Finding Family

October 1st, 2008

Monterey County Genealogy Society hosts conference
By LISA CRAWFORD WATSON
Herald correspondent

Perhaps there was an argument, a falling out. Maybe an affair. Or a financial crisis. Or maybe something much more dramatic, anything, one might hope, that would make the pondering worthwhile. What else would cause her grandparents to pack up the kids and the car and move out of state, closing the door on their past?

It’s not that Junel S. Davidsen never wondered, not that she never asked her mother what happened to those who came before. It’s just that her mother, out of respect for her own mother’s wishes, never brought it up. And so the story, it seemed, was buried with the generation.

“Some families are unwilling to talk about the past,” Davidsen said. “My grandmother simply said we could find out after she was gone. I always hoped she’d leave us some papers, some indication about the history of our family. But she didn’t leave us a clue. After she died, I was able to find her Social Security death index, from which I ordered a copy of her application. On that it told me where she was born. It was a start.”

The real beginning was the genealogy kit Davidsen’s husband gave her for Christmas, coupled with her father’s permission to start researching her mother’s side of the family. And the real Christmas gift came when she located her mother’s cousin in Watsonville. It was the first contact with extended family in more than 70 years.

The impetus for genealogy, the study of family history and lineage, is often the desire to solve a mystery, to verify citizenship,

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Vecer: Macedonians tied to Antic Macedonians, Greeks to Celtic, Germanic, Slavic…

October 1st, 2008

Today’s Macedonians are descendants of the Antic Macedonians, says research results from the Swiss Genealogy Institute iGENEA. For a second time an independent research institution confirms what Oxford and Madrid University confirmed a decade ago.

iGENEA is the most famous global Genealogy institute who once again frustrated the Greek government by confirming the direct connection between the Macedonians today and in Antic times.

The question came from a Greek citizen who asked iGENEA the following question: “What are the roots of today SlavMacedonians”.

The Institute responded:  “Before all, they are Macedonians, not slavMacedonias as you referred to them for political reasons. The largest part of the Macedonians are direct descendants of the Antic Macedonians. Only a minor portion have a Slavic connection”.

iGENEA backed up their findings with hard numbers. However, tying the today’s Macedonians with Antic Macedonians is not the only disappointing information for Greece. According to iGENEA, only 32 percent of Greek citizens have Macedonian, Hellenic and even Arab origin. iGENEA further explains that 31 percent of Greek citizens have Celtic roots, 12 percent Germanic and Slavic origin, while 11% have Illyrian roots.

iGENEA also negated the Illyrians roots of the Albanians. In stark contrast to Albanian beliefs, IGENEA says the Albanians have the least Illyrian roots. Only 20 percent of the Albanians have Illyrian roots, while 40 percent of today’s Bosnians have Illyrian roots.

In the past several months, the iGENEA Genealogy Institute had been flooded with requests by Greek Citizens who, ironically, did not care for their own origin, but all questions were aimed at the Macedonians’ origin. iGENEA in its research uses DNK analysis, historical, archeological, and anthropological sources. //26.09.08 (c) Vecer

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Your Link to Your Past

October 1st, 2008

AIKEN, S.C. – Who are my ancestors? That is the question many people were trying to answer Sunday at Aiken County’s Historical Museum. It is an answer that can be emotional, fulfilling, and really quite amazing.

“If you can find something out about your ancestors you can find something about yourself,” Richard Baxter said.

He has found out about both family and self in his 15 years of genealogical research.

“Genealogy has really been an important part of my life,” Baxter said.

Baxter lives in Aiken, but is from New Jersey. He can trace his family all the way back to the early 1700s in Denmark and Scotland. He has also found family in Ireland, Canada, Detroit, St. Petersburg and Augusta.

“I found out that when Charlotte was giving birth to our son Roger in Aiken, at the same time one of my relatives who I didn’t know at the time was giving birth to their son in Augusta,” Baxter said.

Baxter said tracing your history is important for several reasons.

“One, it tells you about yourself, two, it’s a link to the past, and three, it can enrich your life,” he said.

Baxter is a member of the Saint Andrews Society of Aiken, a genealogical group that hosted a seminar Sunday to help people interested in finding out more about their families.

“I’ve been interested in it for a long time but I don’t even know where to start,” Barbara Lynch said. She attended the seminar.

Events like the one at the Aiken County Historical Museum are to help people new to genealogy who often get frustrated or overwhelmed when researching their families.

“I just have names and my parents are gone. So I have my sister and she and I have to piece together the things,” Patty Oakland said.

She also came out to Sunday’s meeting and said she’s diving into her family’s past to preserve its future.

“Now I have grandchildren and I want them to know what I have found out,” Oakland said.

Baxter said that is really what it is all about.

“To stand before you’re ancestors grave and realize you’re here because they were here that can be an emotional thing,” Baxter said.

If you would like to start researching your family history begin by organizing what information you already know a pedigree chart. Then try visiting the Family History Center at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints located at 358 E. Pine Log Road in Aiken. There you will find help tracing your family’s history for free.

For people in Augusta, the public library’s downtown branch will open a genealogical research area in 2010.

