| September 2006 ~
Jenni Johnson, editor
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RootstampsTM |
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In
This Issue - Discover
the Magic of Family History at our Ogden Conference!
- Query & Answer - Fall FREE Query Offer
- Search Once, Twice, Three Times or More
- Jamborees, Genealogy Conferences, and Retreats
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Discover the Magic
of Family History at our Ogden Conference
Discoveries
are waiting for you at the Northern
Utah Family History Conference & Symposium on Oct. 6th and 7th in
Ogden, Utah! You won't want to miss the fantastic classes (more than 70) and
excellent teachers that are lined just for you. A multitude
of vendors will also be on hand to share their expertise and demonstrate the
latest in genealogy products and services.
This
is going to be a spectacular event! Elder Marlin K. Jensen, LDS church
historian, will be the keynote speaker and DearMYRTLE is our Friday night dinner
speaker. In case you haven't heard, there will be an extra special performance,
"Remember the Tears," on both Friday and Saturday nights in the Peery
Egyptian Theater. If you have registered for the conference, admission to this
performance is free, but you must request tickets. Click
here for more information and to sign up.
Next
stop! -- Cheyenne, Wyoming -- for the Genealogy
& Family Heritage Jamboree on Oct. 20th and 21st.
Then, it's on to the LDS Family History Library in Salt Lake City for the Nov.
13-18 Research Retreat!
Query and Answer - Fall FREE Query Offer!
Learn
from
a professional's
approach to a research problem.
You can submit a
query like the one below, and one of our 70+ professional
genealogists will guide you with some advice on where to take your
research next.
Take advantage of our FREE fall query offer.
Just go to www.myancestorsfound.com/q&a.htm
and enter Sept06 as your promotional
code. If you are one of the first 50 participants, skip right over
the Order button because your query will be absolutely free!
QUERY
Surnames:
Zerbel, Turk, Tuerk,
Wollenburg, Lewandowski
(Query # 05079 Swoboda)
Ancestor Name:
Emma Henrietta Toska Zerbel
nee Turk (Tuerk)
Research Goal: Locate her date
and place of birth Locate her date and place of death
Ancestor's Birth: Unknown -
Possibly Augusteneau, Kolmar, West Prussia or
Province of Posen
Ancestor's Death: Probably
after 1884 and before 1888, Berlin, Germany or
Nakel, Province of Posen
Spouse's Name: Carl Wilhelm
Zerbel
Marriage: 7-21-1858 Nakel,
Province of Posen, Preussen
Children's Names: Emil Johann
Zerbel b. 12-24-1860 Nakel, Posen Karl Wilhelm Zerbel b. 2-11-1863
Nakel, Posen Ottillie L. Zerbe. b. 1-04-1865 Nakel, Posen Gustave
Johann Zerbel b. 7-31-1867 Gromaden, Posen Clara
Zerbel b. 11-02-1871 Kovelifoko, Posen
Parents' Names: Gottfried Turk
and Henrietta Wollenburg
Religion: Probably Lutheran
Occupation: Unknown/Probably
Housewife
Records Searched: The names of
her parents were located by tracing her sister's family, all
obituaries for family members have been traced. This sister had a
daughter who emigrated from Erlau in 1900 and married one of the
sons of Emma and Carl Wilhelm Zerbel, she was born in Biewlowo or
some such name. I have never looked at the original records
on these marriages just the Internet records and I am not sure
whether or not they would include any further information or not
Helpful Info:
She had a sister, Auguste Alvine Turk who married August
Lewandowski, eventually I found her descendants and their records
confirmed the names of her parents and their residence that is not
very far from Nakel now known as Naklo, There is a Franz Turk who
married a Louise Manthey at Nakel on 9-06-1874 who is also no doubt
related to this family as her picture was found in family records. The
family started immigrating in 1884, 1886, and finally Carl Wilhelm
Zerbel and his youngest daughter immigrated in 1888 after the death
of Emma Henrietta Toska Turk, His son Emil Johhann and his family
had probably left the Nakel area as a record has been located that
states his daughter was born in Berlin, Germany, so just where my
great-great grandmother Emma Zerbel died is questionable
Contact Info:
1-608-589-5734
ANSWER
Suggested
Research Approach: Many times
that information is given in the marriage record of the German
ancestor. Your information indicates Emma married Carl Wilhelm
Zerbel in the town of Nakel on 21 Jul 1858.
A search should be conducted of the original parish records for
Nakel, in the Province of Posen. The records are, of course, in the
German language, and the German Gothic handwriting style.
It is possible a search of the original marriage information will
give the birth date and place for Emma. Additionally, that
information may have been listed in her children's records. There
was no standardized record keeping format throughout the German Empire
for listing information, but, experience has shown often such pieces
as you desire are given.
The Genealogical Society of Utah has
only been allowed to film German records until 1875, so, if Emma did
die between 1884 and 1888 in Nakel, only correspondence will bring
that information
Some
of the parish registers available for the city of Berlin do
contain birth, marriage and death information well into the early 1900s.
However, there are many Lutheran parishes in the city, so, it would
first be necessary to try and find the family in extant Berlin City
directories, to obtain an address. Then, that address would need to
be plotted on a map to locate the parishes which that street ran
through, trying to locate the nearest Lutheran Church(es).
