Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Julie Bowen: Who do You Think You Are?


Actress Julie Bowen from the Television Show Modern Family was the subject of this weeks Who do you think you are? They went into two of her ancestors on her Mother’s side, one who they call Big Charley. Who is Julie’s Great-Grandfather who during World War one was the head of agency that rounded up German-Americans that some thought was a threat and put them in camps. This is a dark part of American History I didn’t Know about and I have read Howard Zinn’s books so I know a little about that side, but this is a new one on me.

          Another one was Julie’s 4th times Great-Grandfather on her Mother’s father’s side who was a doctor in Pennsylvania before the Civil War. He ran the local underground railroad. So he was one of the good guys who was fighting the dark side of American History.    

Saturday, March 11, 2017

Courteney Cox; who do you think you are?


Courteney Cox is an actress that is most famous for playing Monica on the TV show “Friends”. She was the subject of the latest “Who do you think you are?” Show which traced her ancestry back to William the Conqueror who defeated the English in 1066. One thing it showed is that once your pedigree chart gets some royal blood on it then there are already more charts waiting for you to add to your chart.

Per an English Genealogist on the show one of Courteney’s ancestors murdered King Edward the second by sticking a red-hot poker up his ass (he put it in a nicer way). This Englishman said that this was “after King Edward fell out of favor because of his failures on the battle field”. I happen to have read a history book in which this event was described and what the English Genealogist didn’t want to say was that this event occurred after the Battle of Bannockburn in which the Scots nocked the hell out of the English army.  

I have found that the records of working class people get rarer as you go back through the centuries until even the church records run out. The fact that your direct ancestors double each generation depending where they lived there is a good chance you will get some noble blood on your chart too.

Thursday, February 23, 2017

What’s in a name?


One of the most frustrating things about looking for a person in genealogical records is that you find that a least two people from the same area that have the same name.  I am mostly talking about the British Isles, but I find that Germany is just as bad. It seems that they had a small pool of names to choose from, girls are named Mary, Margaret, Sarah, Ann(e) and Bridget. The boys are named George, Peter, John, Hugh Timothy and Thomas in the UK and Johann, Friederick in Germany.

Now I have a Great-Grandmother named Margaret Armstrong that I found was born in Manchester England in 1845 and she had a brother named George Armstrong. I also found that she married my Great-Grandfather Donald Wilkes in Newcastle on Tyne in 1865. Now I found a Margaret and George Armstrong living with a family in Newcastle on the 1861 UK Census, but in reverse order and this Margaret Armstrong is on record of marrying a person from that family. It even says she was born in Manchester so even if a lot of the information seems right it is not her.

Another case is on my wife’s side with her Great-Grandmother Bridget Kerrigan who I know from all the US Census was born in Ireland in the 1820’s. The age of Bridget on most of the US Census calculate her birth date out to be around 1822-23, Now I found both her sons that were also born in Ireland were baptized in Westmeath Ireland with the dates and parents being correct, so I am fairly sure that Bridget and her husband John Kane were from Westmeath Ireland. I bet you guessed that I found more people named Bridget Kerrigan, in fact Westmeath if filled with people named Kerrigan, which happens when you are looking at ancestral homes of your ancestors. Another person that was also looking for Bridget Kerrigan found a record of a Bridget Kerigan being baptized in 1827 in Westmeath and I found a Bridget Kerrigan in court records suing someone in 1834. Which might be right if she was born about 1822 where she would be about 12 years old, but if she was born in 1827 she would have been only 7 and would be more improbable.
Another common frustration is the spelling of names, but I will get into that in another post for I don’t like to make these posts too long. I don’t if anyone reads it or not, but I still like to make as easy as possible.




Monday, February 6, 2017

Eulogy from Scotland


I Received a letter from my cousin Anne Reilly who lives here on Long Island, now Anne is a Daughter of my father’s older sister Mary. Anne said she received a letter with a eulogy of my other cousin Ann Gallacher Hutchison who lived back in Scotland and who is the Daughter of my father’s younger sister Vera. The letter sent to Anne Reilly by Angela Hutchison Walker who is Ann Gallacher Hutchison’s Daughte

          Anyway, the eulogy gave a detailed account of Ann Gallacher Hutchison’s life, but was written for folks who knew her. So, I modified it into a biography of Ann adding full names of her parents and husband as well as the full names of places. So, her descendants will better understand her life of growing up in a small Scottish town in the latter part of the 20th Century.
    This is the first time I used a eulogy in this way, but I did write a brief biography of my sister when she died my niece turned it into a eulogy.  I think it is a good idea to use eulogies to add life to your ancestor’s story.

Sunday, January 8, 2017

2017 a new year of research part one.


 I begin this year 2017 as I started many past years looking to Ireland for any information about either my wife or my family. There is some hope that this will be the year that more Irish Catholic Record open up. The Irish records so far only go back as far as the 1860’s. since every line that I have traced to Ireland fled is the 1840’s. My wife’s family to America and my family to Scotland. Now the documents such as Census or Marriage Registry just show Ireland as the place of birth. Now I do have one lead on the Wallace family (My Grandmother’s family) which seems to have been from Tyrone county Ireland. I am hopeful the new year will bring new insights into my family.

Saturday, December 24, 2016

Scotland's People

The scotlandspeople.gov.uk web site has been a great source for my genealogical research of my family. Now they have updated their web site, now I loved their old web site and was afraid that I wouldn’t like the new site, I guess I am getting more conservative as I get older. Once I got into the new site I realized that it was actually much better than the old site. The new site for one thing has photos that might relate to the lives of my ancestors that the old site didn’t have and hopefully they will get more photos over time.
          When I went to the old site I had to go each category like births, marriages and deaths after 1856, from 1513 to 1856, each UK Census from 1841 to 1911, Valuations and Legal Records. Now with the new site you just put in all the information you have on your ancestor and it will search all the records for you. Which makes it a lot easier and could catch records you might have missed.
          You pay by credits, they have added Pay Pal and American Express making easier to pay also.

          If you have Scottish Ancestors this is a great site to find information your family. 

Sunday, December 4, 2016

Tools of our Fathers

These are photos of tools used by three generations of Eiermann men from Frederick Eiermann who came to New York in 1879 at the age of 16 from the little village of Rohrbach Villingen in the Grand Duchy of Baden (in what is now S.W. Germany). He became a carpenter building houses in Brooklyn and Queens, he pass the business down to his son Frederick Herman Eiermann and his Grandson Frederick George Eiermann who build houses in Queens and  Nassau Counties. These are just some of the tools that have survived to be pass down to Frederick Eiermann’s Great-Granddaughter and my wife Adele Grace Eiermann Boyle   

Hammers and planes used by the Eiermann's Builders





Tool Box made by Frederick Eiermann who came from Baden now Germany in 1879 at the age of 16 and build houses in Brooklyn and Queens and used by two generations that build house on Long Island's Nassau County.





Molden Plane