Monday, April 27, 2015

Genealogy social networking



I recently attended a large genealogy conference.  The New England Regional Genealogical Conference (NERGC) was held in Providence, Rhode Island over 4 days, April 15-18.  Genealogy conferences can be very beneficial to anyone interested in genealogy, whether they do it professionally or as a hobby.  There is always something for everyone.
One of the great benefits of attending a genealogy conference, big or small, is the chance to mingle with other people who are as enthralled by genealogy as you are.  Family historians in general lead a pretty solitary existence, and we are all used to the blank stares and vague acknowledgement we get from family and friends when we try to talk to them about our research.  Being at a genealogy conference where everyone “gets” what you mean when you talk about census records, is excited a new collection is being digitized, or knows what a GEDCOM file is can be quite refreshing.  It helps us realize that other genealogists are real people, not just message board posters or bloggers who exist only in cyber space. 
Sure, the genealogy community is connected now in 2015 in more ways than they ever have been before through DNA matches, online family trees, or even transcription projects, but once in a while we like to have that human contact.  Seeing the eager faces all around you at a genealogy conference can kick-start your research and get you motivated to move forward.  Hearing someone else’s story of success is always inspiring, especially if you can see that person in front of you and have the opportunity to interact live with them.
Then there are the genealogy celebrities- who are also real people and can be sighted and chatted with at a genealogy conference.  I personally encountered Josh Taylor of PBS’s “Genealogy Roadshow”, Mocavo.com founder Michael LeClerc and the Legal Genealogist Judy Russell.  All are nationally-known professionals who travel the conference circuit world-wide to offer their expertise to those of us who are lucky enough to attend.  They are also very gracious individuals who share a common interest with us, and started out just where we did. 
Conferences need not be big, or national in scope, to be beneficial.  There are plenty of smaller conferences offered annually in our local area that can serve the purpose of allowing us to connect with fellow genealogists, network, and learn new skills at the same time.  One that comes to mind is the annual Saratoga County Heritage Hunters conference, which is held every October.  Check out their website for more information:  http://www.saratoganygenweb.com/gwsarhh.html  Hope to see you there!

Monday, April 13, 2015

Familiarity breeds contempt, or creates opportunity



In the days before there were things like “independent living”, “assisted living” or nursing care facilities, our extended family members very often lived in the same home.  It was not uncommon for 3 generations to be living under one roof.  Families were large, and when elderly parents could no longer live on their own, they moved in with one or more of their children.  This system, like any other, had its benefits and drawbacks for those involved, but from a purely genealogical standpoint, it was a homerun!
Finding a census in which numerous generations of one family are recorded together in one household can add several branches to a family tree in a relatively short time.  Of course all relationships implied by the census should be verified by other sources, but there is no denying the giant step forward your research can take with such a discovery!
Starting with the 1880 federal census, the relationship of each household member to the “head” of the household is given.  Imagine you are trying to establish a maiden name for your great grandmother, Elizabeth Flannigan, wife of James Flannigan.  Locating a record like the one below from the 1880 census gives you the name of James Flannigan’s mother-in-law, Ellen O’Hanlan.  Now, it can be assumed from this information that Ellen is Elizabeth’s mother, but what can’t be assumed completely is that O’Hanlan is Elizabeth’s maiden name.  There is always the possibility Ellen remarried.
 
More complex extended family relationships can also be analyzed from the data found in census records to open up more research possibilities.  The 1900 census from Albany, NY, below, shows the household of William Kirtley at 838 Madison Avenue. 
   
William resides with his wife Margaret, to whom he has been married for 7 years, and their only son Alfred.  There are 6 extending family members also living in the household, as well as a “boarder”.  (often people classified as boarders are also family members).  Mary Kirtley is identified as “mother in law”, but she is likely William’s mother as they share the same surname.  Mary Chase is a widowed aunt, Thomas D. Olney an unmarried cousin, Mary Boyd, a widowed mother-in-law, Florence and Elizabeth Maxwell, teenaged nieces, and finally, Mary E. Monroe, a single boarder.  Sorting out who all these people are gives us valuable clues as to our own ancestor’s origins.  If you go looking for William Kirtley in earlier census records in an effort to identify his parents, you will know to look for him in a household with a mother named Mary. 
Though the thought of having our extended family members residing with us today makes many of us cringe, we can be happy our ancestors either did not feel the same or were able to conceal their opinion more effectively.  Either way the happy result is often more research possibilities to extend the branches of our family tree!