If the handwriting is reasonably legible in the Nakel parish
records, it is estimated it would take about 1 hr. to find,
photocopy and transcribe the marriage entry for Emma Turk and Carl
Zerbel. If that entry did not give her birth place and date, the
time would be used to find the births of the children born in Nakel,
to see what information about Emma would be given there.
The searches in the City of Berlin could take 2-4 hours. If there
was more than one "C. W. Zerbel" listed in the directory
for the years 1884-1889, each would have to be followed through,
plotting the churches for each address listed in each year. Then,
the actual church records would have to be located and searched.
Most of the time only initials and/or shortened versions of the
first names are listed in the directories.
Answered by Ruth E. Manness, AG
A
My Ancestors Professional
Search
Once, Twice, Three Times or More
by LaRae Free Kerr, M. ED
How long has it been since you searched the Library of Congress’s Local
History and Genealogical Index? If it’s been a while, you might want to run
your ancestors through it again. Go to http://www.loc.gov/rr/genealogy/
to find it.
I’ll give you
fair warning: the site’s search engine does not work like www.FamilySearch.org
or www.Ancestry.com. So it is
imperative you read the search tips found at http://www.loc.gov/rr/genealogy/tips.html.
Then be sure to use all three options in the upper right of the
Local History and Genealogical Index screen: Local History and
Genealogy Pages, Researchers Web Pages, and All Library of Congress
Pages.
Even after those
three options, I could not bring up a book I know is in that
library. So from http://www.loc.gov/rr/genealogy/
I clicked on Search the Library’s Catalog. Even then the book
would not come up by topic. But it did come up by title and
author.
The Library of
Congress has extensive holdings, including most books published in
the United States and many interesting pictures and maps, etc. For
example the Library contains a journal written by Civil War prisoner
Miles O. Sherrill describing prisoners wearing “barrel” shirts
as punishment for stealing cabbage leaves from the garbage heaps.
The site includes information about an early nineteenth-century
Elizabeth Sherrill who illustrated text books for author Emma Hart
Willard when Elizabeth was only a student herself.
When I searched for
Morganton, a town many ancestors came from, up came pictures of a
bridge. The bridge was built way too late to have been used by any
of my family, but the foliage around it probably hasn’t changed
much, leaving a sense of ancestors’ terrain.
So be sure to
search deep on this website. Enter your family name, specific names
in both forms – last name first and first name first, towns,
counties, even states.
Click on each
option at the left of the Local History and Genealogical Index home
page. When you get to
Internet Subscription Services, click on A List of Selected
Genealogy Websites and search those as well. Great finds may be
waiting for you.
In addition, The
Library of Congress allows people to ask librarians questions. I
have attempted to locate an autobiography/reminiscence written by
Sarah Perkins, wife of Jonas White, for some time without success.
So I asked for help. Maybe I’ll get it.
Another site that
bears reviewing from time to time is the Mormon Historic Sites
Foundation at http://www.mormonhistoricsitesfoundation.org/index.htm.
New information is added regularly.
The Mormon
Historical site announced a joint effort between Salt Lake County
and the Genealogical Society of Utah to index early Salt Lake County
births and deaths printed in the Salt Lake Tribune. See http://www.sltrib.com/utah/ci_4100803.
Apparently, the digitizing is done, and the whole package will be on
the web next year. Anyone
interested in checking the pioneer records now can contact the
county's archives office at 801-468-2330.
Since I recommend
running each ancestor through an AltaVista or Google search
regularly, when a reader asked me to explain AltaVista, one of many
search engines, I was delighted to do it. People all over the world
send their ideas, experiences, research, pictures and venting into
the Internet ether. It would just sit there forever, unread, if a
way to retrieve the bits and pieces were not created.
Search engines
crawl along the airways noticing each individual bit.
It would be impossible for one search engine to find and
categorize every single piece of information, so many search engines
exist. Google is the most familiar one. AltaVista is another search
engine which locates more on my family names than Google or others I
have tried.
Ok, so how do you
use AltaVista? When you click on Internet Explorer, several search
engines probably come up. On my computer, Google, Yahoo and MSN all
come up. If I want to use AltaVista, I type in www.altavista.com.
AltaVista’s input rectangle shows up; I enter an ancestor’s
name. A list of sites bearing that name shows up just like it does
when I use Google. But because AltaVista crawls along slightly
different paths, it brings up slightly different websites.
If you are still
looking for addresses for lost cousins, try www.ZabaSearch.com.
Reader recommended, this is the best site of its kind I’ve seen so
far. Say you find an obituary for your great aunt that lists all her
children. How can you contact the children? Go to Zabasearch and
enter their names. Up comes everyone in the United States who has
those names. If the names are common, the site will ask for a middle
name or a town or state. This is one useful site.
Reader J. Shelley
asked for an address in Illinois that would lead her to the massive
card files mentioned in a Spring column. That address is Illinois
State Archives, Norton Building, Capitol Complex, Springfield, IL
62756 or call at 217-782-4682. These marvelous people will research
small requests.
Redoing certain
website searches, such as those mentioned here, are required because
the information about our people is ever-increasing. Thanks to all
who add to the good stuff on the Internet.
LaRae Free Kerr, M. ED., can be
reached at Itsallrelatives@sfcn.org
and www.itsallrelatives.us.
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