Sticky Notes

Month

April 2012

33 posts

Ask Ancestry Anne: How do I know when my state is available in the 1940 census?

Question: More than one of our members has asked: “How do I know when my state is available in the 1940 census?”

Answer:  Watch our status page:  1940 United States Federal Census - Ancestry.com

At the bottom of the page you will see a list of the States and Territories and where they are in process. 

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This is updated manually and you will see the update at the bottom.

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Even when a state is “In Process” you can check on the status and see if your county is there. For example, as I write this, we have started on the state of Washington and we have a few counties available to view.  If you see your county, take a look! 

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I admit that yesterday I was checking often when they started Virginia to catch Rockbridge County as soon as I could.  And I am impatiently waiting for North Carolina. Patience is not a family trait!

I’ve bookmarked the page, so I can check it quickly.

Happy Searching!

—Ancestry Anne

Apr 3, 20121 note
#1940 Census #Ask Ancestry Anne #Member-questions #our 1940 stories
Looking for Lavenia's Granddaughters

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I am waiting for Iowa. And I’ve tried to convince my friends in our data-processing center that Iowa would be such a great state to start with. No one is buying.

Though I can’t wait to see my grandparents, aunts and uncles in the 1940 census records, the folks I am waiting to find, I don’t even know yet. For years I have been tracing the female descendants of my 3rd great grand-aunt, Lavenia Triplett Careless. And those granddaughters of hers have proved elusive and wily. Based on clues to what their married names could be that I have found on USGenWeb, I hope to score a few big finds that will lead me to living cousins who might know a little more of the family story they would be willing to share with me. Here’s who I am looking for:

  • Florence Fisher, b. 1908 in Iowa
  • Mable L. Hyde, b. 1920 in Iowa
  • Betty Ann Hyde, b. 1924 in Iowa
  • Jennie Pearl Parks Parkin, b. Jul 1896 in Iowa

I’ve got my fingers crossed and my cursor on the refresh button at the 1940 Collection page on Ancestry where there is a chart showing the progress for each state (lower left corner).

C’mon Iowa.

Jennifer Utley, Ancestry Employee 15 years

Apr 2, 20121 note
#our 1940 stories #Your Stories
DC and Nevada are Complete--Indiana and Other States Moving Quickly

Wow, states are loading quickly, with Washington, DC, and Nevada now complete. My home state of Indiana has 55 counties represented (of 92), and I’ve already identified who was living in my old house and quickly found my brother-in-law’s family in Jasper County. Whoohoo! We are off and running.

I think it’s only appropriate that on a day that’s like Christmas for family historians, we post the census image showing radio personality and the famous author of A Christmas Story, Jean Shepherd with his family in Hammond, Indiana.

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What have you found so far? You can post your discoveries, memories, and photos to our 1940s interactive map.

Apr 2, 20121 note
#1940 census #interesting finds #julianas corner #our 1940 stories
Hail to the 1940 Chief

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Our first big find in the 1940 census! None other than Franklin Delano Roosevelt, President, Head Honcho in Chief. Tracy Slade in our Digital Preservation department found this way past most people’s bedtime. But none of us could sleep ‘cuz we’re all too excited.

BTW, the 1940 census started streaming live at approximately 1:20 a.m. EST April 2 on Ancestry.com. You should definitely check it out. You can even watch as the images post. Amazing.

Go directly to FDR’s image here.

Or visit http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=2442 to start looking through the 1940 census today. How long have we waited to say that?

Apr 2, 20122 notes
#Our_1940_Stories #our 1940 stories #Your Stories
Ask Ancestry Anne: My grandmother's story continues

I lost touch with my mother’s side of the family many years ago.  But I have rediscovered the family through the documents on Ancestry.com

I’ve learned a lot about my grandmother Jennie Elizabeth Payne and then all of her brothers and sisters.  In 1930, I found her and her orphaned brothers and sisters living together,  her father and mother having died in the 1920’s.  It gave me a whole new perspective on her and what she must have gone through. It changed my whole view of her and what her life must have been like.

 

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I know that in 1930 she has no listed profession, but I know she was a nurse at some point in her life.  Was it during the 1930’s?  Did they the family stay together on the farm or where they all leaving elsewhere?  I know most of her brothers fought in WWII.  Did they have any idea what was coming?

