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12/3/2003 - Archive

•  Ancestry Daily News, 3 December 2003
•  1880 Female Head of Household: Follow-up

Ancestry Daily News, 3 December 2003

In This Issue: December 3, 2003

New Records for Ancestry.com Subscribers

Databases Updated Today
Bristol and Warren, Rhode Island City Directory, 1881-1882 (Images online)
Maryland Archives, 1681-1783 (Images online—Update adding Volume 32, Proceedings of the Council of Maryland, 1761-1770)

Historical Newspapers Collection Update
Staffordshire Sentinel (Stoke-on-trent, Staffordshire, England), 1875-76, and 1915
Bulletin Sentinel (Decatur, Ill.), 1895-96

U.K. and Ireland Records Collection Update
Documents of Medieval Framlingham, 1270-1524 (Images online)

  Today's Map: Tucson, Arizona Territory, 1862
  "1880 Female Head of Household: Follow-Up"
by Michael John Neill
  APG Members Elect New Leaders
  Ancestry Quick Tip
  Fast Fact: Do You Know of Someone Who Is Having Trouble Receiving the Ancestry Daily News?
  Clipping of the Day
 

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"1880 Female Head of Household: Follow-Up"
by Michael John Neill

Last week's article, "An 1880 Female Head of Household," generated a great deal of reader response. This week we'll look at some of the issues raised by readers and discuss a few other nuances of the 1880 census enumeration discussed last week. Readers who missed last week's column can view it here.

While I'm still relatively convinced that economics and culture were the main reason for my specific irregular enumeration, we'll look at potential reasons submitted by readers, which could easily explain other atypical census enumerations. These reasons might explain why your married ancestral couple was enumerated in a non-traditional fashion. For the sake of not confusing myself, I'll refer to the head of household Anna, by her Ostfriesen name of Antje throughout this article.

Husband Incapacitated?
If the husband is unable (or unwilling) to act as the head of the household, the wife (or an older son) may be the functional head of the household. A husband who has had a stroke or serious illness may not be listed as the household head. In the case discussed last week, there is no information indicating that Henry had a diminished mental or physical state, but it is possible. His obituary from 1912 indicates that up to a time shortly before his death, he could still recite entire chapters from the Bible. While this may be an exaggeration, Henry is known to have lived thirty-two years beyond his 1880 census enumeration.

Divorced or Separated?
If divorced or separated couples are enumerated in the same household their listing could be written up in a nontraditional way. Readers sent in examples of divorced couples enumerated in the same household with the wife listed first and the husband appearing in a variety of places within the household. Henry and Antje were not divorced after their 1877 marriage.

Husband Alive on Census Date, but Dead at Enumeration?
Readers submitted several examples where the husband was alive on the actual census date but deceased by the time the household was actually enumerated by the census taker. While not applicable in my case, it is a possibility to consider, especially if the census is the last known record on the husband.

Financial Problems?
One reader sent an example where a couple had moved west after going broke in New England. The couple's first enumeration in the west listed the wife as the head of the household. While there are also issues of women's property rights to consider in that case, it may be that there was some financial reason why the wife was listed first and in this 1850 enumeration the value of property was listed after her name.

Just A Mistake?
It is also possible that listing Antje first was a mistake on the part of the census taker. Several readers sent examples where cross-outs on the actual census hinted that a mistake had been made. In the situation discussed last week, Antje had her own children, grandchildren, and some stepchildren living in the household. Even if the census taker listed the "wrong" person first, he did get all the relationships correct with respect to Antje. This leads me to believe that the census taker intended to list Antje as the household head.

Summary of Reasons
All of the situations were similar in one regard. The unusual enumeration indicated further research on the family, its economic status, and its cultural background was necessary. In attempting to explain a nontraditional enumeration (or any record anomaly), remember that:
— There should be logic behind your conclusions—not unfounded assumptions.
— You consider all possibilities, not just the one that makes the best story or that is most appealing to other family members.
— Attempt to back up the story with other records, contemporary ones where possible.

