Sunday, October 18, 2009

Elisbar Elisibaraschwili - 1902-1945

For the past few weeks I've been on a quest, brought on by a request for information from someone who discovered the tombstone of the above person on the Clark County Genealogy Society's Cemetery web site. A man from Georgia (country--not state) requested information on this guy because his last name is the same, and he is a genealogist who enjoys tracing people with the same last name as his. I can't imagine very many people with this last name, so I suspect most anyone with this last name is related in some way or other.

I got the exact death date from Washington State's online Death Index, and proceeded to the Library, where newspapers are on microfilm. I located the film that covered August and began my search. August 6th was the death date, which is the same day that our country dropped the atomic bomb on several cities in Japan. Naturally the papers for the following days were filled with stories about that event. I have gotten up to August 12th with no mention of this gentleman's death or an obituary, but will be heading back to the library tomorrow so will continue the search.

In the meantime, the *present-day* Mr. Elisbaraschwili had done some more sleuthing online and wrote me again, saying it looked like his shirt-tail relative may have been a German POW. Yet Russia was on our side, so he shouldn't have been considered a POW, unless he was captured by the Germans. Mysteries abound.

I was unaware of War prisoners being held in the USA at all, let alone in our area. I wasn't born until *after* WWII, and this wasn't something ever mentioned in our history books in school. I talked to the CCGS web master, who initially sent me the request since she maintains the online Cemetery pages. Pat's probably 10-15 years older than me and was born and raised in our area, so I figured she might know something. She wasn't aware of any POW camps in our area, either. Must have been a well-guarded secret.

The next step was to go to the LDS Family History Center out on 18th Street to get a copy of Elisbar's death certificate. I did this Wednesday evening, when my friends the Hornes were working there. When I explained the situation to them, John concurred that there were indeed POW camps in the US. He remembered hearing about them as a child in New Mexico, where there were several camps. He immediately got online and began searching for me. He found a report of 154 Russian POW's rebellion at Ft. Dix which explained how Elisbar might have become a soldier of Germany. Seems these 154 captured soldiers at Ft. Dix had rebelled against Stalin and somehow (not clearly explained or else I missed it) found themselves fighting for the Nazi's. The war with Germany was over and the US was preparing to send these men back to Russia. These Russian-German soldiers did not want to go--they were willing to die at the hands of the US than go back to Russia where they would surely be tortured and killed as traitors. Was this how Elisbar became a German soldier?

While John continued his online quest, I found the death certificate and John put it on my flash drive. According to the certificate, Elisbar died of TB and had been under this particular doctor's care for more than a year. And he was listed as Russian soldier, waiting repatriation to Russia. No mention of being a POW, no mention of being a German soldier.

This one will really put my sleuthing abilities to the test. Next steps include:

1. Continue hunting through the newspapers to see if there is any mention of Elisbar's death.

2. Post a "dead-end" question to the CCGS Chat room and put their head-sleuther's skills to the test.

3. Contact my friend who works for the Veterans Administration to see if he has any ideas on how to proceed next. The place of death was Barnes Hospital, Vancouver. I think that was the old VA hospital's name, and if so, there must be records somewhere for this hospital.

Wish me luck!

Sunday, September 27, 2009

A Great New Discovery!

I learned something new yesterday! I already knew that often in the 1920 & 1930 censuses, if you were lucky, the census taker scrawled the name of the street he was working on next to the families who lived there. If they lived in a city or town, and if the census taker remembered that he was supposed to do that.

I was looking at the 1930 census for my mother's hometown of Marysville, Kansas, for someone whose great-grandmother lived there at that time. When I had found the great-grandmother, I scrolled on down the census to the bottom of the page, and there was my mother's oldest sister, her husband, and their infant daughter--my cousin Laura Lee! I mentioned it to the lady for whom I was doing the lookup, and she thought maybe my family had known hers. My mother and all of her siblings have been gone for quite a while now, and I doubt Laura Lee would remember much about living in Marysville since they came to Oregon somewhere before 1936 when the rest of the family migrated. The lady asked what street they were on. I enlarged the census as big as I could get it, then tilted sideways to read the street scrawled along the side. Laramie Street! Then I noticed another column of numbers to the right, and next to the ones I was already familiar with that read "Dwelling Number" and "Family Number." It read "House Number if in Cities or Towns" (or something like that). Whoo-Hoo! I had addresses for my family in Marysville! Who knew!

