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Note: 45b-g9Le7 John9 Milton Leggett born January 22, 1931 in Pittsburgh, PA married August 2, 1958 to Ellin North Ratcliffe in Philadelphia, PA born August 10, 1931 in Philadelphia, PA Children (Leggett) 3: 2 boys, 1 girl 40c-g10Le7 David10 John 40d-g10Le7 Martha10 Louise 40e-g10Le7 Jonathan10 Hollingsworth A year following his birth, his family moved to rural Bradford Woods Boro, north of Pittsburgh, where they rented a house during the Great Depression. Here he attended the two room schoolhouse for four years. In 1941, the family returned to Pittsburgh's Squirrel Hill section, where he finished school at Linden Elementary. He sang in the boys' choir of Calvary Episcopal Church under the direction of Harvey Gaul. Graduating from Shady Side Academy in 1949, he went on to Haverford College, graduating in 1953 with a degree in sociology. Already a member of the U.S. Naval Reserve because of the Korean War, he went to Officer Candidate School in Newport, Rhode Island and was commissioned an Ensign early in 1954. He served for almost four years in the Naval Security Group in Washington, D.C., Charleston, South Carolina, Jacksonville, Florida and Sidi Yahia, Morocco, rising to the rank of Lieutenant, JG. Following this duty in communications intelligence, he returned to Pittsburgh and was searching for employment in managment training when he reached a decision to study for the ordained ministry. He entered the Phildelphia Divinity School of the Episcopal Church in 1957. On 2 August 1958, he married Ellin North Ratcliffe, a resident of Lower Merion, Pennsylvania and a graduate of Swarthmore College who was then employed by the Public Relations Department of Curtis Publishing Company. They honeymooned in Nantucket. Graduating from Phildelphia Divinity in 1960, John was ordained deacon and priest in Pittsburgh. Bishop Austin Pardue assigned him to establish a new congregation north of Pittsburgh in the Shaler and Hampton Township areas. This new church took the name of Church of Our Saviour, Glenshaw. In 1965, he and Ellin bought a tiny cottage in the Village of Madaket at the west end of Nantucket Island, which they named "The 1957 House." The house has been added to substantially in the years since. John's parents visited for several years in the late 1960s, and the entire family has many fond memories of summers in Nantucket. After 14 years at Our Saviour, in 1974 he accepted a call to Trinity Episcopal Church in Washington, Penna, where he remained for 19 years, retiring in 1993. For nine of those years, he also assisted at St. George's Episcopal Church in Waynesburg, Penna, frequently riding the circuit (by car) in rural Greene and Washington Counties. Since his retirement from full-time ministry, he has been retained by the Bishop of Pittsburgh to conduct services at several small, struggling churches in the depressed Monongahela Valley on the eastern edge of Washington County, among them St. Paul's, Monongahela and St. John's, Donora. During 40 years in the ministry, John has been very active in Diocesan and community affairs. He and Ellin edited the Diocesan Church News for nine years. He has also served on the Diocesan Standing Committee, coordinated Diocesan displays at at least six General Conventions, and served as Diocesan Registrar/Historiographer. A history of the Diocese has been a work in progress since his retirement. In 1975, he became a founding board member and secretary of a new evangelical seminary, Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry in Ambridge, Penna., a position he has now held for over 25 years. During his term as President of the Washington City Mission, the Mission opened a women's/children's shelter for the troubled and transient. His interests includ hiking, travel, reading local American and family history. In retirement, he has taken up Revolutionary and Civil War reenactment. The Leggetts live at 897 East Beau Street, Washington, and have been summer visitors to Nantucket Island since their honeymoon in 1958. They have been residents since 1965, when they purchased a house at 262 Madaket Road. Family records of the Rev. John M. Leggett :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: William Haight Leggett Plot Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York. Lot Number 522-523, Section 9, Spring Lake. Genealogical Notes (For more, see WorldConnect at Rootsweb.com, database djleggett). i. Three men of the Leggett family of Ely, Cambridgeshire, England, seem to have come