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Wednesday, February 28, 2018

School Days: My First Communion - 1955

There we all were, the second grade posed on the front steps of St. Rita's School. (As Mother's note states, just barely visible at the bottom, I was eight years old.)

[From my personal collection]


Because I was always among the short kids, I was positioned in the front row, fourth from the right.

I attended St. Rita's for nine years, K-8, as did most of the other children. I'm currently Facebook friends with several of the girls and someone (from a different grammar school) who I went to high school with married one of the boys.

Sister M. Dominica was generally considered to be "mean" although I don't remember her that way.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Book Shelf: "A Pictorial History of the Silent Screen" by Daniel Blum

A sample of what this book contains (from the very earliest movies in 1889 to the end of 1930, when movies had fully transitioned to sound).  Here it covers some of the movies that came out in 1918, including Tallulah Bankhead and Theda Bara.
I don't know what happened to my copy of "A Pictorial History of the Silent Screen" by Daniel Blum, but as a teenage movie buff in the 1980's I would spend hours looking through it.

A young-looking 21-year-old Daniel C. Blum, posing for his passport photo, filed prior to a world-wide tour he was to make with his father Daniel Blum.  Passport Application Form for Native Citizen, Daniel C. Blum, Washington, D.C., 1 Jun 1921, NARA Passport Applications, January 2, 1906 - March 31, 1925, Roll 1636, Certificate: 45213; digital image, Ancestry.com database U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925 (https://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1174 : 27 Feb 2018).


The author, Daniel Blum (1899-1965), was an editor of Theatre World and Screen World annuals, and compiled various works on show business (an obituary can be found in "Daniel Blum, Editor, Dies," The Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD), 25 Feb 1965, page 19, col 2; digital image, Newspapers (https://www.newspapers.com : 27 Feb 2018).

The book is available for free at the Internet Archive.  There are many used and new copies at Amazon.

This must have been a very interesting book for the first generations of people who grew old with the movies.
Only a few years before this book was published the classic Sunset Boulevard (1950) was released, a story of a movie star Norma Desmond (played by Gloria Swanson, superstar of the silent era) who refused to acknowledge the passage of time.

Surely some of our ancestors in the 20th century were movie fans, and I wonder who their favorite actor or actress was?  And did they follow these fashions?

I looked through my various newspaper subscription services, and sure enough many newspapers mentioned or reviewed the book when it originally came out in 1953 (I find reviews in 1953 and 1954), and was mentioned well into the 1980's as a reference work (before the Internet).

An example of the book's mention in a newspaper: in Sarasota, Florida, the wife of Harry Benham (a local who had been in some silent movies) was compelled to buy a copy to see pictures of her husband.  Loveless, Hattie,"City Trailer Park Activities," Sarasota Herald-Tribune (Sarasota, FL), March 28, 1954, pg 17; digital image, Google News (https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=A7-hzOuI2KQC&dat=19540328&printsec=frontpage&hl=en : 27 Feb 2018).

And sure enough, there is Harry Benham (portrait and film clip of him in "Merchant of Venice" (1912).  (page 27)

I need to look through my tree and see which of my actor/actress relations (I have a few) might make an appearance in this work.


Fun fact:  the Harrison Ford of Han Solo fame wasn't even the first famous Harrison Ford!  Here is a clip of Harrison Ford (1884-1957) in 1916 in "The Mysterious Mrs. Musslewhite."  (page 119).






© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, February 26, 2018

Monday Is for Mothers: Martha Woodward (1676 - 1775)

My maternal eighth great grandmother Martha Woodward is named in her her father Richard's will and she survived her husband Joseph Baker Jr. by more than 20 years.

It seems there's only one mention of Martha in Quaker records for the Chester Monthly Meeting it doesn't specify what she had done that merited a visitation but Lewis Woodward, the author of a family history of the Woodwards, thought that was likely that the complaint referred to something to do with her marriage.*

[Genealogy of the Woodward family of Chester county, Pennsylvania, with an appendix giving a brief account of the Woodwards of some other portions of the United States by Woodward, Lewis, b. 1848; Publication date 1879. Digitizing sponsor Boston Public Library.
Source: The Internet Archive.]



