Wednesday, November 30, 2011

My Blog is Decked Out for Christmas!

Once again, as you can see, Destination: Austin Family has taken on a holiday look! I'd appreciate any feedback in the comments area as to what works, doesn't work etc.

Also, in case you want to do you own holiday decorating at your site, check out these resources over at GeneaBloggers:
© 2011, copyright Thomas MacEntee

Friday, November 25, 2011

Leftover Ancestors - 2011 Edition


Last year's edition of  Leftover Ancestors was so delicious, that I couldn't help going for a second serving.  Here it is again!

Thanksgiving Day
  • You knew there would be a family Gathering, and it is inevitable that there would be some family Feuds as well as family Fight.
  • And I also found a Bernard S. Turkey Day in the California Voter Registrations – that’s a way to get into the holiday spirit, no?
Turkeys
  • Do you think there would there be Turkeys in the US Census? But of course! But not as many Tom Turkeys as you might think – although in 1920 there is a Big Turkey in Todd, South Dakota and a Primo Turkey in Franklin, Illinois.
  • There’s a John Turkey Legs along with his wife Lydia Turkey Legs in Big Horn, Montana in 1920! And even a Wish Bone in the Washington State and Territorial Census in 1887. Well, who doesn’t have a few turkeys in their own family tree, right?
Side Dishes
  • Side dishes are well represented this holiday season as well, with various Cranberrys although I can’t verify that any were sauced. Casseroles are covered as well.
  • There’s a bumper crop of Potatoes and while some might be sweet, a Sweet Potato could not be found. Plenty of Yams, my favorites being Yostus Yam and Stray Yam. I would avoid Harry Yam however.
  • In case you were wondering, there was no Mashed Potato but plenty of other people who are Mashed, including Mashed Carpenter, and Mashed Noggie. Another fave: Mashed Clampit, from North Carolina, of course. One note: scrolling down through the Masheds you come upon many listings for nuns, such as Sister M. Joseph, Sister M. Elise. Is there some order of the Masheds that I missed out on?
  • Plenty of Stuffings and Stuffins with some Dressings as well. Also, you may call it Corn but some call it Maize. You’ll find most of the Green Beans in the South but not living anywhere near a Casserole (see above). Anyone for Beets? Not sure if any of them went to Harvard.
  • And finally, you just can’t eat all these good dishes without gravy. I present Gravy Cooks – from the 1930 US Census, Phoenix, Arizona. In case you were wondering, yes, there are several that arrived by boat.
Desserts
  • For dessert there are the usual Pies but which do you prefer? If you aren’t sure there is a Trial Pie and for those who’ve overeaten, a Minnie Pie or even a Zero Pie. There are also those who just want Cake.
Cleanup
  • Eventually you have to deal with the Dishes as well as the Silver Ware – why she was bland, I know not except that may have been her maiden name. Wash the Glasses, even the ones that are Chip and gather up all the Napkins.
* * *

And if we’re lucky and fortunate, we’ll all be back to do it again next year! I hope you all had a great Thanksgiving!

Photo: Thanksgiving Leftovers via Flickr, used under Creative Commons License 3.0.

Disclaimer: See Disclosure Statement for more information on the material connections I have with Ancestry.com and various genealogy and non-genealogy vendors.

© 2011, copyright Thomas MacEntee

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

I Give Thanks - 2011 Edition



It's that time once again for this year's edition of I Give Thanks. Again, 2011 has been filled with challenges, but with blessings as well. And, as the song goes, "I'm Still Here."

