Granny Pam's Genealogical Trials and Triumphs
Header

As part of the 2010 Geneablogger Winter Games, I have been organizing my files, renaming some, adding tags and so on. While doing that I came across some information which may help some of you! I posted these on the Wexford, Michigan RootsWeb e-mail list years ago. I think adding it here might reach some people who just “Google” their names. I am often surprised at the search terms which land people on this blog.

While I was copying obituaries from a scrapbook, some “extra” obituaries which were on the pages with my subjects hitchhiked home with me. If you are researching any of these people, please click the “contact me” link at the top right of this page, and e-mail me the name of your subject. I will e-mail you a copy of the obituary.

Last First Year
Agren Gordon Lee 1942
Albright John 1942
Badder Caroline 1942
Baird Mrs. Richard 1942
Benson John 1942
Boggs Kate 1942
Brewer Smith 1942
Brooks Ruppert 1942
Bruyette Mose 1942
Clark Almeda L. 1949
Edelman Mrs. Charles Anna Lindberg 1942
Flynn Frank W. 1942
Fourman Pharon 1942
Greef, Jr. Karl 1949
Ingemanson Mrs. Ola Selma Samuelson 1941
Johnson Mrs. Albert G 1942
Ketchum Alton 1942
Lamunion Glen A. 1940
Long Mr & Mrs George + 4 children 1942
Manktelow Mrs. Albert Florence Chapin 1940
Merrill Lt. Donald W. 1942-1949
Meyer William F. 1942
Miller William R 1942
Miller Frank W. 1949
Monroe Charles Edward 1942
Nelson Baby of Mr. & Mrs. George Nelson 1942
Older Mrs. John Susana Shirer 1942
Rogers Mrs. Charles Blanche Smith 1942
Russ Luie 1942
Servis Clyde 1949
Servis Mrs. Frank Mary Ellen Krager 1942
Stevens Harvey H. 1949
Thompson Orlo 1942
Van Ocker William 1942

The end is here, the end of the year, that is. It is time to see how Granny has done on her resolutions. On December 28, 2008 I considered my situation carefully and wrote:

For my research:

1. Enter all the information from the BOX into my database. No exceptions, no cheating.

2. I will file all the paperwork in the proper place, not in piles on the floor, desk, or in any convenient box.

Results:

I believe I made three assessments of my progress on August 8, on September 3, and on and October 20th.

For this final look back at 2009, I can report that all the data in the box/pile was entered, and all the original paperwork was filed. That big challenge I made to myself is complete, so I have that to be glad of.

And for my blogs:

1. I will post on either GrannyPam or Granny’s Genealogy every day.

2. I will finish posting all the data from my “old” genealogy site to Granny’s Genealogy.

When this post, and the one I have written for tomorrow is written, I will have made 406 total posts on Granny’s Genealogy, and 180 on GrannyPam. That is a total of 586. To be completely honest, there were many days that I made no post anywhere, but on some days I posted several times.

Honestly, if my goal was to post every day, I did not achieve it. If it was to write every day, I did achieve it.

I am particularly happy about the “Belle’s Box” series of posts. I wanted to highlight a bit about Papa’s family, and their way of life in the early 20th century in Wexford County. Although the series posed many questions, there were also gems, and answers.

As for posting all the data from my old website here on Granny’s Genealogy, I have almost achieved that. There is some data that needs to be reformatted, and I will need to rethink how I present it in blog format. I believe I posted about 90% of the information here, so by my estimate I “almost achieved” that goal.

That is my last look back, from now on, I will be looking forward to 2010. May if be successful for all Geneabloggers!

The Web

November 30th, 2009 | Posted by Granny Pam in Don't Try This | Organize! - (0 Comments)
This entry is part 24 of 99 in the series Deeds in the Family

This little quote replaced the then current earworm in my head the other day:

Oh what a tangled web we weave,

When first we practise to deceive!1

You might want to know that I really don’t think our ancestors were attempting to deceive me. Anyone who ever heated their home with wood, or tried to put food on the table all year from a garden and a little hunting, or shoveled snow out of a mile long drive with a little shovel for 6 months of winter, or even tried to clear enough trees to make room for a garden, knows that the concerns of each day were more than enough to occupy our ancestors. They did not have time to worry about what remnants of their lives I might have to work with as I try to reconstruct their lives and experience.

