Thursday, September 21, 2017

Statistics Canada - Speaker Series - Historical Censuses

Today, I attended an afternoon Statistics Canada Speakers Series entitled, "A glimpse into the past: Using historical censuses to research Canadian families"


From the Statistics Canada website:

"Statistics Canada plays a vital role in providing consistent data that tell the ongoing story of our country and our families. Beginning in 1666 when Jean Talon, the first Intendant of New France, conducted the first census, to more than three centuries later, the Census Program continues to be a valuable source of information for historians and genealogists."

Guest Speaker: Professor Lisa Dillon

The event was well attended by a number of representatives from various government departments as well as academics, and genealogists.

The guest speaker was Lisa Dillon who is the Professor of Demography from the Université de Montréal.

The Panel

Lisa's presentation was followed by a panel discussion and then a question and answer session .

Here are some of the highlights that I noted:
  • During Professor Lisa Dillon's presentation, we were made aware of  a wide variety of research projects that used census data:
    • There are many SPECIAL PROJECTS that use census data: One project looked how families cared for aging parents during the late Victorian period and compared the data from Canada's 1871 census with the 1880 U.S. census.
    • The HISTORIC CENSUS DATA HAS SHORTCOMINGS: Academics have criticized the earlier  census for having no coherent structure
    • LINKAGES ENRICH OUR UNDERSTANDINGS: Parish records/census: the age calculations in the 1666, 1667 and 1681 censuses of Quebec have been compared to ages as calculated from baptismal records 
    • DATA COLLABORATIONS enable research: Famiy Search and Universities have collaborated by sharing materials (i.e. 1852 Census)
    • EARLY 20TH CENTURY CENSUSES show families in transition: A special project about the residential autonomy of never-married persons in urban Canada 1921-1951 as influenced by multiple variables
    • Partners mentioned in the presentation: Statistics Canada, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Family Search (Mormon Church of Latter Day Saints), PRDH Programme De Recherche , Canada Foundation For Innovation and the Minnesota Population Center
  • During the panel discussions I noted:
    • Glenn Wright: The census records are a fundamental resource for genealogists. We can learn so much about ancestors based on questions asked at the door: religion; ethnic origin; could our ancestors read and/or write; etc, etc
      • One of the upcoming challenges for the census and genealogists will be the definition of "family". On the 1911 Canada census, the divorce question was introduced. There are likely other questions that will need to be added in the future
    • Johanna Smith: (Johanna was the first to acknowledge that this Speaker Series was being held on unceded Algonquin territory - thank you for that Johanna) 
    • Lisa Dillon: Lisa wanted to emphasize the importance of partnerships. Academics never work in isolation.
      •  A good example of a partnership that fascilitated the access to reseources and data is the partnership between BIFHSGO, the Morman Church (Family Search) and Library and Archives Canada collaboration on the 1881 census.
      • Social history always references that families are the foundation for society and there is such diversity within families as a result of a number of variables
      • Lisa invited folks to look at the other rich data that can be found on census returns that is often overlooked. Things like comments from the census takers "old woman lives alone in cabin with 20 goats and won't let us enter" or the  contextual summaries at the end of the census districts where the census taker would note things like the number of windmills etc.
From the Questions and Answer Session at the very end of this Speaker series, I took note of the following:
  • Individual based research requests such as immigration files (that do not even go to the Library and Archives Canada until after 150 years) must be dealt with through the Privacy Act and Access To Information processes
  • 2011 Change in Census Policy occurred during the Harper years. This will create problems for researchers in 92 years and represents a substantial gap in data.
Screenshot: Wikipedia: Census in Canada
CENSUS AND GENEALOGY LINKS 

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Ancestry DNA

My father has generously consented to having his DNA analyzed by AncestryDNA and I am so incredibly grateful for this!

He told me from the beginning that he had no desire to do any of the activities that would follow submitting his sample. Things like uploading a GEDCOM file, following up on matches etc etc. He wanted me to manage all of that on his behalf.

