Jacob EYMAN

Characteristics

Type Value Date Place Sources
name Jacob EYMAN

Events

Type Date Place Sources
death 30. August 1879
Fayette County, Ohio, USA Find persons in this place
burial
Washington Cemetery, Washington Court House, Fayette County, Ohio, USA Find persons in this place
birth 4. December 1798
Hardy County, West Virginia, USA Find persons in this place
Reference Number
marriage 13. February 1833
Fayette County, Ohio, USA Find persons in this place
marriage 24. June 1813
Hardy County, West Virginia, USA Find persons in this place

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Marriage ??spouse_en_US??Children
13. February 1833
Fayette County, Ohio, USA
Phebe HOPKINS
24. June 1813
Hardy County, West Virginia, USA
Verena / Frany RADABACK

Notes for this person

Vater:Peter Eymann(1762)USA 1.1,Hat 4 Kinder,Starb an"consumption"

Sources

1 Chronicling America: Historische amerikanische Zeitungen, 1836-1922, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-10449/chronicling-america-historische-amerikanische-zeitungen-1836-1922?itemId=8729407&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
  <p><p>Fayette County Herald<br />Veröffentlichung: Washington Court House, Fayette, Ohio, USA<br />Datum: 4. Sept. 1879<br />Text: "...Death of a Pioneer. Mr. Jacob Eyman, one the oldest citizens of our county, died at his residence, seven miles southeast of this place, on the Chillicothe pike, on Saturday morning last, aged 81 years. Mr ... surgeon, wassent for, and pronounced the disease cerebo-spinal meningitis, and told Mr. Taylor he could do nothing for the horses. The mule died Sunday morning, and the horse Sunday evening. Another horse ... wastaken sick Sunday evening, and died Monday noon. Two more horses were attacked with the disease Tuesday, and yesterday morning, our latest information, one of these was expected to die; theother .... Drs. Skinner and Knott made a post mortem examination of the two animals that died on Sunday, and found the lungs very badly..."<br />Über diese QuelleWilliam Millikan established the Washington Herald in December 1858 in Washington Court House, the seat of Fayette County, Ohio. Two years later, the paper changed its title to the Fayette County Herald. It was the first regular Republican paper established in the county and influential in its support of Republican Party interests and in building up the town and county. In 1868, Millikan was joined in the printing office by his son,William W. Millikan.According to its motto, the Herald was "Devoted to politics, general news and home interest." Readers of the "Official County Paper" were kept abreast of local, state, and national news. Local items included business advertisements; court, real estate, sheriff and other legal notices; market and agricultural news; marriage and death notices; post office lists of unclaimed letters; local organization meeting notices; and church news. Not only did the Herald report on the happenings of Washington Court House and Fayette County, it also included news from other cities and counties around Ohio.To support the Republican Party both locally and nationally, the Herald regularly published political speeches, editorials, news, and party platforms. During the election season, readers were urged to vote for Republican candidates—and to remind their neighbors to do the same. The Herald was in direct competition with the Democratic Ohio State Register and did not shy awayfrom correcting—or criticizing—news reported by its competitor. In addition to political matter, the Herald also included items of more general interest, such as a Children's Corner and works of poetry and other literature. This type of content became more common after the newspaper expanded from a four-page to an eight-page weekly in November 1879.By the mid-1910s, the Herald had ceased publication, though its name would live on in the daily, nonpartisan edition that had been established by the Millikan family in 1885, known as the Washington Daily Herald. This daily paper, whichthe Millikans sold to Joseph H. Parker of the Ohio State Register in 1910, ran independently of their Republican weekly and eventually merged with another local paper, the Record-Republican to form the Washington C.H. Record-Herald which is still published today as the Record Herald</p></p> Zeitungen sind hervorragende Quellen für genealogische und Familienforschungs-Informationen. Geburts-, Heirats- und Todesbekanntmachungen und -anzeigen sind übliche Bereiche der Genealogie. Aber auch in Artikeln über lokale Nachrichten und Ereignisse können Vorfahren auftauchen (z.B. Soziales, Gemeinschaft, Schule, Sport oder geschäftsbezogene Ereignisse).

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files

Title Eymann Genealogie
Description

Neuere Version meiner Datenbank aus myHeritage exportiert.

Id 29309
Upload date 2022-01-08 16:11:28.0
Submitter user's avatar Torsten Eymann visit the user's profile page
email torsten@eymann.net, teymann@web.de
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