This blog traces the linage of my ancestors Filson, Hunter, Manuwal, Zimmerman, Coplen (Copeland), Severns, Rodabough (Rodabaugh) and Hynes. Back in time, from Indiana to Ohio to Virginia and Pennsylvania and over the ocean to Ireland, England, Germany and places unknown. I hope you enjoy my family history and the joy of genealogy. To subscribe to this blog go to the bottom of the page. This blog is written and maintaned by Shelley Filson Bechtold
Showing posts with label geneablogger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label geneablogger. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Surnames
I write this blog for my family and others that may be interested in our ancestors’ journey through time. With this blog I concentrate on the linage of Filson, Hunter, Manuwal, Zimmerman, Coplen (Copeland), Severns, Rodabaugh and Hynes. I concentrate only on the deceased and will only use the names of the living, if I have permission. Our journey starts in Indiana and will move to Ohio. From there the journey is a surprise. I hope to write this blog chronologically, but I get easily distracted and excited about my findings, so I may jump ahead. Some post will be about a particular person, some may be about a place, some may be about a historical moment in time that our ancestor experienced first hand. Also, I may include some of my own personal experiences. Remember it is not the destination, but the journey that is the exciting part. So I invite you to take this journey with me and I look forward to your comments and insights. I also look forward to other distant family members joining this forum. I will try and stay on topic, but sometimes the most exciting thing about genealogy is how I came to find a piece of treasure.
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Friday, October 19, 2012
First a little background on how I came to have this obsession:
It was 2010 and I sat down on a Friday evening to do some channel surfing when
I came upon the show "Who Do You Think You Are?" The show tracks the ancestral
lineage of a celebrity with the help of genealogical experts. On this night it
was Sarah Jessica Parker. Her journey took her to Massachusetts, where she
found out her tenth great grandmother was accused of being a witch in Salem. It
made me curious to see if I could find any witches in my lineage. When I
enrolled on Ancestry.com, I realized I had been sucked into a marketing scheme
but figured I would subscribe for a month and then cancel my account. It took
me about a year before I cut the cable because the website had so much
information. When you start doing genealogy you are told to start off with what
you know and what is known by others in your family. Then you look for evidence
to confirm the information and along the way you track your sources. While
working on your genealogy you need to work backwards through time. So you will
research and learn about someone's death before their birth. The first sources
you seek are primary records, i.e. death, marriage and birth records. Many
states only started requiring vital records in the early 1900s. Sometimes they
are hard to acquire so then you look for secondary records. One of the best
sources for secondary information is the United States Census. The U.S. Census has
been performed since the early 1800s, in the early census records only the head
of household is named and the number of people in the house. Therefore, you can
never be sure you have the right family. Starting in 1850, it was requiring
that every person in the household be recorded. This is a wonderful thing for
genealogist. For more information on the federal census visit:
I will not go any further in depth about being a genealogist but
I will let you know about the resources as I go along. They are too vast to
explain in this post.
Oh, and by the way, I still haven't found any witches.