I give thanks for . . .
  • for all those that went before me. That they persevered and scratched out a life when they landed in America. From Jan Pootman who arrived in 1661 in Albany, New York, to Matthew McGinnes who came from Ireland and became a citizen in 1888. They have taught me that nothing should be taken for granted and that the world doesn't owe you a thing. You make the world you live in.
  • a nation where I can enjoy many freedoms that others cannot.
    • for the strong, independent women in my life - both the dead and the living - who decided that they weren't going to accept life at face value or the way society told them to. These women were fairly conservative, mostly poor, and didn't see themselves as suffragettes or feminists or women's libbers. They just had an innate sense of what was right. And did what they had to do to give their children more than just food and shelter. They gave the gifts of opportunity, laughter, hugs, shoulders to cry on, examples of how to live, faith, wisdom and love.
    • for the men in my life - despite the fact that they have often left all too soon. Grandfathers, fathers and brothers who started families but didn't stick around to see how they finished. These men have taught me how not to behave, how not to treat women and children, and how not to handle responsibility.
    • the ability to get out of bed each morning, of my own will and strength.
    • the wisdom to understand the difference between what I must do and what I want to do; most times I am truly blessed, for they are the same.
    • that I live in a time and place where I can be who I am.  And I can accept others as they are.  And I can voice an opinion.  And I can listen to the views of others.
    • the knowledge that I must let go of what is in my hands in order to receive the next gift.
    • the desire to play the entire keyboard that is life, not just the most common keys.
    • an online community of genealogy colleagues whose support is equal to none.
    • for the family of fellow genea-bloggers, how they inspire me, how they challenge me, how they make me think.  They are more than just a group of memory gatherers: they animate facts such as birth dates and death dates; they bring to life how their ancestors lived and loved; and they often share the personal, from reflections to feelings, from past to present.
    • a career in genealogy and family history, doing what I absolutely love.
    • a sense of humor.
    • a roof over my head and a meal on the table.
    • the responsibility and duty of caring for an aging parent.  I am thankful for the journey that is and has been Mom. Where we've traveled, especially in the past 11 years, is not a trip you'll ever find in a guide book.  Despite all that's been written about Alzheimer's Disease, especially early-onset, no guide book exists, for each journey is unique.  I can never say thank you enough not just to the woman who brought me into this world but to someone from whom I learned life's lessons.  Mom gave me my work ethic, my sensitivity, my love of learning.  We didn't always agree but she also let me know that was okay too.  She also taught me how to say, "Thank You."
    • the friends and loved ones who have passed on this year and what their lives meant to me.
    • a universe that bends towards justice.
    • memories of what was and the hope for what may be.
    I give thanks.

    © 2010, copyright Thomas MacEntee

    Sunday, November 13, 2011

    Thomas' Morning Tech Routine


    I know you all have been waiting to find out just how I do it each morning. Well, at least Jill Ball over at Geniaus wants to know and with her prompt, Genealogists - What's your Morning Tech Routine?, I am only too glad to oblige.

    Believe me, it is not a glamorous routine. I don't have a staff of minions to do my bidding so all the work falls on me each morning. Much depends upon how I've slept the night before and whether I had a bout of insomnia or not. Here goes:

    1. Must make a pot of coffee.  I grind my own beans, am particular about the bean to water ratio, a dash of cinnamon.  I have my ways.  And don't even try to call or talk to me until I have that huge cup in my hand.

    2. Computer boots up while I am making coffee. Check Yahoo News and the Chicago Tribune websites.

    3.  Go to Google Reader, log in as GeneaBloggers and tag all the blog posts that match that day's Daily Blogging Prompts. Skim over all the other posts that have come in overnight.

    4. Check the blogiversaries for that day and give a shout out/share via Facebook and Twitter.

    5. Login as myself and check Google Reader for technology posts and all my Google Alerts (I have them go to my Google Reader instead of email).

    6. Then check email via Microsoft Outlook - 10 different email accounts (between personal, business, GeneaBloggers and all my volunteer groups). Do a quick "triage" and determine what needs to be answered right away.

    7. Then get ready for the rest of the day. This means taking a quick shower (a body is a temple that must be maintained - even if mine resembles a Temple of Doom), trying to look half-way decent so I don't scare children and small animals whilst out on the street, and then getting dressed. Yes, a big part of working at home is routine and getting dressed each day!

    8. Turn on iTunes and play some music, see if I have any conference calls for the day and then start planning out the rest of the day.

    This routine usually starts at 9:00 am and I work straight through until 6:00pm each day, weekends included.  Evenings are taken up with conference calls for volunteer groups, webinars or just watching television.

    Exciting, no? Glamorous, right? Hardly.  But this is what works for me right now. So what is your morning routine?