After I finished profiling the last of my deed transcriptions that mention Papa’s Burdick ancestors, I stopped to consider how to handle the rest of the book.

the Book

Since I love to do things in steps, I scanned all the remaining pages; and found there were 227 in Wexford County, Michigan alone. Holy Cow! Talk about boring, I can not imagine profiling all of them consecutively, and I know no one is interested enough in land records to read the entire mess.

Swinging back to the present, the reason for the transcriptions was to find out more about our ancestors lives.  Since both Papa’s family,  and my family blessed me with a group of closely associated families in  single locations in Wexford County, Michigan, the deeds looked like a bonanza.  Papa’s Fenton and Burdick ancestors were living in Colfax, Greenwood and Cedar Creek Townships, Wexford County beginning about 1870.  My Johnston, Long and Kaiser ancestors arrived in Cadillac, Wexford County between 1885 and 1890.

The next thing that occurred to me is that these transcriptions tell a lot about the relationships between our ancestors. I find that my problem is how to shift focus from actual transcriptions to the information that they contain about our ancestors. Sounds easy, right? Right.

The project person in me just decided to sort the deeds by “family”. That is where the web came in. Are the deeds in Papa’s family Burdick, Fenton, Fellows, Tinker or Longstreet? Are the deeds in my family Kaiser, Johnston, Long, or Yearnd? Many of them represent members of two or three associated families. We have all heard it a million times, our ancestors lived in communities, not in isolation. Their families, including relatives distant, close, far and near; churches; and neighbors formed the framework that supported their difficult lives. Many of these relationships are described by the stories these deed transcriptions tell. I began to think of the web of relationships, activities and actions that these transcriptions describe.

In this vein, I also thought about how easy is is to be fooled by facts. I found a deed in the Burdick group under which John and Susie (Burdick) Fenton were selling their home in Colfax Township to her brother, Fink Burdick. Knowing that John and Susie adventured out to Iowa, I mistakenly assumed that this sale preceded their migration. The sale was on 2 May 1885, perfect for a spring trip west.

Further checking disappointed me, and also pointed out how easy it is to misunderstand any given “fact”. John and Susie’s son Alfred was born in 1887, an old family history says in, “Colfax, Wexford, Michigan”.

I think, OK, maybe John and Susie lived somewhere else in Colfax for two years. Or maybe they sold out to Fink and continued to occupy the place. Or maybe older family members told the cousin all the family but the youngest was born in Colfax. Or maybe older family members recalled that Colfax and Cedar Creek Township were once united and called Colfax. Or maybe no one knew where Alfred was born and just assumed the Fentons lived in Colfax till they headed out to Iowa. Or maybe Susie went to her mother’s house in Colfax to deliver Alfred. I could go on like this all day, really.

So, instead on continuing the speculation, I checked for a birth record for Alfred in Wexford County on the Family Search site. No luck for Alfred, but there was one for Ross, who was born in 1884, in Colfax Township. Hmmmm. My next source for John P. Fenton is a directory listing, and he is in MANTON, about 1883-1884.2 I do have a birth certificate for the John and Susie’s youngest child, Mary Eliza, who was born in Iowa, 3 April 1890. Hmmmm. I still do not know for sure exactly where Alfred Fenton was born, but I do know that it was probably in Michigan, not Iowa.  But, my original assumption about the deed in question being  executed just before the Fentons left for Iowa was in error.

I am going to make every effort to post the facts and information recorded in this group of deeds, but I will also try to relate the facts to the framework of our ancestor’s lives. Time will tell how successful that effort will be, but I will bet that I will learn more along the way than I might have anticipated.

