Showing posts with label Revolutionary War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Revolutionary War. Show all posts

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Sunday Review: Ohio Ancestors 2014 Year in Review

A full 11 days into 2015, I'm still looking back at 2014 to help set the stage for my family history research going forward in 2015.  There's a lot more to get done.


I now list 35 Revolutionary War patriots in my kids' bloodline.  That's a growth of eight in 2014.  I don't expect a 20% growth in that list for 2015 though.  Confirming a few more might be nice.


I attended the wedding of my third cousin in December and met some living family members, including a convergence story that's borderline creepy.  Who would think that my third cousin from New York would marry someone who once lived just two doors away from where we live now in Ohio?


I count finding my fourth great grandmother Phebe's house a great find of 2014.  It will be made greater if I can schmooze an invite to see the inside in 2015.


We'll make a point to visit the Catholic church in Somerset, Ohio again in 2015 where my fourth great grand uncle was a priest more than a century and a half ago.  Richard Pius Miles would later become the first bishop of the Diocese of Nashville.  If a family trip takes us near Nashville, we'll even visit his burial location in the basement of the church. 

Whatever our 2015 Summer Vacation destination turns out to be, it will certainly include some family history stopovers.

2014 would have been a less-productive family history research year but for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania releasing their death certificates archive to Ancestry.com.  That lifted Pennsylvania way up on the list of states where family history research is friendly.  These death certificates helped solve some family mysteries and confirm some others.  My sister-in-law and Aunt, by marriage, are two families with Ohio and Pennsylvania roots that have been made easier to research thanks to this action.  Showing them my findings are on my list in 2015.

Not everything was merely electronic in 2014.  I visited the clothing store my great great grandfather owned in Meadville, PA.  It's now a coffee shop and bakery.

There are some regrets. 

I still haven't seen or gotten a copy of the marriage certificate for Andrew Alfred Baker and Beatrice Merz my Aunt mentioned in an email a year ago.  That information sparked a breakthrough that helped me complete my five-generation family tree.  I may have to send her a digital camera with a return envelope to get a copy.  Would that be too direct?

Figuring out once and for all whether the George Platt on the Brig Niagara at the Battle of Lake Erie in September 1813 is the same George F. Platt, my third great grandfather, who served at Lake Erie with the Pennsylvania Militia is a still-unfulfilled quest.  I just recently obtained the National Archives military file for George F. Platt and there's no mention of his service to the Navy in the file.  I'm still searching though.

 
I'm still waiting for some more photos from cousins.  The Bernard Family Reunion yielded one great find, but the promise of more is on my list to get fulfilled in 2015.  I'm really hoping my Cleveland second cousin once removed finds that missing box of photos with my great great grandmother's photo(s) in it too.
 
With my five-generation family tree now complete, the never-ending quest is to go deeper into the family tree.  With less records, less headstones, and less photographs from that sixth generation and backward, that's going to be tougher to accomplish.  That's 2015 in a nutshell.

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Ancestry Saturday: My Kids' Revolutionary War Patriots Bloodline Update


The plague on the south wall of the Highland County Courthouse in Hillsboro, Ohio has the names of two of my ancestors who were Revolutionary War patriots.  This is a source of pride, but those two are just a sampling of the full list.  With each passing generation of my family, the list will grow and grow.

My research, as of December 2013, showed 27 patriots in the direct blood line of my kids.  The list is now at 35 as of January 1, 2015.

Here's the updated list.

The 22 patriots from their Dad's side:

William Altman
Thomas Fleming Bernard
Charles Beaven Blandford
Elijah Charles
Joseph Conway
George Daubenspeck
John Jacob Daubenspeck
John Downing
Garrett Fiscus
William Fleming
Henry Guthrie
James Gutridge
Robert Jameson
Adam Crain Jones
John Foster Leaverton
John Jacob Muhleisen
Michael Reitenauer
Jeremiah Shontz
Daniel Smith
James Ebenezer Smith
Samuel Woodmansee
James Wygant


The 13 patriots from their Mom's side:

Thomas Adkins
Charles Booth
Zadock Bosworth
Ebenezer Cole, Jr.
Ebenezer Cole, Sr.
Samuel Ferguson
Ebenezer Gage
Charles Gatliff
James Felix McGuire
John Nay
Joshua Quance
Moses Searle
Daniel Walton

I've given my kids a head start.  I bet they can find more some day.

