This is my space to share my quest to collect as many broken branches as I can in my fractured family tree which resembles a bramble bush more then a proper tree. As I go forward in this blogging journey I hope to share how I have searched far & wide for family - with no regard for where they come from or if I should really want them.
You can pick your friends, but you can't pick your family you know!

Saturday, March 28, 2020

Pandemic, 100 years ago ~ Nearly Forgotten

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 2020 Week 13 (NEARLY FORGOTTEN)



On March 16th 2020 the library closed it's doors to the public. On March 18th the book return was locked. 

I don't think I have ever heard of the public library closing. The library is a much needed community resource. It's the great equalizer. The moment anyone walks through the main door they are equals. 

The Covid-19 worldwide pandemic is having far-reaching effects for all. After two weeks of cleaning the library top to bottom all staff were sent home with plans for working remotely.




I searched, and found minimal records of libraries closing in the past. I am grateful my employer chose to put the safety of employees at the forefront. I am also grateful they have found a way to keep us all working while the Federal Government expects 4 million Canadians to apply for Emergency Job Loss Funding along with the almost 1 million who have already applied for Employment Insurance due to job loss after businesses have closed. 


My online searching found records of public libraries closing during the spanish flu pandemic (1918-1920). Here we are 100 years later experiencing another worldwide pandemic.


I went looking through our Bramble Bush to find victims of the Spanish Flu Pandemic. 


I wasn't successful in finding anyone whose death registration listed flu in the right time frame. It is highly unlikely that my husband and I have no ancestors who died during the Spanish Flu Pandemic. The majority of our Canadian people were in Ontario. The remainder were in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Alberta, and British Columbia.


"The virulent Spanish flu, a devastating and previously unknown form of influenza, struck Canada hard between 1918 and 1920. This international pandemic killed approximately 55,000 people in Canada, most of whom were young adults between the ages of 20 and 40." 1
" ...
Flu victim Donald William of St. Thomas, Ontario, was described by Canadian Press as “one of the most brilliant young barristers of the era, being one of the youngest lawyers in the history of Canada to attain his qualifications, only twenty-one years of age at the time.” ...
...Out of Canada’s population of eight million, fifty thousand died from the flu, an enormous death toll in just a few months. ...
....Mr. and Mrs. Quinn of Montreal and their newborn baby died on the same day, leaving a fourteen-month-old as the family’s sole survivor. ....
...No part of Canada escaped the flu. It took from late September until late November for the worst of the flu to abate in Canada. ...
..." 2



My husband's grandfather was a young man during the Spanish Flu Pandemic.

Clifton Alexander (C.A.) (C. A.) (Cliff) Lee
BIRTH 20 MAY 1902 • Northfield Centre, Brant Co., Ontario, Canada
DEATH 9 SEP 1979 • Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada

My husband's aunt, shared this story:
"Dad used to talk about the Spanish Flu. He was a young man of 16 or 17. He said, the healthy people would go around the village & check who had died over night & who needed food, etc. He said he buried a lot of people, sometimes whole families."


Now that I am off work I will join my neighbours in staying at home except for essential activities. My husband belongs to the group of essential workers. He will continue to go to work for his scheduled shifts, and will be working overtime as needed. He's a Paramedic. 

Who knew this tiny baby would grow up to impact so many lives!
There are people alive today because he showed up.
** Emergency Services Paramedic **

Such a cute little nose
                                                                 - with his mom

As the Covid-19 Pandemic continues to spread he, his colleagues, and all in the health care field will be stretched to their limits. I will only have to stay home. What was initially called Social Distancing is now being called Physical Distancing to clarify that 2 meters (or 6 feet) should be as close as anyone should be. I have heard folks saying that our ancestors were called to war, and we are being called to the couch to watch tv. This is very true. The Spanish Flu Pandemic and World War 1 were linked. 100 years ago being isolated to home wasn't like it is today.



100 years ago their phone system couldn't handle the extra calls
Today we have mobile phones that double as entertainment
photo - Public Domain


Some things aren't that much different 100 years later.


Alberta Health
photo - Public Domain

No sports this time around either
100 years ago The Stanley Cup was called off

photo - Public Domain



How will we spend the time that our health authority has told us to stay home


RESTING

No photo description available.   

