OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS

A Part of Genealogy Express
 

Welcome to
Hamilton County, Ohio
History & Genealogy


BIOGRAPHIES

Source:
History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present
- Illustrated -
Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers -
1894

A B C D E F G H I J K L M
N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
  JOHN B. JEWETT is the eldest son of Col. E. F. Jewett, well-known to the people of Hamilton county, from the past service in the offices of county engineer and county surveyor.  The subject of this sketch was born at Newtown, June 24, 1865.  From his mother, who possessed considerable talent, and acquired some note as a writer, he inherited a strong love for literature.  He received his educational training in the public schools of Newtown and at Chickering Institute, Cincinnati.  While at the latter school his deep literary sympathies and aptitude for composition attracted the attention of Prof. W. H. Venable, who thenceforth bestowed upon him especial encouragement and instruction.  After leaving school, and until his twenty-first year, he followed his father's profession of civil engineering, being a part of the time in the service of the county.  In 1887 he took a place on the staff of the Cincinnati Evening Post, but did not hold it long.  At the beginning of Judge Ferris' first term, in February, 1891, he was offered a clerkship in the probate court of this county, which he accepted and retained for two years.  Mr. Jewett's literary productions have been published in the various newspapers and magazines of the first class.  His writings, both prose and verse, show sensitive feeling, and a faculty that is inclined to be original, ingenious and artistic.  A distinguished writer and critic has pronounced one of his romantic pross stories "equal in quality to Irving." - [Written by Edwin F. Flynn.
Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 510
  JOHN A. JOHNSON was born at Lynchburg, Campbell Co., Va., Feb. 24, 1849.  When he was nearly a year old his parents removed to Cincinnati, Ohio, and he resided there continuously until 1883, when he removed to Covington, Ky., where he now makes his home.  He was educated in the public schools of Cincinnati, graduating at Hughes High School June 29, 1866, the fifth in a class of twenty, bearing away two out of three prizes given, a silver medal for mathematics and a fifty-dollar scholarship for the natural sciences.  After graduating he made a tour of Europe, in the course of which he made the ascent of Mt. Blanc, in the company of two guides.  On his return he engaged in the leaf tobacco business with his father, John T. Johnson, with whom he remained seven years.  In 1874 he became bookkeeper for S. Davis Jr. & Company, large pork merchants, and in 1876 paymaster for the Cincinnati Water Works.  In 1880 he was appointed chief deputy in the office of the county clerk of Hamilton county, and in 1883 became secretary of the Covington and Cincinnati Bridge Company, where he still remains.  Too young to participate in the great struggle of ’6l, at the close of the war, when a movement was started among the veterans to organize a battalion, he entered heartily into the movement and enlisted, Feb. 10, 1869, in Company B, First Battalion, Cincinnati Zouaves.  He was elected second lieutenant Dec. 20, 1870; promoted to first lieutenant Feb. 16, 1871; promoted to captain of Company B, Apr. 27, 1871, which position he filled by re-election until Dec. 20, 1879, when business engagements compelled him to resign.  In 1882 he was unanimously elected lieutenant-colonel of the First Regiment Infantry, O. N. G., and served until June 21, 1884, when by reason of removal from the State he was again compelled to resign.  He and his company were complimented in general orders, 1874, for promptness in responding to active duty call at the time of the Nelsonville riots.  He was honorably mentioned in the official reports of 1877 for duty at Columbus and Newark during the great railroad riots of that year, and served with distinction during the celebrated Cincinnati riot, of March, 1834.
Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 896
