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Analyzing Census Data – Building a Research Plan #52Ancestors – Post 4

Disclaimer:  This is a brief sketch on creating a research plan from information listed in a census.  These are my research notes to myself. Do not
take away that this is thorough, complete and reasonably exhausted plan. Research plans evolve as additional resources are identified, located, reviewed and analyzed.

I am starting to look for information on my great aunt Lucy Budny’s husband, Francis Roy Hepworth. Roy as he was called was born in Michigan.  His parents were British immigrants who first settled near Windsor, Ontario.  Roy’s great grandfather is David Hepworth, who is presumed to be the son of Martha Hepworth.

I have located a 1851 census entry for David and Martha Hepworth. Based on other known family data, I believe this is the correct family.

NameRelationship to Head of FamilyConditionAgeOccupuation
Thomas HepworthHeadWidr (Widower)78Tailor
Martha HepworthDaur (daughter)U35Housekeeper to father
Harriot HepworthIllegitimate GranddaughterU13Scholar
David HepworthIllegitimate Grandson5
Phoebe HepworthIllegitimate Granddaughter1
Richard HepworthNephewU34Groom

Analysis

Let’s jump to the most glaring information first, the three illegitimate children.  There are those who would rush to say that those are Martha’s children and list them as such in their family tree. But, do they really belong to Martha.  The enumerator does not list the relationship of the children to Martha Hepworth.

The children are listed as illegitimate grandchildren of Thomas Hepworth. Without further evidence, one cannot assume that Martha Hepworth is the biological mother to the three children. The children could have belonged to another of Thomas Hepworth’s children. Additional research is needed. The research plan needs to include the birth, marriage, death, religious records of the children for the names of the birth parent(s).

One also has to research the illegitimacy and legitimacy laws regarding children in the mid-1800’s of England. If the mother married the father, were previous records changed to list him as the father, was there a legal document required to be field with local courts?   If she married someone else, did that person become the de facto father of the illegitimate children? Did these children assume his name, keep their mother’s maiden name, or did take the name of the biological father if known.

The research plan is identifying possible records to research.  The evaluation you do of the sources can lead to additional sources and repositories that you have not considered.

Sure, we want to look at the information about the people first. An analysis has to be done about the record itself.  Why was it created and what was its purpose? Keep in mind that these records were not created for future genealogical research.

What were the instructions to the enumerator, what do abbreviations mean? What day was the census taken? Plan on researching the purpose and background of source as part of your exhaustive research.

My research plan will include looking for sources that will list Thomas Hepworth’s widow and other possible children. I also have to examine why the nephew Richard Hepworth is living with the family. How does he fit in the Hepworth line? Is it significant to know why he is living there? Yes, why?  Because a there is a marriage record between Martha Hepworth and Richard Hepworth.

Research Plan Notes

Identify wife or wives and children of Thomas Hepworth (the 1841 England Census may list wife and children)
1861 to 1911 England Census
Birth/Marriage/Death and parish records
Historical details of Hill Top Township, Wragby, England
English repositories
Local laws and customs
Search FamilySearch.org, Ancestry.com, FindMyPast, and FHL databases for records, wiki information

Reference:
Analyze Genealogy Records Like a Pro: For the Beginner – A blog post by Amie Bowser Tennant of The Genealogy Reporter

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Colonial South Carolina Dinner – #52Ancestors

Stepping into the teleporter, I transport myself back to colonial South Carolina. The location is set for the vicinity of Chester, SC, in the year 1774. I have timed my arrival to visit Ann Garner, my 7th great grandmother. Ann, her husband, John White, and their six children migrated from Scotland to South Carolina aboard the HMS Donegal in 1767.

My purpose is to observe the family partaking in their mid-day meal, known as “dinner.”  I curious what foods they prepare and serve in colonial South Carolina

The meal may have included one or two meat dishes of venison, squirrel, opossum, rabbit, other small animals, wild and imported fowl. If meat wasn’t available, cured fish from local rivers or fish stew may have been offered instead. Breads, cakes, or porridge could made from rice, corn flour or other cereal grains. Early  colonists also grew wheat, oats, rye, and barley.  Barley or rye can be fermented to make beer or distilled spirits to serve with meals.

