NOTE: We accept only first-source documents. We may opt not to accept Church of Latter Day Saints listings or Ancestry.com sources
-- both of which accept unsubstantiated records. We accept only conclusions with verifiable proof.
1) Email jgp@glynnpatrick.com. In the subject area, type "Time Stamp". We will reply, letting you know if the
project is still open. If so, you will have 15 days to send us your conclusion and copies of your documentation.
One payment will be made per project.
2) We will attempt to validate your findings.
3) If we accept proof of the answer, you will receive payment by check within 10 days. If we cannot, through
primary source records, authenticate your solution, the opportunity will be reopened and offered to other
researchers.
Gary Rhoads is our hero.  GP&A was looking for an unmarked
grave of an infant.
Where was Buddy Richard Webster buried?

Caretaker for Oakwood Cemetery in Macomb, Illinois, Gary took Jody
by truck to the location of the unmarked grave, and also provided plot
and obituary records to flesh out research documents. He was a
tremendous help in solving
Research Opportunity #215: Where is
Buddy Richard Webster buried?
We pay cash for answers!
Earn Money with  
Glynn Patrick & Associates!
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Refer to our "Sample Descendant Report". Amos Webster, Jr. was supposedly born in Vt. or perhaps "from York." Susannah, his
widow, subsequently married a Vail (common Quaker name) and her brother, Stephen Wright, was reportedly Quaker.  But religion is not
our question.

Researchers say, without documentation, that Amos was the son of Amos, Sr. and Mary Little. We cannot find any documentation of
these two people.

Amos Jr. is believed to be a second cousin of Noah Webster. But he is most commonly confused for New York native Amos Gillett
Webster. Though the two migrated along similar lines (OH, IN, IA), they had distinct and different families.

Challenge #218: Establish paternity for this Amos Webster, Jr.  Earn $100.