Souvenir of Loretto centenary, October 10, 1899 : 1799-1899 ,Saint Michael's Catholic Church, Part 8

Author: Kittell, Ferdinand, 1847-1927
Publication date: 1899
Publisher: Cresson, Pa. : Swope Bros., Printers
Number of Pages: 490


USA > Pennsylvania > Cambria County > Loretto > Souvenir of Loretto centenary, October 10, 1899 : 1799-1899 ,Saint Michael's Catholic Church > Part 8


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27


His first mission as a priest was a most uninviting one. Ile was sent to administer to the wants of the Catholics living along the Pennsylvania Railroad which was then boing con- structed near Greensburg and vicinity. After a successful period of two or three years in this locality he was selected by Bishop O'Connor to accompany him to the newly created See of Erie, Pa. The Bishop knew the merits and capabili- ties of Father Pollard, and his appreciation of the same was amply shown in his desire to appoint this youthful priest to the rectorship of the new Cathedral in Erie.


However, "Man proposes but God disposes,"and Bishop O'Comor was re-appointed to Pittsburg. Father Pollard returned also, and was sent to the parish of the sainted


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Prince Gallitzin, Loretto, Pa., where he remained four years, when he was called, by his superiors, to a vaster field of labor in the South Side, Pittsburg. He then became Reetor of St. John the Evangelist's Church, which position he held for about twenty-five years.


Father Pollard's first experience in this part of God's Holy vineyard was certainly novel and not very encouraging. He was obliged to sleep in a rented room, so pervions as to admit the falling rain. His ardor, however, was not damp- (ned at all by this cooling reception, for he went to work as soon as convenience and means allowed to better his habita- tion as well as to proeure everything needful for his growing congregation.


How well he worked and with what success he met are grandly exemplified in the property belonging to St. John's, Fifteenth street, South Side, which he left three years before his death to accept the pastorate of St. Mary's, 46th St., Pitts- burg. A spacious and well furnished church, a large and com- modions pastoral residence, a school and a convent, both amply large to accommodate the children of the parish and the good Sisters in charge; a dwelling for the janitor, besides some vacant ground ad joining these buildings. All these are mon- uments to the zeal and faith of the people he guided so long and so successfully. -


It was not long after his acceptance of St. Mary's that declining health warned him to be ready for the Master's call. Twice stricken with paralysis, he was conscious of his approaching dissolution.


On Sunday, September 16, 1888, having no symptoms of unusnal weakness, he prepared to celebrate the Holy Sacri- fico of the mass. He had gone on with the mass as far as the Offertory, when he was admonished by his own feelings tosum- mon assistance. This was readily extended, and with another paralytic stroke, he was carried from the altar to the cham- ber from which he never afterwards eame alive. He was un- conscious for some time, but rallied sufficiently to receive all the last Sacraments, not excepting Holy Viatieum.


LORETTO CENTENARY.


Surrounded by the good Sisters of Mercy, and by his two faithful assistants, Fathers Foley and Breman, he went to God at 8.30 a. m., on the same Sunday mentioned above. (September 16.)


REV. M. J. MITCHELL.


Michael Joseph Mitchell was born in County Longford, Ireland, in March, 1820. Alter pursuing his studies in his native land he came to this country about the year 1838, and enterd the Seminary of St. Charles Borromeo, Philadelphia, where he completed his course in theology. Attaching hin- self to the newly erected Diocese of Pittsburg, where he was ordained by Bishop O'Connor on the 3d of March, 1844, being the second priest ordained by that illustrious prelate, he was appointed to the little congregation of Butler, where he remained until May, 1847, when he was transferred to Freeport. Finding the church at that place too small, he un- dertook the erection of a new edifice which was completed at the close of 1851. But before the completion of the church he was transferred to Murrensville, where he remained until April 18544; soon after which he was placed in charge of the church at Wilmore. At the close of the following year we find him pastor at Ebensburg, where he remained till the end of 1864, with the exception of the time from December, 1856, to September, 1857, when he had charge of St. John's Church, South Side, Pittsburg, during the absence of the pastor --- Rev. T. S. Reynolds -- who accompanied Bishop O'Comor on his trip to Europe and the Holy Land. During part of the time he was in charge of the church at Ebensburg he lodged with the Franciscan Brothers at St. Francis' Col- lege, Loretto, of whom he was then Ecclesiastical Superior. Early in the winter of 1863 he was appointed pastor of the newly formed congregation of New Brighton. Having re- mained till the spring of 1865, ill health rendered it necessary for him to retire for a time from the active duties of the ministry, and he does not appear to have resumed their exer- cise before February, 1866. He was then appointed pastor of St. Andrew's Church, Allegheny. In the summer of 1868,