Well, some of you may have already known this, but for me it was a New Discovery!

I opened up my Microsoft Streets program (since Googlemaps was taking its own sweet time loading), located Marysville, and the street this lady's great-grandmother lived on as well as my mother & her parents and remaining siblings. My aunt and family and the great-grandmother lived on Laramie St., while my mother & parents etc., lived one block over on Jenkins St. What fun! Next I'm going to locate the remaining members of my grandparents' family still in Marysville, since this thoughtful census taker followed his instructions to the letter by including house numbers, too! Give it a try! Then if you ever happen to visit the old home town, you'll have a place to go!

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Lenawee County, Michigan

WGLS blog 8/30

Still tracking down my Millet/Millett family. A great new "find" on the USGenWeb site for Lenawee Co., Michigan. This is one of those good sites with plenty of data. The particular family I am looking after at the moment is Alexander & Hannah Millet. Alexander was born about 1819 in Wayne Co. NY, according to his death records. His 1st wife was Hannah, possibly Hoag. I have not uncovered absolute proof of her maiden name yet, but have seen other family trees with "Hoag" as her maiden name. Therefore, I decided to research into the Hoag families in Lenawee County as well, to see if I could find some form of proof.

What I did find in Lenawee Co's web site for the USGenWeb Project was a couple of Millett marriages--one Rebecca Millett to Stephen Still, and Mary Jane Millett to Abram McNames. Marriages occurred in 1860 & 1859 respectively. I don't know who they are. They are not older children of Alexander and Hannah, as they are not listed with their family in the 1850 census. Also found a death notice for a Frank Millett, who died in 1876 at the age of 39, in Adrian, Lenawee Co. I also found a number of entries for Hoag family members, so will attempt to research them to see if I can make a connection to Hannah Millet(t).

Every time I get an answer to a question, I get new questions:

Answers: This Alexander Millet(t) is not the same Alexander Millet(t) who was an early settler of Jo Daviess Co. Illinois, nor the one who went off to the California Gold Rush in 1850. In 1850 THIS Alexander Millet(t) is happily living in Madison, Lenawee County Michigan with his wife Hannah and children Theron, Jonathan & Edmond. So of the 4 early Alexander's (one born in 1790, one born between 1790 & 1800, one born 1809, and this Alexander), I can eliminate one as the early Jo Daviess Co. IL pioneer. But, is he the same Alexander reported to be the son of my 3gg grandparents, William and Aurinda Millet(t) of Jo Daviess Co. IL? Oops, that goes in the next section for questions.

Questions: Who was Frank Millett who died in 1876? How does he connect with Alexander, if he does? Was he a brother of Rebecca and Mary Jane? And who were their parents?

Oh, and one more thing I found on the Lenawee Co. web site: A diary, kept by one Hannah Pierce, from 1835 till 1873, although her entries were sparse in the 1860's and the last entry was by a niece in 1873, who reported her death on New Years Day. I decided to take a look, since it was possible that she may have mentioned my family in her diary. Well, she did, there are several mentinons of Alexander Millet, A. Millet, and Hannah Millet. Mostly things like going to visit or their coming to visit her, but there is a mention of a child's death in 1858. Since the three children in the 1850 census are still in the 1860 census, there was another child born between 1850 & 1858 who died. More research is needed.

Hannah Pierce also details their travel from Williamson NY (same area as my Millet(t)'s are from) to Michigan, in 1836. They made the journey from Williamson to Palmyra NY by wagon, but the rest was made by canal boat and steamship across the Great Lakes. The entire journey from Williamson to Adrian, Lenawee Co. Michigan was made in approximately one week. To read this, go to http://migenweb.net/lenawee/diary.html
It's pretty long, and most of her entries are short (visited so-&-so, went quilting, etc.), but there are some very interesting entries about life in her era.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Bombshell!

