1 / 27

Relatively Speaking

Relatively Speaking . WARDian Relativity: Genealogy in the 21st Century. What is Genealogy?. Genealogy is ‘the history of the descent of a family’ It’s about collecting and preserving family history. Why is genealogy interesting?.

keon
Télécharger la présentation

Relatively Speaking

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Relatively Speaking WARDian Relativity: Genealogy in the 21st Century

  2. What is Genealogy? • Genealogy is ‘the history of the descent of a family’ • It’s about collecting and preserving family history

  3. Why is genealogy interesting? • Everyone, no matter how humble the family, has a history and a pedigree • It is unique to each individual except direct siblings • It helps us understand who we are and where we came from • Grandparents love to tell stories about what it was like for them growing up • It makes history real Amos Jackson, 1824-1917

  4. What is a Family Tree? • Pedigree chart • Events • Relationships • Siblings Typical Pedigree Chart, from Genealogical Research Associates (used without permission)

  5. What’s this twice removed stuff? ‘Half 6th cousin three times removed of the husband’ • ‘Xth relation’ indicates number of generations between individuals and common ancestor • ‘Removed’ is difference in generation between two individuals if not the same • ‘Cousins’ might be nieces or nephews • ‘Brothers’ or ‘Sisters’ might be in-laws • ‘In-laws’ sometimes included step-kin • ‘Missus’ didn’t always mean married

  6. What is an Ahnentafel? • Ahnentafel is a German word meaning 'ancestor table'. Used by genealogists, it's a way of numbering the ancestors of a given person. The starting person is given the number 1. Their father is number 2 and mother number 3. To find the father of any person, double their number. Beth’s Ancestor Report, in Ahnentafel format

  7. How far can we go? • X generations • To Civil War, Revolution, etc • To each arrival in America • Until we are stuck (generally in the 1600’s) Our earliest ancestors

  8. Where do we start? • Living relatives & friends • Family records • Photo Albums • Church records Receipts found in the family Bible of Henry H. Haggard

  9. Where else can we look? • US Census • Local Records • Archives • Immigration records • National Archives • Web sites • Any place or organization that an ancestor might have been involved with 1909 Subpoena involving one of Henry Haggard’s daughters

  10. What’s an Index? • Most original records were unsorted paper lists, often handwritten • Searching required reading every line of every page in every book • Volunteers make sorted indexes of every name that appears and the page number • Usually comes in book form, such as ‘Index – Missouri, Dent County Marriages 1913-1943’ • Often ‘informally published’ by local historical societies - many written out in longhand, later copied, bound, or microfilmed • More recently, some are entered and computer sorted

  11. The US Census • On microfilm in archives • Generally includes Head, Spouse, children, others • May include state of birth of each person & their parents • 1790- Today • 1930-on still restricted • 1890 census destroyed by fire • Many special census Sample from a microfilm of the census of 1850. Entries are all handwritten, film quality varies. Originals no longer exist.

  12. Local Records • Generally must physically visit county unless microfilmed and archived • Births, Marriages, Deaths, Taxes & Wills • Cemeteries • Newspapers/Obituaries • Churches • Library/Historical Society Typical county history. Many were prepared during the Nation’s Centennial, or that of the town

  13. Immigration Records • Passenger lists • Citizenship/Naturalization records • Port of entry records I have no idea who these people are

  14. National Archives • National Archives & Records Administration • www.NARA.gov • NATF Form + copy charge • Military Service Records • Military Histories (Official Record of each unit) • Pension Records • Pension Land Grant Records Civil War Payroll records of Amos Jackson (from the National Archives Trust Fund)

  15. Genealogical Archives • LDS Family History Library • LDS Family History Centers • Reynolds Collection, Ft. Wayne • St. Louis City/County Library • Local Historical Societies • State Archives • Museums The LDS Family History Library in Salt Lake City, UT, houses the world’s largest collection of genealogical records

  16. Some research sleuthing techniques • Comb the neighborhood for relatives in the census • Follow related branches; look for in-laws living with family • Understand the political and economic situation • Make some guesses • Remember the difference between a fact and a rumor Frank and Fred Williams at the Williams Feed & Grain, Timewell, IL - circa 1942

