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Saturday, December 31, 2022

Giving Credit Where Credit is Due

 I don't plan these posts.  Something occurs to me or my attention is called to some bit of information and I write something.  Such is the case now.

It's New Year's Eve, 2022.  I've planned nothing other than to stay home and off the roads.  Yesterday, for no apparent reason, I felt very tired.  Today, I'm interested in Hannah Chase Butler who is an ancestor of my paternal Grandmother.  She's buried in the Tyler Cemetery near Roxbury, New York.

The Tyler Cemetery is also the resting place of a number of the Stratton Family members.

Hannah Chase married Barnabas "Barney" Butler sometime between 1830 and 1834.  One of their daughters was named Mary Gould.  In Roxbury, is the Jay Gould Reformed Church which I believe my grandmother attended as a child.  I don't know if the name was simply borrowed or if there was a family connection.

In any case, I'm looking, as I'm writing, at a web site called the Roxbury Experience; at a page giving the History of Stratton Falls.  The site appears to be owned and designed by a couple of hotel owners.  In any case, the glaring "error", as I see it, in their history of Stratton Falls, is in not giving credit where credit is due.  It is a very, very common error in historical and genealogical writing: 

"Joseph Stratton, who died in 1827, had eight children (two daughters and six sons); his brother Samuel (d. 1838) had three daughters and two sons, Jesse and Jonathan."

I know it's splitting hairs but -- never did a man have eight children; or even one.

Because traditionally and conventionally, family history and genealogy has followed the line of the father; and, because, historically, women had NO status, everything was credited to the fathers.  It's time that changed.  Particularly since so many women were left with the sole support of their children; the fathers serving, more or less, simply as sires; sperm donors.  I'm sorry to be so blunt.  In fact, some middle names came from the mothers' families.  In addition, young women often married cousins from either side of the families.

Finally, it is more often the women who are preserving the family histories.

So, I will give credit where credit is due.  It is women who have children; who give birth.  Father's may give surnames, but women give birth.  As the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) federation say, "Women are the givers of life, men are the protectors."

Have a Wonderful New Year.



Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Keeping Up

 After this recent nasty bug I had, I'm continuing to mask during the flu season and limiting the number of people I spend time with except for necessities like grocery shopping.  I finally feel normal; have my hearing back and even felt like taking a walk today but had laundry to catch up on.

WikiTree

I began a new activity at WikiTree - the PIP Voyage - where I'm guided by someone more familiar with WikiTree's editing, etc., through a couple of profiles to improve my Profile Improvement Process.  I need it.  There are a lot of details in editing a profile at WikiTree and a lot to remember.  I've only just got started.

I'm initially working on the profile of Hannah Chase Butler, my paternal grandmother's great grandmother.

I'll admit, I still have some misgivings about WikiTree - the ownership, the fact that servers in Eastern European countries are housing data, etc.  Still, I'm finding their process and structure very helpful.

The One Name Studies

Nothing new here right now.  I've created Blogger pages for each where I can report on what's happening which is, right now, nothing.  It's the holidays.

New Links

I've added several new links on that page so take a look.

The Cemetery Projects

On hold at the moment,  I need to make some contacts and intend to do some research during the winter so, in the Spring, I can get going.

The Genealogy Project

This is what I really want to do, to get fund together to provide genealogical and historical societies (a word about that in a bit) with a dedicated computer with genealogical database software providing a means of collecting local, password-protected, family trees and instruction to enable genealogical research locally.  This will take a chunk of money in each case but I'm hoping I can do, at least a few of these.

And, now a word...

Historical and genealogical societies are NOT always one and the same.  In fact, they sometimes have completely different goals and missions.  I belong to quite a few small historical societies in New York State.  It took me quite a while to realize that most of them do not address genealogy very much.  Both types of organizations suffer from a lack of funds and other resources.  Historical societies usually have a location dedicated to their purposes: to preserve local historical.  Genealogy societies often do not.  Some historical societies include someone who oversees genealogical functions, some do not.  Most are operated by dedicated volunteers who do their work because they love what they do but with limited resources, hours and space, they have a lot of challenges to overcome.

