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Finding Hercules

10/20/2015

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My Great Aunt, who is in her 90’s, would talk often of a statue that she remembered as a young lady being in the town she grew up in. As kids they would hang out on and around it. Its name was Hercules.

       Hercules was the figurehead on the U.S.S Ohio which was designed by Henry Eckford. It had the honor of being the first ship launched out of the Brooklyn Navy Yard in 1820. It served in a myriad of rolls, one being the flagship of the Mediterranean Squadron in 1838, where its crew helped suppress the slave trade and protect commerce. It later served in the Mexican-American War in 1847. Officers, who sailed it, reportedly said that it was a marvel to sail and was a near perfect vessel.

      The ship served in one capacity or another until she was decommissioned and burned in Greenport Harbor, NY in 1884. Her figurehead, Hercules was removed prior to the burning in the harbor. The Aldrich family, who lived in Aquebogue, first bought it during a military surplus auction for $10. Later, Miles Carpenter bought it from the Aldrich family and placed it at the Canoe Place Inn in Hampton Bays, which he owned at the time. Eventually, Mr. Melville acquired it and removed it from Canoe Place Inn giving the deed to the Ward Melville Heritage Organization, who still owns it today. Hercules was given a pavilion as his permanent home, where he is on display for the public.
 
      For years my aunt talked about the statue, but didn’t seem to know, or remember at the time we talked where it went to, she would simply say “It must be somewhere”.  In my searching for local  historic places to take my kids on fieldtrips, I stumbled across the Ward Melville Heritage Organization page. I saw a link for Hercules. I didn’t think it was the “lost” statue, but said to myself, what are the odds? So I clicked the link and low and behold there was Hercules, in all his glory. Being that it was winter, I decided to wait until to warmer weather. Finally, I had an afternoon and the weather was good, so I took my kids on a pilgrimage of sorts to find Hercules, and we found him, at home by the water in his pavilion. It was a little surreal seeing a figure that I had only ever seen in black and white in small old picture of my aunts, very much in color and in person. I was glad we were able to locate it and that we went. I now have pictures now of my kids in front of it, which is pretty cool.

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Cemeteries, Graveyards and the like.

10/8/2015

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Cemeteries, Graveyards and the like
 
       Most of us spend our lives trying to stay out of cemeteries.  However, in your quest of finding long lost family members, a cemetery can be an amazing source of information.

       The downside is some of the materials used in generations past were not able to stand the test of time and have either completely degraded or have lost their battle with the weather to the point where names, dates and epitaphs have been completely worn away.  For the ones that have survived it is a treasure trove of information.

        This past July, I attended a very informative tour of a local historic cemetery. Our town historian pointed out a family that was all buried together near the front. He was noting how sad it was that the family had lost four children at very young ages. It is a testament to the times in which they lived, where mortality rates were higher in children. I took some pictures of the gravestones, later that night I dug a little deeper and found that they had in fact had other children who had lived into adulthood.  Another interesting and somewhat obvious, albeit ignored, fact jumped out at me. All the ones who had died young were born in between censuses. The reality of that moment of clarity hit hard. If one was doing a genealogical search on a particular family and traced all living relatives that appear on later censuses, these four children who were born, loved and lived for two, four, six or maybe eight years might never be found. If their tombstones did not still exist and were not legible, we potentially would have no record of them.   There could be birth certificates, but, they could have been born in a times prior to that practice. There could be baptism records if the family went to church and if those records survived. It was surmised that the cemetery we were at predated the church.  So yes, it might not be the only way to find these lost children, but it is the most dramatic.  It is not family rumor or hearsay.  It is carved in stone.  They lived. They died. They were here.  That made me think for a long while about how truly sad that is and while so many have been lost to time and memory it makes the work of a genealogist, either amateur or professional, that much more important. If you find a family on your tree that had many children over many years with some gaps in between the living ones on the censuses, it might behoove you to dig a little more and see if in fact there were children who were born, but unfortunately did not live a long life.
 
        When you locate a cemetery or grave yard that your relatives have taken as their final resting place, make sure to take the time to look around or ask the administrative staff in the office if there are any other individuals with the same last name buried there.  This may potentially leave out married daughters who are also buried there.  However, if you happen to locate an obituary it may mention them and lead you back to the cemetery.   

        To the staff of cemeteries, volunteers and owners of websites (such as findagrave.com), I thank you for your time effort and energy in posting the information and pictures for us researchers to find and use.  It has been invaluable in my quest. To those facilities who have yet to put their residents online, please entertain the idea (especially if you are in the northern New Jersey/ Paterson area (That is a personal request.  There happen to be a lot of cemeteries in that area and I am currently looking for a needle in a haystack)). If a cemetery has placed a search online that is wonderful, but when we are researching families we don’t always know a location.  Having it on a bigger collection like a findagrave.com helps us find them, which will lead us go the town they were in.

 
        Bonus question: What is the difference between a graveyard and a cemetery? 
Answer: A graveyard is a more random plot of burials (think down south where they would bury their dead in their front or side yard) whereas a cemetery is planned, usually landscaped, and maintained.


Happy searching!!

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Pictures

6/4/2015

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I love old pictures.  Who doesn’t?  They are an insight into our relatives’ past that words can’t always express or may provide an illustration to a family story. You get to see what clothes they wore, cars they drove, places they went, and family resemblances.  You can also see the towns and cities as they would have known them, the buildings that existed, and what businesses they used to be. You can also see the love that their families shared and that is something we can relate to through the time and space that separates us.  It can connect us to a relative long gone.

