One of my immigrant ancestors had six children between 1795 and 1815, one of whom apparently died young. Two of the six were daughters who married but had no children. Their husbands both left wills.
One husband's will left everything to his wife if she survived him. If she did not, he divided his estate in half -- one half to be divided among his surviving siblings, and the other half to be divided among his wife's siblings . . . He named them all, including the one we thought had died as a baby, with her married name. Both had common names, there was no other way to find her.
When I started reading his will, I thought, well, this is pretty far out on a limb. But in genealogy, "out on a limb" is a wise place to be.
Sunday, April 30, 2017
Never ignore childless siblings!
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Harold Henderson
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8:27 AM
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Labels: Dark Ages, probate records, research advice, wills
Friday, April 28, 2017
After a fifteen-month nap (er, hiatus) I will try restarting this blog on a weekly basis.
* The big genealogy news is Karen Jones's planned retirement as editor of one of the top five US scholarly genealogy journals. Those who have worked with and for her at the New York Genealogical and Biographical Record wish her the best (and longest!) retirement, with many delayed ancestors found and published.
* Speaking of the Record, I have a short article in the January issue: “‘A continual claim and struggle’: DeGrove Gleanings from the Appellate Court,” New York Genealogical and Biographical Record 148 (January 2017): 61-64. It's a brief addendum to William DeGrove's ongoing saga of this New York family in the 19th century.
* It's never a mistake to draw up a timeline! I prepared one just to cut out a lot of boring text in a family history. It showed some interesting connections and unexpectedly provoked more city directory research, leading to some original records that may shed light on a Pennsylvania-Ohio family that is visible in only one census between 1860 and 1900. With luck this could be a publishable article in itself.
* GRIP may be the only genealogy institute capable of bilocation, with Deb Deal representing it at this weekend's Ohio conference and Elissa Powell doing the same in New England.
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Harold Henderson
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3:25 PM
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Labels: DeGrove family, GRIP, Karen Jones, New England, NYGBR, Ohio, Pennsylvania, timelines
Monday, February 8, 2016
From Confusion to Conclusion: How to Write Proof Arguments! at GRIP
This summer -- July 22-27 at the Genealogical Research Institute of Pittsburgh -- Kimberly Powell and I will again be coordinating a week-long course that focuses on tools we can use to meet the last three prongs of the Genealogical Proof Standard:
* analysis and correlation,
* resolving conflicts, and
* writing a soundly reasoned, coherently written conclusion (without which no genealogical conclusion can be considered proven).
We don't mean to neglect the first two prongs -- thorough research and good citations -- but we think many genealogists are ready to zero in more closely on these three. (If you need citations consider this June offering.)
Much of the course involves taking apart published articles
and considering how they work and (in some cases) how they came to be.
There will also be daily interactive analysis and writing exercises and discussions.
There's a reason for this case-by-case and hands-on approach: every
genealogical problem requires different tools and approaches; very few
general rules work. Every confusion is different, and it reaches
conclusion in a different way. So we will try to fill your toolboxes, and
not say that you should solve all problems by using (say) a screwdriver.
Thomas W. Jones PhD, CG, CGL, FASG, FNGS, FUGA, and Melissa Johnson CG will each be teaching two sessions.
Quick info here.
A bunch of additional details, day by day, here.
We're in the process of updating the linked information to reflect the fact
that William Litchman cannot be with us this year and Melissa Johnson
will be bringing knowledge gained from her publications in NGSQ and
NYGBR.
Signup for this second session of GRIP begins [CORRECTION!] Wednesday, March 2, at noon Eastern, 11 am Central, 10 am Mountain, and 9 am Pacific. For many inhabitants of the first two time zones, Pittsburgh is within reasonable driving distance.
When last offered, the course filled very quickly. This year we do ask students to be familiar with the concepts presented in the relevant chapters of Mastering Genealogical Proof (Arlington, Va.: National Genealogical Society, 2013). We hope to see you there!
[slightly amplified about an hour after first post]
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Harold Henderson
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Labels: From Confusion to Conclusion, Genealogical Research Institute of Pittsburgh, GRIP, Kimberly Powell, Mastering Genealogical Proof, Melissa Johnson, Thomas W. Jones
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
Try to remember . . .
The science-fiction writer who coined the term "cyberspace" reflects on how difficult it is to recapture a world without television or recorded sound. I've always thought of this in the future tense, in that I have no idea how to write a memoir addressed to the future, because I don't know what will have become unfamiliar, but I think he's struck a deeper chord. What exactly was it that I did when there was no ever-present screen to interact with? (Emphases added.)
