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Thursday, August 27, 2009

Yourfamilytreenow.com Stealing Genealogy Blog Content

A heads up and warning to other genealogy bloggers: a site called Your Family Tree Now which appears to be a blog post aggregator may be violating your copyright.

An example: On August 10, 2009, I posted the article Twitter and Genealogy Conferences here at Destination: Austin Family. That same day, Your Family Tree Now posted a portion of the same article with the same title under an author named "Genealogy."

The consolidated post (the first three lines) on the front page of the blog does not link to my original post nor am I credited with it. And given that the blog is rife with advertising, it appears to violate my Creative Commons License which specifies not-for-profit use only.

Here is a copy of the cease and desist email which I have sent to the site owner:

To The Owner of Yourfamilytreenow.com

This is to advise you that you are using copyrighted and protected material on your website/blog. Your illegal use of an article entitled Twitter and Genealogy Conferences” at http://yourfamilytreenow.com/twitter-and-genealogy-conferences/ is copied from my recent article “Twitter and Genealogy Conferences” at http://destinationaustinfamily.blogspot.com/2009/08/twitter-and-genealogy-conferences.html published at my blog Destination: Austin Family.

What makes your theft so blatant is not only the lack of attribution or link back to the original post, but that you use an author named Genealogy for the article.

This is original content and I am the author and copyright holder. Use of copyright protected material without permission is illegal under copyright laws.

Please take one or more of the following actions immediately:

• Provide compensation for use of my copyright protected material of $1000.00 USD for each article paid via PayPal.

• Remove the plagiarized material immediately.

I expect a response within 5 days to this issue. Thank you for your immediate action on this matter.

Other genealogy blog owners may want to check out Your Family Tree Now to see if their content has been improperly used and lacks attribution.

© 2009, copyright Thomas MacEntee

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Finding A Grave Marker Its Rightful Owner

Just a quick note: I was mentioned at the PatriotLedger.com which is the website of the The Patriot Ledger newspaper in Quincy, Massachusetts today.

Last week, the site ran an article - The Mystery of the Heart-Shaped Grave Marker - trying to match up what was thought to be a grave marker with the proper grave. The only information available was the date of birth and date of death of the woman, Fran Galvin.

Thinking this was a chance to help out, I put my research skills to work and was able to locate the grave at the Massachusetts National Cemetery in Bourne. Realizing that Fran Galvin was buried there with her husband Donald, I figured that the marker which was found must have been a personal commemoration which somehow got separated from its owner.

There are many ways in which genealogists can leverage their research skills and access to online databases to help out others. One fine example is the work that Unclaimed Persons does to match up unclaimed bodies at morgues and medical examiner's offices with their families.

So next time you are reading the news or scanning tweets on Twitter, see if your research savvy can't help out someone else.

© 2009, copyright Thomas MacEntee

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Woodstock Memories

footnote.com is highlighting the Woodstock Music Festival this month as part of its This Month in History series and while I'd like to say it brought back memories, sadly it doesn't. The festival took place 40 years ago this weekend, August 15 - 17, 1969.

Understand that I grew up in Liberty, New York which was probably 10 miles away from Bethel, New York and Max Yasgur's farm where the festival took place. I was not even seven years old yet but for some reason - memories of Woodstock? Nope, ain't got 'em.

Liberty and the county seat Monticello were the biggest towns nearby where people could get food and provisions. I do remember my family in later years talking about all the "hippies" who were camped in the median of the Quickway (NY Rt. 17 which went from the New Jersey border up to Binghamton and beyond). I also remember talk of there being no milk or basics in the stores for days after the festival. How exactly do you prepare for 500,000 people arriving for the weekend? Woodstock for three days became the second largest city in New York state after New York City.

You can see more Woodstock images here at the Woodstock Memories Project. And check out footnote.com's copies of the Poughkeepsie Journal - if you have ancestors from the Hudson Valley like me, you will probably find a great deal of genealogy info such as obituaries and news items at footnote.com.