    © 2011, copyright Thomas MacEntee

    Saturday, November 12, 2011

    Surname Saturday Meme: Names, Places and Most Wanted Faces

    Periodically I think it is important that we "revive" some of the more successful blogging memes in the genealogy community especially since there are always new bloggers coming into the fold. One of the more prominent examples is Jill Ball of Geniaus' revival of the 99 Things Genealogy Meme.

    So, in the same spirit of "what is old is new again" I think it is time to revive the Names, Places and Most Wanted Faces meme started by Craig Manson of GeneaBlogie back in February 2009. Why so? Well this meme actually helps the genealogy blogger create "surname bait" for other researchers to find out on Google and other search engines.

    How The Meme Works

    To participate, do the following at your own blog and post a link back here in the comments:

    1. List your surnames in alphabetical order as follows:

    [SURNAME]: State/Province (county/subdivision), date range
    as in:

    AUSTIN surname: New York (Jefferson County, Lewis County, St. Lawrence County), 1830-present; Rhode Island (Kent County, Washington County), 1638-1830

    2. At the end, list your Most Wanted Ancestor with details!

    Finally, I'm happy to report that since I posted the info below in 2009, I've found my Most Wanted Ancestor and have had to add a new ancestor in that spot!

    My Entries
    • AUSTIN: New York (Jefferson County, Lewis County, St. Lawrence County), 1830-present;
      Rhode Island (Kent County, Washington County), 1638-1830
    • CHRISTIANA: New York (Dutchess County, Ulster County), 1814-1900
    • CRANDALL: Rhode Island (Kent County, Washington County), 1630-1900
    • DEGROODT: New York (Dutchess County, Ulster County), 1800-present
    • DENCE: New York (Lewis County), 1802-present
    • FARREN: New York (Bronx County, Kings County); Ireland (Belfast), 1870-present
    • FINEHOUT: New York (Dutchess County, Ulster County), 1830-present
    • HENNEBERG: New York (Bronx County, Kings County, Queens County, Nassau County), New Jersey (Essex County, Hudson County), 1860-present
    • KROM: New York (Dutchess County, Ulster County), 1653-present
    • LEEHIVE: New York (Ulster County), 1860-present
    • MACENTEE or MCENTEE: New York (Dutchess County, Orange County, Ulster County), 1795-present
    • MCGINNIS or MCGINNES: New York (Bronx County, Kings County), Ireland (County Monaghan), 1870-present
    • PRESSNER or PRESNER: New York (Bronx County, Kings County, Queens County), 1840-present
    • PUTMAN: New York (Albany County, Montgomery County, Schenectady County), 1645-present
    • SLATTERY: New York (Orange County, Ulster County), 1870-present
    • MOST WANTED ANCESTOR: Margaret LEEHIVE, born about 1867 in Greenwich, London, England to John LEEHIVE and Unknown. Married Martin SLATTERY. Died 1898, Rosendale, Ulster County, New York.
      © 2011, copyright Thomas MacEntee

    Thursday, November 10, 2011

    Veterans Day 2011: I Remember Kenny

    Another Veterans Day has arrived, and as I've done each year, I'm reposting Kenny's Choice: A Veterans Day Tribute which I wrote four years ago.

    Kenny's Choice

    As part of an on-going family history project, I’ve wanted to research the military service and sacrifices made by my ancestors and relatives for the upcoming Veterans Day holiday. Although my family has a long history of many veterans who served in each war and conflict since the American Revolution, unfortunately, I did not have to go very far back in my family tree. Only as far back as January 6, 2005 when a cousin, Sgt. Kenneth VonRonn, died in Baghdad, Iraq.

    Kenny was one of seven soldiers maneuvering their M2A2 Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle just north of Baghdad when an improvised explosive device hit it. Those that did not die instantly died when the carrier tumbled into an irrigation ditch and overturned, drowning the survivors.

    The thought of someone, let alone my cousin, dying so far away from their family and at the age of 20 rattled my curiosity as well as my emotions. As if I had received the news just like Kenny’s mom had, I had many questions. The answers I found were honest and painful, and would not only help me form a better family history, but would also help those who loved him.

