Wednesday, January 30, 2019

February Genealogy Events in the NW Suburbs


Every month, the first week of the month, I list genealogical events being held in the Northwest Suburbs of Chicago for about the next six weeks.  Most events are free, but sometimes you will need to register in advance, especially sponsored by a public library.  If it is sponsored by a genealogy society, you probably will not need to register unless there is a fee (which is designated by the $).  Check the website listed for more information. In the meantime, stay warm!

February 2 10:00 AM
Probate and Inquest Records by Grace DuMelle
Arlington Heights Senior Center

February 5 7:00 PM
Getting the Most Out of Ancestry DNA
St. Charles Public Library

February 5 9:30 AM
What’s New in Family Search by Maureen Brady
Gail Borden Library, Elgin

February 9 1:00 PM
A Family Story of Race and Racial Passing by Gail Lukasik
North Suburban Genealogy Society

February 11 7:00 PM
Reconstructing Slave Era Families by Janis Minor Forte
Arlington Heights Memorial Library
http://www.ahml.info/ and go to the events calendar

February 12 10:00 AM
Finding Your Ancestors Online by Steve Szabados
Arlington Heights Memorial Library
http://www.ahml.info/ and go to the events calendar

February 12 7:30 PM
Genealogy Research at the Newberry by Becky Lowery
Schaumburg Township District Library

February 13 12:00 PM – 7:00 PM Appointments
Swedish Genealogy Research Help by Kathy Meade
Arlington Heights Memorial Library
http://www.ahml.info/ and go to the events calendar

February 13 7:00 PM
GOOGLE for Genealogy by Tina Beaird
Fountaindale Public Library

February 14 7:00 PM
A Guide to Overseas Genealogy by Jacquie Schattner
McHenry County Genealogical Society

February 14 6:30 PM
Archived Newspapers
Palatine Public Library

February 16 10:30 PM
Pandemic 1918! Fighting Influenza During the Great War by Tina Beaird
Schaumburg Township Public Library

February 16 9:30 AM
My Ancestry DNA is Back!  What Do I Do? by Suz Bates
Naperville Public Library

February 20 6:30 PM
Planning an Ancestral Trip by Terri O’Connell
Wheaton Public Library

February 21 7:00 PM
It’s Not Online: The Other 90% of Records by Suz Bates
Palatine Public Library

February 21 7:00 PM
DAR and Lineage Societies by Michelle Wilson
Naperville Public Library

February 21 7:00 PM
Climbing in Your Family Tree by Phyllis Myers
Gail Borden Library, Elgin

February 25 7:00 PM
Introduction to FamilySearch
Arlington Heights Memorial Library
http://www.ahml.info/ and go to the events calendar

March 2 10:00 AM
Familienbuchs: An Essential Resource for German Research by John Weiss
Arlington Heights Senior Center

March 4 TBD
Censuses – The Backbone of U.S. Research by Suz Bates
Westmont Public Library




Monday, December 31, 2018

My Best Genea-Moments 2018


At the end of 2017, I thought, “I’ve done a lot of research. Would there be big break-thrus in my research?” At the time, I’d been pretty much spinning my wheels, finding a little something here or there for months. Nothing big. But I’ll never be doubtful again. Here are my 2018 genealogy highlights.

Smarsty Branch – Went Back 4 and 5 Generations
In 1971, my aunt typed a Smarsty family descendant chart, starting with my gr-grandfather, Anton Smarsty, born 1859, Katowice, Poland. She tentatively identified his father as Stephan Smarsty and the mother as Franciska Krzizanowsky. Since then, we’ve not been able to find any other ancestry information including facts on his sister, Valeska, and brother Paul. One Sunday, I was grazing GOOGLE and found the website of the Katowice Catholic Archive. (http://archiwum.archidiecezja.katowice.pl/en/index/content/14/) Simply fill out a form and request information! In English! I received an email back within days, and after about six weeks, the archivist found several generations of Zmarzly family for a small fee. He also gave me the name of the small town they came from, Kotorz Wielki, Opole, Poland. Those Catholic church records were online at familysearch.org. Unindexed, and locked - they could only be seen at an affiliate, but I found a total of 5 generations to Jacob Zmarzlik and wife Ursala born ca. 1715. Yippee!!

First Rootstech
I attended my first Rootstech, saw many genealogists, and learned so much. I wrote about it here: http://seedstotree.blogspot.com/2018/03/first-time-at-rootstech-blissful.html I was thrilled that one of my favorites, Henry Louis Gates, spoke. I will probably return in 2020. This was a genea-bucket list item for me.

