I'm Rob Salzman of 4130 SW 117th Ave # 415 Beaverton, OR, 97005 USA.

Welcome to e-familytree.net. E-familytree.net is my personal genealogy hobby site. The data contained here has been gathered through 20 years of genealogy. Some small part of it is my original research, but most of it has been shared with me.

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Jether Dobbs and Della Wood



Husband Jether Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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Wife Della Wood (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: William Warren Wood (1863-1949) 1
         Mother: Permelia E. Collins (1876-1944) 1





Children
1 M Douglas Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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2 F Carol Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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John Dobbs and Anna Weist



Husband John Dobbs

           Born: 1759 - Dutchess County, New York 2
     Christened: 
           Died: After 1840 - Clinton, County, New York 2
         Buried: 


         Father: David Dobbs (1730-After 1782)
         Mother: Rachael Ostrander (1736-After 1783)


       Marriage: 21 Feb 1791 - New York 2




Wife Anna Weist

           Born: 24 Mar 1757 - Dutchess County, New York 2
     Christened: 
           Died: Bef 1840 - Clinton, County, New York 2
         Buried: 



Children
1 F Rachael Dobbs

           Born: 10 Sep 1796 - Rhinebeck, Dutchess County, New York 2
     Christened: 
           Died: 16 May 1887 - Bath, Steuben County, New York 2
         Buried: 
         Spouse: Benjamin Franklin Look (1788-1877)
           Marr: 15 Jan 1815 - Kinderhook, Columbia County, New York 2





John Hamiter Dobbs and Tennie Belle Dunn



Husband John Hamiter Dobbs 1

           Born: 7 Jan 1867 - Cartersville, GA
     Christened: 
           Died: 4 Jan 1934 - Chattanooga, TN
         Buried: 
       Marriage: 




Wife Tennie Belle Dunn 1

           Born: 5 Oct 1877 - Cartersville, GA
     Christened: 
           Died: 6 Oct 1948 - Chattanooga, TN
         Buried: 


         Father: Benjamin Meeks Dunn (1843-1913) 1
         Mother: Cynthia Serena Parks (1853-1930) 1





Children
1 F Frances Evelyn Dobbs 1

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           Died:  - Saint Petersburg, FL
         Buried: 
         Spouse: Fritz Kries (      -      ) 1



2 M Robert M. Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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3 F Lucille Elizabeth Dobbs 1

           Born: 26 Dec 1898 - Cartersville, GA
     Christened: 
           Died: 26 Oct 1971 - Memphis, TN
         Buried:  - Chattanooga, TN
         Spouse: Robert Rabb Shedd (1895-1950) 1
           Marr: 12 Oct 1921




General Notes (Husband)

John Hamiter Dobbs was a tailor who owned his own shop inChattanooga. He suffered a massive stroke in his store, and a robbertook advantage of the situation by robbing him. He lingered forseveral months before dying.


John L. Dobbs



Husband John L. Dobbs

           Born: Abt 1834 3
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         Father: Hiram Dobbs (Abt 1805-Bef 1860)
         Mother: Mary Grubb (Abt 1802-      )


       Marriage: 




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Joseph Dobbs and Celia M. Fish



Husband Joseph Dobbs 4

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       Marriage: 7 Aug 1856 - Williamson County, Texas




Wife Celia M. Fish 4

           Born: Abt 1839 - Jasper County, Texas
     Christened: 
           Died: 
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         Father: Joseph Fish (1797-1862) 4
         Mother: Nancy 'Ann' Dykes (1802-      ) 4





Darryl Kim Ruthardt and Kelli Dobbs



Husband Darryl Kim Ruthardt (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: Donald Floyd Ruthardt
         Mother: Sandra Nadine Fitzgerald


       Marriage: 

   Other Spouse: Kimberly Yvonne Peters




Wife Kelli Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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Children
1 F Jessica Dawn Ruthardt (details suppressed for this person)

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2 M Bryan Ruthardt (details suppressed for this person)

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Robert Rabb Shedd and Lucille Elizabeth Dobbs



Husband Robert Rabb Shedd 1

           Born: 26 May 1895 - Monticello, Fairfield, SC
     Christened: 
           Died: 4 Aug 1950 - Chattanooga, TN
         Buried:  - Chattanooga, TN
       Marriage: 12 Oct 1921