    Answering the Call

    By telephone, I spoke with Kenny’s mother, Debbie VonRonn, just before Veterans Day in November 2007. Although more than two years had passed since Kenny’s death, and it had become easier to talk about him, you could still sense the difficulty and the sorrow in her words and responses. However, I knew that I could ask her some difficult questions – questions that she could answer now that Operation Iraqi Freedom had stretched on into its fifth year.

    My comfort came from having grown up with Debbie, my first cousin, in the Mid-Hudson Valley region of New York. Even though I had over 40 first cousins, she and I were closest in age and location. She lived with my family for a short period in my senior year while she was working at a local supermarket. We used to laugh and joke at the same things. We spent that summer both working in thankless jobs in the Borscht Belt resort region of the Catskills – she as a deli manager and me as a telephone operator. We would swap stories of the antics, gripes and behaviors of what we called the “city people” who spent leisurely summers up from New York City. We also saw and felt the disparities in wealth during those summers. We knew where we came from and very often we were made to know what our place was.

    Losing Touch, Building Lives

    Debbie and I went our separate ways once I left for college. Debbie married, had four children and built a life completely dedicated to her son and daughters. I spent close to 20 years in California, which was geographically and socially light years away from my roots. Debbie’s parents, my aunt and uncle, passed on in 2000 and 2001 respectively. After my mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease at the age of 58, I moved closer to home so I could help manage her care and her finances.

    We met up once again, after close to two decades, in July 2005 – less than six months after Kenny’s passing. At the family reunion, I could tell that Debbie’s emotions were still raw as they showed in her face and body movement. There was quite a bit of small talk among the group, venturing only into safe subjects. It was not that we all did not want to talk about Kenny. We were just more concerned about Debbie’s state of being and giving her and the girls enough time and room to talk when they wanted to talk.

    “He Was a Good Kid”

    Kenny was born on September 21, 1984, and was raised in Ulster and Orange counties. He was the oldest and the only male in the family after his father left the family. Kenny’s boyhood activities were typical of boys in the rural settings of the Mid-Hudson: hiking and shooting as well as model making. He was also known as a lover of practical jokes and his impish, boyish grin allowed him to get away with it most of the time.

    As I spoke with Debbie she mentioned, “I have a lot of good memories of Kenny. He was a good kid. Right after I received the news of his death, I ran around my bedroom looking for something that I had received from him. I just had to hold something of his close to me. I opened up and read many of his letters. At the end of each he always wrote, ‘Love always Kenny. P.S. The Best Son in the World.’”

    Kenny was also strong-willed and determined. If you were to ask me, he got that from his mother. I should know because Debbie got it from her mother. My aunt grew up, along with my mother, in a family of 12 children during and right after the Great Depression, in Jersey City, New Jersey. There were eight girls and four boys. It was a tough time and a tougher place. You had to have a strong voice just to be heard and a strong will to get what you needed as well as what you wanted.

    A Decision Made

    In 2003, Kenny arrived home from high school one day and told his mother, “I made an important decision today.” It was his senior year and he was now 18 years old. Kenny knew what he wanted for his future and that he had a decision to make about that future coming true. His dream was to become a registered nurse, preferably in the emergency room arena, and then eventually become a pediatrician.

    As Kenny told Debbie “I enlisted in the Army today,” she experienced, in a flash second, the normal concerns that would race through a mother’s mind. Moreover, with our country at war since 2003, the concerns were much more heightened. “Would he come back alive?” “Would my boy be hurt?” “Is this what he really wants?” “Is this what I would want for him?” “Does he know what he’s getting into?”

    Like most mothers, you try to support your child’s choices. What they choose may or may not match their dreams or meet their goals but the choices made become lessons, which become wisdom which is then passed down to their own children. Debbie just wanted what was best for her son. And she knew that Kenny was happy.

    Limited Choices

    As I knew from growing up in the same circumstances as Kenny, with few well-paying jobs and the same economic hardships, the opportunities available to fulfill your dreams were scarce. Like Kenny, I grew up in a household where Mom worked, clothed and fed her kids, and still somehow made 10 cents seem like 15. The only routes out were either a college education or enlistment in the military.