  1. Sir Walter Scott, Marmion, Canto vi. Stanza 17. Scottish author & novelist (1771 – 1832)
  2. R.L. Polk & Co., Directory of Big Rapids City, Mecosta County : Cadillac, Cedar Springs, Cheboygan, Fife Lake, Harbor Springs, Howard City, Kalkaska, Mackinac, Mackinaw, Petoskey, Reed City, Rockford, St. Ignace, and Traverse City : including also, Alanson, Alba, Ashton, Belmont, Boyne Falls, Crofton, Edgerton, Elmira, Kingsley, Leetsville, LeRoy, Lockwood, Luther, Mancelona, Manton, Maple Hill, Mansfield, Milton Junction, Pierson, Sand Lake, South Boardman, Tustin, Walton, and Westwood : embracing a complete alphabetical list of business firms and private citizens, city officers, churches and public schools, benevolent, literary and other associations, and a complete classified business directory of the above named places. (Detroit: R.L Polk and Company 1884), page 284; digital images, ProQuest LLC, Heritage Quest (http://persi.heritagequestonline.com/hqoweb/library/do/books : accessed 18 November 2009).
This entry is part 6 of 8 in the series Land Records

I received a Facebook comment with regard to my land record spreadsheet. I asked permission and added the comment at the end of the post here on my blog. A Facebook comment is soon lost in the feed of status updates, link posts and other miscellaneous garbage stuff information, and I prefer that comments and suggestions are kept with the original content if possible.

To paraphrase the comment, it suggested that I add the township and range to my land record spreadsheet index, and that I share the information on the appropriate county’s US GenWeb site. My reply was: Well, watch for the next part of the story. Since I have so many, I don’t have time right now to add the land descriptions to the spreadsheet. I’ll tuck that in the back of my mind for later, though. It is a good suggestion.

I have taken several days to mull this over, trying to figure out how to best share the information. I had given a pretty lengthy disclaimer with my post, something like this is not complete, might not have all index entries for a surname, might have errors, I’m human, and so on. I also said I might or might not have more information with regard to each index entry, but I would share what I had.

The Wexford County Courthouse is 200 miles from my home, and for quite an extended period of time, whenever my husband traveled that 200 miles for work, I hitched a ride and spent the workday at that courthouse.

My intent when I copied the land record index was to look up every land transaction for every member of our ancestral families that occurred in Wexford County. I did not include the township and range numbers on my index, although they are listed in the index books at the courthouse. I planned to record the legal description of the land from the deed record books. In fact, the working area was so cramped, and the office so busy, that my index listings were done on 8 x 5 “legal” pads. Those who know me often see me pull my tiny pads out of my purse, jacket pocket, or backpack. Every source for copies I have was first noted on one of those little pads, and I still have piles of them to reconcile with photographs and scanned documents which reside on my computer.

Between courthouse trips, I typed up an index which was in the form of liber|page|surname of interest, which I sorted by liber and page. On subsequent trips, armed with my form, and my “index”, I scribbled out transactions as quickly as I could. The results look something like this:binder

Somewhere along the line, my husband’s trips became less frequent, and finally ended when gas prices exceeded $4.00. The company found that phone calls were more economical.

A week or so ago, I found myself in need of material to post on this blog. I considered writing about ancestors, one at a time. I considered posting old family portraits, one by one. I looked around the house for something useful, and I found the land record book on the floor under the bed hidden in a corner on a shelf behind some other valuable items. As you can see, everything is more or less in a book, and nothing is attached to anything that resembles a gedcom or family tree, or anything, really. Having all these records accumulated, yet not analyzed and entered into my database with the proper family defeats the purpose of having them at all. Or at least I think it does. How can I learn anything if I don’t exercise my brain and fingers?

At the same time, I remembered that few of the family history researchers I have met have used land records. Although land records may be a familiar tool for professionals, many others are intimidated by the process, don’t know what they might learn from it, or haven’t even considered using land records. They may be mired in the quicksand of “hatch, match, and dispatch”. It seemed perfect to me, a chance to show a little about land records, how they can be used, what can be learned, and do it all while accomplishing something valuable and relevant to my research efforts. A great winter project.

From my perspective, the very nicely worded, kind comment came out of left field. The idea of loading all the data to US GenWeb had not occurred to me, nor is the data in a format that would be all that helpful. Changing my index by adding the township and range numbers seemed like busy work, and I wanted to do another kind of busy work.

I did not write 5000+ words to argue the pros and cons of someone’s helpful comment, it was to address how I have decided to handle the issue the comment raised. I revised my spreadsheet to include a column for township and range for each index entry and reposted it, you probably already noticed that if you followed the link. I will add the township and range to each entry as I work my way through the notebook. Although my goal will be to show the usefulness of land records, and give tips on how to get the most out of them, I will continue share the data with anyone who requests it. When I have worked my way through the entire pile, I will have the information in a format more useful to US GenWeb, and I will contribute it.

