Sunday, July 31, 2011

Week in Review

Below are some noteworthy news stories and blog posts I have read in the past week that deal with my overlapping interests in Genealogy, History, Heritage, and Technology.
On the Lighter Side
    •  Some may feel that Arthur C. Clarke came pretty close to predicting the future in 1964.



    Other Weekly Link Lists

    Wednesday, July 27, 2011

    Wordless Wednesday: Standard Oil Advertisement - 1915

    On a recent trip to the microfilm archives at the local library, I found the below advertisement:

    A 1915 advertisement for Standard Oil Company-made Menorah Candles from the St. Louis Jewish Voice
    Move mouse over image for additional information, or click image to enlarge.
    Sources: (1) (2)

    Monday, July 25, 2011

    Amanuensis Monday: Naturalization Petition for Salomon Deutsch - 1921

    Amanuensis: A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

    I continue my project to transcribe family letters, journals, newspaper articles, audiotapes, and other historical artifacts. Not only do the documents contain genealogical information, the words breathe life into kin - some I never met - others I see a time in their life before I knew them.

    I began this project back in February of 2009, and since then, many others have joined in on the meme.  Why do we transcribe?  I provide my three reasons in the linked post.  You may find others.  If you participate, feel free to leave a link to your post in the comments.

    ***

    This week, I look at the Petition for Naturalization my great grandfather, Salomon Deutsch, filled out in 1921.  When I looked at the petition for my other great grandfather, Barney Newmark, back in May, I knew I had to retrieve Salomon's from the Chicago courts.  I realized there was a very good chance it could help solve a family mystery.  I said nothing to anyone as I applied, because I didn't want to get the hopes up for any family members reading the blog.  My hopes were only partially answered, and in some ways, I'm no closer to any answers than before.

    Sunday, July 24, 2011

    SNGF: Where I'm From

    Randy at Genea-Musings suggestion yesterday for Saturday Night Genealogy Fun was to create a poem based on the Where I'm From template, created from the poem by poet, George Ella Lyon.  An excellent suggestion.

    You can find her original poem, along with audio of her reading it, on her official site, GeorgeEllaLyon.com (Her poem can be found many other places across the web, as it has become quite popular.)

    I shared my version back in 2009.
    Here it is again

    Where I’m From
    by John Newmark ©2009
    based on Copy-Change Template by George Ella Lyon

    I am from books --
    from hostess ding dongs and lemonade stands.
    I am from a three bedroom, finished basement, with a backyard fence our crazy dog was able to jump over.
    I am from the dandelions I refused to accept were weeds,
    and the tree that was planted in Israel in my name when I turned thirteen.

    I’m from Sunday Dinners and talking politics at the table --
    Sam and Rose --
    fiftieth wedding anniversaries --
    and watching Must See TV every Thursday night with my cousins at Grandma’s.

    I’m from ‘pick up your clothes’ to ‘make your bed.’
    I’m from Christmas Trees and Bar Mitzvah lessons.
    I’m from St. Louis, Transylvania, Poland, and Texas --
    Chopped liver, corned beef, bagels and gefilte fish.

    I’m from a grandfather, who in the 1930s jumped a train with his friends and rode to California
    to a grandmother, age 7, on a beebox in her father’s Texas apiary -
    she stands in the center
    of a photo at my parents’ house
    inside a box next to other boxes
    filled with books,
    pictures,
    high school mementos,
    my grandfather’s Cavalry sword from the 1920s, Star of David on the hilt,
    and the WWII diary of a great-uncle who never returned.

    Week in Review

    Below are some noteworthy news stories and blog posts I have read in the past week that deal with my overlapping interests in Genealogy, History, Heritage, and Technology.


    Should the children of sperm donors be notified of genetic diseases they might carry? (hat/tip: EOGN)

    Good Morning Silicon Valley discusses how the new social network, Google+, has deleted corporate accounts, telling businesses to wait for them to create accounts designed for them.

    Greenman Tim at Walking the Berkshires has had several posts regarding a reenactment of the Revolutionary Battle of Wyoming.  Part 1 and Part 2.

    It's common sense that as genealogists, if we have access to the original, we shouldn't be satisfied with looking at a copy.  However, Michael John Neill at Genealogy Tip of the Day suggests the reverse can be true, as well.  If you have access to a copy, you shouldn't be satisfied with the original.

    Stephanie Lincecum at Graveyard Rabbit Online Journal has an article on Jewish Cemetery Symbolism.