    For kids like us, Kenny and I had only these two choices or the choice to get a menial, low-paying job and be, what I used to call, “stuck.” While my hometown and the surrounding towns were picturesque and brought in the tourists, the scenery hid a dearth of social problems behind its Potemkin village façade. Sullivan County more recently had a per capita income of close to $19,000 compared to the state average of $40,000 and that of Manhattan at $43,000. More children under the age of nine died in Ulster and Sullivan counties in 2005 than almost any other area in New York State. New York City’s problems often became ours due to its close proximity at 90 miles or less. For a sleepy rural area, the population had a disproportionate number of residents who abused drugs, committed welfare fraud, or were suffering from HIV.

    I was able to scrape together enough college funding, loans and scholarships to attend a private university far from home. Kenny’s choice was to enlist in the military and then attend college afterwards with the help of enlistment bonuses and the GI Bill. Get in, get over there, then get out. In an interview after Kenny’s death, his best friend Dan Boen said that Kenny “. . . wanted to finish school, settle down and have a normal life that didn't involve war.”

    Let Me Call You Sweetheart

    Love and companionship were also part of the big plan which included:
    1) graduating from Pine Bush High School in June 2003; 2) going to basic training and army medic training that Fall; 3) marrying his high-school sweetheart; 4) shipping off to wherever the Army told him to serve; 5) and then coming back home and building a life just like Mom did, hopefully with lots of kids.

    Kenny VonRonn and Kira Conklin knew each other since they began attending the same school back in 6th grade. Debbie said it seemed as if they were always together. During a break in training, he came home for the Christmas holidays and they got married on December 23, 2003. However, all too soon he would be off again for more medical training at various places including Oklahoma, Texas and California.

    Duty Bound

    Once basic and combat medic training were completed, Kenny was assigned to the United States Army National Guard, 42nd Infantry Division, 69th Regiment, 1st Battalion, based in New York City.

    Better known as the Fighting 69th with its armory at Lexington Avenue and 25th Street, the 69th Regiment dates back to 1851. Formed by Irish immigrants as the 69th New York Militia, this combat unit has fought in many wars including the Civil War, the Spanish-American War and both World Wars.

    Kenny and his unit deployed to Iraq in October 2004 as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom and were stationed just outside Baghdad. He was part of a platoon of soldiers and support personnel known as Task Force Bengal. The unit comprised the 69th Regiment as well as a group from the Louisiana National Guard, the 256th Mechanized Infantry Brigade, and was responsible for equipping, training and assisting the 40th Iraqi National Guard.

    One Last Kiss, One Last Hug

    On November 24, the day before Thanksgiving, the ringer on Debbie’s cell phone went off while she was scrambling to gather items for the next day’s feast. It would be another holiday without her son. Soon a lucky choice made by another would bring Kenny home one last time.

    Kenny talked to everyone on that call and wished his family a happy Thanksgiving. Then as his mom got back on the phone, he told her that he had some news and that she had to keep it a secret. “No emotions please. Don’t give it away,” he said. He was coming home for two weeks and would see them all that Saturday. He had won a chance for a short leave in a drawing when his name was pulled from a hat that day. He said there was no time to give details. The transport was literally waiting for him and if he missed it, his chance would be gone.

    Of course, his last visit was too short and over before you knew it.

    Christmas Day came and went without a call from him, but the family was not necessarily alarmed. They rationalized that Kenny could have been on maneuvers or that the circuits were just overloaded from all the troops reaching out to their own families. When the phone rang the next day and it was him, relief was able to sweep away those thoughts Debbie had. Thoughts you fight with every day as a mother or a father or a sibling of someone serving in a war. While your loved one fights, you fight too. Even though your fights are ones of thoughts and emotions, sometimes you too are wounded. And you almost always have scars.

    The last time that his family heard from Kenny was on New Year’s Eve, 2004. He called home to wish everyone a happy New Year but was only able to speak to his grandmother, Maria VonRonn, his aunt and two sisters. Debbie had gone out to drive one of the girls to work that evening.