  17. Some research roadblocks • Not everyone was counted • Some records are just wrong • County boundaries changed • Name and spelling changes • Many records hard to read • Many records lost, damaged, or miss-filed (as good as lost) • Some family stories are lost, confused, or ‘improved’ Patent issued to John Knouff of Wilmot, IN in 1917 for a ‘Grindstone Attachment’

  18. Leaves, moss, and birds’ nests in the tree • Pictures • Locations • Stories • Documents • Artifacts • Family histories • War histories • Personal biographies Mary Grace Ward & Levi Bennett Ward - 1906 wedding photo

  19. What can we do with all this stuff? • Build a database • Write a family history or biography • Build a family web site • Post your tree on the web • Brag about your (in)famous ancestors

  20. A Ward Family Story In about 1928, the Central Lake farmhouse burned to the ground after Mary Ward unwrapped a new set of dishes and the wrapping paper caught fire from the stove. The rest of the summer, the family lived in a tent on the farm. When winter set in, the family rented a house in town. Levi Ward worked as a laborer rebuilding the nearby YMCA lodge (which had also burned recently), and saved bent nails & other odd scrap to use in building a new house, which they returned to about 1930. Tent on the farm after the farmhouse burned, c. 1928. Note the 1925 Chevrolet touring car Stanley R. Ward, at the new farmhouse near Central Lake built by his father - July, 2000

  21. Another Ward Family Story The well on the Central Lake farm went dry in about 1932. A Dowser came up from Bellaire, MI, and walked the farm with a dowsing rod balanced across his shoulders, waiting for one side or the other to dip. The spot which the rod repeatedly dipped toward regardless of the direction of approach (about 50 yards from the old well) was selected to dig and drill. Water was struck at this spot, and at a shallower point than the old well. An electric pump has replace the original, but the ‘new’ well on the farm still flows – July, 2000

  22. A Pioneer Story William Fuller, living at the mouth of the Miami river near present-day Cincinnati, was kidnapped by Indians in August, 1791 and held in the Upper Wabash valley. He escaped after two years, killing Tecumseh’s half-sister in the process of his escape. He was pursued by Indians all the way to Detroit, where he was hidden by friends. His eventual return to his family, who had given him up for dead, was nearly four years after his capture. From an account in theLawrenceburg, Ind.. “Independent Press”, Jan 16th, 1852

  23. A few things we have discovered • We started out knowing only the names of our grandparents • We now know of over 1600 direct or indirect ancestors • One was a founder of the first traveling circus in the US in the 1850’s • Another was granted a US patent on a piece of machinery in 1917 • One worked on the first oil wells discovered in PA in the 1870’s • One was a well-known writer (Lloyd Cassel Douglas, 1895-1951) • Three founded Mennonite churches • One was born in Ohio in 1777, when it’s control was still disputed between the British and the French

  24. Our family’s ethnicity • Earliest documented ancestor was born in 1624 in Germany • Nearly all ancestors on paternal side are English • Nearly all ancestors on maternal side are German • One Welshman, one Scott, one Irish, and three were ‘Indians’ • Three direct ancestors were the result of rape, two by Indians • We are eligible for membership in the DAR • We are eligible for membership in the Welcome society • We have spoken with a living tenth cousin three times removed

  25. The great wars • Every single family branch was in the US prior to the Civil War • Three branches known to be in the US prior to the Revolution • 2 in the Revolutionary war • 8 Yanks, 1 Rebel in Civil war • 2 in War of 1812 • 1 in Black Hawk war • 1 in Winnebago war Amos Jackson spent the winter of 1861 at Camp McKim, MD (from the letterhead of the commander, 6th MI Regiment)

  26. Known Immigrations • William Gehman, 1680 in PA, predates the ‘Welcome’ • Lord Haggard, ~1685 from England • Anthony Jacob Knouff, 1743 in PA, on the ship ‘Brawley’ • Owen Seaney, 1720, Wales • Jacob Lambarth, ~ 1720, Wurtemburg, Germany • Hans George Mack, 1735 in Germany • John Merker’s father, ~1825 from Prussia • Joseph Williams & family, ~1855 from England • Duane Albert Ward’s father b.~1845 in England

  27. Web Sites • www.FamilyTreeMaker.com • www.Genealogy.com • www.FamilySearch.org • www.MyTrees.com • www.EllisIslandRecords.org • www.NARA.gov • www.WardsOnline.net

More Related