    Recently during a baseball rain delay, St. Louis radio station, KMOX re-aired a 1960 interview of Jackie Robinson by sportscaster, Jack Buck.  The whole interview isn't online yet, but some of it can be heard in this Riverfront Times article.

    How to Turn Slides and Negatives into Digital Photos.  (hat/tip: Sally Jacobs)
     
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    Monday, July 18, 2011

    Amanuensis Monday: Dawes Commission - Caroline Taylor

    Amanuensis: A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

    I continue my project to transcribe family letters, journals, newspaper articles, audiotapes, and other historical artifacts. Not only do the documents contain genealogical information, the words breathe life into kin - some I never met - others I see a time in their life before I knew them.

    I began this project back in February of 2009, and since then, many others have joined in on the meme.  Why do we transcribe?  I provide my three reasons in the linked post.  You may find others.  If you participate, feel free to leave a link to your post in the comments.

    ***

    This week, I continue with the application my maternal grandmother's aunts, uncles, and cousins made in 1900 to the Dawes Commission to be accepted as Mississippi Choctaws. (The numbers below are the numbers of their case files, and likely indicate the order in which they provided the testimony.) Previously I have transcribed the testimony given by
    1. MCR 1050 - Samuel T Hartley – Nov 21, 1900 (Brother of my great great grandmother, Sarah Hartley Denyer Foster)
    2. MCR 1051 - Robert Hartley - Nov 21, 1900 (Son of Samuel T Hartley) 
    3. MCR 1052 - Virginia Shultz - Nov 21, 1900 (Daughter of Samuel T Hartley)
    4. MCR 1053 - Sophronia Hartley Cagle - Nov 21, 1900 (Daughter of Samuel T Hartley) 
    5. MCR 1054 - Melvin Elijah Van Every – Nov 21, 1900 (My great grandfather)
    6. MCR 1055 - Samuel W Denyer - Nov 21, 1900 (Brother of my great grandmother, Margaret Denyer Van Every)
    7. MCR 1069 - Eliza Caroline Foster Reeves – Nov 26, 1900 (Half-sister of my great grandmother)
    8. MCR 5842 - Georgia Hartley Phillips – June 17, 1902 (Daughter of Samuel T Hartley)
    9. MCR 5842 - Samuel T Hartley – June 17, 1902 
    and the ultimate decision - July 11, 1902  (A rejection.)

    Below is the testimony given by Caroline Taylor, a daughter of Samuel T Hartley, and a first cousin to my great grandmother, Margaret (Denyer) Van Every.  This concludes the testimony provided by my great grandfather, and his wife's family.

    Sunday, July 17, 2011

    Week in Review

    Below are some noteworthy news stories and blog posts I have read in the past week that deal with my overlapping interests in Genealogy, History, Heritage, and Technology.
    • A new study suggests internet use negatively impacts our memory. Or, from a different perspective, our brains are becoming more efficient. If we know where we can look up the information, the brain doesn't waste its resources storing it. 
    •  It appears Microsoft may soon be entering the Social Networking fray as well.  (Personally, I think my Mac would revolt against me if I created a profile on a Microsoft social network, so if they do enter the fray, I will not be testing it out.)
    Other Weekly Link Lists

    Tuesday, July 12, 2011

    Who Will Google Kill This Time?

    Disclaimer:
    Back in June of 2009 I predicted, "Google Wave is Coming; It's Undertow will Claim at least One Victim."
    My record on predictions has historically been pretty lousy.

    ***

    I've been playing on Google's new social network, Google Plus (or Google+ or G+), for 4 days now.  Lots of people are talking about what it will replace.  And since we like violent imagery, the word 'killer' gets bandied about.

    Twitter-Killer?

    Certainly a lot of the same chat that goes on with Twitter I see at Google+.  Currently there isn't anything to compare with Twitter's hashtags. Without something of this nature, Twitter survives.  As someone who has been on Twitter for awhile, and uses it, one of the cool things about Twitter is the ability to use hashtags to find other people talking about the same topics.

    Google+'s Sparks could be a replacement for hashtags, if they turned it inward, and allowed you to search for public posts.  Currently, however, Sparks is only focused outward, yielding Google search results for specific terms.

    Of course, Google is the "King of Search" and Google+ is currently only in "Field-Test" mode.  Many have predicted that they will integrate search within the network and allow us to find posts by keyword.  At that point, I do wonder what distinguishes Twitter to allow it to coexist.  Especially since I feel a large percentage of Twitter users are the type of individual who are likely to sign up for Google+.