Monday, March 30, 2015

There's no place like home.......



Last summer I moved my mother out of the condo she had resided in for 10 years into a smaller “independent living” apartment.  In years prior, I had moved both her and my grandmother out of homes they had lived in for 40+ years.  These types of moves conjure up all kinds of emotions- sadness, nostalgia, anger, apprehension, dread.  Contemplating this got me thinking about how such a move can really be an opportunity to more deeply explore our family history, and the role the places we live play in it. 
A house becomes so much more than 4 walls and a roof as our families grow inside it.  It transforms into the place that we think of as the keeper of the memories- newlyweds setting up housekeeping, bringing baby home from the hospital, birthday parties, homework sessions at the kitchen table, bumps and bruises, accidents and injuries, backyard barbecues, proms, weddings.  The cycles of everyday life and the flurry of important milestones all take place with the house as a backdrop.  If the walls could talk, the stories they could tell!
But walls can’t talk, so we have to do the talking for them.  Cleaning out a parents’ home can be an opportunity to find the documentation of all these memories and take steps to preserve them, so the legacy of the home can be passed down through the generations.  We may never again pass through the doors of the house, but the home continues to be alive in our memories.  Many years from now when someone drives by the house, which may be greatly altered, they can smile and recall the stories that have been carefully preserved and passed down. 
There are bound to boxes and boxes of pictures that capture those special times in that very special place.  Now is the time to develop a system for digitizing them- software and scanners are developing and changing at a very fast rate.  One product I own which I heartedly endorse for both its convenience and performance is a Flip-Pal Mobile Scanner.  It’s a small flatbed scanner that runs on batteries and scans everything to an SD card that can be easily transferred to a computer.  It’s great for scanning things on the go, and can be purchased on Amazon.  There are so many options for software that edits and organizes digital photo files that certainly there would be one that would fit your budget, time constraints, and technological capability.  I use the free software offered by Google called Picasa.  It’s basic features make it easy to edit and organize your digital photo files. 
Once you have them scanned, share them!  A great vehicle for this is starting a Facebook group.  I have had a group for descendants of my great great grandparents, Alfred and Lydia Spencer, for several years now.  This group includes 50-odd members from all over the country.  Some of us know each other, some of us have never met.  There’s nothing like posting an interesting old family photo to get a discussion going.  We have debates on who the people were, what occasion they were celebrating, whose home they were in.  Somehow remembering and reflecting on these people and places makes them feel like they are using Facebook right along with us in 2015!
Saying goodbye to a home that has meant so much over the years can be painful, but it can also be an opportunity to connect on a deeper level with the past.  As I get ready to leave my home of 24 years, I know the memories will stay with me, because I’ve got the tools to make it happen. 

Monday, March 16, 2015

Did your Irish ancestor live in a thatched cottage?



It’s St. Patrick’s Day week, and once again Irish genealogy websites will be flooded with once-a-year visitors yearning to unearth their Irish heritage.  They will surely be visiting the National Archives site and using the 1901 and 1911 census records (http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/), but most likely will overlook forms B1- House and Building Return, and B2- Out-Offices and Farm-Steadings Return, documents that can tell us much about the dwellings our ancestors lived in.
Irish genealogy is often maligned for the lack of records that are obtainable for digging deeper into an ancestor’s past, but some of the records that are available offer us unique glimpses into their everyday lives.  In what other country can you see on a map where an ancestor lived in the 1850’s, then toggle immediately to a map that shows that location today?
Forms B1 and B2 from the 1901 census provide us with a detailed description of the places where our ancestors lived.  Together with contemporary photographs widely available on the internet, Google maps, and published architectural surveys, it doesn’t take a lot of imagination to picture the environs of our ancestor’s home.  
For example, my great great grandmother’s brother John Mortimer remained in Ireland after 4 of his siblings emigrated to the United States in the mid 1800’s.  It’s very likely in 1901 he owned at least part of the land his father Michael was occupying at the time of the Griffith’s Valuation in the 1850’s.  The 1901 census shows John and his family living in house 9 in the townland of Bockagh, District Electoral Division of Lacka, Queen’s County.  The family consisted of John, his wife Mary, and 5 of their adult children (the youngest being 16). 
Forms B1 and B2 describe the house and outbuildings as follows:
Constructed of stone, brick or concrete, roof of thatch or wood, 3 rooms, 3 windows in the front of the house, 7 inhabitants in the house
7 outbuildings- stable, cow house, calf house, piggery, fowl house, turf house, shed
The picture below, from “Thatch:  Voices from the Traditional Houses of County Laios” by Mary Ann Williams, Sinead Hughes and Bronagh Lanigan (available as a PDF at http://www.laois.ie/LeisureandCulture/Heritage/HeritagePublications/LaoisThatchFinal.pdf) shows a likely layout for John’s cottage, even down to the 3 windows in front.  Hard for us in 2015 to imagine 7 people living in 3 rooms, but this would have been fairly typical for this time and area.  Fortunately there are still some surviving houses of this type in Laois, and this book illustrates some great examples.
  