  JOHN WILLIAM JOHNSON was born in Wales, Nov. 15, 1842.  His parents came to this country in 1844, and after a brief sojourn in Cumberland, Md., settled in Pomeroy, Ohio, where they continued to reside, and where he was educated in the public and private schools.  His parents desired to see him enter the ministry, but the breaking out of the Civil war interfered, and he became chief assistant to Capt. (afterward Col.) C. W. Moulton, assistant quartermaster, United States Army, a brother-in-law of Senator and General Sherman, in which capacity he was employed throughout the war, with headquarters first at Gallipolis, and latterly at Cincinnati.
     At the close of the war he entered Harvard Law School, where he remained one year, and then returned to Cincinnati, where he entered the Cincinnati Law School, and was graduated therefrom in 1867.  Immediately thereafter he formed a partnership with Col. C. W. Moulton, under the firm name of Moulton & Johnson, which continued until the association with Warner M. Bateman, when the firm became Moulton, Bateman & Johnson.  Upon Mr. Bateman’s appointment as United States District Attorney, and consequent retirement from the firm, T. A. Blinn was admitted, the firm name becoming Moulton, Johnson & Blinn, which partnership expired by limitation in 1876.  Lipman Levy succeeded Mr. Blinn, the firm thereafter being known as Moulton, Johnson & Levy until the death of Col. Moulton, in January, 1888, since which time it has been that of Johnson & LevyMr. Johnson married Belle, daughter of Charles E. Morse, of Maine, a descendant of Gen. Warren, of Bunker Hill fame.
Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 582
  JAMES AMBROSE JOHNSTON, physician and surgeon, office and residence No. 40 Everett street, Cincinnati, was born May 4, 1860, at Bainbridge, Ind., son of Rev. Edward and Fannie H. (Tomlinson) Johnston, the former a native of Indiana, of Scotch-Irish extraction, the latter a native of New Jersey, of English ancestry.  Dr. Johnston was educated at Petersburg, Ind., studied medicine with Dr. S. B. Tomlinson, graduated from the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery in the spring of 1881, and began the practice of his profession where we now find him located.  He is a member of the Cincinnati Academy of Medicine, and is assistant to the chair of gynecology in the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery.
Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 688
  J. A. JONES, retired farmer, was born in Sycamore township June 20, 1823, son of Jonathan Jones, also a native of Sycamore township, who was born in 1792, and died in 1880.  His mother, Nancy (Cochran) Jones, was born in Sycamore township, and died about 1835.  They were highly respected farmers, residing near the home of our subject. Their family consisted of nine children, four of whom are living: Levi, a blacksmith in Coal Creek, Ind.; Mary E., wife of Benjamin Ferris; Nancy, wife of Joseph Thompson, of Champaign county, Ill., and J. A.  Our subject’s maternal grandfather, who was of Irish origin, settled in Hamilton county early in the eighteenth century, and lived to be ninety-nine years and nine months of age.  His paternal grandfather was of Welsh descent, and also migrated to this county at an early day.   His grandmother is said to have been the first white female child born near the fort in what was formerly known as Turkey Bottom. 
     The subject of our sketch was reared in Sycamore township, and received his education in the district schools of same.  He then learned the plasterer’s trade, and followed it for forty-seven years, after which he turned his attention to farming, in which he has since been engaged.  He has been school director for a number of years.  Mr. Jones is a member of the Masonic Lodge and the I. O. O. F., and politically he is a Democrat.  He was married, Dec. 1, 1850, to Miss Mary A., daughter of Adam Grover, a resident of Hamilton county, and a native of Pennsylvania.  They became the parents of five children, four of whom are living: Ella Beeler, widow, residing with her brother near Hazelwood; Warren L.; Emery and Emmet, who run a sawmill near Hazelwood.

Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 1029
  JOHN D. JONES.   Among those who were prominently and intimately identified with the progress, growth and development of the commercial and mercantile interests of Cincinnati, the memory of John D. Jones is justly entitled to the respect of his fellow- citizens.
     He was born near Morgantown, Berks Co., Penn., Dec. 9, 1797, and was the son of John and Elizabeth Jones, being paternally of Welsh descent (as his name would indicate), with a mixture of Scotch-Irish blood derived by maternal descent.  His great-grandfather, David Jones, came to this country from Wales, about 1720, and settled in Berks county, whither a large number of his native people emigrated, becoming inhabitants, for the most part, of what is now known as the Conestoga Valley; and built the pretty little villages of Morgantown and Churchtown in the vicinity of that beautiful range of hills known as the Welsh Mountains.  They were mostly Episcopalians by faith and education, coming to this country as zealous members of the Church of England.  The father of our subject was a native and resident of the Keystone State, and died Jan. 14, 1810, at the Reading Forge, in Chester county, at the age of fifty-two years; at the time he was a farmer, and a recently-elected member of the House of Assembly of Pennsylvania, but died before taking his seat in that legislative body.  His wife having preceded him to the grave, dying Jan. 13, 1814, ten orphan children were left to mourn the loss of parents whose exemplary character as ardent Christians was worthy of the highest consideration.
     John D. Jones was one of the elder children in this family, and while quite young, prompted by ambition as well as necessity, left home, full of energy and life, to learn the mercantile business.  With that object in view he proceeded to Philadelphia, and was there employed by his maternal uncles, Thomas and John K. Graham.  In September, 1819, with his older brother, George W. Jones, he came to Cincinnati, crossing the Alleghany Mountains in the well-known Conestoga wagons —of whose size and character perhaps only the oldest inhabitants have a correct appreciation—and came down the Ohio river in a flatboat, bringing a stock of dry goods as well as some other necessary parts of an outfit to start a western store, and established the firm of George W. Jones & Company.  Thus they made their first essay as merchants in a field of labor which was at that time confined to a small and circumscribed territory of trade, but has since become expanded until it has assumed almost illimitable dimensions through the assistance of all the conveniences and advantages which the science, skill and industry of man have created.  On Dec. 1, 1820, at the early age of twenty-four years, his brother and partner died, leaving the care and responsibility of a new business, in an undeveloped and almost unsettled country, upon one as yet untried and inexperienced.  Notwithstanding this sad blow, received when his plans of promise and life had scarcely been formed, together with his uncle, Thomas Graham, he continued the business under the firm name of John D. Jones & Company, till its dissolution in 1827.  Nothing seems to have specially marked this period of his life in the prosecution of his mercantile pursuits, except the steady and constant increase and prosperity of the business.
     On Sept. 22, 1823, at Piqua, Miami Co., Ohio, Mr. Jones married Elizabeth Johnston, daughter of the late Col. John Johnston.  She was born Sept. 22, 1807, at the Military Post from which the city of Fort Wayne, Indiana, derived its name, at the time her father, so well and favorably known as one of our western pioneers, was United States factor and Indian agent.  In this connection it may not be improper to mention something of this venerable gentleman, whose personal appearance was familiar, down to within a few years past, to a large number of our citizens, especially to the members of the “Pioneer Association,” of which he was the president.  He was born in Donegal, Ireland, Mar. 17, 1775; came to Cincinnati, or, rather, Fort Washington, Feb. 7, 1793; was previously a clerk in the War office, at Philadelphia, under Gen. Dearborn; and for forty years was in the service of the United States as Indian agent, factor, or in some other fiduciary position, and as such being associated in the control of our governmental affairs in the West, for many years with Gen. Harrison and Cass, with whom he always maintained the most intimate and friendly relationship.  He died in the winter of 1860-61, in Washington City, at the age of eighty-six years, during the session of the Peace Commissioners appointed by the government to avert the impending rebellion which well-nigh destroyed our country.  