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10/13/2004 - Archive

•  Ancestry Daily News, 13 October 2004
•  Female Ancestors: After the Marriage

Ancestry Daily News, 13 October 2004
Untitled Document

In This Issue: October 13, 2004

New Records for Ancestry.com Subscribers

U.S. Records Collection Updates
Alabama Marriages, 1807-1902
Georgia Marriages, 1699-1944
U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900

  Today's Map: New England Colonies, 1607-1760
  Beyond the Index: "Female Ancestors: After the Marriage," by Michael John Neill
  Ancestry Quick Tip
  Fast Fact:Tell Us Your Story!
  Clipping of the Day
 

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Thought for Today

"Books permit us to voyage through time, to tap the wisdom of our ancestors."

--Carl Sagan

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Beyond the Index

Female Ancestors: After the Marriage
by Michael John Neill

Female ancestors present special research problems for two main reasons. A significant part of the difficulty stems from the fact that at the time of their marriage most American females changed their last name to that of their husband. Not knowing the last name makes for significant research difficulties.

Another significant problem in locating women is that for much of American history, women have not had the same legal rights as men. The result is that women are generally listed less often than men in many of the records utilized by genealogists.

Determining what happened to a woman after her marriage requires the genealogist to do more than simply look up names in indexes hoping something magically appears. It requires that the researcher learn about:
-Records of the time period.
- Common legal practices of the time, particularly those involving women's rights and inheritances.
- History of the region during the time period.
- Factors effecting migration during the time period.

Research outlines from the Family History Library for the appropriate state and Ancestry's Red Book: American State, County, and Town Sources are two great ways to learn about records for the state and time period. Reading county, state, and regional histories are excellent sources of additional background information.

It may be possible that someone else has already worked on your problem. Online databases such as the GEDCOM files at WorldConnect, the International Genealogical Index at the Family Search Website (www.familysearch.org), appropriate state and regional mailing lists at Rootsweb (http://lists.rootsweb.com), and other sources available through Rootsweb (www.rootsweb.com) and the USGenWeb (www.usgenweb.org) may prove successful.

It is important to keep in mind that if the problem is a difficult one, the answer may not be available online, and the problem may be unsolved as of yet. Clues and finding aids to off-line records may be online, but the actual answer may lie in an un-microfilmed box of county court records deep in the mountains of Virginia or in an isolated courthouse on the Kansas prairie.

Women Were Treated Differently
For much of American history, women have had significantly fewer legal rights than men. Consequently the number of records mentioning women dwindles as a family history is researched into earlier and earlier time periods.

For much of American history, under a concept called coverture, a woman's separate legal status ended upon her marriage. The married female typically could not own real property and derived her citizenship from that of her husband.

Today this is no longer true, but during the period where most of us have genealogical brick walls, it was. Keep in mind that most laws regarding a woman's right to own property are governed by state statute and have changed over time, sometimes gradually over a period of years. Consequently what is true in one state at one point in time might not be true in another state at another time.

Half of our ancestors are women, and like everyone else, I have encountered these problems before. I've discussed some of them in previous columns:

"Married to an Alien"
This article focuses on women's citizenship and uses a "native born alien" in the 1920 census as a starting point for the discussion.

"The Reality of Sarah's Realty"
This article focuses on the real estate that was not owned by an eighteenth century Virginia widow.

"1856 Illinois Probate Guide: The Dower"
This article discusses the concept of dower and how it was handled in Illinois in the mid-nineteenth century with links to additional references.

Women have not always been treated equally in American history. Learning about the differences makes us better genealogists.

Determining Where She Went
After Her Marriage
It can be challenging enough to find a mobile person whose name is known, let alone a married relative whose husband's name is not known. Of course a thorough search of marriage records should be conducted in those areas where the missing female's family is known to have lived using all reasonable spelling variants.

Let's take a look at some examples of situations where records beyond the marriage record might contain the desired name:

- The missing female's sibling died and the missing female survived. Does the sibling's death notice or obituary provide the name of siblings? Does the funeral home have this information?

- The missing female was an informant on a relative's death certificate after the missing female married. This long shot may pay off, particularly if the missing female remained near relatives.

- Did the missing female inherit from any estate (not just her parents) after her last name changed? If so, she should be listed with the new last name on those records.

- Was the estate of the missing female's parents settled up after the name change? If so, later (or final) records in the probate may provide the new married last name.

What Is the Key Here?
The key is that we are not searching for the missing female when trying to locate these records. All the examples discussed can be located by searching for someone other than the missing female-- someone whose surname is known. Ask yourself, "Is there a record for someone else that will list the missing female with her new last name--possibly as an heir, a sibling, or an informant?" Are there events that might have spurred the creation of a record naming the "missing female?" Are there records of these events that you can locate without knowing the missing female's name?

In some records it will be clear who the missing female is (listed as a sister in an obituary, or as a niece in an estate settlement). In other records the relationship might not be given (an informant on a death certificate, a witness to a marriage, etc.). In these latter cases a "hunch" that the individual is the missing female will have to be confirmed with other records.

Is Your Missing Female
Hiding near Other Relatives?
Locate your missing female's parents and siblings in census records. Is there a married female in a nearby household with the same first name as your missing female? Is that female born in the same place as your missing female? If other sources fail, this neighbor is a candidate for your missing female and this neighbor should be researched to determine if she is the missing female or not.

