30 June 2022

BLACK DEATH PLAGUE - Worst Pandemic In History - ORIGIN SOLVED WITH DNA FROM EARLY 14th CENTURY

Reueters Lifestyle Science Ancient DNA Solves Black Death Mystery 

Excerpt: Researchers said on Wednesday they retrieved ancient DNA traces of the Yersinia pestis plague bacterium from the teeth of three women buried in a medieval Nestorian Christian community in Chu Valley near Lake Issyk Kul in the foothills of the Tian Shan mountains who perished in 1338-1339.  The earliest deaths documented elsewhere in the pandemic were in  1346.

Interesting article!  (That's Central Asia in norther Kyrgystan.)


28 June 2022

NATIONAL ARCHIVES OFFERS STUDENTS GRADE 8 OR ABOVE VOLUNTEER HOURS - TRANSCRIBE HISTORICAL DOCUMENST

NARA CITIZEN ARCHIVIST PROGRAM 

Will you be the one to transcribe the records of "Colored Troops" in the Civil War?  How about Family Data Cards from the Bureau of Indian Affairs? Or the names of nurses who served in the Red Cross?

25 June 2022

TEXTUS ROFFENSIS - PRE MAGNA CARTA ENGLISH LAW MANUSCRIPT - UNESCO's UK Memory of the World Register

I was going to link to the article in DailyMail Online about this, but for whatever reason it's not working.  

So, to reiterate, Rochester Cathedral is the second oldest in England (first called Saint Andrews and built about 604) and that is where the manuscript is kept. It is in old English. Called Textus Roffensis, it predates the 1215 Magna Carta and was a compilation of laws that go back before the Norman Conquest. Monks at the Saint Andrew's Priory at Rochester Cathedral likely created this illuminated manuscript. One of the reasons the monks may have created it is that at the time England was not unified and, for instance, there was a King who ruled Kent.  So, I see that if one were traveling from one Kingdom to another, one might want to know the various rules and regulations for each before hand.)

A little research on this cathedral and it is and has all along been a parish in which services are conducted. Because of its historical nature, there are also exhibits...

https://www.rochestercathedral.org/exhibitions

1400 years of prayer!


21 June 2022

CIVIL WAR HISTORY in CALIFORNIA : DRUM BARRACKS IN WILMINGTON and THE BANNING MUSEUM

1862 : Civil War action in California?  Well, not exactly.  In Wilmington California, which is not far from Long Beach and the Port of Los Angeles, there exists a historical site called The Drum Barracks where there was a military presence. If you're a Civil War buff or had ancestors in that conflict, this could be interesting. This historical site has reopened for tours with a reservation and proof of Covid vaccine.

DRUM BARRACKS ORG - WILMINGTON CALIFORNIA

At this site you'll get a good report on why there soldiers and officers on the Union site.  Basically California had become a state  a little more than a decade earlier but only 25% of the population voted for the Union side.  Texans captured Southern Arizona (half the territory) for the Confederacy.  Also a man named Phineas Banning, who was instrumental in the early foundation of a port which would expand greatly in the future, was a Unionist. So he and his peers wanted to keep the state for the Union. Thousands of soldiers were stationed in the area prepared to fight to keep the Confederates out of California and possibly battle in other territories such as Arizona.

If you're coming from a distance, you'll probably want to tour the Banning House at the same time as they are close to each other.

THE BANNING MUSEUM Link includes Virtual tour

Long before Covid shut downs I did manage to tour this house.  The visitor's center has the genealogy of the family on the wall.  The house dates to 1864 and has 19 rooms open to the public.  There is also a barn and other dwellings in the park that are part of the estate.

18 June 2022

COURT RECORDS and WILLS in EARLY AMERICA - PERSONAL FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS - WHEN CENSUS HAS ONLY STATISTICAL INFORMATION

Court records such as wills, probate, and the purchase and selling of land (and slaves) are quite useful to better understanding your ancestors and how they lived and who they were and how they are connected to other families.  I've had some fascinating journeys using these and so might you.

Where the courts and lawyers were used and how well these records have survived is key, of course, but if your roots are in pre-Revolutionary times into the mid 1800's, these records may make all the difference. (Gentleman's agreements - handshakes -  witnessing by family and friends or neighbors - also occurred where people trusted each other or could not afford lawyers and courts.)

These records can especially enhance the information on early census records, which appear to be quite basic and statistical compared to later census. 

If you're looking at 'head of household' data on an early census, which is usually the oldest male in the family (And so might not be the HUSBAND), looking further within that town, county, or state, archival records can bring up things such as:

The names of family members. Sometimes birth order/ages. (Including the names of wives, daughters, and daughters-in-law that are elsewhere missing and thus marriages.)