Col. Johnston was a stanch  Federalist and Whig in politics, and several times attended, as a delegate, the general political conventions of his party.  In the later days of his life he often expressed his prediction of our Civil war, a prophecy which was too well realized, not in his day, however, the lamp of life having been extinguished but a few months before hostilities were commenced.  But to return from this diversion.  In 1827 Mr. Jones and his younger brother, Caleb, formed the copartnership of J. D. & C. Jones, and were prosperously engaged in business for the period of twenty-one years, during which time Pearl street was opened in order to accommodate the fast growing requirements of our mercantile interests under the following circumstances:  In 1830 J. W. Blachley, Avery & Sharpless, Goodman & Emerson, George Carlisle, C. & J. Bates, Ely Dorsey, B. B. Bowler, J. D. & C. Jones, bought from David Griffin 160 feet of ground on the south side of Pearl street, between Walnut and Main, and erected eight storehouses which were occupied in 1832, with the understanding that Griffin would erect a hotel on the corner of Walnut and Pearl.  In fulfillment of this agreement the “ Pearl Street House,” of which the late Col. John Noble was proprietor, was built.  Now not a vestige is left of the tavern which gave comfort and hospitable accommodations to the enterprising merchants of the West who came to this market for supplies; and of all the above-named parties the members of the last-mentioned firm are the sole survivors.  And although with the vicissitudes of time these old landmarks and familiar faces have passed away, the Pearl street of former days still exists in influence and importance as the center of trade which has been expanded and enlarged commensurate with the growth of our city.
     Mr. Jones was the senior partner successively of the firms of J. D. & C. Jones & Company and Jones Brothers & Company, and retired from all active participation in business in July, 1865, having been engaged in the dry-goods trade uninterruptedly for almost fifty years; during which time many of those who are now prominent among the merchants of our city were employed by him and received, in part, their mercantile education under his guidance and supervision.  The history of this mercantile house, so well known in the East and West, is identified and coincident with the development of Cincinnati, commencing first in a small and unpretentious way, and closing a career of almost half a century as one of the most important and influential, as well as successful establishments in the West.
     As a merchant Mr. Jones pursued a methodical and systematic business, giving his assiduous attention to the prosecution and management of what pertained to the tasks and labors devolving upon him; as a citizen he was associated in spirit and action with the party of progress and industry in most of the enterprises, public and private, which have facilitated the increase and development of the commercial, mercantile, banking and railroad interests of Cincinnati. In 1831 he was a member of the board of directors of the Lafayette Bank, and together with Josiah Lawrence, Judge David K. Este, Hon. Salmon P. Chase, and others, organized and for many years afterward continued in management of that influential corporation.  He was actively interested as one of the original board of directors in the establishment of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton railroad.  For many years was treasurer of the board of trustees of the Cincinnati Orphans’ Asylum, with which his wife was connected as one of the managers—an institution in whose management and welfare it was always his pride and pleasure to take the deepest interest, as well as to perform the laborious duties attached to the position of responsibility from which he was in time relieved by those who were younger and better able physically to fulfill the requirements of the position.
     During the war of the Rebellion three of his sons were in the service of the United States, of whom William Graham Jones, colonel of the Thirty-sixth O. V. I., a graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, fell mortally wounded at the battle of Chickamauga, Sept. 19, 1863; Charles Davis Jones, a graduate of the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, died in 1865 while lieutenant United States navy, having passed safely through the struggles and contests of his service in the war, and having been attached for some time to the frigate “Hartford” while floating the pennant of that gallant old hero, Admiral Farragut; and Frank J. Jones, who entered the army in April, 1861, as a private in the Guthrie Grays from Cincinnati, and returned home as captain and aid-de-camp United States Volunteers, in August, 1864, having served in the armies which operated in the South and West under Buell, Rosecrans and Thomas.