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he was placed in charge of St. Michael's Church, Loretto, where he continued until February 24, 1870, when failing health obliged him to retire to the Mercy Hospital, where for a time his life was despaired of. During his brief stay at Loretto he baptized thirty-nine persons and married nine couples. At length in September, 1871, he took charge of St. Michael's Church. Pittsburg, but he was forced after three months again to return to the hospital. Here he remained, exercising the duties of chaplain, with little interruption, till the fall of ista, when he became pastor of St. Thomas' Church, Braddock. A permanent decline in his health, how- ever, forced him to resign and return to the hospital only a few months prior to his death. In the decrees of Providence it seems that he was never more to leave the hospital, from which he was called to his final rest after having exercised the duties of the sacred ministry for almost thirty-eight Sears -- for the most part in thinly settled districts which tried men's bodies no less than their souls.


He died Wednesday, January 11, 1882, at 10 o'clock a. m., at Mercy Hospital, Pittsburg, and his mortal remains were interred in St. Mary's cemetery.


Father Mitchell was a man of vast and varied experience, a ripe scholar, aud was gifted with a remarkable talent for organization. He was charitable to the poor, gentle with the erring, but where the honor of God or the interests of the Church were concerned, he knew no compromise. His per- feet command of language, which for precision, elegance and incisiveness well compares with that of Junius, supplied him with a weapon which it was dangerous to call into play.


REV. P. M'C. MORGAN.


Rev. Pollard McCormick Morgan was a convert to the Catholic faith from the Presbyterian Church, for the minis- try of which he was, at the time of his conversion, a student in the Western Theological Seminary, Allegheny City. After embracing the Catholic faith he entered St. Michael's Semi- nary for the purpose of preparing himself for the priesthood. lle was ordained in the year 1862. He remained at the semi-


LORETTO CENTENARY.


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nary for some time as Professor of Rhetorie and Theology, which position he filled with credit to himself and to the sat- isfaction of his ecclesiastical superiors. From the latter part of 1864 to May 14, 1866, Father Morgan officiated as as- sistant at St. Michael's, Loretto, baptizing during that time, twenty-eight persons. On May 14, 1866, he left Loretto for London, England, and in the latter part of the following year he returned to Pittsburg. During the remainder of his too short career he labored incessantly for the good of souls and after an illness of over twelve months, died on Sunday morning, April 14, 1872, in Pittsburg, in the 38th year of his age, having been born in 1831. Rev. H. Denny preached his panegyric at the funeral obsequies, after which he was bur- ied in St. Mary's cemetery.


THE REV. H. S. BOWEN.


Horace Seymour Bowen was born in Pittsburg, June 22, 122. His parents were among the most respectable and in- fluential people of the city. They were in religious belief Protestants. The Reverend Father went to school at a very early age, at Mt. St. Mary's College, Emmitsburg, Md. He developed a wonderful talent for music, applied himself most assiduously to its cultivation, and in his prime, both as a lay- man and a priest, he was a celebrated performer and a most successful instructor.


