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Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. John Grossnickle: Birth: 26 AUG 1824 in Clermont, Ohio, USA. Death: 8 JAN 1865 in Clermont, Ohio, USA

  2. Elizabeth Grossnickle: Birth: 1827 in Clermont, Ohio, USA. Death: 22 MAR 1909 in Perry, Montgomery, Ohio, USA

  3. David Grossnickle: Birth: 6 MAR 1828 in Ohio, USA. Death: 5 JUL 1904 in Clermont, Ohio, USA

  4. Sarah Ann Grossnickle: Birth: 16 JAN 1831 in Ohio, USA. Death: 24 AUG 1912 in Wayne, Clermont, Ohio, USA

  5. Catherine Ann Grossnickle: Birth: 16 JAN 1831 in Clermont, Ohio, USA. Death: ABT 1902 in Missouri, USA

  6. Daniel Grossnickle: Birth: 30 OCT 1833 in Clermont, Ohio, USA. Death: 8 JUL 1908 in Edenton, Wayne, Clermont, Ohio, USA

  7. Mary Grossnickle: Birth: 4 SEP 1837 in Clermont, Ohio, USA. Death: 11 JAN 1918 in Mowrystown, Highland, Ohio, USA

  8. Phoebe Lucinda Grossnickle: Birth: 12 NOV 1842 in Clermont, Ohio, USA. Death: 1917 in Franklin, Kansas, USA

  9. Andrew Grossnickle: Birth: 12 SEP 1844 in Clermont, Ohio, USA. Death: 3 JAN 1923 in Brookville, Preble, Ohio, USA


Family
Marriage:
Sources
1. Title:   LDS Ancestral File
2. Title:   Welton, Claudia Cox
3. Title:   International Genealogical Index (IGI)
4. Title:   Obannon Creek/Stonelick Church History by Reverend Merle C. Rummel
Publication:   Location: Clermont County, Ohio USGenWeb Site;
5. Title:   Grossnickle Descendants in Maryland and Indiana and Other States
Author:   Carol Constance Younker Boyer
Publication:   Name: Revised edition 1990;
6. Title:   1870 United States Federal Census
7. Title:   Monument Inscriptions Prior to 1900 From Cemeteries in Clermont County, Ohio
8. Title:   Online Family Tree
Publication:   Location: http://www.geocities.com/~wjboyer/d0004/g0000099.html#I1169;
9. Title:   Pedigree Resource File
10. Title:   Online Family Tree
Publication:   Location: http://www.geocities.com/~wjboyer/d0004/g0000099.html#I1169;
11. Title:   Clermont County, Ohio Deaths 1856 - 1908: An Index
12. Title:   Clermont County, Ohio Cemetery Inscriptions Index
13. Title:   Boyer Chronologists' Families
Author:   Dennis Boyer
Publication:   Location: http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&id=I1161&db=deboyer39;
14. Title:   1830 United States Federal Census
15. Title:   1840 United States Federal Census
16. Title:   1850 United States Federal Census
17. Title:   1880 United States Federal Census
18. Title:   Clermont County, Ohio 1800-1850 Computer Indexed Marriage Records

Notes
a. Note:   Buried in Stouder Cemetery, Clermont Co.
 13 Nov 98
 From Obannon Creek/Stonelick Church History by Reverend Merle C. Rummel at Clermont County, Ohio USGenWeb Site:
 "The Obannon Creek/Stonelick Church was the first German Baptist Brethren ("Dunker", now -Church of the Brethren) congregation north of the Ohio River, founded 1795, and is probably our oldest existing church west of the Appalachians. As these ancestors planned their western move, this church became a destination point or goal. From Pennsylvania, Maryland and Northern Virginia, they traveled the Braddock and Forbes roads to Pittsburgh, where they floated down the Ohio River to Kentucky and Ohio. From the lower Valley of Virginia and North Carolina, they followed the Kanawha Trace through the Mountains to Charleston, where they built flatboats and came down the Kanawha River to the Ohio to Cincinnati. While others from North Carolina and Tennessee followed Daniel Boone's Wilderness road through the Cumberland Gap into Kaintuck, only very few of these came to Ohio...
  "There were three early Dunker settlements in Clermont County, Ohio. the earliest was Obannon Creek on the Warren County line, off the Little Miami River,...The Ten Mile Creek Settlement ...Earliest Obannon Church services were held in the home of Frederick Weaver, born in Frederick Co MD, married to Elizabeth Maugans. They lived on Obannon Creek just south of Goshen. His son, Frederick, lived at the Stouder Cemetery. He was a blacksmith.
  "The better farmland of the Stonelick attracted many of the younger children of the families. It was only about 5 miles from the old Obannon Church, but that is a long way to go in a horse and buggy. In 1854 the families living here built a brick meetinghouse, which is the present Stonelick Church of the Brethren (it has undergone some remodelling). It stands on the banks of Stonelick Creek, and the Stonelick State Park stretches behind the Church. There are some records which indicate that the building of the new church on the Stonelick caused quite a dispute in the Obannon Creek congregation.
  "David Grossnickle of Middletown Valley, Frederick Co MD, came to the Stonelick and married Mary, daughter of Frederick Weaver. Several descendents became prominent local ministers. The descendents are one of the main families of the present church."
  From Grossnickle Descendants in Maryland and Indiana:
 Buried in Stouder Cemetery, Goshen Twp, Clermont Co, OH
  AFN: KS87-8D
  From Boyer Chronologists' Families at RootsWeb's WorldConnect Project (http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=deboyer39&id=I1169):
 "Additional source: Anna Grossnickle Hines, Milford, PA. Aug. 1997: "Called David. (Prob) Born in Frederick Co. MD (in second marriage record), or (PA in 1850 census); Signed name with mark to petition for guardian in Orphan's Court in Cambria Co. PA. Listed as farmer in 1840 and 1850 census in Wayne Twp., Clermont Co., OH. German Baptist. Will of 1883 left 77 acre home farm to be divided between sons, Daniel and Andrew, who were to pay cash to other 6 children and heirs of 7th. Died....of lung fever from waiting in cold rain to kill wild turkey; buried in Stouder Cemetery. Goshen Twp., Clermont Co." (Some sources give 25 Nov 1796 as date of birth)"



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