Sunday, January 24, 2016

Exploring Old Newspapers for Clues To Your Family's History

Spirit of the Ages  newspaper March 9, 1901

I decided to approach my newspaper research a little differently this week.  I usually plug in a name and a State and then browse through all those papers that come up even though they are not near my family's usual residence. Example, Bennington, Vermont is no where near where my Merrill line lived but they did have a newspaper that the usual search of Merrill in Vermont would bring up.

This week I decided to pick a newspaper that I knew was from near where my Merrill line lived during the late 1800-1920 time frame.  I chose the Spirit of the Ages newspaper because if came from Woodstock and my family lived in Hartland, Reading, West Woodstock, Pomfret and a few other little towns near there.  So I entered the name of the newspaper, then Reading, Merrill, as my search criteria.



Up popped a huge list of that combination.  I spent over 4 days perusing all these listings and found 127 articles that named my Merril line!  It was so exciting to find my great-great-grandfather's obituary with all the children and siblings listed.  Also to see little tidbits of my great-great-grandmother's travels over the area visiting her children.  The three big articles about my great-uncle Hollis's cows being poisoned with the court information included.  Even the sad stories of losses and sicknesses.  My great-grandfather's purchase of a new horse.  Or the funny story of the new sewer line being extended to my cousin's street.

Newspapers are filled with little tidbits of information that can add so much to our family story.  I found two cousins from the 1900-1920 time frame that had several little articles about them.  Both of them died young, so I decided to find the death certificates online at Ancestry for them.  The one Hazel, was really close to my grandmother.  They were both born in the late 1800's and grew up in the same town.  My grandmother spoke of her often.  She died at age 22.  When I found the death certificate, I was astonished to find she committed suicide by shooting herself!  She had only been married 2 years.  I sat here and felt sorrow as if I knew her and had just learned of her death.  Those newspaper articles about her showed a different story than a life so sad she would take her own life.  The other cousin was in the newspapers a lot as she was a teacher and each time she came from the academy where she taught, they would tell of her visit home.  She died at age 36.  She married at age 30, which for the early 1900's was old.  She died with an ectopic pregnancy.  Again, I felt as if I had just learned of the death of a friend.  Reading about their lives through these newspaper articles had made them come alive.

In order to document my finding's I opened two screens, my Family Tree Maker program and the actual article.  I made a source file then added each article as a citation.  Because I was using the same source each time, it was much easier to document it.  If you have multiple monitors it would be even easier.



I had the information details on from the articles and could just transcribe it into the Family Tree Maker program. This would work with whatever program you use.

In one week I as able to add dimension and depth to my family story.  Those little tidbits make it more interesting and makes the people who were just names in my family database become my friends too.




Spirit of the Age Newspaper (Woodstock, VT, Spirit of the Age), www.newspapers.com, December 5, 1903; page 2

The reason I have my Family Tree Maker program opened at the same time as I am searching the newspapers is to verify the family connections.  I knew when I read the above article  that Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Brown were Emma Merrill's parents, I knew the names Verna, Hilda, Harlan, Thelma and Reba were their children.

I wish you many happy hours browsing the old newspapers found online and in libraries.
For a list of more newspapers found on the internet, here is a link to my toolbox for newspaper sites:










Thursday, January 14, 2016

Hidden Gems in Town Clerk Records


"Vermont, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1732-2005," images, <i>FamilySearch</i> (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1961-27950-4617-38?cc=1987653 : accessed 14 January 2016), Windsor &gt; Reading &gt; Births, marriages, deaths, town records 1817-1858 vol 3-4 &gt; image 306 of 480; town clerk offices, Vermont.


I was "browsing" through the town clerk records from Reading, Vermont looking for proof of when my 4th great grandfather Jonathan Merrill moved to Reading.  I know he died there in 1879 and I know the date of one of his children's birth was in Plymouth, Vermont in 1840.  Logically he moved there between those dates.

As I was jumping around trying to find the files dated past 1840, I came across the image above.  It was from 1839 and I was about to go to another page when I noticed notes on the second page dated 1860!  I realized one of the clerks had gone back and added notes about people to earlier notes.  On another page I found a whole family genealogy added to the birth of a person in 1840.  Someone had come back and added the other children's birthdates and even some death dates for the parents.  All signed and certified by the clerk.

The lesson learned from this is to be willing to go page-by-page even though the date you are seeking is not on the image you are looking at presently.  We never know what kind of gems of family history are hidden in the "side notes".

Happy treasure hunting....

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Mapping My Genealogy? How?


Mid-century city and road maps can be used to map your family's past.


There are many wonderful historical mapping sites online.  There are tools that help you overlay maps from the past to what is today's road and city boundaries.  All of them offer a unique and easy-to-find look at mapping your family's travels and past residences and in some types you can use the old boundary land grants to map out your ancestor's land as it would be today.