Wife Lucille Elizabeth Dobbs 1

           Born: 26 Dec 1898 - Cartersville, GA
     Christened: 
           Died: 26 Oct 1971 - Memphis, TN
         Buried:  - Chattanooga, TN


         Father: John Hamiter Dobbs (1867-1934) 1
         Mother: Tennie Belle Dunn (1877-1948) 1




General Notes (Husband)

Robert Rabb Shedd was a soldier in the 42nd (Rainbow) Division inWorld War I. This article was written for The Stars and Stripes, theU.S. military newspaper in Europe, by his grandson, Brian SheddBrooks, then editor (1998):

FOR MAY 24 SUNDAY MAG, THE STARS AND STRIPES, 1998.

(EDITOR'S NOTE: Stars and Stripes Editor Brian S. Brooks recentlyretraced his grandfather's steps in France during World War I andpieced together this account of the battle in which he was wounded.The battle took place 80 years ago, as Brooks recounts in thisMemorial Day Weekend tribute.)

By BRIAN S. BROOKS Editor, The Stars and Stripes

SOMERANCE, France -- Field mice are more common than people here.Humans barely outnumber the occasional red foxes that roam thehillsides in search of prey. The road that leads from this sleepy farmhamlet to nearby Landres is seldom traveled. A few cars a day, almostall owned by locals, traverse the rolling hills between the towns, twomere specks found only on the most detailed maps of France.

For the most part, the only things that provide evidence of humanpresence are the neatly plowed fields and the sputter of an occasionaltractor. One of those roadside shrines containing an image of theVirgin Mary, so common in Catholic France, protects the crops. This,you see, is farm country. French farm country. Rural France. Off thebeaten track.

Indeed, except for the thin layer of blacktop on theSomerance-to-Landres road, this place must look much the same as itdid 80 years ago. It can't possibly have changed much. Nothing muchchanges here.

Still, I'm not sure that my grandfather, were he alive today, wouldrecognize the place. That's because when he was here, almost 80 yearsago, this road wasn't so peaceful. On Oct. 14, 1918, it was no-man'sland -- hell on earth between the powerful German army and a millionor so Americans brought to France by Gen. John J. Pershing to fightthe War to End All Wars. On that day, the Somerance-to-Landres roadwas on the front lines.

My grandfather, Sgt. 1st Class Robert R. Shedd, was a long way fromhis home in Monticello, S.C. He had dropped out of Clemson to join theArmy when his country called. As an electrical engineering major, hewas a natural for assignment to Co. C of the 117th Engineers. The117th was to distinguish itself while attached to the 42nd Division,the so-called Rainbow Division, Gen. Douglas MacArthur's World War Ioutfit. After basic training at Fort Jackson, S.C., Shedd had beensent by train to Camp Mills, N.Y., itself a world away from ruralSouth Carolina, and then, six weeks later, by ship to faraway France.

Ironically, he now found himself in French farm country, land that innormal times would look almost like home to a South Carolina farm boy.But these weren't normal times.

The Germans had invaded France four years earlier, and they had nearlyreached the suburbs of Paris itself before Gen. Pershing's Americans,my grandfather among them, turned the tide at Chateau Thierry. TheGermans knew by now that they were facing a formidable foe,particularly when fighting alongside the British and the French,determined to recover every centimeter of the land that was theirs.

The young and fresh American Army by now had already been tested, andso had my grandfather. In a tattered clipping from the Winnsboro,S.C., newspaper of Feb. 6, 1919, he tells the story of that test:

"In February 1918, we were sent to the Alsace-Lorraine trenches, andthen our first taste of real war began. Here we were engaged in layingout and building dugouts for the protection of our soldiers. At thistime we were attached to the Rainbow Division, which was the firstdivision of American soldiers to take over a sector of the trenches.

"Here in the Alsace-Lorraine trenches we were subjected to shell fireand were caught in a number of barrages, but saw no fighting at closerange. We spent 110 days in these trenches before being relieved.

"After leaving the trenches in Alsace-Lorraine we were given a periodof rest, after which we were rushed to the Champagne sector, where webegan to prepare for the great German drive on Paris that was to takeplace later. Here, near Chalons, I received my first baptism of fire.

