Showing posts with label Genealogy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genealogy. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Stephen Morse - genealogy - Denver Seminar

I often hear the comment, "I'm here - it doesn't matter where I came from!" and that's true for certain! But I find it absolutely fascinating to learn about the past of those who got me here. Questions like.....how did a family migrate? What country did they come from? are all good....but why do I have brown eyes and dark skin and my sister have brown eyes and fair skin? What bits and pieces of our ancestors make up the unique DNA of each of us? How do I find out what makes me me? And when your maiden name is something like MOORE - how do you track down a single ancestor? Worse than hunting for a needle in a haystack!!!


If you live in Colorado and do genealogy, I think you will want to attend this one-day seminar. 10-10-10 - gotta love the date! Stephen Morse is the man who invented the 8086 processor - pre pentium processor stuff. Then he took up genealogy and created the One-step website. Just click on the flyer above, print and send it in. It's as easy as that!

Oh - just check out the full day agenda. I don't know which session I'm most interested in - they all look great!

$40 includes a one year membership to JGSCO (I'm their new secretary) and a box lunch PLUS admission to all the sessions. What a steal!!!

I'll be waiting for you at the door!!!

Friday, June 18, 2010

Summer in Colorado

I'm starting to get emails from my followers because I haven't been posting. Well, it's summer in Colorado! And I'm outside for 2-3 hours every morning doing yardwork. Yes, we really HAVE to downsize soon. We have just over 2/3 acre for our yard and that's just too big for me to take care of. But rather than flowers, I have been turning my flowerbeds into fruit beds. And this year, for the first time since we moved in here, we have apples, peaches, pears, cherries, raspberries and strawberries.

I'm seriously thinking of filling up the jacuzzi with dirt and turning it into a planter! I need to find a place to grow some tomatoes and green beans next year! Suppose I could just dig up the entire yard....just not sure I need even more work to do!

This is just one of the raspberry beds, but I think it makes a great way to hide "under the deck". I started out with strawberries in front....but I've had to transplant most of them. I cut the raspberries back to 2' every fall and they produced berries through October last year.

I think it's going to be a bumper crop again this year!

The strawberries are loving the fertilizer I put down. Just so thick. Maybe ripe in another 2 weeks.

The pears have a ways to go, but the tree is going to be full.


The apples are too thick and will probably break some branches this year, but they are looking quite healthy. It's definitely organic gardening in my back yard.

Two peach trees and I will be calling my neighbors to come pick them as we will never eat this much fruit....ever!!!

And the branches on the cherry tree are already bending over from the weight. Don't know when we've had such a bumper crop.

I do have good neighbors who bring their kids and love to come pick the fruit. I take what I can reach from the ground and they bring ladders and huge bags. We have a neighborhood email and I simple send a note when stuff is ready to pick. Sort of fun.

Days like today, I love having so much produce growing right in our back yard. But it sure is work. And it sure cuts into my art time!

Other updates - I've been busy with my genealogy project - working on the Cotopaxi Jewish Agricultural Colony research. The Colorado Jewish Genealogy Society voted me in as their Secretary last week, and I'm going to be working on an art poster contest for the International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies.

Kerry is doing great. He has been released from the cardiac surgeon and now with the neurosurgeon's team. Physical Therapy has started on his back. Surgery maybe as early as August.

I'm just too busy to post! But I promise to try to do better!

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

A world lost in 4 generations?

Tuesday night, I finally found "Tuesday Night Live in Jerusalem" on TV. Channel 366 if you have Direct TV, or look for JLT. Ari said that most Jews today are only 4 generations from being devout. That all you have to do is start to study. I happen to think that applies to the rest of us as well. 4 generations ago, our ancestors were all pretty religious in one way or another. I think we have lost a lot. I've written already about how language was lost in my ancestors in just 3 generations. Along with language is customs, culture, photos, memories and stories.

Today I start a journey that I've not taken before - scrapping a story that is not related to me in any way....other than the fact that Dad owned a Texaco station in the place the story took place.

I've gotten just a few emails from you all asking about genealogy and how to get started. So, here are my thoughts. Interview your parents and your grandparents. Ask cousins, aunts and uncles what they know. Oral histories are the best place to start and 9 times out of 10, you can prove the oral history with legal documents.

