Monday, April 30, 2018

Monday Is for Mothers: Sarah Emma Biddle Spencer (1842 - 1868)

Sarah Emma, one of my paternal third great aunts, was not quite ten years old when her father returned from the West and packed up his whole family and moved with them to the Oregon Territory.*
[From the Barton/Cardwell/Chalmers/Babler/Fortier Family Tree
of Delby46 on Ancestry.com]

At 17 she married William H. Spencer:

[Ancestry.com. Oregon, Biographical and Other Index Card File, 1700s-1900s [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA:
Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors.
Original data: Oregon, Biographical and Other Cards. Oregon Historical Society, Portland, Oregon.]

Her only child was born two years later and died at 15 months:

[Ancestry.com. Oregon, Biographical and Other Index Card File, 1700s-1900s [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA:
Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors.
Original data: Oregon, Biographical and Other Cards. Oregon Historical Society, Portland, Oregon.]


Today I found Sarah Emma's 1868 obituary at Newspapers.com:

[30 May 1868, Page 3 - Corvallis Gazette-Times at Newspapers.com]

She's buried next to her son in the IOOF Cemetery in Corvallis, Oregon.


*She was just over three years older than her sister Matilda "Puggie" (my great great grandmother).

© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, April 29, 2018

Sunday Drive: Summer Vacation - 1939/40?

Besides being a champion swimmer, crack chess player and a classical musician who played cello and French horn, Harold D. Currey Jr. was also an amateur photographer who developed and printed his own pictures in a darkroom built into his father's backyard shop.

These three photographs are some of his work which document a summer trip the family took just before World War II.*




And here's what they brought back to Encanto.

[All from my personal collection]


*The only clue I have for the year of this trip is the fact the the Dodge truck pictures is a later model than the one shown in pictures taken when they acquired the trailer in 1938.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, April 28, 2018

School Days: Eighth Grade Graduation - 1961

Even though Christine was sent home from the hospital today, she's still not quite up to posting yet so it's up to me to fill in.

So here's the last photos of my St. Rita's class of 1961 in cap and gown, looking serious.

[From my personal collection]

My photo is the second to last one.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Friday, April 27, 2018

School Days: Eighth Grade - 1960/61

Here we are in our last year together,* some of us having been classmates beginning in kindergarten and I'm in "Facebook" contact with at least four of them.

[From my personal collection]



*I'm the fourth from the left in the top row. (My seventh grade class photo is missing.)


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Christine Won't Be Posting Today (Again)

But she has a very good excuse. Here's a picture I took this afternoon of Christine lying in her hospital bed at the Prebys Cardiovascular Institute.*

[From my personal collection]


She's feeling much better now and is demanding her cell phone and laptop.


*The giant machine blocking her from view is a CRRT hemodialysis unit (which has since been disconnected and taken away).

© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Gone for Soldiers: Pete Slater Writes Home - March 31, 1919 (Part III)

Continuing with the third part of Pete Slater's letter to his great uncle describing his experiences on the battlefields of France during World War I. Up to this point in his deployment he had not seen much action but that changed. During this action all the officers and half of the men in his company had been killed.

[22 May 1919, Page 10 - The Severyite at Newspapers.com]





© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

This Blog's First Post - October 30, 2010

Christine suffered a heart attack Sunday night and after several exciting medical adventures over the past two days, is currently recovering in the intensive care unit of a local hospital. So of course she isn't up to posting anything today and I promised I'd fill in with something from the past.

Here it is, still one of our most popular posts:

Solomon Joseph Hartley: Brick Wall everlasting?

My maiden name is Hartley. Captain Solomon Joseph Hartley (abt 1775-1815), who was a mariner in the late 1700's/early 1800's in the Philadelphia area, is my 4th-great-grandfather. When I first started my family tree it didn't sink in that he was only 1 of 64 4th-great-grandparents, and because I shared the same last name I put an undue amount of importance on his line.

The problem is, no one seems to know where he came from.

This is the original info I had on Solomon:
Captain Solomon Joseph Hartley, the progenitor of the family which forms the subject of this chapter, was a sea captain in Philadelphia, PA. He was born about the time of the beginning of the American Revolutionary War. He followed the sea from the time he was a boy and finally became a sea captain. He is known to have made long voyages to foreign countries and sometimes would be gone for three years on such trips. On one voyage to China he brought back some dishes which have been preserved by one of his descendants. [QUERY: DO WE NOW KNOW WHERE THESE DISHES ARE?] He had a brother, William, of whom nothing further is known than that he was resident either in Pennsylvania or New Jersey in 1815. Capt. Hartley married, about 1803, in Jersey City, NJ, Mary (Gwynap) (Clegg) Onetti, the widow of Joseph Onetti; he was her third husband...............
Capt. Hartley drowned in the Delaware River in 1815 at the age of 39, while rowing on the river near Philadelphia. ("It is greatly to be regretted," May Tibbetts wrote, "that some history of his branch of the Hartley family was not written down during his lifetime, to be preserved for his descendants." The widow Mary Hartley, who older sons were eight and 10 years old at the time of their father's untimely death, was left in straitened circumstances; she assumed again her occupation as glove maker and pursued that work for many years until her death, about 1855, at the home of her son, William Hartley, then of Camden, NJ.

