Finding the Citizenship Documents for Andrias Anderson

It’s a moment you never forget. Unfortunately, it will only be preserved in our memory as the Michigan National Archives in Green Bay, Wisconsin, would not permit cameras.

Decades spent guessing at our family tree, my mother sat in the chair next to me with white gloved hands holding the citizenship papers of her first ancestor in the Anderson line to cross the sea. The 154 year old half sheet of fragile paper lay on her fingers and the chills of the history shivered across our arms.

The signature of the 40 year old immigrant to the new world, Anderis Anderson, was shaky but graceful as he signed away his fidelity from Oscar I, King of Sweden and Norway, to the United States.

We’ve found many spellings of his first name, and games with Anderson and Andersen, and this small piece of paper confirms the Andersen, but still leaves us questioning if he was Anderis, Andrias, Andiras, Anders, Andres, Anders, or other combinations. The closest we can read on the paper is Ander_s. His tombstone says “Andrias” but we’ve never been completely sure.

Andrias Anderson Citizenship Certificate, United States, 1852, Wisconsin

State of Wisconsin, County of Manitowoc, ss.

Anderis Anderson personally appeared before the subscriber, the Clerk of the Circuit Court, for said County, being a COURT OF RECORD, and made oath that he was born in Norway on or about the year Eighteen hundred and Twelve, that he emigrated to the United States, and landed in the Port of New York on or about the month of July in the year Eighteen hundred and Fifty-one, that it is bona fide his INTENTION to become a CITIZEN OF THE UNITED STATES, and to renounce forever all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign Prince, Potentate, State or Sovereignty whatever, and particularly to Oscar I, Kind of Sweden and Norway, whereof he is a subject.

Subscribed and sworn to before me the 2nd day of November AD 1852.

F. Alrich, Clerk
by E. Salomon, Deputy

Ander_s Anderson [signature]

We finally had the connection to our Anderson/Andersen family immigrants to Norway.


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Otto Anderson (1870-1916)

otto-anderson-obit-1916-lessor-wisconsinOtto Anderson (1870-1916) was a surprising find in my Anderson lineage, a successful businessman well-known and respected in his community. We’re still researching information about him, but I’ve found enough to help us paint the picture of my not-so-distant relative, the brother of Johan/John Christian Anderson, my great grandfather.

He owned a store with his wife in Navarino, formerly known as Galesburg, in Shawano County, not far from Lessor, Wisconsin. According to the obituary, he was a town founder and successful businessman in the Township of Galesburg. He was buried in Lessor, Wisconsin, in Our Savior’s Lutheran Cemetery.

In our Anderson family tree, Otto was the child of Hans Anderson (1844-1924 and son of Andrias Anderson) and Sarah, daughter of Ole Olson, married on June 15, 1867 at La Crosse, La Crosse, Wisconsin. His father, Hans, was born in Fredriksvern, Norway, arriving with his father, Andrias Anderson, at age 7 to the United States in 1851 in New York, traveling onto Wisconsin immediately after arrival.

Otto was the first generation of this Anderson line born in the United States. His early years were filled with traveling adventures as well as death. His father was a farmer and he and Julia had 11 children with only 5 surviving. We known the names of 9 of the 11 children so far: Amelia, Louis (b. 1869), Johan Christian (c1875), Carolina (c1871), Gena/Jenny (c1873), Mary (c1877), Ida (c1879), and Anton (April 18, 1880). Otto was born in South Dakota after his family moved there to find work, we believe.

According to the birth records and census, the family lived in Wisconsin in the nearby towns of Manitowoc, Cicerco, and Lessor during the first few years of their arrival from Norway. By 1869, the family was in Yankton, South Dakota, possibly to find work as part of the migration to look for work. Otto, Louis, Johan, Caroline, and Gena were born there. Mary Anderson was born about 1877 in Town of Cicero, Wisconsin, in Outagamie County, and the US Census has them back by 1880, where few of them left until their death. Most of them are buried in the Out Savior’s Lutheran Cemetery in Lessor. Continue reading


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DesRochers Annual Family Christmas Party 2009


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The Genealogy Guys Podcast

According to their blog, The Genealogy Guys are George G. Morgan and Drew Smith and they run the longest-running continuous genealogy podcast in the world. They started in 2005 and have been rocking at least once a week ever since.