Cousin David dropped a bombshell on me the other day. He says that my gg grandmother Hobb (nee Elizabeth Parsons) was married before she married my gg grandfather. We knew he had been married before, but I didn't know that she was married before as well. I have a copy of her marriage certificate to James, she was married in 1863 in Missouri and was married using her maiden name, which probably isn't all that unusual. And I should have noticed the two daughters living with James & Elizabeth in the 1870 census, who were older than they should have been for an 1863 marriage. I knew one was the daughter of a previous marriage for James (who had actually been married two times before), I'm not sure that "Nydia/Lydia" ever registered with me, although looking at my genealogy program, I see I do not have her listed as one of their children.

Which brings up another question--one of many: GG grandma Elizabeth was from England, came to America when she was 9 years old and settled in Illinois with her parents, according to her obituary. She married in Missouri. I have not been able to find her parents thus far, in either Illinois or Missouri. Of course, a lot can happen in the 10 years between censuses that may miss documentation, but I wonder if gg grandma Elizabeth came to Missouri alone, or with a family. I find an Elizabeth of the right age and birthplace in Kane Co. IL in 1860, enumerated with a 41-year old Thomas Parsons. He is certainly old enough to be the father of a 17 year old. Thirty-year old Eliza probably isn't Elizabeth's mother, especially since there's a gap between Elizabeth and the next child--a pretty good-sized gap. Second wife? But I have been unable to find anyone thus far in Missouri (Clark Co.) who matches up.

And I have not been able to find a marriage record for Elizabeth and any Fife in Illinois, which is where they were supposed to have been married. The state of Illinois has a marriage index online, transcribed, so prone to errors, and someone could have miss-transcribed their names, or missed them altogether.

Nydia Fite is the daughter of Elizabeth and her first husband, reportedly Albert Fite. She only appears on the one census as a child, as she married Luman Washington Quinn in 1879 in Iowa (found the marriage on a marriage index). So in 1880 she is in Des Moines IA with her husband. The next Federal census is 1900, and the family is in Saginaw, Michigan. So is Elizabeth--listed as mother-in-law to Luman. Elizabeth is also listed back in Missouri in a son's household. If she was visiting, she stuck around until 1920, although I suppose she could have gone back and forth, since she made the journey there in the first place. In 1910 and 1920 she is still living with Nydia, in Chicago, although in 1920 Luman has died and Nydia has remarried. Nydia died in 1922, and Elizabeth moved back to Kansas, living with her oldest daughter she had with James, my great grandmother, Sarah Hobb Rathbun. Elizabeth died the following year.

So many questions, still looking for answers.

1. How did Elizabeth happen to come to Missouri? Did she travel alone or with family? What happened to her family?
2. How did Nydia get from Missouri to Iowa to marry? How did she meet Luman Quinn? Was he in Missouri? Did Nydia travel alone to Iowa?

I still have more places to look. Iowa has a pretty good state census, I hope to find them in the 1885 census, if they haven't already moved to Michigan by then. Perhaps Luman will be found in an 1875 census, if there is one.

At least we know where a couple of odd names in the family come from. My grandfather Rathbun had a sister named Nydia. And one of James & Elizabeth's sons name was James Luman, although I believe he went by Luman.

Friday, August 7, 2009

Millet's, Simmons, & Browns, Oh-My!

Tuesday night, I decided to see if I could possibly find any further data about my 3gg grandmother's sister, Betsey Millet Simmons, and her family. I had tried before, and they all seemed to disappear after 1863, when their son Watson married Mariette J. Brown in Branch Co., Missouri. With a little searching, I found them on the 1870 census in Monroe Co., Missouri. And a bonus find--Hiram Millet, whom I believe to be my 3gg grandfather's brother. Finding him with a child of Betsey adds one more little chink of proof that I am right as I attempt to put this family together.

What I found was a household headed up by "Mary J. Simmons," and which included two Simmon's children (Glen age 3 & Horace age 1), an older Brown couple, Melville Simmons (brother-in-law to "Mary J.", and Hiram Millett (age 74). What a mixed household, and I'd certainly be interested in knowing just how they all drifted from "up north" to Missouri.

Since this was the latest time frame for anyone in this particular family, I decided to do a little more exploring. Going to the 1880 census, they were no longer in Monroe County. I could not find a Millett or a Simmons of the right ages in Missouri, but when I took the birth date parameter out of the search engine, I turned up the two Simmons boys in neighboring Shelby County, with step-dad William T. Carothers and their mother "Etta J." Carothers. Ancestry.com has Missouri marriages at their web site, so it wasn't difficult to find an 1871 marriage between the two, and a copy now resides on my computer. No Melville, although I did find him in Nebraska in 1880. No Hiram Millett, but given that he would be about 84, I would have been more surprised if I had found him.