© 2009, copyright Thomas MacEntee

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

German Genealogy Group Makes Major Database Updates



My readers know that I have German ancestry on my mother's side - namely her mother Anna May Henneberg as well as Anna's mother Frances Pressner. The German Genealogy Group has been a great FREE resource for me during my research - so much so that I decided to join this genealogy society even though I am nowhere near its usual meeting places in New York.

Well the GGG (as I commonly call it) has some great news about updates to its databases:
  • 13,087 names from 54 yearbooks have been added to the yearbooks database which now contains over 140,000 names in 426 yearbooks from around the country.
  • The Southern District Naturalizations database has been updated to include 6,331 repatriations, 2,381 WW II naturalizations, 856 Korean War naturalizations and 209 transferred naturalizations.
  • Joining all the other databases on this site is the index to 735,333 New York City birth records, all Counties, for the years 1901 through 1907.
The German Genealogy Group website offers over 30 different databases and all at a great price: FREE.

I urge you to look at GGG especially if you have German ancestry from the New York City area but also for any ancestry from NYC as well. And if you've found valuable information, think about joining them. Membership is only $15 a year.

© 2009, copyright Thomas MacEntee

Monday, August 10, 2009

Under Construction

Well folks, I am revamping the "look" here at Destination: Austin Family today so don't be surprised if you see some odd layouts - it all depends at what point of our "makeover" you decide to visit.

Given the recent feedback on my GeneaBloggers site, I don't think the "magazine" format - where you get a snippet of a post and have to click "read more" - works and the font size was too small. As I get older, I am finding those blogs that are easiest to read and navigate have a larger font as well as a white or light background.

Thanks for your patience and feel free to let me know what works and doesn't work with the new layout.

Twitter and Genealogy Conferences



There is a lively discussion going on in the genealogy blogging community concerning Twitter and genealogy conferences. The main issue is this:

Does tweeting the proceedings of a presentation constitute a copyright violation of the presenter's materials or could it be considered permissible by the Fair Use doctrine?

The issue was first brought to my attention by Elizabeth O'Neal of the Little Bytes of Life blog who, like me, had attended the Southern California Genealogical Society's Jamboree in Burbank this past June where Twitter was used quite a bit during the Blogger Summit as well as other presentations.

Randy Seaver of the Genea-Musings blog and Janet Hovorka of The Chart Chick blog have both weighed in and I imagine that many more genealogy bloggers who attend conferences will also post about this. For that reason, GeneaBloggers has created a blog post summary at its site - this will probably be the hot topic for the week and as Amy Coffin of the We Tree blog stated on Twitter this morning, will place Twitter under the microscope at the upcoming Federation of Genealogical Societies conference in Little Rock, Arkansas next month.

For what it matters and being someone who lectures on social media and genealogy, here are my thoughts:
  • Personally I don't follow any "play-by-play" tweets on Twitter whether they are about a football game (which I think is silly if I could watch it myself on television) or about a genealogy conference. I find such entries are distracting and tend to litter my Tweetdeck screen.
  • True confession: when someone tweets a presention I use TwitterSnooze and force them into a Twitter nap. If I need to, I can use Twitter search to look at the individual tweets later in the day.
  • I would much rather see a blog post by the person using Twitter during the presentation. As Janet Hovorka mentioned during one of her recent presentations, the wifi went out and not all the points were covered. AncestryInsider did clarify some points in a summary blog post after the presentation.
  • I think there are more pluses than minuses for everyone (the presenter, the genealogical conference, the person using Twitter, and those following the tweets) in using Twitter during presentations. I think that a "best practices" can be developed in terms of such Twitter use which does not stray into the area of being too overly structured or heavy handed. To me, Twitter is all about freedom of speech and I'd hate to see too many "thou shalt nots" bantered about in the genealogy community.
  • I use Twitter as marketing tool not only for Destination: Austin Family but for GeneaBloggers as well. If they haven't already hopped on board the Twitter train, presenters should learn how to use Twitter to their advantage to market themselves and their presentations.
  • As a presenter I would actually not want to see tweets which were verbatim statements from my handouts. While I know it may fall under the Fair Use doctrine (less than three lines of text), if the presenter requests that presentation materials not be tweeted, that should be respected. I'd rather see a summary tweet or true "reporting" in the form of that person's impressions.
  • I predict that when you attend upcoming presentations - be they stand-alone or at genealogical conferences - you will see a statement about tweeting the presentation either made verbally by the presenter or printed in the materials.
  • Some presenters will actively encourage the use of Twitter during their presentations as part of marketing themselves, their presentation and their areas of expertise.
  • Some presenters will request that those who tweet also follow-up with a "report" on their individual blog in case the landscape that is Twitter does not sufficiently communicate the salient points within a 140 character limit. I think this is only fair and not an unreasonable request.
What I appreciate most about this entire issue is that genealogy bloggers are willing to discuss it (within blog posts and on Twitter) and report about it on their sites. This is the power of our community - we can have an exchange of ideas which will impact the greater genealogy community.