Could I do that? Was it possible? And how would I do that once we started the proceess?

Can You Purchase A DNA Kit For A Family Member?

Thankfully I discovered the Facebook group Genetic Genealogy Tips and Techniques and so I posted some questions:


I asked:
"Can I purchase an ancestry.ca DNA for my father and upload his results or does he have to purchase an ancestry membership as well?"

I received many responses to my query. One in particular came from Lesley Anderson whom I had met at the 2016 Ontario Genealogical Conference in Toronto and at the 2017 Ontario Genealogical Conference in Ottawa.

Lesley Anderson wrote:
"You can purchase an AncestryDNA kit for anyone and they can activate it online themselves and send it in. They do not need to purchase a membership but if you have one they can benefit from it to have additional features by inviting you as a contributor or manager under the DNA settings page."

 Which DNA Kit Should I Buy?

Well, that was all I needed to know and now I needed to know which DNA kit should I buy?

Because I had been building my family tree on Ancestry.ca since 2008 (and researching my family history since the 1980s), I was hoping that the AncestryDNA offered the "best bang for the buck".

I researched the topic to learn that the whole area of DNA and genealogy is a lot more complicated and that there were no easy answers to "Which DNA Kit?" anyone should buy.

This is a well prepared comparison of the five top companies that do Autosomal DNA testing for genetic genealogy purposes: 23andMe, AncestryDNA, MyHeritage, Family Tree DNA and the Genographic Project.



At the end of the day I chose AncestryDNA for my father because:
  • there are 5,000,000 people (DNA) in the database 
  • we can contact any "cousin matches" through Ancestry.com’s messaging system
  • it is possible to download of raw data fileof the DNA results
  • Overall accuracy and sophistication of the biogeographical ancestry analysis was 4.5 (only surpassed by the  23andMe DNA test)
  • Special feature: Comparison of overlap of ancestral origins between matches and automatic identification of common ancestors, surnames and birth places between matches' family trees
The support offered by Ancestry was excellent. I made inquiries about shipping and they responded quickly and with an 800 telephone number if I had any additional questions.

Waiting For The Results

We mailed the sample the same day and were surprised at how AncestryDNA has kept us up to date every step of the way. 

The DNA kit came from Utah and then we mailed it to Ireland. We were notified when it arrived and when it entered the lab for processing.

We are now waiting for the results....and getting ready for the next step "You've Received Your Results. Now what?"

Part I 


Part II 

Saturday, September 9, 2017

Windsor Directories (1888 - 1964)

PDF
1964 City of Windsor Directory, Might Directories Limited
1963 City of Windsor Directory, Might Directories Limited
1962 City of Windsor Directory, Might Directories Limited
1961 City of Windsor Directory, Might Directories Limited
1960 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1959 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1958 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1957 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1956 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1955 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1954 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1953 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1952 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co. Limited
1951 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1950 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co. Limited
1949 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1948 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Company
1947 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1946 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1945 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1944 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Co., Limited
1943 City of Windsor Directory, ACME Windsor Directory Company
1942 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1941 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1940 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1939 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1938 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1937 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1935 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (Leddy Copy), Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1935 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (WPL Copy), Vernon's Directories Limited
1934 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1933 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1932 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1931 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (Leddy Copy), Vernon Directories Limited
1931 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (WPL Copy), Vernon's Directories Limited
1930 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon's Directories Limited
1929-1930 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Vernon Directories Limited Publishers
1928-1929 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (WPL Copy), Henry Vernon And Son
1928-1929 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (Leddy Copy), Henry Vernon and Sons Publishers
1927-1928 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Henry Vernon and Sons Publishers
1926-1927 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Henry Vernon and Sons Publishers
1925-1926 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Henry Vernon And Son
1924-1925 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Henry Vernon and Sons Publishers
1923-1924 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Henry Vernon and Sons Publisher
1922-1923 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Henry Vernon and Sons Publishers
1919-1920 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Henry Vernon and Sons Publishers
1916 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory, Henry Vernon And Son
1915 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (Leddy Copy), Henry Vernon And Son
1915 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (WPL Copy), Henry Vernon And Son
1914 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (Leddy Copy), Henry Vernon And Son
1914 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (WPL Copy), Henry Vernon And Son
1913-1914 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (Leddy Copy), Henry Vernon And Son
1913-1914 Vernon's City of Windsor Directory (WPL Copy), Henry Vernon And Son
1912 Windsor Directory, Henry Vernon And Son
1911 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1910 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1909 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1908 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1906-1907 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1905-1906 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1904 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1903 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1901 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1900 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1899 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1897-1898 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1896 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1895 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1894 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1893 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1891 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company
1888 Windsor Directory, Union Publishing Company

