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Your Name in History |
Enter your surname for a list of genealogy books with fascinating facts and history about your family name
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Search Olive Tree Genealogy Family of Websites
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Account Books 1772-1925 Find your ancestors in unique collection of original ledger books from stores, schools and individuals in USA & Canada
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Lost Faces Civil War era ancestor photo albums online
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Genealogy & Historical Documents
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Paper Trail Assorted Documents: Wills, land records, marriage certs, passports, indentures, slave records, estate inventories...
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Paper Trail Genealogy & Historical Documents
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Coffin Plate Collection Private collection of over 400 coffin plates with names of ancestors plus birth and death dates
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FREE subscription Be the first to know about great offers! Weekly updates of new databases. Get tips, research advice and other helpful ideas for finding your elusive brick-wall ancestor
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* GenealogyBank.com - search Historical Newspapers 1690 - 1977, Historical Books 1801 - 1900, Historical Documents 1789 - 1980, America's Obituaries 1977 to current, and Social Security Death Index 1937 to current
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Judson W. Dennis Sergeant, Company L, 119th Infantry American Expeditionary Forces
March 18, 1892 ~ October 17, 1918
"Write to me every week. And tell the others to write..." Judson Dennis, France June 21, 1918
June 21, 1918 Somewhere in France
Dear Mother:
How are you all by now? I'm getting along fine and having a good time. I'm anxious to hear from you. Write me all the news when you write.
How is Minnie, Tom and the kids getting along? Mother, tell me all the boys who have had to go to the army since I left from around home. Has Leslie and Joe M. had to go yet? Well, Mother, I can't write much this time. Write to me every week. And tell the others to write. Give them my address: Co. L 119th Inf.; American Expeditionary Forces; Forcis, France
How is my mare getting along? I think I will have Tom to sell her for me this summer. Well write me at once.
Your son,
J.W.D.

Wishing you had an ancestor photograph? Check out the 1800s photographs and antique photo albums on Lost Faces. There are over 2,500 photos in this growing genealogy collection
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Judson W. Dennis was a 24 year old farm boy from Model, Tennessee in Stewart County. He was an unmarried farmer and raised tobacco on land he shared with his brother, Tom. From his letters home, we know that he owned a mare, Old Annie, of which he was very fond. We also know he had many friends and was very fond of his brother Tom and wife Minnie's two little girls, Hazel and Helen.
Judson corresponded with his mother Minnie Dunlap Murphy of Granite City, IL and his brother, Thomas Milton Dennis of Tip Top, TN from the time of his departure from Tennessee in Sept. 1917 for Camp Sevier in Greenville, S.C. until days before his death in France in 1918. Following, in chronicological order are those letters, transcribed by his great-niece, Jan Dennis Philpot. Because of the materials with which he sometimes had to write, as well as creases in the paper, it is sometime difficult to make out all he is saying. In these few cases, a ? appears where this is unclear. Following his letters is a transcription of the telegraph informing Tom of his brother's death, as well as a letter from a soldier friend of Jud's who was with him at his death.
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