Friday, 29 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - Z



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.




Z is for Sister

Ah ha, you weren't expecting that, were you?

According to the Department of Anthropology at the University of Alabama, in the Kinship Glossary the letter Z = sister, since the letter S is already used for son.




Don't forget the unmarried and/or childless sisters in your tree.  My 2x great grandmother Elizabeth always had her unmarried sister Mary living with her. She is among many unmarried sisters on my tree.

My Aunt Stella was my grandmother's unmarried sister.  She was lots of fun.  She never married because her parents would not let her married the boy she loved. He moved away to the US and married, but that did not stop him from bringing his daughter to visit my aunt from time to time over the years.

Sometimes on my tree I find a male ancestor who is widowed with young children marrying his wife's sister. Keeping it all in the family.

Then you have sisters marrying brothers. Now, now!! Not their own brothers. My 2x great grandmother Susanna Johnston married John Porter and her sister Margaret Johnston married John's brother Thomas Porter.

My great uncle George Seale's wife Clara Annie was a serving sister for the St John's Ambulance in Winnipeg for many years. She was also Honorary President of the George Seale Nursing Division. Her daughter Eleanor also did Red Cross work, and eventually became a doctor.



Eleanor, sitting on the arm of the chair, looks just like her father!

My husband's aunt was a sister with the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary.

Sister Thérèse-Joséphine (nee Marie Otila) 

I wrote to the order and they forwarded my email to their archives.  I received a very nice reply with all her service information and dates.  "Ask and ye shall receive."

And finally.... my four daughters (born within 5 years) who are more than sisters, they are best friends.

Photo taken July 1984 at La Ronde, Montreal, Quebec



Related Posts:  Nurses, Red Cross and More
                       Keep the Faith



Thank you for taking this A to Z journey with me.  I have enjoyed meeting and interacting with many fellow bloggers and seeing what is different or the same in our lives although in different countries and cultures. I have also learned a lot on this journey and I thank you.

I hope you will continue to read my regular blog at Genealogy: Beyond the BMD where I post at least once a week, sometimes more. 

My family stories are at The Days of Their Lives  where I post when the spirit moves me.




Thursday, 28 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - Y



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.




Y is for Yearbooks

I have a few of my high school year books.  Its fun to look back and see all the friends I grew up with. Many of which I keep in touch with today.

I was pleasantly surprised a few years ago when I found that McGill University uploaded the yearbooks for West Hill High School in Montreal West, the school my Dad and his sibling all went to. The year my uncle graduated is missing, but the other 3 are there.





In some school yearbooks they have a section at the back with an update on former students... who got engaged, married, etc.  So check a few years ahead too. Also years before they graduated for clubs or sports they participated in.

Don't forget there are other kinds of schools - music, agricultural, and other specialty schools. Check the links below.





Related Post:  School Days
                     Private Schools
                     Schools for the Deaf and Blind
                     School's Out
                     Teachers




Wednesday, 27 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - X



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.



X marks the Spot

Land Records help us to put our ancestors in time and place and Cadaster survey maps could include details of ownership, marking the exact spot. McGill University in Montreal digitized the cadastre map for all of Ontario, helping me find the land of my 2x great grandfather Seale.



Pittsburgh, Frontenac, Ontario (Barriefield)


This map has his name, lot number and lot size.  So John Seale owned Lot 2 and for some reason unknown to me yet, he has the biggest lot in the whole area, 360 acres covering both sides of the road.

I am also by now familiar with a lot of the names on this map, a few of them having married into the family of seven sons and one daughter.

Learn how to map your ancestors with Google Earth by watching the acclaimed free video by Lisa Louise Cooke on her website Genealogy Gems. Well worth the time.

What if you have an address from a census or directory or other document or letter, but can't find it on a modern map? I had that dilemma when I was trying to find another ancestor's address in Montreal. I had them living at one address then the next year a different address.  They did not move, as I had thought. First the numbering system changed then the name of the street changed!  Read about how I discovered this in the Postcard Mystery link below.

Then there are a couple of my ancestor homes that have been burned down or torn down. Perhaps in such a case you will then have luck with historical photos. And.... don't discount the power of FaceBook. I was on the FB page for the Devon Family History Society and just threw out there that "according to the 1839 Charleton apportionments my shoemaker ancestor Samuel Nichols lived on #638 in Goveton Village - would that house still be there?"




Well didn't the guy that now lives right across the street know of it!!  Samuel's house on the corner and the one next to it had burned down a few years after my ancestor had died, but this neighbour had an old photo of it, and a bit about Samuel in a local book.  I did find the spot on Google Maps and after a few attempts to get just the right angle, I made a composite of the old photo and the google map image.



