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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.