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Archive for June, 2009

Andrew Dabelstein

Andrew Dabelstein

I’ve been doing research on my husband’s Dabelstein line as I prepare to go to Chicago to the Newberry Library and Concordia Cemetery.  Wilhelmina Dabelstein was my husband’s great-grandmother.  I know that she grew up in Chicago and I know her father was Andrew Dabelstein.  I have the family group sheet filled out pretty completely except for the date of death for 1 brother.  I decided to purchase a 1 month subscription to Footnote.com to see if the city directories could help me out.

When looking at the Chicago directories, I realized that Dabelstein was a pretty rare name in Chicago, which made me begin to wonder if the families that were listed could be related. Almost all of the Dabelstein men were bricklayers or masons, so it seemed likely that they could be related.  I also found an “old German file” from the FBI on one of the Dabelstein names (a lawyer, not a bricklayer) that made me even more curious!

I began to build an Excel file with all of the information I could find on the families.  Because I had been concentrating on the Chicago city directories, that information was stuck in my mind, so that’s where I started.  I began to build my Excel file with each person listed along with their address from each directory.  My goal was to be able to separate the families based on addresses because there were some duplicate first names.  After assembling the information from directories for 1884 – 1916, I had a vague idea of who belonged to each family, but I wasn’t certain, so I decided to add census information from Ancestry.  This helped me to be more certain of my breakdown and even made me realize that 1 person was listed under 2 different names (August and Gustav) – sometimes in the same directory.

Then, I realized (hand smack on forehead) that if I could find the birthplace for the different heads of each family, I could be pretty sure they were related in SOME way.  I had found the birthplace of Wilhelmina’s father by finding the birth certificates for her siblings on pilot.familysearch.com, so I thought I’d see if I could find birth certificates for the other family and was thrilled to find one that confirmed the same village for Frank Dabelstein!  He was 10 years older than Andrew, so he could be a brother or a cousin.­­­  There was a 3rd family – a mother and 2 children – all born in Germany.  The 2 children were never married, so I’m not sure how to find a birthplace for them yet, but the ages and date of immigration do not appear to fit with my family but I’ll try to keep an open mind there.

Since I have this connection, I’m going to continue collecting all information possible in this Excel name study to see what potential information I can find on Andrew through Frank.  My next step will be to look for immigration information for Frank.

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Hot and humid in Indiana

Today is REALLY hot (about 95 degrees!) and our air conditioning is out of commission until the repair man can visit us next week.  I keep thinking how this would have been the norm when my mother was young (except for the incredibly hot laptop on my legs!) 

My Mom has told me stories about how they used to take their beds outside to sleep when it was hot.  (Right now, that’s sounding pretty good to me!) There’s even a mention of sleeping outside in the booklet of memories from my Grandmother. She remembered that in 1936 when my oldest uncle was born, it was a very hot summer and they slept outside most of the summer.   When my mother was growing up, their house had an alley next to it AND behind it.  The siblings would dare each other to sleep close to the alley because they were convinced that one of the neighbors was “crazy” and would take you if you got too close.  When she would go to summer church camp, all of the campers would take their cots onto the 2nd floor patio to catch the breeze!

fanI can remember being in hot church services as a youngster watching all of the ladies fanning with cardboard fans similar to this one.  It seems to me that they were donated by a local funeral home, but I could be wrong.  I also remember seeing the large window fans running, but they would all be pointed out.  That frustrated me to no end!  Of course, now I understand that the goal was to remove the hot air that collected up near the ceiling, but you couldn’t convince me of that back then!

Did I mention that it’s hot??

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Last week, I attended the PalAm conference in Ft. Wayne so that I could learn more about doing research for German lines.  All of my husband’s lines came through Germany, so I had a great time learning about research sources, customs specific to northern Germany, etc.  I also enjoyed visiting the vendors and picked up a nice little book on German script (originally written for elementary school students, which is just about my speed!) and several maps for the districts of Germany that I’ll be focusing on.

I was especially excited after going to the session on Reseaching Northern German roots because I have several lines to research from Schleswig-Holstein.