     Mr. Jones resided at Glendale, one of the many pleasant villages in the vicinity of Cincinnati, in the quiet enjoyment of the society of his wife, and the comfort of good health and a pleasant home until his death in August, 1878; his wife died in November, 1878, and the remains of both lie buried in Spring Grove Cemetery.
Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 504
  NEIL B. JONES, D. V. S., and dean of the Ohio Veterinary College, No. 135 Sycamore street, Cincinnati, was born in Chillicothe, Ohio, May 21, 1868, a son of W. G. and Huldah Jones, of Ross county, Ohio, the father a veterinary surgeon, still living, the mother deceased.  Our subject was educated in the schools of Adelphi, Ross county, Chillicothe, Ohio, and Toronto, Canada, and graduated from the Ontario Veterinary College, of the latter city, in April, 1889, since which time he has successfully followed the practice of his chosen profession.  He was honored with the deanship of the Ohio Veterinary College in October, 1893, an institution that is rapidly growing and bidding fair to be the most thorough of its kind on the the continent, having a Faculty of twelve professors, each of whom is a specialist in his branch.
     Prof. Jones was married Oct. 3, 1893, to Miss Nellie B. Socin.  They are both members of the Protestant denomination.  The Professor is a member of the Knights of Pythias, resident State secretary of the United States Veterinary Medical Association, and is also vice-president of the Ohio State Veterinary Medical Association.
Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 730
  OLIVER BELL JONES was born in Cincinnati, Jan. 4, 1856, a son of the late J. Dan Jones and Margaretta (Bell) Jones, both of whom were natives of Hamilton county, Ohio.  J. Dan Jones was the son of Oliver Jones and grandson of John Jones, the latter a Revolutionary soldier, a native of Maryland, who came to this section of the Northwest Territory in 1797, and purchased a tract of land in Columbia township from John Cleves Symmes and his associates, the title to which land still vests in the heirs of the original purchaser.  John Jones was closely identified with the early political history of Hamilton county, was one of the first justices of the peace, and was a member of both Houses of the State Legislature. His son, Oliver, was a soldier in the war of 1812, and was also a member of the House of Representatives, and of the Senate of the Ohio Legislature.  J. Dan Jones was for a number of years connected with the auditor’s office of Hamilton county, and was himself county auditor in 1856 and 1858.  He was a member of the constitutional convention of 1850; was for a number of years treasurer of his township, and for two terms was a member of the Decennial State Board of Equalization.  He died in 1873.  His wife Margaretta (Bell) Jones, who survived him but five years, was the granddaughter of the late Peter Bell, one of the first judges of the court of common pleas of Hamilton county.
     Oliver B. Jones received his education in the public schools of Columbia township and of Cincinnati, and was graduated from Woodward High School in the class of 1875.  For several years thereafter he was one of the clerical force in the office of the board of public works of Cincinnati.  During this period, he began the study of law and entered the Cincinnati Law School, graduating therefrom in 1880, and entering upon the practice of law in 1881.  Mr. Jones is a Democrat, and has been more or less actively identified with the work of his party in this county.  He held the position of an assistant under City Solicitor J. M. Dawson, and was, in 1890, his party’s nominee for probate judge.  On Sept. 28, 1886, he was married to Louise F., daughter of S. W. Stone, consulting engineer of the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern railroad.  She is a graduate of Cincinnati Wesleyan College.  Three children born of this marriage are: Stephen W.; Rufus B., and Louise Frances.  The family reside at Madisonville, where they are connected with the Methodist Episcopal Church.
Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 608
  PRICE J. JONES was born in Rome, Adams Co., Ohio, Mar. 17, 1844, a son of the late Milton and Ruth (Tracy) Jones, the former a native of Kentucky, of Welsh descent, the latter a native of New York.  Milton Jones was for a number of years a farmer of Adams county, and latterly of Edgar county, Ill., where he died Oct. 24, 1892.  His father, Dr. John Jones, a Virginian by birth, was the first physician to locate at the stockade at the Falls of the Ohio river, the present site of Louisville.