[From "Our Family Ancestors" by Thomas Maxwell Potts. Cannonsburg, Pennsylvania, 1895.
Source: Internet Archive - original at Allen County Public Library, Ft. Wayne, Indiana ]



*I tried to locate the original of this Chester Monthly Meeting record but didn't have any luck.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Sunday Drive: Middleton Place - 2008

Bonnie and I arrived at Middleton Place during our 2008 visit to South Carolina and Georgia was far more prosaic than these folks.*



We were there to see the grounds which are the site of the oldest landscaped gardens in America, begun in the first half of the 18th century. Our tour guide assured us the she and the other docents had already scanned the area that morning and we weren't likely to encounter any alligators on the paths.




After visiting the formal gardens we walked around the lake which afforded us some stunning views. At the start of this part of our visit, we noticed that something was causing a large ripple in the middle of the lake.



As we continued our stroll along the lakeside path we realized the cause after the creature emerged from the water on the other side of the lake.







[All photos from my personal collection]

We finished our visit with lunch at the MIddleton Place Restaurant. The only thing I remember from that meal is the Golden Rice Pudding I had for dessert.



*Instead we arrived via our little white rental car.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, February 24, 2018

I Will Soon Have DNA in All Four Ponds

Okay, now I'll have DNA at the four major players (the others being AncestryDNA, FTDNA, and 23andMe).

Thank you Mom for purchasing DNA kits at MyHeritage.

Please let these four DNA companies be the only ones for a while.  I'm in serious DNA overload right now!


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Friday, February 23, 2018

From the Probate Files: Richard Woodward - Chester County, Pennsylvania - 1706

Ancestry's online databases weren't very helpful in regard to the will of my maternal ninth great grandfather Richard Woodward. All I could find was this:

[Ancestry.com]

And I found nothing at all on FamilySearch.

But I persisted because, as you will note, one of his children was "Martha, wife of --- Baker" and therefore my 8th great grandmother. Fortunately an earlier Woodward published a book in 1879* about the family (available through the Internet Archive) which includes a transcription of Richard's will.


[Genealogy of the Woodward family of Chester county, Pennsylvania, with an appendix giving a brief account of the Woodwards of some other portions of the United States. by Lewis Woodward, b. 1848. From the collection of the Boston Public Library. Internet Archive.com]

(As you can see Martha's bequest was "five pounds in monys or a Cow equivalent to the sum" while her sisters Jane, Mary and Sarah each were to receive twenty pounds, perhaps because Martha was already married which they were not.)**

It appears that the house in Thornbury Township that Richard lived in before he removed to Middletown is still standing and it was documented in the 1930s by the Historic American Buildings Survey which stated that "Significance: This house, although much altered, is of interest because the original section was possibly built in the last decade of the 17th century."

[SOUTH FRONT AND EAST SIDE - Richard Woodward House, Concord Road (Thornbury Township), Westtown, Chester County, PA
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. ]

[ WEST AND NORTH SIDES - Richard Woodward House, Concord Road (Thornbury Township), Westtown, Chester County, PA.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.]

[FIRST FLOOR, EAST WALL FIREPLACE - Richard Woodward House, Concord Road (Thornbury Township), Westtown, Chester County, PA.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.]

[SECOND FLOOR, HALL - Richard Woodward House, Concord Road (Thornbury Township), Westtown, Chester County, PA.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.]


Here's how I'm descended from Richard Woodward:

[Ancestry.com]




*Here's the title page:


**Of his sons, only Joseph (not the eldest) inherited property. The others had to settle for "four shillings or a pair of gloves".



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, February 22, 2018

Final Settlement of the Estate of Job Taylor

Johnson County, Iowa, Probate Court, Book 5, 26 Sep 1853, page 201, Estate of Job Taylor (FHL microfilm ??); digital image, Ancestry.com database, Iowa, Wills and Probate Records, 1787-1997, image 471 (https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/9064/007592130_00001 : 20 February 2018).
A continuation of the estate records of Job Taylor (1800-1850).

Transcription

Estate of Job Taylor decd.

On the 26th day of September 1853 came William
Manatt administrator of Job Taylor late of Johnson Co.
decd, and made his final settlement of his adm-
inistration of said estate, wherefore it appeared to
the Court that said administrator had received from
the sale of personal property belonging to said decd,
the lien??? of $324.47
Interest recd thereon $24.91
Total amt recd $349.38

Said Adm has paid out as ??uots,
on claims against said estate,                           $78.31
Paid Adm for his Service + expence                    28.50
$106.81
Leaving for distribution to heirs $242.57

Paid Guardian of said heir a??cts 219.07
Bill for Board ?? of the head? paid
to Wm Manatte as per bill                                 23.50

$242.57
Said adminstrator is thereupon discharged from further liability
in the proceeding.




© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Working on Wednesday: Josiah Haralson Freeman (1897 - 1950), Seaman

In 1919 Josiah H. Freeman (a second cousin, twice removed) was issued his seaman's protection certificate* in New Orleans. 

[Ancestry.com. U.S., Applications for Seaman's Protection Certificates, 1916-1940 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. Original data: Application for Seaman's Protection Certificates, 1916-1940. 1151 Boxes. NAID: 2788575. Records of the Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, 1774-1982, Record Group 41. The National Archives at Washington, D.C.]

His application lists the birthplaces of his father Leroy W. Freeman and himself, both of whom were natives of Georgia. Josiah had enlisted in the U.S. Navy during World War I and apparently found the lure of the sea was stronger than his attachment to his Georgia home.

[Ancestry.com. U.S., Applications for Seaman's Protection Certificates, 1916-1940 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. Original data: Application for Seaman's Protection Certificates, 1916-1940. 1151 Boxes. NAID: 2788575. Records of the Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, 1774-1982, Record Group 41. The National Archives at Washington, D.C.]

As far as I can tell he never lived in Georgia again, residing first in Baltimore, Maryland, and then in Washington D.C. In his 1942 draft registration card he listed his place of work as the U.S. Government Navy Yard and named his mother as his nearest relative.

[Draft Registration Cards for District of Columbia, 10/16/1940 - 03/31/1947, Fold3.com. Original source: The National Archive.]

Josiah died at the age of 53 and is buried in the National Cemetery in Baltimore.

He was named for his great great grandfather Josiah Freeman, the ancestor we both trace to.

[Ancestry.com]


*Christine shared a much earlier version of the same type of certificate for her paternal fourth great grandfather Solomon Joseph Hartley (1775-1815).


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Money Claims Against the Estate of Job Taylor Deceased

Johnson County, Iowa, Probate Record, Book 5: page 17, Money Claims Against Job Taylor Deceased, Nov. 1851, FHL microfilm 985943; digital image, Ancestry.com database Iowa, Wills and Probate Records, 1758-1997, Johnson County Probate Record, Vol 5, 1851-1857, image 376 (https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/9064/007592130_00001 : 20 February 2018).




Estate of Job Taylor deceased

And now to wit: November 1851
Came William Manatt administrator of the 
estate of the said Job Taylor deceased and 
presented vouching for moneys disbursed in pay-
ment of claims against said Estate amounting
to Forty Eight dollars and eighty five cents
which account is passed to his credit on 
page 17 of Book of Executors accounts.




© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, February 19, 2018

Monday Is for Mothers: Miss Letta E. Porter, Poet - 1917

My paternal grandmother was 15 when she submitted a poem to the Gulfport-Biloxi Daily Herald. Her effort was judged to be the fifth best.

["Jackson Man Wins Prize in "Miss Issippi Is Calling You" Contest," Biloxi Daily Herald (Biloxi, MS) April 21, 1917, page 1, col 4-5; digital image, NewspaperArchive (http://newspaperarchive.com : 28 Feb 2017).]


I wondered what Mr. Bougher's prize winning submission was like so I sought it out and discovered that there's more to the story.

["Prize Winning Poem, 'Mississippi Is Calling You" Biloxi Daily Herald (Biloxi, MS) April 24, 1917, page 1, digital image, NewspaperArchive (https://newspaperarchive.com/biloxi-daily-herald-apr-24-1917-p-1/).]


["["Winner of Prize Is Very Feminine" Biloxi Daily Herald (Biloxi, MS) April 24, 1917,
page 1, digital image, NewspaperArchive (https://newspaperarchive.com/biloxi-daily-herald-apr-24-1917-p-1/).

From a quick search of the newspaper archives it doesn't look The Herald ever printed Letta's poem.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, February 18, 2018

Sunday Drive: In Cameron County, Texas

The little girl in these photos is Eugenie Evelyn Jackson (1930-1998), the stepdaughter of a paternal third cousin, once removed, Eugenius Nesbit Freeman Jr.* who married her mother in 1936. School and newspaper records for Eugenie and her older sister Jessie show that they commonly used the Freeman surname but gave their correct maiden name when they got married.