Friday, September 8, 2017

Sept. 10: National Grandparents Day

National Grandparents Day is celebrated at different times of year depending on the country. 
In Canada and the US it is 
Sunday, September 10th, 2017

My great great grandparents
Jeremiah and Mary (Brennan) Moynahan (based on of photograph circa 1922)
Mixed media sketch on monoprint by Cindi Moynahan-Foreman

Diane Nolin of "Genealogy: Moving Beyond BMD" has issued a challenge for National Grandparents Day and you can read about Diane's challenge here: http://genealogybeyondthebmd.blogspot.ca/2017/09/grandparents-day-challenge.html

Diane Nolin's CHALLENGE:  "Tell a story as told to you by one of your grandparents!"

I would like to expand on that challenge slightly:
  • Did your grandparents ever tell you a story that you never forgot?
  • Did you ever hear a story about one of your grandparents that you never forgot?
  • Did you ever hear a story about a grandparent who you NEVER met that makes you wish you could travel back in time to talk to them?
My Paternal grandparents
My maternal Grandparents




The picture below was taken in Windsor, Ontario on the porch of my great grandparents home on Campbell Avenue. 
(On the left is me and on the right my cousin Lorri.)
We are posing with our great grandmother
Mary Anne Elizabeth (Broderick) Moynahan (1869-1960) 

I feel very fortunate to have this photograph.


Happy Grandparents Day



Friday, May 12, 2017

On This Day: May 12

Wedding Day May 12, 1903
Patrick Broderick and Clara Moynahan
(Photo from private collection of Bernard Broderick)
On this day in 1903, Patrick Broderick married Clara Moynahan at St Mary's Roman Catholic Church in Maidstone, Ontario.

St. Mary's R.C. Church, Maidstone, Ontario
Image Source: Maidstone Cemetery Records
St Mary's church is located on Lot 293, North Talbot Rd., Highway 3, Maidstone, Ontario.

Many  of  our ancestors are buried in the cemetery there (https://essex.ogs.on.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Maidstone-ST-MARYs-Ess2818-INDEX.pdf)

Source: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2007.Original data - Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: Institut Généalogique Drouin.Original data: Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec,
Patrick had his brother Leo W. Broderick (who later became a detective) as his best man, and Clara had her sister Maud Moynahan (who later married Frank Flannery) as her maid of honour.

Photo of Moynahan sisters Maud Agnes and Clara
(Photo from private collection of Frank Lyons)

Unfortunately, Clara (Moynahan) Broderick died in 1919 at the young age of 37 years (after a lingering illness) leaving her husband Patrick with five children aged 18 months to 15 years.

Source: The Border Cities Star - Dec 13, 1919

At 51 years of age, Patrick remarried American-born Mary Josephine Kuehne (1876-1938) on November 28, 1922 in the Roman Catholic church in Amherstburg. Josephine was born in Cleveland, Ohio to Joseph Kuehne (born in Switzerland) and Sarah Darragh (born in Cleveland, Ohio)

Source: Essex Free Press (Essex, ON), December 8, 1922

The Broderick-Moynahan Family Tree

The Broderick-Moynahan Family Tree
I have written previously of Patrick and Clara and some of their children
I have not yet written histories on the Workmans (Indiana) , the Wheelers (California) and the Lyons (Windsor) who have descended from this marriage. My research has benefited greatly from an online ancestry connection to a Lyons distant cousin. I am very grateful for that.