Also look at all the gravestones near your missing female's parents and siblings. Is there a grave with a burial whose first name is that of your missing female? Family members were frequently buried near each other and there is a chance that you have walked right by your missing female relative while looking at her parents' or sibling's stones.

Did She Go with a Sibling or
Another Family Member?
Thomas Chaney died in Bedford County, Pennsylvania in 1856 leaving a large family. Two children left Pennsylvania. Son Abraham was easy to track to Ohio, his last name never changed. What of daughter Elizabeth who "vanished" in Bedford County, Pennsylvania? She reappeared in Coshocton County, Ohio, the very same county where her brother settled.

In most cases, a female who heads west in the early nineteenth century didn't strike out entirely on her own. Chances are she has a brother, uncle, or other relative or neighbor who has gone west before her or at the same time. The problem is finding out who that relative is and where they went. For this reason another approach to locating missing females is to completely research their other family members in hopes that this will also locate the missing female relative.

Sum It Up
Locating missing female relatives is not always easy. Some useful approaches are:
- Consider all the records that might list the female with her new last name.
- Consider that the female might have moved to live near other family members or former neighbors.
- Consider that the missing female might be hiding right under your nose near her family--only with a different last name.


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 h e regrets that he is unable to assist with personal research.

Copyright 2004, MyFamily.com.

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Ancestry Quick Tip

City Directories Helpful in
Finding Street Names
City Directories can be helpful if you find ancestors living on a street with an unfamiliar name. In my own case, the family was known to have lived on Cleveland Avenue in New Orleans for many years. An earlier census showed them living on Gasquet (a street name that was completely unfamiliar to me). I originally assumed that the family had lived in a different residence at that time, but when comparing the census and various city directories, I was able to see lists of the neighbors. I realized that the name of the street had been changed from Gasquet to Cleveland (not surprisingly, shortly after the death of Grover Cleveland).

Nicole Guerin


Thanks to Nicole 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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Fast Fact

Tell Us Your Story!

Ancestry.com wants to hear about your family history quest! We are anxious to hear more about why you've started doing family history research, what you hope to find, and what exciting discoveries (and people!) you've already found.

Here are some questions to help you get started:
- What inspired you to start researching your family's story?
- What is the most exciting thing you've learned while researching your family tree?
- How has your family history brought your family closer together?
- Why is learning about your family's past important to you?
- How has using Ancestry.com made it easier to find your family?

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Clipping of the Day

From the Adams Centinel (Gettysburg, Pa.), 13 October 1819, page 2:

From the Georgian.
Mister: the man who wrote about the comet in your paper, and calls himself Astrologus, is a high larnt knowing man, and I should like to converse with him about the above comet....I know that a comet is a sign, and a bad sign. The very night it happened in the north, I got a letter from the north, saying Dear granny, this comes, to inform you that your granddaughter Jemima was seized with fits last night, and the doctor has given her up....

But this isn't all, Mr. Editor--I had a set of silver tea spoons stole the night after, while I was looking out for this very Comet--next day I broke my spec, the next day my pipe, and the next a coal flew out and burnt a hole in my apron, which argues death in the family. I advise folks to keep a horse shoe nailed over their doors, and to sleep with a bible under their heads, as I am convinced evil spirits have a hand in this Comet....As for earthquakes, we shall have one this fall for sartin, and I am sure as I live, I felt one last night and several times to-day. As for sickness, it is a sure sign that we will have plenty this summer--the Yellow Fever, you see, has broken out in Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Charleston, and no doubt here, if the doctors would tell the truth. I know more than a little about signs, and if I could write myself, I would be of great service on this head. If you have time to call at my house, I will tell what I know about such matters from experience, and tell your fortune for seven pence only.

Yours to command,
Deborah

P.S. Since writing the above my dear old cat died suddenly--misfortunes never come alone, and I should not be surprised if ruination comes upon the whole family in a few days....I saw a star towards the grave yard last night, and a death bell tolled in my ear! I dream horrid dreams; a few days before my beloved cat died he slept with one eye open; the great bible fell off the shelf and nobody touched it! I saw a winding sheet in the candle on Saturday night. Yesterday there was wizzard knots in my old mare's tail, and I am sure that my old cow Brownie is sucked by witches....O, the Comet! the Comet! what will become of us?


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

Subscribe to the Historical Newspapers Collection at Ancestry.com.

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NGS Welcomes New Board of Directors

The results of the 2004 election are tallied. The National Genealogical Society is pleased to announce the names of the new Board of Directors effective 1 October 2004.

President--Barbara Vines Little, CG, Virginia

Vice President--Sheila Benedict, CGRS, California

Secretary--Janet Nutter Alpert, Michigan

Treasurer--Patricia O'Brien Shawker, CGRS, Maryland

Directors
Area 1
--Connie Lenzen, CGRS, Oregon

Area 2--John A. (Jack) Brissee, Wisconsin

Area 3--Richard Camaur, CG, Virginia

Area 4--Bob Velke, Maryland

Directors at Large
Cyndi Howells, Washington

Jane Gardner Aprill, CGRS, Louisiana

Ann Lisa Pearson, Colorado

Peter E. Broadbent Jr., Virginia

The new board will convene 20 November 2004, in Nashville, Tennessee, site of the 2005 NGS Conference in the States.

NGS thanks its many members for casting their vote. An overwhelming majority voted electronically using the ballot posted on the NGS website.

For more information about the National Genealogical Society please visit our website (www.ngsgenealogy.org).

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