Next start with the 1930 census. It's the most recent available to us. Join ancestry.com or another site that will give you access. Worth every penny! If your grandpa was 40 in the 1930 census, then look for him as 30 in the 1920 and so on. Don't bother looking at the indexed names. Take the township where he lived and look at each individual name. I swear....people could not write and today, the people doing the transcriptions don't have an ounce of logic! LOL!!! Newby is NOT Neuman, no matter how you look at it. But I know, it's just a job and they are in a hurry. So, tip #1 - look at each page of the census. Usually, family lived pretty close together, so if you find someone with a similar name, start looking real close!

Tip # 2. Anything in writing is only as good as the person who took down the information and we all make mistakes. But look for the obvious. 2 sisters born 6 months apart....probably something written down wrong.

Tip # 3. Think about spelling. No one knew how to spell and mostly did it by how it sounded in earlier census records. Moore could be Moor, More, Mohr, Muir and so on. Clark could be Klark or Clarc or Klarc. And then add accents. My ancestors came from Germany. Haus became House. And in one census, it is written Hauce. Hmmm....Not sure about that one!

Tip # 4. Until about 1917, you could change your name anytime you wanted. To anything. We didn't have driver's licenses, etc. In my family, the story was told that 2 brothers got mad at each other and the one changed his name from Kerr to Karr. Sure enough, that is exactly how they are in the 1930 census!

So, when you find something, don't just write it down, do something with it. Today, Kathy came over and gave me an almost full day lesson in the cricut. WOW!!! I have been having fun using my jukebox and Design Studio. Amazing technology. We'll see where I can take it.






Note, just click on the photo and it will come up in it's own window. IF you are a descendant of the colony, feel free to print and make your own scrapbook as you follow along with the stories here.

And please email me! I'd love to hear from you! jlowe54@gmail.com

Saul Baer, Sal Baur, Baruch, SB....he changed his name on nearly every single document found. He died as S. B. Milstein. I have decided to say that his name is Saul Baruch Muhlstein because that is the name I found on the ships register which is the earliest document found.




Last tip today, invest in some type of software. I use Reunon for Mac, but have used Familytreemaker in the past as well as other packages. I kept everything by hand for years and still have boxes of stuff to enter into my computer. OK, it may never get done. But remember, I've been doing this off and on for over 40 years. Loads of stuff to scan!

Build a family tree and add to it as you find new information. A tree in itself can help you find people and I'll talk about that next time. And really, I plan to scrap my way through part of the story of Cotopaxi, but as I do it....look at the layout. Can you tell what is store bought and what I made myself with the cricut? Kathy showed me how to merge different elements together and I think I may just go crazy combining diecuts! You will have to look hard to see that the flourish and star in the upper right corner are one piece with other stars layered on top and below them. Truly gives great dimension to a page!

Monday, February 15, 2010

The truth about your name!

I have been buried in genealogy and just having the best time ever. So I thought I'd take a break and talk about the truth of your name. Pretty amazing if you look at the numbers.

We each have 2 parents, and they each have 2 parent....and so on. A lot of genealogists only search their surname...and I think they are missing the boat when they do this.

My maiden name is Moore. I can't find much on them - just way too many.

My mom's maiden name is House. Even more common. But I started with that name at age 17, so my files are extensive.

In looking at my entire family tree, I have:

2 parents
4 grandparents
8 great grandparents
16 gr gr grandparents
32 gr gr gr grandparents
64 gr gr gr gr grandparents
128 gr gr gr gr gr grandparents
256 gr gr gr gr gr gr grandparents
512 gr gr gr gr gr gr gr grandparents

1022 - total number of direct ancestors you are searching in 9 generations

going back on mom's side, 9 generation - only takes me to the year 1720! If you give 25 years to each generation thinking that a mom has a child by age 25, who has a child by age 25, and so on...you might only get back to 1785 in your research. My ancestors were "slower". LOL!

My point is, that of the 1022 direct ancestors that I am searching ONLY NINE people have the surname of House,

Only NINE people have the Surname Moore.

There should be at least 1004 other surnames in my family tree. Yes, some of them will be the same as the male in each line goes back.....but how on earth can we forget or overlook the women? Yes, they are much more difficult to trace, but they still were necessary to get us here today!!!

