24 April 2008
1898 German Directory
My direct line ancestors were in the United States by 1898, but I did find a couple of uncles who remained in Germany in these directories. Some of the entries for Wrisse are shown in this post, Johann and Jurgen Goldenstein are brothers of my ancestor Focke Goldenstein.
Also shown in this post are some of the entries from Holtrop (the left hand column of page 1341). Eilt Ufkes was a brother to another ancestor, Johann Ufkes.
The images are searchable at Ancestry.com. Most of the entries have to be searched by last name only.
23 April 2008
Trientje Eilts Post calligraphy
Labels: ufkes
22 April 2008
Still Room on 3rd annual Salt Lake City Family History Research Trip
For more information on our trip, visit our website at:
http://www.rootdig.com/slctrip.html
or email Michael at mjnrootdig@gmail.com
Annual Ft. Wayne, Indiana Genealogy Library Trip-May 2008
More information is available on our website at:
http://www.rootdig.com/acpltrip.html
17 April 2008
Droin Collection At Ancestry.com
The image that is a part of this post comes from the Droin Collection and is the baptismal entry for Cesarie Robidoux. The entry is from St-Constant and is from the year 1827. Her parents are Alexis Robixoux and his wife Rosalie Rheume. Those wishing to use these records will need to brush up on their Latin. When time allows we will post a translation here on our site.
Cesarie is my wife's 3rd great-grandmother. Cesarie's family settled in Clinton County, New York where she died.
Labels: ancestry, droin, robidoux
16 April 2008
Getting Ready for OGS
Regular site visitors or readers of my Ancestry.com column are welcome to come up and introduce themselves.
Labels: speaking
14 April 2008
The Census Taker Cometh
(originally published at Ancestry.com in 2004)
It is June 3, 1860.
Anna Gufferman, who is twelve years old, sees a stranger approaching her small home. He looks reasonably dressed and does not appear to be carrying a weapon. Illinois is not as wild a place as Nebraska where her cousins live, but mother has warned her that one can never be too careful. She shoos her five younger siblings in the house as the man approaches.
He approaches the front yard and calls out for the man or the woman of the house and says he is here to ask questions for something called the “census.” Anna is wary of calling for her parents if there is no need. When Father and the boys are in the field, he does not like to be disturbed, not even if Grandfather comes. Mother is down at the creek by herself, having left Anna with the children. The weekly washing is one of the few times Mother does not have several small children underfoot, and Anna is hesitant to bother her if it is not absolutely necessary. Anna decides this “census” does not require her to disturb her parents. She tells the census taker that she is very familiar with the family and the goings on in the household. After all, she is twelve years old and responsible for several younger siblings.
The census taker asks Anna several questions, which she frankly thinks are none of his business. He tells her that the government needs to know this information and that it is important it be accurate. Anna does the best she can to answer his questions. He starts by asking her the names of her parents and her siblings.
“It is a good thing my parents are not here,” Anna thinks to herself. While her English is rudimentary, it is considerably better than the handful of words her parents have managed to learn. Determined to impress the census man with her knowledge of English, she indicates that her parents are not Hinrich and Anneke Gufferman, but that they are rather Henry and Ann. Her other siblings all have names more German sounding than Anna's. She decides to provide the census taker with English versions of their names, just as she did with those of her parents.
Anna is not quite certain how old her parents and her siblings are, but the man seems to insist on knowing their age precisely. Their christening names and dates of birth would be in the family bible, but Mother would fly into an absolute rage if Anna got the bible herself and began leafing through it. Deciding it was not worth the risk of her mother catching her in the act, Anna guesses as to the age of her parents. Despite her uncertainty, she speaks clearly and distinctly to convince the census man that she knows the ages precisely. He seems pleased to get the information.
He then asks where her parents were born. Anna knows they were born in Germany and were married there. Those questions are easy. The census man then asks where she and her siblings were born. These questions are not so easy. She cannot remember which of her older brothers were born in Germany and which ones were born in Illinois. She remembers that her parents lived for a while in Ohio before coming to Illinois. And frankly, she is getting tired of all the questions. Consequently she tells the census taker that her two older brothers were born in Germany, the next was born in Ohio and that all the remaining children were born in Illinois.
