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The Web is a huge place, and quite easy to
get side tracked. Please check out some of these sites that have helped me discover my own families roots.
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This organization strives to commemorate a committee of 34 duly elected citizens, of Harford
County Maryland that put there very existence in peril, back in March of 1775. They all signed a declaration,
supporting Boston, after the famous Tea Party and in so doing, declared a personal disdain for King George of England.


The McArdle Notebook................ Henry Arthur McArdle was born in 1836, the year in which Texas declared its independence.
He studied art under David A. Woodward at the Maryland Institute for the Promotion of Mechanic Arts and in 1860 won the Peabody
Prize. His family later moved to San Antonio, where he set up a studio and began a series of portraits and action canvases
associated with Texas subjects, and The Battle of San Jacinto remain among the best known of his surviving works. To reproduce
as accurately as possible the persons, events, accoutrements, and settings of the events they portray, McArdle amassed a body
of documents, photographs, maps, and personal recollections.
I've probably just scratched the surface with my research on the family tree. If you have more
information about a branch of the family tree or photos you'd like to share, please contact me!
You can send me regular US. mail at:
R. S. Patrick
1817 Janell Rene Circle
Deer Park, Texas 77536
OR
The Lone Star State, its fun for everyone.

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| Dancing Star, courtesy of Texas Graphics from Gran Gran |

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"The Patricks of the Republic of Texas", Copyright © 2007 Robert Scott Patrick
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