Can you guess what I will have for Y and Z?



                       Postcard Mystery Address
                       Lay of the Land
                       Making it in Alberta (land records online)
                       Forfieted Lands & War Claims





Tuesday, 26 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - W



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.





W is for Weather


You can find what the weather was on certain days from newspapers, journals and almanacs. Knowing what the weather was on certain days can add life to your stories. Many historical disasters were caused by weather.

Imagine you are in the year 1663.  You have come far from your home and everything you know on a great adventure to New France. You are now a husband and wife, maybe a couple of kids, and you have a nice little spread in Kébec. Life is good. It is Monday the 5th of February, around 5:30 in the evening. The deepest winter chills are starting to ease off now. The two cows were milked by husband just as it started to get dark about a half hour ago, while wife got the kids washed up for the dinner that cast its appetizing aroma around the cabin as it was simmering on the wood stove. Now you are all sitting around the beautifully handcrafted pine table, made from the wood cut down when the land was cleared to build the house and plant the fields.  All of a sudden the dishes start violently rattling, the house is creaking and moaning and shaking….. WTH? Your little family runs outside only to behold something they have never seen or experienced in their life!  Something that could only have been sent by the hand of God to punish you for some forgotten slight!!






Your little family was experiencing the high magnitude Charlevoix Earthquake of 1663, which was felt through all of eastern Canada and New England (note the US was using a different calendar at that time). Click here to read how it was told by the Jesuits in New France.

Having lived in Quebec I know that it gets dark a little later in February.  I googled "sunset february 5 1663 montreal" and it gave me the time, which is about right for that time of year.  Except there was no daylight savings in 1663. Oh well. 




According to the Quebec Almanac of 1795 that is pretty close.





Did your ancestors live through a disaster?



Related Posts:  Le Trois Fait le Mois (weather folk lore and almanacs)

Other Reading:  Jan Kozak Collection:  Historical Earthquakes

Monday, 25 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - V



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.




V is for Voting

My 2x great grandmother was Elizabeth Nichols of Charleton, Devon. I have found her sister Sarah at many occasions in trouble with the law.  Now I find that her brother Samuel got her and her husband involved in an election scandal in Devon, England.

The following are excerpts from the Totnes Election Committee hearings of 1866 in the matter of paying for votes during the elections of 1863.

The players here are Sarah (Nichols) Crawford, who is married to Henry Crawford, and her brother Samuel Nichols Jr.


Part of Testimony of Henry Crawford


Testimony of Sarah (Nichols) Crawford



We may find our ancestors in Poll Books, Electoral Registers or Voters Lists.  The link below will take you to some online Poll Books - the earliest I found was for Aberdeen in 1696.



Related Posts:  Time to Vote


  

A to Z Challenge - U



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.





U is for Unclaimed

Unclaimed letters, estates and money are three other things to look for in old newspapers.




The Sessional Papers of Canada also hold lists like this one...




Then there is unclaimed property. This next publication also holds lists of lost friends, parish clerk's notices, wills, packages, and some amusing anecdotes on extraordinary windfalls etc...




The Federal Banks hold lists of people that have left money in old accounts.  I was browsing one day (well ok, hoping and wishing) and found that my aunt had over $200 in an old account.  I told my cousin and they claimed it, using the forms provided on the websites.

Do you have money sitting in an old bank account that you forgot about? Check in the Unclaimed Money link below.




Related Posts:  Money and Cost of Living (Unclaimed money)
                       UK Unclaimed Dividend Books
                       The Post Office (Unclaimed Letters)
                       Next of Kin (Unclaimed Estates)
         

Saturday, 23 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - T



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.





T is for Taxes

A timely theme, since it is tax time here in North America.

I won't go into boring details of all the ways the governments dream up to take our tax dollars, you can read about them in the below mentioned post.

One interesting thing I found....
In the publication of the list of tax payers for Charleston, SC for 1860, there is a list at the back titled "Tax on Property paid by Persons of Indian Descent and Free Persons of Color" with list of names, value of property and amount of tax paid. Even some of them had slaves!




Something I found while researching my ancestors in Devon, is that by using the Devon Tithe Apportionment Books and the accompanying map with corresponding numbers I could map all the land my ancestors owned or rented in Devon. Also using the descriptions of land my 4x great grandfather Clement King left to his children in his will I could map that out.



My King ancestors were millers, and the green on the map is the Avon Mills at Loddisswell, Devon. It is a garden center now, with a couple of other businesses, and a B&B upstairs.  I will have to stay there whenever I can get to go tour Devon.






Related Post:  The Taxman Cometh
                      Devon Genealogy Resources
                 


Friday, 22 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - S



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.