·


He remained at the Mountain College until about the year 1841, but before his departure thenee to engage in the busy world, he saw the light of God's Holy Faith, and always hou- est and sincere he followed it. He was received into the Catholic Church and evinced great piety and fervor. After leaving college he gave his attention to music. Whilst prac- ticing the duties of his religion faithfully, he supported him- self by instructing others in the chosen branch.


For many years during the pastorate of the present Bishop of Erie, Rt. Rev. Tobias Mullen, he was in charge of the organ and choir of St. Peter's Church, Allegheny, Pa.


God, however, designed him for greater things, and called him to the sacred ministry. Well versed in the Latin


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and Greek languages as well as the ordinary sciences of a collegiate course, he began the study of theology. He was ordained a priest in the year 1868.


As a priest he was most devoted and zealous. For seven- teen years, while living and teaching music at St. Francis' College, he was chaplain to the Sisters of Mercy, Loretto, Pa. Although he had a considerable distance to walk every morning to the Convent chapel, and at a time when he was broken down in health and declining in years, still in the most inclement weather he was at his post. He left the scene of his labors only when he was carried to the Merey Hospital, emaciated and fast sinking into the grave.


Fortified by the Sacraments, with the kind attention of his beloved sister, Mother Neri of the Order of Mercy, he breathed his last in peace. Owing to the time in which he died there was no mass over his remains on the day of his funeral, Good Friday, April 8, 1887.


On the afternoon of this day his remains were taken to St. Paul's Cathedral. There were present in the sanctuary some twenty or thirty priests to do honor to the beloved de- ceased.


Bishop Phelan was also there. The vespers of the Dead wore chanted by the assembled clergymen and then the Bishop prononneed the absolution. Rev. Father Neason, a particularly dear friend of Father Bowen, delivered a touch- ing enlogy. The Rt. Rev. Bishop and many priests accom- panied the remains to St. Mary's cemetery, where the inter- ment took place.


DATES IN LOCAL HISTORY.


1785. Captain Michael McGuire made the first settlement in what is now Cambria County, Pa.


1791. Joseph Jahus ( Yahus) settled at Johnstown.


1793. November 17, Captain Michael McGuire died. He was the first to be buried in the cemetery at Loretto.


LORETTO CENTENARY.


1795. March 18, Rev. Demetrius A. Gallitzin ordained to the priesthood by Bishop John Carroll, in Baltimore. He had sailed from Rotterdam, August 18, 1792, and reached Baltimore on October 28th following.


1799. August, Father Gallitzin eame to McGuire's Settle- ment and built the first church between Lancaster, Pa., and St. Louis.


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1804. March 26, Cambria County was organized.


1810. First census of Cambria County taken.


18]1. Bishop Egan, of Philadelphia, administered confirma- tion in the log church at Loretto. .


1819. John Weakland settled at Hart's Sleeping Place.


1826. Canal begun at Allegheny river.


1830. December 10, canal finished to Johnstown.


1831. April, work of construction begun on Old Portage. railroad.


1832. August, postoffices established at Jefferson (Wil- more) and at Summit.


1883. May 12, the old cherry tree, the boundary mark at Canoe Place, washed out of root.


1833. November 20, first train passed over the Old Portage railroad.


1834. Boats first transferred from canal to cars on Old Port- age railroad ..


1835. Second track completed on the Old Portage railroad.


1840. Work commenced on Lake Conemaugh. Completed 1853.


1847. Monument of Father Gallitzin erected. Franciscan Brothers came to Loretto.


1848. Sisters of Mercy came to Loretto. Congregation at St. Augustine detached from Loretto. August 27, cor- nor stone of Franciscan Monastery laid.


1850. December 25, St. Benedict's Church, Carrolltown, dedicated.


1851. Corner stone of new church at Loretto laid. First Mission in the diocese held at Loretto, opening on Low Sunday. June 8, corner stone of the new St. Paul's Ca- thedral, Pittsburg, laid. June 20, St. Aloysius Church, Summit, dedicated.