The location of property. (Follow up with maps, as place names may have changed.) Often the descriptiveness of where the property lines are defies any survey.

Who was favored in a will, and sometimes why.

Sometimes letters to the court with petitions and adjustments. (For instance letters a daughter sent to her father asking him to please send certain slaves to her, though she was in a territory where there was no official slavery. He did by the way.)

How much was paid. (Follow up with an inflation calculator): You may get a feel for if that person was rich or poor, if they owed money or were in debt. (Don't be too surprised. Our Founding Fathers and their families often were.  Thomas Jefferson, George Washington were in debt.)

WHERE TO FIND THEM:

Although certain subscription genealogy oriented databases have loaded on some of these documents, which are in English or German for early colonial, pre-Revolutionary, and post-Revolutionary times, there is much more out there.

I still believe the so-called "Old Fashioned" methods such as looking in books, historical societies, local and state archives, NARA, and libraries, are useful.

If you think you have found family on census in a certain place, focus on that place and see what libraries may contain books that were published in that area.  (The population was much smaller so one book might contain the information on every person who owned land in that county.)

You may be surprised to learn that big city collections far from that area also have Will books and other records of legal proceedings.  In one big city library I found information on many counties in the Southern United States. Sometimes you wonder how those books got there. (They may have been donated.) However, start where the location on the census is and expand out from there.

Consider:  The largest city, county, and state archives.  The college or university libraries (even if they are 2 year community colleges.)  SOMETIMES THE LIBRARIANS or ARCHIVIST may NOT have what you want BUT THEY MAY BE ABLE TO TELL YOU WHERE THE DOCUMENTS ARE HELD.

These early records are almost always in handwriting.  Sometimes the handwriting itself is puzzling as is the terminology. 

C Ancestry Worship - Genealogy BlogSpot

13 June 2022

ANCESTRY GENEALOGY DATABASE - U.S. SLAVE ERA INSURANCE POLICIES 1640-1865

I check the Ancestry card catalogue to see what is new and also use it to search for databases I don't know about. I never thought that slave owners would take out insurance on their slaves. and as early as 1640!  Since using the ProQuest History Vault brought up Delaware, I thought I'd try this one for the city of Pittsburgh.  While Pittsburgh did not come up there were lists of slaves including some surnames, the place of residence, and the slave holder's name.

An example is Henry Clay a slave in Louisville Kentucky whose holder was James McDowell.

It says he was a steamboat hand and the policy on him was number 1686.

Now the links to the policy information go to the Internet, so be sure you're on a computer that will do that. Some library computers will not. This one went to the state of Illinois.

I take it that Northern insurance companies sold policies to people who held slaves in other  states even if slavery was illegal in theirs.  What an eye opener.

C 2022 Ancestry Worship - Genealogy BlogSpor

11 June 2022

USING PROQUEST HISTORY VAULT FOR AFRICAN AMERICAN GENEALOGY and HISTORY RESEARCH

SOUTHERN LIFE, SLAVERY, and the CIVIL WAR is the title of the ProQuest History Vault that I used.  I can't link to it for you, but you may find this database available at your local library. ProQuest has many databases including newspapers that can be used.

I decided to see what this database offers and thought it was pretty exciting. Records of Antebellum Southern Plantations brought up a few titles and descriptions for a PDF download.  You're thinking the South, right? Well, not necessarily. I started with the name of a city in the North.

FOLDER 008967-01209-0913 Brought up Sally Barker an infant born free in Kent Delaware in 1807 who had petitioned with the help of an adult obviously, to remain free.

FOLDER 016455-003-0458 brought up Free Black Henry Banes who seeks to emancipate his wife, Judith, who he mentions is also a midwife whose services to the community will be valuable.

FOLDER 001542-003-0612 brings up William who is actually asking to become the slave of a certain physician who he says he does not wish to removed from in Mississippi.  He says they have a good relationship. It's 1859.

You can bring up folders by putting the numbers above (but not the word FOLDER) in the search bar.  I would suggest a general search beginning with a place.  Try a state first.

There are diaries and estate records and so on in this history vault.  I like that these stand as testimonials.

C 2022 Ancestry Worship Genealogy

05 June 2022

02 June 2022

MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION : WOMEN VOTED FOR THE REVOLUTION - THEN LOST THE VOTE!

MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION   Explore how women VOTED for the American Revolution, then lost the vote... 

TERRIFIC INTERACTIVES on this and many other subjects, so you can learn more about the historyu of the United States!

01 June 2022


 
Ancestry Worship - Genealogy