![]() Names of his children - that is if he could read and write, but in a dif¬įerent economy this luxury was not always thought necessary. Nearly everyone had a Family Bible in which he recorded the Letter for there he has put some of himself down on paper for-us to see. We are indeed fortunate when we cam find an old The record of this transaction, but that gives little clue as to his char¬Īcter, nor can the cold stone over his grave impart any of the warmth If heīought or sold a farm or other real estate his name was preserved in He was born, died, married or had a child-and not always then. Many a man in the past never got his name on paper except when ![]() Respectful regard of his fellow man, only God can now judge his worth¬ Man's entire lifetime in which he lived in the fear of God and for the That have been left to us are merely excerpts from their lives. Untold for those who have lived it have gone and the meagre records Sense their fear, love, anxiety or remorse since we can not ourselves ![]() Real circumstances that moved people to act as they did. But to the events that happened in the past weĬan never be anything more than spectators from afar - we cannot actu¬Īlly feel the tension, the emotions, the dreams or otherwise know the Win ever actually visit the many places where these people lived, how¬Įver it is quite possible. We are about to take a journey, not In distance, but in time-īack into the happenings of yesteryear. Full text of " The story of the Bloods : including an account of the early generations of the family in America in genealogical lines from Robert Blood of Concord and Richard Blood of Groton / Roger Deane Harris." ![]()
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