The St. Andrews Society of Aiken will host another two genealogy events. On October 5th there will be a two part session starting at 2 p.m. at the Aiken County Public Library. This session will cover the emigration of Scots to America and using the internet for genealogical research. On October 12th there will be a working session at the Aiken County Historical Museum where those attending are encouraged to bring any information they have on a family tree. Attendees will be assisted in finding out more about what to do next in their search.

There are also some websites that can help you research. Start with Cindy’s List. It is a database of genealogy sites.

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Conference aims to help genealogists uncover Eastern European branches of family trees

July 27th, 2008
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
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Map out your route for success at the Muskogee Public Library

July 27th, 2008

By Nancy Calhoun
Phoenix Correspondent

Very few people would take a trip across the United States without first consulting maps and planning their route.

The same was true for our ancestors. They also consulted maps and followed the established routes, whether waterways, railroads or roads.

Maps provide a wealth of information. Some of these early maps still exist in books, libraries or archives. Many have been reproduced and are available for sale or online.

Maps can define state and county lines and their changes over time. Early day colonial maps show states extending west. Records for early day West Virginia and even Kentucky may be found in Virginia records. County boundaries may have changed numerous times. Families may have lived in the same location for years, yet the county changed repeatedly as boundaries were moved.

Maps can provide the clues to find a missing relation. People moving followed established roads, rivers, canals, and railroads.

An example is the Great Wagon Road. Thousands moved west along this road through the Cumberland Gap in southwestern Virginia, one of the few routes through the formidable Appalachian Mountains. The roads then fanned out to take the travelers to various destinations west, south and north.

A section of this road went through a Calhoun family farm in the Teas, Virginia area. After more than 200 years, the deep road cut into the earth still remains, a silent testimony to the thousands of wagons that rolled and travelers who walked that road to a new home.

Maps are an often overlooked resource in historical collections.

Maps at Muskogee Public Library show what the area was like in the 1800s, Indian Territory, the various Indian Nations, where trails and railroads were located, census townships, and original Indian allotments.

“Historical Atlas of Oklahoma” by Charles Robert Goins and Danney Goble provides a wealth of information on the area which is now Oklahoma. Maps trace early explorers, show where the various native tribes lived, Indian and Oklahoma Territories, railroads, cattle trails, The Three Forks Area, removal maps, battles, ethnic groups, and many other subjects, illustrated with photographs and drawings.

An Oklahoma research classic for years, the newly updated volume adds a new dimension to research.

The Genealogy and Local History collection also contains similar maps for other states. “Illustrated Historical Atlas of the State of Indiana” is a newly acquired publication. It provides detailed township maps for all Indiana counties.

Researchers on their Cherokee background often use Trail of Tears books which contain maps showing the various routes used by the different groups. Other writers have written of their travels as they retrace the route of their ancestor.

Highly detailed maps of areas of Oklahoma are contained in atlases such as “Oklahoma Atlas and Gazetteer” and “The Roads of Oklahoma,” both available in the Genealogy and Local History Department.

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Sure-fire Methods to Wisconsin Genealogy Success – Wisconsin Genealogy: Using WIGENWEB

April 7th, 2008

Wisconsin became the nation’s 30th state in 1848.  It was formed with land that originally belonged to Michigan.  Many northern Europeans began immigrating here in the late 1800s.  Some were Scandinavians and Germans.  More than a dozen Native American tribes lived here prior to the immigration of the northern Europeans.

Five Million Inhabitants

As you probably know, especially if you come from Wisconsin, which is also referred to, as the “Badger State” is the twenty-sixth ranked state in terms of its size and also has a population of over five million people. Listen closely.  For those who are interested in learning more about Wisconsin genealogy, the WIGENWEB project is an important resource and it is made up of many genealogists who provide free information to the public at large.

County Websites

Other places to visit to find out more about Wisconsin genealogy are the County Websites where you can learn about your ancestors who resided there and in case you are not sure of where your ancestors lived, you could use tools included in their Maps & Gazetteers section. Also, WIGENWEB also has an Unknown County Query Board that you can tap if you are not sure of the county where your ancestors came from and their Wisconsin Rootsweb Message Boards is another tool to help you out with your Wisconsin genealogy search.

WIGENWEB

WIGENWEB provides Wisconsin genealogy information pertaining to all counties in the state from collected databases as well as other information resources including genealogical societies, maps, posted queries as well as many other tools and aids. The best place to begin your search for Wisconsin genealogy is the Guide to Wisconsin Genealogy, wherein are contained a good perspective of general resources that you could use, and once you are conversant with such resources, you could then check out WIGENWEB Archives that holds voluminous information that will prove very useful to you.

Robert Bickham’s Twenty-Six Tips

It’s always a good idea to take some time and study how you are going to do the Wisconsin genealogy research to find out where you came from.  There are numerous websites on the World Wide Web (also known as the Internet) that contain Wisconsin Genealogy information.  Go right to the source in Wisconsin and do birthparents Searches, Bible and church records, Adoption, and Biographies of Wisconsin citizens.  Check out the website at Genealogy.com.  There are many articles there on how to conduct a genealogy research project.  Last, but not least read about Robert Bickham’s twenty-six steps for doing genealogy research.  Remember, as Robert Bickham says, “What you discover today, you will be remembered for tomorrow“.

 

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