Anna decides to give hurried answers to the rest of the census man's questions. He has taken time away from her chores and Mother will not be happy if the morning tasks are not done when she returns. Occasionally impatient with Anna's delayed answers, the census man seems pleased when Anna begins answering the questions more quickly. Eager to please and knowing she should return to her chores, Anna speedily answers the remaining questions, paying little concern to the accuracy of her answers.
It is June 25, 1880.
The census taker arrives at the home of Hinrich and Anneke Gufferman. It is a different place than his fellow enumerator encountered in 1860. Hinrich and Anneke have two children at home, the youngest son who helps his father farm and a daughter who works as a hired girl for a Swedish couple up the road. There is still plenty of work for Anneke to perform around the house, but no longer meeting the needs of twelve children makes her life less harried than it was before.
Anneke invites the census taker into her kitchen and after he indicates some of the information he needs, she goes and gets the family bible, which contains the names and dates of birth for her husband and her children. She opens the bible to the appropriate page and tells the census taker there is the information. The entries are written in Hinrich's bold, clean script and the census taker only has difficulty in reading the name of the youngest daughter Trientje, which he copies down as Fruita. Otherwise the odd-sounding names are easy to read and the census taker simply copies them into his record.
There are additional questions and Anneke provides the answers as best she can. In Germany, her husband was a day laborer and had moved several times looking for work. When asked where her husband's parents were born she is not certain; Hinrich's mother died when he was a baby and the father had died shortly after their marriage. Anneke told him the parents were born in Germany. Anneke was not certain of her father's place of birth, either. He had died before her birth and had been a soldier. Anneke had been named for her father's mother, with a first name that was unusual for the area of Germany where she was from. Thinking her father was Dutch, she told the census taker that her father was born in Holland. But she was not really certain.
It is June 16, 1900.
The census taker comes to the door of Hinrich Gufferman. It has been a month since his beloved Anneke has died. Hinrich does not know the census taker. He swears at him in German in a booming voice and the enumerator senses that he will get no answers. Gufferman's son Johann lives a few miles up the road, fortunately in the same township. The son had told the census taker that Hinrich was taking the death very badly and was only speaking to a few family members. Johann told the census taker to come back if information was needed on the father. It looked like the enumerator would have to take Johann up on his offer.
Ever wondered why some census entries look like creative accounting? Have you ever thought about what actually transpired when the census taker arrived at your ancestor's home?
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requests to reprint/publish can be directed to me at mjnrootdig@gmail.com
Thanks.
Michael
Labels: census
07 April 2008
Footnote workshop in St. Charles 12 April-openings
Registration is limited. Please contact me at mjnrootdig@gmail.com if you wish to register as we are getting very close to the dateand I will forward your email to the representative from the St. Charles County [Missouri] Genealogical Society which is co-sponsoring the workshop with St. Charles Community College. We want to make certain everyone who registers has a spot and a computer wn which to use.
More information is available here:
http://www.rootdig.com/stchas2008.htm
But please contact me if you would like to come and have not yet signed up.
Omaha workshop attendees--land record handout
I enjoyed the conference in Omaha and hope attendees did as well.
Michael
05 April 2008
Links and Information from Omaha Workshop
LDS Research Guides the "G" section
Main Family Hisory Site
http://www.familysearch.org/
Mailing Lists at Rootsweb.com
http://lists.rootsweb.com/
World Connect
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/
Translators online
http://babelfish.altavista.com/
BYU Library Book Images and search interface.
http://www.lib.byu.edu/fhc/Footnote-there are some free things
http://www.footnote.com/
Social Security Death Index at Rootsweb
http://ssdi.rootsweb.com/
USGENWEB
http://www.usgenweb.com/
WorldVitalRecords.comNew databases are free for 10 days—some things are free for good.
http://www.worldvitalrecords.com/
Genealogy BankYou can see snippets of some newspaper items at no charge
Genealogy Bank
Books at Google
http://books.google.com/
WorldCat
http://www.worldcat.org/
Family Search Labs
http://search.labs.familysearch.org/recordsearch/start.html
I didn't mention the American Memory Collection at the Library of Congress
http://memory.loc.gov/
If I forgot something or there are questions, post a response or email me at mjnrootdig@gmail.com
03 April 2008
A Rose by any other name...