When you add in each grandparents other children and their children, you can quickly gather thousands of people into your family tree. But I think the rather important line are the direct ancestors.

I'm starting to think that while a name may identify us as to who we are today, it really doesn't have much importance on who our ancestors were.

Even in the Bible, we are given both lines for Jesus....one for Joseph and one for Mary.

If you are lucky enough to have a family tree, take a look at it. Does it show your mother's mother's mother's mother? How far have you gone back on each of the female/mother lines? If you don't know who they were, how do you now who you were?

In a 9 generation tree (add you for the 10th generation) your surname is only .8 % of who you are....NOT EVEN ONE PERCENT!!!! And ask yourself these question...if my name is less than 1% of who my ancestors were,

is it really only a means to identify my physical body today....and not who I am?

who is my father's father's mother's mother?

what if 3 or 4 generations back, the entire family on your mom's side was quaker?

what if 6 generations back, they were all Jewish and fled from France as refugees? there is some speculation that the Hugeunots may have been Jewish, hiding their religion.

What if 15 generations back, many of their family members were beheaded because they refused to become Catholic?

If you take the time to look at the women in your family tree, you might be surprised as to who you really are, and how strong your DNA was.

Perhaps the best question to ask....if you are less than 1% of what you think your surname is, then who are the other 99%+ that were here on earth to help get you here?

Monday, October 26, 2009

WOW moments

I am lost in the world of genealogy. Waving goodbye forever as I sink farther and farther down into the never ending hole of research, notes, printed family trees, photographs, emails, census pages......

Just kidding!!!

What a fantastic few days I have had! And I'm not even doing this for me or my family. I'm working on a family tree of the descendants and ancestors of the Cotopaxi Colony. Jewish immigrants. So I'm learning a little yiddish as well!

Dad bought the Texaco station in Cotopaxi in the early 70s and my brother still lives just south of town. While there were others before the colony, it was the Jewish immigrants who probably put the "town" on the map and I am just having the best time ever with my research.

And today, I got an email with 3 "WOW's" in it from a descendant of the colony. More than enough to keep me going.

I also spent today at the Denver Public Library's Genealogy center. If you haven't been there.....and you don't already know, it is one of the 5 largest genealogy research centers in the states. And just 26 miles down the road from me. I had not been there in over 20 years and much has changed.....but much is still the same.

There is a story to be told about the colony and when I have it written, I will share it here. So I am creating....creating memories to share on paper. Maybe I'll have to add some art to them as well!

Monday, December 17, 2007

Penelope Stout lived in a tree.....

Tonight, I'll write one of the stories that my genealogy research has uncovered. I scrapped this one....and it was published a few years ago in a book produced by Memory Makers. For this layout, I had fun wetting and crumpling paper. This was in the days befor I inked much of anything...but I did grunge by dragging it across the driveway! LOL! OK, try it...it works!



And I think I've been interactive since day 1. This is one of my earliest layouts. The tag on the lower left is a shaker box. The tag on the upper right has tags inside of it. Both "cards" flip open. I do like to play when I play!

Notice the "coin" on the top card? That is an image of the original coin created to commemorate Penelope's life printed on velum, put over silver...and it sort of looks like a coin!



At the time, I was using FamilyTreeMaker software and it would print genealogy charts done in a fan, colored by generation. You can see the many missing blocks...but you can also count back 8 generations to find Penelope in my tree.



In the layout, I wrote the "real" story from the history books, but here is what I wrote for my niece and nephew. I figured since the story had been lost throughout the generations, there is no harm recreating it in a fashion that might just keep it alive in future generations!




Dear Rachel and Jacob,


Once upon a time, a long time ago…..

Well, a very very very long time ago….almost 400 years ago, there lived a little princess named Penelope. Princess “P” lived in a land called Holland. Her daddy, the Baron Van Princis Printzen, was a Baptist preacher. He used to live in England, but he ran away from there because the other people did not like what he was preaching. Princess “P” grew up such a happy little girl. Her family was very rich and she had just about everything that she ever wanted. She had 2 sisters and 7 brothers, so it was a very big family indeed!