"During the first days of the drive the Germans put up what is perhapsthe greatest barrage of shell fire in the history of warfare. We weregiven orders to stand our ground at all costs, and at the end of threedays the Germans had not gained an inch. During this fighting, ourdivision faced as many as 15 waves of German troops in one day. Attimes the fighting was hand-to-hand, and in many instances, whenautomatics became too hot to handle, men fought with knives."

After failing to dislodge the Americans at Chalons, the Germansshifted the point of attack to Chateau Thierry, and the Rainbow rushedthere to join the fight once again. Shedd recounts the horror of thatbattle:

"Here I saw what I thought to be the most terrible spectacle of deadduring the whole war. At places the ground was covered with the bodiesof the dead, men and horses matted together. The sight was terrible.Here we fought for eight days, during which time the Americans wereable to drive the Germans back and save Paris."

From Chateau Thierry the Rainbow went into the battles of St. Mihieland the Argonne Forest. It was there that the Rainbow relieved the 1stInfantry Division and entered what would be Shedd's final battle onOct. 14, 1918.

Until now, the Argonne, a dense forest that provided good cover, hadprotected the Americans' advance. But by the morning of Oct. 14, theyhad fought their way to the edge of the forest, and the jumping offpoint for the Rainbow was just outside Somerance. Shedd's engineers,with no remaining officer and him in charge, were to cut throughbarbed wire at the front to assist the advance of the 3rd Battalion,165th New York Infantry Regiment.

"During the early morning, we went into battle," Shedd told theWinnsboro paper. "I had one platoon of 50 men. Within the first fewminutes of fighting, I had lost two-thirds of my men. We were fightingin the face of terrific machine gun fire and advancing as if it wereonly popguns.

"Suddenly I felt a shot in my foot, and a few moments later anothermachine gun bullet hit me in the ankle, breaking the small bone of theleg."

By now, Shedd and what remained of his platoon had reached theSomerance-to-Landres road, which runs along a natural depressionbetween the hillside from which they had launched the attack and thehillside on the opposite side of the road, where the Germans wereentrenched. All the way, they were subjected to heavy fire.

"I tried to go on," Shedd recalled later. "As I approached the road Irealized that if I stepped into the road I would most likely be hitagain. However, I decided to try it. Almost as soon as I stepped inthe road I was hit again, this time in the side, and I went down.

"Two of the men caught me and tried to drag me out of the road. Asthey did so, both were shot. Two others went back to get a stretcherto carry me on, and I have never seen them since. I suppose they werekilled by the machine gun fire."

Later, Shedd would learn that he had been hit in the lung. Only thefact that the wound was seared shut by a tracer round would keep himfrom bleeding to death.

"All the stretcher-bearers had been killed, and there was nothing todo but lie there on the ground and watch the fighting. For seven hoursthey fought over and around me, and for seven hours I watched themfall and many of them die. That night, when our division was relieved,those who were still on their feet carried the rest of us who werewounded back of the lines."

There, a medic named E.R. Jorden administered first aid and gave him adiagnosis tag: "Left side G.S.W. (gunshot wound); G.S.W. B. Right leg.A.T.S. given."

The next day medics took Shedd to a field hospital, where he wasoperated on. He later was transported to an evacuation hospital andfrom there to a base hospital at Angers. On Nov. 15, four days afterthe Armistice he helped to bring about, Shedd sailed from Brest,landing at Newport News, Va., on Thanksgiving Day of 1918.

"I was so sick and weak I could not be up," Shedd later told thenewspaper. "But when they told me we were in sight of Newport News, Itold them I would take a look at Old America again if it killed me,and I got up long enough to take a look. It certainly was a happyThanksgiving Day for me."

From there he went to a convalescent hospital at Fort McPherson inAtlanta, where he met my grandmother, a volunteer nurse from nearbyCartersville, Ga. They married a couple of years later, and my mother,the first of their three children, was born in October 1922.

I think often of that place along the Somerance-to-Landres road inFrance, and I am especially happy now to have finally seen it. Bypiecing together my grandfather's account of the battle with theRainbow Division's history of the war, published in 1935, I pinpointedwithin a hundred yards the place where my grandfather was shot.