S is for Souvenir Books (and Pamphlets)

In the late 1800's to mid 1900's souvenir books were printed for cities and villages, associations, jubilees and centennials, government officials, religious conferences, grand openings and unveilings, manufacturers, sporting events... 





There were souvenirs published also to commemorate floods, fires and earthquakes! 





... and in times of war.





If you are looking for old photographs of places or events and perhaps your ancestors or people they knew, these are great resources for finding them. 



Relate Posts:  Souvenir Books
                    The Photographic Album
                    Nurses, Red Cross, and  more
                    All Aboard
                    Where's the Fire




Thursday, 21 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - R



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.




R is for Recording

I am so thankful that a couple of years ago I thought to put a recording app on my phone and on my iPad. Whenever I visited my Mom she liked to tell me stories of her childhood and of my grandparents, and great aunts and uncles. Now I have them all recorded.

She was famous for her little ditties, some quite raunchy, and I have quite a few of them recorded. Here is a tame one she recorded for me the day after her 90th birthday in August 2015.





Do you have recorded stories of your ancestors?

    

Related Post:  Recording for Posterity



Wednesday, 20 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - Q



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.




Q is for Quo Progenitores (loosely translated, the ancestors)



Had to go back to my Latin days for that one, hahaha.

Specifically, the genealogical numbering system widely adopted for the numeration of ancestors on family trees and charts.

In 1590 the first Ahnentafel was published by Michaël Eytzinger in Thesaurus principum hac aetate in Europa viventium, pro progenitores.... in Cologne.





Are you using this numbering system in your records?



Related Links


Tuesday, 19 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - P



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.




P is for Prices

Even if you are not writing that your ancestor went in to town and at the general store or grocers paid 11¢ for a sack of sugar, it is still fun to know what prices were like in the 1800's and before. 

On the shipping pages of some newspapers they noted what ships were coming in carrying what products and what the market price was to be. 

Aberdeen Herald and General Advertiser 22 April 1848


George Taytt in 1570 belonged to the Perth Guild of Bowyers. A bower was paid one Shilling for his work. It cost him about 2d for a pint of ale.

These are some facts I can add in the telling of my Tait family story.

There are prices of foods and grains, hides, textiles, animals, etc. The newspapers also carry prices of passage, carting, coach, etc.  Take a look at the 2 links below.



Related Posts:  History of Prices
                       What's the Beef
                       Ledgers & Account Books
                       Fashionably Early





Monday, 18 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - O



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.




O is for Occupations


I figure a few of us are using Occuptaions for the Letter O.

The censuses and city directories tell us our ancestors' occupation - but what does that mean? What does the work entail?  What wages do they earn? Maybe your ancestor is a farm labourer - who owns the farm he works on? Is it crops, animals or both?  Who owns the iron company or the calico printing factory my ancestors worked for?

My great grandfather was a brass finisher. What is that job? Find the answer in the post Occupations & Wages mentioned below.

Sometimes an ancestor will have other jobs.  My 3x great grandfather in Ellon, Scotland was a farm labourer and also a railway labourer.  My 2x great grandfather in Canada was a farmer with 100 acres and a carpenter, but also a wheelwright and the local coffin maker.


O is for Optician -  Het Menselyk Bedryf
(Book of Trades) by Dutch Artist Jan Luyken


It is important to have the right meaning of the trade. I have discovered that just because it is on a list on the internet, and other people copy that to their tree, doesn't make it right. I have 2 ancestors with old occupations that I had to dig deep to find the right definition because what was said did not ring true with what I knew of my ancestors.
Can you guess what they are? (no googling hehehe)

A Fermorer (in Scotland) and an Armurier (New France) - both from about 1666.



Related Posts: Heigh-ho, heigh-ho  
                      Occupations & Wages 
                      Trade Directories 
                      Tricks of the Trade 
                      Guilds & Apprenticeships 




Saturday, 16 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - N



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.


NOTE: My comments somehow got turned off at the Letter L ... it is working again and I always value and enjoy your comments.  Thank you.




N is for Neighbours

In small communities especially, people depended on their neighbours. They saw each other in church and at community socials. They helped each other in need and also traded what they produced on their land.

My grandfather Herbert Mavor's uncle John was married to a Carbee, and his aunt Jean was married to a Swanson.  The Mavors, Carbees and Swansons were all friends and neighbours. Jean's brother-in-law was a land agent for the west and that, I discovered, is probably the reason John Mavor and his buddy Edwin Carbee headed west to get some land. Once John was settled in Alberta he went home to marry is sweatheart, Edwin's sister Ruth Carbee.




