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Monday Genea-pourri, Week of June 22–28, 2026

Outside activities included phenology, and two short trips to the History Center and library. I was busy this week with GRIP. Genealogy Genealogy Volunteer/Work: I volunteered at the History Center for a couple of hours on Tuesday and Wednesday after my GRIP class. Basically, I had time to just catch up with what is needed and answering a couple of queries. I was the Zoom host on Saturday for the CGS webinar on newspaper research. They held it live at the new site, so it was a hybrid presentation. Genealogy Meetings:  I hosted the RootsMagic SIG but only one person came. Genealogy Writing/Research : In my free time this week, I searched for deeds for Denis and John Tierney in Nepean Township, Carleton County, Ontario (or Upper Canada). Blog Posts Published: When Circumstances Forces Father Hork to Leave For the theme of “a hard choice” I wrote about Father Albert Hork having to choose to leave a parish that was too poor to care for him. Checking the California Vote...

12 for ’26: Finding Deed for Tierney Family in Nepean Township, Carleton County

In the last post about the Tierney family, Margaret (Tierney) Gleeson had grown up in Carleton County with her parents, John Tierney and Ann Murray, and was one of eleven children born to them. The earliest census that John Tierney was enumerated in was 1842, the census of Canada West in the Upper Canada Province. By this time, John owned 100 acres of property and was a farmer. So, property records should show when he acquired this land. Land Records The earliest deed I located was dated 3 August 1830. William Hamilton of Nepean, sold about 100 acres of land located in the rear half of lot number 29 in the 6th concession, to Denis Tierney and John Tierney, both of Nepean. They paid £87.10 (87 pounds, 10 shillings) of lawful money of Upper Canada. It is very likely that Denis Tierney was John’s father. [1] Before going further, the layout of concessions needs to be discussed. Land was surveyed and divided into concessions and then into 35 lots. Each lot was about 200 acres unless so...

SNGF -- Your Revolutionary War Era Ancestors

Calling all Genea-Musings Fans:  It's Saturday Night again -  Time for some more Genealogy Fun!! Our assignment Randy Seaver of Genea-Musings, is to: 1)  We all have ancestors who were alive in 1776, and some of them may have celebrated the signing of the Declaration of Independence or even served in the military during the War.  2)  Describe one or more of your ancestors who lived in that time or served in the military.   Here's mine: Well, one cannot assume that every genealogist has an ancestor in America during the revolution. I do, but I have not documented many of my ancestors in that time period. My husband does have some early German immigrants who may have been here then, too, but I also, have not documented them. I first searched my RootsMagic database for “revolution” to see what folks might turn up. This is what I found. None of these people have been documented by me. William Whitfield , father of Elizabeth Whitfield who m...

Happy 15th Blogiversary!

Fifteen years ago, I started a blog on January 15, centered around my maternal grandmother’s family. It was too confining, so in June of 2011, I started this blog, so I could also write about my grandfather’s family, my father’s family, and my husband’s family. That began the start of My Trails into the Past . 15 years is a nice round number and I still enjoy blogging. I write at least three posts a week: one for 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks , one for Saturday Night Genealogy Fun , and one for Genea-pourri about my genealogy pursuits of the past week. So doing that means close to 150 posts a year. Of course, some are posted on my other blog, Mam-ma’s Southern Family , if the theme has something to do with her family. This year, I started a new meme, working on twelve family lines, one per month. That has increased the number of posts I have written per week. So far in 2026, I have written about 80 posts and I wrote 80 posts last year since June 27. 12 for ‘26 This is a new theme this...

Checking the California Voter Registrations for a Female Ancestor

I am taking the virtual GRIP class “Marching Toward Change: Reformers, Crises, and Movements that Transformed 19th and 20th Century America,” coordinated by Katherine R. Willson. One session yesterday (Tuesday) was about women’s rights and suffrage taught by Gena Philibert-Ortega. I started thinking if I had checked out that database for my female family members. California gave the vote to women in 1911. My grandmother’s aunt, Mary Martha (Gleeson) Gilbert, was living in California at that time. She was the daughter of John Gleeson and Margaret Tierney, and my great-grandaunt. Warren, Mary, Anna (her sister), Lorene (Anna's daughter), Muriel, John Sullivan (Anna's father) c. 1923 Did she register to vote? Ancestry has a California Voter Registration collection, so let's check it out. I did not find her in 1912, but did in 1914. She and her husband, Warren E. Gilbert, were listed living at 2343 Scarff Street in Los Angeles. He registered as a Democrat and she registe...

When Circumstances Forces Father Hork to Leave

Father Albert Hork, my great-grandfather’s brother, was a Roman Catholic priest. He was assigned to many parishes in Nebraska, Arkansas, and Oregon. He served in Nebraska between 1888 and 1904, when the communities were small and the areas just being settled. He tended to serve those communities with German immigrant settlers. Learning about his service from diocese records only gave the facts of locations where he served and dates of those services. Newspaper articles tended to fill in the rest of what I know. Sometimes he served as the parish priest of one church and the roving priest for neighboring church whose parish were not large enough to support a full-time priest. He was assigned as the first full-time priest at Frances Church in Randolph, Nebraska. Before his arrival, visiting priest served the parish on an irregular basis. They might say a mass once a month, baptize any children born since the last visit, and then come back again in a month. The first priest who did tha...

Monday Genea-pourri, Week of June 15–21, 2026

Outside activities included a trip on the weekend to Santa Rosa to babysit the granddog and give a genealogy presentation. Otherwise, I was sick the early part of the week and stayed home.   Genealogy Genealogy Volunteer/Work: The only work I did was to give a presentation about research plans to the Sonoma County Genealogical Society, an in-person seminar. This was my last event with the group. I turned my secretary binders over to the new secretary. The seminar went well and many people came up to me at the break thanking me for the talk. I think they enjoyed how I involved the audience during the presentation. They all seemed to enjoy the second presentation on railroad records, too, which was very good. Genealogy Meetings:  I attended the Kinseekers NARA SIG on Monday but didn’t participate much as I was not feeling well. I shared that I am getting a bankruptcy file from NARA Kansas City soon. Genealogy Writing/Research : I attended two session of Level Up writin...