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1852. January 14. Johnstown's second Catholic Church, frame, 10x60 feet, dedicated.


1853. December 9. Papal Nunzio, Monsignor Bedini, at Loretto.


1654. Janmary 6, St. Michael's new brick church at Loretto dedicated.


1555. The new Portage railroad completed. December 8, church at New Germany dedicated.


1557. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company purchased the line of public improvements, the old and new Portage railroads, canal, etc. July 4, grand celebration at Lo- l'etto.


1859. First church built at Chest Springs.


March 20, above named church dedicated.


1863. June 4, heavy frost. August 27, frost.


1804. September 1, new church at New Germany dedi- cated.


1665. June 4, oil tapped at Jerome Dawson's by William Tyne for Collins & Co., at 340 feet.


1867. Jannary 17, blockade of roads commenced. High winds and snow for twelve days in succession.


1667. January 27, Sunday. Not more than sixty persons at church; not one sled or sleigh on the ground. All dur- ing May very wet and cold. Oats, corn and potatoes could not be planted.


Istix. December &, a very stormy day. Roads blocked, and not more than seventy persons at church.


1875. From July 2 to August 6 rain about every other day. Bad harvest. Much wheat, rye and grass damaged. October 3, jubilee commenced and ended on the 10th. Was well attended.


1879. August 26, first lots in new part of cemetery sold to the following persons: A. J. Christy, M. F' MeDonald, W. J. Buck, J. Gibbons, F. D. Sanpp and William Glass. September 8, Jacob Gibbons' monument completed. The first in the new part of the cemetery; in 1885 re- moved to Milton, Pa.


1822. May 25, dedication of new Court House at Ebensburg.


LORETTO CENTENARY.


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1884. January 14, first telegram sent over the Loretto wire.


1886. December 9, big fire at St. Francis' College.


1889. May 31, Johnstown flood. December 7, Rt. Rev. Bishop Tuigg died in Altoona.


1890. April 6, Easter Sunday. Rev. E. A. Bush, for twenty years pastor of Loretto, delivered his farewell sermon. On the Wednesday following he assumed charge of St. John's Church, Altoona. On the 18th of the same month Rev. Martin Ryan left St. Augustine and became pastor of Lovetto.


1891. March 14, Rev. M. Ryan left Lorotto to take charge of St. Patrick's Church, Gallitzin. No ceremonies during Holy Week.


1891. April 1, Rev. Ferdinand Kittell was installed as pastor of Loretto.


PART SECOND.


BY REV. FERDINAND KITTELL, PASTOR. MATRIMONIAL AND BAPTISMAL RECORDS -OF- REV. D. A. GALLITZIN.


NOTE .- Father Gallitzin in making entries of baptisms, was not accustomed to express the maiden surname of the mother. Hence such surnames, when not found in the Mat- rimonial Register, have been in some instances supplied from other sources, but in too many cases they are unfortunately wanting. The dates after the names of the children, all of whom were baptized by him, denote the year of birth of the first and of the last. All the marriages recorded by Father Gallitzin are here noted. . But it is certain that he performed many baptisms and marriages which he failed to record, for the reason that, administering these sacraments while trav- eling among his scattered flock, he would frequently, as he himself stated, lose the memoranda which he intended, on re- turning home, to copy into the Registers.


ADAMS John and Ann John, Robert, William, Susan, Louisa Ann. (1800-17.) ADAMS William and Eve Sanker.


Jacob, John, James, Mary Magdalen, Thomas, William, Joseph, Juliana. (1807-25.)


ADAMS Ignatius and Honoria Burgoon. Married June 18, 1815.


Veronica Ann, Matthew, Winifred, Barnabas, Ignatius, Thomas Samuel. (1816-27.)


ADAMS Thomas and Rachel McGuire.


Mary Ann, Thomas, Julia Ann, Rachel. (1821-33.)


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ADAMS Richard and Margaret McConnell. Married Septem- ber 18, 1821.