But Princess “P” wanted something more! Ever since she was a little girl, she had heard stories about a new country, a new land that had been discovered and she longed to go see this place. It was many many many miles away, in fact, so many miles that she couldn’t begin to count them. The only way to get there was to ride on a ship for months and weeks and days and nights. She had heard many stories about men going on these ships and never coming back. She knew that the sea ate many of them up, or that their trip was so long that they ran out of food and they starved to death.

When Princess “P” was going to school, she met a young man named John Kent who also wanted to go discover this new place called America. They traded their secrets and talked in whispers and they just knew their parents would never ever let them leave home on such a dangerous, long journey. Princess “P” was very excited that she had found someone who wanted to go with her to this new place and every night, she would go to sleep dreaming about what she would find when she got there!

Finally, Princess “P’ and John were married and the very next day, they got on their ship to go to America on their honeymoon. Oh! What a great time they had! They slept in the very best cabin, ate the very best food, and even danced under the stars at night as their ship made it’s way across the ocean. They were so excited that most nights they could barely go to sleep. And all day long, they talked with the other passengers about what they would do when they got to America. In Holland, they had lived in a town called Amsterdam, and now they were heading to a new place called New Amsterdam. Everyone around them was so excited. But their trip took them 60 days and 60 nights. One night, John woke up very, very sick. He had a fever and he was sweating, and he couldn’t eat a thing. Poor John. He just couldn’t get well. So Princess “P” sat by his bed and held his hand all day long and all night long, hoping and wishing that her new husband would soon get well.

John never did get well, and just as they were getting close enough to see the land of this new country, a huge storm came upon them. The rain was really hard with lots of lightening and thunder and the waves were so high that the water came up over the top of the ship and ran down into their rooms. The waves would crash on one side of the ship and then on the other side and suddenly, there was a loud clap, a clash, and they realized that their ship had crashed into the huge rocks and cliffs at Sandy Point. It was breaking in half with water rushing in everywhere and all the people were screaming and yelling. Poor John was so sick he could barely get out of his bed. But somehow, Princess “P” managed to help him to the top deck just as the ship sunk deep into the ocean.

Many of the people they had met on board the ship were drowned in the huge waves that gobbled them up. But somehow, Princess “P” and John made it to shore where they laid in their dripping wet clothes for several hours. John couldn’t move, so Princess “P” got up and started talking with the other people who had made it to shore. They wanted to leave immediately and walk to New Amsterdam. But John was in no shape to walk, so he and Princess “P” had to stay behind.

Oh! She was so scared! They were in this strange, new land, and all their friends had left them behind. They had no money, no food, and no clothes .just nothing at all! And poor John. He was so sick. He was saying all kinds of things that didn’t make any sense at all. He was making really loud noises, shouting at the top of his voice until he fainted and passed out.

Now, Princess “P” and John had no idea that nearby there lived a village of Indians. Usually, these Indians were very friendly, but some of the Dutch men who had come to this area earlier had killed some of their friends. So now, the Indians were pretty upset. And when they heard John yelling, they went to find him. The Indian men attacked them, and in one blow of a tomahawk, killed John Kent. They grabbed Princess "P's" hair and scalped her!!!! Then they slashed a knife across her tummy and pulled her insides out!!! Her shoulder and arm were cut and she was left to die. Well, actually, they thought she was dead but she was just laying there, pretending to be dead so they would leave her alone.

The Princess had to hold her tummy, and with her head bleeding, her arms and legs bleeding, she crawled over to a hollowed out tree that was laying in some sticks. She crawled inside and for seven days, she laid there thinking that she was going to die for sure. There was nothing to eat or drink, so she licked the tree sap and that’s how she stayed alive. After a whole week, she woke up to find a dog licking her arm!!! The dog was a guide dog for the local Indians and was out sniffing around, trying to find food for them! There were 2 Indians in this hunting party and they found her laying in the hollowed out tree where she had been since the others had left her for dead a week earlier. The younger one wanted to kill her, but the older Indian felt sorry for her.

He put her over his shoulder and carried her back to his Indian Village. There, he used a fishbone needle and vegetable fibers to sew up her cuts. Imagine that! He just split up a celery stalk and used the thread from that and he made a needle by wrapping the celery around the end of a fishbone, then lacing it through her skin to pull the openings closed.
It took nearly 2 years for Princess “P” to get well. She didn’t want them to know that she was a Princess, so she told them that her name was Penelope Kent. The older Indian could speak a little English. He was Chief Tisquantum, of the Lenni Lenape tribe, members of the Algonquian language family and now known as the Delaware. He was a very kind man and she lived and worked with his tribe.