Records indicate that the three sons of Capt. Solomon Joseph and Mary Hartley were provided with "good educations" and each was apprenticed to well-to-do Quaker families in Philadelphia. By this means, each learned a trade. All were reared in the Society of Friends, though in later life they did not all continue as members of this group.

The name Hartley immediately says "English" to most people, and one of my cousins, Richard Stanley Dunlop (who wrote the above quote), did quite a bit of research on other Hartley's in the Philadelphia area who all seemed to be of English heritage. When he assembled the list of possibilities there was no Internet as we know it today, and certainly no online genealogy sites. I took his extensive work and developed Ancestry* trees for those lines, soon discovering that Solomon Joseph Hartley did not fit into any of them.

Solomon had three children that we know of, all with his wife Mary Gwynap (??-abt 1855) (she is another monster of a brick wall): George Washington Hartley (1805-1880), William Hartley(1807-1874), and Abner Hartley (1813-1890).

I believe George W probably has the most descendants (I am one of them) and thus more people are likely looking for info on Solomon from that angle. George W claimed his father's birthplace was GER on the 1880 Census (the first federal census that asked for parents' place of birth).

Germany?? But Hartley isn't a German name! Well, actually it can be, it turns out, although I don't think it is very common, or is an anglicized version of Hertel or Hartle.

William only lived until 1874 so he didn't get to answer that question.

Abner, who was an obscure figure on my side compared to his brothers, was generally thought to have been born about 1809, a reasonable assumption of spacing between siblings, but wrong. He was born in 1813 and was only about 1 1/2 when his father drowned in the Delaware river. In the 1880 Census he put his father as from Poland.

Poland????

And then one of George W's sons, Marquis de Lafayette Hartley (1836-abt 1920), seemed to think Solomon was a Danish sailer. By this time it was decades away from the fact and he never met Solomon, so it is possible that he got it mixed up.

There is a Family Search/LDS/IGI record of Solomon Joseph Hartley married to a Miss Gijwnap, daughter of Giles Gijwnap. I'm not a big fan of the Family Search side of the LDS records, and this record is just strange. Mary Gwynap was supposedly born in New Jersey and was Scottish (although Gwynap says "Welsh" to me). At some point I will have to request the info on who submitted that data to LDS. But I digress...

I've noticed that in the 1800's and 1900's Censuses people would say that their parents were from Ireland or Germany or wherever and upon further investigation of the parents it would turn out that they were just of that ethnicity a generation or two back, and were actually from Pennsylvania or Maryland for example.

Anyway, none of this evidence on Solomon says "English" to me. I looked on the map and tried to figure out what area would have been in both Germany and Poland at some point around Solomon's time and that would work with the assertion that he "followed the sea from the time he was a boy," and came up with the tentative place of Danzig.

Solomon was gone a lot at sea, and didn't appear to be in any of the Federal Census records (although the New Jersey ones of his era were lost, so he might have been on one of those). It is possible that the Solomon Hartley in the modern-day Fishtown area of Philadelphia in the 1813 Philadelphia city directory is my guy, and possibly the 1810 Bridgeport address, but otherwise there seemed to be no documentation on him.

After months of looking around the web I discovered a wonderful index put together by the (late) Ruth Dixon that was on limited preview via Google Books:

Title Index to Seamen's protection certificate applications, port of Philadelphia, 1796-1823: record group 36, records of the Bureau of Customs, National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC

Indexes to Seamen's Protection Certificate Applications and Proofs of Citizenship Author Ruth Dixon Edition reprint Publisher Genealogical Publishing Com, 2001 ISBN 0806345896, 9780806345895 Length 159 pages

Seamen's Protection Certificates were authorized by Congress in 1796 to identify American merchant seamen as citizens of the United States and, as such, entitled to protection against impressment at sea. This work is an index to the names of merchant seamen who made application for a Seamen's Protection Certificate (SPe at the Port of Philadelphia between 1796 and 1823. The names of 14,397 seamen appear in this new volume, and each is identified according to the date of the SPC application, age, race, and state or country of birth.

Limited preview - 2001 - 159 pages - Reference


Through this I found a Solomon Hartley (applied in 1803 at age 28, born in PA), a George Hartley (applied in 1794 at age ?? from Germany), and Joseph Onetto (likely Mary Gwynap's first son by her second husband Joseph Onetto). Umm, wow!! Hot stuff!