Another tattered clipping in my grandmother's scrapbook, undated butclearly published some years later, reminds our family of that day.The clipping announces that Shedd had finally been awarded the PurpleHeart for his actions.

In my war, Vietnam, a sergeant who led a platoon of engineers into theface of heavy machine gun fire would have merited a Bronze Star forvalor, if not a Silver Star. In his war, Shedd had trouble gettingeven the Purple Heart he had earned by spilling his blood on theSomerance-to-Landres road.

I suppose I understand that. After all, there was really no one leftto write a citation for a medal. Most of the platoon was gone, andthere was no officer. Still, I often think about this unsung hero, theman who displayed more bravery than I could ever have mustered.Somehow, I don't think he got the recognition he deserves.

After the war, Shedd finished Clemson to become the first person in myfamily to graduate from college. From there he joined the WestinghouseCorp., for which he would work for the rest of his life. Aftertraining in Pittsburgh, he and my grandmother would move to Atlanta,where my mother was born, then settle in Chattanooga, Tenn.

Shedd was a hero in peacetime, too. He was a co-founder of TennesseeTemple University in Chattanooga and became chairman of the board ofdeacons of Highland Park Baptist Church, which during his time had thelargest congregation in the Southern Baptist Convention.

Shedd died Aug. 4, 1950, in Chattanooga, a little more than a monthbefore my fifth birthday. He lived to be only 55, and his doctor, onhis death certificate, listed as the cause of death "cancer caused bya gunshot wound to the kidney suffered during World War I." Despitethat, my grandmother never collected a penny in compensation from thegovernment, even with the help of Sen. Estes Kefauver, the familylawyer. She never pressed it; after all, my grandfather was just doingwhat his country expected him to do.

I think often about how fortunate Shedd was to have been wounded, ifit had to happen at all, with a tracer round. But for that, he wouldnever have lived to meet my grandmother. But for that, my mother, mybrother and I would not have existed. But for that, I would never havemet this man I adored. But for that, America would have lost animportant son like so many others who didn't make it back from theBattle of the Argonne Forest.

At nearby Romagne, the American cemetery holds the remains of 14,246men who gave their lives on the fields of France, all of them duringWorld War I and many of them in the battle my grandfather survived. Itis the largest American cemetery in Europe, even larger than the oneat Normandy. The bodies of thousands more were sent home.

Although I was a young child when my grandfather died, he made alasting impression on me. I remember him well, and I remember him assoft-spoken and quiet, deeply religious and the model of what ahusband, father and grandfather should be.

To this day, I have trouble imagining my mild-mannered, soft-spokengrandfather as a 23-year-old sergeant leading a platoon of engineersinto battle against the Germans. But he did it. I have been to theplace it happened. It is quiet now. The Somerance-to-Landres road isback in French hands. The farmers plow the adjacent fields annually,and the crops grow strong, nourished in part by the blood spilledthere.

Gen. Pershing, for one, knew that American blood would have to bespilled, and he saw it as repayment of a national debt. When hearrived with his Army in France, Pershing recalled what the Frenchhero Lafayette had done for America in our War of Independence fromBritain. It was time, he said, for Americans to return the favor andsave France.

"Lafayette, we are here!" Pershing proclaimed at Lafayette's tomb onlytwo days after landing in France.

The going was tough at times. The battle that began on Oct. 14 on theedge of the Argonne Forest continued until Oct. 31, when the Rainbowwas finally relieved. In two weeks, the American Army had advancedonly about 1,200 yards, almost half of it that first day. After Oct.31, it would advance more quickly.

On Nov. 11, 1918, battered by the advancing Americans and with theirbacks at the Belgian border, the Germans sued for peace. The peacedidn't last. Only a quarter-century later, my father would be back inEurope, fighting with other Americans to defeat the Germans yet again.Some of those Americans would pass once again along theSomerance-to-Landres road.

Ironically, in both of those wars our troops, including my father andgrandfather, read The Stars and Stripes, the newspaper I now edit.

