 1880, we moved to Springfield, O. where I worked one year in the Champion Machine Works setting up mowers and reapers, then superintended Mr. Fasler’s farm until 1883 when, on account of my wife’s health, we moved to Interlachen, Fla. Where I put up a twenty room lodging house. In 1886, I traded the Florida property to A.L. Ross for a farm of 60 acres and tools and stock at Deer Lodge, Tenn. On the Cumberland plateau. In 1887, I sols out to Mr. Hale, moved about 75 miles down to Athens, Tenn. And bought 65 acres of land, no house. I put up a four-room house and in one year sold it to a New York man and rented for a year.
“In June 1890, wife and I took a trip to Washington, D.C. and New York. Then that fall, wife took a trip to Seattle, Wash. To visit our son Elston who had come here after the big Seattle fire. Then she was to go to Los Angeles to visit her father and brother, but never went any farther, and the next years, after disposing of my stuff, I embarked for Seattle where I landed November 3, 1891. I have looked after a ranch on Vashion for four years, and for three years looked after Elston’s ranch. The balance of the time of 22 years in Seattle (to 1913)., I have built myself a house and helped a t a good many other jobs.” (R80).
ITEMS, by Dr. E.M. Bates, Alderwood manor, Washington: “Edward Camp, born November 14, 1811, married Rowena Grad October 3, 1833. She was a daughter of David Gard and Mary Hiett and was born December 20, 1810.
“He soon bought a farm four miles Southeast of Vincent, Ohio, on which he lived until his family were all grown and had migrated west to the frontier, when in 1886 he filed claim four miles north of Shockeyville, Kansas. He died in 1888, Grandmother (Rowena ). having preceded him in death about a year.
“Grandfather (Edward). was very childish the last years of his life, yet his mind was perfectly clear on things that happened in early life and he used to tell me many things that happened in the early days in Ohio. He was a tanner by trade. One story that made quite an impression on my mind had to do with the business. He used to trade with the Indians; in fact, got most of his furs from them, trading beads, trinkets, etc.
“In 1840, he and his partner decided to try and lay in a big stock of furs for their winter’s work. So they built a large canoe and rowed down the Ohio river to the Mississippi, then up the Mississippi to St. Louis, which at that time consisted of tone log house on the East bank of the river. The man in charge told them if they went farther to be very careful as there was a tribe of Indians above on the war path. Nevertheless, they pushed ahead three days, and the third night out camped on a little island out in the middle of the stream. The next morning to tell me many things that happened in the early days in Ohio. He was a tanner by trade. One story that made quite an impression on my mind had to do with the business. He used to trade with the Indians; in fact; got most of his furs from them, trading beads, trinkets, etc.
“In 1840, he and his partner decided to try and lay in a big stock of furs for their winter’s work. So they built a large canoe and rowed down the Ohio river to the Mississippi, then up the Mississippi to St. Louis, which at that time consisted of one log house on the East bank of the river. The man in charge told them if they went farther to be very careful as there was tribe of Indians above on the war path. Nevertheless, they pushed ahead three days, and the third night out camped on a little island out in the middle of the stream. The next morning they had not gone far until a band of Indians came running down to the east bank waving furs, and they started to go to shore when they noticed there were no squaws or papooses among them, and that the braves had on war paint. So they piled their furs on the side of that boat and turned down the middle of the stream. No sooner had the Indians discovered what they were doing than the arrows began to fly thick and fast. Fortunately none hit them, but several hit the furs they had piled up for protection. Some of the Indians as followed on the bank, and some on rafts, but slowly yet steadily they gained on their pursuers until by noon they were out of sight; yet they rowed all day, all night, and until noon the next day without stopping for rest. Reaching St. Louis again, where they rested a couple of days, they started for home where they arrived safely with a very large load of valuable furs, being gone four months on the trip.” (R80).MARRIAGE: From a Letter by Nellie A GARD dated 29 Dec 1970:
Washington County (OH) marriage records (Index Wrong): I found the marriage only because I knew the date of the marriage and leafed through the book until I found July 1865 marriages: Vol 4 pp. 51: George L CAMP married 4 Jul 1865 Ernestine N DEEBLE by Thomas Nickes, M.G.