     Price J. Jones read law under the preceptorship of the late Judge John M. Collins, of Portsmouth, Ohio, and was admitted to practice by the Circuit Court of Adams county in September, 1869.  He then came to Cincinnati, and has ever since then engaged in the practice of law.  At the breaking out of the Civil war he enlisted in the Eighty-first O. V. I., and was mustered in as a private.  His regiment was of the Army of the Tennessee.  He was mustered out as first lieutenant July 21, 1865.  He is a member of the G. A. R., I. O. O. F., and K. of P. On Aug. 5, 1879, Mr. Jones was married to Isabella, daughter of Martin Clements, an old resident of Cincinnati.
Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 584
  WALTER ST. JOHN JONES, president of the Miami Valley Insurance Company, was born at New Haven, Conn., Sept. 2, 1850, son of John D. and Elizabeth (Johnston) Jones.  He attended the public schools of Cincinnati until the age of twelve, and then spent one year at Mt. Pleasant Military Academy, Sing Sing, N. Y., and the same length of time at Chester Military Academy, Westchester, Penn.  In 1869 he entered Yale College, and graduated in 1873, immediately thereafter commencing the study of law with Perry & Jenney, and entered the Cincinnati Law School, graduating in 1875.  He practiced in the State and United Slates courts until 1890, after which he devoted himself entirely to the management of property for non-residents and legal collections.  In November, 1891, he was elected vice president of the Miami Valley Insurance Company, of which he became president in February, 1892.  This Company was chartered as the Portsmouth Insurance Company, of Portsmouth, Ohio, in 1837; in 1860 the name was changed to the present style, and the offices were removed to Cincinnati.  Mr. Jones is also secretary and treasurer of the Lewis & Talbott Stone Company, of Centerville, Ohio, and president of the Dayton, Lebanon & Cincinnati Railroad Company.
     On Oct. 5, 1861, he married Jean, daughter of David and Agnes (Clark) Ross, of Louisville, Ivy., natives of Scotland, and one child, Agnes, was born to them.  Mrs. Jones died Apr. 15, 1885, and on Apr. 13, 1888, he married Martha B., daughter of Henry Lewis, of Cincinnati.  To this union one child, Elizabeth St. John, has been born.  Mr. Jones united with the Protestant Episcopal Church while a student at Westchester, Penn., and has been a member of the vestry of the church at Glendale for fifteen years.  He was also actively identified with the building of the Lyceum at that place. In politics Mr. Jones is a Republican.
Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 888
  WILLIAM H. JONES was born in the city of Bangor, North Wales, Nov. 4, 1840.  Early in life, he chose the profession of teaching, and was regularly trained for that profession in one of the British government normal colleges.  In 1866 he emigrated to this country, and in the spring of 1867, after obtaining a principal’s certificate from the Cincinnati board of examiners, taught for a short period in the public schools of Cincinnati.  In the fall of that year he was appointed principal of one of the public schools of Newport, Ky., and the following year was elected superintendent of the public schools of that city, which position he held ten years.  He then qualified himself for admission to the Bar, and shortly after severing his connection with the Newport schools, was, in 1879, regularly admitted to practice by the Kentucky court of appeals.
     Shortly after this he moved to Cincinnati, and associated himself with the law firm of Moulton, Johnson & Levy.  Subsequently he was admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of Ohio, as well as the United States Court.  Mr. Jones in early manhood married one who took the same professional training that he did, and who now ranks as one of the most prominent educators and pedagogical lecturers of the State of Ohio—Mrs. Jennie H. Jones.  For the first few years of his career at the Bar, he made a specialty of admiralty practice.  He is still connected with the firm of Johnson & Levy (formerly Moulton, Johnson & Levy), and in addition to this has formed a nominal partnership with Alfred Herholz, of Cincinnati.  Mr. Jones being a native of Wales is an ardent and enthusiastic Welshman, conspicuous at all public gatherings of that nationality, and is generally known among the Welsh- Americans of Cincinnati as “Y Cyfreithiwe Cymraeg”— the Welsh lawyer.
Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 603

Henry Cundell Juler
HENRY CUNDELL JULER

Source: History of Cincinnati and Hamilton Co., Ohio, Past & Present - Illustrated - Publ. Cincinnati, Ohio - S. B. Nelson & Co., Publishers - 1894 - Page 642

 

CLICK HERE to RETURN to
HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO

CLICK HERE to RETURN to
OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS

FREE GENEALOGY RESEARCH is My MISSION
GENEALOGY EXPRESS
This Webpage has been created by Sharon Wick exclusively for Genealogy Express  ©2008
Submitters retain all copyrights