I urge everyone to support their local historical and genealogical societies with an annual membership, at least.  They are both, also, a good place to donate your family memorabilia to be preserved for your family and the entire community.  Their are ways to do so that indicates that it is on loan from your family.  I will see if I can get a legal statement about how to do that.  Donations to any of these types of organizations are usually tax deductible.

While I will remain a member of various historical societies, I will concentrate my attention, funds and interest on genealogical societies.  Both have records of use in genealogy.  I'll see where I can find what I need most

                                                    Happy Holidays       



                                                             


Thursday, August 25, 2022

The One-Name Studies

 One step at a time.  This time it's site addresses for each of the one-name studies.  I did not want to spend money on a site, especially during this economically difficult time, so I'm using Blogger which is designed for blogs, of course, but allows static pages in addition to the individual posts.  

The address of the Beismer One-Name Study is:  Beismer One-Name Study

The address of the Wormuth One-Name Study :  Wormuth One-Name Study

That's it for right now.  




Friday, August 19, 2022

Cemetery Project




 After my recent visit to the Tyler Cemetery in Roxbury, NY, I realized that both the Tyler and the Vandemark Family Cemeteries need the same kinds of cleanup.  So, foolish me, I've decided to try to make that happen.



A while ago, I started a GoFundMe account to get some assistance with the usual expenses of family history research: expensive memberships in web sites like Ancestry.com, memberships in historical and genealogical societies, supplies, computer hardware and software upgrades, travel expenses, postage, fees for documents (New York State now charges $22 dollars for a genealogical copy of a document.  But, now that I se what needs to be done in these 2 little cemeteries, I think it's better if I dedicate the GoFundMe to that until they're finished.

I will post a running record of the projects here so everyone involved can see what's happening.  More on that in a bit....


The One-Name Studies:

Well, I have a bad habit, as you can see of getting involved in a lot of things at once.  So, I haven't done much on either the Beismer One-Name Study, nor the Wormuth One-Name Study.  

  • I've added a few names to the studies and added profiles for them in WikiTree.  
  • I created separate databases for the studies in my genealogy software which it allows me to do.  That way I can keep the information easily identify as part of each study.
  • I joined the Guild of One-Name Studies which is a British organization that specializes in such projects.
  • I identified several unrelated (as far as I know) individuals with variant spellings of the surnames.
  • I collected all the photos I can find in my possession of members of each family to be sure they are digitized and classified.
Much more needs to be done.  I haven't figure out the statistical aspect of the studies yet.  I hate statistics.

The GoFundMe.  

The original purpose was to cover expenses of just doing this research:  memberships, document fees, postage, computer hardware and software upgrades, etc.

Then, there's another project I would like to accomplish which is to enable several historical and genealogical societies to have a public access computer and genealogy software in order to provide a way for people to create a protected family tree to leave at a local organization so future generations can find their family histories and continue the stories.

Now, the 2 Cemetery Projects are a priority but will have an eventual end point when attention can go back to other projects.

Please consider donating.  Even a $1 dollar donation will help.  Thank you.

That's it for now, come back to see how things progress.


                            




Monday, August 1, 2022

Visit to the Family Cemetery

 Visited the Vandermark Family Cemetery in Debruce, New York, this past Sunday.  I was accompanied by Judie Smith who is a relative of a relative.  

I was very happy to see that the town has erected a gate and sign so there is no longer a dispute with the neighbor.  

Judie tells me it's a good idea to keep up a chatter because of bears in the area.

It was fortunate weather for the visit; not too hot.

We made the rounds of the cemetery.  I took pictures and notes but I had forgotten my cleaning kit so I wasn't able to clean the stones.  Judie scraped some moss off some of them.

There are some broken stones; some fallen stones, some long ago; stones gradually slipping off their bases; so, much work to be done.  a lot of stones are darkened, some have lichens and moss.  Shale stones are gradually losing their imprinting and are becoming difficult to read.

There are quite a few older graves that have caved in; more than half a dozen, and a few graves that feel they may be next.

