

Old Ship Meeting House, Hingham, Massachusetts. Samuel Stowell nd his family were members. This church is still standing.

Memorial tablet to Lt. Perrin Ross and his brother, Private Jeremiah Ross, from their brother, William. The Hollenbeck Cemetery, Wilkes Barre PA.

Lt. Perrin Ross and his brother, Private Jeremiah Ross, Hollenbeck Cemetery; Wilkes Barre PA.
See Plaque >
See Plaque >

The names of those who died in the Wyoming Valley Massacre, Wilkes Barre PA 1778 including Lt. Perrin Ross and his younger brother, Pvt. Jeremiah Ross

National Veterans' Cemetery, Fort Leavenworth. Kansas. William B. Ross, (1842 - 1900) is buried in this cemetery. Sectiom 15, Row 8, Grave 4

Amos Thom(p)son (1765 - 1840) and his wife Catherine (Callie) (1768 - 1840) Maple Hill Cemetery, Dorset Vermont

Curtis Hubble Thomson, (1835 - 1901) and Fanney Stowell (1828 - 1907) and their sons, Norman LeRoy, (1866 - 1888) and William Addis, (1864 - 1885)

Judy Thomson beside the gravestone of Curtis Hubble and Fanney (Stowell) Thomson and their sons. Scotts Valley Cemetery, Osseo, Wisconsin.

Judy Thomson, granddaughter of Ira Addis Thomson by the gravestone if the Coon family. Hattie Coon was the wife of John Curtis Thomson.

Christopher Serviss and his wife, Eleanor. St. Lawrence Union Cemetery, Ingleside, Stormont County, Ontario.

Several Serviss family members are buried in the Union Cemetery. Cemetery established after the cration of the St. Lawrence Seaway.

Left Side: John S. Serviss (1792 - 1856) and his wife, Hannah Faeder 1800 - 1865. Hamilton Cemetery, West Salem, LaCrosse County, Wisconsin

Michael Hollenbeck (left) (1739 1792) and his wife, (right) (1740 - 1800) Riverside Cemetery, North Egremont Cemetery, Berkshire County, Massachusetts

Leo Johnson makes a rubbing of Tamzin Hollenbeck’s gravestone. (Permission should be obtained before doing this.)

Places Along The Way
Johnnycake Journey follows our families from the shores of the Atlantic to the edge of the Pacific and accounts for them from the late 1600’s to the early 1900’s. They ask to be remembered.
For dates, places and relationships, please refer to the ancestral charts.
Thank you to Judy Thomson.