YDNA – Locates 400 Page Genealogy Book
While I was at Rootstech, I took advantage of the DNA bargains, and had my husband’s YDNA tested. A few weeks later the results pointed me to a Schattner genealogist living in Germany who wrote a 400 page book on the Schattners. His grandfather and my husband’s grandfather, both named Gustave Schattner were born just a couple of years and a few miles from each other. They were first cousins. He emailed his detailed research to me.

Springville, New York Newspapers on newspapers.com
I anticipated that if the Springville newspapers were scanned and OCR indexed, I would find many more clues and stories on my husband’s family who lived there for years. Boy was I correct! I found three key stories:

1) My husband’s 2nd gr-grandfather, Franklin Thurber (1832) was shot in the leg with a musket as a young man and his leg was surgically removed. The newspaper article praised the fact that he lived through the surgery. (In fact, he lived until he was 75!)

2) Solving a 20 year brickwall, for many years we knew that Catherine Birchard (1799), my husband’s 3rd gr-grandmother, mother of Franklin) was either the daughter of Amos Birchard or of his father Joseph Birchard. (These are large families with multiple wives.) In an obit for her uncle, I found she was the daughter of Amos, granddaughter of Joseph.

3) While Ella Harvey (1861, an orphan) is not a direct relative, she is the wife of my husband’s 2nd gr-uncle, Manly Pettit. We knew she had received money as a result of her brother’s Civil War death. Who was her brother? Would he lead us to her parents? In a newly found article, she had a sister named Mrs. Ford from East Otto, NY who also received money. There were only two Mrs. Fords in East Otto. One husband’s obit was very detailed, giving her maiden name as Rosetta Harvey. In the 1860 census, I found Rosetta living with her parents, and older brother Bethuel, who later died in the Civil War. Her father Nelson Harvey died before 1865, so Ella was never listed as a Harvey in the censuses. Having this information, I was able to find Bethuel’s pension request filed by Ella Harvey et al. Mystery solved!



Organization of Genealogy Files
I spent a great deal of time, organizing my many file drawers of genealogy papers. I threw out duplicates and papers I could find online such as census. I found information I thought long lost. I write about it in detail here: http://seedstotree.blogspot.com/2018/09/organizing-feels-soooo-good.html

Presentations
I made 28 presentations, of which only 7 were volunteer. My most requested class is a beginners’ class, the one I mostly volunteer to give. But the classes on Emigration/Immigration and another on Overseas research are also very popular. There’s a fun one about Top 10 Genea-Tips and Tricks that everyone enjoys too. My new US Church records class is well received.

All these are wonderful. But at Christmas dinner, I had a real sense of accomplishment when my niece and nephews asked me to tell them the story about a Belgian cousin who had escaped a Nazi prisoner camp and lived in hiding the rest of the war. I had a twinkle in my eye as I told this story when I realized that they will have some sense of the history of our family.

 Mission accomplished!


Saturday, December 29, 2018

January Genealogy Events in the Northwest Suburbs


Happy New Year! 

If you are like me, with a quiet genealogy month in December, I have a renewed spirit to start out the year with a push into learning new ideas.  I’m looking forward to attending several of the events listed below.  Here are the presentations in the area for the next six weeks or so.  If I’ve missed an event or you know of a society that can be included, please let me know.  Most of these events are free, but please check the website listed for more information and if necessary, any registration.  

I hope your genealogy research is successful in 2019.

January 5 10:00 AM
How to Organize All This Genealogy Stuff (webinar) by Lisa Louise Cooke
Arlington Heights Memorial Library
http://www.ahml.info/ and go to the events calendar

January 8 7:30 PM
Preparing to Publish your Genealogy Book by Regina Yuill
Schaumburg Township District Library

January 9 7:00 PM
How to Deal with Other Genealogists without Going Crazy by Thomas MacEntee
Fountaindale Public Library (webinar)

January 10 7:00 PM
Maternal Lineage by Larry Wood
McHenry County Genealogical Society

January 12 1:00 PM
How to Turn Family Genealogy into Family History
North Suburban Genealogy Society

January 15 7:00 PM
How Do I Use DNA in Genealogy Research?
St. Charles Public Library

January 16 6:30 PM
Issuing Citations That Help “Prove” Genealogical Research by Laura Street Chaplin
Wheaton Public Library

January 16 10:00 AM – 3:00 PM Appointments
Swedish Genealogy Research Help by Kathy Meade
Arlington Heights Memorial Library
http://www.ahml.info/ and go to the events calendar