More sleuthing between Ancestry.com, the Missouri Digital Archives site with their death records online, and the USGenWeb site for Shelby County, allowed me to put most of the pieces of this family together. A Shelby County history on this USGenWeb site confirmed that the two Brown's (Henry & Sarah) were indeed Mariette/Mary J./Etta's parents, and that her first husband was indeed Watson Simmons. Found wives and children for the two Simmons boys, death and burial records for them as well.

Would I have found them without the Internet? I doubt that I would have lived long enough to have found them without the Internet, nor been lucky enough to come across any current-day relatives to share information with.

The saga will continue..............

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Sorting Out My Millet Family

What? Two posts in the same day? I can go months with nothing, then suddenly I do two in one day--not to mention one last week. Maybe I'm turning over a new leaf

I was going to tie this in with the previous post, but it didn't seem right, so here you go--two in one day. Enjoy, who knows when I'll do another one.

From everything I can find in my research, I am a descendant of Jonathan & Jenet (Edmond) Millet of Voluntown, New London, Connecticut. My assignment, and I have accepted it, is to figure out which one of their sons I am descended from.

I have ruled out the oldest son, John, born in 1764. His family went to Darke County, Ohio, by 1830 when he appears in the census for Twin township. His will is made out in 1831, and he died sometime before May, 1833. His will names all but two of his children. His "two youngest daughters" are listed this way, not by name. I was never sure if this was "my" John, but later on a timely email from someone who had in his possession a family history of sorts, indicated this was indeed the oldest son of Jonathan & Jenet. I've found no trace of him between 1800 & 1830, but have traced his descendants enough to know that he is not my 4gg grandfather, in spite of having a son named "Merrit."

I have also ruled out Samuel, born in 1772. His family is well-documented, first in a history written in the late 1800's by someone related to his wife, Rachel Douglass, and by further research. Most of his family remained in upstate New York, although a few did migrate west and settled in Illinois, which is where I first pick up my gg grandmother Mary Millet.

And I've ruled out William, although at one time I was pretty sure he was my 3gg grandfather. However, he seemed to be most prominent in Jefferson Co., Indiana, as well as Geauga Co. Ohio and Jo Daviess Co. IL, so he always made me scratch my head in wonder. Later, we discovered why he was hopping around so much.

The other sons are Andrew (born 1767), Daniel (born 1774), Jonathan (born abt 1780), William (born about 1784) and Alexander (born 1790).

My gg grandmother was Mary Millet. She married my gg grandfather, Samuel Henry Johnson, in 1843 in Jo Daviess County, Illinois. She had two sons, Merrit and Samuel Henry Jr., before dying prior to 1850. Samuel married Roxy Lyon in 1850, who turns out to be a cousin of Mary's. A descendant of the second marriage has a paper which she found in her great grandmother's things, giving a listing of some of this family. The paper credits Alexander Millet for being the father of Alexander, William, Hiram and Martin Millet, as well as daughters Rhoda and one who married a Simmons. The paper also gives credit to this William as the father of my Mary. I had thought William was my 3gg grandfather, but I had the wrong William!

Gotta love this family! They are not original when naming their children--they use the ancestral names over and over again, and it gets confusing when there are many Williams, Alexanders, etc., who are born pretty close together and often in the same place. The William I "thought" was mine, turns out he's only an uncle! Thank you, Sandy Groezinger, for appearing on the genealogical scene long enough to share this information with me!

However, in my research, I have not found an Alexander Millet old enough to be fathering any children in the 1790's to early 1800's. The above-mentioned Alexander wasn't born until 1790; the other Alexander's were born even later, and are apparently sons of some of the brothers. One Alexander was born in 1809, and through court records of Geauga County we can assume this one is a son of William, grandson of Jonathan & Jenet.

This is getting long, so I will cut to the chase. I have narrowed down the possible candidates to be the grandfather of Mary Millet Johnson, to Andrew, son of Jonathan & Jenet. In checking through 1800-1830 censuses, he is the only one with enough children listed in his household to qualify, compared to his brothers Alexander, Daniel, William & Jonathan. Samuel has already been ruled out due to the Douglass genealogy, and he did not have an Alexander according to this biography. Or a William.