Their site is frustrating to read as the text is crammed together and links are in text not links, but the information offered in their podcasts are jammed-filled with treasures and information you need to know about genealogy and family history research.

If you love podcasts, and want to learn more about genealogy, download and listen while you drive, walk, bike, ride, or just sit, and enjoy.

Do you have a favorite genealogy and family history podcast that you follow faithfully and enjoy? Share it, please.


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How Do You Represent Religion in Your GEDCOM Records?

In a fascinating discussion on soc.genealogy.computing’s mailing list, the issue of how religion is represented in GEDCOM 5.5’s RELI token. The question was whether or not there was a standardized value or list to use to represent the religion.

The example in the original question gave a possible example which explains the confusion over the taxonomy:

How would I represent the fact that a person is “roman-catholic”

RELI roman-catholic
RELI rÃmisch-katholisch
RELI roemisch-katholisch
RELI RK
RELI RC

Very good point. But one that is more complex that it may first appear.

The biggest problem GEDCOM files will have with such specific taxonomy examples is the use of character entities like the à which is might not recognize during the import/exporting process by genealogy software programs.

The issue of standardized values, such as grouping and sorting all Roman Catholics and Mormons together in your database program, makes this even more complex since Catholics may be listed as Catholic, Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Assyrian, Chaldean Syrian, Byzantine, and so on. All come under “Catholic” but you’d have to program the computer to recognize each of these as “Catholic” even if they don’t have the word in the tag.

Then there is the issue, as another person brought up, of the ancestor being baptized in one religion, marrying under another religion, converting to a different religion, or changing religions due to marriage or other reasons. If there is only one tag for religion, how do you associate it with the religious changes a person might make in their lifetime?

In GEDCOM, the tag or token is standardized, but the information within the tag isn’t always as standardized. The problem isn’t in the tag but the information the tag holds.

The best recommendation the team came up with, and I agree, is to maintain your own standardized references. If you want to separate Roman Catholics from Eastern Orthodox Catholics in your family tree, label them accordingly. If not, then keep the reference as simple as possible by calling them Catholic.

One interesting note in the discussion was the fact that the:

…Handbook of Religious Denominations in the United States, edition of 1985 from Abingdon Press. It lists over 225 denominations from 22 years ago; who knows how many there are now! Think of how many “non-denominational” churches have sprung since then, each of which would probably insist on being included. And that’s just the United States. I’m sure there would be thousands and thousands if the whole world were included.

Another adds:

…there were over 70,000 Australians who listed their religion as Jedi in the 2001 census.

You can see how this religious thing has gotten totally out of control, making our job as family history researchers and preservers much more difficult. 😉


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How Far Will You Go To Dig Into Your Family History?

Boston 1775 offers “Washington’s Hanukkah: An Oral Tradition”, researching the historical evidence of General George Washington learning about Jewish traditions.

In his recent picture book Hanukkah at Valley Forge, Stephen Krensky gives a main source for his story of Gen. George Washington learning about that Jewish festival, and that book in turn cites as its main source a rabbi’s sermon from 1955. Then, as I discussed yesterday, the trail goes cold.

But Rabbi David Hollander isn’t the only person who’s talked or written about Washington meeting a Jewish soldier at Valley Forge. The web has captured several other examples-so many, in fact, that it’s possible to triangulate among those versions to find the details they share, which hint at a common source. I think that internal evidence points to an oral tradition that started sometime in the mid-20th century and then spread among rabbis and Jewish writers, details changing along the way.

As J.L. Bell explains, tracking down this kind of information into hard cold facts is very difficult. If it were a current day event, then there would be living witnesses, but researching a past event means digging into written accounts from the time period, as well as photographs and records.

This is a great example of the depth researchers of history go to find out the truth behind the legends. And teaches us more about how we need to be more thorough when researching our own family stories and history.

Bell covers more of this in Seeing Fiction as Fact.