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Ohio Ancestors 2013 Year in Review

I'm reading newspaper updates on the stories of the past year.  Why not a blog version?

Here's some updates on the ohioancestors.blogspot.com columns from the past year.


My column of the year was the eight-part series titled Solved: The Their-Disselbrede Mystery.  The update is that my father-in-law has, for the first time, visited the cemetery where his grandparents William and Barbara Disselbrett are buried.  It was a less than 30 minute trip, but he never knew where to look.


Trading Finds was about Elaine in Wisconsin.  She sent me a photo of my kids' third great grandfather as a trade for my finding some records for her.  I traded back again when I sent her one that included her great grandfather a few months later in Are These The Same People?


I preached, mostly to myself, the need to document vital records for my five-generation family tree in March.  I celebrated finding the elusive Gretna Green marriage of Royal and Grace Smith Platt in August though.

The digital photo matching search for which regimental band trombonist was my great grandfather proved right on.  More From The Mogon Attic brought an end to the mystery and showed the value of digital photo face matching software.


That great Mogon Attic find was a true highlight for the year too.  I'm Facebook friends with my second cousin once removed, third cousin, and third cousin once removed in Pittsburgh now.  There's little chance of losing that connection now.


I puzzled about Group Think in Genealogy that had me wondering who were the  parents of Thomas Worthington Sanders.  Now, months later, I found my cousin in Eastern Ohio admitting that he doesn't know where the name Worthington as Thomas' middle name came from in the first place.  I've taken that name down and posted an update to the columns on it.  Since I've now also located an obit and a photo of Thomas W. Sanders, I'll have more to say about this in the future.


In September, I sweated out the acceptance of my "proof" of James McConnell being in Ohio pre-statehood.  Not long after, I got accepted into the First Families of Ohio lineage society with the coveted pre-statehood status to boot thanks to James McConnell.  Oh yeah, they generously added some ancestors I hadn't even sought too.


On Veterans' Day, I put my first list of Revolutionary War patriots together and marveled that my kids could boast, by my research, at least 21 patriots in their bloodline.  This month, I grew the list to 27.

2014 has more mysteries to solve.  Stay tuned.

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Ancestry Saturday: A Lesson In Keep-On-Lookingness

 
I ventured up a big hill and on to private property to find a walled cemetery.  The gravestone for my fifth great grand uncle was to be there in Magnolia, Ohio in Stark County, yet no photo was online. 
 
Stark County is my native home county, and I was intrigued to find if a stone still existed for my relative for whom a predecessor town to Magnolia got its name in 1836--Downingville.
 
 
What I quickly found, though, was that the 191 years since the stone was placed had not served it well.  I could tell the death year was 1822. I could read 72 years as his age.  Nothing else of note was still there, including his name.
 
James Downing and his brother, John, my fifth great grandfather, served in the Revolutionary War.  If it weren't for the metal star commemorating his war service, I would not have been able to believe, with any certainty, that it was his grave I was photographing. 
 
Nonetheless, I was the first person to post a photo of his stone on FindaGrave.com to share it with the World.  I couldn't find a stone for his wife, Sarah Laughlin Downing despite a listing saying she was there.

 
As I would find out two months later, I wasn't the first person to take a photo, though.  Forty years earlier, in May 1972, researcher Edna Conrad snapped a couple of black and white photos and got them developed.  A relative of hers kindly put copies of the photos in an application for the First Families of Ohio lineage society of the Ohio Genealogical Society.
 