Last summer, I concentrated on a line that came from Alsace and luckily for me, the records for the time period I needed were all in French, which I studied in high school.  (A long time ago to be sure, but at least not a totally new alphabet!)  I was comforted by the fact that the types of records in German research as well as the layout for most of them will be very similar to those I spent so much time with last summer.  So at least I’ll have a good idea of where to look for the person’s name and where to look for the location name, etc.

As I prepare to order FHL films (still holding out a tiny hope that I’ll find a great deal to travel to Salt Lake City this summer) I am concentrating on finding the village of origin for my families.  I had a handwritten note on a family group sheet that said “Luzbek?” but I didn’t know where I had found that.  I did a Google search for Luzbek Germany and found nothing.  As I said in my last blog post, I have been filling in information for the siblings of my direct line and that’s where I was able to find the proper spelling of “Lübeck” on the birth certificate of a sibling.  I found the birth certificate at pilot.familysearch.org, where I have been able to find MANY birth and marriage certificates for my Chicago lines in the last couple of weeks.  The interesting thing is that this is not the source where I originally found “Luzbeck” so there must another source that I’m not finding.

While looking at the FHL films available for Lübeck, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, I discovered that from the time my known ancestor was born until about the time that he emigrated, that area of Germany was under Danish control!  Because I am such a newbie to foreign research, I had never considered the fact that Germany might not be Germany!  (Although you’d think I’d have had a clue after my Alsace research.)  I can order films for the census of 1835, 1845 and 1855, but they are written in German OR Danish!  I have never studied any strategies for Danish research, so I’m not sure about ordering those films.  And because I have 4 lines that I know are from Schleswig-Holstein, I’m not sure if I should re-think the lines to research this summer or not.  Maybe my Kentucky lines would be my best bet for this summer.  (That was my original plan until this conference. Now I cn’t tear myself away from my “German” families!)

Guess I need to look at the Research Guide for Denmark before I decide anything.  Would love to hear comments from anyone who is researching this area so I’ll have an idea of what to expect!!!

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Hindsight is 20/20

Several days ago, I was “blog surfing” and I came across The One-Minute Writer.  I love the whole idea of taking 1 minute every day to write SOMETHING about your life.  I wish it were a little more genealogy specific, to give me some good thought jumpers to advance my research, but on the day that I happened to visit, the prompt of the day was “Since ‘hindsight is 20/20′, I now know that…”

Since reading that, I’ve been thinking alot about what I’d change in my genealogy research.  And by having that in the back of my mind, I’ve become just a bit frustrated with the way I’ve done my research in the past!  If I could go back to my original days of genealogy research, there are a couple of things I’d make sure to do (and I don’t think these will be a surprise to anyone!)

1)  I would make sure that I was using footnotes in EVERYTHING to indicate where my information was coming from.  And I don’t just mean to footnote basic date and location information, but things like where I got the middle name from.  Which source told me year only, or month and year only and which source gave me the full date?  Or why do I have more than 1 location for birth, etc.  If I have no specific “source”, then where did I get the idea from? I have all kinds of little notes to myself on my group sheets that say, “Where did THIS come from?” Quite a bit of my original information came from asking my mother or grandparents for information.  I didn’t put any source footnotes at all, but if I could go back, at the very least I’d add a footnote that said, “Grandma told me so!”  Now I don’t know if she’s the one who told me, or if a fellow researcher told me, or if it’s just an educated guess that hasn’t been proven yet. And I’d footnote EVERY source, not just the 1 or 2 basic, or “best” sources.  That way, I’d know where to go back to if I had more questions.  I’d also indicate where I found the source…Allen County Library, Ancestry, Salt Lake City, Online database, etc.