I believe she married my grandfather Howard Turner in May of 1940, so I should find her living alone or with relatives.  In 1930, she is living in Crowder’s Mountain, Gaston County, North Carolina.  My mother was born in Buncombe County, North Carolina, after 1940, so I have a couple of counties to start hunting in.  And yes, I will page through the images until I find her.  I just know that there are some details in the census that will help me understand what happened to this family during the depression.

Happy Searching!

— Ancestry Anne

Apr 1, 20121 note
#Ask Ancestry Anne #Our 1940 Stories #Genealogy #Ancestry.com #Family History
Finding Daddy in the 1940 Census

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Robert, Judy, and James Szucs, with John Mekalski (and John Szucs, Jr. in the doorway), c. 1942

I feel like a kid on Christmas Eve. As I write this we’re 28 hours from the release of the 1940 census.  Yes, we’re measuring it in hours now.  This is the first census that I’ll be able to see that includes my dad. He was a young boy in 1940 and I’ll find him, his brother and sister, and my grandparents living in Cleveland, Ohio.

He’s told me a lot of stories about when his early years—how during the war years, his family would follow what was going on in Europe with maps, how he got the scar on his arm running from a loose dog, memories of his grandparents, and so much more. The 1940 census will help me to build on the stories he told me, and those my grandma told me—how they were very poor when they first got married and had a difficult time during the Great Depression and how tough it was with three young children at that time.  

Were they still feeling the effects in 1940? I know that by 1940, they had bought a house, and I have the address where I expect to find them. The census will tell me how much that house was worth and who their neighbors were.

Was Grandpa working at that time? Was he unemployed at any time in 1939? How much did he earn? I’ll learn that as well.

Even more than the details on the form, sharing this record with my dad is what I’m looking forward to most. Who knows what new stories he’ll be reminded of and can share with me?

Why is the clock moving so slowly?

Juliana Smith, Ancestry.com employee since 1998

Mar 31, 20124 notes
#our 1940 stories #Your Stories #julianas corner #1940 census
Finding My Adopted Family in the 1940 Census

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Lou arriving in El Paso in the arms of her grandfather, Raymond Dyer, 1943

It was 1943 when my father became ill and my mother was left to support six little children. At 22 months of age, I was taken in by my mother’s sister’s family. My grandfather flew with me from New York to El Paso, Texas to the Pyburn home and what was supposed to be a temporary arrangement. My father never recovered so my aunt and uncle lovingly raised me along with their own four children. They had previously lived in Mexico where my uncle was a mining engineer and I’m unsure when they moved back to the United States. I’m excitedly waiting to see where they were living when the 1940 census was taken. This is the family that had so much to do with whom I am today. Will they be there?

Loretto “Lou” Szucs

(Ancestry employee since 1992)

Mar 31, 201211 notes
#our 1940 stories #your stories

March 2012

15 posts

Our 1940 Stories: Remembering Small Town America

My mom grew up in Caldwell, Idaho, a little town near the Oregon border.

The family home is gone now—replaced by a medical complex—but not my memories of it. As a young girl a trip to grandma’s always meant feasting on fried chicken, making dolls out of hollyhock blossoms, and getting candy from the Penny Wise drugstore.

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When the release of the 1940 census was announced I knew my first stop would have to be in the town where I had so many good times. Not only will I find my grandparents, but it’s also the first census where my mom would be listed. To help pass the time until the records are released, I decided to do some online research of Caldwell and came across an amazing set of historical photos, which includes more than 100 images of the tiny Idaho town as it was in 1941, less than a year after the census.

The photos are from the Library of Congress’s online Farm Security Administration-Office of War Information Collection. In the late 1930s and early 1940s, the U.S. government hired a group of photographers to travel the country and document how New Deal programs were helping rural farmers. For almost a decade, photographers created thousands and thousands of images of everyday Americans during the Great Depression and WWII. In the words of Roy Stryker who managed the project, they “introduced America to Americans.”

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Now, more than 160,000 of these iconic photos are available on the Library of Congress website. While you’re waiting for the 1940 census to go online, why not take a quick trip back in time and search the collection for the small towns in your family tree. You never know what—or who—you may find.