As Amy Coffin so deftly mentioned on Twitter, "I sense fear by those who have opinions on Twitter but don't use it or understand the many ways it can be used." Twitter, like other social media tools such as Facebook, are not going away and while many in the genealogy community may not want to embrace them, they at least need to recognize and acknowledge the impact - positive and negative - that they will have on our community.

I look forward to picking up these same discussions when we all meet in person at the next genealogy conference!

© 2009, copyright Thomas MacEntee

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Alzheimer's Redux

I'm not sure what got into me, but I've been thinking it's time for a repost of one of my writings about Alzheimer's Disease and how it has affected me and my family. Mom has been on my mind quite a bit lately and I also have some genealogy friends who are dealing with this same issue in their own families. I just pray that those with Alzheimer's find peace and comfort and that we, their caretakers, can find it as well.

* * *

[This is a repost from October 16, 2007]

I heard the news yesterday that a new blood test was being developed at Stanford University in California that could help detect the probability of developing Alzheimer's Disease within two to six years.

While the results are still preliminary and the next step is to open up the testing to a larger test population, it has had a 91% accuracy so far.

Some of you know that my mother, Jacqueline Austin MacEntee, was diagnosed with dementia, one of the early indicators of Alzheimer's Disease in 2000 at the age of 58. I can relate to you what I and my family had to endure just to get Mom diagnosed.

The diagnosis currently starts with a visit to a doctor for basic tests (blood, liver, cholesterol, heart, etc.) and then being sent to a specialist for neurological testing such as an MRI. Once everything is cleared as to possible causes, comes a visit to a gerontologist and a test consisting of about 30 questions. Questions are basic (the current day or year, the current president, etc.) and some are more complex (reading a small story and then relating what the story was about or who the main character was). This is usually when the diagnosis is positive as to Alzheimer's Disease.

And so it begins. You know it eventually has to end, and how it ends, but it just seems like it never ends.

You notice a marked change in behavior and instances where Mom just isn't herself. Many times you call and ask her what she did over the weekend or what movie she saw and she can't remember. Then it becomes the lack of remembering simple things like how to drive from point A to point B in a small town where Mom has lived for over 40 years. But you also rejoice when your mother utters her disgust about Bush and the others in his administration who've hijacked our democracy. Part of you says "it's just the Alzheimer's" while part of you says it is clarity and another part of you hopes that all the years of discussing your own views have influenced her.

The disease progresses to affect employment and the means of earning a living and surviving financially. You deal with the chief at the village police office where she works as a dispatcher and clerk when he tells her that she has "psychological problems." She loses the second job at a local restaurant because she can no longer handle the bookkeeping responsibilities. You step in to get Mom out on early retirement via Social Security and still you need to fight, hire an attorney, and attend hearings, meetings, etc. But you feel good that you are able to get Mom out on retirement early so that she can enjoy the few good years she has left enjoying movies, shopping, etc.