I've identified the car as a 1932 Plymouth Coupe (note the rumble seat) and Eugenie looks to be about four so the photo dates to about 1934/35 and may have belonged to her birth father John I. Jackson.



According to the relative who posted these pictures, Gladys was the name of Eugenie's doll.

[Both photos shared to one of her public Ancestry.com family trees by agadobetty]



*As far as I can tell, E.N. Freeman (as he preferred to be known) never had any children of his own.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, February 17, 2018

Job Taylor Died Intestate in Johnson County, Iowa

Oh goody!  Some more info on my elusive 4th great grandfather, Job Taylor (1800-1805).  Johnson County, Iowa, Probate Record, Book 4: page 24, Record of the Estate of Job Taylor, 1850; FHL microfilm 985943; digital images, Ancestry.com database Iowa, Wills and Probate Records, 1758-1997, Johnson County, Probate Records, Vol 3-5, 1847-1857 (https://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=9064 : 17 February 2018), image start 298.  


Record of the Estate of Job Taylor. Wm. Manatt Ad.

1850 26 State of Iowa Letters of Administration
Johnson County

The State of Iowa, to all known these presents shall come greeting
Know ye that whereas Job Taylor late of the county of Johnson in the state of Iowa died intestate as it is said on or about the 29 day of Aug. 1850 having at the same time personal property and real estate in this state, which may be lost, destroyed, or diminished in value, if speedy care be not taken of the same.-  To the end therefore that said property maybe collected and preserved for those who shall appear to have a legal right or inerest therein, we, do hereby appoint William Manatt of the county of Johnson Administrator of all and singular, the goods and chattels, rights and and credits, of the said deceased, with full power and authroity to collect and secure the property and debts belonging to said estate, in whose hands a possesion the same may be, in this state, and to fully Administer and settle said estate, and in general to do and perform all other acts which now are or hereafter may be required of him by law as administrator as aforesaid.
[Seal]
In Testimony whereof, I, Daniel G [S?] Warren Judge of Probate in and for the county of Johnson, have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said court at Iowa City in said county this 26 day of Sept. A.D. 1850.
Daniel L. Warren
Judge of Probate
___
carried over


25
Record of Estate of Job Taylor. Continued.
1850
Sept. 26 State of Iowa, Johnson County // ss. Administrators Bond.
Know all men by these presents, That we, William Manatt as principal, and Jacob Hull as securities, of the county of Johnson and state of Iowa, are held and firmly bound unto Daniel S. Warren as Judge of Probate in and for said county of Johnson, and his successors in office in the penal sum of two hundred dollars, lawful money of the United States, for the payment of which well and truly to be made and performed, We, bind ourselves, our heirs, executors, andministratos and assigns, jointly and severally, firmly by these Presents, signed with our hands, and sealed with our seals, this 26 day of Sept. A.D. 1850. = The condition of this obligation is such, that whereas the above bound William Manatt, has been appointed administrator of the estate of Job Taylor late of Johnson county deceased. = Now if the said William Manatt, shall make and return unto the Probate Court for the county of Johnson within three months, a true Inventory of all the real estate, and all the goods and chattells, rights and credits, of the deceased, that have or shall come to his possesion or knowledge, and shall administer accordig to law and the goods, chattels, rights and credits, of the deceased, and the proceeds of all his real estate that may be sold for the payments of his debts which shall come at any time to his possession, or to the possession of any person, for he shall render upon oath a true account of his administration within one year, and at any time when required by the Judge of Probate, shall pay any balance remaining in his hands with(?) settlement of his accounds, to such persons as the Judge of Probate shall direct, and deliver the letters of administration into the Probate court, in case any will of the deceased shall be hereafter duly proved and allowed, then and in that case these presents and everything herein expressed shall be absolutely null and void, otherwise to be and remain in full force and virtue.
This is to certify that I
have examined this bond and do hereby approve the same and the securities Sept. 26. 1850.
William Manatt [Seal]
Jacob Hull [Seal]

Daniel S. Warren, Judge of Probate
Iowa City, Iowa


Record Continued.= Warrant of Appraisement,
1850
Sept. 26. State of Iowa, Johnson County // ss.

