Genealogy is a journey back through time, in which you learn what your family’s place was in history and how history has affected your family and you.
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Native American Genealogy Group
I am resurrecting an old idea. There continues to be interest in Native American genealogy in upstate New York and western Massachusetts. Researching a people whose history was traditionally oral requires a similar method to help uncover and preserve the history. Therefore, I have decided to begin a group dedicated to Native American genealogy to meet in different counties of upstate New York and western Massachusetts monthly, on different days of the week, to maximize exposure and gain membership. I already have a DBA under the name Native Roots and Branches, so I decided to continue with it.
Friday, July 19, 2013
How Times Have Changed
The Man in the Black Hat:
“Notes of a Red-Headed Secretary”
Chatham Courier, 30 July 1964
"SMALL TOWN VIGNETTE:
While Rolland Snyder was attending the Chatham High Class of 1924
reunion at 1811 on Saturday night, he received a long distance call from Quebec….The
person calling knew only that he was “attending some sort of school function in
Chatham, but our alert operators immediately connected the caller with the 1811
Inn and Mr. Snyder…."
Difficult to Imagine
Chatham Courier, Chatham, NY, July 7, 1927
“It is said that in Massachusetts gasoline can be purchased
at prices ranging from thirteen to nineteen cents a gallon, depending upon
local conditions. In this section the
price remains at twenty-one cents and in some of the nearby villages it is
twenty-two.”
Monday, July 1, 2013
A Grave Puzzle
I just came across a good example of why it's a good idea of making a practice of double checking any information that you have.
After writing about Ada Winchell, I looked up her sister Rachel Almira, who was born on 3 Sep 1864 in the Town of Great Barrington. On 10 Oct 1882, she married James L. Lee, born 18 Mar 1853in West Stockbridge, the son of Abram and Mary Jane Lee. According to Tombstone Inscriptions: Great Barrington, Massachusetts, Vol. 2., the couple had a daughter named Alda who was born 10 June 1883 and died 15 November 1885. Rachel herself died 3 July 1886 of phthusis pulumates, a fancy name for tuberculosis.
I wanted to see what the child's cause of death was so I went to Familysearch to look for a death record. Nothing came up so I decided to search on the father's name. Imagine my surprise when I found a birth record for a son named Winfred L. Lee, born 7 June 1883. He did die on 15 Nov 1885 from tubercular meningitis. How did this child's gender and first name change in the records? Below are excerpts from the Town of Great Barrington records documenting Winfred's existence.
After writing about Ada Winchell, I looked up her sister Rachel Almira, who was born on 3 Sep 1864 in the Town of Great Barrington. On 10 Oct 1882, she married James L. Lee, born 18 Mar 1853in West Stockbridge, the son of Abram and Mary Jane Lee. According to Tombstone Inscriptions: Great Barrington, Massachusetts, Vol. 2., the couple had a daughter named Alda who was born 10 June 1883 and died 15 November 1885. Rachel herself died 3 July 1886 of phthusis pulumates, a fancy name for tuberculosis.
I wanted to see what the child's cause of death was so I went to Familysearch to look for a death record. Nothing came up so I decided to search on the father's name. Imagine my surprise when I found a birth record for a son named Winfred L. Lee, born 7 June 1883. He did die on 15 Nov 1885 from tubercular meningitis. How did this child's gender and first name change in the records? Below are excerpts from the Town of Great Barrington records documenting Winfred's existence.
No doubt Winfred Leonardi's short life is one reason why these errors have gone uncorrected for so long. His middle name makes me wonder how imaginative his parents were.
Rachel was not James' first wife. He married Martha M. Tucker, the daughter of William and Maria T. Tucker, on 21 Oct 1874 in Lee, Berkshire County, Mass. They had a daughter, Martha C. Lee born 26 Jul 1875 in Lee. Unfortunately she died 6 Mar 1876 in the same locality. The gender for the child is correct, but her death was nine years earlier and in a different location. At a cursory look there are two cemeteries in Lee and several nearby in Lenox. Winfred/Alda is buried in Greenlawn Cemetery in Housatonic. The information on "Alda" Lee must be the result of an error in transcribing the tombstone records. This is also a good illustration of the value of original, or primary, records.
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