I contacted the National Archives and Records administration and they sent me copies of these certificates (so far my experience with NARA has rocked!).

Text of Solomon's protection certificate--anything in parenthesis are my comments:

(Content of the copy of the record of Solomon Hartley (n. 9566 Soloman Hartley, 2 Nov). The certificate is folded, with info on each side)

(inside)

Commonwealth of Penn.

Phildelphia County

Personally appeared before me the Subscriber one of the Justices of the Peace forsaid county, James Creed(?), who upon his sollemn Oath Sywreth and Sayeth, that Solloman Hartley to his certain knowledge was born at Pitsborough in the Commonwealth aforesaid, said Solloman is about twenty eight years of age, five feet five inches and three quarters high, brown hair, near unto black, blue eyes and dark complexion, a scarr under his left chinn on the upper part of his neck. A mark or scarr on the upper joynt of the little finger of his right hand-- Said Solloman Hartley acknowledges no government but the government of the state of Penn and generally the Government of the United States of America of whome he claims citizenship--

Sworn and subscribed before me Given under my hand and Seal the 2nd day of Novem. 1803

James Creed(?) (signed)

Salomon Hartley (signed) (might read Solomon, the writing is a little unclear)

Wm Robinson(?) (signed) (last name unclear)
So he's claiming to be from PITTSBURGH (Pitsborough) of all places lol. It just goes to show that when you assume things you'll miss out on other possibilities. For some reason I thought the population movement went from East to West in the early United States, but actually it makes sense. Pittsburgh isn't near the ocean, but it is near key rivers and maybe Solomon originally was a riverboat guy. Also, there were German immigrants in that area when he was born.


Text of George Hartley's protection certificate:
City of Philadelphia ss(?),

I Matthew Clarkson Mayor of the said City do hereby Certify that George Hartley Mariner son of George Hartley Labourer of Dantzig, where he was born, and arrived at Philadelphia--from Amsterdam----did this day take and subscribe before me the Oath of Allegiance prescribed by an Act of the General Assembly of the Common Wealth of Pennsylvania pass on the 13th day March 1789,--

five feet nine inches, dark compl.

Germany, Dansick

In testimony whereof, I have hereunto subscribed my name and affixed my seal the--Third day of July 1794

Matthew Clarkson (signed), Mayor
DANZIG?? I just about fell over when I saw this. I'm not saying that this IS a relative of Solomon because I really have no way to prove it, but I made a pretty good guess at a mariner Hartley from Danzig! I do wonder if it IS a relative though.

So, I've made some progress on Solomon, but not as much as I'd like. I could never figure out what happened to his brother William mentioned in the quote toward the beginning.
I did recently contact the very helpful Joan Lowe, Corporate Archivist at ACE Archives for a search of the Insurance Company of North America (INA) voyage insurance records to see if his name came up, but he didn't. And I think if he was a captain he should have had a record. This makes me wonder if he was indeed a captain or if that was a natural exaggeration of status that happens so often in family genealogies lol. Ms. Lowe recommended that I contact the Philadelphia Seaport Museum library to see if they have any ideas, so that is the direction I'll go next, along with a new interest in early Pittsburgh.

As an aside, I do wish I knew how Solomon met Mary Gwynap. At that time she was twice-widowed Mary Gwynap Clegg Onetto, and mother to 2 young children, Joseph "Joe" Onetto (b abt 1796-1851) and Elizabeth "Betsey" Onetto (b abt 1800-???). Was Joseph Onetto elder a mariner as well? Did Joseph Onetto the elder and Solomon know each other?? Why on earth did Solomon and Mary get married in Jersey City, NJ, instead of Camden NJ or Philadelphia? I believe that one of Joe Onetto's own children said he was from Italy in the 1880 Census, and that seems to be one of those cases where he was of Italian ancestry (father Joseph Onetto probably WAS from Italy) rather than from Italy itself.


*I am an Ancestry subscriber, so my bias tends toward that service.


© 2014 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, April 23, 2018

A Bit More Information about the Slater-Tomlinson Wedding - December 25, 1885

We've already seen this maternal great grandparents' marriage license but thanks to a small item in a local newspaper we now know where their wedding took place:

[25 Dec 1885, Page 1 - The Eureka Herald and Greenwood
County Republican at Newspapers.com]

I wasn't able to locate a picture of the hotel but here's an ad for it a few years later:

[9 Jun 1888, Page 4 - The Severyite at Newspapers.com]

A reminder:--here's a portrait of the happy couple that was probably taken at about the time of their marriage:

[Courtesy of Olive Slater-Kennedy]



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, April 22, 2018

Sunday Drive: Boats in Collioure, France - September 2009

The brilliant light here in this sun-drenched town on the shores of the Mediterranean is what drew early 20th century artists like Matisse, Chagall, and Picasso.