European Quick Links
A while back I gave a lecture on "European Research Online." It was necessarily broad. The links we used are here for those who are inclined. Please let me know (mjnrootdig@gmail.com) if any are bad--I checked most, but one or two bad ones might have slipped through.
02 April 2008
More Can You Read it?
This one (twice on the same page) comes from a court document in 1904 in Hancock County, Illinois. This individual probably learned to write in the German script.
Go ahead and post a guess as to the name. The typewritten letters should not be a problem.
Labels: handwriting
Can You Read it? One more from the same guy
Can You Read it?
Labels: handwriting
Suggestion for GenealogyBank
Labels: genealogybank
Using Genealogy for Passwords
If I can't remember whether I used bubbagum12 or bubbagum13 and I enter in the wrong one too many times, I get kicked out.
I designed a different system. I use initials (or names) of relatives and their year of birth. This works better for me as I "know" from memory the name of each ancestor through my great-grandparents with their year of birth. Then my challenge question is simply "so and so" and I know what it means.
For those who say that others might be able to figure it out based upon the challenge question, that is taken care of too. I have "nicknames" for each grandparent that no would (other than my parents) would know. My challenge question is not "Grandma Neill," but rather "Grandma Goose" (not her real nickname), or "Grandma Goose's mother." Then I know to whom I was referring and I can enter the appropriate password.
I just got sick and tired of making up arbitrary passwords I could never remember.
Labels: tips
Michael's Speaking Schedule 2008 and 2009
I would be happy to discuss the possibility of coming to present to your genealogy group or club for their workshop or seminar. Genealogy workshops and seminars are great ways for members of your group to enhance their research skills and network with other genealogists. There is a world away from the computer.
For more information on speaking availability, fees, expenses, and opportunities, send an email to me at michaeln2@winco.net. Please indicate the potential date of the seminar, typical format, and general audience level. We can go from there.
Lectures are informative, relaxed, and fun.
Topics can be arranged and new lectures can be developed upon request.
I have presented over fifty all-day workshops across the United States on a wide variety of genealogy and computer genealogy topics. Some have been hands on all day workshops on Ancestry.com, Genline, Family Tree Maker. Others have been more traditional days of lectures and presentations on a wide variety of topics. I have lectured for small and large groups including NGS and FGS conferences.
A list of incomplete topics is available at http://www.rootdig.com/topics.html.
Most upcoming engagements are listed at http://www.rootdig.com/labels/speaking.html
Labels: speaking
Are You Looking in Surrounding Counties?
The Dirks entry got me to wondering about the numbers after the names. I knew they were not section numbers--the numbers only were 1, 2, and 3.
Labels: directories, dirks, tips
01 April 2008
Missouri Death Certificates 1910-1957
It appears as if the Missouri State Archives has completed the digitization of most of the 1910-1957 death certificates for the state.
The image in this post is part of the death certificate for William Lake, who died in Chariton County, Missouri on 1 December 1924.
The nice thing about the free online death certificates is that one can then easily obtain them for extended family members and potentially reveal new clues about the family.
In this case, I was hoping for a little more detail on the parents, or perhaps a different piece of information than I had before. I will keep looking in the index for the rest of the children of John and Charlotte Brown Lake.
There are a variety of records on the Missouri State Archives website. The death records are just one.
And if anyone is related to William Lake, fire off an email. His youngest brother, Granville, is my wife's great-grandfather.
Using Footnote.com in St. Charles, Missouri 12 April 2008
There is still room in my workshop on using Footnote.com on 12 April 2008 at the community college in St. Peters, Missouri (suburban St. Louis). Attendees will have access to the site for the duration of the workshop and there will be time for searching and self-discovery.Registration is limited and more information is available on our website.
Colonel Febucker in Virginia--Who is he?
OCR searches in Footnote
Labels: footnote
Getting Ready for Omaha--5 April 2008
Those interested in the all-day workshop can visit the society's website or view the brochure for workshop on our site.

