Posted on 05/14/2010 11:54:44 AM PDT by American Quilter
Now that so many ancestry records have been digitized, it's amazingly easy to start tracing your family tree. I'd never done it, but I watched this season's TV show, "Who Do You Think You Are?", and they kept referring to ancestry.com. So on a whim a few weeks ago I logged onto that site , and I've been amazed at what I've found. My mother's father's mother's family line goes back into the late 1400s in France, via many generations of French Canadians--who knew??? One of my dad's grandfathers came to the US to escape the Potato Famine in Ireland, and the other was apparently paid by his wealthy father-in-law to leave Ireland before the authorities arrested him for his anti-English revolutionary activities.
I've started wondering if I may be related to any of my fellow FReepers. Do any of you have any ancestor stories you'd be willing to share? My family has history in Quebec, St. Paul MN, Jasper County IN, Iroquois County IL, and the Seattle area (including the Olympic peninsula), but I'd love to hear from other FReepers regardless of whether we turn out to be related.
That sucks. Those bastards stole and destroyed so much history. I hate that so much valuable and interesting, for the world as a whole, or just familial, history has been lost forever because a relatively few nut jobs. And I’m not just talking about the Nazis.
“I’ve started wondering if I may be related to any of my fellow FReepers. Do any of you have any ancestor stories you’d be willing to share?”
I’ve found people related to many of my ancestors.
A warning about this ancestor searching...it is addictive!
My family’s story:
“Jesus Wept” An American Story
http://jesusweptanamericanstory.blogspot.com/
Huh... your ancestors probably knew mine.
One of my greatgrandfathers also came from Ireland after the Great Famine. I’ll see if I can find out from which county or town—maybe your wife and I are related. It’s fun to speculate.
“Huh... your ancestors probably knew mine.”
That would be interesting.
Yep. I’m related to the Cornell family that founded the University, including a crazy one who was part of a pseudo Salem Witch trial. Got some crazy Scots and Welsh kin too.
I haven’t tried Footnote. I do use US GenWeb though. I have hit some walls. Some were easy like the Bumpas line. Edward de Bompasse came here from Leydon in 1621 on the Fortune. But I have a GG Grandfather that doesn’t show up in census and finding his wife has been a nightmare. She died young and her family were suing them. That’s how we got her name, from the lawsuit. She died during the suit and I think he hid.
The part of my family that didn't come over on the boat were already here to greet them.
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I actually do have a cousin of sorts I'd met on FR, but I'm ashamed I don't remember her screen name.
OK! Since you opened the door, I have a request for information if anyone knows about a Eliza Meadors, born in Ark., 1851, married and divorced William Daniel Meadors. I would like to know where she is buried. This is my husband’s great great grandmother. The family lived in Crawford County Ark.
Yes, the name misspellings can be a hoot, though it can also make people a lot harder to track! My first Irish ancestor to come to the States was Martin O’Meagher. At Ellis Island he spelled it “Maher” to the official, wanting it to look more like it sounded. The O’ was dropped entirely.
How wonderful that you know all that! I’m glad all of the ladies then had such a sense of pride in their country and took the trouble to maintain their histories.
Ancestry.com offers a two-week free trial, and you can get a lot of info in that time! Then you can make an informed decision about whether to invest membership fees. As a teaser, they let you see all US records during the trial period, but nothing from outside the States. The monthly rate is quite reasonable; $25 for US records, and $30 for world-wide.
The funniest name in my line is Bumpas. We used to laugh at my Grandmothers grandmothers name when we were kids. Made her mad! LOL If only she had known that it started out de Bompasse.
My sons Father in law, who is a disgusting Sandlin, classifies us as three booters.
I do have a more cultured line that's descended from The Mayflower (have traced that branch back to the mid-1500's), although this branch grew from some inbreeding amongst cousins so its real culture is questionable.
The cultured gene didn't stand a chance against the drinking and fighting genes in my family tree and I now proudly carry on the great family tradition. At least the drinking part, I do.
Ain’t that the truth
LOL
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