• Photo
  • Mar4

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    Updated: I had to add a few more favorite entries taken from my Flickr stream.

    Found while volunteering to transcribe marriage records – My new favorite bride’s name:

    An Olive Branch is offered

    Olive Branch offers herself in marriage

    Another favorite name from the 1900 census:

     

    Horny Baxter rides again

    Horny Baxter Rides Again!

    Finally, I’ve forgotten where I first saw this census page mentioned – it may have been at Randy Seaver’s Geneamusings Blog(?) but don’t quote me on that. See if you can figure out the what the girls’ occupation was at house number 90 on this page from the 1870 census in Kansas…

    Working Girls

    Hint: Click on the image to see it full size.

    Out of guesses? There’s an extra clue written along the left column – or just see the table below.

     

    Libby Thompson   – “Diddles”
    Harriet Pamentis   – “Does Horizontal Work”
    Ettie Baldwin         – “Squirms” in the dark
    Lizzie Harris         – “Ogles” fools (and I assume, takes care of 4 year old John Edward.)

     

  • Feb24

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    Vaclav Simanek side by side
    Two photos of my great-grandfather Václav Šimánek from our family albums – the rather dashing one on the left taken about 1894 in New York and the one on the right later in life back home in Czechoslovakia.

    We believe he took a trip from Czechoslovakia (then called Bohemia) to visit some previously emigrated family in Baltimore, Maryland then returned home.

    While scanning our family photos I did find a clue that we may not have the whole story – I noticed that the back of the first photo (aka a “cabinet card”) has a photographer logo of Rud Bachmann and address of 6 East 14th Street in New York, so apparently Vaclav took a side trip before returning home.

    The family story goes that he was impressed with the set up of fire departments in the United States and when he returned home to Předmíř he used what he learned to create a better fire department there.

    Needless to say I now have a very strong urge to add some handlebars to my own moustache.

  • Feb18

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    Tierney grave at Second Calvary Cemetery
    After unearthing my great-grandfather’s death certificate recently, I was finally able to track down* his grave at Calvary Cemetery in Queens.

    Good news for me was that I found four folks for the price of one! Both of my great-grandparents, Michael & Anna Tierney were there, as well as my grandfather’s brother Thomas.

    The nice surprise was finding Winifred Tierney as well, who passed when only 3 years old during the 1918 Spanish Influenza epidemic. Winifred was one of four children of my grandfather and his first wife Sabina Gilroy who, quite sadly passed away only a few months later from the same illness.

    (Update in 2012: After researching in the death certificates at the NYC Municipal Archives, I found that little Winifred actually died from Diptheria. Primary sources are your friend.)

    For those keeping track, little Winifred would be my half-Aunt, if there is such a thing as “halfness” in this situation.

    Winifred Tierney Death NoticeWe first saw mention of Winifred in a tree online that was compiled from an interview with her sister Sabina many years later. I found a listing for Winifred in a NYC death index and also a short notice for her in the NY Times obituaries. But, when I found the grave of my grandfather John Tierney and Sabina, I was surprised that Winifred was missing. It seemed odd since she died so near her mother.

    But, now we know she has been safely set with her grandparents all this time.

    *Please note the restraint I exhibited by not using the phrase “dig up”

  • Feb7

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    Woman sitting on a wall - Courtesy of the National Library of Ireland

    Courtesy of the National Library of Ireland

    One of my favorite photos, courtesy of the National Library of Ireland. Notes from their site:

    Taken by J. J. Clarke (1879-1961) of Castleblayney, Co. Monaghan while he was studying in Dublin [ca.1894-1904?]
    Physical Description: 1 photonegative : glass ; 13 x 10 cm.

    See it at the NLI site here.