   Image may contain: dog       

Image may contain: dog  

Image may contain: bedroom, dog and indoor

Image may contain: living room, table and indoor


No photo description available.     

   


REMINISCING ABOUT WHEN WE COULD LEAVE OUR HOUSE


Image may contain: one or more people and dog


Image may contain: dog


Image may contain: dog




EATING HEALTHY 



Image may contain: one or more people and dog



ENJOYING THE SUN AND OUR YARDS



No photo description available.


Image may contain: plant, cat, table and indoor



TAKING TIME TO READ A GOOD BOOK


No photo description available.


No photo description available.




PRACTICING SOCIAL DISTANCING



Image may contain: 1 person, cat


No photo description available.



On this day in 2020 this Bramble Bush has no living members effected. It is quite possible that all of our ancestors did not experience the worst of the pandemic. Maybe they had genes that make them resilient, and they have passed them on to us. We will never know. When I think of ancestors who may have been FORGOTTEN, and are not recorded in our bramble bush it makes me sad. No one should be forgotten. 


In case you were worried I was going to end this blog without sharing any human family photos you won't be disappointed. For future descendants who find this blog I present my family:



Image may contain: 5 people, beard, closeup and indoor


Image may contain: 5 people

Image may contain: 6 people, indoor






Blogging to leave the stories for my descendants!







This is why I search - 



Cause ... 





You can pick your friends, but you can't pick your family you know!
















***Any errors are my own. Please send me any updates or corrections via the comments at the bottom of this blog post***



Footnotes:  

1 Government of Canada, Parks Canada, History and culture, The Spanish Flu in Canada (1918-1920),  Retrieved March 27th 2020 from
https://www.pc.gc.ca/en/culture/clmhc-hsmbc/res/doc/information-backgrounder/espagnole-spanish

Canada's History, Killer Flu,  Retrieved March 27th 2020 from
https://www.canadashistory.ca/explore/arts-culture-society/killer-flu



Sources:

Global News, Coronavirus: Nearly 1 million Canadians applied for EI last week, Posted March 24, 2020 12:35 pm, Updated March 24, 2020 2:26 pm, Retrieved March 27th 2020 from   https://globalnews.ca/news/6726111/coronavirus-ei-claims-1-million/


Globe & Mail, Ottawa expects 4 million Canadians to apply for emergency job loss fund due to COVID-19, Published March 25th 2020, Retrieved March 27th 2020 from
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/article-trudeau-says-new-merged-benefits-will-help-workers-affected-by-covid/


Photos, public domain sources or personal


Links:

Amy Johnson Crow, 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge
https://www.amyjohnsoncrow.com/



If you reference or use my blog posts in any way please
include a link to the specific blog and
credit http://somehowrelated.blogspot.com/
My blogs are ©Deborah Buchner, 2014 forward.
All rights reserved.
Please & Thank you!


___________________________________________________________

Friday, March 20, 2020

Popular Name ~ Thomas Thomson

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 2020 Week 12 (POPULAR)


There is nothing more popular in my family research than the name 
Thomas Thomson.


As a Canadian searching online for family members it was difficult to find accurate Thomson information. The first 100 hits in every search were either the Canadian Artist or the Scottish Chemist. It was many years before I found my great grandfather's Canadian Virtual War Memorial page because it was just too far down the list of hits on any search.  


For reasons unknown his birth date and age is incorrect. 
Thomas was 60 when he died

Thomas Thomson
BIRTH 10 MAY 1880 • North Berwick, East Lothian, Scotland
DEATH 19 NOV 1940 • Kananaskis, Alberta, Canada


CANADIAN VIRTUAL WAR MEMORIAL
https://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/memorials/canadian-virtual-war-memorial/detail/2849835


Growing up in Canada we learned about the Canadian painter Tom Thomson in school. I always wondered whether he was related to me. Every so often I go back to research the artist, but haven't yet been able to connect our family lines.



My grandmother's Thomson line intersects with another Thomson line at my X3 great grandparents listed below. 

