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Ancestor 21: Mary Sheehan

Mary Sheehan, the wife of Jeremiah Sullivan and mother of my great-grandfather, John H. Sullivan, was born in County Cork in Ireland. Her place of birth was consistently written as Ireland and her tombstone in Motley Cemetery in Todd County, Minnesota states County Cork. Like many Irish-born illiterate immigrants, the date of birth is fuzzy. Records of her birth in records recorded in the United States range from 1822 to 1832. She was 38 in 1870, living with her 40-year-old mining husband, Jeremiah, in Franklin township in Houghton County, Michigan.[ 1 ]  This suggests an 1832 birth. In 1880, the family lived on a farm they homesteaded in Todd County, Minnesota and she was 53 years old.[ 2 ]  This suggests an 1827 birth. Her husband was 61, causing him to age 20 years.  Five years later, she was 60 years old.  She now has an 1825 birth. Now “Jerry” was 70, certainly more than five years older.[ 3 ] Her tombstone's death date of 24 Feb 1892 and age of 70 years calculates to a birth

Monday Genea-pourri, Week of November 11-17, 2024

I have completed two hundred and forty-three (243) weeks of semi-lockdown due to Covid-19. My only outside activities were trips to the History Center, the meadow for phenology, and the Western Railway Museum.  Genealogy Genealogy Meetings:    I met with my recertification accountability group on Monday and Amigos on Wednesday. We had good discussions. At Kinseekers we learned about WWI Index and Return cards from Ohio, Korean-era draft cards coming online at Ancestry, the Air Force records at the AFHRA, and WWII US Medical Research Center created by European reenactors. Jacqueline and I hosted the last Roundtable meeting on Wednesday. The Oakland FamilySearch Center staff meeting was on Friday. Many had good ideas for future classes to have.  Genealogy Writing/Research: Most of my time was spent preparing for the two SLIG classes and my AppGen class, so I did no writing or research except for working on the two blog posts this week. Blog Post Published: Traditions of the Gorrell and

Traditions of the Gorrell & Hork Families

What does one write when our families do not have cultural traditions? Are our family traditions cultural at all? Hork Family Traditions When growing up, we had some holiday traditions. Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners were always at the Hork house, as our house was large enough to seat everyone. The maternal grandparents and great-aunt came to us, bringing salads and dessert. Mom cooked the rest: turkey for Thanksgiving and a ham for Christmas. The side courses were always candied yams, mashed potatoes and gravy with giblets, cornbread stuffing, and peas with onions. Hors d′oeuvres consisted of potato chips with onion dip, carrot, celery, radish, and green onion sticks, and smoked baby oysters. Dessert was a variety of pies: pumpkin, mincemeat, pecan, or apple. My mother made us recipe books when we married and here is her recipe for the turkey and stuffing. Gorrell Family Traditions At the Gorrell house, they also had turkey on Thanksgiving with a sage stuffing, mashed potatoes, gr

Monday Genea-pourri, Week of October 28-November 3, 2024

I have completed two hundred and forty-two (242) weeks of semi-lockdown due to Covid-19. My only outside activities were trips to the History Center, Oakland FamilySearch Center, to the bank and bookstore, and to Tony’s for an ops session.  Genealogy Genealogy Meetings:    I met with Jacqueline on Thursday instead of Monday, due the the AppGen class starting this week. I also met with the NGS conference committee. At the FamilySearch Center in Oakland, I was interviewed by members of the Project 2026 committee for the California Genealogical Society. The APG NorCal group also met this week. Our two field trips were included in this month’s eNews and we discussed future field trips. Genealogy Writing/Research: I worked on my case study adding visual effects of bullet points and a map. I met with two others separately where we gave feedback to each other on our work. I got some great feedback and we promised to meet again in the new year after working on our papers. Blog Post Published:

Colorful in Youth; Black and White in Elder Years

In the years I knew my aunt, Bev, she wore what I considered drab clothing. She came to our Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners wearing black, white, or silver outfits. I could never understand why she had to be so uncolorful. These colors did match her silver-gray hair, and she always wore bright red lipstick to brighten up her face. Beryl on the right, her sister-in-law, Pansy on the left Pansy (left) & Beryl (right) It wasn’t until later that I learned that black and other dark, solid colors have a slimming effect, and that was likely why she dressed that way.  I have a collection of color slides of my aunt. These images delight my sisters and me. They are of her posing in various outfits probably in her home so that she could change into them easily. I have no idea who took the images, but as we can see, she was very photogenic. These images prove she wore lots of color in her younger years. #52Ancestors-Week 45: Colorful This is my seventh year working on this year-long prompt,

Monday Genea-pourri, Week of October 28-November 3, 2024

I have completed two hundred and forty-one (241) weeks of semi-lockdown due to Covid-19. My only outside activities were trips to the History Center twice and Kaiser for Covid & flu vaccines.  Genealogy Genealogy Meetings:    My recertification accountability group met on Monday morning. We’re meeting twice a month. The CCCGS Roundtable met next on Monday and there was lots of discussion about DNA and I shared about my trip to the FamilySearch Library. Jaqueline and I met on Tuesday and we discussed the webinar we attended on blueprints to help with writing.   Genealogy Writing/Research: I continued working on my Polly case study. The Assemblage class’s homework was to work only on the title, pull quote, introduction, and conclusion. I submitted it in time for peer review. I like that Jan also gives us feedback. It’s becoming obvious that I still need a little more research and some correlation and analysis before the main writing can be completed. One afternoon, I gathered newspap

SNGF -- Do You Have Any Ancestors from Whom You Descend Two (or more) Times?

Calling all Genea-Musings Fans:  It's Saturday Night again -  Time for some more Genealogy Fun!! Our mission tonight from Randy Seaver of Genea-Musings is to:  1)   Do you have any ancestors from which you descend two (or more) times ? [thank you to Linda Stufflebean for suggesting this topic!]  Here's mine: I do not have this situation. My parents are not related in any way, one family has been here in the U.S. since colonial times, and the other came in the 19th Century. My husband’s family is the same. His mother’s family is from Sweden and his father’s family is from Cornwall and Germany. However, my husband’s mother, Thelma, is related to her cousin in two ways: first cousin and second cousin. Her mother’s brother, John Lundquist married Signe Johnson. They were first cousins. John’s parents were Matilda Erickson & Per Alfred Lundquist. Signe’s parents were Carolina Eriksson and Charles Emil Johnson. Carolina and Matilda were sisters, daughters of Karl Erickson and St