Coffee or tea may have been limited or too expensive to serve to guests.  Homemade beer, distilled spirits, or cider may have been served instead.  Colonial beverages may include a rum punch made with oranges, lemons, rum and egg whites. Native raspberries were pickled with vinegar then sweetened with powdered sugar and water to make beverage.

After seven years, there may have been a well-established vegetable garden to supplement their food sources.  Planted vegetables were most likely from seedlings from Scotland or England. South Carolina has several native fruits trees which provided a food source to the colonists, the Chickasaw plum, wild black cherry, persimmon, and pawpaw. Small berries such as the serviceberry and red mulberry, could be eaten raw, used in fruit preserves, or dried to make pemmican.

I do not interact with my ancestors to avoid any paradoxes or disturb the space time continuum. I am famished as I teleporting back to 2018. A quick stop at the local grocery store provides a quick meal with no preparation at all.

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks – 2018 Edition Challenge – Post 4

To blog more consistently in 2018, I am undertaking the 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge again. The #52Ancestors Challenge is where a group of us blog about our ancestors, collateral relatives, discoveries, etc., for each week of the year.  To learn more about the challenge or if you are interesting in joining, visit Amy Johnson Crow’s site at Amy’s website.

Sources

http://www.scwildlife.com/articles/novdec2012/fruittrees.html
https://www.landofthebrave.info/colonial-food.htm
http://www.nps.gov/history/nr/twhp/wwwlps/lessons/3rice/3facts1.htm
www.ncpedia.org
http://www.foodtimeline.org/foodbeverages.html#colonialdrinks
http://www.foodtimeline.org/statefoods.html#southcarolina

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Longevity – People and Things #52Ancestors

1884 – The oldest photograph in my possession is a tintype of my Great Grandfather, Oliver Roll born in 1884. I wrote about Oliver in the 2014 edition of 52 Ancestors. Oliver died 100 years age during the Influenza Epidemic http://traceyourgenealogy.com/2014/02/17/52-ancestors-no-7-oliver-cromwell-roll/

1917 – Photograph of my step Great Grandfather, Borden Baumgartel in his National Guard Uniform.  Border served in the Guard from 1914 to 1917. Borden was part of the 2014 52 Ancestors edition. http://traceyourgenealogy.com/2014/02/08/52-ancestors-no-6-borden-hays-baumgartel-senior/

1922 – Borden’s son, Bob, will be 96 years old this year. Uncle Bob started working for GM in his twenties.  He traveled throughout his career, living in Venezuela, Greece, and Singapore. He retired and started a second career as a stationery printer.

1924 – My first cousin once removed, Chester, will be 94. He is the first child of the second generation of my ancestral Polish immigrants.

1968 – Stuffed Bunny – “Molly” was in my Easter Basket in 1968.  My family spent Easter at the cottage located in Inverhuron, Ontario, Canada.  She has survived two attempted purges of my belongings. Not sure if she will become the RV mascot when I finally retire and hit the road.

18 Years and counting – My brother is very much dismayed when I repeatedly answer his question with the same reply. “No, don’t need one.” I am the originally owner of a 2000 Subaru Outback, nicknamed “Honu.” She rolled off the Indiana Assembly plant in March 2000.  I bought her over the internet, sight unseen. The salesperson dropped the car off at my workplace with about 100 miles on the odometer. As of today, my little green Subaru has 114,998 miles on her.  I hoped to keep answering my brother’s question, Did you get a new car yet? with “No” for another two years.

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks – 2018 Edition Challenge – Post 3

To blog more consistently in 2018, I am undertaking the 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge again. The #52Ancestors Challenge is where a group of us blog about our ancestors, collateral relatives, discoveries, etc., for each week of the year.  To learn more about the challenge or if you are interesting in joining, visit Amy Johnson Crow’s site at Amy’s website.

