My children descend from a variety of cultures.

The BRIGHT family relocated from Pennsylvania to the booming riverfront town of Wyandotte, Kansas, shortly after the Civil War.

The MOORE family, of Scots-Irish descent, lived in the upcountry of South Carolina for a hundred years or more.

The THADEN family came from German immigrants and Tennessee Scots-Irish clans.

The NICHOLAS family originated in Tripoli and Beirut, Syria, and lived among a Syrian colony in Jacksonville, Florida.

The HAHN and LUTES families raced for land in the Oklahoma Land Run of 1893 and had been ever on the frontier prior to that time.

The ROMEO and MOTTA families immigrated to this country at the turn of the century from Sicily.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Reading Old Newspapers

At Chronicling America, old newspapers from Holt County, Missouri have been digitized .  Our direct ancestor, Samuel Hahn, left the county in the mid-1860s, but much can be learned about his brothers, Richard and Daniel Hahn, who remained in the county until they died.  Trying different search terms has produced many articles that help to piece together Daniel's very large family.  The articles also open a peek into the daily life of Daniel Hahn, one the county's first and respected citizens, a successful and wealthy farmer, who lived to be 83 years old.  You can read some of these articles at Daniel Hahn (1813-1897).

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Youth Genealogy

The Back in the Day Youth


How refreshing to see young people involved in their family history.


Friday, August 5, 2011

Letters from the Old Country


How fun to receive last week a tube full of documents pertaining to Herman Thaden and his family.  There was a patent for the airship and a brochure explaining the wonders of this airship for potential shareholders.  There was also a news clipping featuring the airship in an Atlanta German-language newspaper.  Many letters accompanied these documents, written by Bernard Thaden to relatives back home.  All are written in German with the exception of some written to his sister's family.  Curiously, his sister also lived in Ostfriesland but must have had no trouble with the English language.  Incidentally, Bernard's English was better than most Americans'.  The translation of these letters will be a challenge, especially since the script is Old German and more especially since they are most likely written in the plat Deutsch of Ostfriesland.  These papers were discovered  in an old trunk, by a Strenge cousin, in the attic of the Thaden home in Dornum before it was torn down. Thanks to Cousins Christoph and Lenchen for securing such nice scans of the documents and then sending them to me.  They truly know the value of good family history research!