separately to this country at various times in the 17th century. First, in 1640, before the English Revolution, probably via Barbados, where he lived c. 1635-40, came John Leggett "of Exeter, N.H." (b.1598-a.1652), schoolmaster in Hampton and Exeter, N.H. in the 1640s, who removed to Westchester, N. Y. after 1652, and left no issue. Second, and most definitely, in 1661 (following the Restoration) came to Westchester Gabriel Leggett (1637-1700), (son of the Gabriel Leggett who was warden of St. Mary the Virgin, Ely, under Oliver Cromwell's lay rectorship there, likely brother of the above first-arrival John Leggett "of Exeter, N.H."). Third, and last, the older brother of second-arrival Gabriel Leggett, John Leggett "the Mariner" (1628-1679?), seems to have arrived in Westchester sometime shortly after July 1665. All three men took wives in this country, only the latter two leaving issue to the present day. ii. The Leggetts became landowners in Westchester, N. Y., eventually holding approximately 10,000 acres in the present-day South Bronx and Hunt's Point areas of New York City, which remained in the family for 200 years. The main house on this estate, known by the early 19th century as Rose Bank, stood in the vicinity of the present-day Leggett Avenue, in the Bronx, overlooking the Brothers Islands in the East River, until sometime in the late 19th century. From here the family involved itself early in mercantile ventures in nearby Manhattan, such as the business at 301 Pearl Street, which operated from the 1780s until 1927. William T. Leggett brought the family to Pittsburgh, founding the Wm. T. Leggett Co., now at 190 40th Street, in 1886. iii. The Leggett line of descent to the persons interred in this plot, with wives and the couple's place of interment, is as follows: 1. Gabriel (born Ely, b. 1545, died Ely, 1609) and Joan (Unknown) Wood, widow, Churchyard of St. Mary the Virgin, Ely; 2. Thomas (born Ely, b. 1570, died Ely, 1640) and Katherine Piggot, St. Mary's; 3. Gabriel (born Ely, b. 1599, died Ely, 1657) and Susan Kilbourne, St. Mary's; 4. Gabriel (born Ely, 1637-died Westchester, 1700) and Elizabeth Richardson, the family burying ground now known as Drake Park, Hunt's Point, Bronx, N. Y.; 5. Gabriel (1698-1786) and Bridget Williams (first of three or four wives), Drake Park; 6. Thomas (1721-a. 1781) and Mary Embree, Drake Park; 7. Thomas (1755-1843), Churchyard of St. Peter's (Episcopal), Bronx, N.Y., descent via Mary Haight, first wife, Drake Park; (Second wife, Mary Underhill, Old Quaker Cemetery, Schuylerville, N.Y.); 8. William Haight (1789-1863) and Margaret Peck Wright, subject plot; 9. Thomas Bogart (1823-1895) and Sarah Maria Huggins, subject plot. (For the lines of descent to the present day, see text of affidavit, below.) iv. William Haight Leggett (1789-1863) and his wife Margaret Peck (Wright) Leggett (1794-1878) are the parents of 11 children, 8 of whom survived infancy, 5 of the latter being interred in Woodlawn with their spouses: the Thomas Bogart Leggett (1823-1895) mentioned above, John Wright Leggett (1826-1897) and Francis William Leggett (1833-1907), the preceding all interred in the Wm. H. Leggett Plot; also Catherine Maria (Leggett) Allen (1827-1890), interred in the William Mortimer Allen plot abutting the Wm. H. Leggett Plot, and George Fox Leggett (1823-1887), interred in the nearby Josiah Macy Plot. v. Two sisters of William Haight Leggett, Charlotte (Leggett) Fox (1787-1871) and Mary (Leggett) Pearsall (1803-1876) are buried in the abutting Fox plot and the nearby Pearsall plot, respectively, in Woodlawn, with their husbands. vi. A nephew of William Haight Leggett, Samuel Leggett, Jr. (1828-1873) is buried in the nearby Samuel Leggett, Jr. Plot in Woodlawn, with his wife and two of their five children, George W. Leggett (1861-1891), and Linda Leggett (d. 1932). vii. The above Samuel Leggett, Jr.'s father, (brother of William Haight Leggett, son of Thomas Leggett) Samuel Leggett, Sr. (1782-1847) is interred in the burying ground of the Flushing Friend's Meeting House, Queens, N. Y. viii. William Haight Leggett's father, Thomas Leggett (1755-1843) is interred in the churchyard of St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Village of Westchester (Bronx, N. Y. ), as noted above. Also buried at St. Peter's in a single grave are the remains of William Leggett (1691-1763), (son of Gabriel Leggett (1637-1700)) and his first (of two wives) Sarah (Lee) Leggett (1692-1744) and seven unknown relatives, which, according to the witness of Theodore A. Leggett (1845-1906) as set forth in his book, Early Settlers of West Farms, were reinterred in 1891 following destruction of the William Leggett burying ground at Rose Bank during development of the Bronx. This burying ground was separate from the one which survives in Drake Park today. It was apparently nearer the Rose Bank house itself. (An Ebenezer C. Leggett (1860/1-1885), who, according to his tombstone, is "son of Augustus and Eliza" (a couple of presently unknown relationship to our tree) is also buried nearby at St. Peter's.) ix. Researchers should note that similar affidavits have been filed with the below mentioned Homewood, Green-Wood and North Cemeteries. In the latter cemetery, the family of Congressman Joseph Baltzell Showalter may be traced. I. I, John Milton Leggett, residing at 897 East Beau Street, Washington, Pennsylvania 15301, being duly sworn, do depose and say: That Thomas Bogart Leggett of 293 Lenox Avenue, New York, N.Y., late owner of Lot Number 522-523, Section 9, Spring Lake Plot in the Woodlawn Cemetery, situated in the City of New York and County of Bronx, died on or about the 1st day of April 1895 (interred in subject plot) and did not specifically refer to said lot by last Will and Testament. That at the time of the death of the said John Milton Leggett Affidavit, Lot 522-523, Section 9, Spring Lake, Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York, Page 1 of 4. Thomas Bogart Leggett, he left surviving his widow Sarah Maria (Huggins) Leggett, (1826-1902), interred in subject plot), and the following four children, as his sole heirs, his other three children, Ellen Bowman Leggett, (1850-1854) Norton Wright Leggett (1855-1859) and Maud Leggett (1867-1867), respective burial places presently unknown, having died in infancy: 1. Edward Howard Leggett, (1845-1927), and his wife Georgiana (Clapp) Leggett (1850-1938), of 450 North Broad Street, Elizabeth, N.J., both interred in the Benjamin Winthrop Clapp / Leggett Plot, Lot 613, Section 44, Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y. 2. Clinton Huggins Leggett, (1847-1937), and his wife Josephine Louise (Morgan) Leggett (1851-1927) of 73 East 92nd Street, New York, NY, he later of Asbury Park, N. J., both interred in the John J. Morgan / Leggett Plot, SW 11473, Section 21, Brookside, Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, N.Y., no issue. 3. William Thomas Leggett, (1852-1909), and his wife Kate Adelia (Bagnall) Leggett (1864-1960), of 314 Homewood Avenue, Pittsburgh, Penna., both interred in the William Thomas Leggett / Corbett Plot, Lot 122, Section 16, Homewood Cemetery, Pittsburgh, Penna. 4. Florence Huggins Leggett, (1863-1934), of 293 Lenox Avenue, New York, N.Y., (later married one George Lesley, his burial place unknown), she interred in subject plot, no issue. Edward Howard Leggett left a widow Georgiana (Clapp) Leggett (1850-1938), and one child, Howard Clapp Leggett (1876-1969), unmarried, no issue, as Edward Howard's daughter Mary Hills Leggett (1878-1901), unmarried, no issue, predeceased him. Parents and both children are interred in the B.W. Clapp / Leggett Plot, Green-Wood Cemetery. Said Howard Clapp Leggett swore the last affidavit pertaining to subject plot on the 5th day of March 1938. William Thomas Leggett left a widow, Kate Adelia (Bagnall) Leggett, (1864-1960), interred in the W. T. Leggett Plot, Homewood Cemetery, and two children, Milton William Leggett (1894-1970), interred in the Joseph Baltzell Showalter Plot, Lot 21-22, Section 18, North Cemetery, Butler, Penna., and Helen Leggett (1899-1982), (later married William Joseph Corbett, (1893-1942) both interred in the W. T. Leggett / Corbett Plot, Homewood Cemetery. II. Now therefore, I, John Milton Leggett say further that: The above mentioned William Thomas Leggett is my grandfather, and he died on or about the 6th day of October 1909 in Pittsburgh, Penna. and did not specifically refer to said lot by last Will and Testament. That at the time of the death of the said William Thomas Leggett, he left surviving, as his sole heirs, a widow, the above mentioned Kate Adelia (Bagnall) Leggett, and the following two children: The above mentioned 1. Milton William Leggett (1894-1970) and 2. Helen Leggett (Corbett) (1899-1982). Helen (Leggett) Corbett (1899-1982) left one child, Dorothy (Corbett) Wertz (born 1937) and her husband Richard Wayne Wertz (born 1933) of 2002 Main Road, Westport Point, Mass. and 39 Rutland Square, Boston, Mass., no issue. John Milton Leggett Affidavit, Lot 522-523, Section 9, Spring