To James Shaff, Henry Bogers [Rogers?], and Wm. Gathercole
you are hereby appointed to appraise on oath the
estate and effects of Job Taylor late of Johnson
county deceased.
When you have performed that serice you will
deliver this warrant and your doings in pusuance
thereof to William Manatt, adminitrator of said deceased,
that he may return the same to this court.
[seal]
In witness whereof, I. Daniel S. Warren, Judge
of Probate, in and for said county of Johnson,
have hereunto set my hand and affixed the
seal of said court at Iowa City this 26 day of
Sept. A.D. 1850,
Daniel S. Warren, Judge of Probate

Oath to Appraisers,
We and each of us do solemnly swear, that we
will well and truly appraise the estate and effects
of Job Taylor, late of Johnson County. deceased, to
the best of our ability and understanding so help us God.

James Shaff
Henry Rogers (Bogers?)
William Gathercole


1850 Inventory and appraisement Bill
Oct. 7 Of the property of Job Taylor Dec'd $
One cooking stove $12, =one bureau $9. 21.00
one clock $2, = one table $2, 4.00
one lot shoe makers tools + 5 shears 3.50
Knife Bowl and Knife Box 1.00
A lot of capenters [sic] tools 3.00
A lot of pot-mettle 3.00
Crockery wear $3, Barrells $1, 4.00
Old Irons $3, One axe $1, horse gearing $6 10.00
Loom accoutrements 2.00


27
Continued
Record of the Estate of Job Taylor
1850
Oct. 7. Spinning Wheel $1, Carpet $2, $3.00
looking glass, 50. C. Molds yc[?], 37.   .87
one short gun $4, one rifle gun $8. 12.00
Flax and Toe[?] $1, -3 bags or sacks, 50. 1.50
one horse carriage $20, = one horse wagon $18 1/2 38.50
lumber $2.37. Wheat + oats in stack $30 32.37
lots of Hoggs $18, = 4 Beds + bedding $12 30.00
one yoke of oxen $45. = 2 cows $20 65.00
three calves $6, = 1 yearling heifer $5.50 11.50
8 Sheep $8, = 2 ploughs $7. 15.00
2 scythes + cradle $2.50. 19 lbs. Bolls[?] $7, 12 1/2 9.62 1/2
corn.......... 9.00
_____

We James Shaff Henry Rogers + William
Gathercole do here certify that the above
articles was duly appraised by use as the prop-
erty of Job Taylor Deceased, on the 7 day of October A.D. 1850.

James Shaff
Henry Rogers Appraisers
William Gathercole


Washtub and board not sold
one tea kettle not sold
spools not sold



Record continued, Order for sale of personal property. 28
1850
Sept. 26. State of Iowa, Johnson County. ss
To William Manat Administrator of the estate of Job Taylor, late of Johnson county deceased,
it appearing to the satisfaction of this court that
it becomes necessary to sell the personal property belong.
to said estate to pay the debts there of and the costs of
administration
These are therfor in the name of
the state of Iowa, to authorise, instruct and empower
you, to sell at public or private sale, the personal
property belonging to the said estate of the said
Job Taylor, deceased, and for so doing this shall
be your sufficient order.

[seal]
In witness whereof, I have here unto
set my hand and affixed the seal of
said court at Iowa City this 26 day of
Sept. 1850.

Daniel S. Warren, Jude of Probate.


Sale of the Bill of the Estate of Job Taylor
1850
Oct. 8
Wm Manatt, one Pickling tub $0.12 1/2 [might be $11.12 1/2]
Lewis Van Buskirk one Barrell   .15
Wm. Manatt, one small Barrell   .25
Wm. Britten half Bushel + Basket   .05
Thomas Watters, pot, hooks, and dipper   .55
Lewis Van Buskirk, one shovel   .65
James Watters, one log-chane 2.25
A. W. Young, one chane + tramel   .60
"  "  "     Trace chanes   .38
Clark Lemly Basket + Irons   .75
Jerry Highett one Big kettle 2.85
Clark Lemly 2 axes + clevis[?]   .55
S. A. Watters. hoe, shovel + lantern   .26
R. W. Gray, Cooking stove etc 15.50
Lewis Van Buskirk one Bureau 9.25

