Denise Ann Carpenter Gregory Macy

Member for
15 years 20 days
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Bio

My name is Denise Ann Carpenter Gregory Macy. I have been doing genealogy as of 2016 for over 30 years. I have volunteered with my local genealogical society when I started and learned from some of the best. I typed up census records in the early years for the LeFlore County Genealogical Society which took a year to do working 5 or more hours a day for that year. I volunteered to research for people who wrote to my local library. My mother and I used to go on Saturdays to the libraries in Poteau, Oklahoma and Fort Smith Arkansas and the LDS in Fort Smith, Arkansas. I have spent many days photographing cemeteries and working on pictures of tombstones. We were even part of working to find grave stones in a cemetery in about 1995 that had been plowed under to be used as a field for planting in the early 1900's and trying to use funeral home records to make a book for the hundreds of lost stones and went to the cemetery with my family and the head of the genealogical society to find gravestones that were buried and right them. I have participated in Ancestry.com and their DNA project and have gotten quiet a few family members to take part in DNA. This is my passion and I love it so much.

My name is Denise Ann Carpenter Gregory Macy. I have been doing genealogy as of 2016 for over 30 years. I have volunteered with my local genealogical society when I started and learned from some of the best. I typed up census records in the early years for the LeFlore County Genealogical Society which took a year to do working 5 or more hours a day for that year. I volunteered to research for people who wrote to my local library. My mother and I used to go on Saturdays to the libraries in Poteau, Oklahoma and Fort Smith Arkansas and the LDS in Fort Smith, Arkansas. I have spent many days photographing cemeteries and working on pictures of tombstones. We were even part of working to find grave stones in a cemetery in about 1995 that had been plowed under to be used as a field for planting in the early 1900's and trying to use funeral home records to make a book for the hundreds of lost stones and went to the cemetery with my family and the head of the genealogical society to find gravestones that were buried and right them. I have participated in Ancestry.com and their DNA project and have gotten quiet a few family members to take part in DNA. This is my passion and I love it so much.

Search memorial contributions by Denise Ann Carpenter Gregory Macy

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