Tana Pedersen, Ancestry.com Employee

Mar 30, 20124 notes
#our 1940 stories #Your Stories
Your 1940s Stories

Can you believe it’s almost here! No longer are we talking about the release of the 1940 census in terms of weeks or months—it’s only days away! As we sit here watching the clock and counting down, we thought it would be fun to get us in the mood with some of the stories you’ve sent us for our 1940s time capsule. (If you’d like to share your story, see the details at the end of this post.)

We received the following story from Angelo F. Coniglio:

When my parents Gaetano Coniglio and Rosa Alessi moved to Buffalo in 1921, they had four sons in tow: Gaetano (Guy Jr.), born in their home town of Serradifalco, Sicily; and Leonardo (Leonard), Felice (Phil), and Raimondo (Ray), born in Robertsdale, Pennsylvania.

The family lived briefly in ‘the Hooks’ in Buffalo, in a tenement at 18 Peacock Street, where their first girl, Carmela (Millie) was born. They didn’t stay long in the Canal District, but in 1924 moved to a rented flat at 309 Myrtle Avenue on the East Side, across from the La Stella bleach factory. My sisters, the twins Concetta (Connie) and Maria (Mary) were born there, as was my brother Antonio (Tony). I came along in 1936, the only one to be born in a hospital, while our nation was in the midst of the Great Depression.

My father found work as a caretaker at Welcome Hall, the community center at Myrtle and Cedar, and as a bartender at the Magistrale family’s saloon, Marconi’s, but the pay was slim, and to augment the family’s income, in summers of the late 1930s and early 1940s the whole family would be loaded on a truck with other poor immigrant families, and be taken to Musacchio’s farm, on Route 62, just outside the town of North Collins, New York.

There, we lived in a one-room “shack” with cooking and sleeping areas separated by sheets hung over wires spanning the room. We got our water in buckets from the community pump, and used a smelly outhouse (baccausu, pidgen-English for “back house”) when we could “hold it” no longer.

We picked string beans, strawberries, and red and purple raspberries, depending on which crop was ripe. Before I was born, my eight siblings, mother and father worked the fields, and were paid one to three cents for each quart of berries picked. The kids picked about a hundred quarts a day, and my mother about a hundred-fifty, and my father, who came by Greyhound bus on weekends, also picked about a hundred-fifty a day. So on a good day, the family might earn about ten to thirty dollars!

The number of Coniglio kids at the farm camp varied, as some would stay back for school or other reasons. For example, my brother Leonard ran away with the circus in 1930, depleting the ‘crew’ until he returned the following year; and in 1936, the family was a pair of hands short, as my brother Guy had married the year before and remained in Buffalo to work at a glass factory.

Another mouth to feed came along in 1936, when I was born. As the youngest, I think I ate more berries than I picked, but some of my earliest memories are of “the farm” and the other families that I got to know there: the Sciortinos from Efner Street and the Pepes from Myrtle Avenue.

 

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Phil’s friend Alphonse ‘Foonzi’ Pepe remembers that my father Gaetano loved to watch the camp’s sandlot baseball games, in which Phil usually starred. We also met and were befriended by families from North Collins; the Fricanos, Elardos, Manuels, De Carlos, and especially the Volos, who also originated in Serradifalco. My sister Millie met and fell in love with Al Volo during our summers there, and they eventually married and settled in North Collins. 

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My father is shown in this photo standing by the community water-well pump of Musacchio’s farm camp. I recently learned from Sam and Ross Markello (Marchello) of North Collins that he was assigned the responsibility of removing the pump handle each day at sunset and replacing it the next day before sunrise, to prevent unauthorized use of water by the resident laborers. Because of this assignment, he was called “Marshu Tanu” (Master Gaetano).

After years of scrimping and saving from our three-cents-a-quart labors, Gaetano was able to buy the first home the family ever owned in 1944. It was at 973 West Avenue, a few blocks from Bluebird’s Bakery, and right next door to the family of Calogero Butera and Grazia Asarese, fellow immigrants from Serradifalco.

Sadly, our joy at being in our own home was cut short on July 4, 1944, when my father was struck and killed by a hit and run driver on the corner of West Ferry and Niagara. But by buying that house on West Avenue, Gaetano had provided for his family, and through his work ethic, frugality and passion to save, he had given us all a valuable example that we have tried to emulate throughout our lives.

You can view my famly tree here.

If you’d like to share your your photos, memories and stories about 1940 (give or take 10 years), send them to 1940stories@ancestry.com. We’ll add them to our time capsule — and invite everyone to share in this amazing era from the past.