    It's possible people will keep posting to Twitter, posting the same status updates to both places, as they post them to Facebook and Twitter now.  As soon as Google releases the G+ API, there will be apps to make this simple.  But I see myself already losing interest in Twitter, and the only thing keeping me there is the hashtags.

    Tumblr-Killer?

    For those unfamiliar with Tumblr, it is a blogging platform excelling at the sharing, and resharing, of media (images, video, and audio).  G+ definitely does this very well.

    However, like Twitter, Tumblr thrives on hashtags.  So until Google+ integrates an internal search engine, it's safe.  However, once it does, I suspect use of Tumblr will drop as users realize their posts will get more views on Google+.

    Facebook-Killer?

    So far I have found only two things Facebook can do that Google+ can't.

    1) Games.  [Many will see this as a plus in favor of Google]
    2) Event managing

    While many people use Facebook to schedule events, and invite their friends, you can't do that YET with Google+.  However, all signs indicate that Google intends to integrate Google+ with as many of its products as possible.  And Google Calendar is one of its products.  I don't know when it's coming, but I think it's a safe bet that they will release some sort of event management function.

    However, regardless of whether Social Network A and B can do the same things, and regardless of which one does it better, a Social Network must contain one essential thing.  The People With Whom You Wish to Network.

    The First Adopters of Google+ are highly extolling its virtues.  But if we can't convince our less techy friends, and family members to join us, we will need to maintain both a Facebook and a Google+ account.  At least we will if we feel the need to continue to 'network' with both groups.

    I ask myself the crucial question: When will I delete my Facebook account?

    After less than a week, still in Field-Test invite only stage, almost all the fellow Genealogists who I networked with on Facebook are on G+.  I have 95 'friends' on Facebook who are in my 'Genealogy' list.  I have 71 individuals in my Genealogy circle on Google+.

    Along with:
    • A handful of close friends
    • No family (excepting my fiancee)
    • No fellow high school or college alums.
    I need to hand out gold stars to the Genealogy community.  Especially when the stereotype doesn't fall within the 18-40 male geek demographic one expects to be "First Adopters" of new technology.  Of course, online genealogists are used to 'trying out' new database websites for their research.  Just because a large number of us are anxious to see what's going on, doesn't mean we'll all stay.

    One member of the genealogy community has gotten a fair amount of press for his G+ activity.  Paul Allen, founder of Ancestry.com.  Using Ancestry's census statistics, and surname counts on G+, he estimated G+ would surpass 10,000,000 users today.  Google has neither confirmed nor denied his estimates.

    I find myself asking other crucial questions:  
    Why did I join Facebook originally? 
    What purpose does a social network fill for me?

    If my family wants to talk to me, they either pick up a phone, or send me an email.
    If my close friends wish to talk to me, they either pick up a phone, or send me an email.

    What Facebook has done for me is get me in touch with people I had lost track of from earlier periods in my life (school, former jobs, etc).

    I see the following progression of events for me:
    1) I will stop posting new status posts on Facebook.  I predict that happens now. I'm not including occasional posts to Facebook reminding people - hey, if you want to see what's going on with me, look at my public G+ posts, or join up, and I'll add you to my circles.
    2) I will only use Facebook to read (and comment) on other posts.
    3) I will delete everyone on Facebook that has a Google+ account, and is clearly using it.
    4) I will monitor my usage of Facebook.

    I predict, before the first snowfall this winter, I will delete my Facebook account.

    However, I foresee Google+ and Facebook coexisting.  There will be more then enough people who prefer each network. Some people will feel the need to be on both.  Others will make their choices.

    Monday, July 11, 2011

    Amanuensis Monday: Dawes Commission - Virigina Shultz

    Amanuensis: A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

    I continue my project to transcribe family letters, journals, newspaper articles, audiotapes, and other historical artifacts. Not only do the documents contain genealogical information, the words breathe life into kin - some I never met - others I see a time in their life before I knew them.

    I began this project back in February of 2009, and since then, many others have joined in on the meme.  Why do we transcribe?  I provide my three reasons in the linked post.  You may find others.  If you participate, feel free to leave a link to your post in the comments.