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Web 2.5: DNA Social Networking

According to The Globe and Mail Technology, the hottest trend in online social networking is genealogy, but not genealogy as you might imagine. This is a far cry from your family history blog.

Rather than exchanging photos, music and cellphone numbers, as many of the 100 million members of MySpace.com do, participants in Ms. Wong’s online community share Y-DNA markers and mtDNA Haplogroups.

The neuroscientist is president and chief executive officer of Genetrack Biolabs Inc., one of the country’s largest DNA testing labs. Recently the Vancouver company broadened its focus beyond paternity suits and other legal testing to capitalize on the emerging field of genetic genealogy.

With a swab of the mouth and access to Genetrack’s site DNAancestryproject.com, clients can trace their lineage for possible connections to famous figures of the past, such as Marie Antoinette, whose DNA has been preserved in a locket of her hair.

The farther back in time, the wider the family connections. For example, researchers have found that one in five men in the northwest of Ireland carry the DNA of the great Irish king Niall Noigiallach, who ruled in the early 5th century. And they estimate that 2 per cent of New York’s European males today also share the royal chromosome.

Turning back the clock to prehistoric times, the website lets participants track the migratory paths their distant ancestors took out of Africa and even connect with people of related groups today.

Amazing. We spend time researching our family history through our blogs and genealogy discussion groups, but imagine a social networking group whose sole purpose to to connect you with your DNA relatives.

The idea behind Genetrack and DNAancestryproject.com is to help those researching their family history through their DNA find common ground and make connections beyond the gene pool. According to the company president, Ms. Wong: “Everybody in the project is connected to everyone else.” Which makes this social networking project even more amazing and wide spread.

Genetrack’s DNA testing kit has been sold online, but just recently started appearing in a few retail sale in stores in Canada, the US, and other places in the world. According to Genetrack, it is most popular for the 47-54 year old age group, but many young people are starting to get into digging into their past. I’d love to walk into a store and buy a DNA testing kit, wouldn’t you?

What makes this new social networking trend fascinating is the new relationships that could form because of this. The concept of “family” has been changing for a long time in the United States and elsewhere as we move farther apart from our blood relatives and turn friends into “family members”.

DNA social networking groups could reverse that trend, turning strangers into blood relatives, allowing us to meet up with family members long separated by time and distance.

In my own family history research, I’ve been able to make connections with long lost family members through genealogy research and resources online, meeting in person family descendants from the 17th and 18th century. I’ve only recently started exploring my own DNA history and expect to make contact with family members separated even farther back.

Each person I connect with brings with them some history and information about their family’s lives as well as their own that helps me fill in the missing puzzle pieces of my own. Answers from the past often help answer questions in the present.

DNA social networking is destined to become a powerful Web 2.0 type force on the web. Would you participate? How would you use such a social networking service? How would it benefit you?


Posted in Genealogy News, Genealogy Resources, Genealogy Techniques | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Move Your Genealogy Blog Into the 21st Century With Site Feeds

The Society of Genealogists in the UK has finally added a feed to their website. They join a growing rank of family history, genealogical societies, clubs, groups, and services finally getting onto the feed band wagon.

Some of the most valuable online resources to history researchers still do not offer feeds, such as the US National Archives or most pages and resources on Ancestry.com, which limits access, use, and makes it difficult to keep track of new events, activities, resources, and news.

Feed technology has been around for several years and is one of the fastest growing methods of communication and sharing on the web. If your site doesn’t offer feeds, you are losing readers.

For those who monitor the many websites and blogs most family history and genealogy researchers do, visiting each site individually is a nightmare and time waster. Feeds are XML files from a website or blog containing the latest new information on the site in chronological order. These are read through many different feed readers such as Firefox’s Sage Feed Reader, Google Reader, or one of the many web-based feed readers.

Site and blog feeds feature the most recent posts by title, excerpt or full content, allowing your eye to skim across a single page to find out which websites you monitor have new information. Click on the title or link and it will take you directly to the newly updated information to get the full story, if you want.

While many family history and genealogy sites and blogs still have a long way to go visually and structurally, adding feeds is one of the best things you can do to help spread the word about what you have to offer.