So, I'm looking for an illusive will or land record that will give me the definitive proof I need to declare the identity of my 4gg grandfather. And while I'm at it, I'm trying to sort out the later generations who keep popping up here and there in the same places as my known Millet family.

Stay tuned for more!

Over at the USGenWeb Project:

Elections for the USGW Project's Advisory Board were recently completed, although we do not have the results yet as to who won or lost. I have one more year on the AB, serving as the Northeast-North Central County Coordinator Representative. Then I plan to "retire," and get out of politics. It's been somewhat of an exercise in futility. I naively thought that I could make a difference, but when you're dealing in politics, you just can't make some people happy no matter what you do. There are some people who think the AB can step in and solve all the problems, and there are others who squwack when we try to do something. Since the title and job description are pretty closely tied (aka "advisory"), we really don't have the power that some people think we do.

Another County Coordinator bit the dust recently, in a southern state which my husband has genealogical ties to. The dust hasn't settled there yet, but I don't think the CC plans on protesting or filing any grievances for her unjust "firing." Too bad, from what I see it's an open & shut case of unjust relieving of duty. But the CC is probably smarter than I would be, because if she files and wins, she still has to live with the State Coordinator, who would undoubtedly do it right the next time. Easier for her to pack it up and be independent. With the search engines these days, her web site will still be found.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Garden of the Gods


We just returned home from our annual trip to Colorado Springs to visit my dad. One of our favorite things to do while we're there is to take a trip through the Garden of the Gods. This place has a special meaning to me, because as a young girl, my grandmother camped out here en route from Boise, Idaho, back to Marysville, Kansas. Seems her father was always looking for some place better than the flat lands of Kansas, and one of the first places he tried was Boise, Idaho. I am not sure of the time frame for the travel, but one of her younger sisters was born in Boise in 1889. She was named "Idaho Rose," although she always went by "Rose." So somewhere between 1889 and 1994, when the next child was born, the family returned to Kansas. My grandmother told us that they stopped to visit relatives in Colorado Springs, camping out in the Garden of the Gods while her father worked to earn more money to make the trip home. In researching the family, I find that my great grandmother had a sister Julia, who settled in Colorado Springs about 1888 with husband and children. By process of elimination, the Watson's are the ones who my grandmother's family visited on the way home.

My great grandfather also tried the Oklahoma Gold Rush, some place in Canada, and Arkansas as a new home for his family. Finding nothing to suit him in any of these places, he always went back to Marysville. I've been to Marysville, and if he was looking for a prettier place, I'd say Colorado Springs wins it, hands down. I've seen pictures of Oklahoma, and I've been to Boise, so there's not much difference (IMHO) between these locations. I don't know where in Canada he went so can't compare, but I'm thinking that most of Canada is MUCH prettier than Kansas. Maybe he thought it was too cold, I don't know. I do know that if he had gone further west to, say, La Grande or on to Portland, my whole history and personality could have been changed by that one decision. But as he always returned to Kansas, it allowed my grandparents to meet and marry and produce my mother. Who knows who I'd be, or where I'd be--otherwise.

Somewhere in the mid-1930's, after my great grandfather's death, my grandparents brought their family west to Oregon to join two of their married children who had already settled there. We traveled over the same roads 70-some years later, culminating in a stop in that very place where my grandmother spent some time as a young child.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Internet Genealogy

I am amazed when I think of how many new genealogical records have been added to the 'net in the past 14 years. Fourteen years ago, wondering what I was going to do with this new-fangled tool that I had been given (the Internet), I typed the word "Genealogy" into a search box on Prodigy, and that launched me into online genealogy--something I haven't quit doing in all this time. Prodigy had their Message Boards, and I quickly located a few for the surnames that I research. Millet was one, and Allen was another one. I made great strides in the year that I was on Prodigy, and then my dear brother decided that I was ready for the "real" Internet.

This is where I discovered "real" online records. The first ones I discovered were census records on a Darke County Ohio web site, run by my online friend, Wally Garchow. Discovered some Millet's on some of the census transcriptions, and saved them "just in case" they were part of my family. Years later, thanks to Rootsweb Message Boards and mailing lists, it was confirmed that they were a part of my Millet line.