And the denial, the denial, the denial -- from both Mom, me and the rest of the family -- that this is really happening. Much of the denial is the realization that by watching Mom and the deterioration of her condition, you could be looking in a mirror held up to your face so that you know your own mortality. Even worse, that you come to the realization that this could be you. "There but for the grace of God . ."

You drag your partner into the mess, the person you want to spend the rest of your life with, the person who may very well be doing all this for you one day. But you know that he'd gladly make the sacrifices just as you would for him or for his parents.

Then there are the financial scammers that come out of the woodwork. Her "financial advisor" at New York Life who talked her into an annuity that only made money for the advisor. And then the same advisor selling Mom expensive health books and vitamins as a treatment for the disease. I know - I cleaned out the house, saw the books, and have the receipts.

And as the months progress into years, the gerontologist's test is given at least yearly and the number of correct answers dwindles from 22 to 20 to 17.

You decide to take the car away after several instances of U-turns through the grassy median of a 4-lane highway. You notice unexplained dents and dings to the car or even to the house or garage. You have to fight and get a letter from the doctor to give to DMV in order to take the car away.

If you are smart or lucky or both, you find a good elder law attorney and you do this early when Mom can adequately communicate her wishes. Wishes such as "do not resuscitate," funeral and burial, will, assets, care, etc. The power of attorney kicks in and you have so much more responsibility than just making sure Mom is comfortable. But you know you and your family are lucky, and smart, because you did this early. You didn't wait to find out that investments were sucked dry by scammers who sell home improvements or driveway repaving or annuities. Boy were you lucky.

While you sort through the tangled financial web of the past five years, you try to arrange for in-home care for Mom, knowing that having the familiar around her is the best thing. You arrange for adult day care at the local hospital where on a given day she is probably the youngest one there and most definitely the most ambulatory. You bring in local women who specialize in elder care to stay with her the other 16 hours of the day and also to transport her to day care and doctors' appointments. You want to keep her in the home she bought 25 years ago, as a divorced parent with two boys and little credit. You know she deserves this and you and the rest of the family make sacrifices so this will happen.

You decide that while you've enjoyed living in California for the past 20 years, you can't handle all the tasks and responsibilities from so far away. The telephone, e-mail and the internet only work up to a point. You move to Chicago so you are at least a short two hour flight away, with three flights to New York each hour from O'Hare. You feel blessed because your employer in California believes in you and your work and the sacrifices you are making so much that they let you work from home in Chicago since they don't have an office there. You thank Heller Ehrman LLP and all your work family from California to London for being so supportive.

You get so caught up in the politics of family, and the squabbling and the pettiness that you decide to walk away altogether. You decide it isn't that you aren't up to the responsibility but that you don't know why family has to make it all so complicated - especially those who are selfish and want this to be about them and not about Mom. A simple Thanksgiving day phone call turns into a yelling match with your aunt who doesn't know how to handle Mom or why she has been accused of stealing a book or moving furniture. You decide you need a break so you don't call for close to six months and you drop out. And you feel guilty, as you should. And every time you are willing to put it behind you and focus on what Mom needs now because you are back in the mix, someone is there to remind you of how you walked away.

And besides bleeding tears, you bleed money. Your mother's money. The money she worked so hard for at the phone company before she went out on retirement due to a bad back. The money she earned working for the state at the police station. The SSI money. You run credit reports and find out there are over 100 credit cards in her name, many from stores like Macy's (where she had six accounts!) with clerks who say "would you like to save 15% today by opening a Macy's account?" knowing that Mom already had other Macy's accounts but the $5 commission was all that mattered. You close all the accounts, cash out IRAs and that damned annuity at a loss. You end up paying federal and state income tax as if Mom earned over $100,000 that year all because you had to cash in the investments for her care. But you also know that this is the best thing to do in this moment because it means months of in-home care, and safety and security. That's why we save for rainy days and right now it is pouring.

