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Subject: [RHEA-L] Rhea names in Missouri
Date: Mon, 20 Dec 1999 16:08:43 EST


1910 CENSUS - CARTER COUNTY MISSOURI - KELLY TOWNSHIP


THIRTEENTH CENSUS OF THE UNITED STATES
CARTER COUNTY , MISSOURI
KELLY TOWNSHIP 1910

d/f Head Relation age p.birth father mother
19 Rhea,F.Marion Head 45 Mo Tn Mo
Sarah K wife 45(12/10) Mo Tn Mo
James W son 19 Mo Mo Mo
Ida A dau 17 Mo Mo Mo
Cora dau 15 Mo Mo Mo
William A son 12 Mo Mo Mo
Edward J son 8 Mo Mo Mo
Raymon son 4 Mo Mo Mo
*Mysic,James C g-son 3 Mo Mo Mo
*Mysic,Annie g-dau 2 Mo Mo Mo
Arbie A son 1 Mo Mo Mo
*************************

ABSTRACTS OF WILLS & ADMRo BONDS ~1816-ll353
Washington Co. MO.
RHEA, ROBERT P., intO Admr, Samuel P Browne, 28 Feb 1820.
(Adms A:12)
***

1907 Property Tax Lists for Vernon Co. MO.
Rhea, Henry
***


Vernon County, MO Back Taxes Index 1893
*****************************************************************
RHEA 160,
***********
Wintersville Cem. Sullivan Co. MO
DIRECTIONS: From Milan take E west, pass the Asburry Cemetery, turn left
on 2nd road, Wintersville Cemetery is about 4 miles on the right.

RHEA, Infant S of JL & EA 09/14/1887
*********
CAVE SPRINGS CEMETERY - Oregon Co., MO
Location: Abt. 3 miles SE of Alton, Mo. on E highway.
(PINEYTWP.) Sec. 14, Twp. 23, R 4W , Oregon Co.

Ralston, Rhea, 1882/ 1951
****
Heads of Household for Johnson County, Mo. Census 1840
Rhea, Hugh
******
Knights of Pythias Cemetery, Ironton, Iron Co., Mo.
Located on the outskirts of Ironton, Mo.

REAGAN, Rhea W. 14 Sept 1891 - 2 Sept 1965
***
Laurel Oak Cemetery
aka: Windsor City Cemetery T43, R24, S12 - Windsor Township Smith Street
(Hwy E), Windsor, Henry Co, MO 6394 burials from 1843 to 1999

BROWN, Mark Allen - b: Jul 5 1959 Kansas City, KS - d: Dec 28 1985
Shawnee, KS - son of Berle
& Helen R. SHERLEY BROWN - ch: Misty Rhea - bur: Dec 31 1985 L1326 GB
*************
HOSKINS CEMETERY, Carter Co., MO
LOCATED IN SECTION 17 TWP 27 N R1E ABOUT 2 MILES EAST OF VAN BUREN, MO. 1 1/2
MILE OFF
HWY 60. THE CEMETERY IS ON THE LEFT OF THE ROAD. OLDEST MARKER - FRANCIS
HOSKINS
1856. COPIED 1983 BY MARGARET ROAM.

RHEA: OTHO 14 MAR 1918 - 6 APR 1946
****
ROSE HILL CEMETERY, Breckenridge, Caldwell County, Missouri
To 1996
Located: North East Corner, East of Road

SALISBURY, Mother, 1861-1932
Father, 1847-1920
Berta Rhea, Mar. 17, 1889 May 15, 1926
Fred Allen, Aug. 2, 1887 Mar. 29, 1947
******* Master Index for Obituary Books 1-8 Caldwell Co. Mo.
Rhea Catherine (Mrs. Charles) 5 801
Rhea Mary (Mrs.) 2 458
*******************************************

SOME BUSINESS MEN FIFTY YEARS AGO IN KINGSTON MO.
Narrator: Mrs. Wm. McAfee, Hamilton

Mrs. McAfee, as a girl, lived in the country near Mirabile and they did
their trading there, hence she knew little of the stores in Kingston till
they
moved there in the early 70s.
She recalled the Heiser furniture store, the store kept by D.G. McDonald
(sr.) on the corner east of the courthouse, the very corner where some 25
years later, his sons had a general store in Kingston. The millinery store
of
Mrs. Costello-Smith (Costello being her first husband) was a block west of
the
courthouse, the Fenn store was on the west end of Main (the street at front
of
the courthouse). She remembered that the McDonald store, the Fenn store and
the Costello-Smith store all went to Hamilton in the 80s. One of the Fenn
girls married Chas. Boroff.
The Switzer livery barn stood in her time and burned down three times in
the same spot.
Her memory of the Northup Lewis firm is interesting. Mr. Northrup's
daughter married Mr. Lewis and this couple were the parents of Mrs. Harry
Sloan of Hamilton and Rev. Glenn Lewis, and other children. After the
general
store business which they had was ended, Northup and Lewis ran a big vineyard
and had a wine press on the lots now owned by Mrs. Altha Crockett in north
Kingston, where a wine parlor was located, and much frequented. It was the
last house on this street.
She recalled old Augustus Mack who was a while in early 60s ran a
harness
shop in partners with Wm. Goodman in the town. Goodman moved to Hamilton and
Mack went on by himself for a long time. The Goodman family ran a hotel in
Kingston in the early 60s but left town 1864 to start a hotel at Hamilton.
It
was while working on the 1860 courthouse that Enos Dudley, one of the early
carpenters, met a Goodman girl and married.
She recalled that Mr. Boucher who lived near the Heiser wagon shop, had
two daughters, both musicians. One married Wm. Spivey of Kingston and she
gave lessons in organ (Mrs. McAfee took of her). The other married Dr.
Stevens of Hamilton, and she had a music class in that town.
Ed Gapen was a carpenter in the 70 and 80s till he fell to his death
from
a ladder. Mr. Rhea kept a blacksmith shop at the corner east of the present
hotel. Tickey Johnson's father had a saloon in the middle of the block south
of the courthouse.
In the early 70s, T.D. Clarkson grandfather of Mrs. James Kautz of
Hamilton, edited the Caldwell County Citizen and with him at times was one
Lenzy who afterwards became a lawyer in New York City. Mills and Spivey ran
the Kingston Sentinel. John T. Botthoff had a drug store in the late 70s and
previously was a well known drug clerk for other drug stores.
There was no bank in Kingston for years and years. The first bank that
Mrs. McAfee recalls was the one organized in early 80s in the south room of
the Commercial Hotel by the Cox family.
Interview February 1935.



















Patricia L. Hall
Olathe, Ks.

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