If your website host, software, or blogging program does not offer feeds, you can create and add your own through one of the many feed creation services online.

For more information, see:


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Finding Ancestors Thrills: Arab Royalty With European Genes

The thrill of identifying an ancestor is always exciting in family history research. Sometimes it’s a predictable find (Norwegians finding Norwegians in their past), and sometimes unpredictable (Norwegians finding Africans in their past). Then there are truly “shocking” and yet totally appropriate finds.

One recent ancestor discovery in the news is a bit shocking, depending upon your perspective of the world around you. However, it is appropriate and not surprising when you have a better perspective on the world around you.

Discovery News announced “Mummy’s Mom Was European” (print version) based upon DNA and genealogy technology research by scientists recently on a child mummy child born between 30 BC and 130 AD in Egypt’s Roman period, about the same time of Mark Antony and Cleopatra.

The baby mummy had a European mom, and likely came from a wealthy family. But where he lived and why he died — and at such a young age — remain a mystery. The mummy, exhibited for the first time Thursday at the Saint Louis Science Center, has been the year-long focus of an international team of investigators. The museum said it may be the most extensive research project ever undertaken on a child mummy.

…The challenge was boring into the mummy, which had petrified, to get three samples of degraded muscle, tissue and bone. She succeeded by inserting a thick needle into the chest and shoulder. After that, she extracted DNA using routine methods. Tests showed the boy’s mother was European. She plans more tests to determine his father’s ancestry.

Bowcock said it was amazing to get anything at all from 2,000-year-old DNA.

The surprising part is that they found enough DNA to make any determination. The not-so-surprising part is the parentage of the mummy child as European.

Many of today’s Arab royalty have “white” wives. Some are European and there are even a few Americans. Today’s King Abdullah II of Jordan had an English mother. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is married to Suzanne Saleh Sabet whose mother was Welsh. Former President Anwar al-Sadat’s second wife has an English mother. Another Egyptian ruler, Khedive Abbas Himi, who ruled from 1892-1914 married a Hungarian Countess. In ancient times, many of the Ottoman royalty married French, English, and other European women as part of agreements and pacts to maintain peace and economic trade, using women as property and bargaining chips.

According to Egyptian Consorts by Egy.com, Cairo’s Recollections and History:

Except for Queens Farida and Nariman all of the above consorts were of mixed or foreign ancestry.

In principal the intermarried members of the Mohammed Ali clan were of Turco-Balkan stock. Countess May on the other hand is up-and-down Hungarian. And while Queen Nazli is of French-Greek extraction through her maternal grandparents, both Ikbal Hanem and Sultana Melek were imports from the northern Ottoman provinces. Princess Neslishah meanwhile is the result of a six-century bloodline of imperial Sultans and Khans.

Of Egypt’s four post-monarchy First Ladies, Tahia Abdel Nasser is the daughter of a humble clerk of Iranian origin…On the other hand First Ladies Jehan Raouf and Suzanne Sabet came from educated middle class backgrounds. Both sets of parents were almost carbon copies of each other. Both their paternal grandfathers came from Upper Egypt and both Jehan and Suzanne’s respective fathers pursued medical studies in the United Kingdom while in their twenties opting for British brides.

With all the intermarriage of European women into Arab royalty, why is there so little history of European rulers marrying Arab women? They must have, but I can’t find much. Have you?

Still, why is it surprising that this child mummy had a European mother? Many of today’s Arab royalty come from such mixed blood families, it isn’t surprising that the trend started hundred’s of years ago.

The advancement in DNA to research our family’s ancestors brings with it a lot of surprises and a lot of “well, of course” with it. Aren’t you fascinated by all of it?


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Uncovering the Myths and Truths in Our Family Tree

In Columbus Colonists’ Despair Revealed (print version) from Discovery News, it appears to be confirmed that Columbus faked the wealth of his discovery of the new world.

The first silver ever extracted from coarser materials by Europeans in the New World appears to have been a desperate, last ditch effort involving not American, but Spanish metals, say archaeologists.