Henry Thomson
BIRTH 1825 • Buckhaven, East Wemyss, Fife, Scotland
DEATH 3 OCT 1901 • Buckhaven, Fife, Scotland
and
Agnes Thomson (maiden & married THOMSON)
BIRTH 1826 • Inverkeithing, East Wymess, Fife, Scotland
DEATH 7 FEB 1898 • Inverkeithing, Fife, Scotland


A family member I collaborated with in my early days of researching was my dad's second cousin who lived in New Zealand, Murray. Early on I asked Murray why it was that his grandfather had a cool name that was easy to search. He told me that I should be pleased that my dad's grandfather carried the family tradition with the name Thomas Thomson, but honestly that didn't make me feel any better since his grandfather was James Devlin Glass Thomson. Now that was a super cool name - Thomas Thomson, not so much.

We were both happy to see Glass as a middle name for his grandfather because it confirmed the maiden name of their mom.

Parents of Thomas Thomson (my dad's grandfather) and James Devlin Glass Thomson (Murray's grandfather) were:



Thomas & Isabella (nee Glass) Thomson
Photo credit: Murray Thomson

Thomas Thomson
BIRTH ABT 1849 • Buckhaven, East Wemyss, Fife, Scotland
DEATH 22 FEB 1919 • Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
and
Isabella Glass
BIRTH ABT 1848 • North Berwick, East Lothian, Scotland
DEATH 29 JUL 1943 • Edinburgh, City of Edinburgh, Scotlan
* James Devlin was the husband of Isabella's sister Mary


Researching the Thomson family line has been challenging because of the popularity of the given name Thomas where often there was no middle name added.


Both of my Thomson family lines come from the Eastern coast of Scotland. There is little publicly available about the artist Tom Thomson's family regarding their origins in Scotland. Whether we are related remains unknown. I have always been a fan of his art, and believe that someday I will find the connection in our family lines. 






Not so grateful for ancestors with popular names!







This is why I search - 



Cause ... 





You can pick your friends, but you can't pick your family you know!
















***Any errors are my own. Please send me any updates or corrections via the comments at the bottom of this blog post***






Links:

Amy Johnson Crow, 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge
https://www.amyjohnsoncrow.com/



If you reference or use my blog posts in any way please
include a link to the specific blog and
credit http://somehowrelated.blogspot.com/
My blogs are ©Deborah Buchner, 2014 forward.
All rights reserved.
Please & Thank you!


___________________________________________________________

Friday, March 13, 2020

When Two Lines Become One ~ Clarissa (nee Buchner) Rittenour

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 2020 Week 11 (LUCK)

When I made my first tree on Ancestry in 2013 I didn't use the best research techniques. I hadn't yet taken a genealogy course so didn't have any idea what a reasonably exhaustive search meant. I began adding people willy nilly to my tree without any regard to whether the facts fit. The only thing I looked for was the same name. I had no idea that there was anything wrong with my tree. 



Then one day I realized that I had one set of parents with 40 children. I knew that many of the families back then were pretty prolific,  Did they really name 4 of their children John?  Was it a nickname?  Did the older one die, and the younger given the same name?  Nope - I had added the same John 4 times. I had also done the exact same thing with his 9 siblings. 


I then began looking at my tree with a closer attention to detail. I had children born after their parents died. I had children married to their parents & grandparents. I had multiple marriages for the same person. I had the same child with both their birth name and nickname, and sometimes multiple nicknames. Things were a real mess. 


The only excuse I might be able to use is that I was recovering from surgery when I made that tree. I had purchased an all access membership to assist with my 6 week recovery time thinking that I would be too obsessed to want to leave my resting position for the entire 6 weeks. It was the first time I had paid for access for genealogy research. No one had warned me this would be my gateway. I really was like a kid in a candy store - racing from one shaky green leaf to the next. I had thought Ancestry wouldn't give me hints that didn't actually fit. It was a rude awakening when I discovered those 40 children for one couple many weeks after my successful recovery and return to work.


I tried to fix the errors, but in the end it became too much and I started over after deleting my tree.  Although I still ended up with some errors there were a lot less once I began carefully considering details before adding a new person.



It was several years later that I was working on my father-in-law's maternal side of the family tree when the shaky green leaf presented Clarissa Buchner married to George W Rittenour. Clarissa & George are my husband's 4th great grandparents via his father' maternal line. My father-in-law's paternal line is Buchner, and LUCKILY I listened to my instincts that the name Clarissa Buchner was familiar to me. 


