. The annals of the families of Caspar, Henry, Baltzer and George Spengler, who settled in York County, respectively, in 1729, 1732, 1732, and 1751 : with biographical and historical sketches, and memorabilia of contemporaneous local events. first volunteer company for Mexico, and the first volunteer company forthe defence of the Capital in the late war. My two sons were men of talent andwealth ; Edward C. Carrington, Baltimore, Md., with two promising sons, EdwardJr., and Campbell, all lawyers. My youngest son, Campbell Carrington, is a mostsuccessful lawyer in Washington, D. C. This little b


. The annals of the families of Caspar, Henry, Baltzer and George Spengler, who settled in York County, respectively, in 1729, 1732, 1732, and 1751 : with biographical and historical sketches, and memorabilia of contemporaneous local events. first volunteer company for Mexico, and the first volunteer company forthe defence of the Capital in the late war. My two sons were men of talent andwealth ; Edward C. Carrington, Baltimore, Md., with two promising sons, EdwardJr., and Campbell, all lawyers. My youngest son, Campbell Carrington, is a mostsuccessful lawyer in Washington, D. C. This little bit of history I now write, may make your book sell well, with apicture of the old Colonial house I occupy, which Louis Kossuth, the exiled patriot,occupied when he was in this country. He made a visit here and slept in a roomwhich is placarded as a fact—a Hungarian family then occupied the house, andthey were all friends when boys. By my mothers side of the house, I am great-niece of Gen. Andrew Lewis,whose statue is among the bronze groupe in Richmond Va., and am also a grand-niece of Gen. Richard Montgomery, who fell at Quebec, in 1775, and who was mar-ried to Miss Livingston, of New York. Respectfully Yours, Marie a. AN OLD VIRGINIA MILL. IvETTER FROM MRS. CARRINGTON. 317 In A Memorial discourse on the life, character and services ofGen. Edward C. Carrington, delivered at the First PresbyterianChurch, of Washington, D. C, by the pastor. Rev. Dr. Byron Sun-derland, June 5, 1892, occurs the following: Nor less happy was lie in the union of his married life with her who tnoumshim today in the tokens of fresh widowhood, and who traces her family relation-ship through the Swoopes, the Trents and the Lewises of Revolutionary fame. NOTE 21. (page ii8.) The Pennsylvania Germans. Compared with their Defamers. Their Perrsecutions and Early Trials. Contemptuous Treatment by their English Neighbors. Their Dialect, and THEIR Glorious Record in the Wars OF THE Nation. Devas


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectyorkcou, bookyear1896