More family facts
  • Frank Broderick and Clara Moynahan's children were not only cousins to John Moynahan and Mary Broderick's children (like my grandfather Ernest Moynahan), they were double first cousins: They have both sets of grandparents in common.
  • Double Cousins have happened more than once in our family tree
    • Matthew Moynahan and Catherine Carr and Timothy Moynahan and Julia Ann Carr
  • A new stone was erected for Patrick and Clara Broderick in 1989 (see photo below)
Bernard Broderick (1916-1992) son of Patrick and Clara Broderick
(Picture taken in 1989 at Bernard's parents new stone
at St Mary's Cemetery, Maidstone, Ontario)

Sunday, April 2, 2017

On This Day: April 2 - Nellie (Annal) Simpson Was Born

 Nellie (Annal) Simpson (1899-1962)
(my 1st cousin 2x removed) 
Photo credit: Private collection of Graydon Douglas Simpson (son of Nellie Annal)
For 2017, I have decided to use  "On This Day" (or OTD for short) as a means to:
  • honour the life events of my ancestors
  • revisit my previous research on them, 
  • check for any new information online (i.e. on ancestry and Family Search)
  • update any of my previous blog posts if new information was found
  • share these #OTD memes on social media like my Facebook page (to share with family) and on twitter (to share with other genealogists).
In some cases, I have created new blog posts (see Francis Clifford Tomlin's Headstone and Ann (Moynahan) Jobin). Such is the case for Nellie - I want to dedicate this blog post to her on her birthday.

Nellie (Annal) Simpson (1899-1962)

I had written a little bit about Nellie previously in my blog post 52 Ancestors No.31 Meeting Distant Cousins from the Annal-Hess Clan . In that blog post I described how two distant cousin genealogists, Vicky Hess and Kim Simpson, were the reason that my Annal-Hess clan research was so far advanced. They had done ALL the work! I am sincerely grateful to both of them.
 
Nellie Lillian Annal was the daughter of  James and Mary (Wright) Annal


I had written previously about Nellie's father James Annal (1873-1921) as well in my blog post 52 Ancestors #36: Fire Chief and Ice Dealer James Annal . I was surprised that James had died so young (47 years of age) being described as "hale and hearty" and a "powerful, vigorous man" and James had worked as an "Ice Man" and Firefighter. Sadly, he did not live long enough to see his three grandsons born (the children of Nellie and Graydon Simpson.).


Pictures of Nellie with her parents James and Maggie Annal 
Photo credit: Private collection of Graydon Douglas Simpson (son of Nellie Annal)


 Three Things To Know About Nellie

As a birthday tribute to the Nellie Lillian Annal who was born on this day, April 2 in the year 1899, here are three things you probably did NOT know about her.

Fact No. 1: Nellie had two sisters who died before their second birthday

How sad that Nellie grew up as an only child and how sad that her two sisters did not even live long enough to see their second birthdays. It must have been hard on Nellie's parents as well.

I love the poems that appear on Bessie and Rena's headstones and I am assuming that they were probably written by their mother (?). Both girls, Bessie and Rena, are buried at the Riverview Cemetery in Wallaceburg, Ontario.

I located a death certificate for Bessie and learned that she died from "gastro intestinal" according to the physician in attendance.

Nellie's sister Bessie Irene died at 1 year 6 months and 13 days old

Nellie's sister Rena May died at 8 months 11 days old.
Fact No. 2: Nellie had three sons


Nellie with her three sons
(left to right): Russell Lee, Graydon Douglas, and James Willard
(c. 1930s) Photo credit: Private collection of Graydon Douglas Simpson (son of Nellie Annal)
All three of Nellie's sons married and lived in Michigan and Nellie lived to see the arrival of six grandchildren.