Include your name, email address, plus a photo and story details (names of people, location, year, etc.). Note that by submitting a photo or story, you grant Ancestry.com Operations Inc. permission to use, distribute, edit or republish your User Provided Content on our website as part of the time capsule. If we select yours for publication, you’ll be credited as the submitter, so be certain that any living persons mentioned or pictured provide their consent for publication, too.

Mar 29, 2012
#Your Stories #our 1940 stories
Ask Ancestry Anne: Finding my grandparents in the 1940 census

One of the first families I will look for will be my paternal grandparents Gilbert Gillespie and Ann Gillespie nee Feazell.  This will be the first census where I will see them married, and my Aunt Madeline will be on it as well.  My dad was born in September of 1940, so he just missed appearing.

 

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Fingers crossed that one of them is on line 14 or 29 and was asked supplementary questions, but I’ll be happy enough to find them.

No one has been able to tell me if my grandmother graduated from high school…the answer should be on there. Was my grandmother listed as Ann, Irene or by the name we all knew her by, Judy?  The story there is her brother saw a Punch and Judy show, and started calling his sister Judy.  And it stuck to the day she died.

 

Did they own a home?  They hadn’t been married for long.  Did they live on or near Houston Street near my grandfather’s parents? Or were they living in Buena Vista near my grandmother’s parents?  My dad can remember sitting on the porch at the end of World War II watching a parade to celebrate the end of the War.

 

Was my grandfather working?  What was he doing?  I know he spent most of his life working for Burlington Industries.  Had he already started? Had he been working steadily?  And what about his parents? Brothers? Sisters? This will be the last census record where I will find my great grandfather Wyatt – he dies a year later.

 

I suspect that I won’t learn anything mind blowing on this census, but I can’t wait to find them on the form. you just never know what new detail is going to jump out at you and make you say “Wow, I never knew that.”


Happy Searching!

— Ancestry Anne

Mar 29, 20122 notes
#Ancestry.com #Ask Ancestry Anne #Genealogy #Our_1940_Stories #Our 1940 Stories
Play
Mar 26, 20126 notes
#kris williams #genealogy #ancestry.com #ancestry #paranomoral #ghost hunters #ghost hunting #family tree #family search #interesting-finds #interesting finds
Kris Williams: How I Got Started in Genealogy

“My life not availeth me in comparison to the liberty of the truth”

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When I was 11 years old and in the 4th grade, I had a teacher who was obsessed with genealogy. She would regularly come in and tell my class about the new things she had found through her research. Eventually, as a graded project, she had us go home and start our own family tree. She gave us some pointers on how to get started and gave us two weeks to see what we could find. I still wonder if she had any idea the monster she created when she gave me that assignment.

Being as young as I was, I couldn’t drive to town halls and the internet wasn’t around like it is today. So, most of my research was done through phone calls and visits with my grandparents.  During those conversations and visits, I learned about my great grandfather who was born in Italy and another who was born in Nova Scotia. I also learned that I came from a line of strong willed women. One of which, who’s story was so interesting, caught the attention of this history loving nerd and is responsible for my obsession with genealogy.

Mary Dyer was one of several women my grandmother (my Dad’s mother) had told me about. At the time, all she could tell me was Mary was hanged for being a witch in Boston. She was unable to tell me how we were related to her, however she said that her mother used to have a family bible that outlined the connection. She also told me that the tree Mary had been hanged from had been cut down and from it; plaques were made and given to descendants. My great grandmother had one of these plaques. However, when my great grandmother died, the bible and the plaque were two of several things that disappeared from her house. Due to my own curiosity and wanting to solve the puzzle for my grandmother; it then became my goal to track down my family’s connection to Mary Dyer.

Mary Dyer came over to Boston in the 1630’s from England with her husband William. Together they had several children and were very active within the small community. Along the way she made friends with another strong willed woman, Anne Hutchinson. Anne Hutchinson was known for holding her own religious meetings and had a good following. Since it was uncommon for women at that time, Anne became a target and was eventually banished to Rhode Island with her family. During that time, Mary had become a Quaker. Quakers were very unpopular in Boston which was lead by Puritans. Some of the local leaders disliked Mary and her religion so much, when she gave birth to a stillborn baby they spread rumors about it being badly deformed. They said that it had horns and scales and that it was obviously the outcome of her dealings with the devil. These leaders labeled her as a witch and decided to banish her from the city.