January 17 7:00 PM
Grandma Nellie’s Scrapbook Interpreting History by Tina Beaird
Gail Borden Library, Elgin

January 18 7:00PM
A Guide to Overseas Genealogy by Jacquie Schattner
Arlington Heights Memorial Library
http://www.ahml.info/ and go to the events calendar

January 19 10:30 AM
Internet Archive: Amazing Genealogical Resource! by Debra Dudek
Schaumburg Township Public Library

January 22 7:00 PM
I Got My DNA Results: Now What Do I Do? By Suz Bates
Helen Plum Library, Lombard

January 25, 2:30 PM
Beginning Genealogy by Jacquie Schattner
Arlington Heights Memorial Library
http://www.ahml.info/ and go to the events calendar

February 2 10:00 AM
Probate and Inquest Records by Grace DuMelle
Arlington Heights Senior Center

February 5 7:00 PM
Getting the Most Out of Ancestry DNA
St. Charles Public Library

February 5 9:30 AM
What’s New in Family Search by Maureen Brady
Gail Borden Library, Elgin

February 9 1:00 PM
A Family Story of Race and Racial Passing by Gail Lukasik
North Suburban Genealogy Society



Thursday, November 1, 2018

November Presentations in the Northwest Suburbs

It is surprising to me that we are already in November.  This will be my last list for 2018.  I actually could not find any December presentations.  So you'll see my next list the last week of December. In the meantime, I hope you enjoy the holidays with family and friends.


November 1 7:00 PM
Genealogy-Beyond the Basics by Steve Szabados
Indian Trails Library, Wheeling

November 3 10 AM
DNA Doubleheader – Basics of DNA and Ethnicity Estimates by Robert Sliwinski
Arlington Heights Senior Center

November 6 9:30 AM
Researching My Norwegian Roots by Caron Primas Brennan
Gail Borden Library, Elgin

November 7 2:00 PM
ArkivDigital Research
Arlington Heights Memorial Library

November 12 7:00 PM
Family History Research in the British Isles by Maureen Brady
Palatine Public Library

November 13 7:00 PM
Mapping the Past; Navigating Your Family History with Maps by Dr. Daniel Hubbard
Schaumburg Township Public Library

November 14 6:30 PM
Even Gangsters had to Register by Janis Minor Forte
Wheaton Public Library

November 14 7:00 PM
Lineage Societies by Kimberly Nagy
Fountaindale Public Library

November 15 7:00 PM
Adoption Searches: Past and Present by Matt Rutherford
Cook Library, Libertyville/Vernon Hills

November 15 7:00 PM
Organizing Your Genealogy by Steve Szabados
St. Charles Public Library

November 27
What DNA Kit Do I Buy? By Suz Bates
Helen Plum Library, Lombard
www.helenplum.org

Happy Holidays!  More classes in 2019!

Saturday, October 6, 2018

20 Great Genealogy Questions


Ellen Thompson-Jennings wrote 20 More Questions About Your Ancestors and Maybe A Few About You this week and Linda Stufflebean thought it would be a great SNGF challenge.  Randy Seaver also mentioned this in his Saturday Night post.  Here are the questions and my replies.