The 1st marriage of Geroge L CAMP to Sarah PALMER I could not find. That is strange. The PALMERS - a large family - came from Vermont about 1800 and were well known in Palmer and Barlow Townships expecially, and were intermarried with both the GARDS and DUNSMOORS. Some of the records are faded or poorly written so it is difficult to read them.
Washington County , Ohio Marriages 1789-1918; page 250RESEARCH-LEAD:
=================================
From: "Cheryl Hagen" CherylHagen@msn.com
To: CAMP-L@rootsweb.com
George Lowe Camp b. Jan. 28, 1835, Palmer Township, Wash. Count, Ohio. died Nov 28 1919 Seattle, King County, Washington. George Lowe Camp married Sarah H. Palmer october 25, 1855. Childern of George and Sarah are:
Alice Camp, b. June 21, 1857 d. 1942 And
Elmer Ellsworth Camp, b. June 13, 1861 d. January 31, 1862
---------------------------------------
Later George (Lowe Camp) married Ernestine Mary Adams October 25, 1865. Children of George and Ernestine are:
Clarence Evans Camp b 1866 and
Elston Hamlin Camp, b. Aug 30, 1868, Wash. Co., Ohio; d. May 09, 1943, Seattle, King County, Washington.
Elston Camp married Hattie louise Greene July 13, July 13, 1895, daughter of Rev Suamuel Greene and Sarah Moor. She as b. March 25, 1864 and d. Nov 2, 1907 their children:
Mary Louise Camp b Nov 19, 1903 (my grandma) d April 1980 Seattle, WA.
Sherman Adam Camp, b Jun 6, 1901 died 2000 California.
Dorothy Foster Camp b June 5, 1899 and Margaret Elston Camp b November 19, 1903.
Do I have a cousins on this list? Can anyone help fill in the blanks.
CherylHagen@msn.com
=================================CENSUS: 1860 United States Federal Census
Name: George L Camp
Age in 1860: 25
Birth Year: abt 1835
Birthplace: Ohio
Home in 1860: Palmer, Washington, Ohio
Gender: Male
Post Office: Browns Mills and Roxbury
Value of real estate:
Household Members:
Name Age
George L Camp 25
Sarah H Camp 25
Ruth A Camp 3
Source Citation: Year: 1860; Census Place: Palmer, Washington, Ohio; Roll: M653_1048; Page: 106; Image: 216; Family History Library Film: 805048.CENSUS: 1880 United States Federal Census
Name: George S. Camp (George L Camp)
Age: 45
Birth Year: abt 1835
Birthplace: Ohio
Home in 1880: Union, Madison, Ohio
Race: White
Gender: Male
Relation to Head of House: Self (Head)
Marital Status: Married
Spouse's Name: Erntes S. Camp
Father's Birthplace: New Jersey
Mother's Birthplace: Ohio
Occupation: Work Saw Mill
Household Members:
Name Age
George S. Camp 45
Erntes S. Camp 48
Claranc C. Camp 14
Ealston H. Camp 12
Source Citation: Year: 1880; Census Place: Union, Madison, Ohio; Roll: 1044; Family History Film: 1255044; Page: 259A; Enumeration District: 061; Image: 0678.CENSUS: 1885 Florida State Census, 1867-1945
Name: G L Camp
Age: 50
Gender: Male
Race: White
Birth Place: O
Est. Birth Year: abt 1835
Relationship to Head: Head
Family Number: 876
Marital Status: Married
Spouse Name: Ernestine Camp
Father's Birth Place: O
Mother's Birth Place: O
Census Year: 1885
Enumeration District: 9
Locality: District 9
County: Putnam
Page: 85
Line: 7
Archive Series #: M845, Roll 11
Household Members:
Name Age
G L Camp 50
Ernestine Camp 52
Elston Camp 17
Seba Smith 30
Source Information:
Ancestry.com. Florida State Census, 1867-1945 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.CENSUS: 1900 United States Federal Census
Name: George L Camp
Age: 65
Birth Date: Jan 1835
Birthplace: Ohio
Home in 1900: Seattle Ward 8, King, Washington
[King]
Race: White