Composite of wedding announcements for the three Simpson brothers (taken from the Detroit Free Press archives).

Fact No. 3: Nellie Lillian (Annal) Simpson was a quilter and "sewed for Britain".

I located a Detroit Free Press clipping dated March 9, 1941 (Page 43) that shows women "sewing for Britain" and one of them is Mrs. Graydon Simpson - Nellie!


Comfort Quilts
"Of all the services that women provided for wartime relief, perhaps the making of quilts represented the most intimate expression of comfort and care for those suffering the horrors of war. Women all over Canada gathered to sew quilts for bombed-out families in Britain......"(Source: http://halifaxwomenshistory.ca/canadian-comfort-quilts/)

I am so grateful to Kim Simpson for sending me photographs of a quilt made by Nellie from her private collection.

Nellie's Quilt
Photo credit:
Private collection of Douglas and Kim Simpson

Nellie's Quilt (close up)
Photo credit:
Private collection of Douglas and Kim Simpson

Nellie's Quilt (detail)
Photo credit:
Private collection of Douglas and Kim Simpson

Nellie Lillian (Annal) Simpson Died in 1962
 
Death Notice: Detroit Free Press (6 Jun 1962): Simpson, Nellie l.
Nellie died in 1962 and is buried in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens in Novi, Michigan alongside her husband Graydon who died sixteen years later (1978). There are no pictures available online of their headstone.
Death Notice: Detroit Free Press (18 Jan 1978): Simpson, Graydon

Links to War Time Sewing Clubs

Monday, March 27, 2017

On This Day (OTD) March 2017

In past years, I have used Amy Crow's "52 Ancestors" as a means to go deeper into my family history research.

For 2017,I have decided to use "On This Day" (or OTD for short) as a means to
  • honour the life events of my ancestors
  • revisit my previous research, 
  • check for new information online (i.e. on ancestry and Family Search)
  • update any of my previous blog posts if new information was found
  • share these #OTD memes on social media like my Facebook page (to share with family) and on twitter (to share with other genealogists). (See the images at the bottom of this post for examples of previous March 2017 posts.)
  • In some cases (like Francis Clifford Tomlin's Headstone) I have created new blog posts.

On This Day :
Ann (Moynahan) Jobin
Was Born March 27, 1877

Ann (Moynahan)Jobin

On this day, March 27, 2017, we commemorate the birthday of Ann Jobin. She is my 2nd great-aunt and she was born in Maidstone, Ontario. She is the daughter of Jeremiah and Mary (Brennan) Moynahan.

She married Alexander Jobin and lived her entire life on the same farm she moved to when she married Alex (9th Concession in Sandwich South, Ontario).

The newspaper reports that in December 1947, Ann's friends were "wishing her a speedy recovery from a serious operation" which she never recovered from. She eventually died from this "serious operation" in March 1948. No further information is available on this operation because the online records do not yet go to 1948. ( Ontario Deaths, 1869-1937 and Overseas Deaths, 1939-1947 ).


I wanted to dedicate extra space to Ann today to share three interesting facts about Ann's life that folks might not know.

FACT #1: Ann's father Jeremiah Moynahan died in her home in June 1922 while on a visit:

FACT #2: My grandfather, Ernest Moynahan, was one of the six nephews who were pallbearers at Ann's funeral.


FACT #3: Ann's headstone at St Mary's in Maidstone Ontario has a interesting dollar sign symbol at the top that has nothing to do with money.

Source: CanGenWeb: Maidstone: St Mary's Cemetery
"This symbol, which looks like a dollar sign ($), is actually the letters I, H, and S superimposed over each other. These represent the Greek letters Iota (Ι), Eta (Η) and Sigma (Σ), which are the first three letters of Jesus in Greek." (Source: Cemetery Wordpress)

Happy Birthday Ann (Moynahan) Jobin (1877-1948)

OTD Archive - March 2017

March 1
 March 6
 March 10

 March 13
 March 14
 March 21
 March 27