Although she was banished she returned to Boston to bring clothing and food to other imprisoned Quakers. When she was caught, they were going to have her hanged until her husband was able to get her released under the condition he swore they would never return to the city. Mary stayed away for a short time before returning to Boston again to support her Quaker friends. This would be the 3rd and final stand she would take against the city for her religion.

Mary was hanged June 1, 1660 on the Boston Common in front of a whole mob of people.  She was then buried in an unmarked grave somewhere on the Common. Mary’s son Samuel eventually married Anne Hutchinson’s granddaughter, Anne Hutchinson and this is the line I descend from.  Today a statue of both Mary Dyer and Anne Hutchinson stand in front of the Boston State House over looking the site of Mary’s hanging.

Having not grown up in a church, I did not understand dying for a religion. However, I did understand the importance of standing up for what you believe in and the importance of knowing right from wrong. Her refusal to back down, while others may have seen it as stubborn or foolish due to the consequences at the time, helped shape the country we know and love today.

Kris Williams - Lead Investigator from SyFy’s Ghost Hunters International

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Mar 26, 201213 notes
#ancestry #ancestry #ancestry.com #genealogy #kris williams #interesting finds #interesting-finds
Movers and shakers who forged the way on Who Do You Think You Are?

On last night’s episode of Who Do You Think You Are? award-winning actress Helen Hunt uncovered the stories in her dad’s family tree. She knew little about his family; her dad’s mother died when he was just five years old. But Helen’s goal to unlock the past and share it with her own daughter persevered. First stop – census records that directed her to California and ultimately the Gold Rush, where Helen’s great-grandfather staked his claim. But the gold he found was a little more green as he built the foundation of a financial institution that still stands today.

And the inspiration kept coming. Next Helen traveled across the country to Maine to learn more about a great-great-grandmother. Following her through historical records, Helen discovered this powerful woman paved the way for women’s suffrage – even casting a ballot herself.

Ancestry.com is a sponsor of Who Do You Think You Are? airing Fridays at 8/7c on NBC. Watch Helen’s episode online here.

Every family tree is full of inspiration, yours included, even if your own family’s story never made it into a history book. You can rest assured that the sacrifices they made and the struggles they endured helped forge a more welcoming path for each of us. And the best part? Now you get to follow their trail, uncover their journeys and come face to face with history all over again.

Mar 24, 2012
#who do you think you are #helen hunt #ancestry #genealogy #family tree #family search #interesting finds #interesting-finds
Helen Hunt Discovers Her Past on Who Do You Think You Are?

Discovering that her great-grandmother was a leader in the Women’s Christian Temperance Union doesn’t sit well at first with award-winning actress Helen Hunt – until she traces this powerful female’s surprising impact on history. From groundbreaking roots in California to a women’s rights mover-and-shaker in Maine, it’s a story full of surprises. Watch it unfold on Friday night’s episode of Who Do You Think You Are? at 8/7c on NBC, sponsored by Ancestry.com.

Mar 23, 20121 note
#ancestry #ancestry.com #genealogy #helen hunt #who do you think you are #women #interesting-finds #interesting finds
Win the Journey of a Lifetime in the 'Star of Your Family Story Contest'

Who Do You Think You Are? follows some of today’s most beloved celebrities as they embark on personal journeys of discovery as their families’ histories are revealed. We all know a celebrity’s story is interesting, but what about your story?

Ancestry.com allows you to unlock so many magical moments in your family journey, and we want to allow you the mystique celebrities get to enjoy. Ancestry.com is offering you a chance to have your family story discovered and then unveiled for the world to see. We are giving away an Ancestry.com produced video that reveals your own amazing journey of family discovery, and will feature it on Ancestry.com this summer.

How do you enter? It’s easy!