The strange tale, entwined with Christopher Columbus questionable approach to attracting European investors to back his expeditions, has been uncovered at the site of the abandoned colony of La Isabela, on Hispaniola in the Caribbean.

The mystery started with the discovery of a leaden slag heap high in the layers of debris indicating that it was one of the last things the colonists created before leaving what was the first European town in the Americas in 1498.

It seems that when Columbus couldn’t find the wealth he needed to bring back proof of his successful and expensive voyage and discovery of the new world, he made some up.

The lead contained a small amount of silver and they smelted it down to produce what little they could find. The isotopic signature of the metal found came from Spain, not the Caribbean, the researchers found. So the treasure they brought back to Spain came from Spain.

According to one of the researchers, “Columbus led them all on.” Though the deception didn’t last long. “In 1496 Columbus was shipped back to Spain in chains and his colonies were left to fend for themselves.”

Columbus has been hailed for centuries as the great discoverer of the new world, and I and many children grew up with dreams of what it must have been like to sail off into the unknown, awaiting that moment when we’d slip off the edge of the world to our death, or prove the theories right, that the earth was indeed round. And what mysteries and adventures would we meet along the way?

In some areas of the world, Columbus has been granted near sainthood with the fame and legend around his mythology.

Today, we’re finding a lot of our long-held, historical myths aren’t really true.

In other news from the Discovery Channel, a new documentary aired about the finding of the “tomb of Jesus”, offering proof and evidence, they say, that this is indeed the spot where Christ was buried.

The only thing is that the evidence sounds more like proof that Dan Brown’s book, The Da Vinci Code, was based upon truth, not fiction.

New scientific evidence, including DNA analysis conducted at one of the world’s foremost molecular genetics laboratories, as well as studies by leading scholars, suggests a 2,000-year-old Jerusalem tomb could have once held the remains of Jesus of Nazareth and his family.

The findings also suggest that Jesus and Mary Magdalene might have produced a son named Judah.

The DNA findings, alongside statistical conclusions made about the artifacts — originally excavated in 1980 — open a potentially significant chapter in Biblical archaeological history.

Significant chapter? While those names were very common during that time period and people were buried like that for several hundred years, if somehow it is proven that this is the family of Jesus and where they were buried, whether or not Jesus rose from the dead or not, it certainly changes the history of the world according to Christians. Not because they have found the “real tomb”. The Christian world would be rocked to find a married and childbearing Jesus. Either way, it will be a new tourist spot for visitors to Jerusalem, bringing in more tourist dollars.

True or not, discoveries like this and the assumptions made about them continually question the past we thought we knew and believed in.

What Myths Lurk in Your Family Tree?

There are a lot of myths in my family tree. I bet there are in yours. For several generations we believed that the West family was descended from British royalty and that we could go to England and claim the unclaimed inheritance of our ancestors…if we wanted to, but no one ever did. I have since learned that we are not related to that family in any way.

Yet, ask my aunt and she’ll tell you that her hands look the way they do because she is a descendant of royalty and has “royal hands”, whatever that means. She taught all her children to honor their hands because they, too, had royal hands.

Another recently uncovered West mystery is that my grandfather Howard West Sr. was abandoned by his mother when he was a little baby and that he never saw his mother again. It’s true that he was indeed abandoned and taken in by a Catholic orphanage in Portland, Oregon, but he was six years old. We have census records showing him living with him mother as a teenager, as well as information to prove that he had contact with her on a regular basis up until her death in 1930, proving this to be another myth in our family tree.

We also recently discovered that a myth about Elizabeth Knapp in the Knapp family was also untrue. The story was that she was discovered in the burning wreckage of a wagon train crossing the West attacked by Indians, the sole survivor. The James Brothers, notorious bank robbers, rescued her and turned her over to a friend to raise. Tracing her family history, she might have been on a wagon train, and may have been the sole survivor of a massacre, we haven’t been able to determine that. But if Jesse and Frank James participated, they were not even 10 years old at the time, making it a little difficult to believe. The dates don’t match no matter how much we fidget with them.

What myths do you have in your family tree? What stories have you always believed but then found were untrue as you dug deep into the truth of your family’s stories?


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