John, Elizabeth, Peter, Jacob, Richard, Francis, De- metrins Silas. (1822-34.)


ADAMS Joseph and Maria Inlow. Married December 30, 1828.


Thoma's, Elizabeth, Joseph, Ann Magdalen, Jane, Mary Magdalen, Anastasia. (1824-37.)


ADAMS Peter and Mary Gallagher. Married January 8, 1833. Richard, Joseph, Elizabeth. (1834-36.)


ADELSBERGER Michael and Elizabeth Hughes.


Mary, Thomas, Ann Mary, Mary Rebecca, Ann Eliza- beth, Catharine. (1824-37.)


AKELS Samuel and Jane --- Elizabeth. (1806.)


ANDERSON Andrew and Patience -. Rhoda, John. (1794-96.) ANDERSON John and Emily Burgoon. Married January 10, 1815. ARNELL Joseph and Mary --.


William. (1808.) ASHCROFT Richard and Mary Ellen. (1821.) BALLIPP John and Eve --- Elizabeth, Mary, Martha Jane. (1805-13.)


BAKER John and Mary -


Ann, Thomas, John. (1809-18.)


BAKER William and Christina Helfreit. Mary Ann, Christina. (1835-38.)


BAKER John and Catharine Fox. Married August 25, 1835. BARNHART John and Frances - Elizabeth, John. (1837-38.) BARNICLE Thaddens and Sarah ---- Mary Ann, Bridget, Catherine. (1802-08.)


BARNICLE William and Susan -. William Michael, Sarah, Bartholomew, Mary. (1815- 21.)


LORETTO CENTENARY.


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BARNICLE William and Mary Am -. William. (1828.) BARNICLE Michael and Margaret John, Ambrose Aug., Michael. (1827-30.)


BARNICLE Philip and Margaret Gillespie. Married Septem- ber 2, 1834. BARTLETT Charles and Elizabeth Sarah. (1826.)


BAUMGARDNER John and Mary ----. Sarah Jane, Edward. (1835-37.)


BEAMER John and Abigail Coleman. 1817. Henry, Mathias, John, William, Solomon, Samuel. (1820-31.)


Married August 17,


BEAMER John and Elizabeth O'Hara. Married November 8, 1831.


Thomas, Catherine, Daniel. (1832-36.)


BEARER Casper and Catharine Huber. Married January 11, 1825. Casper Joseph, Catharine, Henry, John. (1826-31.) BEARER Melchoir and Theresa Huber. Married January 11, 1825.


Casper Nicholas, William, Mary Ann, Rebecca, Joseph Paul. (1826-33.)


BEBER Christian and Mary Magdalen -. Adam, William, Juliana, Henry, Margaret, Demetrius Aug. (1816-31.) BECHER John and Elizabeth -. Mary Catherine, Mary Elizabeth. (1808-11.) BECHER Nicholas and Christina Coons. Samuel John, Henry Ang., William Jos., Apollonia, Mary Ann, Linus Nicholas, Matilda. (1827-39.) Brent Philip and Mary Elizabeth. (1807.)


Benk Anthony and Mary Noel. Married September 14, 1813. Mary, Elizabeth, Veronica. (1814-21.)


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BEHE Conrad and Elizabeth Noel. Married October 26, 1817. John, Thomas, Ellen, Susan, Joseph, Henry, William, .Jos. Conrad, Nicholas. (1820-38.) BEHE Mathias and Catherine Kaylor. Married March 26, 1ァード. James, Elias, Elizabeth Ann, John, Mary Ann, Joseph, Henry, Mary Magdalen, Francis Elias, Luke. (1819-38.) BEHRINGER George and Margaret -. Eliza Jane, John. (1880-38.) BRIGLEY Heury and Cynthia -.


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Johu. (1798.) BAGLEY John and Mary Walsh. William, Mary Ann, Thomas, John. (1822-31.) BELFORD William and Mary Rush. Married August 27, 1822. George, Jacob, James, William, John, Thomas, Mar- garet, Ann. (1823-39.) BENDEN John and Mary -. Thomas, Margaret. (1807-20.)


