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Friday Genealogy News

503 Cassi and Devon

Happy birthday to my little sister (pictured here in one of my favorite pictures of her and my brother)! She just turned 30 yesterday 🙂

Genealogy News

  • Dear Myrtle – one of my favorite genealogy blogs is hosting a beginning genealogy study group using Google+ Hangouts on Air. Check it out! She’ll be discussing research strategies and lots of examples for beginners.
  • Illinois New Law – this will be of interest for those with Illinois adoption research: they have sent applications to Illinois adoptees to apply for their original birth certificate. This is wonderful news for those adoptees in Illinois who wish to find out more about their family!
  • Upfront with NGS – “Hidden Gems – Record Collections Which Hold Records You Wouldn’t Expect” – This article discusses a recent discovery of files on Ancestry.com about occupations. Check out the article and Ancestry.com if you have a subscription and see what you could discover.
  • Genealogy Bargains – I post this one on Facebook often but it is updated nearly daily so don’t forget to check out the Genealogy Bargains that GeneaBloggers presents!
  • Genealogy Do-Over – Speaking of GeneaBloggers, don’t forget to check out this week’s do-over topics. Even if you aren’t doing the project, he has great topics on tracking and conducting research this week – including a great template for a genealogy research log.
  • Family Tree Builder – This program is now available for Macs! Dick Eastman’s newsletter recently discussed using this program (which is connected with MyHeritage) on a Mac so if you’re curious about the program, check out his article.

Don’t forget to follow and like my Copper Leaf Genealogy Facebook page where I post newfound items that deal with history and genealogy on a near daily basis!

Happy Friday!

 

Wordless Wednesday: New (to me) Raifsnider sibling

502 Raifsniders

John Raifsnider and his wife Elizabeth. John is a brother to my 2x great-grandfather Hezekiah and also fought in the Civil War like Hezekiah.

Tuesday’s Tip: Finding Passenger Lists Online

For those of us with recent immigrants in our family tree, passenger lists can give you a wonderful snapshot of your ancestor. For example, my 2x great-grandmother, Theresa Kiebel came back to the United States in 1920 with my great-grandfather in tow:[1]

499 Page 1 of Passenger List

500 page 2 of passenger list

She was also held for special inquiry since she was a widowed woman at the time. She didn’t get the chance to leave New York for about eight days (this I gathered from how many breakfast they served her and her son) – presumably when her father or brother came to claim her and swear she wouldn’t be a “Likely Public Charge” as she was so labeled on the form.[2]

501 Special Inquiry Record

There is a lot of information you can find in these wonderful records! Like the records I have pictured, it shows things like where they are going and to whom, a relative that was left behind, birth place location, language spoken, etc. Sometimes you’ll get a physical description, how much money they had, and even how much luggage they carried. It really can help tell the story of your immigrant ancestors!

Although not everything is correct. For example, I know that my great-grandfather was not born in Vukovar, Yugoslavia and had been in the United States before but his immigration record shows otherwise. Lucky for me, I have his birth certificate from Pennsylvania, so I know for sure that he was born in the United States and had therefore been here before.[3] I’m not sure why his mother would give that information – maybe it was easier to leave the country? Also, depending on when they returned to Austria-Hungary (which is what it was when they returned) he was most likely an infant and was therefore raised in Vukovar for about 10 years. So it could have seemed like he was born there. Either way, that information was incorrect and my great-grandfather did know it as he always listed his birthplace as Pennsylvania in his records.

So, how do you find these wonderful records online?

Before 1820

 Searching for immigrants who came over before 1820 will not be easy. There weren’t uniform laws in place for the recording and keeping of such records. There are some that exist, however. The National Archives and Record Administration has records (in microfilm) for New Orleans, LA, 1813-1919 (film publication M2009) and for Philadelphia, PA, 1800-1819 (film publication M425).  Neither one of these are currently online though.

What you can find online is a list from the Library of Congress of books that have been published that have reconstructed passenger lists (that list can be found here).   The National Archives is also a wonderful place to go for more information on what is available from before 1820!

After 1820

Obviously, NARA is a great place to go for indexes and microfilmed copies of the original passenger lists. However, for online sources you have a few options:

  • Ancestry.com: This is my first option because I have a subscription to it. And, as you may have noticed from my citations, it’s where I got my immigration information on the Kiebel/Langneck family.
  • Ellis Island: This has just recently been updated and the search form is different now. However, you can still search and somewhat see the information for the passenger list. What I tend to do is if I found the record on this website, then I go to Ancestry.com and sometimes will have to manually search for the passenger record to get a clearer view of the record (and save it to my ancestor).
  • Castle Garden: This website is dedicated to the first immigration station before Ellis Island and was in operation from 1855-1890. The website has a search engine for finding immigrants who came over during those times.
  • Dr. Steve Morse: This is one of my favorite search engines for passenger lists! It is a one-step webpage that you can use to help you search Ellis Island, Castle Garden and other ports. The link I gave you goes right to the page that describes what the page does and how to use it. FYI: The links that go to the Ellis Island site are not currently working with Ellis Island’s updated site. The information that he gives IS there but you’ll need to then manually search on Ellis Island’s website for the information to see the passenger list. I’m hopeful this will be updated but for now, this work around works.
  • FamilySearch.org: There are passenger lists available through FamilySearch.org that have been indexed and are therefore searchable by name but not all of them are indexed. Some you may have to look through image by image.
  • The Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild (ISTG): This is a site I haven’t used yet but it is bookmarked to go through. It is a volunteer driven group and they transcribe passenger lists and then post them online. The site has been running since 1998 and their blog was last updated 5 January 2015 so it is still an ongoing volunteer project.

Some items to keep in mind:

  • SPELLING! First off, the name was not changed at Ellis Island. (See this article for more information). Each manifest is based off of the manifest that was recorded from wherever they left from. Be aware that spellings change with accents and typos over time so when you’re searching, search for all variations of the name. Even better would be to search with a phonetic spelling too and use wildcard searches. First names were also spelled oddly. In the birth record for my great-grandfather, his name is spelled Frederick. However, ten years later after being overseas for a number of years, his name on the passenger list is Fridrih.
  • Remember that people came over in family groups usually, with maybe the father or oldest son going over first and then the rest following later. That can help in finding a family unit if you know they all came over.
  • Another pull factor into coming to the United States are friends. So if you see your ancestor living with others that he isn’t related to but they are all from the same country, you should search the passenger records for those people as well. When finding your ancestor is difficult, sometimes you’ll find a friend and realize your ancestor was next to him (or near him) all along although the name is spelled very differently!
  • If you’re having trouble finding a date for when your ancestor came over, look at the 1900-1930 census records as those will provide a year of immigration for each person of foreign birth. Also, if the ancestor was naturalized, their papers may give information on their date and place of arrival. This works very well for those naturalized after 1906.

Good luck on your searches and let me know if you feel I left out something vital for passenger lists.

 

CITATIONS

[1] “New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957,” digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 8 July 2014), manifest S.S. Caronia, 31 December 1920, stamped 234, line 23, entry for Terezia Langeneck, age 30.

[2] “New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957,” digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 8 July 2014), Record of Aliens Held for Special Inquiry, S.S. Caronia, 5 January 1921, stamped p. 298, line 64, entry for Terezia Langeneck, age 30.

[3] Pennsylvania Department of Health, birth certificate no. 123372-1910 Frederick Langeneck (1910); Division of Vital Records, Harrisburg.

 

Fresh Start!

Beautiful sunrise off the coast of Cancun (taken by NikiMarie in Jan 2014)

Beautiful sunrise off the coast of Cancun (taken by NikiMarie in Jan 2014)

This is kind of along the idea of the genealogy do-over that is going on over at geneabloggers (the site is down at the moment by the way).

I use two programs to keep track of my family tree: Ancestry.com and RootsMagic. My RootsMagic tree is the one I consider to be correct. When I have verified enough information, I add that person to my tree. Sometimes I do add people even though I’ve only found them listed as a parent on a death certificate but that gives me a research goal to work with (plus I make a note that I have only found them on a death certificate).

Now my Ancestry.com tree is what I call a clue tree – items aren’t verified on there. I do have a public tree now (for AncestryDNA items) and there are a LOT of unverified ancestors on there. So I do have some work to do.

This has been a rather ongoing project – something I started before taking my BU course. I went through and scanned every paper copy document I had and filed them in my computer (I use Dropbox and Backblaze as backups) so my file cabinet now matches my computer. Well, more or less. I don’t print off online sources that I find and file them in my file cabinet, I just save that in a folder on my computer. After every document was scanned in and correctly labeled, I went through and RE-CITED every document in my program (because I now know how to do it correctly.

That took A. LONG. TIME. However, it’s finished (or well, the documents I currently have in my program are finished – just ignore the growing paper file next to my desk…) and now everything in there is cited correctly. Now I’m going through and seeing if I have facts for people that don’t have a source connected to it. Normally this happens because I simply forgot to tag the source to the fact so it’s usually a quick fix. But sometimes, it takes me a bit to figure out where I got that bit of information from and yes, some items have been deleted.

Once this is complete, then I can go through and compare each person to what I have on Ancestry.com to see what I need to add. It’ll be a long process, but at least my research will be up to date and ready for a more focused research plan this year!

That is another goal this year – focus my research on specific people in a specific line. I have genealogy ADD too often! I see a name and quickly decide to follow that for a bit until it leads to another name where I follow that for a bit, etc. etc.

Anyone else going for a fresh start to their genealogy research this year? Or even going to give the genealogy do-over a try?

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