This is where I want to be buried so Judie, who is on the board of several cemetery associations, is looking into what I need to do to insure that.  Because the cemetery is considered an abandoned family cemetery, the town has taken responsibility for it and keeps it mowed and allows burials there, whether or not there's a relationship.

NOTE:  I'm going to have to abandon the idea of forming a family cemetery association to protect this cemetery and to preserve it as an historic family cemetery.  It requires quite a few people to assist with its management: someone to keep records, someone to work with the town to maintain it, someone to visit from time to time to ensure it's protected (although I think the town is doing a good job).  So far, it's just me.  Most of my elders in the three original families have left this life and cannot assist, and younger relatives don't seem interested.

Right now, the best thing to do for the cemetery would be to x-ray the area inside the stone wall to determine how many unmarked graves there are, fix the broken stones, cut some over-hanging tree branches, determine a way to mark unmarked graves.

Taken in the cemetery:

Found on the headstone of Hannah Vandermark, wife of Josiah, a soldier of the War of 1812.  It's a newly emerged cicada resting on its old carcass.  Hannah's maiden name was Bush.

We also saw two different varieties of toad.  I hadn't seen a toad in ages.

Judie gave me a new perspective of the custom of leaving visiting stones on the headstones, a custom I like very much.  She pointed out that the stones can be a problem for the mowers, if the stones fall from the headstones.  That's why talking to people who have more experience with any particular thing is a good idea, because they have more, closer knowledge of that thing.  If you've never ridden a horse, it's a good idea to talk to someone who has; otherwise, good luck to you and to the horse.  I still like the idea of leaving a sign that someone has remembered and visited a gravesite.




Thursday, July 7, 2022

Next - Aristocratic ancestors, et al

 Confirmed by WikiTree:  through the Beismer, Vandermark and Hogancamp families, one of which is so named; I am a 18th cousin, 4 times removed of Lafayette, French aristocrat who fought with the Continental army during our American Revolution.

Our families' Lafayette Vandermark is buried in the Vandermark Family Cemetery in Debruce, Sullivan County, NY.

Lafayette Vandermark headstone

It's one of the fun features of WikiTree, you can find how closely related you are to various historical people and celebrities; if that's what you're interested in.


What have I been working on?  A little bit of everything.  

  • I adopted a lot of WikiTree profiles: orphaned Odell profiles (no manager) in NY; some profiles of variant spellings of Beismer and Wormuth, as part of the one-name studies; 
  • I created a couple of profiles of Native American people I'd met or knew about.  
  • I adopted profiles of Platners in NY.

I had not thought about the fact that by adopting orphan profiles at WikiTree, I've committed myself to ensure they are correct and as complete as I can make them.  So, now I have a mountain of work to do to accomplish that.  It keeps me busy.

  • I started the PIP (Profile Improvement Project) Voyage which will, hopefully, help me improve my skills at WikiTree.  I've already learned some things.
  • I'm continuing to research how to form a Family Cemetery Association for the Vandermark Family Cemetery in Debruce.  It's a little complicated and I definitely need some relatives of the three (3) original families to participate.  Anyone related to any of the original families: Beesimer, Vandermark, Hogancamp; are welcomed to participate.
  • Best of all, I'm making day and overnight trips to visit New York cemeteries and historical and genealogical societies to take pictures, notes and do research.  There's still a mountain of information that isn't online.

July Family Dates: births, marriages and deaths: 

Included are adopted profiles, click on a name and arrive at their WikiTree profile.  This will always be a work in progress as profiles and information are added.  Your input is always welcomed.