    ***

    This week, I continue with the application my maternal grandmother's aunts, uncles, and cousins made in 1900 to the Dawes Commission to be accepted as Mississippi Choctaws. (The numbers below are the numbers of their case files, and likely indicate the order in which they provided the testimony.) Previously I have transcribed the testimony given by
    1. MCR 1050 - Samuel T Hartley – Nov 21, 1900 (Brother of my great great grandmother, Sarah Hartley Denyer Foster)
    2. MCR 1051 - Robert Hartley - Nov 21, 1900 (Son of Samuel T Hartley)
    3. MCR 1053 - Sophronia Hartley Cagle - Nov 21, 1900 (Daughter of Samuel T Hartley) 
    4. MCR 1054 - Melvin Elijah Van Every – Nov 21, 1900 (My great grandfather)
    5. MCR 1055 - Samuel W Denyer - Nov 21, 1900 (Brother of my great grandmother, Margaret Denyer Van Every)
    6. MCR 1069 - Eliza Caroline Foster Reeves – Nov 26, 1900 (Half-sister of my great grandmother)
    7. MCR 5842 - Georgia Hartley Phillips – June 17, 1902 (Daughter of Samuel T Hartley)
    8. MCR 5842 - Samuel T Hartley – June 17, 1902 
    and the ultimate decision - July 11, 1902  (A rejection.)

    Below is the testimony given by Virginia Shultz, a daughter of Samuel T Hartley, and a first cousin to my great grandmother, Margaret (Denyer) Van Every

    Sunday, July 10, 2011

    Week in Review

    Below are some noteworthy news stories and blog posts I have read in the past week that deal with my overlapping interests in Genealogy, History, Heritage, and Technology.

    Genealogy Research
    • Michael John Neill at RootDig discusses Percents and Genealogy, and how overall statistics are irrelevant when dealing with specific cases. Agreed. I could probably find some statistic saying that 90%, or higher, of Ashkenazic Jewish families didn't name a child after a living relative between Year X and Year Y. But that doesn't mean Sol X's grandfather, Sol, had to be dead when Sol was born. There are always exceptions.
    History
    Photographs
    • Thanks to footnoteMaven's post, I discovered the DearPhotograph tumblr site this week. Open to submissions, the idea of the site is to take old photographs to their original location, and take a photograph of the photograph, held up so that the old background merges with the new background, and then to write a brief letter to the photograph.  Visit the site to understand what I am saying. 
    Technology / Social Networking
      •  As Google+ catches on, some are looking at it as a possible blogging tool.  Digg founder, Kevin Rose, has forwarded his personal domain KevinRose.com to his Goggle+ page. If you aren't on Google+ yet, you can view his posts, and all the comments, but can't participate.  Science Fiction editor, Patrick Nielsen Hayden has a few issues with using it as a blog replacment.  And if your blog readers aren't among the early adopters, they're not going to be happy about not being able to comment.
      A few Google+ pages for those who want to see what's going on:
        Carnivals
        Animals have genealogy, too!
        Other Weekly Link Lists

        Wednesday, July 6, 2011

        The Immigrants: 1600s

        Over the Fourth of July holiday a family member was in Plymouth, MA, and I was asked if any ancestors came over on the Mayflower.  My response was an, "I don't know of any."  However, this inspired me to catalog as many early Immigrants I could for my family.  ["Early" as in those who didn't cross via the Land Bridge.]  I indicate my web-based sources, though for most I am relying on the poorly cited research of others.

        1) The Betts and the Stoughtons

        My eighth great grandparents, Richard Betts and Joanna Chamberlain were married in Ipswich, Massachusetts Bay Colony - in 1648.  It is thought Joanna arrived by 1635, and Richard mid-1640s. [source source].  Joanna Chamberlain was the daughter of Elizabeth Stoughton and Richard Chamberlain, and the granddaughter of Rev Thomas and Katherine Stoughton.

        2) Hortons and Langtons

        9th great grandparents, Barnabas Horton and Mary Langton are said to have immigrated c. 1630 on the ship "Swallow." [source] - Living in Massachusetts and Connecticut prior to settling in Southold, Long Island.

        3) Hallocks

        Barnabas Horton's son, Caleb, married Abigail Hallock.  Abigail's father, William Hallock, likely arrived in Southold, Long Island ca. 1640. [source]

        4) Van Everys

        Brothers Myndert and Carsten Frederickse (sons of Frederick Van Iveren) likely immigrated to New Amsterdam in the 1640s or 1650s, with Myndert marrying Catharina Burger (Burghart) in New Amsterdam in 1656. [source].  Most of the descendants of Myndert and Carsten took the surname of either Van Every or Van Avery.  Myndert was my 8th great grandfather. 

        5) Swayzes and Kinges 

        John Sweezey [Swayze], another eighth great grandfather, immigrated prior to 1650. [source].  He married Catherine Kinge in 1650 in Salem, Essex, Massachusetts.  He settled in Suffolk, Long Island.