That, however, is another story. For now, let's just recognize thatShedd was one of many American heroes a long way from home who helpedthe French get their country back. The rest of the world may not knowabout the unsung hero I cherished as a boy. But to me, he will alwaysrepresent what our country is all about. He was one of America's best.

Today, thanks to him and his compatriots, Somerance and Landres arefree and sleepy once again. Nothing much changes here.


Malinda Dobbs



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Wife Malinda Dobbs

           Born: Abt 1845 3
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         Father: Hiram Dobbs (Abt 1805-Bef 1860)
         Mother: Mary Grubb (Abt 1802-      )





Martha Elizabeth Dobbs



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Wife Martha Elizabeth Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: James Howard Dobbs Jr (1924-1984) 1
         Mother: Ruth Ferrel Gamble





Mary Jane Dobbs



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Wife Mary Jane Dobbs

           Born: 24 Feb 1848 3
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         Father: Hiram Dobbs (Abt 1805-Bef 1860)
         Mother: Mary Grubb (Abt 1802-      )





Mary Lou Dobbs



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Wife Mary Lou Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: Arthur Herbert Dobbs (1922-1998) 1
         Mother: Lona Evans (1919-2001) 1





Robert L. Harrison and Mary Virginia Dobbs



Husband Robert L. Harrison (details suppressed for this person)

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Wife Mary Virginia Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: James Howard Dobbs (1897-1984) 1
         Mother: Lula Jeanette Aiken (1893-1974) 1





Children
1 M Robert Lee Harrison (details suppressed for this person)

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2 M James Michael Harrison (details suppressed for this person)

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3 M David Lewis Harrison (details suppressed for this person)

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Melissa Dobbs



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Wife Melissa Dobbs

           Born: 11 Feb 1838 3
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         Father: Hiram Dobbs (Abt 1805-Bef 1860)
         Mother: Mary Grubb (Abt 1802-      )





Nancy Dobbs



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Wife Nancy Dobbs

           Born: Abt 1842 3
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         Father: Hiram Dobbs (Abt 1805-Bef 1860)
         Mother: Mary Grubb (Abt 1802-      )





Benjamin Franklin Look and Rachael Dobbs



Husband Benjamin Franklin Look

           Born: 18 Nov 1788 - Stillwater, Saratoga County, New York 2
     Christened: 
           Died: 21 Mar 1877 - Kinderhook, Columbia County, New York 2
         Buried: 
       Marriage: 15 Jan 1815 - Kinderhook, Columbia County, New York 2




Wife Rachael Dobbs

           Born: 10 Sep 1796 - Rhinebeck, Dutchess County, New York 2
     Christened: 
           Died: 16 May 1887 - Bath, Steuben County, New York 2
         Buried: 


         Father: John Dobbs (1759-After 1840)
         Mother: Anna Weist (1757-Bef 1840)





Children
1 F Ardelia Look

           Born: 15 Apr 1832 - Bath, Steuben County, New York 2
     Christened: 
           Died: 2 Oct 1890 - Linn County, Iowa 2
         Buried: 
         Spouse: Jacob Harrison (1834-1918)
           Marr: 17 Jan 1856 - Painted Post, Steuben County, New York 2





Robert M. Dobbs



Husband Robert M. Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: John Hamiter Dobbs (1867-1934) 1
         Mother: Tennie Belle Dunn (1877-1948) 1


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Sara Dobbs



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Wife Sara Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: Gene Dobbs
         Mother: Janice Rae Reneau





Sarah Elizabeth Dobbs



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Wife Sarah Elizabeth Dobbs

           Born: Abt 1835 3
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         Father: Hiram Dobbs (Abt 1805-Bef 1860)
         Mother: Mary Grubb (Abt 1802-      )





Wayne Dobbs and Margaret Myrick



Husband Wayne Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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Wife Margaret Myrick (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: William Myrick
         Mother: Jewel Ellen McGowan



   Other Spouse: Philip Tworivers



Children
1 M Eddie Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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2 M William Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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William Dobbs



Husband William Dobbs (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: Wayne Dobbs
         Mother: Margaret Myrick


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William Riley Dobbs



Husband William Riley Dobbs

           Born: 28 Oct 1825 3
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         Father: Hiram Dobbs (Abt 1805-Bef 1860)
         Mother: Mary Grubb (Abt 1802-      )