Deeds in the Family, the plot thickens!

This entry is part 5 of 8 in the series Land Records

As I have studied the land records of my families in Michigan, I have used a variety of maps and resources to be sure I know the location of each piece of property. I have likewise used multiple resources to visit homes, cemeteries, libraries and other research locations. Many of these are familiar, but perhaps some will be new and helpful.

Here are some resources you may find helpful. First, for Michigan:

  1. A set of county maps from Michigan State University. These maps are PDF format and downloadable. There are zip code maps, transportation maps, hydrology maps, current census district maps, land use maps level 1 and level 2, and my favorite, the (MCD) Minor Civil Division maps which show cities, villages, towns and townships including the township and range number. I use these all the time and find them very valuable.
  2. Michigan subdivision plats. When a deed says, “assessor plat No. 1″, or “Mr. So-and-so’s” 2nd addition to the city of Podunk”, this is your site. Search by county, or enter the name of the plat or subdivision. A great resource! (My disclaimer, added October 30, 2009: I don’t know what happened to Michigan’s website with this data. I know the link on the State page is not working right now. I hope it will work again soon.)
  3. Michigan County Histories and Atlases. Click the subject link, and enter your county. There are historic atlas as of many Michigan counties on this site. Be sure to browse and search the histories of the counties your ancestors lived in while you are here.
  4. Be sure to find the website of the Michigan county your family resided in. Some counties have free downloadable or usable “Base Maps” or “Standard Maps”, with helpful information. There are also maps which require a subscription, or purchase, but take your time and you may find some gems. As an example, check what I found for Oakland County, and Wexford County. Some cities also offer this service, just look around websites of governmental units in your target area.

Now, for good measure, some map and map related sites that can be used for Michigan, and other areas, too.

  1. The United States Geographic Names Information System (GNIS). All things geographic. Find cemeteries, mountains, just about anything but your ancestor on this site.
  2. USGenWeb Project, United States Digital Map Library. You never know what you will find here.
  3. National Atlas Dot Gov. : This huge site is a resource for all things map in the United States. There is a primer on the Public Land Survey System (PLSS), and a large group of maps for many purposes.
  4. The Newberry Library interactive maps. Historical boundaries, cool overlays, useful.
  5. David Rumsey map collection. A variety of maps, and worth a look.
  6. Earth Point tools for Google Earth. A high tech solution for finding township and range locations in Google Earth. I listed the last because it is a subscription service. However, you can test drive it, and one subscription option is very reasonable.

Next time, I outline a plan to make my deed transcriptions available to interested researchers. I will also continue to describe what I have learned from deed records.

This entry is part 4 of 8 in the series Land Records

Now I had a neat spreadsheet of land records I extracted from the Wexford County, Michigan index books. What should I do next?  There were so many deeds, and I was not equally interested in them.  Or, at least at the moment I created my list from the index,  some were more important to me than others.  I copied every one I could find for my names, just to be sure I would not have to go back over the books again. With such a long list, it was not possible for me to purchase copies of every deed. So I did what any good project manager would do, and designed a form to collect the information from the records, it looks like this:

land record abstract form

You can see the information I was interested in, it pretty much follows the format of a warranty deed. Just to clarify, I recorded:

  1. The date I was extracting the information
  2. The date of the land transaction, this is usually at the bottom with the signatures and notarizing
  3. My initials/name as the person who extracted the information
  4. The location of the transaction, I actually recorded the county and state the deed was recorded in.
  5. The Grantor, the person or entity selling the land.
  6. The Grantee, the person or entity purchasing the land.
  7. The names of the witnesses
  8. The type of deed, warranty, quick claim, whatever it was
  9. The date the registrar received the deed to record
  10. The name of the Registrar
  11. The location of the land, usually a county and township
  12. A description of the land, varies with location but is written out in the deed.
  13. Any notes I felt I needed to make
  14. The “consideration”: what was paid for the land.

If you would like to use my form, I have posted an Excel version, and a PDF version. Please do not publish the form, just link back here and let any interested party download their own copy.

Tomorrow: How a filled out form looks. What did I learn?