Lest the visitor miss the references Collioure  has erected large labeled rectangles framing the views as depicted in works by various artists.




[All from my personal collection]


Bonnie and I, together with friends Jessica and Rita, only spent one night here but it was definitely worth the trip!

© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, April 21, 2018

"The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there" - Leslie Poles Hartley

From The St. Louis Republic. (St. Louis, Mo.), 29 Mar 1903, unpaged [image 68]; digital image, Chronicling America: Library of Congress (http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84020274/1903-03-29/ed-1/seq-68/) : accessed 21 Apr 2018.


I started out today intending to post about paper dolls in advertising in the 1800s/1900s.  I have long been aware of their existence, as I collected paper dolls as a child and had a Dover publication on that topic.  When I looked up "paper doll" this morning in Chronicling America it confirmed my suspicion that newspapers also occasionally printed paper dolls to interest the younger readers, as the above graphic shows.

But I was derailed from today's topic by the ludicrous and totally random comic below the paper doll:

Let's just say that title would not be allowed today.












The quality is so bad on this image, but it looks like they ended up dismembering him??


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Friday, April 20, 2018

School Days: Sixth Grade - 1958/59

Other than being another year older than in our last school photo, the biggest visual change for me was getting my hair cut.* Quite a few of us had first met in kindergarten and here we were seven years later.

[From my personal collection]


*Second row, third from the left.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, April 19, 2018

Limited Time Free Webinar: "Better Together: Making Your Case with Documents and DNA" by Patti Lee Hobbs



You've taken one or more DNA tests.  Now what do you do with that information?  Let Patti Lee Hobbs, CG show you some of the ways that professional genealogists use the results of DNA tests in her webinar "Better Together: Making Your Case with Documents and DNA:"
The genealogical proof standard requires reasonably exhaustive research in solving ancestral-identity problems. DNA evidence is now often part of that research. Even the best DNA evidence must be combined with some traditional research. This webinar will show different ways that genealogical problems have been solved by integrating DNA evidence with the paper trail.

Runs 1 hour 28 minutes
Free to non-subscribers through April 24



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Gone for Soldiers: Pete Slater Writes Home - March 31, 1919 (Part II)

Here ise the second of a series of articles from the The Severyite of a letter sent by my great uncle George Logan "Pete" Slater to his great uncle Albert Ross Tomlinson back in Kansas describing his experiences during World War I.

[15 May 1919, Page 8 - The Severyite at Newspapers.com]




© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Legacy Family Tree Webinar: "Using FamilySearch Digital Microfilm to Find Genealogical Records" by Randy Seaver


When I started out in genealogy in earnest back about 2008, I looked at FamilySearch and was unimpressed by how little I was finding.  I was using it wrong, by the way--I didn't even look at the un-indexed records (what a newb!).  While they do have an amazing amount of indexed records (the size grows every day), their un-indexed collection has always been incredible.  If you are new to genealogy, don't be a dummy like I was, and learn to use the un-indexed records.  If you put the time in to learn you will be a better genealogist.

I was very pleased to discover today that fellow San Diegan Randy Seaver presented a webinar on this very topic,"Using FamilySearch Digital Microfilm to Find Genealogical Records:"
This presentation was part of the 2018 Surname Society annual seminar. 
Learn how to search digital microfilm on the FamilySearch website to find genealogical records.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, April 16, 2018

Fashion Question? Whoopee Booties - The Style Success of the Season

Do you think one of your ancestors might have worn these in 1929?

[Sears Roebuck catalog, Fall 1929 - from the witness2fashion blog on Wordpress]


I found this image on one of my favorite blogs: witness2fashion which is a great resource, especially for "ordinary" clothing styles of the 1920s and 30s.*

I can picture my paternal grandmother Letta Estella Porter (1901-1974) donning a pair, though it doesn't appear that's what she was wearing in this snapshot taken in Dallas, Texas, on August 18th of that year.

[Courtesy of James E. Turnbull III]






*The blog also covers clothing styles of other decades as well.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, April 15, 2018

Sunday Drive: Vintage Trailers

In September of 2003 Bonnie and I drove up to Sylmar, California, to see some vintage trailers that were part of a special show on the grounds of the Nethercutt Collection.* I just came across some photos of several of those trailers:

Perhaps the most amazing one was this 1935 Bowlus Road Chief:**



There was 1936 Halsco Land Yacht:***



And there was the 1936 Trav-L-Coach with its black exterior and funky interior:****

[All photos from my personal collection]

Of course the show featured more trailers than these three, but these are the only images that have survived.


*You can read what a Staff Writer for the Los Angeles Times wrote about the show here.
**This link will take you to a history of Hawley Bowlus and his trailers, including some more interior shots.
***It seems that actress Ida Lupino bought her own Halsco in 1937 (scroll down for the photo).
****You can read about these trailers here.





© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.