02 Jul 1920 Laura Shaw married Edmund Shaw
03 Jul 1822 Frederick Biesemeier was born
03 Jul 1901 Alfred Biesemeier died
04 Jul 1931 Mildred Tarchine married John Tarchine
04 Jul 1953 Dorothy Schulz married Walt Schulz
04 Jul 1888 Mary Wormuth married David Neer
04 Jul 1822 Phebe Brown was born
06 Jul 1883 Leroy O'Dell was born - Not my Dad
07 Jul 1898 Erling Odell was born
07 Jul 1928 Irene Platner died
08 Jul 1813 Susan Sherwood was born
08 Jul 1885 George Bossley was born
08 Jul 1925 Dora Reimuth was born
10 Jul 1942 Emma Camp died
10 Jul 1830 Sophia Wilcox married Joel Randall
10 Jul 1903 Joseph Odell died
10 Jul 1771 Maria Frans was born
12 Jul 1905 Laura Shaw was born
12 Jul 1853 Hendrick Mattice died
13 Jul 1918 Laura Chase died
16 Jul 1899 Robert Odell married Anna Odell
17 Jul 2006 Mary Barnhart died
17 Jul 1942 Carolyn Reeves died
17 Jul 1847 Othniel Odell was born
17 Jul 2007 Bill O'Dell died
18 Jul 2006 Frank Platner died
19 Jul 1893 Lowell Barnhart was born
19 Jul 1820 Anna Abrams was born
21 Jul 1997 Francis Grant died
21 Jul 1910 Roy Beismer was born
22 Jul 1947 Roger Besemer was born
22 Jul 1996 Leon Shenandoah died
23 Jul 1777 Janneke Besemer was born
24 Jul 1806 Cornelius Beesimer was born
24 Jul 1858 Henry Mattice married Georgeanna Mattice
25 Jul 1865 John Hendrickson died
25 Jul 1902 Stella Baxter was born
29 Jul 2009 Ruth O'Dell died
29 Jul 1953 Belle Space died
30 Jul 1931 Iona Bowker died
31 Jul 1937 Anson Odell married Marcella Odell
31 Jul 1950 Roy Beismer died

That's it for now                                          

Sunday, June 19, 2022

An Interesting Feature

 FamilySearch.org is the Mormon church's genealogy web site.  They have a lot of free records and information about their many genealogy libraries all over the country.  Family history is important to them.

This morning, I got an email from them with an interesting feature they've provided; they combed through members' family trees and found ancestors that were living when the Emancipation Proclamation was issued, calculated their ages and sent out emails to members showing that information.  It's quite interesting to see.

The Emancipation Proclamation was issued on January 1, 1863.  This is what they found from my brief family tree posted on their web site:  (The links on the names will take you to their WikiTree profiles)

My great grandmother, Eliza Vandermark, was 13 at the time.  

 


 Her mother, Mary Jane Hogancamp Vandermark, was about 34.


Eliza's father, Simeon Vandermark, was about 41, at the time.

My 2nd great grandfather, Henry Mattice, was about 24.

His wife, my 2nd great grandmother, Georgeanna Dudley, was about 30.

My 2nd great grandfather, Joseph Wormuth, was about 48.


His wife, my 2nd great grandmother, Eleanor Debeck Wormuth, was about 30, then.


My 2nd great grandfather, James Hulse, was about 74.

My 2nd great grandfather, Joseph Odell, was about 2 years old then.


My 2nd great grandfather, Henry Flowers, was 20, and fought in the Civil War.

His wife, my 2nd great grandmother, Martha Hayden Flowers, was 6.  Uh oh, something seems wrong there; but, no, they didn't marry until 1878 when she was 21 and there was roughly 15 years between them.

My 3rd great grandfather, Jacob Mattice, Henry Mattice's father, was about 52.

His wife, my 3rd great grandmother, Mark Parks, about about 53.

My great grandfather, my father's grandfather, Frank Mattice, was 4, at the time.


My great grandfather, my mother's grandfather, Silas Beismer, was about 24.  I'm pretty sure he did not serve during the war.


My great grandmother, my mother's grandmother, Fanny Hulse Wotmuth, was 8.


Her husband, my great grandfather, T. James Wormuth, was 16.


There are more, of course, but I don't put all of my tree everywhere online; mostly at WikiTree.  

I think it's fun to look at this and imagine back then.

I have several ancestors, that I've found so far, who fought in the Civil War for the Union.

Enjoy.




 

Wednesday, June 8, 2022

Preserving the Vandermark Family Cemetery and other cemetery concerns

 I'm back on this.

But, before that -- there are new and interesting links that I've added.  See the Links tab above.