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#52Ancestors – Favorite Photo and Most Dreaded Photo

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks – 2018 Edition Challenge – Post 2

To blog more consistently in 2018, I am undertaking the 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge again. The #52Ancestors Challenge is where a group of us blog about our ancestors, collateral relatives, discoveries, etc., for each week of the year.  To learn more about the challenge or if you are interesting in joining, visit Amy Johnson Crow’s site at Amy’s website.

Favorite Photo

Author as a young toddler

Oh my! Doesn’t this little tyke exude confidence.  I love her happy expression. She does not shy away from the camera.

As I grew older, I preferred to be behind the camera so I would not get my picture taken.  Why was she happy, who is taking the photo? One of my parents probably took the photo.

The photo is of me as a toddler taken at one of the many camping trips my family took in the 60’s.  Decades later, nature or nurture of those early camping trips, has played a role that my retirement plan includes getting an RV to travel the United States and Canada.

 

 

Most Dreaded Photo

The photos must go!

Why do I dread this photo? It’s a tote filled with the physical photos in my possession, thousands of photos. This 40 pound, 62-quart tote is an albatross around my neck. I have no desire to preserve them.  I do not have the interest, energy and the time to scan, label, and disseminate to whoever will take the photos. What! But, you are a genealogist, the family historian. Yes, and I have lost interest in being the Keeper of Photos. 

The photos have to go! There is no room in the future motor home. I will scan, label, and find a home for the old black and white photos with family members. Photos showing pastoral scenes go to the trash heap. Photos of my trips to Europe, Australia and New Zealand, trash. Google Earth ™ displays a much better image then the photo I originally took anyways. The rest of the photos will be categorized by family grouping. Then sent to some niece or nephew who may be so inclined to save for posterity.

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52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks – 2018 Edition Challenge

This is post 1 of the 2018 #52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge

To blog more consistently in 2018, I am undertaking the 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge again. The #52Ancestors Challenge is where a group of us can blog about our ancestors, collateral relatives, discoveries, etc., for each week of the year.  To learn more about the challenge or if you are interesting in joining, visit Amy Johnson Crow’s site at Amy’s website.

Revisiting the Lipinski Family

During the 2014 Edition of the 52 Ancestors Challenge, I wrote about Aleksandra Lipinska.  Aleksandra is the wife of my second Great Uncle Ignacy Borucki.  Over the New Year’s weekend, I went squirreling through the Polish genealogy website, Geneteka, to look a little closer at the Lipinski family.

Prior research of Ignacy and Aleksandra’s marriage record provided the names of Aleksandra’s parents, Jan Lipinski and Anna Czaplinska.  My search in 2014 using the parent’s names in the Maków County, marriage records identified three siblings of Aleksandra. My recent foray led to the discovery of additional records of birth, marriages, deaths related to the Lipinski’s. I also found another sibling to Aleksandra, a brother named Antoni Lipinski, not previously known.

In 1920, Antoni Lipinski married Marianna Budna in Krasnosielc-Sielc, Poland.  Most likely, this is a second marriage from Antoni as he was born in 1865 and presumably had an earlier marriage. I will have to give this Marianna Budna, a nickname to distinguish her from my Great Grandmother, Marianna (Borucki) Budny (Budna).

There are additional Geneteka records that provide clues to Jan Lipinski’s and Anna Czaplinska’s , siblings, parents and grandparents. Some Geneteka records are indexed only with no scan of the record to view.  Gratefully, FamilySearch.org has microfilmed the parish records for Krasnosielc-Sielc.  An image of Jan and Anna’s marriage record available at FamilySearch, lists their parents’ names. With Jan’s parents’ names, I located siblings, and his grandparents names, Gotlib/Gotleb Lipinski and Katarzyna Tomaszewska. It appears that I will be able to take at least one of my Polish collateral line back to the late 1700’s.  Quite a feat for me, as my own direct Budny line only goes back to 1898.

Next week’s #52Ancestors prompt is “favorite photo.” Can I pick out a favorite photo to blog about?  I do have an proclamation I want to share about preserving photos.

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