I have a large collection of old travel maps from the places our family visited.  It is fun to go back over those large city maps like one for Atlanta or New York City and see those cities they way they were when we visited in the 1960's through the 1990's. I have vacation maps for places like Sanibel Island or the Smokey Mountain parks.  Some from little towns that our ancestors lived in and we visited the relatives that still live there.

It is both a fun collection and very useful to document what was there at the time we visited. So many roads and towns are changed, even in the 20th century lots of place are no longer or the roads to and from them have changed.

If you don't happen to have any paper maps from your travels...here are some online sites you might like to try for mapping your ancestors.










Have some fun searching for your old places.  You may find the past is closer than your once thought it was.


















Friday, November 27, 2015

Gathering Memories Before It Is Too Late

Pre-wedding haircut

The memories of family events fade quickly.  If we don't document what was going on, the true nuance of the photos may be lost.  The photo above is of my mother and my aunt.  On it's own, it is just a photo of two ladies at a local beauty salon.  What it doesn't show is, these two are sisters who are getting ready for one of their grandson's wedding. .  It doesn't show that they traveled over 400 miles to get there. It doesn't say the who the woman reflected in the mirror is.  It doesn't show that the beauty salon was an old store-front from the early 1900's.  The only way anyone will know those facets of the photo is if someone who was there documents it.

I have made it my project this year to scan all the hundreds of photos I inherited from my grandmother and my parents.  Thankfully my grandmother and my mother were avid documentors on the backs of the photos or on the envelope the photos came in.  Still there have been so many photos that were not written on and even though I was there for many of the events. I cannot remember who the people are.

It occurred to me I have to come up with a few ways to get help.  I am making Facebook albums so my relatives can tell me who they are if they remember.  Also, I will be making some blog posts that will ask for help.  "Do You Know This Person" or "Who Is It?", or maybe even "Help Me!  I am lost don't remember my name!"

I would love to hear from others on how they handle the forgotten people or events.  It does help sometimes to look at a set of event photos and try to document the scene.  That sometimes does trigger memories.  I have also texted some photos to my sisters in hopes they would remember more than me.  So many of the above generation are gone.  Both of these wonderful women in the above photo are gone now.


This is a copy of an old tintype.  We know the man on the right is my great grandfather, John Thomas Hames.  He had no brothers, only two sisters, so the men in the picture cannot be his immediate family.  We do know he lived with his aunt and uncle after his parents died so these men may be cousins. They look very much alike as if they are brothers.   

This was in my grandparents belongings, found after they died in a trunk. How I wish they had been the ones who dragged out the old photo albums and told us the stories.  We would have been able to know for sure who they are.  That is why it is so important to either document on the item, and/or tell the stories to the family.  I know it has made me a better documenter of family history.  I don't want those who come behind me to throw old photos away because they don't know who they are and have no reason to find out.



Sunday, November 8, 2015

Treasure Hunting in the Vermont Town Clerk Records






"Vermont, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1732-2005," images, <i>FamilySearch</i>
(https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1961-27948-6744-55?cc=1987653 : accessed 9 November 2015), Windsor &gt; Hartland &gt; Births, marriages, deaths, town records 1810-1871 vol 3-4 &gt; image 333 of 424; town clerk offices, Vermont. 

While perusing the images in this wonderful database found on Family Search, I found many pages of treasures.  Birth, marriage and death records.  The birth records above list the wife's name with the husband.  

I knew about Fanny as she is my 4th great-grandmother.  The second wife and all those other children...what a nice surprise to find.  In this record, I also realized that Fannie died in childbirth with her son, Thomas as she died the day he was born.


The lesson is--don't be shy about looking through the browseable records found on Family Search.  They contain some wonderful records with all sorts of lovely finds...

I also found the maiden name of the 2nd wife later in the files when the marriage records showed up.

Have fun treasure hunting!











Thursday, May 7, 2015

How to upload and share a Google Doc


This is a basic look at uploading and sharing a doc from Google Docs.

First, create your document on Word or whatever word processing program you use. [You can create the document in Google Docs itself, but that is another blog post.]
The easiest way to find Google Docs is to go to the home page













Click on the 9-square cube


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This will open Drive for you.  If you are new there will be some pop-up hints you can read or close, whichever you choose.
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Click on the "New" button on the left. 
This will open a drop-down menu. 
Choose "file upload".
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Find the word document you want to upload from your hard drive and click, "okay".
When the file uploads, open it by double clicking it.  

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Click on the icon with the person and + sign 
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Click on the "get shareable link" button, then copy the link.

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Then you can post it on the DearMyrtle comment spot here.  
That will make the link to your homework available for us to look at.
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Hope this helps.
Molly