Farm Life: Lee and Cary Brown
Lee worked for Kroger Grocery Company for 43 years – 8 hours a day, 5 days a week – 40 hr week. He owned and farmed 450 acres: crops were Corn, Wheat, Soy Beans
Cary Brown (son of Lee): (at about age 55) (2003) Cary owns and manages his own business: 19 refrigerated semi – trucks bringing fresh produce from west coast back to Ohio. Gross revenue is about …
Farm Life: Norman L. Brown
Owned and farmed at least 160 acres or more in his prime. I seem to remember something about him owning and farming 2/3 or 3/4 of a square mile. Crops were corn, wheat, soybeans, hay and straw, and tobacco.
The Shell Dolls & Susie Giles
In 1941, when I was 11, my mother Ruth and dad, Abe, went on a 2 week summer road trip vacation to Florida. They drove down the east coast through St. Augustine to Miami, where I
The Brown Family Beginning
It is ironic that the family member who has no children ended up with the Brown/Patterson Family Bible, but that is exactly what happened. Perhaps it was fortuitous, because I
Photographic Documentation of Brown/Hefelfinger Farm
This picture documentation was taken by Carolyn Ruth Hunt on July 18, 1994 as Maxine and Verneda, the Hefelfinger daughters, were
Walter & Verno
Walter Scott Brown was born ?? in Montgomery county. Walter was allowed to attend high school from 1911. It was there that he met his future wife, Verno Marie Detrick and they graduated together as […]
My Encounters with Famous People
Sara Jane Kahn Moore 1946-47 – Sara Jane was a friend during my Junior year of High School during the play that we worked on together “The Late Christopher Bean”. See Attempted assassination of Gerald […]
Trivia – Did you know?…
I was runner-up in the 1954 Women’s Tennis Championship in Parkersburg, West Virginia I took voice lessons when I was I sang in the choir I was the Conductor of the Children’s choir
Genealogy Book of the Daniel Rasor Sr. Family
The information contained in this book started by the efforts of Clement Rasor, William and Thelma Baker, Dorothy Carey, Wayne Watkins of the Brookville Historical Society, and many other sources not now known. The contributor list continues to grow.