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Tuesday’s Tip: Etsy?

Recently, Thomas MacEntee of Geneabloggers posted about using Etsy for genealogy. Have you tried this yet? Are you familiar with Etsy?

Etsy

 

Etsy is actually one of my favorite places to shop because I LOVE handmade items – journals, jewelry, house items, etc. So I’ve shopped on Etsy for a number of years now. I’ll admit though, I hadn’t thought of using Etsy for genealogy until I saw the post on Geneabloggers.

Even now, I’m… skeptical.

There are genealogy related items on Etsy. For example, here’s a screenshot of what searching for genealogy can find:

Etsy1

You get a lot of fun items this way where you can display your genealogy work.

  • Prints featuring personalized trees, graphs, charts, etc. that you can hang in your home
  • Other forms of artwork that can be personalized for you – Christmas ornaments, maps, etc.
  • Jewelry shaped in trees or other ways that can be genealogy related (for example, my favorite necklace came from Barb’s Branches on Etsy)
  • and more

Thomas MacEntee recommends adding the word ‘books’ to get some really interesting results and this surprised me as well. There were a number of items here that would be very useful mixed in with the usual ‘make your own’ genealogy books:

Etsy books

From there you can get specific – put in the word Pennsylvania after genealogy books and you’ll get a number of PA related historical books.

Searching just for a place can also bring up some great results, too. For example, a search for Saginaw brings up:

etsy saginaw

MAPS!!!!

Did I mention how much I LOVE maps???

For a measly $8.00 I could get a reproduction of the East Saginaw 1867 map – AMAZING! My husband is not thrilled with this recent discovery and since we share an office and it’s tiny, there’s not much I can do about this at the moment.. Trust me, when I get to have my own office one day, the walls will be filled with framed maps (and MANY book shelves…)!

Until then, I need to restrain myself.

Another neat item on Etsy is the photographs part when you search for genealogy. When you do a general search for genealogy, one of the top categories that comes up is photography. Clicking there is like finding a treasure trove at a garage sale. There’s an amazing amount of photos on there!  Not all are identified and some are incredibly expensive, but it’s still very neat to see what is in this collection.

Etsy photos

Thomas MacEntee also recommends looking by surname. Now when I did this I found nothing for my main surnames (Witherell, Langeneck, Almy). But when I use my paternal grandmother’s maiden name, which is Hummel, LOTS of figurines showed up! That isn’t surprising though and I expected as much for that name. In my quick search, I didn’t find anything genealogically related with the name though. However, it’s free to search so I recommend doing so; you could be pleasantly surprised!

 

Now as far as what this can do for your genealogy research, that will be up to you. It’s fun to look through and if you enjoy items created by your genealogy, this is a great site! The items for sale that could be useful (like the books and maps) tend to be available in libraries or historical societies, but if you like to have these items at home for whatever reason, for example, because you live far away from such places, this could be useful in your research. As I said, I remain skeptical as to how well this site can be used for your genealogy research, but it’s still worth the search. Nothing ventured, nothing gained after all!

 

Have you used Etsy for your research? Share your story!

Friday Finds July 4th-10th

I, BenAveling [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html), CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/) or CC BY-SA 2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5-2.0-1.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

I, BenAveling [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html), CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/) or CC BY-SA 2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5-2.0-1.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

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Mystery Monday: Mary Witherell Hay Owen

Many years ago, when I began my search for my ancestry, I had one focus: Witherell. There were a variety of reasons for this:

  • It’s my maiden name
  • The origin stories and others made me very curious to know the truth: the name is Scottish; the name is British; the name came from the border of Scotland and England; they were sheepherders; someone was killed for stealing a horse, etc.
  • Mary Witherell Hay Owen – the woman who really started it all for me. While wandering a cemetery, I saw her grave and was astounded she had my maiden name. Where did it come from?

Mary Witherell Hay Owen may have started my beginnings in genealogy, however, I never finished looking into her.