Lake, Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York, Page 2 of 4. III. And further that: The above mentioned Milton William Leggett is my father, and he died on or about the 10th day of July 1970 in Pittsburgh, Penna. and did not specifically refer to said lot by last Will and Testament. That at the time of the death of the said Milton William Leggett, he left surviving, as his sole heirs, a widow, Lucile McKee (Showalter) Leggett (1893-1974), interred in J.B. Showalter Plot, North Cemetery, and the following two children: 1. Elizabeth Ann (Leggett) Black, (born 1927), and her husband Douglas Mitchell Black (born 1930) of 156 Little Pond Road, Concord, N. H. 03301 and their five children: 1. Stephen Douglas Black (adopted, born 1959) 2. Rebecca Ann Black (adopted, born 1962) 3. Susan Elizabeth Black (born 1965) 4. James Milton Black (born 1966) 5. Thomas Mitchell Black (born 1970) 2. John Milton Leggett (born 1931), this deponent, and his wife Ellin North (Ratcliffe) Leggett of 2405 Clearview Drive, Glenshaw, Penna. 15116, later of 897 East Beau Street, Washington, Penna. 15301 and The 1957 House, 262 Madaket Road, Nantucket, Mass. 02554 and their three children: 1. David John Leggett (born 1961) 2. Martha Louise Leggett (born 1963) 3. Jonathan Hollingsworth Leggett (1965-1981), interred in the J.B. Showalter Plot, North Cemetery, unmarried, no issue. IV. And finally: There are at present the following nine great grandchildren, four adopted and five natural, of the above mentioned Milton William Leggett: The four children of my niece, the above mentioned Rebecca Ann (Black) Ingersoll, and her husband Douglas Lee Ingersoll (born 1959), of 154 Little Pond Road, Concord, N. H. 03301: 1. Tristan Thomas Black Ingersoll (born 1989) 2. Myles Douglas Black Ingersoll (born 1991) 3. Camden Lee Black Ingersoll (born 1993) 4. Flannery Jean Black Ingersoll (born 1997) John Milton Leggett Affidavit, Lot 522-523, Section 9, Spring Lake, Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York, Page 3 of 4. The two children of my son, the above mentioned David John Leggett, and his wife Julia Hsiang-ning (Chu) Leggett (born 1965), of 2408 North Quantico Street, Arlington, Virginia 22207 and The 1957 House, 262 Madaket Road, Nantucket, Mass. 02554: 1. William Haight Showalter Leggett (born 1999) 2. Hannah Folger Jenkins Leggett (born 2001) The three children of my daughter, the above mentioned Martha Louise (Leggett) Robbins, and her husband Brent Monroe Robbins (born 1959), of 7169 Mount Meeker Road, Longmont, Colorado 80503: 1. Emma Louise Robbins (born 1997) 2. Cole Monroe Robbins (born 1998) 3. Maxwell Jeremiah Robbins (born 2001) Wherefore, I have hereunto set my hand and seal this ____day of September in the Year of Our Lord 2001: John Milton Leggett John Milton Leggett Affidavit, Lot 522-523, Section 9, Spring Lake, Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York, Page 4 of 4. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: The Inquirer and Mirror Nantucket, Mass. Thursday 7 Aug 2003 On Tour Historical walking tours offer open-air look at island`s heritage By Lindsey Whitton I&M Staff Writer Photo by Nicole Harnishfeger Walkers on the Nantucket Historical Association`s tour led by Peggy Godwin check out the Pacific National Bank on Main Street. If downtown Nantucket is a living museum, then historical walking tours are the interpreters. In recent years, three nonprofit organizations on the island have begun offering walking tours several times a day to groups as large as 30 people who share the sidewalks with shoppers, learning about the architectural and historical legacy of an island community first settled more than 300 years ago. The educational tours have proven very popular, and now many visitors to Nantucket learn about the significance of Main Street window shapes even before they study the displays inside. The Nantucket Historical Association, the Nantucket Preservation Trust and the Friends of the African Meeting House all offer walking tours that use the architecture and design of the downtown core district to explain island history. The wealth of historic architecture on Nantucket allows guides to illustrate how life on the island evolved from the first Quaker settlers to the rise of the tourism industry. Tour guides reveal how a cat-slide roof angled to the north was built to repel bitter winds and a tall brick storefront was erected after the Great Fire of 1846 burned most of the wooden buildings in town. The three organizations` tours all cover the same basic history