"It’s harder to imagine the past
that went away than it is to imagine the future. What we were prior to our
latest batch of technology is, in a way, unknowable. It would be harder to
accurately imagine what New York City was like the day before the advent of
broadcast television than to imagine what it will be like after life-size
broadcast holography comes online. But actually the New York without the
television is more mysterious, because we’ve already been there and nobody paid
any attention. That world is gone.
"My great-grandfather was born into
a world where there was no recorded music. It’s very, very difficult to
conceive of a world in which there is no possibility of audio recording at all.
Some people were extremely upset by the first Edison recordings. It nauseated
them, terrified them. It sounded like the devil, they said, this evil unnatural
technology that offered the potential of hearing the dead speak. We don’t think
about that when we’re driving somewhere and turn on the radio. We take it for
granted."
William Gibson, interviewed by
David Wallace-Wells, The Paris Review,
Summer 2011
(http://www.theparisreview.org/interviews/6089/the-art-of-fiction-no-211-william-gibson)
Posted by
Harold Henderson
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6:08 AM
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Labels: imagining the past, New York without the television, Paris Review, William Gibson
Friday, January 22, 2016
The genealogy of fairy tales
From 3 Quarks Daily, one of the great aggregator sites, I learned that numerous stories have been traced back thousands of years -- "not quite tales as old as time, but perhaps as old as wheels and writing," writes Ed Yong in The Atlantic. The oldest one the Durham University investigators have found is about 6,000 years old. Did your ancestor hear it told? Check it out.
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Harold Henderson
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5:00 AM
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Labels: 3 Quarks Daily, Ed Yong, fairy stories, folk tales, The Atlantic
Sunday, January 17, 2016
Looking back on 2015 writing and prospects for 2016
Last year, with the help of kind editors and colleagues, I published a dozen genealogy articles (four in peer-reviewed journals) and six book reviews. The full list is at Midwest Roots.
I experimented with "double-decker" publishing, following a problem-solving article about an eastern Indiana Smith family in NGS Quarterly with the full genealogical summary of the family in later issues of Indiana Genealogist. (BTW, one needs a long running start to do this. I have been puzzling over this family for six years!) And I experimented with a "review essay" which appeared in the December NGSQ.
And I've had fun with a series of short methodology articles on indirect evidence, negative evidence, and historical context in the Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly.
Early 2015 saw the long-awaited publication of La Porte County, Indiana, Early Probate Records, 1833-1850 with Genealogical Publishing Co., a joint production with Dorothy Germain Palmer and Mary Leahy Wenzel -- one of the few such books containing a nearly-every-name index of the probate materials, so that early La Porte researchers can track non-decedents in these records. Proceeds go to our genealogical society, of which Dorothy is president.
I also changed professional focus from client research to client editing. The plan is to spend more time on writing (and more on specific problems and families), and less time on committee work, speaking, and (sigh) blogging. I hope 2016 -- or the 11 1/2 months of it that remain -- will be good for y'all, with publications and credentials galore.
Posted by
Harold Henderson
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1:14 AM
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Labels: APGQ, Dorothy Germain Palmer, Indiana Genealogist, La Porte County Indiana Early Probate Records 1833-1850, Mary Leahy Wenzel, methodology, Midwest Roots, NGSQ, publications
Thursday, January 14, 2016
Reading Two Top Genealogy Books Together
The best two books for serious genealogists are Thomas W. Jones's Mastering Genealogical Proof and Robert Charles Anderson's Elements of Genealogical Analysis.
But they are different enough in their emphases and terminology that reading both may induce vertigo. My review essay in the December 2015 National Genealogical Society Quarterly may help. (Jones co-edits the Quarterly but was not involved in the editing of this piece.) It is free on line to NGS members and available at good genealogy libraries.
And if the review essay doesn't float your boat, enjoy the substantial articles by Laurel T. Baty (AL, GA, NC), Ronald A. Hill (Cornwall), and annual writing contest winner William A. Cox (VA, PA).
And if these don't float your boat either, well . . . back in the 1700s Samuel Johnson said, "When a man is tired of London, he is tired of life." I would venture an update: "If you're tired of NGSQ, you're tired of genealogy."
“Review Essay: How to Solve Genealogy Problems, and How to Know When They Have Been Solved: A Guide to Elements of Genealogical Analysis and Mastering Genealogical Proof,” National Genealogical Society Quarterly 103 (December 2015): 304-308
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Harold Henderson
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7:56 AM
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Labels: Elements of Genealogical Analysis, How to Solve Genealogy Problems and How To Know When They Have Been Solved, Mastering Genealogical Proof, NGSQ, review essay, Robert Charles Anderson, Thomas W. Jones


