And the number of correct answers, at least on that test, becomes 15, then 12, then 10. For the rest of the process there are no correct answers, there are no touchstones because you've never been this way before. Oh how you don't want to be here right now but oh how you do because it's all about Mom.

Besides untangling finances, you have to untangle agreements and understandings that Mom entered into with other family members but had not the mental capacity nor the right to enter into. You deal with the house in Florida and you deal with Mom's home. You deal with the Grahamsville property that Mom inherited from her great-grandmother (Therese McGinnes Austin) for all her years of sacrifice and care. You realize that Mom entered into a purchase agreement with a family member who has since rented the property out but that person can't prove their payments to Mom or for taxes. You know that property meant so much to Mom as a kid but you also know the best thing is to let it go and realize that she was taken advantage of and to just deal with it. You deal, you deal, you deal. Until you think all the cards are dealt.

You fight with other family members who either think they know how to care for an Alzheimer's patient or want to keep denying that their sister has the disease. Because there's a small chance, given that the oldest sister already died from Alzheimer's, that you are next on the list to get it. But you also find other supportive family members who are glad to pitch in and actually make so many sacrifices for your mother when you know they already have their hands full.

Then comes the time to talk to Mom about finding a "facility" for her long-term care when either the finances or patience runs out, or both. You dread the discussion you have to have on Mother's Day, of all days, but you find she takes it well. Then you wonder if she really understands that a facility means a nursing home. You wonder if she is clear enough to figure it out over the next few weeks and retreat back into the denial stage. You have visions of that scene in the Exorcist when the priest puts his mother in an inner city nursing home yelling "Demi, why you do this to me? I'm afraid Demi." But you realize that when you see her a month later that she's lost over 20 lbs, she's eating better, she has lots of activities. She is safe, she is happy, she is living in the moment.

Next you have to clean out the house you grew up in and you don't know where to start. You make six trips in one year, buying boxes when you step off the plane to Newark. Working long hours sorting through every scrap of paper, every wadded up tissue in a sweater or pants pocket because it might contain something of value, every book some of which would have a gold bracelet as a bookmark. You remember that Mom took care of your great-grandmother and your great-aunt (Ethel McCrickert Hannan) in that same house and realize that their possessions are still there. You get angry when you find all the crap and junk she's been sold, be it greeting cards ("Why are there 100 of the same Thanksgiving card from a Hallmark store? I know I won't ever live to see 100 Thanksgivings!"), or the wrapping paper that people sell for their kid's school, or the needless health books, vitamins, and other quackery and the expensive overpriced dolls from China which are probably decorated with lead paint. And you hope that however crappy or tacky or useless, these things brought her joy and made her happy, even if for a moment.

You sort, you throw away. You become cold, efficient, without feeling as you decide not to pause and look at a photo album - you just toss it in The Box. You donate clothing to thrift stores, you sell antique items that no one wants and that you can't send home to Chicago. Your aunt has a great idea to donate most of the 100+ dolls to a shelter for battered women and children. And when you are back home, you enjoy The Box and all its photos, diaries, etc. later in the year - it is the beginning of this project and other genealogy projects. You feel lucky to have photos from your ancestors and to begin to know who you are.

You have lots of help from family members that you can never thank enough. You didn't do it alone although you feel lonely and have a deep sense of loss most of the time. You thank your Uncle Jerry for all the help from the beginning - for attending hearings, meetings, taking care of finances, arranging in-home care and the nursing home. All of this was not possible without him and without Nan's support. You thank your Uncle Lem and Aunt Judy for helping clean out the house. You thank your Aunt Joan for providing a year of room and board to Mom despite the aggravation and the problems. You thank Beth for making the trip from Delhi and visiting. You thank all your other relatives who make visits at the nursing home, visits Mom won't remember five minutes later, but visits that you know make her happy despite the visitor being saddened by what they see or wanting to cry. And you thank all her friends, even the ones who no longer keep in touch because it is just too uncomfortable.