    In speaking with Debbie, I could tell that she regretted not being able to take that call. When we look back, sometimes we only see the things that could have been or that should have been. In that search, we often forget the many times that moments of love actually did take place. As his mother said to Kenny on many phone calls while he served in Iraq, “Be safe. Watch your back. Keep your head down. And I love you.”

    Receiving the News

    When I asked how she first found out that her son had died, Debbie said that a little after midnight on Friday, January 6, 2005, she was awakened by a phone call from her daughter-in-law Kira. She said, “The Army’s just been here.” Still not awake, Debbie tried to understand the meaning of Kira’s words. She thought to herself, “Kenny was just injured. He’s had close calls before.” In fact, shrapnel had hit Kenny in late 2004 but an “action figure” in the pocket of his flak jacket had taken the brunt of the injury. “Batman took it for me,” he said.

    This time Debbie could tell that something was different in Kira’s voice.

    “Don’t tell me. Just don’t tell me. Is he dead?”

    Kira said, “Yes.”

    All Debbie could do was let out a scream as the truth sunk in. Her daughters Samantha, Courtney and Gina were still awake, watching television in the living room, and they rushed in to see what was going on. The girls were counting on the following day being a “snow day” and having schools closed due to a heavy snowstorm on Thursday. There would be no school on Friday for far different reasons.

    “Could it be a mistake?” Debbie thought. She wasn’t the only one with that same thought, that same hope.

    Saying Goodbye

    While the days following the news were all “a blur,” as she put it, Debbie can now look back and remember how her family, her friends, her employer and her community selflessly reached out to help. One of the first phone calls she made in those early morning hours was to her employer. Debbie said that within 10 minutes both her bosses were at her home to comfort her and to see how they could assist. Debbie had asked them to go with her to see the flag-draped coffin at the funeral home. She knew she might need support in case the sight was too overwhelming for her. Kenny had not come home as his mother, or anyone, had expected. A steady stream of family followed over the course of the next few days until Kenny’s body arrived on Wednesday, January 12.

    Kenny was the sixth member of the Armed Forces from the mid-Hudson region to be lost in Iraq. At the funeral, you would have thought it was meant for the first casualty. For most everyone, any casualty, in any war or conflict, is one too many.

    Debbie told me that at one point, while she was riding from the service in Pine Bush, she looked back and realized that she and her son were leading a 2.5-mile motorcade. As it slowly and deliberately snaked up Route 17, the procession included the New York State Police, Ulster County Sheriff, Orange County Sheriff and Sullivan County Sheriff members. She said that the troopers even closed off exits so that oncoming traffic would not interrupt the procession. A driver would have to be blind, visually and emotionally, not to realize what was going on.

    The burial, with full military honors, took place at the Sullivan County Veterans Cemetery in Liberty. I asked her why the burial was there and not in Arlington Cemetery. Debbie said that while they could have had Kenny buried at Arlington, Kira and everyone else agreed that they wanted to have him closer to home.

    The Remembering

    As we come up on Veterans Day, I asked Debbie how she and the girls work to remember Kenny. I used the word “work” because sometimes it is just that. There are visits to the grave, gifts of flowers, and thinking of him on his birthday and other holidays.

    Over time, the remembering is easier and there are more details about the little things. Looking back, Debbie said that at about 11:00 pm on January 5th, barely an hour before she first received the news, a story appeared on the local news about a roadside bomb killing seven soldiers in Awad al-Hussein, north of Baghdad earlier that day. She had the sinking feeling as she did whenever she heard similar news in the past. The battle of the thoughts began again. This time the thoughts would win.

    Debbie knows that over time, while she may not forget what her son achieved, others might. So she and others like her, Gold Star Mothers and Gold Star Siblings, the American Legion, the VFW, make sure there are events, dedications and remembrances. Like the one on October 27, 2007 at the Sullivan County Veterans Cemetery when a tank that had been part of his National Guard unit was dedicated in his honor. Over 100 family and friends as well as strangers came to see the tank that now watches over his grave and those of other veterans. It has been nicknamed VonRonn’s Express.