Rural NYS has a lot of small cemeteries, some of them originally family burial spaces, that should be preserved and, in some cases, promoted as interesting places to visit.

I've tried to get enough people interested in working with me, and to comply NYS regulations, to form a family cemetery association for the Vandermark Family Cemetery in Debruce, NY.  There's also the Henry Family Cemetery, nearby, closer to the road.  The Vandermark Family Cemetery was the burial place of family members of the Vandermark, Hogancamp and Beismer families. It is, unhappily, landlocked so access, in the past, has sometimes been difficult.  There is a road to it but, the last time I was there, that road was on private property.

I have a few new ideas to get this done.

I'm not finding information at the NYS site today, but I'm determined to get this done.  There may be legal work to be done and fees, etc.  That's one of the reasons for the GoFundMe I started, so I can get this and other things done.

I want the cemetery preserved for the families.

I'm also interested in green burial and green funerals which also preserves open space and can provide a natural and historic place for people to visit.

If anyone is interested in working on this, please let me know; I'll appreciate the help.




Thursday, June 2, 2022

Awaiting my PIP Voyage guide

I decided to begin the Voyage process with the profile of Hannah Chase, wife of Barnabas Butler who is a brick wall in that family line.  I haven't done much with Hannah's profile because, so far, I haven't found decent sources for information about her.  She was one of my ggg grandmothers on my paternal side.


In the meantime:  These are June anniversaries of various sorts for people I'm researching; they're not all blood relatives, some are profiles that I've adopted for various reasons  The links will take you back to their WikiTree profiles.

June

01 Jun 1862 Minerva Odell was born
01 Jun 1756 Rhoda Griswold was born
02 Jun 1899 Harry Eronimous was born
02 Jun 1924 Mary Ribich was born
03 Jun 1926 Minnie Lowe died
03 Jun 1771 Jobannah Smith died
05 Jun 1889 Ray Wormuth was born
06 Jun 1767 Elijah Flower died
06 Jun 1934 Fanny Wormuth died
06 Jun 1973 Elmer Biesemeier died
07 Jun 1881 Clinton Beismer died
09 Jun 1899 Nellie Flowers married Albert Sager
11 Jun 1903 Bertha Steinover married Leroy Steinhover
11 Jun 1923 Iona Bowker married Joseph Bowker
14 Jun 1813 Amy Powley was born 
14 Jun 1893 Florence Squaires was born
14 Jun 1934 William Hulse died
15 Jun 1879 George Odell was born
15 Jun 1926 Eunice Hubble died
16 Jun 1916 Elmer Biesemeier married Violet Biesemeier
16 Jun 1876 Isabel Space was born
17 Jun 1800 Catrina Besemer was born
17 Jun 1938 Jim O'Dell was born
18 Jun 1985 Lois Gergens died
19 Jun 1996 John Tarchine died
19 Jun 1904 Henry Besmer was born
20 Jun 1951 Elting Beesimer died
20 Jun 1939 Eliza Beismer died
22 Jun 1971 Charles Dewitt died
23 Jun 1971 Bertha Kniffen died
23 Jun 1910 Mary Ann Elizabeth Wisor died
23 Jun 1927 Dorothy Schulz was born
24 Jun 1782 Melissa Hoyt was born
26 Jun 1900 David Butler died
27 Jun 1895 Awilda Neail married Andrew Neail
27 Jun 1838 Henry Mattice was born 
27 Jun 1795 Joseph Flower was born 
27 Jun 1907 Beatrice Goodman was born 
27 Jun 1916 Clara Neail died
27 Jun 1908 Rebecca Vandermark died
28 Jun 1839 Lucy Odell died
29 Jun 1782 Hendrick Mattice was born
29 Jun 1860 Joseph Odell was born
29 Jun 1936 Lowell Barnhart died 
30 Jun 1898 George Odell married Fanny Odell 
30 Jun 1878 Henry Flowers married Martha Flowers
30 Jun 1920 Harry Eronimous married Esther Eronimous


Please consider donating to my FamilyTracker Genealogy GoFund Me.  This is a very expensive activity and I share everything I find.  Thank you.