You keep in touch with family and friends who call and want an update on Mom. Or you get updates from them when they go for a visit at the nursing home. While you notice the deterioration in her condition on each visit, you hear from relatives that she has an ankle brace due to a fall, or this problem or that problem. And still you know you've done the best thing for Mom.

The time you get to spend with Mom becomes shorter and shorter - not because you don't want to visit, but because her attention span doesn't enable her to focus on any one thing for more than 30 seconds. You call the nurses’ station to talk to her and after a short conversation, you realize she put the phone on the counter and walked away. Not because there was something more interesting, but because she can't focus.

And the list of correct answers to that test are now in the single digits. You know what the future holds and you dread it. You don't want to go through the first time Mom doesn't know who you are, but you know it will happen. You already see the difficulty she has in eating, getting on and off an elevator (she won't get on because she thinks you are getting off to visit her), or getting in and out of a car. You know what the next steps are because just like this article, you've read them in some blog or book or news article or website. You know Mom will suddenly stop talking, stop walking, stop eating, stop breathing.

But you will always know that you are your mother's son. And that she knew that too.

I've decided that I can either be bitter or I can be better. And bitter won't change my mother's condition - just mine. I choose better and the way I can do that is to:

a) talk about my mother's experience with people like writing this article;

b) mention the bad times as well as the good times, the negative as well as the positive but focus more on the positive - the negative is there as a reminder but not something to regret for it can't be changed;

c) not regret the journey of Alzheimer's for me, for Mom and for the others involved - for a journey has lessons;

d) understand that I did and do the most that is possible for my mother's care given the circumstances, finances and that I was lucky to have other family members involved; and

e) honor my mother and the way she raised me by not forgetting her sacrifices and her love, her challenges and her gifts, her mistakes and her accomplishments.

After all this, would I want to take a blood test, or any test, that would help predict whether or not I was to have Alzheimer's Disease? You're damned right I would. Not only would it help progress the research that has already been done, but it would help me prepare for the future. And I could live life and every day as if it were important and my last. I wouldn't make someone else go through that dark twisting tunnel of care unguided and with those feelings of helplessness. Knowledge is power and power, be it the power of health, finances or love, can help you conquer all adversities.

Would you take the test?

[This is the first off-topic topic that I've posted but in way it does relate to genealogy in that some forms of Alzheimer's Disease is hereditary or genetic (I believe the percentage is 15%)]

Saturday, August 8, 2009

My Sweet Sixteen - My 16 Great-Grandparents

It is time again for Saturday Night Fun - and thanks to Randy Seaver at Genea-Musings we have a nice challenge tonite:

1) List your 16 great-grandparents in pedigree chart order. List their birth and death years and places.

2) Figure out the dominant ethnicity or nationality of each of them.

3) Calculate your ancestral ethnicity or nationality by adding them up for the 16 - 6.25% for each (obviously, this is approximate).

4) If you don't know all 16 of your great-grandparents, then do it for the last full generation you have.

5) Write your own blog post, or make a comment on Facebook or in this post.

Thanks to a recent brick wall coming down, I can now complete these tasks!

My 16 great-great grandparents

1. John W. McEntee is the son of Edward McEntee and Ann E. Freer. He was born on Jan 21, 1840 in Gardiner, Ulster, New York, USA. He died on Jan 21, 1918 in Gardiner, Ulster, New York, USA.

2. Elmira Wood is the daughter of William Wood and Elizabeth C. Unknown. She was born on Dec 10, 1851 in New York, New York, New York, USA. She died on Dec 10, 1882 in Gardiner, Ulster, New York, USA.

3. Jacob L. DeGroodt is the son of Charles C. DeGroodt and Elisabeth Mariah Finehout. He was born on Sep 22, 1860 in New York, New York, New York, USA. He died on Jan 09, 1933.

4. Georgiana Simpson is the daughter of Elijah Simpson and Rachel Unknown. She was born Feb 1862 in New York, New York, New York, USA. She died on Nov 10, 1938 in Walkill, Ulster, New York, USA.