but each has its own focus. The NHA offers tours the most frequently and gives a general survey of island history. The tour is an hour and a half long, travels from the whaling museum on Broad Street to the Civil War monument at the top of Main Street and is led by one of 15 guides, called interpreters. This summer, the NHA has also offered a family-oriented tour on Thursdays and Fridays. It is a good way to get an accurate overview of more than 300 years of history, said Kirstin Gamble, NHA educational public programs coordinator. The Preservation Trust offers two architectural walking tours a week, led by its executive director Patricia Butler, an expert in historic preservation and Nantucket architecture. The tours are held on Thursdays and Fridays at 10 a.m. The Thursday walk covers the bottom of Orange Street and up Main Street to the Starbuck-Kilvert house, and the Friday tour takes in more of Orange Street. Butler briefly summarizes Nantucket history but focuses on what buildings and architectural details reveal about island society and the lifestyle of the occupants. It`s just a wonderful synthesis of history and architecture and love of the island, said Maureen Phillips, who took the tour last Thursday. The Friends of the African Meeting house also offer two different tours a Wednesday walk through the downtown area and a Friday walk through the African burial ground. The downtown walking tour usually has a much smaller group than the NHA and Preservation Trust tours, so it is a more intimate and interactive experience. The guide uses both his surroundings and a large binder filled with photos and printed material to further illustrate Nantucket history. While there is more of a focus on the island`s diverse past, this 2 1/2 hour tour details the general historical story as well. So much of Nantucket history is so often unknown, said Alix Olson, who went on the tour last week because she wanted to educate herself about the island`s multicultural history. The NHA tour is structured around the rise of Nantucket through the whaling industry, the depression following the collapse of that industry and the second great economic boom from tourism. The interpreters are all given an outline of the tour with the big themes and the locations of the stops. It`s not a script that people need to memorize, Gamble said. We all cover the same history and the same story but everyone puts their own spin on it. The tour is in its forth year. Since it is the most general tour, part of the NHA history ticket and is offered the most frequently, it is the most popular historical walking tour, especially for people who are visiting Nantucket only for a brief time. The NHA limits each tour to 20 people. I am so impressed with the day-trippers, said interpreter Patty Frost, who has been leading NHA tours for three years. They often spend half their time in the museum and on the tour. The interpreters are very well-trained, however, and they include little details and often unknown facts throughout their telling of the general history, so the walk is still informative for people more familiar with Nantucket`s past. Gamble thinks that an advantage to the walking tour format is that it teaches people familiar with an area a new way of looking at certain elements of the landscape. The brick Roach counting house building at the bottom of Main Street is reveled as the location of the first candle-making factory on island. This was very significant, interpreters explain, since it allowed Nantucketers to horizontally integrate the whaling industry and maximize their profits. At the other end of commercial Main Street, an interpreter points to the roof of the Pacific National Bank and tells how that is where Maria Mitchell first looked through a telescope. A highlight of the tour is when the group stops at the Easy Street basin and the interpreter asks them to imagine how that same location looked during the height of the Nantucket whaling industry. The harbor overflowed with ships, the wharves were filled with a boisterous, diverse crowd from all over the world, little wooden shacks sold everything needed for long whaling voyages and garbage was thrown everywhere. The interpreters aptly describe the flies, noise, different dialects and colorful characters. The NHA family tour is only 45 minutes long, and it was designed to keep children engaged while answering their parents` questions. The tour incorporates historic photos for comparison, a scavenger hunt, children`s books and a couple stops not on the general