A farm that had 7 outbuildings seems fairly prosperous to me- I can only imagine what a “piggery” might look like!  I could not find any reference to the amount of acreage John had in 1901, but his father’s holding in 1853 amounted to 33 acres.  The terrain was very mountainous, and it’s very possible much of John’s land was used for purposes of animal grazing.  There is no mention on the census sheets of the animals he kept, but the report of his outbuildings indicates he had cattle, pigs and fowl.  He may have had some sort of dairy farm, and there was a well-known cheese industry that thrived in the foothills of the Slieve Bloom Mountains, where John’s farm was located.   

Monday, March 2, 2015

Home sweet home



The house I live in was built in the early 1880’s by Daniel Morgan, an Irish immigrant from County Down.  He came to the United States in 1879 with his widowed mother Catherine.  It seems likely that he came to Castleton with a job already lined up, since he was able to marry, purchase land and build a home within a few years of arriving.
A lot can be learned about our ancestors by examining where they lived.  We can make guesses about their social class, their leisure activities, their diet, their likely choice of spouse, all kinds of things based on where they resided.  A variety of resources, both old-fashioned and high tech, exist to give us clues about the types of dwellings our family called home. 
Many United States Federal census records include special schedules that include details about the farms people lived and worked on.  These “Agricultural Schedules” give details such as how many acres a property contained, how many outbuildings were on it, what types of crops were grown, how many and what farm animals lived there, and annual income.  These fascinating documents often get overlooked because they don’t contain much in the way of biographical information like their more “glamorous” counterparts, the population schedules. 

The Agricultural schedule above, from 1880, gives details about the farm in the town of Broome, Schoharie County, New York where David Jackson, my great great grandfather lived.  The document states that he spent $37 on farm repairs during the previous year, that he only employed outside help for 2 weeks out of the year, and that he had 2 horses living on the farm on June 1, 1880.  I could probably surmise from this information that David owned a small farm which he mostly worked himself, calling in help only when he most needed it such as at harvest time.    
Likewise, if your ancestor was a town dweller and owned a business, he might be found in the “Industry Schedules”.  These show details of all kinds of businesses, everything from the town blacksmith working his own shop to the textile mill owner who employed hundreds of people. 
A friend’s ancestor, Thomas Talbot, was partner with his brother Charles in the North Billerica, Massachusetts business Talbot Mills, which manufactured flannel.  The Manufacturing Schedule below from 1860 shows the brothers had $75,000 invested in the business (which would be over $2 million in today’s money) and they employed 80 people.  One could imagine the Talbot brothers must have lived in the nicest area of Billerica, in palatial homes that had the latest of modern conveniences.  A city directory from 1860 might give us a street address, and we could view what the home looks like today on Google maps.  (more about that in later posts)
   
These special census schedules are available online via Ancestry.com and are accessed by choosing the community you are interested in, then browsing through the pages.  Remember that you don’t need an Ancestry subscription since Ancestry Library Edition is accessible in many local libraries.  Check your library’s website to see if they have it!
In 2 weeks, some surprisingly detailed  information from the Emerald Isle on our ancestors’ housing!