As an aside to this one, I have to admit that I have put off adding footnotes to things because I’ve been so hung up on “what is the correct format”.  Finally, in the last month, I’ve started adding footnotes that are meaningful to ME.  I know that the ultimate goal is to have all information formatted so that others could confirm my research or that my descendants could follow up on what I’ve done, but I have to start somewhere.  And because I’m usually a “do it perfectly or don’t do it at all” type of person, I actually consider this a forward step for me!  As I figure out the correct formatting, I improve my footnotes.  It’s easy enough for me to have the correct format for a book – I use WorldCat to figure those out by finding the book and then clicking on the “Cite/Export” button and then choose the “Chicago” option.  I copy and paste that and then add a page number and where I found the book.  It’s those records that are microfilms of originals that I’m reading online, etc that really stop me in my tracks!

2)  In my footnotes for family group sheets, I’d worry more about writing out some of my reasoning and not just a source.  It’s one thing to attach a footnote for a WWI draft card, but to indicate WHY I think it’s the correct draft card would save me a TON of time and frustration over retracing my steps!  For example, I have a proven address for 1 child on a family group sheet.  I confirmed a sibling because he listed that name and address as the person who would always know his whereabouts.  If I don’t indicate that in my footnotes somewhere, I’ll always be wondering if I have the correct guy on my groupsheet. Or how did I find the name of the church that family attended?  My footnotes could include that I did a Google search on the name of the priest on the marriage certificate and found that his church was a short distance from my family’s location.

3)  Originally, I only cared about direct ancestors.  I did zero research on siblings or other children of direct ancestors.  So now, I’m spending alot of time filling in easy to find information that I could have been entering long ago (and finding lots of additional clues in the process!)  Even if I don’t find additional information on my direct ancestor because of gathering information on a sibling, it is not unusual to find a new SOURCE to look for information for my direct ancestor because something “clicked” on a new source for a sibling.  Also, I might find a new spelling variation for a name that I hadn’t considered before.

4)  I need to think this through a little more (because I AM going to start doing this), but I’d have a 2nd set of notes for each family I’m researching.  I already have notes for each family that are written like a timeline.  For every piece of information I find, I include the date, the event (like birth, census, city directory, etc.) along with pertinent details.  Next to that, I include a thumbnail image of my source (see my blog entry) so I can quickly tell if it’s an original or from a compiled source, etc.  I try to keep iformation for every member of the immediate family, so these notes can become pages and pages long.  Eventually, I’d like to turn these notes into a “story” and less of a list.  These would be the notes I’d give to family members who are interested in what I’ve found.  But I think I’d like to keep a 2nd set of notes – or an additional “chapter” in the same notes, that are just thoughts, questions, reasoning, ideas of things to look for, specific sources to look up on my next trip to the library, etc. that only I would see.  I could also copy and paste background information into this set of notes that might come in handy someday in the future.  Historic information on a certain location or hours of operation for a repository, ect. It just seems that if I try to mix those things in with my “timeline notes”, it would be easy to miss something and it would ruin he flow of my story.  Maybe I should pick 1 family and try a set of these types of notes to see if it’s worth my time.  Just seems like whenever I’m researching – especially online research – questions keep popping into my head.  “Did I look for that already?”  “Maybe I should check out such and such county.”  ”Here’s a new spelling I haven’t tried yet.”   Right now, I use the “Post-It Note Method” which isn’t very effective.  Or I write little notes on the back of group sheets or photocopies that didn’t turn out and then later, I wonder what those notes mean.  Did I ever look that up?  This would be more than a research log – more like a research “diary”.   

Dear Diary,  Was my ancestor’s home in the affected by the Chicago fire?  Look for maps.  Did his address change soon after?  Check Chicago Directories.

Maybe I should spend less time thinking about this and “Just Do It!”

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Wordless Wednesday

4 siblings around 1939

4 siblings around 1939

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George and Anna VonLanken

George and Anna VonLanken

George VonLanken was born Apr. 19, 1892 in Douglas County, Illinois.  He was the 5th child of Heinrich VonLanken and Maria Heit.  Heinrich (Henry) had come to America at the age of 12 and moved with his family directly to Douglas County.

George married Anna Marie Klink on Jan 12, 1911 in Douglas County and remained there to raise their 5 children.  George passed away in Douglas County on Feb. 22, 1966 and is buried next to his wife in Zion Cemetery.