BENDEN Robert and Mary Caroline Trexler. Married August 21, 1838. Mary Elizabeth. (1839.)


BENDER Emerick and Mary Magdalen -


Mary Ann, Jacob, Lydia Apollonia, Joseph, Margaret Ann, Catherine Ann, Henry, John. (1810-28.)


BENDER Henry and Mary Ann Myers. Married February 17, 1828.


James Angustine, Mary Ellen. (1828-32.)


BERTRAM John and Martina Heit. Married January 29, 1839. BIGLIN James and Ann Early.


Margaret, Eugene, James, Mary Ann. (1832-38. )


BIENER Louis and Ann Mary -. William. (1837.) BLAIR Obediah and Mary Jolm. (1825.) BLAKE Henry and Elizabeth George. (1816.) BLONDIN Edward and Ann --. Rosanna. (1838.)


LORETTO CENTENARY.


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BOLAN Michael and Margaret Ann, Thomas. (1835-37.)


BOLAN Landelin and Elizabeth Beber. Married October 21, 1831. Christian. (1836.) BOLEY Sebastian and Agatha Henry, Peter Paul. (1835-89.)


BOONE Joseph and Priscilla Ellen, Thomas. ( 1819-21.)


BOONE Henry and Catherine Fels. Married May 27, 1823. Mary Jane, William Francis, Eliza Amanda. (1824-28.) BORTMAN Peter and Mary Ann Hertzog. Elizabeth Ann, Joseph. (1837-39.)


Bow John and Mary Mary. (1832.)


BOYLE llenry and Elizabeth Catherine, Jolm, Mary Ann, Andrew. (1806-13.)


BOYLE John and Margaret . --... Joseph, James, Hugh, Sarah, Mary, William, Am. (1812-24.) BOYLE Edward and Ellen Margaret. (1821.) BOYLE Eugene and Bridget Sarah Ann. (1832.)


BRADDOCK Michael and Sarah Margaret, James. (1816-17.)


BRADDOCK John and Am - . Simon Peter, Mary Ann, Catherine, Emily. (1811-17.) BRADDOCK Job and Elizabeth Malone (Storm.) Married


May 25, 1826.


Mary Ellen, Ann Elizabeth, Michael John, Leo Joseph, Henry James, Susan Margaret. (1827-37.)


BRADLEY Manasses and Frances -. John, Susan. (1799-1801.) BRADLEY Charles and Mary Joseph. (1800.) The first baptism recorded by Father Gallitzin.


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BRADLEY James and Ellen


Patrick, John, Charles, Joseph, Michael. (111-27.) BRADLEY Patrick and Mary - . Cornelius, James, Elizabeth. (1817-21.)


BRADLEY William and Rosanna MeMonigle. William, Ellen, Francis, Sarah Jane. (1823-39.) BRADLEY Edward aud Sarah Neason. Married October 14, 1521.


Mary, Charles, Martha. (1825-29.)


BRADLEY Charles and Catherine MeGnire. Married Febru- ary 17, 1828.


John Chrys., Mary, Richard, Ansehn, Mark, Sylves- ter. (1:29-87.)


BRADLEY John and Mary - James, Mary. ( 1886-8s.)


BRADLEY Charles and Jane Bradley. Susan. (1837.)


BRADLEY John and Catherine Bradley. Married December 9, 183M.


BRADLEY Dennis and Mary McCoy. Married January 12, 1810.


BRADY Terence and Ellen Ellen, Rosanna. (1820-28.)


BRADY lugh and Catharine Margaret. (1833.)


BRADY Charles and Margaret Skelly. Married November 22, 1885. Susan. (1836.)


BRANIOWISKY Thomas and Catharine Huber. Mary. (1822.)


BRANNIPP Michael and Margaret --.


