Archive for the ‘Genealogy’ Category

Well, better late than never. After a busy weekend with Halloween and the kids, I find myself writing this on Monday morning.

I have updated the data at over on the Koen Family Genealogy site to include all recent discoveries, including those given here.

This week’s activities included a trip to the St. Louis County Library to investigate what they have on Montgomery County, Missouri. In particular there was one book that I wanted to look at, “Family Maps of Montgomery County, Missouri” by Gregory A. Boyd, J.D. Mr. Boyd has taken and mapped out all of the original Federal land grants with in the Montgomery County and others across the country. Unfortunately, I think my research in Montgomery County has taken me far enough back in time to really make use of the book. I am fairly certain that I don’t have all of my direct line ancestors from Montgomery County identified. This should prove to be a very useful book, when I am ready for it.

Building on what I worked on the previous week, I looked at all of the other children of Edward Lee Allen . These would be George Draper Allen (1892-?) and Joseph Burnace Allen (1893-1956) .

What I know about George Draper Allen

According to his WW I Draft Registration Card, he was born 4 Mar 1892 in New Florence, Montgomery, Missouri, USA. He married Bertha J. Ekey on 10 Oct 1914 presumably in Montgomery County, Missouri, USA. At this point, I do not know when he left this world, There is no record in the Missouri Digital Heritage database. I have found him in each of the Federal Censuses from 1900-1930, all in Montgomery County.

I have not done much research on the Ekey family, so what I have for Bertha J. Ekey, is scant. She was born about Aug. 1892, probably in Montgomery County, Missouri, as this is where her siblings were born.

George and Bertha had two daughters:

  1. Jewel E. Allen, b. Abt. 1914.
  2. Vaurine Allen, b. Abt 1917.

Research to do

  • Determine George Draper Allen’s date of death
  • Land Records
  • Newspapers to flesh out other details of his life

Notes

My mother has put me in contact with one of Jewel’s children, who may have some of the data needed on this family as well as the Joseph Burnace Allen family.

There were brothers and sisters who married brothers and sisters, between the Ekey and Allen family. This created double cousins. My maternal grandmother used to talk about this.

From the Montgomery City Standard, 20 Oct 1952, page 1 column 3:

Mrs. E. L. Allen Dies In Wellsville

Magnolia Elrod, daughter of the late James and Amanda Elrod, was bord July 16, 1867 south of Danville, Missouri and departed this life September 25, 1952 in Wellsville, Missouri at the Knight Nursing Home, at the age of 85 years 2 months and 9 days.

At an early age she professed faith in her Savior and united with the Methodist Church. She was a faithful member and, as long as her health permitted, was a regular attendant at Sunday School and church.

On June 9, 1889, she was united in Holy Matriomony in the Methodist Church in Danville with Edward Lee Allen who preceded her in death March 12, 1949. To this union were born four children: Orpha (Mrs. Henry Ekey), George and Burnace all of New Florence, and Frank, who preceded her in death at the tender age of two years.

She leaves to mourn her passing three children, four grandchildren, four great grandchildren; one brother, James Elrod of New Florence; two nieces: Lucy Elrod and Mrs. Helen Groteweil; one nephew, Merlin Elrod; one sister-in-law, Mrs. Jennie Marlow, and many other relatives and a host of friends.

Funeral services were conducted at New Florence Methodist Church Sunday afternoon by her pastor, Rev. Jon Kirk and burial was in New Florence Cemetery—Hopkins service.

From the Montgomery Standard, 17 March 1949, page 1 column 2:

Ed Allen Dies At Eighty-Five Years

Edward Lee Allen, son of J. C. and Mollie Allen, was born October 5th, 1863 near Mineola, Missouri. He departed this life March 12, 1949 at the age of 85 years, 5 months, and 7 days.

On June 9, 1889, he was united in marriage to Magnolia Elrod at Danville Methodist Church. To this union four children were born, namely—Orpha, George, Burnace, all of New Florence; and Frank, who preceded him in death at the tender age of two years.

He united with the Methodist Church at Americus in his early boyhood and lived a consistent christian life. He spent most of hist life in Montgomery County, except for four years, during which time he ran a general store in Revere, Clark County.

He leave to mourn his passing his wife, three children, four grandchildren, four great grandchildren, one sister—Mrs. Jennie Marlow of Montgomery City, many other relatives and a host of friends.

Funeral services were conducted at the New Florence Methodist Church with J. Preston Cole in charge on Monday, March 14th, and burial was at New Florence.

Mr. Allen was an auctioneer for a number of years, in addition to his farming. He was a member of the Oddfellows Lodge.

We extend our sympathy to the family, who has an unusual record—there not having been a death in the immediate family since the death of the two-year-old Frank years ago.