That's where I made a find I'll credit to keep-on-lookingness.  I found that member file, numbered 35 out of list that now stands over 4,000, during a recent visit to the OGS library. 
 
 
Albiet quite damaged, a much-more readable, and mostly-intact gravestone for James Downing was the find in the 1972 photo. 


Also in that 1972 photo was a stone for Sarah Laughlin Downing.  There in the back is the tall monument stone for their son James and his wife, Nancy too. 


The 1972 photo captured a portion of the stone for Drusilla Miller, the Downing's daughter and wife of the founder of Downingville.  Her stone isn't standing anymore so this might be the last such photo, portion or not.

Credit keep-on-lookingness again.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Ancestry Saturday: The Albany-to-Elsewhere-to-Albany Geographic Loop





As I wrote last week, my Dad never knew his family tree led to a Revolutionary War Patriot buried nearby his office in Albany, New York. 

The Jeremiah Shontz-to-John Platt story has ironic east-to-west-and-return twists that bring this family tree in a geographic full loop from Albany to elsewhere and back to Albany.

Jeremiah would have a son, John, who would end up further west in Crawford County, Pennsylvania where his daughter, Miranda, would live her whole life. Miranda would marry and have a daughter Mary Ann who would have a daughter Grace. Grace would migrate still further west.

Grace Smith Platt's son, Richard would end up as far west as California where he graduated from UCLA in 1936.

The return East began in 1937. Richard would have a son, John, in Ohio in 1943.

My Dad, that's John, would live 53 years in Ohio but end up spending the last eight years of his life back in the same Albany, New York area where that branch of the family had begun in this country almost 300 years earlier.

Ironic.

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Ancestry Saturday: A Patriot Nearby






My Dad probably drove past this church and never knew. His office in Albany, New York from 1996 to 2003 was less than an 8-mile drive away.

My Dad never knew his fourth great grandfather was buried there at East Greenbush Cemetery, southeast of Albany. There's a Revolutionary War memorial marker there to mark his patriotic service.




I'm just starting to research Jeremiah Shontz, or Shants as the grave maker spelled it.

This much I know: The family was Dutch with the surname Schayaensch. Jeremiah's father, Christian, immigrated from the Netherlands in time to get married in Albany in 1719. Jeremiah was born, spent his life, and died in Albany.

My Dad's family history research papers show he knew he had a great great grandmother with the surname Shontz. But he never knew further back it led to a Revolutionary War Patriot nearby.

Monday, November 11, 2013

My Kids Have Revolutionary War Patriots' Blood


Today is Veteran's Day 2013.  It has me thinking of my ancestors.


Two names are on the plaque at the Highland County, Ohio courthouse to commemorate Revolutionary War patriots buried there who were blood relatives in my family tree.  There should have been three.

Thomas F. Bernard, John Foster Leaverton, and Samuel Woodmansee are the three who boasted service in the Revolutionary War and who are now buried in Highland County.

When I added it up recently, I found a confirmed list of 21 Revolutionary War patriots in my kids' pedigree.

Here's the complete list, at least as of November 2013, of my kids' patriots' blood.

The eleven confirmed patriots from their Dad's side:

Robert Jameson
George Daubenspeck
James Ebenezer Smith
Michael Reitenauer
James Wygant
James Gutridge
John Foster Leaverton
Thomas Fleming Bernard
John Downing
Joseph Conway
Samuel Woodmansee

The ten patriots from their Mom's side:

Joshua Quance
Ebenezer Cole, Sr.
Ebenezer Cole, Jr.
Zadock Bosworth
Daniel Walton
Thomas Adkins
John Nay
Charles Gatliff
Charles Booth
Samuel Ferguson

There's still some potential more to show up as my research efforts continue.  Stay tuned kids.

-----------------------------------------

UPDATE December 2013: Add Jeremiah Shontz, Daniel Smith, and Henry Guthrie to the Dad's side of the list.  Add Moses Searle, James Felix McGuire, and Ebenezer Gage to the Mom's side.  Now, that's 27.  But, I still bet I find more.