Ambrose, Philip, Barnabas, Michael. (1809-14.)


BRANNIFP John and Elizabeth --- Ann, John, William. (1814-19.)


BRANNIPE Philip and Catharine ----. Mary Ann, Michael. (1836-37.)


BRANT Joseph and Dorothy ---. Mary Ann, Catharine, Augustine. (1809-13.)


LORETTO CENTENARY.


BRANT Augustine and Mary Noel. Daniel Demetrius. (18-10.) BRAWERY Dennis and Catharine Margaret, Dennis, Catherine, Jolm, Elizabeth. (1805- 17.) BRAWLEY David and Mary Ann Burgoon. Married Novem- 24, 1828.


BRAWLEY Michael and Mary Magdalen Burgoon. Married Jannary 15, 1839. Brambak George and Jane Bailey. Mary. (183-1.) BROOK BANK John and An Matilda Am. (1815.)


BROOK BANK William and Sarah -


John, Emily Am, Mary Ann, Eliza Jane. (1823-1832.) BROOKBANK Thomas and Mary Brady. Married October 18, 1831.


Mary Ellen, Margaret Ann, Edward, Alice Matilda. ' (1832-43.)


BROWN Phanuel and Elizabeth John. (1802.)


BROWN John and Susan - .


Michael, John, Sarah, James, Thomas, Henry. (1797- 1817.) BROWN Daniel and Apollonia


Heury, Sarah Ann, Margaret, William Daniel, Helen. (1821-85.)


BROWN Michael and Catharine Platt. Married November 5, 1817.


Mary Ann Matilda. (1823.)


BROWN Michael and Cecilia Waters. Married September 20, 1825. John, Martha Jane. (1826-29.)


BROWN Moses and Mary Gallagher. Married November 10, 1829. James, Susan Catherine, Jolm. (1830-35.)


BROWN Thomas and Margaret Roberts. Married Septem- ber 3, 1833.


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Susan Ann, Sarah Jane, John. (1834-39.) BROWN Henry and Mary Mary. (1836.) BROWN Jolm and Lavina Sharp. Married May 16, 1839.


BRUCE John and Mary ---. George. (1800.)


BRUCE George and Juliana Mckinney. Married May 26, 1833. John C. (183-1.)


BRUCE George and Amelia Me Manamy. Married October 8, 1>37.


James Alexander. (1838.)


BUCHANAN John and Mary William. ( 1823.)


Bock Joseph and Elizabeth Eckenrode.


Jolm, Christian, Sarah Am, William, Jacob, Jerome, Mary Ann. (1828-38.)


Beek Christian and Mary Young. Married September 2, 1827. Joseph, Jacob, William. (1828-32.)


Beek Henry and Agnes An Byrne. Married November 17, 1829.


Thomas, Daniel, Sarah Ann, Susan. (1832-38.) Buck Joseph and Rebecca -. Clothilde. (1835.)


BURGOON Robert and Catharine ---


Leo, Catherine, Mary Ann, Joseph, Elizabeth, Sarah Am, Susan, Bridget. (1801-21.)


BURGOON Barnabas and Mary George, Jacob. (1803-05.)


BURGoON Joseph and Mary Ann ---.


Juliana, Margaret, Susan, Joseph, John Baptist, John Chrysostom, Mary Ann, Jacob. (1897-27.) BURGOON John and Mary Ann -----. Susan, Jacob, Margaret Ann. (1809-15.) BURGOON Levi and Ann Lilly. Married June 6, 1813. Charity. (1817.)


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BURGOON Richard and Ann Delozier. Married May 16, 1814. Ann, Jacob. ( 1815-16.)


BURGOON John and Rhoda Anderson. Married January 10, 1815. Andrew. (181.) < father of feelquestions beaugoon ( BURGOON Jacob and Mary Burkle. Married December 26, 1815.


BURGOON Benedict and Catherine Weaver. Married Novem- ber 14, 1824.




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