Additional Considerations
1880 Agricultural Census. The 1880 population census was not the only federal census enumeration that took place in 1880. There was also an agricultural census. Interestingly enough, the Habben farm is enumerated in Henry Fecht's name in the corresponding 1880 agricultural census. How do I know it is Antje's farm? Henry Fecht's name does not appear on any real estate property tax rolls for 1880-81 for Prairie Township, which is where his name appears on the 1880 agricultural census. Since Antje's name appears on the property tax rolls in 1880-81, but not on the corresponding 1880 agricultural census, it seems very likely that the enumeration for Henry Fecht is actually referring to Antje's real estate.

1900 Census.
The family's enumeration in 1900 would make an interesting comparison. Unfortunately Antje died on 20 May 1900 and is not enumerated in the 1900 census. Henry is enumerated as a single widower in the same township where he is residing in 1880. In 1910, still living in the same township, the eighty-seven-year-old is enumerated with a daughter and son-in-law.

Is Antje Really Sixty-Five in 1880?
Several readers pointed out that in 1880, Antje is listed as being sixty-five years of age. Included in the household were three of her children, aged 20, 18, and 13. A 65-year-old being the biological mother of a thirteen-year-old is a bit of a stretch. Based upon church records in her native Germany and other sources, Antje should have been fifty-seven at the time of the 1880 enumeration, not sixty-five. One should always take census ages with a grain of salt. As a general tendency, the younger a person is, the more likely their age is to be relatively accurate. It is much easier to be five or ten years off when someone is sixty than when they are three.

We've mentioned the records of various female relatives in earlier columns, focusing on those cases where the record is unusual or noteworthy. Some recent examples are:

Married to an Alien
This article discusses a 1920 census entry where a New York State native female is listed as an un-naturalized alien.

The Reality of Sarah's Realty
This article discusses a mid-eighteenth century Virginia female and the disposition of her property after her death.

Researching female ancestors can be more difficult than researching the males but it just as interesting and generally worth the challenge.

One last item from last week…

Michael Descends from Both of Antje's Husbands?
No one called me on this statement, but it is true despite the fact that Antje and Henry Fecht had no children together. I descend from Antje's first husband, Mimke Habben, who died in 1877 and from her second husband, Henry. Fortunately, I only descend from Antje once. Jann Habben (Antje's son by her first marriage) and Anke Fecht (Henry's daughter by a previous marriage) were married in 1881. They are my great-great-grandparents. In this ethnic immigrant group, like many, marriage within the ethnic community was encouraged by family, church, and a common heritage.


Note: Michael John Neill will be presenting five all-day genealogy computing workshops at Carl Sandburg College in Galesburg, Illinois, during March of 2004. The sixth annual week of workshops will be held on the college's main campus. Registration is only $35 per day. Topics will include:
— Family Tree Maker
— European Research Online
— Using Ancestry.com, Genealogy.com and FamilySearch.org
— Online Genealogy Techniques
— Genealogy Potpourri

All workshops are hands-on and registration is limited. More information is available at: www.rootdig.com/sandbur.html

Michael John Neill is the Course I Coordinator at the Genealogical Institute of Mid America (GIMA) held annually in Springfield, Illinois, and is also on the faculty of Carl Sandburg College in Galesburg, Illinois. Michael is the Web columnist for the FGS FORUM and is on the editorial board of the Illinois State Genealogical Society Quarterly. He conducts seminars and lectures on a wide variety of genealogical and computer topics and contributes to several genealogical publications, including Ancestry Magazine and Genealogical Computing. You can e-mail him at: mjnrootdig@myfamily.com or visit his website at: www.rootdig.com/, but he regrets that he is unable to assist with personal research.

Copyright 2003, MyFamily.com. All rights reserved.

ACCESS A PRINTER–FRIENDLY VERSION OF THIS ARTICLE, e–mail it to a friend, or submit your feedback on it.

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APG Members Elect New Leaders

J. Mark Lowe, CG, of Springfield, Tenn., has been elected president of the board of directors of the Association of Professional Genealogists (APG), the world's leading professional organization of family history and related professionals. He will succeed Sherry Irvine, B.A., CGRS, FSA Scot, of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.

Lowe, a full-time professional genealogist and lecturer who is currently vice president of APG, said, "APG can continue to make a difference by providing consumers with information regarding ethical professionals, by improving educational opportunities for members, and by expanding the association's efforts in records preservation and access." Lowe is also director of RIGS Alliance workshops in cooperation with the National Archives Regional System.

