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Showing posts from 2020

The Best of 2020

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In the past year, I wrote 17 posts on this blog. Most of my blog posts are published on the more general blog My Trails into the Past .   The blog posts fell in three categories: 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 11 posts Saturday Night Genealogy Fun: 3 posts Family Story: 3 posts The five most-viewed posts were: 52 Ancestors: Uncertain-What was the Maiden Name of Rebecca Ro(d)gers? 52 Ancestors: Land-Tom & Pansy Johnston Purchased a House in 1949 Something I Didn’t Know About Restrictive Covenants in Deeds Why I’m Studying about African American Research 52 Ancestors: Bearded-Growing a Beard for a Contest I don’t post as often here, as the theme of the blog is my maternal grandmother’s family, which limits on who I can write about. If I write about my maternal grandfather’s family, I do it at the other blog. I did manage to write eleven posts for the 52 Ancestors meme and that was pretty good. I hope I can be as successful as this next year, adding to the stories of my gra

52 Ancestors-Week 48: Gratitude – Thankful for My Grandmother’s Interest in My Family Research

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This is my third year working on this year-long prompt, hosted by Amy Johnson Crow. I will write each week in one of my two blogs, either Mam-ma’s Southern Family or at My Trails into the Past. I have enjoyed writing about my children’s ancestors in new and exciting ways. I cannot remember the year I started doing family research. It was after the birth of my children, so perhaps in the early 1990s. My daughters’ babysitter was a genealogist who visited the Family History Library in Salt Lake City every year and was actually there when my second child was born. I must have expressed an interest because she took me to Sutro Library in San Francisco where she set me down at a microfilm machine to look at the 1920 Soundex roll for Ravalli County, Montana. When I found my paternal grandfather, William Cyril Hork in that census and then in the 1910 census, I was hooked and wanted to go to the Family History Library with the group the following year! After my mother died in 1992, us six

Putting Names to the Enslaved from Jemima (Porter) Coor’s Estate in Copiah Co, Mississippi

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Saying the names of the enslaved brings them to life. As I find these people in my ancestor’s records, I shall bring them to the light and say their names. They are an important part of the history of my ancestor’s lives and their livelihood. I am currently studying the life of Jemima Porter who married Daniel Coor around 1784 in North Carolina. [1] Fast forward, she died sometime before 18 February 1839, when George Madison Barnes began settling her estate. He, with sureties Samuel T. Scott and W. K. Perkins, posted the bond of twenty thousand dollars, which indicates an estate of large value. [2]   Bond, George M. Barnes, Jemima Coor Estate On the same day, the following men were ordered to appraise her estate: Edwin R. Brown, Moses Norman, Chas. J. Hendry, Andrew J. Cassity and Samuel H Aby. Aby, Brown, and Norman swore and signed the authorization for the appraisal. [3] E. R. Brown, P. H. Aby, and MD Norman performed the appraisal and issued the following list of the personal

Something I Didn't Know About Restrictive Covenants in Deeds

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I am currently reading the book The Color of Law  by Richard Rothstein. [1] I had heard the term "systemic racism" but never really understood it until I began reading this book. This really opened my eyes about how discriminatory policies, from the federal government down to the local level, played a role in the racial inequities we have in America.  I found an example of this in my grandparent's papers.  In 1949, my maternal grandparents bought a house in a brand-new housing development in Pleasant Hill, California, called Gregory Gardens. [2]  From the deed included in the title company papers, I learned they paid $7800. [3] It might even have been the first home they bought. Previously, they were renting in neighboring Walnut Creek, but the man who owned their property wouldn’t sell it to them. It was a great opportunity for them to purchase a new home, although it also forced their daughter to change high school districts. Restrictive Covenant Besides the deed

52 Ancestors-Week 45: Bearded – Growing a Beard for a Contest

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This is my third year working on this year-long prompt, hosted by Amy Johnson Crow. I will write each week in one of my two blogs, either Mam-ma’s Southern Family or at My Trails into the Past. I have enjoyed writing about my children’s ancestors in new and exciting ways. My grandfather, Tom J. Johnston once grew a beard for a contest. I had written previously about my grandfather’s beard . This post is an update because I found a record held at the Contra Costa County Historical Society that substantiates the contest. In Walnut Creek, where my maternal grandparents, Tom J. and Pansy Johnston, and their daughter, Lela Nell, lived is a yearly festival in September called the Walnut Festival. Before large housing tracts were built, the area had numerous walnut orchards and a big packing plant in downtown Walnut Creek to process the walnuts. When I was growing up in the 1960s in Walnut Creek, many of the homes had some of these old walnut trees in their yards. Kids would come to s