_____
$34.21 1/2


29

Record of Job Taylor estate continued
1850
Oct. 8 Amount brot forward $34.21 1/2
Richard Patterson one clock   4.85
Alfred Marshal one Breakfast table   1.00
Ira A. Parker 8 largest hogs 16.00
"   "  "      12 Shotes   6.85
Wm. Manatt, one sett breast chains    .31
A. W. Young one square + 1/2 inch auger    .70
Jerry Highett, one drawing knife    .45
Samuel Oliver 2 augers and dividers    .70
A. P. Templeton one hand saw   1.00
L. P. Young, 2 chisells + auger    .75
James Shaff, Little Spinning wheel    .52
S. A. Walters 2 candlesticks,
              candle molds, sausage stuffer    .37 1/2
Alfred Marshall one coffee mill + boiler    .35
M. W. Budd one tin pale one wooden pale    .50
A. W. Young, 2 wooden boles + tin pan    .45
Jerry Highett, one sifter and 2 battles    .35
Alfred Marshall Stone Churn    .45
Clark Lemly 2 crocks, 2 Jugs, one pitcher    .31
Wm. Van Buskirk one sett plates    .60
"   "   "       one sett Tea-cups + saucers    .45
Thomas Watters one sett Tea saucers    .25
"      "       plates, Tea cups + saucers    .15
J. Stilling 5 plates    .35
Jacob Hull shelf ware    .18 3/4
Wm. Van Buskirk 3 chairs   1.80
John Maples 3 chairs   1.00
Richard Patterson 3 sacks   1.31
Samuel Oliver loom geares   1.37 1/2
Richard Patterson 2 reeds   1.20
Ira Parker a lot of flax   1.27
S. P. Young carpet   2.05
Charles Edmundson, one Rifle gun   9.05
A. W. Young smooth bon[?] rifle   5.00
John Maples one sett britchen   1.10
Clark Lemly sett britchen   1.40

_____
carried forward $98.74 1/4



30

Record of Job Taylor estate continued

1850
Oct 8 Amount brot forward $98.74 1/4
Clark Lemly lines    .45
Richard Patterson 2 Bridles and hatters    .80
S. P. Young one horse collar   1.00
Wm. Snider one horse collar    .70
Wm. Van Buskirk Washtub, board + tea kettle    .65
"   "   "       One Mourning scythe   1.05
Alfred Marshall one scythe + cradle   1.05
Thomas Watters knives fork and spoons   1.35
Clark Lemly one box chest    .37
Hiram Wasson, Buggy + harness 29.12 1/2
Lewis van Buskirk Door latches    .21
Alfred Marshall one 2 horse wagon 25.05
Lewis van Buskirk one sled and lumber   1.40
Henry Rogers, The West stack of wheat   9.50
"     "       Middle stack   "  "   9.75
"     "       East   "       "  " 10.00
Lewis Van Buskirk lot sheaf oats   2.65
Samuel Ledenbucker [?] Pitchfork    .40
J. Stillings A lot of corn in field 12.00
S. P. Young one Bell    .50
James Watters one yoke oxen 53.00
John Maples 2 calves   7.55
Clark Lemly one heifer   8.45
Wm. Turnip [?] ??? One Red Cow 13.75
Samuel Oliver one line back cow 13.37 1/2
John Maples 8 sheep 11.00
Wm. Van Buskirk one play. $5.80.=shovel plow, 85. 6.65
Clark Lemly one red calf   3.87

_____
$324.46 3/4
I hereby certify that the above is a
true list of the property sold at the sale of Job Taylor Deceased, this 8th day of Oct. 1850.
fees $1.25

Wm. L. Griffiths, Clerk of said sale



William Maynatt administrator of Job Taylor Dec.

has Credit for the following receipts - for
money paid on debts vs. said estate.
paid David Bunker 1.19
"    Daniel S. Warren 3.00
"    Wm Maynatt 11.33
"    Jacob Hull 4.00
"    S. Workman for Tax 1.58
"    Wm Griffith 2.00
"    do do 10.00
"    W. H. Rouseau 12.50
"    J. R. King 1.25
"    Thomas Waters 2.00
Administrators allowed 24.00

_____

$72.85

This account transfered to
page 17 Executors accounts.






© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Friday, February 16, 2018

Family Friday: Harold Delbert Currey Junior & his Hat

 The captions to these two photos tell it all.