As Penelope got well, a trust and friendship grew between her and the Lenni Lenape tribe members, especially Tisquantum. But at the same time, the white men living in New Amsterdam heard that there was a white woman living with the Indians. Penelope’s parents were still living in Holland and they could just not believe that their daughter was dead. And when they heard the news that she might be living with the Indians, they put up a very large reward for her return. The men of New Amsterdam set out on foot to go visit the Indians in their village. They were going to trade her for the money her parents had sent to them.

When the white men arrived, Tisquantum went to Penelope and asked her if she wished to leave. When she said she did, the old man accepted payment and let her go. But the two of them remained friends until he died. Penelope went back with the white men and became a member of the New Amsterdam colony. This where she met and fell in love with Richard Stout. They were soon married and had 10 little boys and girls.

Tisquantum came to visit her often and he brought many gifts when he came. He always liked to stay for dinner and talk with her and Richard. One day, he sat down at her table and he gave three heavy sighs; “Sigh……sigh…….sigh”. After the last sigh, she said, “What is the matter?” He said, “I have something I need to tell you, because you are my dear, dear friend. But if I tell you, I may die!” Well, Penelope couldn’t imagine what that could be and she begged him to tell her! He said that the Indians were going to kill all the white people that very night, and then he told her to take her children and her husband and go to New Amsterdam. She asked him, “How can I possibly do that?” He said, “I have left a canoe down by the beach! Take that!!!” When he left, she sent for her husband who was out in the field, and told him what Tisquantum had said. Richard did not believe her at all! Penelope said, “Tisquantum never ever lied to me! I will take our children and leave now!”

When they were gone, Richard decided to go get his neighbors. They set up a guard and about midnight, they heard the dismal war-whoop. Sure enough, here came the Indians! Richard and his neighbors went to them and told them that if they persisted with their raid, they would surely die. The Indians listened this time as they realized they were not going to surprise the white men at all. This was the day that the Indians and the white men began a peace that lasted for many years to come.

Penelope Stout lived to be 110 years old. She always wore a scarf around her head to cover up the place where the Indians had scalped her. She became known as the First Lady of Monmouth, New Jersey, and there was a monument erected in her honor and a commemorative coin was made showing Tisquantum carrying her on his shoulder on one side and on the other side, it shows Tisquantum trading her to the white men for the money.

Today, when you hear the phrase “a stout-hearted woman”, that means that you were strong, like Penelope Stout. And she was your great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great grandma!!!



Well, once you read my tale, you may decide that history is better!!!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

More Jenealogy

I posted awhile back about Jenealogy - Jen's Genealogy. It's not something that I do on a daily basis, but it is something that I fall back into on a lazy Sunday afternoon when the warm sun pours through the kitchen window and the cold wind is blowing the snow around outside so much that I just want to kick back and read a good book with the fireplace going.

Well...what better book than the internet with it's vast array of links to history from our past and resources for linking into research by other genealogists? I thought today I would share some links.

DNA. A few years ago, I had my brother tested for the Moore line (dad), and my uncle tested for the House line (mom). I have since joined a few (very few) DNA groups. I find it so exciting....to be able to prove your lineage through a simple swab of the mouth. But man! It is just so expensive!

The German DNA network

one of the Moore DNA networks

When you look at these charts, you will see all types of numbers off to the right. The first 12 numbers are the most common "markers" and these groups will email me whenever someone else joins who is a match to our family numbers. It's a relatively new field of research and because of the expense, there just are not too many people doing this yet....but I believe it is the future of genealogy. And I jumped on board the first year it was available to the public....which has been an interesting journey in itself! Watching this field of research evolve...just incredible. If I can ever afford, I'd love to get more than just the first 12 markers done...but for now....this has been great fun!

Rootsweb is a great place to get started, but be sure to check out the hundreds and hundreds of pages from the Germanna History notes. What a fabulous collection to have access to online!

And if you want to do a query or read thousands of queries and search them, then my favorite is GenForum. I have found loads of "cousins" thru this site! You can search a surname, a state, a township or county, a war...it's incredible!