In 1996 I was invited to become part of the USGenWeb Project, an ambitious project to create a web site for every county in the United States. I knew nothing of html or web site publishing, but a wonderful volunteer named Nancy Trice held my hand through the process, and Marshall County, Kansas was added to the Project. I felt so good about this that I adopted two more counties in Ohio, my home county in Washington state, and just last December, two more in Colorado. While the USGenWeb Project has grown by leaps and bounds in nearly 13 years, other entities have been added to the game.

Many states have begun to digitize their records and you can find actual images online for Missouri marriages and deaths. Washington state will undoubtedly have their death certificates online soon (currently there is a good index for them). Utah has online records--actual images too. There are other states with online records, and of course the LDS Church has been indexing from their vast collection of microfilmed records and putting the images online for better than a year now.

Thus I can open up my genealogy program, select a family, and go online to find records and information about them. Over the past few days I've been looking at my Hobb/Hobbs line, found in Missouri. This is my stepdad's paternal grandmother's parents. How incredible it is to find a marriage license and application--actual image--online for them, to save and to print out for my files.

Looking for cemetery or tombstone records? You'll find them online, affiliated with the USGenWeb's Tombstone Project, or at interment.net and findagrave.com. We truly live in a wonderous age, and locating our ancestors has become MUCH easier now than when I started nearly 41 years ago. I expect that as time passes, we'll see even more miracles in the field of "Internet Genealogy."

Friday, February 20, 2009

Using Censuses to Find Your Family

Earlier in the week I was spending a little time surfing the 'net and working on my elusive Millet line. I was checking out early census records on Ancestry.com, and had come across a couple of new (to me) Millet's whom I had never run into before.

Now keep in mind that in all Federal censuses before 1850, only the heads of household were listed by name, with tally marks by age group for all members of the household--parents, children, anyone who lives in that household. Depending on the year, the age groups are broken down by "under 10," or "under 5," "5 to 10," etc. And they're also broken down by males or females, so you can tell there are x number of children by age and gender. They aren't especially helpful since they do not list all residents of the household by name. You can look at the information you already have and try to determine if you have all the children or not. And of course you don't know if all the children belong to the head of household who is listed by name. Case in point: The gentleman whom I believe to be my 4th great great grandfather is Andrew Millet, and in 1830 he is living in Walworth, Wayne Co. NY. He was born in 1867, so by 1830 he's in the neighborhood of 63 years old. You would think there would be no children in his household, at least not very young ones, especially since his wife is older as well. But in this census there are younger adults and small children living with them. Now I am using this as a possible clue that one of his married children & family are living with them. Since I cannot locate his probable son William, whom I am even more sure is my 3gg grandfather, there is the possibility that this younger family is William's.

As I was strolling through the pages, a new Millet jumped out at me. Martha Millet, living in Rushford, Allegany Co. New York in 1830. I had never noticed her before, and so far I've been unsuccessful at finding her in 1840. In 1820 three Millet brothers are living in this county--Daniel, Jonathan, and Alexander. In 1830 Alexander is still here, but no Jonathan and no Daniel. Now, family legend tells us that Daniel went somewhere (Ohio or Michigan?) and was shot by a hunter who mistook him for a bear. If this is really true, and I have not been able to confirm it, Martha may be the widow of Jonathan, if he died between 1820 & 1830. I've not been able to locate him in later censuses either, which makes me think he had died between those dates. He could also have been moving west, leaving his family at home until he found a suitable homestead site and prepared to bring them west.

I'm certainly not done hunting, and will be undertaking a search in 1850 to see what Millet's may be in the area. In 1850, all household members are identified by name. We don't know what the relationship is for sure, but at least there are names.

But I digress. I have discovered that perhaps it's not the wisest thing to do to wait until bedtime to start researching. It literally took me HOURS to get to sleep that night, I was so excited and busy thinking about possibilities.

What's next? Looking at later censuses to see if I can find Martha, although she may have remarried and I would not have her new name, unless her children were listed under Millet and not the new husband's name. And renting some microfilm from the LDS Family History Library for Allegany Co. NY land records, which should tell what these men's wives names were--if they bought and/or sold land.

More later, I hope!