


Winder Wonderland DNA Project
Researching the genealogy of the Winder/Winders/Wynder/etc families.
Idah Harriet WINDER

-
Name Idah Harriet WINDER [1] Birth 14 Apr 1905 [1] Gender Female _UID ADC0C82C2D714615AFE7D5C1E0BE9C9F5FC9 Death 26 Dec 1923 , Butler, Missouri, USA [1]
Person ID I22088 WinderWonderland Last Modified 7 Mar 2006
Father John Columbus WINDER, b. 16 Sep 1864, Duquoin, Hamilton, Illinois, USA d. 12 Dec 1940, Fagus, Butler, Missouri, USA
(Age 76 years)
Mother Martha Harriet DOYLE, b. 24 Nov 1871 d. 18 Mar 1952, Fisk, Butler, Missouri, USA (Age 80 years)
Marriage 14 Oct 1888 , Stoddard, Missouri, USA [2]
Family ID F6552 Group Sheet | Family Chart
-
Sources - [S241] Edmund West, comp., ancestry.com, Family Data Collection, (
The Family Data Collection records were created while gathering genealogical data for use in the study of human genetics and disease. Compiling data for genetic research does not require the same type of documentation as traditional genealogical research. The genes themselves verify relationships and qualify or disqualify a person from a particular study. Citing the source of every genealogical fact in the electronic gene pool was deemed unnecessary and cost prohibitive by medical researchers. Millions of individual records were created from birth, marriage and death records; obituaries; probate records; books of remembrance; family histories; genealogies; family group sheets; pedigree charts; and other sources. The records collected that did not fit a specific study became the project's by-products and were schedule to be discarded. After viewing the quality of the source material used to create the gene pool and despite the absence of cited documentation, the electronic rights to the data were purchased, rather than see it destroyed.), Nov 2003 (Reliability: 3).
- [S255] Dorothy Laughlin.
- [S241] Edmund West, comp., ancestry.com, Family Data Collection, (
The Family Data Collection records were created while gathering genealogical data for use in the study of human genetics and disease. Compiling data for genetic research does not require the same type of documentation as traditional genealogical research. The genes themselves verify relationships and qualify or disqualify a person from a particular study. Citing the source of every genealogical fact in the electronic gene pool was deemed unnecessary and cost prohibitive by medical researchers. Millions of individual records were created from birth, marriage and death records; obituaries; probate records; books of remembrance; family histories; genealogies; family group sheets; pedigree charts; and other sources. The records collected that did not fit a specific study became the project's by-products and were schedule to be discarded. After viewing the quality of the source material used to create the gene pool and despite the absence of cited documentation, the electronic rights to the data were purchased, rather than see it destroyed.), Nov 2003 (Reliability: 3).