Monday, May 30, 2022

Juniors, Seniors, II (2nd), III (3rd), etc. and related topics

 Well, you learn something new every day, if you keep an open mind and your natural curiosity.


I thought I had learned that men, named after their father's, usually, were only, technically, a Junior, if their full name was EXACTLY the same as their father and Dad became a Senior when he named his son after himself.  Then, if the Junior named a son after himself, the son became the 2nd or II, etc.  Well, no.  

Because, I had found many, many juniors whose first and last names were the same as their father's but not necessarily their middle name.  I also found lots of Juniors who didn't use that suffix, Jr., nor did their fathers use Sr.

I had also learned, over the past decade, that after Senior dies, it's more correct that Junior drop the Jr. since he's no longer the Junior; although that practice is not necessarily followed.  I've also noticed that celebrity Juniors usually don't follow that practice; particularly if both were celebrities.

And, sometimes the name skips a generation.  And, sometimes the name is given to a nephew, etc.

So, I asked, at WikiTree because they have a way to ask such questions and tons of people there, more knowledgeable than I, about things genealogical; even professional genealogists.  This is what I learned:

First, the ideas I had about how and when to use Junior and Senior and 2nd, 3rd, II, III, etc. came from Emily Post's Etiquette and she doesn't cite her sources, so....  

One person, at WikiTree, answering indicated that Junior and Senior is primarily an English language thing.  They also said that it's not always father and son but could be Uncle and Nephew.  They also said that, as far as exactness of the full name, prior to the 19th century, middle names did not usually exist.

Another person informed that, in England, the II, III, etc. were reserved for Monarchs.

From one WikiTree member who answered: "Sadly, the way a suffix is applied is not consistent so what may be acceptable to one family, may not be recognized in another. All are correct if it's on the birth certificate!"  That seems to be the prevailing practice; although I haven't checked any of the birth certificates I have.

I personally like the Emily Post method, or some of it.  And, I like middle names because they differentiate people and it's very helpful in family history research to have people named uniquely.  It's just easier to keep people straight if all the William Smiths in a family have different middle names.

But, as I indicated above, it's a free-for-all in naming.  And, now names are made up that don't even have meanings behind them.  Gone are the days when both surnames and given names actually meant something.  Rufus means red (hair), Violet was named for a flower, April for the month.  Surnames like Cooper, Smith, Cartwright told you what they did as a profession.

After all these years of researching family history, I've acquired an interest in Onomastics, the study of proper names (See, open mind, natural curiosity):  

After all, why, out of all her siblings, did Aunt Mary not have a middle name, when all the rest did?  

Since, many middle names come from other family members (mine from Aunt Iona), where did Joseph King Odell's middle name come from?  I'm particularly interested in this family tidbit and the fact that at least one other person in the family had that middle name and that my father's name, Leroy, means the king in French.  Does all that have some significance or is it just coincidental?

I find some people's names very interesting:  

I think the most unattractive given name I've come across is Permelia which means "by sweetness", derived from Latin and is a variant of Pamela which I think is a pleasant name.  I don't find it a sweet name.

I was told that my grandfather, William Odell, changed the spelling of our surname to O'Dell because he had a younger uncle named the same, William Odell, and didn't like to be called Little William when he was the elder.  But, their names were not the same; his was William Joseph, his uncle was William Ralph, so he could just as well have used his middle name, Joseph.  And, his uncle wasn't younger, he was older by 4 years - so much for the accuracy of family stories.  Don't trust them.

I've said elsewhere, in this blog, that I realized, over the past few years that most of the names of our ancestors and relatives that we've ever seen have been written by someone other than the person themselves.  So, I've begun to collect signatures, when I can find them, of ancestors and relatives.  That, almost immediately, made me aware of how recently we, as a species, became educated and literate.  Looking through the various censuses, you see, right away, how many ancestors could neither read nor write.  In some cases, it was because they were immigrants and didn't, yet, know English, but, in many cases, most had no or little education.  They were needed, at home, working.  They lived subsistence lives.

Education, in the broader meaning, is a wonderful thing; as I said at the very beginning of this post.