A quick search of my tree in a second search tab, and voila I found that Clarissa's parents were my husband's 4th great grandparents via his father's paternal line, and Clarissa with husband George was already in my tree. 


This was the first time that I discovered a relative already in the tree was connected via a different family line. Since then I have found several on my mother's maternal line.


The lucky discovery is outlined below:


My husband's:
4th great grandparents via his father' paternal line
&
5th great grandparents via his father's maternal line
are:

Jacob Buchner
BIRTH 31 MAY 1763 • Hardwick Twp., Sussex, New Jersey, USA
DEATH 11 AUG 1841 • Woodhouse, Norfolk County, Ontario
and

Catherine Shelar (Shuler) (Schuler)
BIRTH 20 SEP 1767 • Sussex County, New Jersey

DEATH 8 FEB 1855 • Woodhouse, Norfolk County, Ontario

  

His two  lines descend through siblings (bold, underline & italics below)

3rd great grandparents

Jacob Clasnor Buchner
BIRTH 20 APR 1803 • Woodhouse Twp, Norfolk County , Ontario, Canada
DEATH 29 JUN 1886 • Houghton Twp, Norfolk County , Ontario, Canada
&
Amy Catherine Matthews
BIRTH ABT 1801 • Woodhouse, Ontario
DEATH 10 MAR 1880 • Cultus, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada

4th great grandparents
Clarissa Buchner
BIRTH 1815 • Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 1898 • Wheeler Twp, Michigan, USA
&
George W Rittenour
BIRTH 1801 • Ohio, USA
DEATH 6 OCT 1874 • Ontario, Canada


My husband's 4th great grandmother via his father's maternal line, and his 4th great aunt via his father's paternal line!

Clarissa (nee Buchner) Rittenour



Lakefield Cemetery, Saginaw County, Michigan, United States of America






In our BRAMBLE BUSH FAMILY TREE on Ancestry I use a DNA symbol as the profile photo of the confirmed through a descendant match.



This line resulted in the creation of a new symbol (combining the two DNA strands normally used to track each line into one photo). 


Father's paternal and maternal line








When two lines become one the potential relatives reduce greatly, but DNA matching becomes a bit more complicated!








This is why I search - 



Cause ... 





You can pick your friends, but you can't pick your family you know!
















***Any errors are my own. Please send me any updates or corrections via the comments at the bottom of this blog post***







Links:

Amy Johnson Crow, 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge
https://www.amyjohnsoncrow.com/



If you reference or use my blog posts in any way please
include a link to the specific blog and
credit http://somehowrelated.blogspot.com/
My blogs are ©Deborah Buchner, 2014 forward.
All rights reserved.
Please & Thank you!


___________________________________________________________

Friday, March 6, 2020

Mary (nee Maximiw) Pellack ~ Homesteading in Saskatchewan

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 2020 Week 10 (STRONG WOMAN)



When I first became interested in Genealogy it was because I discovered one branch of my tree was completely unknown. My grandfather reinvented himself (for reasons that will never completely be understood), and no one in my dad's immediate family knew about the Pellack family heritage.



*Clyde & Mary (nee Thomson) Robertson
*AKA - Max Pellack
My dad's parents - My grandparents

My dad never met his grandparents on his dad's side. 


He was very connected to his mom's side of the family. I grew up hearing so many family tales of Scotland and Canada that I never realized I was only hearing about half of his family of origin. Grandma was a story teller, and Dad too. I heard many tales from grandma directly, and then dad repeated them for me with photos and artifacts. I thought I knew my family history.


I was 29 years old when I found out that there was more to my dad's family story than either of us understood.


I began searching.



What I discovered was a hardworking family who immigrated from Galicia to Saskatchewan, Canada in 1909. They traveled with my grandpa's three older siblings on the ship Willehad. They left the Port of Bremen on June 2nd 1909, and arrived in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on June 19th 1909. They became homesteading farmers in Gronlid, Saskatchewan.



Sourced below
Page 16 - Library & Archives Canada, Immigration, Passenger Lists

In the book, Our Courageous Pioneers, the journey was described by a family member when the book was published in 1991.