5. Martin Slattery. He was born in Ireland.

6. Margaret Leehive is the daughter of John Leehive and Unknown. She was born Abt. 1867 in Greenwich, London, England. She died Bef. 1900.

7. William R. Krom is the son of Jacob Markle Krom and Jane F. Roosa. He was born on Jun 25, 1847 in Marbletown, Ulster, New York, USA. He died on Nov 19, 1891 in Olive, Ulster, New York, USA.

8. Sarah Ann Christiana is the daughter of Jacob L. Christiana and Mary M. Smith. She was born Abt. 1851 in Olive, Ulster, New York, USA. She died on Feb 26, 1926 in Gardiner, Ulster, New York, USA.

9. William Dence Austin is the son of Ira H. Austin and Hannah Dence. His birth on May 24, 1863 (Boonville, Oneida, New York). He died on Mar 26, 1932 in Bronx, Bronx, New York, USA.

10. Catherine M. O'Keefe is the daughter of David O'Keefe and Catherine Sullivan. She was born on Sep 30, 1862 in Lowville, Lewis, New York, USA. She died on Nov 08, 1946 in Bronx, Bronx, New York, USA.

11. Matthew McGinnis. He was born Abt. 1851 in Ireland. He died on Feb 15, 1899 in New York, New York, New York, USA.

12. Bridget Farren is the daughter of John Farren and Ellen Doherty. She was born Oct 1861 in Belfast, Antrim, Ireland. She died Aft. 1930 in New York, New York, New York, USA.

13. Gustavus Henneberg is the son of Gustave Henneberg and Magdalena Schmidt. He was born on Jul 06, 1864 in Germany. His death on Aug 15, 1942 in Queens, Queens, New York, USA.

14. Magdalena Zwicker. She was born on Jun 12, 1864 in Germany. Her death on Feb 10, 1937 in Queens, Queens, New York, USA.

15. Robert F. Pressner is the son of Johann Pressner and Franziska Unknown. He was born on Jun 11, 1858 in Pogwitz, Austria. His death on Feb 07, 1897 in Manhattan, New York, New York, USA.

16. Anna Herring is the daughter of Franz Xaver Herring and Anna Manch. She was born on Nov 13, 1860 in Aixheim, Tuttlingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.

Ethnicity

The dominant ethnicity is European - Y-DNA haplogroup is R.

Nationalities

5 Irish (31%), 4 English (25%), 4 German (25%), 3 Dutch (19%).

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

High-Ya! Kicking Down That Brick Wall



Photo: Richard Henneberg and Frances Pressner, abt. 1911, Bronx, New York. Digital photograph. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE], Chicago, Illinois, 2009.

[This post was composed for the 22nd Edition of The Carnival of Central and Eastern European Genealogy hosted at Al's Polish- American Genealogy Research blog]

Last month I posted about how after many years I was able to break through my Pressner brick wall and I wanted to bring my readers up to date on some more breakthroughs involving my Pressner and Henneberg lines.

Anna May Henneberg (1912 - 1965) was my maternal grandmother who lived in the Bronx, New York and died in 1965 - thus I don't have many memories of her or her family. Anna Henneberg's parents were Richard Henneberg (1988 - 1941) and Frances Pressner (1889 - 1960) and for years I was unable to identify the parents of Frances.

I've been working with my 2nd cousin Wendy who I met on Facebook and we've been sharing Henneberg and Pressner data for months now. We also both have our family trees posted on Ancestry so we can keep tabs on each other's progress.

Wendy also is the one who has been handling requests with the New York City office of Vital Records to obtain death and marriage certificates. She and I have been using Stephen P. Morse's One Step website to identify the exact certificate numbers and then she takes care of placing the order. And then the waiting and waiting takes place.

Remember what it was like to get something fun in the mailbox? Well Wendy knows that and the anticipation involved - she says it is exciting and she can't wait to see which mysteries will be solved when the certificates arrive.