52 Ancestors-Week 38: On the Map—Communities in Erath County, Texas Where My Ancestors Lived

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This is my third year working on this year-long prompt, hosted by Amy Johnson Crow. I will write each week in one of my two blogs, either Mam-ma’s Southern Family or at My Trails into the Past. I have enjoyed writing about my children’s ancestors in new and exciting ways. My daughters are still here visiting, so I have found a previously written blog post that fits this theme about maps and my ancestor’s communities. https://mam-massouthernfamily.blogspot.com/2016/12/where-did-my-ancestors-live-communities.html Copyright © 2020 by Lisa S. Gorrell, Mam-ma's Southern Family, All rights reserved.

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun -- Did You or Your Children Know Their Great-Grandparents?

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It's  Saturday  Night – Time for more  Genealogy Fun! Our mission from Randy Seaver of Genea-Musing is to: 1) Did you or your children know their great-grandparents?   2) Tell us in your own blog post, or in comments to this post, or in comments on Facebook.  As always, please leave a link to your work in Comments.    My response: My daughters knew only one of my grandparents. My maternal grandmother, Pansy Louise (Lancaster) Johnston lived until just over a month short of 100 years. That really increased the chance of my children to have known her. I had both of my children at a later age (mid-thirties), while my grandmother had my mother at age 20 and my mother had me at age 20. If I had had a child at twenty and my daughter also at 20, we might have had five generations living at the same time. I have a photo of four generations: my grandmother, my mother, myself, and my first daughter, taken on her baptism day. Unfortunately, my mother passed away

Why I’m Studying About African American Research

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This past week I attended the Midwest African American Genealogy Institute (MAAGI for short) that was originally scheduled for three days of instruction at the Allen County Public Library (ACPL) but because of Covid-19, was scheduled online. This gave me the opportunity to attend. Check out their website for next year’s courses. Just $50 can reserve you spot! I took Track IB: Methods & Strategies for Slavery Era Research , coordinated by Dr. Shelley Murphy. We had these wonderful instructors: Nicka Sewell-Smith “Systems to Track and Document Enslaved Populations.” Excel or Google Sheets is your friend in keeping track of all of the data about the enslaved and enslavers, plus keeping track of DNA matches. “No Stone Unturned: Case Studies in Identifying the Last Slaveholder.” Surnames are not always an indicator of last enslaver. It was seeing her success stories. “Case Studies in Gray: Identifying Shared Ancestries Thru DNA.” Lots more use of online DNA sites a

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks (2020) – Week 25: Unexpected—My Grandparents Marriage License Location

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This is my third year working on this year-long prompt, hosted by Amy Johnson Crow. I will write each week in one of my two blogs, either Mam-ma’s Southern Family or at My Trails into the Past. I have enjoyed writing about my children’s ancestors in new and exciting ways. Tom & Pansy - 1930s My grandfather, Tom J. Johnston, Jr. was from Gustine in Comanche County, Texas. He met my grandmother, Pansy Louise Lancaster in her hometown of Stephenville in Erath County, Texas. My mother, Lela Nell, was born in Stephenville in 1934. So, when were my grandparents married? In my early days of doing genealogy, I never got the marriage date for my grandparents. I had their birth dates and places, but not their marriage. They didn’t seem to celebrate their anniversary, at least not publicly, so I didn’t know it by that way either. My sisters speculated that perhaps they had to get married, due to the upcoming birth of their child, Lela Nell. Perhaps that was why they di

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks (2020) – Week 22: Uncertain—What Was the Maiden Name of Rebecca Ro(d)gers?

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This is my third year working on this year-long prompt, hosted by Amy Johnson Crow. I will write each week in one of my two blogs, either Mam-ma’s Southern Family or at My Trails Into the Past. I have enjoyed writing about my children’s ancestors in new and exciting ways. For the theme of “uncertain,” I decided to find a female with no maiden name, or at least an uncertain maiden name. This blog post will review what I know about Rebecca, wife of David Ro(d)gers and mother of Eliza Ro(d)gers, who married Ebenezer Loveless in 1871. Through the process, I will be creating a plan for future research. I will start with what I know about her daughter, Eliza. I am also going to standardize the spelling of the surname to RODGERS for simplicity. Chattooga County, Georgia I first wrote about Eliza in this blog post . At the time I was trying to verify her parents’ names. Eliza Rodgers was born May 1854 in South Carolina. [1] She first appeared in the 1860 population census in