" ... The family departed by train from Skoroki to the port of Bremen, There, a wait of several days ensued while sufficient cargo of livestock and people were assembled to make the voyage profitable. Livestock were placed in the bottom and people were placed in the middle deck. Sometime in May, 1909, the leaky ship set out to sea With numerous stops for additional cargo and delays caused by traffic and icebergs, the voyage took some sixteen days.
Quebec felt cold. From the large gathering hall which was the dispersal point for all immigrants, the family was shuffled onto a train bound for Winnipeg and eventually to Star City.  Alexander's brother, Makita who immigrated to Canada two years earlier, met them at the train with a cart and oxen which he had hired from a neighbour. It was a long trip from Star City to the homestead east of Gronlid. Imagine bumping down cut lines, over stumps through sloughs. It was an unforgettable experience, a dark rainy night, with their first encounter with mosquitoes! ..." 1

The story above is an example of one my branch of the tree never heard first hand. As often happens in family stories, not all the details are exact (they arrived in June not May). Stories are always seasoned with the teller's own memories. 


I imagine that my great grandmother, Mary Maximiw, would tell me this story many times over the years. Each time the story would provide new and different details, but the important details would never change. She would answer all of my questions, and provide more details to explain. I would grow up knowing exactly where my family came from.


Of course this moment could never have happened because my great grandmother died many years before I was born. Her oldest daughter was 11 years older than my grandpa. Maybe she would have been the one to share stories with my dad and his siblings. I was an adult before my great aunt died - maybe she would have gathered me close to tell me of the long journey to come to Canada where my grandfather was the first one born on their homestead in Saskatchewan. 



When my dad was born both his grandparents were alive. I wonder if they ever knew that their 4th born child had gotten married, and had 4  grandchildren living in British Columbia.


A few months ago I found my grandfather in the 1926 census with his usual place of residence as Edenbridge, Saskatchewan. 



WHAT --- I thought he lived in Gronlid, Saskatchewan. 



Curiosity peaked I began searching Edenbridge. I discovered that the detail had been right under my nose since I received my great grandfather's homestead records in 2017. 





















When I went looking for more information about Edenbridge I discovered there was a lot of information online & many published memoirs. I began researching while I waited from my interlibrary loan department to find me the books: Uncle Mike's Edenbridge: Memoirs of a Jewish Pioneer Farmer & Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On.


The European Jewish results in my Ancestry DNA were beginning to make sense. In November 2018 I was left wondering if there was a mistake when the results showed 14% European Jewish. In May 2019 my dad's results showing 27% European Jewish which made everything clear and yet completely confusing. 


Now that Edenbridge was a part of my Saskatchewan story I began to wonder if my grandparents followed the Greek Catholic church as I had understood or if they were Jewish. The centiMorgans (cM)  of European Jewish in mine and my father's results fit for one of his grandparents to be Jewish. 



Alexander & Mary (nee Maximiw) Pellack
my dad's grandparents - my great grandparents


My great grandfather's brother Mikita Pellack was a founding member of the Victory Church, also known as  St. Michael Ukrainian Catholic Church, in Gronlid, and by all accounts Alexander and family attended too.

I then found this map online:


https://kehilalinks.jewishgen.org/Edenbridge/Edenbridge%20Maps.html


In the upper left my great grandfather's homestead is the second over from Herman Katzeff who was one of the references on Alexander's homestead application.

Once the 2 books arrived from interlibrary loan I was also able to see that Herman Katzeff was a founding member of Edenbridge. There was a mention in the book that helped clarify things for me. 


Edenbridge sought it's first Rabbi, and Max Shallitt arrived. In describing his character it was noted that:
" ... Mr. Shallitt was also very popular with the gentile neighbors, particularly the Ukrainians. They were very grateful to him as he would do all their English correspondence." 2

I also discovered that Edenbridge was the name of the post office of the area's farming village. 

 I would like to believe my great grandparents and their relatives were who was being referenced as having a connection to the Jewish settlers. Although the European Jewish blood running in my veins likely came via them they are not listed in any of the Edenbridge documents by name so likely did not identify as Jewish. 