Of course, if you can pay the money, the Ancestry.com is the place to search. I do not have my tree posted anywhere on the internet. Why? Because Ancestry will find it, add it to their collection, then charge you to look at it and not pay me a cent. I figure my 40 years of research are worth at least 2 cents!!! LOLOL! I'm not about to give it to them for free! And I'm pretty adamant about that! I shared my tree with a 3rd cousin about 10 years ago and it showed up at Ancestry. I made him delete it and ancestry removed it. The front of my tree clearly states it is never to be published online.

I happen to live close to the federal records center in Lakewood CO which is the best place to go search for census records and other public information. And, the Denver Public Library is one of the 5 top genealogy research centers in the country. I haven't been in about 5 years...but at one time, I think I had read almost every book there. About time I take another trip to see what's new!

I hope to blog tomorrow about a scrapbook layout that I did based on this research that led me to uncover stories about ancestors that had long been forgotten....that need to be remembered. After all...that's why I scrap....to preserve today's memories for tomorrow's generations.

Friday, October 5, 2007

Jeneaolgy - Jen's Genealogy

I belonged to a high school history club and we had to present a family tree. My Great Uncle Tad House gave me a copy of the "House" line. I was 17 years old and filled with every possible teenage hormone at the time. So you can only fathom how furious I was that MY name was nowhere in his tree!

He explained to me that only the men with the surname "House" were of any importance! OK..that was about 1967 in central Indiana on the farm where men at that time had that kind of values. BUT NOT ME!!! LOLOL!!! I remember being so furious because my cousin who was male, with the right surname was in the tree, but my brother....was not! I vowed right then and there to spend the rest of my life hunting down the women and inserting them into the tree. And I've done just that!

It has been an on-again, off-again love/hate relationship searching out my ancestors. I have come across some incredibly famous female ancestors who just MUST be part of the family tree. And of course, I've added my dad's line, the Moores. Through this research, I have learned that in my family, it took less than 50 years and only 2 generations to completely lose a native language! Gives me new meaning to the expression "time flies". No one has stories of the Civil War, much less the American Revolution. They barely talk about the Korean confict. No one discusses either World War. It is past, done, and forgotten. So you can imagine my struggle at reviving family lore!

Through the efforts of fellow researchers, I have linked one of my lines back to the Kings of England. Yes, I always knew I was a princess! Har! Har! But it did inspire this layout titled "My Royal Tree and Me", detailing the flow of my family and where we split and came to the US and declaried our allegiance to this country. This LO was published in an F&W book, "Family Tree Pages for Scrapbookers".



The bottom corner pulls down and shows the entire family tree with photos of past Kings and Queens in that line.



Somehow down the lines I am the 23rd cousin 3 times removed to Queen Elizabeth...think she will invite me over for tea?

This line also links back to Jewish ancestors. That is the only connection I have to any Jewish blood in me...I'm pretty much gentile through and through. But I do have an inate love for anything Judaica and it inspires a lot of what I create. To me, the Star of David is simply a symbol that I am seeking the Messiah's return. Knowing the Messiah will return again is the most beautiful thing on earth....quite personal, but inspires so much of what I do when I play.

I used to make dolls. And at one time was quite heavily involved in that "world". I started making a line of Jewish Peddler Immigrant Dolls....simply because mom asked me to make her one. They were quite in demand, each one standing about 24" tall. They are hand made down to the Arba Kanfot. They each have a hand made, embossed leather T'fillin, a Yarmika, and are just about as authentic as you can get.

My hubby requested that I make one for his 50th birthday. Meet Kerpholtz Ephrian Lowenbert from Coldounlaws, West Wemyss, Fifeshire, Scotland. Did you know that Scotland is the only country that has never killed Jews? His ancestors had lived there since the late 1600s and most likely immigrated from Germany. Most of his ancestors were Masons. His father had worked in a coal mine. Jews were not allowed to own land in America, so many became peddlers.








He has a letter in his pocket that he wrote to his wife last night, his immigration documents, his passport and this doll is peddling pots, pans and books. Even his wool hat was hand made. Oh, his wife's name is Jenena Lenit Moher....I still need to create her!

Just so much fun to create....and inspired once again by my love for Israel, for keeping history alive, for creating art that has meaning.