        Catherine emigrated with her father, William, prior to 1635 
        They settled at Salem, Massachusetts. He was admitted a freeman there May 25, 1636. He had grants of land of forty acres on Jeffrey's Creek, now Manchester-by-the-Sea; thirty acres at Royal-side at the head of Bass river, now Beverly, and he located his homestead there. He was a grand juror in 1637. He was a member of the First church at Salem, but in 1637 joined the Antinomians and came under the ban of the Salem authorities. He was requested to sever his connection with the new church or have his arms taken away from him. He remained with the new faith and gave up his gun to Lieutenant Danforth. Later he was banished for a time for sheltering the persecuted Quakers. [source]

        Monday, July 4, 2011

        Amanuensis Monday: NY Militia Rolls for David Van Every - 1775, 1777

        Amanuensis: A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

        I continue my project to transcribe family letters, journals, newspaper  articles, audiotapes, and other historical artifacts. Not only do the  documents contain genealogical information, the words breathe life into  kin - some I never met - others I see a time in their life before I knew  them.

        I began this project back in February of 2009, and since then, many others have joined in on the meme.  Why do we transcribe?  I provide my three reasons in the linked post.  You may find others.  If you participate, feel free to leave a link to your post in the comments.

        ***

        This week, in honor of the holiday, I transcribe the NY Militia Service Records for my 4th great grandfather, David Van Every, son of McGregory Van Every.

        Sunday, July 3, 2011

        Week in Review

        Genealogy and Technology
        Genealogy and Social Networking
        The big news this week
        Discussion and Viewpoints
        "Whether at this point it’s still worth it as a writer to own one’s own domain, i.e., in the age of everyone being on Facebook, setting up one’s online shingle elsewhere is like opening a business on a dusty street a mile away from Main Street."
        His response is timely, and appropriate for any professional hanging out their shingle, including genealogists.
        Cartoonist, Randall Munroe, adds some visual commentary (click image to go to original site):


        Press Releases:
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          Friday, July 1, 2011

          A Toast to the First and the Fourth

          A Toast to the First and the Fourth of July
          for David Van Every (1757-1820)
          ©July 2009 - John Newmark

          For two years my fourth great fought
          for the creation of our nation
          then in seventeen seventy seven
          he deemed his disloyalty a disservice
          and joined the other side.
          Finally, he and his family fled to Canada.

          His motivations are unrecorded.
          Beyond his appearance on muster rolls,
          a few brief mentions elsewhere,
          we have nothing. No inkling
          of the wherefores behind his decision
          either in seventy five, or seventy seven.

          In July’s opening barrage
          of national celebrations
          I honor both of his decisions -
          whatever the reasons, and his willingness
          to fight for what he believed
          even when those beliefs changed.

          ***
          July 1 is Canada Day
          July 4 is Independence Day

          This poem was based on information I'd found on the web, citing The Records of the Van Every Family, by Mary Blackadar Piersol, 1947.  After writing this poem, I discovered the muster rolls for David Van Every on Footnote that put the information somewhat in doubt.

          The muster rolls suggest he enlisted on July 4, 1775, and deserted on Sept 12 (or Sept / 2) 1775. And re-enlisted on May 23, 1777, and redeserted in June of 1777. So in total it would have been for three months, not two years.

          Also, since writing the poem, I obtained a copy of The Records of the Van Every Family, by Mary Blackadar Piersol. She only mentions David joining and deserting in 1777. So she didn't know about the 1775 muster roll. Somebody else must have found documentation that he joined in 1775, and an incorrect interpretation was made that he remained in service between 1775 and 1777.

          It's impossible to assign motivation to the enlistments and desertions. David was 18 and 20 years old in 1775 and 1777. He may have just been a very confused young man.

          While McGregory Van Every and his children ultimately joined the Loyalist camp, and fled to Canada, there were many Van Everys who fought as Patriots throughout the war.  They just aren't my ancestors.  As one researcher notes concerning David and his brother, Benjamin:
          David and Benjamin Van Every perhaps had decided to join the New York Militia, as it was in this Regiment that the cousins of their father, McGregory Van Every had been serving: Martin as a Lieutenant, Cornelius (1730 - 1815) as an Ensign and later as a Lieutenant, and Rynier as a Captain. However, soon after deserting from the New York Militia, both David and Benjamin transferred themselves to Butler's Rangers, within which they fought for the duration of the American Revolution, David as a Sergeant and Benjamin as a regular soldier.

          ---
          "Warner Cemetery: an important piece of Canada's heritage worth preserving," Robert Collins McBride, The Loyalist Gazette, March 22, 2000.