With regard to my spreadsheet, Just a disclaimer, again. They are selected records only, not complete indices. There may be transcription errors. I searched the indices for family names, but many not have recorded every deed for every family. I recorded both the grantor and grantee for each deed, and created a spreadsheet of the results. I may or may not have further information on these transactions, but it will not cost you anything to ask, and I will share anything I have.

Progress and Pain

October 20th, 2009 | Posted by Granny Pam in Organize! | Tools and Information - (4 Comments)

Back on December 28, 2008 I made some resolutions, on which I will report progress today in this post. This is not a 30 day or quarterly report, I am writing it because I don’t know what else to write today, and this may help me decide what to write tomorrow.

No more foot dragging, here are my resolutions for genealogical research:

  1. Enter all the information from the BOX into my database. No exceptions, no cheating.
  2. I will file all the paperwork in the proper place, not in piles on the floor, desk, or in any convenient box.

These two resolutions are complete. I do have a folder of newly gather information, but that was not part of the resolution, right? Hmmm.

And for my blogs:

  1. I will post on either GrannyPam or Granny’s Genealogy every day.
  2. I will finish posting all the data from my “old” genealogy site to Granny’s Genealogy.

It would take a little checking, but I am pretty sure I have missed a day here and there. However, my overall post total has more than met my unstated goal of 365 posts for 2009. A review of the numbers shows that I have posted more here on Granny’s Genealogy than on my personal blog. I have also made several posts on Papa’s site, which was not in the mix back when I made the resolution to write every day. The bottom line is that I probably never will write every day, but I can manage writing most days, and scheduling when I am too busy or away from home to write.

Posts in 2009 (after this is published) 485, as follows:
Granny’s Genealogy: January: 30, February: 32, March: 38, April: 32, May: 34, June: 33, July: 65, August: 10, September: 31, October: 23, total: 328.
GrannyPam: January: 15, February: 15, March: 26, April: 22, May: 22, June: 13, July: 15, August: 11, September: 10, October: 8, total: 157.

Traffic is up on Granny’s Genealogy, and down on GrannyPam, and checking the post numbers explains why.

Now the thing that is not complete, posting all the data from my old site to this blog. This has proved much more difficult that I thought it would be. I have started, but some of those pages were written in 2003. I know more now, so I feel I should update them. Additionally, a web page is different from a blog post, and things don’t translate as well as I thought they would.

I took a big bite and did the cemetery photos from my old blog. I had to split them into more posts than I had web pages, and format them differently, and link the photos differently. I am still not sure if I am satisfied with what I did, but this is a blog, so I need to post and move forward.

The organization factor has been bothering me, and I have partly addressed it. In the side bar, you will see monthly archives, category archives and a new tool, “Series” I found this little widget when trying to find a practical way to index my posts. I am not satisfied without an index, and am still working on that, but the series widget has helped some. When you click on it, it gives you the posts in a given series from the first one to the last one, in order. That is pretty hard to beat in some circumstances. For the cemetery posts, the first to last order doesn’t matter much, perhaps an alphabetical list of cemetery locations or names would be better. But for things like my Grandma’s books, it does put them in order, and make them accessible in one place as a group.

I am happy with my progress on genealogical resolutions, but not sure what direction I am headed. I believe I will need a new resolution before the year ends, or at least a new direction. The data from my old site will run out quickly, and I will need to decide how and when to post on this blog. I really do well with a list, but I am out of artifacts to list and describe. Except perhaps for a large group of old photos. I will have to put my thinking cap on, and see what feels right.

Thanks to everyone who has hung with me through my growing pains and continues to visit my blogs. I have great appreciation for the many geneabloggers who continue to produce valuable and thoughtful posts day in and day out. What talent!

Remember the box, and the resolution to enter all the data into my genealogy database? On June 6th, I checked how I was doing, and found that I had fallen miserably short on the data entry end of things.

When I assessed my progress on August 2th, I was feeling a little better about the progress I had made.

Today, my pile looks like this:
missing pile
Right, it is GONE. Sorry to yell, but this is a big deal to me. I finished entering all the data from my pile. Nothing left but dust. I was about to declare myself a big winner, and have a drink:
drink

But, then I realized that the filing is not complete:
to file

I think I can do the filing in one day, and I have chosen tomorrow to do that.

