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Terry Mason's Family History Site36,270 names. Major lines: Allen, Beck, Borden, Buck, Burden, Carpenter, Carper, Cobb, Cook, Cornell, Cowan, Daffron, Davis, Downing, Faubion, Fauntleroy, Fenter, Fishback, Foulks, Gray, Harris, Heimbach, Henn, Holland, Holtzclaw, Jackson, Jameson, Johnson, Jones, King, Lewis, Mason, Massengill, McAnnally, Moore, Morgan, Overstreet, Price, Peck, Rice, Richardson, Rogers, Samuel, Smith, Taylor, Thomas, Wade, Warren, Weeks, Webb, Wodell, Yeiser. |
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He may have run a livery stable on Short St. in Lexington with Albert Harmer around the time of his marriage. That fall, the couple headed to Liberty, Missouri. The 1850 census lists him as a blacksmith with property valued at about $1800. The 1860 census lists him as a farmer with real property of $7,000 and personal property at $12,000. He farmed 170 acres y practically adjacent to the city of Liberty on the south side of the main east-west road through the city.
George Clifford (Jolly) Wymore
"Jolly" Wymore was shot and killed coming home from school when he was across the street from the Clay County Savings Assn. Bank on Feb. 13, 1866 the day the Jesse James gang robbed it. As the robbers left the bank, they fired several shots at bystanders, killing young Wymore. Some said that Frank James fired the fatal shot. This was the James gang’s first bank robbery and "Jolly" Wymore the first of many killed by the gang. The robbery netted the gang about $60,000 in gold, silver, currency and Treasury bearer bonds; it was thought to be the largest sum the James gang garnered in a single bank robbery. The loss forced the bank to close paying about 60 cents on a dollar deposit. See History of Clay and Platte Counties ... (n. 9), pp. 259-61
She was living in Liberty and not married in 1896.
He may have run a livery stable on Short St. in Lexington with Albert Harmer around the time of his marriage. That fall, the couple headed to Liberty, Missouri. The 1850 census lists him as a blacksmith with property valued at about $1800. The 1860 census lists him as a farmer with real property of $7,000 and personal property at $12,000. He farmed 170 acres y practically adjacent to the city of Liberty on the south side of the main east-west road through the city.
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