    Was The Choice Worth It?

    Some of the more difficult questions that I felt I had to ask were “How do you feel when you see people in this country speak out against our operations in Iraq? Do you think that a person can speak out against the war but still be patriotic? Do you think that someone can actively oppose the war but still be supportive of our men and women over there? How would you feel if one of your daughters now said they wanted to make the same choice as Kenny?”

    Debbie told me: “I’m not political by any means and I don’t blame the Army at all. The way I look at it is that my son chose to do something and he believed in what he was doing. I believed in my son. People need to realize that Kenny made a choice.”

    She added that with the protracted engagement and the mounting casualties, as well as the lack of evidence as to weapons of mass destruction, now she just wants everyone to come home. “Coming home now doesn’t mean failure; it’s just time to come home.”

    My cousin Kenny made a choice back in 2003 so that I, and many others, could still make choices even after he was gone. Freedom to choose the church, synagogue or mosque I want to attend – or not attend. Freedom to choose who I want to vote for – or to not vote at all. Freedom to make my own plans, reach my own goals, see my own dreams come true.

    Luckily, we can choose to voice our opinions about a variety of issues and can choose to support the war or not support the war. Support does not make you a rabid jingoistic hawk. Opposition does not make you a bleeding-heart unpatriotic dove. Kenny had a choice and thankfully, we all do.

    Kenny’s choice may not have been the same as my choice or your choice. It was his choice. Remember to thank a veteran today for their service and their choice.

    © 2011, copyright Thomas MacEntee

    Wednesday, November 2, 2011

    An Ots-Toch Cousin Found!


    I had not one, not two, but three cousin connections during the recent Legacy Family Tree Cruise last month! Above is a photo of me with one of my newly-found cousins, Judy Nissila. We look alike don't we? Well, at least we both know how to clown around for the camera. The photo was taken in the Palace Theater on Royal Carribean's Explorer of the Seas as it sailed from Halifax, Nova Scotia to Boston, Massachusetts on Wednesday, October 5, 2011.

    Here is how Judy and I made our connection!
    • Each night at dinner, all cruisers were assigned a table in the dining room - mine was Table 318 near the window on the starboard side, deck 3. Since the Legacy group was so large (over 175 of us!), we decided to switch tables each night in order to get to know a variety of people.
    • On Monday evening, this vibrant (and beautiful) woman named Judy sat at our small table (which seated six), across from me.
    • As often happens with genealogists in any location, the discussions turned to surnames, ancestors and brick walls.  Judy started to relate how she was looking for that father of one of her ancestors who was French and had traveled up the Hudson River in New York, eventually landing in Canada.
    • I asked if he was a fur trapper, which was a common occupation for the French in New York and Canada during the time period, being the first half of the 1600s.
    • Judy affirmed my "diagnosis" and went on to relate how he had married a "Mohawk woman."
    • As my curiosity was peaking and I was working on a specific ancestral line of my own in my mind, I asked Judy if "they lived in a castle near present day Albany, New York."
    • She was surprised that I knew so much. Well I finally laid out all my cards on the table and let Judy know that one of the children of this Frenchman - Jacques Hertel  was my 12th great-grandfather. I descend along the Van Slyke line through his daughter Ots-Toch.
    To say Judy was shocked and delighted was an understatement.  I'm sure we bored the rest of our dinner companions but we swapped the info that we each had (and could remember without our Legacy databases in front of us!).  I also told my new cousin that I was in the middle of reviewing a book about the Van Slyke family (read the review here) and that I would send it her way once I was done.

    And so I have - the book is in the mail and I couldn't be happier with my new cousin connection.  After that evening, and after meeting most, if not all, of the cruisers, I met another Jacques Hertel cousin as well as a cousin through my Elder John Crandall of Westerly, Rhode Island line!

    Photo: Cousins on a Cruise, Wednesday, October 5, 2011 aboard the Explorer of the Seas, Legacy Family Tree Cruise 2011 by J. Nissila. Digital image, original photo in possession of J. Nissila, [address withheld by request].

    © 2011, copyright Thomas MacEntee