I won’t be celebrating for too long, I have a ways to go before I can really declare myself a winner. The next problem is the data entry from the files on my computer. I just looked at the computer folder which contains results from numerous trips. I have been to courthouses, libraries, cemeteries, even Salt Lake City, and my results are stored neatly in folders with the date and the place I visited. There are notes, transcriptions, and pictures. The pictures are of deeds, of graveyards, and of pages in books, and there are photos of microfilm boxes showing the number of the film, and of microfilm screens, showing data about some person of interest.

The fact that it is all neatly organized into folders is some consolation, but not a lot. The parent folder is massive: 4.63 Gb, 79 sub-folders, 4984 files. I’m not sure how long it will take me look at, evaluate, transcribe (if necessary) and enter the data I have collected in those 79 folders. I also have some hand written notes that go with some of the files:
to do

The top of the report looks like this:
to do close

Darn. Well, I’m having a drink anyway. Then, after the filing is complete, I will tackle my pile of notes and start the process. Maybe next week.

I have been working hard on my genealogy resolution, to organize, evaluate, enter, and file all the information that I have gathered and piled up over the past year or so. On August 12 the pile looked like this:
DSC05869

Today, it looks like this:
DSC05884

However, everything I have entered is still waiting to be filed, it is organized by letter here:
DSC05885

Because I am so easily side tracked I find it better to break tasks down; in my breakdown, filing is separate from data entry. The good news is, the pile of unentered printed data is shrinking.

The bad news is that I have a subfolder in my genealogy data on my computer marked newpics. That little folder has 34 subfolders of digital photos and files I have taken or downloaded. Each folder is stuffed with genealogical information to enter into and attach to my database. Hidden in a drawer, I have several legal pads with hen scratching that amount to the references and sources for all those files. That job won’t be too pretty, but it won’t yield a lot of paper to file.

Oh, yes: in the process of entering the data I found things I had found, celebrated over, and then promptly put in the pile and forgotten. I guess that little revelation won’t be news to anyone doing a lot of genealogical research. The thing is, getting all this stuff entered and organized now will prevent me from looking it all up again. And again. And again.

So, back to the salt mines.

I feel disconnected from the this blog right now, having spent the last week on other things. Some reports for my genealogy society, some other work for that cause, a trip to Lansing to protest (so 60′s), and a family reunion. Now all that is water over the dam.

I’m going continue on my quest to fulfill my New Year’s resolutions. Let me see, what was that?

1. Enter all the information from the BOX into my database. No exceptions, no cheating.

2. I will file all the paperwork in the proper place, not in piles on the floor, desk, or in any convenient box.

And for my blogs:

1. I will post on either GrannyPam or Granny’s Genealogy every day.

2. I will finish posting all the data from my “old” genealogy site to Granny’s Genealogy.

Wow, it’s a good thing I looked back. My results are dismal:

  1. Some of the box information is entered.
  2. What is entered is filed in another box.

I’m in real trouble here, it appears that I’ve completely stalled. However, we put down three rooms of new flooring, painted much of the house, raised a garden, cared for our lawn and flowers, and took a few breaks to see our favorite music and musicians.

I’m hoping that I can return to using one or two days a week exclusively for data entry. That will mean no Facebook, no Twitter, and no YouTube for those days. I am betting if I could stick to that, the pile would shrink dramatically.

Between my two blogs, I have made the following posts:

  1. GrannyPam: 129 posts
  2. Granny’s Genealogy: 265 posts

That is 394, more than one per day for a 365 day year. So, if averages count, I can take the rest of the year off! The funny think about this is that I thought I had accomplished much toward my resolutions by analyzing and posting all the “Belle’s Box” items, and it turns out that was not among my goals!

There is a saying I can remember, Keep Your Eyes On The Prize. Interesting, unsourced info on WikipediA on that.

To end this little evaluation, here is the song that that saying is based on. This a super cool version from The Nashville Bluegrass Band. That is Mike Compton singing and playing mandolin. I had to look twice, usually he is wearing a T-shirt and bib overalls.   I love this video, for the song, the excellent job done on it, and for the camera shots of the Lewis Family members sitting in the audience. They also appeared in the Gaither Bluegrass Gospel Homecoming videos, which we own and play sometimes around here. Enjoy, and I’ll try to keep my hand on the plow.