Junior was born in 1923 so he would have been eight in the next picture.

[All from my personal collection]





© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, February 15, 2018

My Task Today: Master Plan for Job Taylor

No more haphazard searching!

Using the research form ideas from Marian Louis Pierre (specifically from her 2012 webinar and syllabus: "Plan Your Way to Research Success"--available for subscribers to Legacy Family Tree only or single digital download) and Evernote, I have started to put together an actual research plan (gasp!) for Job Taylor, one of my "brickwalls."



Master Research Plan

Ancestor: Job Taylor
Project Start Date: 15 Feb 2018
Specific Goal:  Establish what is known about Job Taylor; look for additional information within given records; follow his trajectory and try to understand why he went there.

Questions:
What did he do as a living?
Who was his wife and when did they marry?
FAN club needs to be established (neighbors and names associated with his records)
Historical events in his lifetime?

Background Information:
Birth: abt 1800 in New Jersey
Death: 27 Aug 1850 in Johnson County, Iowa
Parents: unknown, possibly Daniel Taylor as father but that is speculative
Married (presumably) to Betsey (abt 1805 in PA or OH), not sure if his only marriage
Inferred children: 
Simon Taylor (1832 Ohio)
Betsey (possibly my Elizabeth) Taylor (1835 Ohio)
George Taylor (1842 Ohio)
Info derived from Federal Census Records (1830, 1840, 1850), GLO patent record "sale of Public Lands" (to Job Taylor of Washington County Iowa"; land office in Iowa City), and Iowa Probate Records (on Ancestry)


Research Plan:

Task
Source
Location
Birth date and place


Who are his parents?



Death Date?



Determine Births of Children in Ohio



Probate/guardianship records for Job Taylor 




Land records for Job in PA, OH, and Iowa


Church Records?


Gravesite/Cemetery?


Literature Search for Job Taylor in PA, OH, and Iowa


Local histories of Westmoreland County, PA, Holmes County, OH, and Washington/Johnson counties, IA


Manuscript search for Job Taylor


Manuscript search for contemporaries of Job Taylor


Maps


Historical timelines





So now I need to fill in the sources I plan to use and where those are location.  Then I can make a plan for each task.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Celebrations: Valentine's Day

Here are two valentines from 1884 printed by Obpacher Brothers who are described as Art Publishers of Munich and New York.

[New York : By Obpacher Bros., New York, 1884.
Source: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.]


[New York : By Obpacher Bros., New York, 1884.
Source: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.]



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Free Webinar: "Have Nordic Ancestors? Count Yourself Lucky - Nordic Records Are Amazing" by Mike Mansfield

Do I have Nordic ancestors.  Why yes, I do!

But have I made any progress in my Nordic research?  Why no, I haven't.  And that's my own darn fault.

Mike Mansfield presents "Have Nordic Ancestors? Count Yourself Lucky - Nordic Records are Amazing":
An overview of available records in the Nordic countries (Norway, Sweden, Denmark, & Finland) will be presented.

Runs 1 hour 29 minutes

© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, February 12, 2018

Monday Is for Mothers: Elisabeth Alcott (About 1720 - 1749)

As far as I can tell this maternal 6th great grandmother lived her whole life in Burlington County, New Jersey.

[New England, New York, New Jersey and Pensilvania. By H. Moll, Geographer. (Printed and sold by Tho: Bowles next ye Chapter House in St. Pauls Church Yard, & Ino: Bowles at ye Black Horse in Cornhill, 1736?). Source: David Rumsey Historical Map Collection]


As you can see in these details from the 1736 map of the region, Burlington was on the regular post route between Philadelphia and New York.




I've written about her father William Alcott in the past, but we know very little about Elisabeth except that the 1745 license for her marriage to James Rossell survives.

[Northampton Township, Burlington Co., New Jersey added to his Ancestry.com tree by dwcustard.]

Licence of Marriage was Granted by his Excellency Lewis
Morris Esq. Governour of New Jersey etc on the 24th day of Aprill
1745 unto James Rosele of the Township of Northampton &
County of Burlington wheelwright of the one part & Elisabeth
Alcott of the same place Spinster of the other party.
                                                Chal Read Secry


 Elisabeth died four year later, having given birth to three children (the oldest of which is my direct ancestor Hope Rossell). Here's how I descend from her.

[Ancestry.com]

   


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.