“Labor” month ?


Our weather is predicted to be up and down like a yoyo. Hopefully, cool enough to get some projects accomplished in the yard and storage unit. The clutter annoys me but I lack the initiative to be outdoors in the heat and humidity. Yesterday, I rode the “three-wheeler” for half an hour. Tuesday, too?


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In case you missed it, read my earlier message.

“Labor Day”

Yesterday, all day, I was documenting the Bowman family (from Bowman obituary). But today, “Labor Day,” I am “laboring” on projects unrelated to family history.

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P.S. (Ha, ha, ha.) I wrote that message late last night and scheduled it for publication today. It was my sincere intention to do household projects. Instead, all day documenting the Bowman family!!

Loose ends ?!

I had “a couple of loose ends” I wanted to “tie up” before moving to other tasks. Well, I spent the entire day working to correctly document two men named Daniel Bowman. Same name, similar birth and death dates–and hopelessly confusing to this “seasoned researcher.” Look at the record (above) and see how the “top of the list” Member presents her information. (Most sources, most records, always tops the list.) By documenting the children, I was able to accurately document the family. “If” there are other children, they did not show up in my twenty-three sources and twenty-two records. Truthfully, I shout at my computer screen (when I read that information) and say “Hey, are you blind? Don’t you ‘proof’ your information?”  Conservatively, I added an additional one-hundred people to my database and five to fifteen “sources” for each.

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On a brighter note, see the beautiful Crepe Myrtle in the neighbor’s yard. ~~ I moved the KIA out of the carport hoping the next rainstorm will wash off the dirt. I’m inching toward a trip to the market for groceries.

Paying it forward

The response to an inquiry…

THANK YOU for the “thank you.” You can’t imagine how many messages I answer and I never receive a “thank you.” I have been very blessed with “family history” and I love to “pay it forward.” ~~~ Nereida, I’m not related to Gertrude. My Ancestry database says she is the “aunt of wife of second cousin.” ~~~ It’s a long story but I’ll make it brief and tell you that I “inherited” the Myrtle Traxler Family Tree. Myrtle (Hull) Traxler was the wife of my first cousin one time removed. She spent decades documenting the Traxler family in her genealogy software program. She passed away and the children and grandchildren didn’t give a hoot about her devotion to the Traxler family (and collateral lines). Miraculously (praise the Lord), a cousin (illegitimate son of my first cousin one time removed) sent me a thumb-drive with all of Myrtle’s records (more than 75,000 names). I uploaded it to Ancestry and I maintain the database. I don’t do much with it but it is my belief that the information should be available to researchers. The cousin didn’t know about his biological father until a DNA test. Fortunately, he made the connection but he is not a welcome member of the family. “They” shared their mother’s research so he has information about his ancestry. ~~~ Perhaps your friend will be fortunate and connect with family and learn the lineage. ~~~ Very best wishes from Lorraine Frantz Edwards (with Lorraine Frantz Family Tree). ~~~

whereohwhere hasmylittledoggone?

…whereohwhere canhebe?

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Straight forwards, simple, “piece of cake,”  etc., etc. It shouldn’t be difficult to document the relatives mentioned in an obituary?! It has been nine hours and I’m not finished!! ~~ Same “given name,” same location, “same surname,” married a cousin or step-brother or step-sister. I aim for 200% accuracy and “accuracy” was elusive. Most of the families were already in my database–therefore, it should be “a piece of cake.”  A spouse dies and the bereaved marries the brother or sister of the deceased spouse. Get the picture? Confused?? “They” are second and third cousins so I’m focused on getting them accurately documented in my Ancestry  database. The following… does not show how “Flora” and “Flory” add to the confusion. True story: It’s a “Bowman” obituary!!

Memories, how they linger…

how they ever flood my soul.

This was the scene that greeted me when I turned on the TV.  In 1959, 60 and 61, my U.S. Army husband was stationed in Paris, France. He, and a buddy, went to a remote location to watch the Tour de  France  (1960). During those years, my husband and I, and our two little boys, did “tours of France.” ~~ I took a lot of pictures with my Argus C-3 camera, 35 mm film…

Memories that last a lifetime.

Stay home, stay safe

“Stay home, stay safe”  has a drawback. Lack of social interactions! I’m fondly remembering the “social occasions,” people and places. ~~ “Armchair research” is a God-sent blessing (for me) during this trying time.