Minnesota Death Records

MHS

Not that long ago, I posted about Ostrom Witherell, my 2x great-grandfather’s brother and what could have happened to him. I mentioned that Ostrom’s father died in 1915 and the obituary mentioned that Ostrom was in Grand Rapids. Now, me being me, assumed that meant Grand Rapids Michigan. However, an astute reader noted that it was Grand Rapids, Minnesota!

And that led me to a new-to-me resource: Minnesota Death Records!

These records are held at the Minnesota Historical Society website where they actually have a number of great sounding indexes, but I stuck with the death certificates for the time being.

The Minnesota Death Records go from 1904-2001 and can be searched by using two search engines: either PeopleFinder or the MNHS Research Materials. Either one uses the same kind of search technique. First I narrowed down by collection:

 

MHS Death Records Collection

Then used the search term Witherall as well as narrowed down the year:

MHS Death Records Collection Search

And there were two very sad results:

MHS Death Records Collection Results

*Mabel’s last name was spelled differently, obviously, and took narrowing down the years and her first name to find her.*

Ostrom’s death certificate said he was a widower and his wife had been Mable Sheehan – could this be the same? And was that baby boy his? So I ordered the records to see what they could say. Each cost $9.00 and they arrived in about 10 days.

The result – Mabel Sheehan was the wife of Ostrom Witherell and that baby boy was their child. Mabel was born around 1892 in Canada, which is also where she was removed for burial in Toronto. She died of eclampsia after the birth of said baby boy. ((Minnesota Historical Society, death certificate no. 1913-MN0005468 (1913), Mable Weatherell; Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul. )) Are any of you fans of the TV show Downtown Abbey? Remember the horrific death scene of Sybil? Mabel died from the same thing. I can’t imagine Ostrom’s grief over losing his baby boy AND his wife in one day.

For Ostrom’s story, this does give me some other clues. Next I’ll check for marriage certificates in Toronto as well as Grand Rapids, Minnesota. Ostrom’s mother was from around Toronto as well (another brick wall of mine) so perhaps there could be a link there?

His story aside – this is a great resource for those with Minnesota relatives! The index was easy to use and the ordered copies came within two weeks, which is always a plus!

Friday Finds 15 April 2015

The T. A. Moulton Barn on Mormon Row at the base of the Grand Tetons, Wyoming. By Jon Sullivan, PD Photo. [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons

The T. A. Moulton Barn on Mormon Row at the base of the Grand Tetons, Wyoming. By Jon Sullivan, PD Photo. [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons

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Saturday Night Genealogy Fun

By Jayu from Harrisburg, PA, U.S.A. (Hummelstown, Pennsylvania) [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

By Jayu from Harrisburg, PA, U.S.A. (Hummelstown, Pennsylvania) [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

It’s been a long week FULL of non-genealogy work so I decided to play along with Randy Seaver’s (from Genea-Musings) Saturday Night genealogy fun for once!

So this Saturday’s fun is answering a few questions:

Name four places on my ancestral home bucket list I’d like to visit:

  • Hummelsville Pennsylvania! My paternal grandmother was a Hummel and she’s part of the reason I got started in genealogy. I would LOVE to go where my ancestors used to live. The last one was my 3x great-grandfather, Jacob Hummel, who made the trek from PA to Michigan.
  • Vukovar, Croatia – This is where my great-grandfather lived before he came back to America (where he was born and probably lived for less than a year before his parents brought him to Austria-Hungary).
  • Nova Pazova, Servia – this is where the above great-grandfather’s father supposedly was born and lived. I say supposedly because his name was Friedrich, which was quite popular, and his surname Langeneck is also a lot more popular than I expected.
  • Orleans County, New York – I get here with the Witherell line and can find some information (like marriage records) but I need more! Going here would help so much in my research.

What are the four most unusual surnames in your family tree?

  • McGriff (To me only maybe – it reminds me of the McGruff crime dog) – in Michigan, Ohio, possibly Indiana, and Pennsylvania
  • Little – in Michigan and Ohio
  • Bitzing- Michigan, Illinois, and possibly Germany – This one is unusual and has SO many variations
  • Hockey – England and Michigan – it’s one of my favorite sports!

Which four brick walls would you most like to smash through?

  • David Witherell (1813-1862) – I want to identify his parents for certain and figure out where the Witherells were from!
  • Lillian (McLeod) Witherell (1861-1895) – My Scottish connection! Or so I believe. I want to know who her parents are and where in Scotland they were from!
  • Henry Bitzing (1813-1895) – Came from Germany to America between 1845-1850 and I want to know more about where in Germany he was from and, of course, who his parents were
  • Friedrich Langeneck (1885-1916?) – I want to confirm that the Austria-Hungarian soldier I found in a POW camp in Russia, who later died there, is my ancestor. And then go from there to see who his parents were and where they were from. I weirdly found a family tree that shows he did NOT die in World War I but remarried… which is not the story my grandfather heard from his father about him!
  • It was hard picking four – I have more than that!

 

Play along if you’d like! Go to the link for the questions and directions on the Genea-Musings page and comment your answers or create a blog post! Enjoy 🙂

Friday Finds 8 April 2016

Joseph Mischyshyn [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Joseph Mischyshyn [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

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