One of the Carbee boys moved to the United States and on one of the US censuses a Swanson boy was lodging with him. If I was only researching Swanson's or just Carbees, I may not have made the connection, because there t no other link between the Carbees and the Swansons.

Also without checking the neighbours, I would not have been able to find the origins of Hannah Meade and why she was living with my Seale family in Barriefield, Ontario.

In my previous post for the letter L for Loyalty Oaths I see many of my ancestor's neighbours on the list of those that took the oath of fealty in Kingsbrige.



Related Post:  Who is Hannah Meade
                      Making it in Alberta
                      Along the Crocus Trail, the history of Daysland and Districts




Friday, 15 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - M



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.

NOTE: My comments somehow got turned off yesterday... it is working again and I always value and enjoy your comments.  Thank you.




M is for Medical 


I wrote a post in my regular blog about how important it is to know your medical history. A new-found cousin has a disease that the doctor's did not want to diagnose for sure because it is hereditary and they thought there was no history of it in the family.  That was before she found my post! Now her and her family know for sure and can proceed with proper treatment and care.

Where I was born

One of my favourite books is called "Domina" by Barbara Wood. It is about a young woman who struggles to become a doctor in Victorian London. I've read it a few times and soon I'll forget enough that I can read it again.



Do you know your medical history?



Related Posts:  Medical History- Knowing your Genes
                       Military Medical
                       Is There a Doctor in the House
                     

Thursday, 14 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - L



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.




L is for Loyalty


It was once common for persons to swear an Oath of Loyalty and Fealty to their king or lord.

I believe I found my ancestors names on a list of Oaths sworn at The George, Kingsbridge, Devonshire, England on 4 November 1723 before Courtenay Croker, William Ilbert, William Cholwich and John Fowell esqs.




I notice the Bastards of Alvington are in attendance ;-)

This accounting gives the location of "the George"..


"The George doesn't exist any longer as such; it was a tavern on Church Steps, next to St. Edmund's Church. It was listed as a tavern by 1707, also called the Old Tavern, and sometime before 1775 known as the Prince George. It was untenanted in the 1770s and 80s because of a legal dispute, had reopened as the George Inn by 1841, then closed again in 1872 and was converted to a house and solicitor's office. The site is now behind Lidstone’s butchers at 70 Fore Street." (from Kingsbridge Museum)

Map of Kingsbridge 1586


Did you find ancestors that made an oath of loyalty and fealty to the king or someone?
There were other occasions to take an oath of loyalty.  Check them out in the link below.


Related Post: Fealty, Loyalty, Allegiance


PS: I would just like to say that L is also for Love - the love passed down from person to person of each generation. The Love of my Mom, who passed away this week. We keep her in our hearts and tell her stories to the grandchildren.



Tuesday, 12 April 2016

A to Z Challenge - K



The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2016 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. The theme I chose is Genealogy Tips. At the end I will give a related post from my blog Genealogy: Beyond the BMD.





K is for Kids

Get the kids involved! Some of my fondest memories, and what got me interested in genealogy at a young age, are of family dinners or get-togethers and all the aunts and uncles and grandparents telling stories about their younger days.

There are many ways to get the kids interested in their ancestors.  Some heritage parks in Canada have summer camps for kids.  My grandson went to one and he wants to go back this year. They live in the 1800's and learn how to make things from that time. A wonderful experience.


Raiden at Camp


My favourite is to make books. You don't have to be a professional writer, younger kids like the pictures just fine, and just use your own heartfelt words. You can get books made pretty cheaply at an office supply store. I like the idea of writing a book for each of the grandchildren telling them which ancestor they are most like and why.  Try to make it exciting. Find something that interests them and look for an ancestor that matches.

The kids touch on family trees in school and of course they call me when they need info. One grandson was excited to learn that his 10x great grandfather came to Quebec from France in 1613. "Wait!" he said. "That's 400 years ago. Four hundred years!!" He was amazed, especially that they had to take long voyages in "fancy" wooden boats across rough seas to get here.

I found out another grandson couldn't wait til he was old enough to join the highlander cadets.  He was intrigued when I told him that my grandfather also joined the highlander cadets and he would be very proud. And many of his ancestors were in the militia or the armed forces.

Other ideas:
- Card games using ancestors pictures - like Go Fish or Memory. (They have to say the ancestor's name)
- I found a simple copy and paste code for a webpage memory game where you can substitute your ancestor photos.  I did one a few years ago in December with everyone wearing Christmas hats, the kids loved playing it on their device.

Are you as lucky as I am to have your children and grandchildren interested in their ancestors? Can you think of others ways to get them interested?



Related Post:  Raiden's Camp





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