By Ms Jones from California, USA (Our (Almost Traditional) Thanksgiving Dinner) [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
My Thanksgiving dinner didn’t look a thing like that! My sister and I talked our mom into doing a “Day-After-Thanksgiving” dinner. We did that in a busy year past and loved it! My mom made homemade breads for turkey sandwiches and she was able to make all of the food ahead of time instead of cooking all day. It was a great dinner and day. Happy Thanksgiving to all of you! I hope you are well stuffed and feeling loved 🙂
“Holiday Bargains” on Maureen Taylor’s website, the Photo Detective
Holiday Bundles on books from the New England Historic Genealogical Society at AmericanAncestors.org
RootsMagic Holiday Sales – This is the genealogy program I personally use – try them for free first to see if it’s something you’d want to purchase! Sale ends Dec 19th so plenty of time to decide 🙂
Blogs/Articles
“Read the Directions” by Judy G. Russell at the Legal Genealogist – ever wonder what something means in a census? Reading the census-taker directions will tell you!
“Looking for Descendants of the Orphan Train Riders” By Dick Eastman on his blog (EOGN) – I am a bit bias in posting this as it’s about the society I’m a board member of, but I do want it to reach as many people as we can! 🙂
“Mapping Wars Or Other Events” on Worldwide Genealogy – a very neat way to map military movements using Google maps. I will have to give this a try!
“Mapping the Census” by Judy G. Russell – works well with the first article I posted!
“Menus of the 1850s and 1860s” on EOGN – it’s just a neat thing to see! And check out the list of breakfast wines 🙂
Media
The Board for Certification of Genealogists has posted some recent webinars online! Go here to find out how to access “Applying the Standards to International Research” by Melanie D. Holtz, C.G. and “Do You Have the Reflexes You Need to Become Certified?” by Harold Henderson.
“Genetic Genealogy for Beginners” on the Young and Savvy Genealogists YouTube channel – it was originally posted in January but still a good resource!
“Genetic Genealogy 101 Part 3: Testing” on the In-Depth Genealogist – great review on the three kinds of tests and some of the well known testing companies
So I mentioned my search for my ancestor David Witherell’s siblings. I am currently looking at his older brother, John Witherell Jr. And well… I am coming up with nil.
I worked on a plan, like I mentioned. I really only had the one document (another brother (Darius)’s family Bible) to go on. So here’s a shortened version of what my plan looked like and some of my research:
What is Known:
John Witherell Jr – born 5 October 1811
Had a son named Ray who was born August 1838
The Source:
The source is a picture from the DAR files for the siblings maternal grandfather, David Bullard, who supposedly was in the American Revolution. The person who submitted the application is also a descendant of David’s. There is no mention of how she got the picture of the Bible.
The Bible is from Darius Witherell – he is a sibling of David’s and lived in Wayne County, NY
The Bible is copyrighted from 1848 – so it was not written at the time of the birth; however, it is likely that Darius filled in the information but it could have also been his wife
The majority of the writing is all the same except for one line mentioning an infant of Darius and his wife’s who born and died quickly, suggesting that all the information may have been written at once. The photocopy is in black and white so if there was different colored ink, it doesn’t show in my copy.
Ray Witherell:
It may be possible to find the father through the son – so I looked at Ray
A family tree on Ancestry shows that Ray was born in Michigan around 1838
John doesn’t show up in any census after that – did he perhaps die in Michigan? Would there be a will/estate record involved?
Following Ray in census records shows him in the following locations:
1850: with Darius Witherell, his uncle, in Butler, Wayne County, New York ((1850 U.S. Census, Wayne County, New York, population schedule, Butler, p. 309 (stamped), dwelling 168, family 168, Ray Witherell; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 17 November 2015); citing National Archives microfilm publication M432, roll 613. ))
1860: with McAllister family in Washtenaw County, Michigan ((1860 U.S. Census, Washtenaw County, Michigan, population schedule, York, p. 153 (penned), dwelling, 1189, family 1171, Ray Witherell; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 17 November 2015); citing National Archives microfilm publication M653, roll 563. )) – could these be his mother’s family?
1875: with his own family now in Cayuga County, New York ((1875 New York state census, Cayuga County, population schedule, Conquest, p. 5, dwelling 44, family 47, Ray Witherell; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 17 November 2015); citing Census of the state of New York, for 1875 microfilm, New York State Archives, Albany. ))
1880: with own family in Butler, Wayne County, New York (next door to his uncle Darius) ((1880 U.S Census, Wayne County, New York, population schedule, Butler, enumeration district (ED) 173, p. 23, dwelling 261, family 277, Ray Witherell; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 17 November 2015), citing National Archives microfilm publication T9, roll 943. ))
1892: in Butler, Wayne County, New York ((1892 New York state census, Wayne County, population schedule, Butler, ED 02, p. 2, 2nd column, line 3, Ray Witherell; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 17 November 2015); citing New York State Education Department, Office of Cultural education; 1892 New York State Census, New York State Archives, Albany.))
1900: in Auburn, Cayuga County, New York with family ((1900 U.S Census, Cayuga County, New York, population schedule, Auburn Ward 7, enumeration district (ED) 14, p. 1B, dwelling 16, family 28, Ray Witherell in John Witherell household; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 17 November 2015), citing National Archives microfilm publication T623, roll 1012.))
1905: In Auburn, Cayuga County, New York ((1905 New York state census, Cayuga County, population schedule, Auburn Ward 7, ED 01, p. 4, line 1, Ray Witherell; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 17 November 2015); citing New York State Archives, State Population Census Schedules, 1905, New York State Archives, Albany.))
I sadly can’t find out when Ray died but there is no record that I could find for him after 1905 so it’s likely he died between 1905 and 1910 and probably in Cayuga County, New York.
Records
Possibly do a search in Cayuga County for a date of when Ray Witherell died – that date could lead to an obituary (hopefully it would mention his dad!) and maybe even a birth county in Michigan
Check Darius’s estate/will records – he may mention Ray or John
See if there is a family connection with the McAllister’s and Ray – could be his mother’s family – also confirm that that is the correct Ray Witherell
Find a marriage record for Ray and his wife Mary who married sometime in the 1860’s
Ray is on a draft registration for the Civil War in New York, but I couldn’t find out if he served or not – that needs more work
See if Darius’s family Bible still exists – the DAR record only has one section of the Bible, family births, mentioned. It would be great to find if the Bible still exists or if copies of other pages exist – this may go into Darius’s research plan
Because I don’t know where John died (New York? Michigan?) or who his wife was or where they could have been married (New York? Michigan?), looking for my usual records (marriage, cemetery, estates, land records) has proven to be a bit more difficult. I need to know more and I’m hoping Ray’s records can reveal some clues for me.
So I’m at a frustrating point – one where being far away from the area I’m searching in makes my search more difficult. I will next contact any and all of the genealogical societies in the area to see what records still exist or perhaps they know the names I’m looking for.
If you have any suggestions, please leave me a note! I’m stepping away from John Jr’s for a bit to let my mind breathe for a moment and then I plan on returning in a day or two and hope to see points I missed, as is part of the process.
Contest from Geneabloggers: Win a Copy of Writing Life Stories! – This coincides with National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) and can be a great resource for those who wish to write their family stories – More info here
“Native American Papers” on the Newspapers.com blog – lots of new newspapers for those searching for Native American ancestry!