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John A. Dobbyns and Narcissa Moon



Husband John A. Dobbyns 1

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       Marriage: 16 Mar 1820 - Lunenburg Co., VA




Wife Narcissa Moon 1

           Born: Abt 1800
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         Father: Abner Hudson Moon (1786-1814) 1
         Mother: Julaney Farmer (      -      ) 1





Dan Doberstein and Terry Jens



Husband Dan Doberstein (details suppressed for this person)

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Wife Terry Jens (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: Lester Jens
         Mother: Wanda Luceille Sullins





Children
1 F Heidi Doberstein (details suppressed for this person)

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2 F Danna Doberstein (details suppressed for this person)

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Danna Doberstein



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Wife Danna Doberstein (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: Dan Doberstein
         Mother: Terry Jens





Heidi Doberstein



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Wife Heidi Doberstein (details suppressed for this person)

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         Father: Dan Doberstein
         Mother: Terry Jens





Henry Zachary Jones Jr and Sarah Dobey



Husband Henry Zachary Jones Jr 1

           Born: 1917 - Dacusville, Pickens Co., SC
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           Died: 12 Jul 1999 - Greenville, SC
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         Father: Henry Zachary Jones (1891-1972) 1
         Mother: Martha Inez Smith (1897-1937) 1


       Marriage: 




Wife Sarah Dobey 1

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           Died: 1985
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General Notes (Husband)

Graduate Clemson University


John Blassingame Liles and Sarah Alta Dobkins



Husband John Blassingame Liles 1

           Born: 27 Jul 1861 - Polk, NC
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           Died: 2 Jul 1940 - Dublin, TX
         Buried:  - New Dublin Cemetery, Erath, TX


         Father: Robert Lyle (1835-1856) 1
         Mother: Lydia Anna Blassingame (      -      ) 1


       Marriage: 25 Sep 1887

   Other Spouse: Sarah Alta Carpenter (      -      ) 1 - 25 Sep 1887




Wife Sarah Alta Dobkins 1

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Wasyl Siemaszko Dobratynski and Anna Sapiezanka



Husband Wasyl Siemaszko Dobratynski 5

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Wife Anna Sapiezanka 5

           Born: Abt 1575 - Of Bykhov, Mglv, Byelorussia 5
     Christened: 
           Died: 
         Buried: 


         Father: Pawel Sapieha (Abt 1523-1580) 5
         Mother: Anna Chodkiewiczowna (Abt 1540-After 1595) 5





Peter Dobree



Husband Peter Dobree 6

           Born: 
     Christened: 
           Died: 
         Buried: 
       Marriage: 




Wife

           Born: 
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           Died: 
         Buried: 



Children
1 F Rachel Dobree 6 7

           Born: 
     Christened: 
           Died: 
         Buried: 
         Spouse: Philip Bainbrigge Lt-Col (      -1799) 6 7





Henry Pott and Hazel Dobrileit



Husband Henry Pott (details suppressed for this person)

           Born: 
     Christened: 
           Died: 
         Buried: 


         Father: Henry Pott (1882-1952) 8 9
         Mother: Helen Kuenke (1882-1963) 8 9


       Marriage: 




Wife Hazel Dobrileit (details suppressed for this person)

           Born: 
     Christened: 
           Died: 
         Buried: 



Children
1 F Diane Pott (details suppressed for this person)

           Born: 
     Christened: 
           Died: 
         Buried: 



2 M David Pott (details suppressed for this person)

           Born: 
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Sources


1 Herman Geshwind, Old Pendelton District Database - a project of the Old Pendelton District Chapter of the South Carolina Genealogica Society..

2 Terrence (Terry) Kelly-Boscobel.ged-Sep 1998.

3 Grubb.GED Ernie Grubb May 2000.

4 J. Feagin, Gedcom from J. Feagin.

5 June Ferguson Unknown, June Ferguson's Royalty GED.

6 Peter Western, </pre><a href="http://www.genealogydatabase.co.uk/tngsoonad.html">http://www.genealogydatabase.co.uk/tngsoonad.html</a><pre>.

7 Edward III Decendents.

8 1224494.ged.

9 James Miracle, 1735328.ged - - Compiled by James Miracle.

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