THE QUESTIONS
1.    Why do you love doing genealogy/family history?  I love problem solving although mixing history with genealogy comes in a close second.
2.    How far have you traveled to research an ancestor? Belgium, Luxembourg and France
3.    What do you think your favorite ancestor would think of our lives today?  My favorite ancestor, Hiram R Dunbar was born in 1804 and would definitely be confused.
4.    What do you think that your ancestor would like/dislike? There’s a group of us (isn’t genealogy a team sport?) looking for information on him.  Although we are distant cousins, we still are in communication with each other over him and we remember him. I think he’d like that.
5.    What was the most unusual cause of death that you’ve found? On my husband’s side, there was a boy decapitated by a train and another teenager smashed by an elevator going to the basement where he was looking for something.
6.    Which ancestor had the most unusual occupation? Hiram Dunbar, Jr. was a street sprinkler in 1870. He watered the town streets to keep the dust down. Basically a teamster driving a horse drawn wagon with leaking barrels of water up and down streets.
7.    Have you ever gone to where your ancestor lived and it felt like home even if you’ve never been there before? Yes, in Bastogne, Belgium where my grandmother grew up.
8.    Do you have a distant ancestor (several generations back) that looks like someone in the family? Not that I know of.
9.    What is the oldest ancestral photo that you have? Civil war vintage, 1860’s. One a soldier and another a portrait.
10. Did you have an ancestor that had an arranged marriage? Not that I know of.
11. If you could live in the time period of one of your ancestors what year would it be? Where would it be? Homesteading in the 1880’s in Kansas.  (If I didn’t have to do the work.)
12. Which ancestor was married the most times? Perry Commodore Dunbar was married three times, twice to his second wife, Catherine Coffey because he wasn’t quite divorced from his first wife when he married her the first time.  His nephew, John, married 4 times, not always quite divorced.
13. If you’ve tested your DNA what was the biggest ethnicity surprise? I think a lot of peoplefrom central Europe are surprised by those Scandinavians coming during the 30-year war.
14. Did you have a female ancestor that was different or unusual from other females from that time period? I had a beautiful great aunt who ran away from home when she was 20 to elope with a much older married man.  It was in all the newspapers, she was nick-named Sheba.  They were arrested under the Mann act. Later, she took up with someone in the mob.
15. Did your ancestor go through a hardship that you don’t know how they managed? My grandmother lived in Belgium through two World Wars, and was widowed twice. Came here and never left. She was a woman without a country. 
16. How often do you research? Are you a genealogy addict? Research something everyday.
17. Do you have someone in your family that will take over the family history? I have a couple of possibilities, but no sure bets yet.
18. Have you had a genealogy surprise? What was it?  One of my husband’s gr-grandmothers had 5 children, never married. In general, there have been lots of marriages while the bride was pregnant.
19. Are you a storyteller? What’s your favorite family story? I’m a good but not great story teller. When I was born my father was still a Luxembourg citizen, so I had dual citizenship until I turned 18 years old.
20. What was your greatest genealogy discovery? My husband is related to the baseball pitcher Warren Spahn.


Monday, October 1, 2018

October Genealogy in the Northwest Suburbs

The cooler air is here and genealogy groups are in full swing.  I hope you enjoy a few of these great classes that are being held in the next month.

October 1 7:00 PM
DNA, Behind the Scenes by Daniel Hubbard
Arlington Heights Memorial Library

October 6 10 AM
Newspaper Research: Beyond the Birdcage by Debra Mieszela
Arlington Heights Senior Center

October 9 7 PM
How DNA Can Help Your Genealogy by Steve Szabados
Schaumburg Township Public Library
www.schaumburglibrary.org

October 10, 7 p.m.
Overseas Genealogy by Jacquie Schattner
Fremd High School (continuing education class $)

October 10 Noon -7PM
Swedish Research help (by appointment)
Arlington Heights Memorial Library

October 10 7 PM
Searching for French Canadians
Fountaindale Public Library

October 11 10 AM
Finding Your Ancestors Online
Arlington Heights Memorial Library

October 13 1 PM
Members’ Show and Tell
Northbrook Historical Society
http://nsgsil.org

October 13 9:00 AM (All Day)
Irish Genealogical Workshop
Fountaindale Public Library

October 17 6:30 PM
Celebrate the Illinois Bicentennial by Sandra Trapp
Wheaton Public Library

October 19 6:00 PM
Genealogy After Hours
Cook Library, Libertyville/Vernon Hills

October 20 10:30 AM
Unchopping Down My Family Tree with DNA by Jeffery Bockman
Schaumburg Township Public Library

October 20 All Day
Family History Day
Harold Washington Library

October 20 9:30 AM
Make the Genealogy Organizational Challenge Work for You by Marsha Peterson-Maas
Naperville Public Library

October 24 7:00 PM
Using Newspapers in Genealogy Research by Caron Primas Brennan
St. Charles Public Library

October 25 6:30 PM
Using Ancestry.com
Palatine Public Library

November 3 10 AM
DNA Doubleheader – Basics of DNA and Ethnicity Estimates by Robert Sliwinski
Arlington Heights Senior Center

November 6 9:30 AM
Researching My Norwegian Roots by Caron Primas Brennan
Gail Borden Library, Elgin

November 7 2:00 PM
ArkivDigital Research
Arlington Heights Memorial Library

Tuesday, September 18, 2018

Organizing Feels SOOOO Good!


On my retirement to-do list, is to prune and organize my genealogical papers. I would keep my records so much differently if I were starting today (in scanned files instead). But in 1996, I spent hours and hours at my local Family History Library, ordering 100’s of rolls of film, and printing paper copies of all sorts of records. At one point, I had eight file cabinet drawers filled with paper records. Up until last week, I still had six drawers-ful. Time to prune. In a week, I reduced my paper files by about 50%. This is what I did to be more organized. (Maybe some of my ideas can help you.)



