Thursday, November 26, 2009
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Tombstone Tuesday--Charles Stark
Sunday, November 22, 2009
SNGF--Most Recent Unknown Ancestor
A couple of leads that I have not followed:
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Treasure Chest Thursday--Stark Cane
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Tombstone Tuesday--William Steele and Elizabeth Ann Pool McClure
The McClures lived on a farm in Monongalia County and raised nine children.
Elizabeth, known to family as Aunt Sis, was a life long member of Rock Forge Methodist Church (now known as Brookhaven Methodist Church). She had attended a subscription school as a child.
The McClures are buried in East Oak Grove Cemetery, Morgantown, Monongalia County, West Virginia.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Treasure Chest Thursday--Stark Cross Stitch
Now that I am thinking about this photo, I am wonder how Teek, with her arthritis even got up the flight of stairs to my bedroom? As tidy as the room is, I must have already left home either for college or marriage ;-)
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
VETERAN'S DAY 2009
Flipside's Veteran Pages can be found at:
The Linda Hughes Hiser Family Genealogy Home Page Roster of Ancestors Who Were Veterans
and
Grave Yard Rabbit Carnival--Memorial Day
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
The new Kreativ Blogger Award--THANKS LORI
THANK YOU TO my blogging buddy, Lori, over at Family Trees May Contain Nuts, for sending Flipside the new Kreativ Blogger Award. Lori must read hundreds of blogs daily and she ALWAYS leaves positive and usually humorous comments. She is the BEST!!!
Apparently the winner of the award has to list seven things about themselves and then pass the award along to seven other bloggers. Here goes....
1. I absolutely LOVE pasta.
2. I try to keep things in order, but it's a losing battle.
3. I am a collector of many things antique.
4. I LOVE my family....immediate and extended.
5. Always pour me Red Bicyclette chardonnay.
6. I have the BEST friends in the world and I love spending time with them.
7. Genealogy, photography and travel are my passions.
Now, to pass the Kreativ Blogger along. I, too, read many blogs daily. Choosing just seven is almost an impossible task. I primarily concentrate on blogs from the Geneabloggers. They are all so well researched and thoughtfully written.
1. Greta at Greta's Bog
2. Carol at Reflections from the Fence
3. Linda at Exploring Almost Forgotten Gravesites in Ohio
4. Deez at Cemetery Explorers
5. Hummer at Branching Out Through the Years
6. Jennifer at Jennifer's Genealogy Blog
7. Lori at Stories of My Ancestors
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Treasure Chest Thursday--Hughes Mushball Medal
Service in World War I
Siberian Bag
Artist
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Smile for the Camera, 18th Edition--Travel
The word prompt for the 18th Edition of Smile For The Camera is "Travel." Planes, trains and automobiles. Horses, mules, carts, and wagons. Bikes or on foot. Show us your family and how they traveled. This is going to be a good one, I feel it in my luggage. Admission is free with every photograph! Thank you to footnote MAVEN over at Shades of the Departed for hosting.
What a “buggy!” There are numerous notes throughout my maternal grandmother’s photo albums and notes that refer to a car as a “buggy” or "the machine." I know next to nothing about cars, so I can’t identify the make and model of this one, however the folks standing in front of it include my mother, her parents, her aunt and her grandmother.
This was an extensive family motor trip traveling from Avalon, Pennsylvania to Washington D.C. and Mt. Vernon; then into New York during August 1928. My mother was 6 ½ years old. From the photos and captions the itinerary for this trip covered Washington, DC., and Mt. Vernon, and then up the Hudson River through the Adirondack Mountains visiting West Point, Saratoga Springs, Glens Falls and the Ausable Chasm near Plattsburg. Then into the Finger Lake area—Ithaca and Watkins Glen, before returning to Avalon. The West Point portion of the Hudson River adventure was on the Old Storm King Highway.
The car belonged to my mother’s Uncle Walter. Mom's father my maternal grandfather, Charles Edward Stark, never owned a car.