Just submit a video telling us your family’s story on our Facebook entry page here:

Mar 20, 20121 note
#interesting finds #interesting-finds
Mar 13, 20121 note
#Your Stories #interesting finds #photograph
Return of a Treasure

With a lead from an 1860 slave schedule, I found the name  of my family’s slaveholder.  Later, I located an article the slaveholder’s 2nd great-granddaughter had written about her family.  Reluctantly, I contacted her and identified myself as the 2nd great-granddaughter of a slave owned by her 2nd great grandfather and I’m glad I did. I sent her results of extensive research I had done on my family.  She later contacted me and told me that her brother had my 2nd great-grandfather’s tombstone.  It had been displaced from a cemetery due to flooding.  Someone found it and gave it to her brother, thinking he was a family member.  After learning the stone was my 2nd great-grandfather’s, her brother gave it to me.   The caption on the stone reads:  “Gabe Embry, Born June 30, 1837, Died Feb 28, 1887.”  Members of my family and theirs later held a short memorial service and placed the stone in a family cemetery next to his grandson.  It was the return of a treasure.

Dorothy A. Tuck

Mar 13, 20123 notes
#Your Stories
Getting Ready for 1940

It’s getting closer. Only 25 more days until the 1940 census is released. So I’m busily trying to update my family tree, adding every address I know of to the ancestors who were alive in 1940. I’m feeling quite organized actually. I created a report using Family Tree Maker that lists family members who were alive in 1940.

The report’s really pretty simple to create. Under the Publish tab in Family Tree Maker (I’m using 2012, but these steps should still work in the most recent versions), click on Person Reports in the left panel and then select the Index of Individuals Report.   

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On the right side of the page, click on the button that says Individuals to Include.

 

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Then from the dialog box that pops up Filter in anyone born before 1 Apr 1940. Then Filter out anyone who died before 1 Apr 1940.  This gives me a list of people who were alive on the census date.

 

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You may need to tweak your list, if for example, you have family who was living outside the U.S. at that time, or for people that snuck in because maybe you don’t have a death date for them, but that’s simple enough too. Just select those individuals on the report side (right) and click on Exclude.

Once you’ve got your list created, click on the save icon in the upper right corner. (It’s the last icon under the green bar that says Index of Individual Report Options.) Then just name your report and you can print it out.

 

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I’m using mine as a check list and am gathering addresses on the people I need to find. So I’m anxious to hear your ideas. How are you preparing for the big day?

Mar 8, 20125 notes
#julianas corner
Mar 6, 20125 notes
#Census #interesting finds
Ask Ancestry Anne: Where is George Elmer Thomas?

Dear Anne

Is there any way that you can help me find out who the parents were for George Elmer Thomas?  He was born November 18, 1863 and died December 27, 1955. He was married to Emma Adams in Burlington, NJ at the Methodist church (no help there on his marriage return).  He lived in Buddtown, Burlington and Vincentown, New Jersey and he died at the Cranbury Nursing home in Cranbury, New Jersey.

I wanted to look at old school records from Vincentown to see if his parents registered him for school (no luck). The only thing I have is the 1880 census of him working on the farm of a Job Clevenger. It seems as if his life began at 17. 

Please help! 

— Rosemary Thomas

Rosemary,

I searched for a George Elmer Thomas in the 1870 census and found an Elmer Thomas born in 1862 in New Jersey.

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You’ll notice that he is living in the household of Thomas Bellanger, who is living with a Martha Bellanger, relationship unknown. Also living at the house are Sallie Thomas and Annie Gates.  Sallie is a domestic servant, and Annie and Elmer are living at home.

A search of the 1860 census in Burlington County shows no other likely candidates who can be George.

It’s interesting that both Annie and Elmer are listed as “at home” and not as servants. Were Sallie, Annie and Elmer related to Thomas? Sallie could be Elmer’s mother, but she would have been 17 when she had him and probably around 16 when she got married (if she married). 

I could not find marriage records that included a likely candidate for Sallie in the early 1860s, and I can’t find a Sallie Thomas in the 1860 Burlington, New Jersey census. And there are too many Sallie/Sally/Susan’s in the 1860 census of that age to pick one that might be her per-marriage.

I’d suggest next that you investigate the four people living in the household that George Elmer lived in. If you can find marriage records for Burlington County in the 1860s you could try to track down Sallie to see if she is in there. 

You may also consider contacting the Burlington County Historical Society. They may have additional suggestions on where you could locate birth and marriage information for that period.

I’m also guessing that some of our readers who are more familiar with New Jersey genealogy records than I am will have some suggestions.

Happy Searching!

Ancestry Anne

Mar 1, 201224 notes
#ask ancestry anne #genealogy #member-questions
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