First, in my Family Tree Maker database, I color-coded the four branches of our family. My children’s four grandparents and their ancestors were each assigned a color. For example, my mother’s side is color-coded green. Other colors are red, yellow and blue. I purchased packages of two-inch expandable folders in the same four colors, a box of manila files and got to work. One surname at a time, I pulled out and pruned files. Here’s a list 
what I did to organize:





1)    Put all the papers in one direction. (Just being honest here – my left handedness is a disadvantage.)
2)    Pulled out any records that can be found free at more than one website, i.e. U.S. census records. I don’t use my files any more, just look online.
3)    Tossed the copies of obits that I’d already entered or scanned into my database.
4)    Reviewed and threw out many family outlines that I had printed, mailed to relatives, and were returned with corrections and additions. I made those corrections in my FTM more than 20 years ago.
5)    Threw out duplicates.
6)    Other old records that were thrown out included thank you notes, address lists (they’ve probably moved), IGI’s and social security death indexes that I’d printed at the library.
Expanding folder on top of papers to be tossed.
I split my time tossing papers or double checking that I’d recorded the information for example an obit. This was a bit dangerous as I could easily have “gone down the rabbit hole” while checking, but my goal was to organize papers, not look for new information. I was surprised how “good” I was at staying on task.

In the early 2000’s, I created one-name study in the countries of Belgium and Luxembourg for the family surnames Mazoin, Renquin, Krieps, Scholtes, Galderoux, Antoine and Roisson. (Long story.) This was when records were on rolls of film. I printed 1000’s. I translated French-to-English and wrote film number, date, and all names on the back of each certificate, and entered all of them into my database putting families together. (Lots of tedious work.) Then I carefully filed these birth, marriage and death certificates in date order in manila files labelled with town name. Three years ago, I pulled out and saved the records of my closest relatives, then put the files in two drawers of a basement file cabinet. I didn’t look at them in the three years, so decided to throw out these paper records which are now online. That quickly cleaned out two file drawers. I saved the paper records from Germany which are not yet online.
Folders of one-name studies
After I was done pruning the papers, I placed the records I kept into manila file folders and labeled by surname, then given name. Most people would put in the expanding colored folder by ABC order, but my mind works a little different, I put them in age order. So the oldest relative with that surname is first file, and the youngest is last. (I’m a numbers thinker, so I use date order instead of alpha-order. My computer files are similar.) Just to be certain, once I physically placed them in date order, I also numbered the manila files for that surname.

Then I placed the manila files in order in the colored expanding folder. If there are too many manila files for one expanding folder, I labeled two, three or more folders with the surname and number, ie. Dunbar 1, Dunbar 2, Dunbar 3. (Another way to do this would be files in ABC order, then the folders would have something like Dunbar A-G, Dunbar H-L, Dunbar L-Z but I am a numbers thinker.)
Folder and files
Which branch had the most folders? My mother-in-law has the most people whose families go back to old new England families: Thurbers, Stanbro and Johnson. What fills those files? Revolutionary War pension records, land records, church records and wills. There are also maps and county histories where they are named and newspaper articles. I’ve also found juicy records such as divorce records and arrest records. These are not available for the family branches with more recent immigrants. My father-in-law is first generation American. Although I have his German families’ baptism, marriage and death records going back to the 1600’s, I don’t have other records to fill in the story, such as wills, military or land records. His branch has two folders, one for his mother, one for his father!
Before - unruly folders, files and envelopes
What did I learn?

There are many wonderful websites that no longer exist: genealogy.com, ancestryplus.com, myfamily.com, familytreemaker.com.

Rootsweb was a much more go-to website than it is today. People used it to “meet” other people with the same surnames and worked collaboratively.

Many personal letters. I mailed letters asking for information to random people with good surnames who lived in ancestors’ hometowns. Many sent the information they had collected, in exchange for the family research I could give them. I had filed more than 50 letters with information, some people are no longer with us. Sometimes I’d be lucky and was given copies of family pedigree charts.  Some were a few pages, some were 30 or more pages. Pre-email days.

No DNA paper records! I use this source now, but not in my early (paper) days.

A dozen long-lost documents and photos were found, that had simply been mis-filed; helping solve some family mysteries.

And…(drum roll), I’m saving the best for last. I was surprised, instead of feeling sad for the records I no longer keep. I don’t miss them. Instead, I feel SOO free! I’m organized!!!!!
After - color coded, labelled and organized!