Gender: Male
Relation to Head of House: Head
Marital Status: Married
Spouse's Name: Earnestine N Camp
Marriage Year: 1865
Years Married: 35
Father's Birthplace: Ohio
Mother's Birthplace: Ohio
Occupation:
Household Members:
Name Age
George L Camp 65
Earnestine N Camp 67
Source Citation: Year: 1900; Census Place: Seattle Ward 8, King, Washington; Roll: 1745; Page: 7B; Enumeration District: 113; FHL microfilm: 1241745.1900 United States Federal Census
Name: George L Camp
Age: 65
Birth Date: Jan 1835
Birthplace: Ohio
Home in 1900: Seattle Ward 8, King, Washington [King]
Race: White
Gender: Male
Relation to Head of House: Head
Marital Status: Married
Spouse's Name: Earnestine N Camp
Marriage Year: 1865
Years Married: 35
Father's Birthplace: Ohio
Mother's Birthplace: Ohio
Household Members:
Name Age
George L Camp 65
Earnestine N Camp 67
Source Citation: Year: 1900; Census Place: Seattle Ward 8, King, Washington; Roll: 1745; Page: 7B; Enumeration District: 113; FHL microfilm: 1241745.
BIRTH: Ernestine Mary Adams. b. 1832
(From a Letter by Cheryl Hagen dated 17 February 2002)MARRIAGE: Washington County (OH) marriage records index said (Vol I-pp. 203) CAMP / DEEBLE marriage. Dates on that page were September 8, 11, 16, 1866. Unable to find the actual entry, an improper index, no doubt.
(From a Letter by Nellie A GARD dated 29 Dec 1970)DEATH: Ernestine Deeble
SSN: 562-38-4357
Last Residence: 95945 Grass Valley, Nevada, California, United States of America
Born: 18 Feb 1906
Died: Dec 1984
SSN issued: California Before 1951
(SS Death Index)RESEARCH-LEAD: Fan Deeble
SSN: 550-20-6072
Last Residence: 95959 Nevada City, Nevada, California, United States of America
Born: 27 Sep 1877
Died: Aug 1971
SSN issued: California Before 1951
(SS Death Index)CENSUS: 1860 United States Federal Census
Name: Ernestine Adams
Age in 1860: 28
Birth Year: abt 1832
Birthplace: Ohio
Home in 1860: Marietta, Washington, Ohio
Gender: Female
Post Office: Marietta
Household Members: Name Age
D P Adams 36
Angeline Adams 26
Dennis Adams 68
Ernestine Adams 28
Volney Deeble 11
Emma S Adams 8CENSUS: 1880 United States Federal Census
Name: Erntes S. Camp (Earnestine N Camp)
Age: 48
Birth Year: abt 1832
Birthplace: Ohio
Home in 1880: Union, Madison, Ohio
Race: White
Gender: Female
Relation to Head of House: Wife
Marital Status: Married
Spouse's Name: George S. Camp
Father's Birthplace: Vermont
Mother's Birthplace: Maryland
Occupation: Keeping House
Household Members:
Name Age
George S. Camp 45
Erntes S. Camp 48
Claranc C. Camp 14
Ealston H. Camp 12
Source Citation: Year: 1880; Census Place: Union, Madison, Ohio; Roll: 1044; Family History Film: 1255044; Page: 259A; Enumeration District: 061; Image: 0678.SOURCE: http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=35394640
Mattie Daniels married John Stickley & Roy Mabry and she had 2 children.
Dudley Daniels married Rosa Lee Capley.
In the family bible Annie B Dennis's birth is recorded as December 2,1892.
Annie Belle "Aunt Belle" was married to Newt Pierce in Tenn. They had a son who died as a child. Belle moved to Texas after her husband died. She was married to Henry Nelson of Nelson Brothers Ready Mix a cement company in Dallas. They divorced and had no children.
For a time Belle lived in a trailer behind the home of her brother James in Carrollton Tx. She later lived near downtown Carrollton.
I have a photograph sent to me by Inis Dennis Watson of Belle Dennis Pierce and her husband Romantus Pierce.