I was in college at the time when I was earnestly researching her so my research was sporadic at best. However, I had help from the wonderful librarians in my hometown as they were just as interested in this project as I was. They told me many things that I didn’t really look into much at the time but will prove useful as I search for her now:

  • Her father, James Hay, was a wealthy Scottish lumberman in Saginaw, Michigan. He was the president of the Tittabawassee Boom Company and in 1859 went into business with Ezra Rust – who is a big name in Saginaw (there’s a park and street named after him).((History of Saginaw County Michigan; Together with Sketches of its Cities, Villages, and Townships, Educational, Religious, Civil, Military, and Political History; Portraits of Prominent Persons, and Biographies of Representative Citizens (Chicago: Chas. C. Chapman & Co., 1881), 666 and 695.))
  • Mary married Edward Owen in 1889 – I did find the records to prove that. She was 22 at the time and Edward was 26. ((Michigan, Marriage Records, 1867-1952, vol.3:176, record number 1467, Edward Owen-Mary W Hay, 15 Oct 1889; image, “Michigan, Marriage Records 1867-1952,” Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 6 July 2015); citing Michigan Department of Community Health, Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics.))  Edward Owen’s father, John G, was also involved with lumber and salt works in Saginaw. ((History of Saginaw County Michigan; Together with Sketches of its Cities, Villages, and Townships, Educational, Religious, Civil, Military, and Political History; Portraits of Prominent Persons, and Biographies of Representative Citizens (Chicago: Chas. C. Chapman & Co., 1881), 575.))
  • She was a lumber baroness – Although I can see where that might be true, after all both her father and father-in-law were in the business, I haven’t found anything to support that fact that her or her husband were involved in the business while she was alive. (If there was only the 1890 census, part of this question could be answered!)
  • The Hay family had connections with the prominent Witherell’s of DetroitJames Witherell was a Judge of the Supreme Court for the Territory of Michigan and his son, Benjamin Franklin Hawkins Witherell was also a jurist in the U.S. State of Michigan and a justice on the Michigan Supreme Court. Now this may prove to be true – Mary’s mother’s maiden name is Hawkins as well. ((Michigan Marriages, 1851-1875, James Hay-Martha E. Hawkins, 13 Dec 1864; database and index, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : accessed 6 July 2015), citing Wayne County, Michigan Marriages, 1851-1869, FHL Film 1377620-1377622.))
  • Mary died in 1896 at the age of 28. Saginaw has an online record of burials that can sometimes include how the person died. In Mary’s case it was phthisis, also known as consumption or tuberculosis.((Public Libraries of Saginaw, “City of Saginaw Cemeteries Search,” database, City of Saginaw Cemeteries (http://cemeteries.saginaw-mi.com : accessed 6 July 2015), entry for Mary Owen, Oakwood Cemetery, Section 14, Lot 113, burial 26 May 1896, Saginaw, Michigan.))

So my main research question from the early 2000’s was: Is she related to me? As far as I could tell at that point, no.  There is a Witherell book that focuses on two progenitors in America: Rev. William Witherell and William Witherell. That book connects the Detroit Witherell’s I mentioned to them but my family is NOT in that book. Maybe I could still be related to one of those two progenitors, but my research showed no connection. Because of that missed connection, I stopped researching her all those years ago. side note: I have gone further back in my Witherell line since then, but the names are still not in that book.

I am picking this ‘mystery’ back up again! I doubt it is a real mystery since I have quite a bit of information on her from before that will likely lead to a lot more. When I first started looking into this woman, I really had no idea where to go or what I was doing! I’ve learned quite a bit since that time so it’ll be fun to see what I can find out now.

Stay tuned!

 

By Jenney, J. A. (James A.) -- Photographer [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

By Jenney, J. A. (James A.) — Photographer [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Friday Finds June 27th-July 3rd

By Sayamindu Dasgupta from Cambridge, MA, United States (4th of July 2012 in Boston) [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

By Sayamindu Dasgupta from Cambridge, MA, United States (4th of July 2012 in Boston) [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

This is my favorite month out of the whole year! When I was younger July was always when the best things seemed to happen:

  • Absolutely no school (my school year ended mid-June and August always had back-to-school tones)
  • The 4th of July and all the events leading up to it (parades, cook-outs, fun downtown events, etc.)
  • FIREWORKS!
  • My birthday
  • Adventures: vacations, beaches, camping, sleepovers, swimming, star-gazing, bike riding until the street lights came on – suffice it to say, summers were spent OUTSIDE
  • Family Stuff – we’d always get together sometime during the summer and it would often be in July

July was always the best month and although it’s changed over the years, it’s still a time I look forward to. 🙂

Blogs/Articles

  • WIN AN ANCESTRYDNA KIT!!!! Hosted by Geneabloggers.com, you could win a FREE AncestryDNA kit! You have until Sunday to enter! Check out the details here and good luck!
  • As mentioned above, this is the time for vacations! If you’re thinking about adding history to the trip (which is what my vacations consist of entirely!), then check out this list of living history destinations! I HIGHLY recommend Colonial Williamsburg and Greenfield Village!
  • Last year at NGS I was introduced to the Genealogist’s Declaration of Rights. It’s still ongoing and in need of support! Upfront with NGS posted about it again, fittingly for this weekend. Read the article here to see how access for genealogists has been restricted over the years and to find out how to sign the declaration!
  • Have we become too PC when it comes to historic sites? This could start a great conversation! Check out this well-written article by Michelle Zupan on her recent experience in Savannah, GA
  • Do you struggle with research plans? Practice will make this better! That and reading what others do! Here’s a great blog post from Jill Morelli of Genealogy Certification: “Research Plans: A Reprise.”
  • I went through a run-down of AncestryAcademy when it is was still quite new. Now they’ve added quite a bit more! Check out Dick Eastman’s review of the educational resource here!
  • This is a wonderful idea – “Instructions for Census Takers” in this post on EOGN, he discusses why you should read (and how to find) these instructions.
  • Ever wonder why some information was removed from a favorite online site? Dick Eastman discusses that in his blog post titled “Why Was the Information Removed from Online?”
  • Rhode Island Proposal to Restrict Access to Vital Records” – see the post by Dick Eastman as well as where to go for more information.

Webinars/Videos

  • Pinning Your Family History by Thomas MacEntee will be presented this coming Wed, 8 July, 9pmEST! To register to view it for FREE (if you view it live), click here.
  • This wonderful story from an immigrant coming over with her family to be with her father brought tears to my eyes! Check out the oral history here.
  • The Freedmen’s Bureau made some big news lately with the announcement of making the records freely searchable online. Here’s a wonderful video about using these valuable records! (Plus the link to help out!)
  • How to Use the New National Archives Catalog” by US National Archives – it’s an hour long but if you use the National Archives catalog, it’s worth the time!

Resources

  • FREE access to the New England Historic Genealogical Society (NEHGS)’s Great Migration database! It’s free through 8 July!
  • FREE access to the Revolutionary War Collection by Fold3! It’s free from July 1st-July 15th!
  • Did you see the list of FREE Family History Webinars by Legacy Family Tree? See my blog post here or check out the website here and click on print brochure to see the full schedule. That’s a great educational opportunity!
  • FindMyPast Friday – last Friday (26 June) really. It sadly didn’t update before I had posted last week’s Friday Finds, here’s last week’s new records that focused on criminal records:
    • England & Wales, Crime, Prisons, and Punishments;
    • Home Office: Newgate Prison Calendar 1782-1853;
    • Home Office: Convict Hulks, Convict Prisons and Criminal Lunatic Asylums: Quarterly Returns of Prisoners 1824-1876;
    • Home Office: Criminal Entry Books 1782-1871;
    • Home Office: Old Captions and Transfer Papers 1843-1871;
    • Home Office and Prison Commission: Male Licenses 1853-1887;
    • Metropolitan Police: Criminal Record Office: habitual criminals’ registers and miscellaneous papers;
    • Australia Convict Ships 1786-1849;
    • Australia Convict Conditional and Absolute Pardons 1791-1867;
    •  New South Wales Registers of Convicts’ Applications to Marry 1825-1851;
    • Victoria Prison Registers 1855-1960;
    • and Sligo Workhouse Admission and Discharge Registers 1848-1859
  • History Colorado Collections Online” – a post by Dick Eastman of EOGN

 

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