However, there are things that are a nemesis to pictures. Some are obvious.  Things such as water, sunlight, and extreme heat/cold can destroy old photographs. Also things like paper clips and staples, if attached to photographs can, over time, leave rust marks on photographs and ruin then.  If pictures have been glued into an old photo album it makes it hard to scan them and can warp them. The worst are things like curling, flaking, and cracking.  If you do have some pictures with these issues there are experts out there that can help to alleviate some of those problems and restore the picture.

 If you have pictures, make sure when you store them they are in a temperature controlled area and in acid free holders. Be sure to label them.  Names, date, ages, and maybe a bit of what the photo is of: graduations, parties, confirmations, baptisms, birthdays, etc.  That way, when you go back to view them at a later date you will know exactly what and whom you are looking at.

We live in a wonderful time where we have the ability, rather inexpensively, to make as many copies of a picture you want (or can afford).  It is easy to scan the pictures, upload them to photo websites (like Snapfish or CVS), make copies, and put into a picture book or make other products.

 When you create a photobook, make sure to put labels so you know who is who. You can also add in family stories or a narrative to go with the picture. Then you can get many copies so everyone in the family can have one.  Sometimes the pictures are small and they do not enlarge very well, but with home printers you can easily print out customs sizes.  Then you can make family trees, jewelry, or many other projects with the pictures while preserving the original. Never cut or mark up the front of the original.  There is no need when copies can be made for anywhere from $0.01 to $0.29 cents.  An original photograph cannot be replaced for all the money in the world.

If you are scanning be sure to check the backs for writing.  If there is any, scan that too.  It can be a nice touch to a photo book to have the label in that person’s handwriting.  Also, even if you do not know who the person is, you may find information that makes that label make sense later in your research.

It doesn’t just have to be pictures that you scan you can do letters, postcards, birthday cards, drawings, patches. Anything that you don’t have multiple of and fit on a scanner, it may not be the same as having the actual item, however it does make it easy to share. There was a time before photography and I worry that, even in today's world where it is estimated that in 2014 humans took more pictures in that one year then in all the years since photography was invented, that our relative's one hundred years from now will not have photographs of this generation. Even though someone may take a thousand selfies in a year, if they do not print out some of the pictures and keep them in albums or save them via hard drive to print at a later date, when the phone gets lost or broken, those pictures will be gone with it. So be sure to stay current with the pictures so that there is a complete history.
photography was invented, that our relative’s one hundred years from will not have photographs of this generation.  Even though someone may take a thousand selfies in a year, if they don’t print out some of the pictures and keep them in albums or save them via hard drive to print at a later date, when the phone gets lost or broken, those pictures will be gone with it. So be sure to stay current with the pictures so that there is a compete history.


 

Happy researching.  
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Newspapers

5/4/2015

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Newspapers are an excellent source of information for research. They could include: birth announcements, death announcements, obituaries, arrests, weddings, and so forth.  In some newspapers, they publish community columns.

These columns included more than just town happenings.  What could seem like mundane town business could be of interest if you know a relative belonged to a particular organization and the column may mention them by name.  These community columns also used to include if someone in town: had a party, listing guests by name; if someone went out of town and who they were visiting; as well as if someone was in the hospital or otherwise infirmed.  This can create connections and potential other family members.

Pay close attention to the guests of parties.  The last names could be different if the women were married, but they still could be mother/daughter.  Don’t count them out because it wasn’t what you were looking for.  If you are having trouble finding relatives use the guest list as a “list of suspects” and search each of them to see if any of them pans out as a relative.  You are looking for either a common parent or grandparent as they could be siblings or cousins.   

Be sure to print out the newspaper article.  This can add a fun touch if you are doing a scrapbook on the family.  You may get lucky and pictures may be included.  Either way, it makes a great addition to your research and should be printed out and kept in your file or binder. Make sure to include with it the relative information highlighted or notated in some way and a note with it as to the relation so if someone else looks at your research they will know why it was worthy of being printed out.

Happy researching!

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Getting Started

4/27/2015

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Researching your family tree may seem daunting. Most people do not realize that they already have a good beginning. So, the first step I always suggest is to start with the relatives that you know. Start with yourself, your children (if any), your parents, their parents and so forth. Write it all down on paper, adding in as many dates, last names and locations that you know. Once you get pre-1940 it will be easier to trace using records. This is for numerous reasons.  One is that the last United States census released was the 1940 census.  Another is that privacy laws do not pertain to deceased individuals. This is not to say that living relatives cannot be found. They absolutely can be. Social media and online ancestry sites can connect long lost cousins. This, of course, relies on them also searching for the common ancestor on those sites.   

  Pick one line and start going back there.  Print everything you can find out. Sometimes, you will find a website and then when you go to look for it again it seems to have vanished. Of course it may not have, it may only be buried in cyberspace and take longer to re-find it.  Keep a log of the information found, where it was located and on what date. Even if you stumble upon a member you were not expecting to research, print and write down everything. This way when you organize it into a binder it will be easier to see who you have to go back and give you a starting point.

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    I have been researching my family for years. I really enjoy the research involved in the process of discovering these individuals.

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