Travelers on this family holiday were:
My mother: Martha Jean Stark
Her father, my grandfather: Charles Edward Stark
Her mother, my grandmother: Martha Marie Frederick Stark
Her uncle, my granduncle: Alfred Walter Stark
Her aunt, my grandaunt: Frances Stark
Her grand mother, my great grandmother: Wilhelmina Catherine Schwarz Stark and a second blog
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Tombstone Tuesday--William Williams and Trumbull Cemetery or Old Cemetery, Lebanon, New London County, Connecticut
More Information:
1. William Williams on Find-A-Grave.
2. Old Cemetery/Trumbull Cemetery on Find-A-Grave.
3. William Williams biography.
4. William Williams signer of the Declaration of Independence.
5. Standing Stones has more details and photographs taken in Trumbull Cemetery. Of special interest is the information on the various carvers of the tombstones found within the cemetery.
6. The William Williams House on Lebanon Green. Privately owned.
Monday, November 2, 2009
Stories in Stone--Michael Motz of Loudonville, Ohio
Michael Motz, son of Philip Jacob Motz and Barbara Young, was born on November 6, 1845 in Knox County, Ohio. He married Magdalena Ullman, daughter of John Ullman and Catherine Derrenburger Ullman on May 19, 1867 in Holmes County, Ohio. Magdalena, known as Lana, was born on January 16, 1844 in Washington Township, Holmes County, Ohio.
On the 1880 Ohio Federal Census, the Motz family was living on Main Street in New Lexington, Perry County, Ohio and Michael was employed as a baker. A female servant is listed as living in the home. By the 1900 Ohio census, the Michael had relocated his family to Loudonville Village, Hanover Township in Ashland County, Ohio and he was a grocer. Michael ran his grocery store on Main Street until his death in 1927 at which time his youngest child, Josephine Laura Motz became the proprietor.
Michael Motz died at age eighty-one, on March 7, 1927 in Loudonville, Ashland County, Ohio and was buried in the Loudonville Cemetery just down the street from his grocery store. In his honor all the merchants in town closed their stores for one hour during his funeral service. Magdalena contined to live in Loudonville until her death on September 11, 1935 at age ninety-one. She is buried next to her husband in Loudonville Cemetery.
6. Josephine Laura Motz--born July 11, 1882 in New Lexington, Perry County, Ohio and died November 29, 1969 in Loundonville, Ashland County, Ohio. She married Harry LeRoy Redd in Ashland County, Ohio on July 10, 1948. Both Josephine and Harry are buried in the Loudonville Cemetery. In 1971 a bequeath from the estate of Josephine Motz Redd was made to the Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church in Loudonville in the amount of $5000 which was designated as The Josephine Motz Redd Memorial Scholarship of Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church, Loudonville, Ohio. The scholarship is to be used for students of archeology assigned to archaelogical digs in Palestine.
Sources:
-Mt. Zion Lutheran Church, Loudonville, Ohio Weekly Bulletin
-Clara Motz Ohio Death Certificate, Ashland County, Number 35205
-Michael Motz Ohio Death Certificate, Ashland County, Number 13225
-Magdalena Ullman Motz Ohio Death Certificate, Ashland County, Number 52184
-1880 Ohio Census, New Lexington, Perry County
-1990 Ohio Census, Loudonville Village, Hanover Township, Ashland County, ED 3, Sheet 3B
-1910 Ohio Census, Loudonville Village, Hanover Township, Ashland County, ED 4, Sheet 4B
-1920 Ohio Census, Loudonville Village, Hanover Township, Ashland County, ED 4, Sheet 20A
-1930 Ohio Census, Loudonville Village, Hanover Township, Ashland County, ED 3-6, Sheet 14B
-Franks-Kaylor/Koehler-Leininger Genealogy
-The Mansfield News, Mansfield, Ohio
-Mansfield News Journal, Mansfield, Ohio
-Ancestry.com
-Rootsweb
-Find-A-Grave, Motz and Redd, Loudonville Cemetery, Loudonville, Ohio
© 2009, copyright Linda Hughes Hiser
Sunday, November 1, 2009
"Scene" From the Road--Amish County Day Trip
However this year we went south on Ohio Route 301, through the small village of Spencer. Ken knew of an Amish school on Black River School Road. We found it easily and Miss Snap Happy leaned out the car window and captured it on the Sony memory stick. As we were leaving a young Amish man was walking out of his nearby house to see what we were up to.