I spent some time this week getting my family history data put online with the TNG software it resides at http://genealogy.koen.net now. I will continue to post what research activities I completed this week as well as plans for upcoming research. I am including links to the data on the individuals discuss below. All source information on this family is included in the database.

After the success of last week, I continued further up the family tree and looked at the Edward Lee Allen family. Edward Lee Allen (1863-1949) and Magnolia Elrod (1867-1952) are the parents of Orpha Allen who I researched last week.

What I know

Edward Lee Allen was born 3 October 1863 in Mineola, Montgomery, Missouri, USA. He married Magnolia Elrod. He died on 12 Mar 1949 in New Florence, Montgomery, Missouri, USA and was buried in the New Florence Cemetery, New Florence, Missouri, USA.

At this point, I have found him in the 1900 U.S. Census in Bear Creek Township, Montgomery, Missouri. He is located in the Danville Township in each of the 1910, 1920, and 1930 U.S. Census.The census schedule indicate he was farmer and owned the land he farmed.

According to his death certificate, he died at his home from coronary thrombosis due to a cerebreal haemmorhage, due to arterio-sclerosis. His parents were Joseph C. Allen and Mollie Windsor. His son George is listed as the informant.

Magnolia Elrod was born 16 July 1867 in New Florence, Montgomery, Missouri, USA and died 25 September 1952 at the Knights Nursing Home in Wellsville, Montgomery, Missouri. She was buried 28 September 1952 in the New Florence Cemetery as well.

She was located in the census schedules with her husband Edward in 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930. Her death certificate says that she died from bronchial pneumonia and a cerebral haemmorhage and the son George was also the informant. Her parents were listed as James Elrod and Amanda Wright.

Edward and Magnolia had four children:

  1. Orpha Allen, b. 3 Aug 1890, m. Henry Harrison Ekey 7 May 1910, d. 28 Apr 1964
  2. George D. Allen, b. abt 1892
  3. Joseph Burnace Allen, b. 14 Dec 1893, m. Georgie A. Davis Dec 1914, d. 25 Jan 1956
  4. Frank Allen, b. 18 Jul 1896, d. 15 Dec 1898

I  have  obituaries for Edward and Magnolia as well from the Montgomery County Standard and will post them later.

Research to do

  • Locate Edward Lee Allen and Magnolia Elrod in the other Census schedules.
  • Trace the children of the family forward through all offspring.
  • Research the land records of Edward Lee Allen.
  • Get tombstone pictures from the New Florence Cemetery
  • Find marriage information for Edward Allen and Magnolia Elrod.

Notes

Again, what is detailed here is what is available from the folks at Ancestry.com. There are a number of books available at the St. Louis County Library Headquarters through the NGS book collection that I will be looking at, hopefully, this week.

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23
Oct

Follow Friday – TNG

   Posted by: bryan Tags:

The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding

I first came across TNG, probably three years ago when I was looking for a easy way to present my data in a “pretty” fashion. That first release was TNG v.5. The project has come a long way since then. Darrin Lythgoe is the brilliant developer behind this project. For a reasonable price, you can put together a nice clean, Web 2.0, friendly genealogy website. I would recommend checking it out.

Note: I have received no compensation from TNG or Darrin Lythgoe in making this post, nor will I receive anything in the future.

Ahnentafel von Herzog Ludwig (1568-1593) Holzs...
Image via Wikipedia

I have installed TNG to host my family history research data at http://genealogy.koen.net. This is just a starting point with what I feel is reasonably clean data. I will continue to update it as my clean up process continues.

I have also added a widget on the right side that will have the most five most recent updates to the data listed in it. You can subscribe to this information in your favorite RSS reader if you’d like.

If you have any questions about this data, please contact me.

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This weeks activities included running across the largest research file that I have on my ancestors. I said largest, I didn’t say cleanest. This file has its origins from my “junk genealogy” days. However, it was nice to run across it, as I will use it has a road map to create a new, safe for public consumption database.

The first family that I chose to research was my maternal grandmother’s parents. Henry Harrison Ekey (1884-1964) and Orpha Allen (1890-1964). They had one daughter Vivian Verniece Ekey (1917-1987), my grandmother. I chose this family for two reasons, my mother visited them many times when she was growing up and has many memories of them and the close proximity to St. Louis. As a kid, I remember visiting the cemeteries with my grandparents around Memorial Day each year to place flowers on their graves.

What I know

Henry Harrison Ekey was born 7 Nov 1884 in Franklin County, Missouri. He married Orpha Allen on 4 May 1910 in Montgomery County, Missouri. He died 20 Aug 1964 in New Florence, Montgomery, Missouri.