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I have a LOT of family group sheets.  But until about a year ago, I had never seen family group sheets with footnotes!  What a wonderful idea!  I’m always wondering where a certain piece of information came from, but I don’t always have my software with me.  So I’ve been working diligently to update my group sheets to have footnotes.

I have a group sheet for Andrew Dabestein and Alvina Carsten – my husband’s great-great grandparents.  On this group sheet, I have 6 children listed, complete with dates of birth and dates of death and burial locations.  The only problem is that I have 1 sibling that I cannot find a SINGLE source for!  He is not listed in my genealogy software or on my tree in Ancestry.  He only exists on my group sheet. 

I have Hans Dabelstein b. 27 Dec. 1881, d. 6 Mar. 1903 buried in Concordia Cemetery (where most of the family is buried) in Chicago.  He would be the 2nd child out of 6. I have no idea where this information came from. 

He is not in a single family census record – perhaps because of the missing 1890 census records.  In the 1910 census, it says that Alvina had 5 children and 4 were still living.  If Hans really belongs to this family, she would have had 6 children by 1910. 

If the date of birth is correct, he would have immigrated with his family in 1883, but I only find a record for his parents and older brother.    Where did the date of birth come from?  It’s pretty specific!  I have found the Cook County birth certificates for the younger 4 children.  But if Hans was born in 1881, he would have been born in Germany, so no help there.

I can confirm the date of death in the online Illinois Death Index, but that in no way connects him to this family. And how do I know he’s buried in Concordia?  None of this family is listed in Find-a-grave.  He is not listed (that I can find) when I explore the death certificates available at the Cook County Genealogy Web site.

This one really is driving me mad!

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This concludes the 1890 Census of Veterans and Widows for Russell County, Kentucky!

Kean, William R – 5 Ky. Cav.

Kearnes, Job – 3 Ky. Inft.

Lalli, Ovidas  - 13 Ky.

Lawless, William J – 5 Ky. Cav.

McFarland, David C – 3 Ky. Inft.

McKiney, Benj – 13 Ky. Cav.

Meadows, Andrew C – 13 Ky. Cav.

Morrison, John A. – 13 Ky. Cav.

Payne, William P – 12 Ky. Inf.

Polson, Alexander D – 3 Ky. Inf.

Sharp, Hugh F – Sarah F Sharp widow of – 5 Ky. Cav.

Sims, John M – 5 Ky. Cav.

Turner, John – 5 Ky. Cav.

Warner, John W – 3 Ky. Inf.

Whitehead, James – 12 Ky. Cav.

Wills, Asa C  – Tura Wills widow of – 5 Ky. Cav.

Wolford, William D – 13 Ky. Cav.

Wooldridge, John F. – 5 Ky. Cav.

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Barger, Alonzo – 13 Ky. Cav.

Blakey, John W – 13 Ky. Cav.

Brockman, Willis W – 12 Ky. Inf.

Bunch, Ralph – 12 Ky. Inf.

Bunch, Saloman – 12 Ky. Inf.

Burris, Henry – 3 Ky. Inft.

Cannadas, William D – 12 Ky. Inf.

Chapman, James K – 13 Ky. Cav.

Chort, Granville – 12 Ky. Inf.

Coe, Green M.  – Sarah E Coe widow of – 13 Ky. Cav.

Collins, Timothy F. – 13 Ky. Cav.

Corbin, Elijah – 13 Ky. Cav.

Cundiff, Ambrose Sr – 13 Ky. Cav.

(D)rufur, L.J. – 3 Ky. Inft.

Duncan, Peter – 11 L*** Cav.

Hadley, Richard – 32 Ky. Inft.

Hadley, Richard – 3 Ky. Inf.

Holt, Thomas E – 3 Ky. Inft.

Hudson, Sheriden – 11 Mo. Cav.

Karnes, William H – 13 Ky. Cav.

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Notice the squirrels on the line

Notice the squirrels on the line

I have learned so much about my family as I have been working on the old negatives that were my grandmother’s.  This is my mother’s father, Herman Smith.  I asked my mom if they ate those squirrels and she said, “Well, yes!” like it was an unusual question or something!

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