. . . in the fall issue of the New England Historical and Genealogical Register for the second and concluding installment, now visible to NEHGS members on line at American Ancestors and to patrons of good genealogy libraries.
His unlikely trajectory -- from pioneer/fugitive from justice to farmer to teacher to doctor to an early death in 1827 -- is not quite complete yet. His great-grandchildren scattered across the continent, but they had to be cut from the journal for space reasons. They will appear, most likely on line, in good time -- as will Joel's dozens of nieces and nephews. He was the oldest of ten children, all of whom have multiple descendants.
" 'Faultless
Could I Love Him Less?' Joel S. Thrall and His Descendants in Vermont, Quebec,
Ohio, and Texas," parts 1 and 2, New England Historical and Genealogical Register 172,
Summer 2018:248-56, Fall 2018:341-52.
Thursday, November 15, 2018
Joel Thrall is back . . .
Posted by
Harold Henderson
at
12:20 PM
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Labels: American Ancestors, Joel Thrall, New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Ohio, Quebec, Texas, Thrall family, Vermont
Thursday, August 16, 2018
Did your ancestor get sent off with a 35-line memorial poem?
My great-grandfather's oldest brother, Joel Thrall (1792-1827), went from Vermont to Quebec to Ohio, where he died outside of Columbus, leaving behind him a mysterious widow (wife #3), a trail of bad debts, a skeleton (in addition to his own), and a 35-line memorial mourning poem.
I knew nothing of this when I set out to write him up. (Beware those dull-seeming relatives!)
The first part of his story is now out in the summer issue of the New England Historical and Genealogical Register, AKA The Journal of American Genealogy. The second and last part (scheduled for fall) follows Joel's son Homer (with wife #1), who became a Methodist missionary in Texas and a Confederate apologist, and his daughter Rachel (with wife #2), whose grandchildren are scattered across Canada and the U.S. She is the source of all of Joel's living descendants, but he was not present at her christening. It seems unlikely that she knew him, but she and half-brother Homer probably met when he paid a flying visit to Quebec in later life (1884).
FYI would-be writers: The Register is not all New England all the time; it is interested in out-migrations as well.
Posted by
Harold Henderson
at
2:47 PM
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Labels: Homer Thrall, Joel Thrall, Journal of American Genealogy, Methodists, New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Ohio, Quebec, Rachel Thrall, Texas, Vermont