According to the 1920 and 1930 Federal Census, they lived in the Bear Creek township of Montgomery County where Henry listed his occupation as a farmer on property that was owned by the family. He appears in the 1900 and 1910 Federal Census with his parents Rezon Barkhurst Ekey and Elizabeth Frances “Lizzie” Wallace and many of his siblings.

Orpha Allen was born 2 Aug 1890 in New Florence, Montgomery, Missouri to Edward Lee Allen and Magnolia Elrod. She died shortly before Henry on 28 Apr 1964 in New Florence, Montgomery, Missouri. She appears on the 1910 Census, which was taken shortly before they were married, with her parents and two brothers, George D. Allen and Joseph B. Allen in the Danville Township, Montgomery, Missouri. She also appears with Henry on the 1920 and 1930 Census.

They were married 4 May 1910 in New Florence, Montgomery, Missouri and only had one daughter, Vivian Verniece Ekey. This marriage was listed in an index to Montgomery County Marriages on Ancestry.com.

I have both of their obituaries from the Montgomery County Leader somewhere in my files. Once I locate them, I will post them on this site.

Research to do

  • Compile the complete listing of Henry Ekey‘s siblings.
  • Locate the land records and transactions for the property that was own by the family.
  • Get tombstone pictures from the New Florence cemetery.
  • Locate Death certificates for Henry Ekey and Orpha Allen.
  • Interview my mother to she what she has on this family. She has some pictures and other items from them.

Notes

Most of what I have recorded with sources is what I have been able to find in sources on Ancestry.com, not including the user-submitted records. It’s now time to do the further digging necessary to develop a complete picture of their life.

Please feel free to share what you have, if anything on this family.

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6
Oct

What is Cluster Genealogy?

   Posted by: bryan Tags: ,

Concrete wall
Image via Wikipedia

I have recently been reading Emily Croom’s Unpuzzling Your Past. She talks about the benefits of doing “cluster genealogy.”  This got me to thinking about what this really means. A quick search on Google, shows Wikipedia’s definition first:

Cluster genealogy is a research technique employed by genealogists to learn more about an ancestor by examining records left by the ancestor’s cluster. A person’s cluster consists of the extended family, friends, neighbors, and other associates, such as business partners. Researching the lives of an ancestor’s cluster leads to a more complete and more accurate picture of the ancestor’s life.

Why do it?

Most of us get so focused on researching the direct line ancestors, but here’s why this technique helps:

  • The records of those extended family members and friends can provide pointers to the previous generation.
  • Family groups often migrated to the same towns and lived near each other. You might find that neighbors are relatives.
  • In a lot of cases a single record isn’t sufficient evidence to meet the proof standard, so researching by the cluster can provide additional records.
  • Your direct line ancestor may be indexed incorrectly. Knowing the entire family can help you locate the family.
  • Researching a larger group of ancestors improves your chances of connecting with other researcher.

How does it work?

You need to search beyond your direct line ancestors. Check out brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, cousins, neighbors and friends. Look for these individuals in vital records, land records, census records, and other compiled genealogies. Record your finding in your software, just as if they were related.

Don’t forget the spouses of these individuals, either. If your tree is lacking other researchers, the spouses’ trees might not be. Here again compiled genealogies may be available on these allied lines.

Census records really shine for doing this type of resource. Land and church records can also provide pointers to additional individuals of interest.

Conclusion

I certainly hope that you can see that by increasing your research options, you improve your chances of finding details and records about your ancestors.

Feel free to share how these techniques have helped you.

Finally, I’d like to thank Kimberly Powell, about.com Genealogy Guide for the information here.

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Successful research
Image by jntolva via Flickr

One of the intentions of this blog was to share with those that are interested my ongoing efforts in researching my family history. In the year or so that this incarnation of the blog there has not been a single post regarding my genealogical research. It’s time for this to change.

I have done research off and on for the past 11 years. However, I have yet to correct many of the careless entries in my family files from my early days. There is a lot of the data that is undocumented and in some cases, just plain wrong. This is as a result of not following sound research practices and being more concerned with going “deep,” rather than accurate. There is quite a bit of criticism regarding some of the “homegrown” data that is published online. So, I want to ensure that my data is correct and well-documented.

I eventually intend to publish a family history. So, this is a good exercise for that project.

I am pursuing the following steps to make this happen:

  1. Extract any and all information that I can find on my direct line ancestors. This includes online, as well as, in my own files.
  2. Create a “sloppy” data set from this data.
  3. Use tools like GenSmarts and The Master Genealogist‘s Audit feature to create an action plan.
  4. Follow the advice and guidance of these tools to create a new “clean” data set that is accurate and well-documented.
  5. Post the clean findings here and elsewhere online.

If you have gone through a similar exercise, I would be curious to hear about your experience and what strategies you found worked well for you.

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