Well Wendy hit the jackpot last week. The marriage certificate arrived for Richard Henneberg and Frances Pressner which revealed the name of Frances' parents (Robert Pressner and Anna Herring) as well as confirming the maiden name of Richard' mother (Zwicker). Also key were the names of the witnesses - Adam and Julia Beyerman. Subsequent census searching revealed that Julia was in fact Julia Pressner and the sister of Frances Pressner.

And if that were not enough, further research of census and immigration records has brought us the name of Robert Pressner's parents (Johann Pressner and Franciska ______ from Austria) as well as Anna Herring's parents (Albert Herring and Emily _____).

By getting copies of the marriage certificate and then supplementing it with further research, my cousin and I could add two more generations to our family tree. As a side benefit, I've gotten Wendy interested enough in genealogy (and she is so good at the research) that she thinks genealogy might be a new profession for her!

Leaving no stone unturned, getting out and doing non-Internet based genealogy research, and being persistant is the key to breaking through those brick walls!

SNGF: Genealogy Threes

Randy Seaver at Genea-Musings has posted his weekly Saturday Night Genealogical Fun challenge and I thought I might give it a go. The challenge is to give three responses to the following statements:

* Three genealogical libraries I frequent

True confessions: I don't get out much. Seriously. Between looking for full-time employment and running various blogs like GeneaBloggers, as well as working on genealogy presentations to give over the next few months, I am not left with much time.

The three libraries/archives that I love to visit, and I wish I could do so more often are:


* Three places I've visited on genealogy trips

Lowville, New York where my great-grandfather John Ralph Austin was born in 1896.
North Kingstown, Rhode Island where my 10th great-grandfather Robert Austin was born in 1638.
Westerly, Rhode Island where by 9th great-grandfather Joseph Crandall was born in 1661.

* Three genealogy societies I belong to (or want to)


* Three websites that help my research


* Three ancestral graves that I've visited

Hugo Freer in New Paltz, NY - my 8th great-grandfather
Elmer A. MacEntee in New Paltz, NY - my great-grandfather
Edward McEntee in New Paltz, NY - my 3rd great-grandfather

* Three ancestral places I want to visit

County Monaghan, Ireland where my MacEntee/McEntee ancestors lived.
Leipzig, Germany where my Henneberg ancestors lived.
Schenectady, New York where by Putman ancestors lived.

* Three brickwall ancestors I want to research more
Elizabeth Finehout, my 3rd great-grandmother
John Leehive, my 3rd great-grandfather
Matthew McGinnes, my 2nd great-grandfather

© 2009, copyright Thomas MacEntee

Carnival of Central and Eastern European Genealogy, 21st Edition




Welcome to the 21st edition of the Carnival of Central and Eastern European Genealogy! I am hosting this edition here at Destination: Austin Family with the theme being:


Summer! How did your ancestors celebrate the glorious season of summer both back home in Europe and here in America? Did they need to make adjustments once here in America since the weather was different? Or summer customs were different? Include memories, photos, recipes – anything that helps tell summertime stories.


The first submission is from Jessica Oswalt of Jessica's Genejournal with My German Ancestors and Their Summertime Experiences. As she tries to compares summers in the Great Lakes region to those of her ancestors in Germany, Jessica concludes that overall the summers were probably very similar.


Here at Destination: Austin Family, I've contributed Summertime for My German Ancestors. My Henneberg and Pressner ancestors arrived from Germany in the late 1860s and 1870s when New York City and more specifically, the Bronx, were likely less crowded and less humid than today.


A small edition this time but lots of fun and informative still! The 22nd edition of the Carnival of Central and Eastern European Genealogy will be hosted by Al Wierzba of Al's Polish Genealogy Research Blog. The theme is roadblocks and breakthroughs encountered during your genealogy research. All carnival submissions should be sent to Al at alwierz@gmail.com no later than Saturday, August 8th, 2009.