Irvine, reflecting on APG's change and continuity over her seven years on APG's board and executive committee in the December issue of the APG Quarterly, wrote, "I think it has matured from just another sort of genealogical society into what it really is, an organization for professionals—if you work in this field you must belong to APG."

APG members also elected three members of the board's executive committee and nine of its nineteen regional directors to two-year terms as well as two members to one-year terms on the nominating committee.

Taking seats on the executive committee on Jan. 1, 2004, will be Vice President Sharon Tate Moody, CGRS, of Smyrna, Ga., presently a regional director; Secretary Beverly Rice, CGRS, of Coos Bay, Ore.; and Treasurer Gary Mokotoff of Bergenfield, N.J., an incumbent.

Directors elected were: Jake Gehring of Woods Cross, Utah and Joan A. Hunter, M.L.S., CG, of Eugene, Ore., Region 1; Mary Clement Douglass, CGRS, of Salina, Kans. and Nancy Waller Thomas of Columbia, Mo., Region 2; Craig Roberts Scott, M.A., CGRS, of Westminster, Md. and C. Ann Staley, CGRS, of Jacksonville, Fla., Region 3; Elissa Scalise Powell, CGRS, of Wexford, Pa. and Maureen A. Taylor, M.A., of Westwood, Mass., Region 4; and Cornelia Schrader-Muggenthaler of Ostra, Italy, International Region B.

Jana Sloan Broglin of Swanton, Ohio and Arlene V. Jennings of New York, N.Y. were elected to the nominating committee.

The Association of Professional Genealogists, established in 1979 and based near Denver in Westminster, Colo., represents some 1,400 professional genealogists, professional researchers, librarians, writers, editors, instructors, booksellers, publishers, and others in all populated continents.

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Ancestry Quick Tip

The Joy of Finding an Unusual Name

For a genealogist, finding a relative with an unusual given name and a distinctive surname can be like finding money on the sidewalk. I found Merab Crookham in an 1850 Census register for Muskingum County, Ohio. All it told me was that she was female, had been born in Pennsylvania, and that she was so many years old.

She was living in a household consisting of a proven ancestor named Samuel Scott and his wife, Mary. Samuel and Mary had been born in Pennsylvania too. It seemed probable that Merab was somebody's sister, but of which one—Samuel or Mary? If she was Samuel's sister, then Crookham was her married name. If she was Mary's sister, then Crookham was Mary's maiden name. Either way, Crookham seemed an unusual name, and so it proved to be. A search of Pennsylvania census indexes from 1790 to 1850 turned up only one basic family of Crookhams, located in Allegheny County in western Pennsylvania.

That in turn led to queries on the Internet, which helped me to locate distant cousins who had considerable information and shared it generously. The end result was the identification of many families of ancestors, pushing the ancestral trail back to the 1660s in England.

Terry Burnside


Thanks to Terry for today's Quick Tip! If you have a tip you would like to share with researchers, you can send it to: ADNeditor@ancestry.com

Quick Tips may be reprinted, with credit to the submitter, in other Ancestry publications, so if you do not want your tip included in a publication other than the Ancestry Daily News and Ancestry Weekly Digest, please state so clearly in your message.

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Clipping of the Day


From the
Republican Compiler
(Gettysburg, Pa.), 03 December 1833, page 3:

Columbia, (Mo.) Nov. 9.
RETURN OF THE SANTA FE TRADERS
About one hundred of our fellow citizens have, within a few days past, returned to their homes in this and the adjacent counties, from Santa Fe, in New Mexico. They have brought we understand, from eighty to one hundred thousand dollars in specie, besides a large quantity of furs, mules, &c. the value of which we have not heard stated, but will, undoubtedly, produce a large sum. We are pleased to learn that the traders med with no molestation from the Indians on the route, and that they have generally made profitable adventures.

This trace, which is principally carried on by the citizens of the Western part of Missouri, has now become of considerable importance. Specie, furs, mules, &c. are annually brought from that country, to a very large amount.


Subscribers with access to the Historical Newspapers Collection can view this entire clipping.

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at Ancestry.com.

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