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Fearless Females: Honoring a Female Ancestor

The Fearless Female prompts were created and posted at The Accidental Genealogist – this prompt is: March 29 — Create a free Fold3 Memorial Page or a Genealogy Trading Card at Big Huge Labs for a female ancestor… Tell us about who you’ve selected and why and then post a link to what you’ve created.

I created a fold3 memorial page for my 2nd great-grandmother, Theresa (Kiebel) Langeneck Schmidt.

fold3 memorial

Theresa is the one of the first immigrants I ran into on my family line. There are only four of my 2x great-grandparents who were born in another country, including her. Because of that, I tend to treasure them as they are rather mysterious to me and tend to be more fun (and frustrating) to research.

Theresa first came over to Pennsylvania with her parents sometime between 1907-1910 (when her youngest sister was born and when she married in PA in 1910). Shortly after she married Frederick Langeneck, my great-grandfather was born (7 months after the marriage – makes me wonder if it was a forced marriage because she was pregnant). They moved back to Austria-Hungary after that. The family story is that Frederick had to go back to fight in World War I on the Austria-Hungary side. We believe he died over there in 1916 and I have found documents stating that a Frederick Langeneck did die there, but it turns out there are several Langenecks there and Frederick is a common name, so I need to confirm that. Either way, Theresa returned in 1920 with her ten-year old son, my great-grandfather, and went to Michigan where her parents and siblings lived.

When Theresa and her son returned to the United States, she came with $16 dollars and had to wait until a relative came and received her at Ellis Island. She was held as an LPC , a likely public charge. Because she was a widow with a child, she was likely considered to be a possible burden on society. It was likely a male relative who had to come and claim her and show she wouldn’t be a burden, that she had family to help her. The two stayed at Ellis Island for at least 9 dinners, so a bit over a week while waiting for someone to come and get them.

In 1921, she married Michael Schmidt and had two more children. She died young, in 1934, of heart disease.

Theresa, as it turns out, is a family name. Her mother’s name was also Teresa and she named her first daughter Theresa. My great-grandfather then named his first born daughter Theresa (although we called her Betty). I can’t get further back on her mother’s line to see if it continues because the German documents are difficult for me to read. I hope to be able to get further on that line someday soon though!

Friday Finds 25 March 2016

By Frank Schulenburg (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

By Frank Schulenburg (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Blogs/Articles

Media

  • Introduction to German Parish Records” by Gail Blankenau on Legacy Family Tree Webinars – free until 30 March!
  • ESM’ QuickLesson #2” by DearMyrtle – Dear Myrtle is studing the works of Elizabeth Shown Mills, beginning with her QuickLessons. Watch to learn more about citations and analysis!

Resources

Pedigree Chart of Ancestor Birth

This is making the rounds on Facebook but I wanted to share on here just in case you haven’t seen it yet. This is a pedigree chart of 6 generations of my ancestor’s birth places.

Look at all those Michigan ancestors!

6 generation picture

 

 

It takes another generation to get them out of Michigan completely (and one of those may  have been born in Michigan and not the Texas everyone assumes – but I need more support for my assumption).

I knew I had lots of Michigan ancestors but this does make it clear! Did you know I went to the same high school as my great-grandparents? It would have been the same one my 2x great-grandparents attended but it hadn’t been built yet 🙂

Anyone else try this? Do share!

Friday Finds 18 March 2016

THIS SATURDAY!!!

THIS SATURDAY!!!

The South Bend Area Genealogical Society will be hosting it’s annual conference this Saturday, 19 March 2016 from 10-4pm. We have two speakers: Jeanne Larzalere Bloom and Katherine R Willson! We also have some amazing door prizes and raffle items including: DNA kits from AncestryDNA and FamilyTreeDNA, RootsMagic software, Legacy Software, 1 year subscriptions to Legacy Family Tree Webinars, My Heritage, Newspapers.com, Genealogy Gems, Fold3, GenealogyBank and more! Come check it out!

Blogs

Media

Resources

 

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