NHA tour, including a schoolhouse. We`ve tried to include a lot of the history but in a kid-friendly manner, Gamble said. Butler`s Preservation Trust walking tours usually attract about 12 to 15 people. Many of the attendees are members of the Preservation Trust or longtime Nantucket residents or summer visitors who are especially interested in the architecture and history of the island. Butler begins her Thursday tour by passing a stone around the group that she found on West Chester Street and that she later identified as a scraper from Nantucket`s Native American population. She uses it as an example of how rich the island is with historical artifacts but also how residents and visitors to Nantucket learn to become visually astute. Her tour teaches people how to look at architecture with a new awareness. She points to a brick wall and explains that the rough shape of the small bricks shows that it was built while bricks were still handmade. She shows how the front wall in the same house has different, Photo by Jim Powers Attendees of the Preservation Trust`s walking tour of downtown Nantucket admire Orange Street architecture while standing in front of the Unitarian Church last Thursday. later bricks. That means that the front of the house was originally wood and after it burned in the Great Fire, it was replaced with bricks, she said. I`ve been meaning to do this tour for eons, Phillips said. I am really interested in this history. All of these things I knew she is hooking together. Commercial Main Street is mostly brick and fairly formal, Butler says, gesturing down the street. But this is only because the Great Fire burned all of the more modest, Quaker structures. The architecture of homes often gives hints to the lifestyle of the inhabitants. A center chimney style versus a raised grade house shows the absence or presence of servants. We don`t have the answers to all these things we just try to figure them out as best we can, Butler told a group last week. Architecture is such a wonderful social study. The Black Photo by Jim Powers John Leggett leads the Black Heritage Tour on Broad Street last week. Heritage Trail tour is led by John Leggett, a Nantucket summer resident since 1965. His tour is smaller. Several times I`ve had absolutely nobody, he said. He is willing to take even one person, however, on an extensive tour that includes the Great Hall of the Atheneum whre Frederick Douglass once spoke and driving in Leggett`s station wagon down Orange Street to the African Meeting house and burial ground. Leggett shows his group a binder filled with clippings from magazines, brochures, history texts, newspapers and art books, with photos and articles that have key words and phrases highlighted. He compiled this visual aid over the past few years, and after the tour he welcomes people to look through the pages he didn`t have time to cover. Walking tours on Nantucket are gaining in popularity and number every summer. The island historical organizations have found that the preserved architectural environment is a perfect illustration when telling the story of Nantucket history. It`s the only way to see Nantucket, said summer resident Lisa Dunfey. I do different walking tours every year. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 897 East Beau Street goes up for sale, 1 Oct 2004; in the family since 1974; moved in 11 June of that year. Paid $43,500 for it then. http://www.howardhanna.com/content/PropertyDetail.asp Property Details: Location,location,location!It's a charmer! Large home perfect for grand living and gracious entertaining!Large backyard off large covered porch,large paved parkng area 897 E Beau Street South Strabane, PA 15301 $ 199,000 4 Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths, 1 Half Bath Style: 2 ST County: Washington Garage spots: 2 Garage Type: INT/GRG School District: Trinity Area Taxes: $2200 Mortgage Calculation Dining Room: 13x13 - Main Level Living Room: 13x25 - Main Level Kitchen: 13x13 - Main Level Master Bedroom 1: 12x14 - Upper Level Bedroom 2: 11x13 - Upper Level Bedroom 3: 11x13 - Upper Level Bedroom 4: 10x12 - Upper Level Basement: Full Acreage: 0.75 Lot Dimensions: 135x300x90x300 Fireplaces: 1 Listing Agent: Gretchen Means Office: HOWARD HANNA WASHINGTON OFFICE Phone Number: 724-222-6040 MLS Number: W532112 All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. © 2004 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services Continued under notes for Ellin North Ratcliffe.
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