My Pellack relatives lived in close proximity to Edenbridge. They arrived in the area at a similar time to the immigrant arrivals that began Edenbridge. While reading the two books I realized just how difficult it had to have been for my great grandmother Mary (nee Maximiw) Pellack to have arrived to homestead in the Canadian prairies.I would like to introduce you to my great grandmother. I now know a bit more about how that journey must have been based on the memoirs of others. 




Mary Maximiw (Maksymiv) Pellack
Born December 24th 1875 in Ukraine/Galicia/Austria
Died August 12th 1946 in Gronlid, Saskatchewan, Canada



From just an idea to homesteading in Canada.


"... while visiting the Post Office, he picked up a pamphlet which attracted his attention. ... by the Canadian Government stating there were homesteads available in the west consisting of 160 acres each for the price of only $10.00.  ..." 3

"The ocean voyage was no picnic! Our ship, which looked like a New York skyscraper in dock, when let out to sea, bobbed up and down like an empty nutshell. Compared to the vastness of the mighty sea, our great vessel and it's hundreds of passengers were quite insignificant. the hustle and bustle of the crew frightened us. Sailors ran up and down; signals flashed, and danger seemed imminent. ..." 4

  "The conductor called out "Star City", and I realized that I had arrived at my destination. I had to get off the train. The trip was really over. I found myself in the middle of a vast, uninhabited country. The only evidence of civilization was the rooftop of the railway station jutting out ... there was no city in sight..." 5

 "...One can imagine their surprise to find a small village at the end of the steel rather that a bustling city as the name implied ..." 6

 "...The ride took place with no sign of a road anywhere. We bumped along through brush and muddy swamps, periodically being splashed from head to foot. Suddenly the wind changed direction and there, on the 26th of May, we were caught in a terrible snowstorm, ..." 7

"... Mr. Riederer informed them that the other members of their family and friends were settled some twenty miles north of Star City ..." 8

"Arriving at Star City, he [Mikita Pellack] met a gentleman by the name of Tony Reider who briefed him on available homesteads 20 miles north known as the Ratner district, ..." 9

"...filed upon virgin land for $10.00. In order to acquire title to the land, the homesteader was required to 'prove-up' by spending at least six months each year in residence on the land and to clear off scrub and put into a tillable state at least five acres a year over a three year period. Having met the above requirements and following an inspection by a homestead inspector, a patent to the land was granted. Among other things, the pioneers first concerns were to build a house on their newly acquired homesteads and to purchase motive power (oxen) and farm implements." 10  


  "...With unbounded determination and courage, with sweat and tears they cleared the land stump by stump, they drained the mosquito infested swamps, they tilled the soil, and transformed the wilderness they found in 1906 into waving fields of grain with accessible roads, schools, homes, and a synagogue ..." 11

"When the women saw their little log cabin, which was to be their home for a while, they wept, and almost ganged up on their husbands, and if they had ropes, I believe they would have lynched every last one of them. We are going right back they said, we are not remaining here to be eaten alive by these big elephants, which you call mosquitoes ..." 12  


  "...more important than any other single factor was how necessary it was for the wives of the new settlers to be courageous: to be strong; to hide their disappointments..." 13

When Mary arrived with her family of 5 they had no house yet. The homestead records show that by 1914 the Pellack home was a 420 square foot log home for a family of 7. By 1914 they had 8 cattle, 31 acres in crop, 1 mile of fencing, a well, and had continually lived on their homestead. 

  "...Farther north along the range line the children of Jewish settlers attended Athol School .." 14  suggesting they attended school with my grandfather and his siblings. 

  "...He stood out in the rain for several minutes restraining a strong urge to inform his friends that he had had enough of this great adventure and was ready to go back, But as he contemplated this decision, ...Our young immigrant realized there was no turning back. Come what may, Canada was his new home. ..." 15  


As I read through the memoirs of others I began to get a sense of what the journey to Canada must have been for my great grandmother as they traveled with 3 children. My grandfather's birth was never registered. He claimed May 10th 1910. If that date was correct he was conceived not too long after arriving to their homestead. If the date is not accurate she may have been pregnant on the long journey by boat and train.


In considering who in my family tree fit for strong woman I realized I had never thought about great grandma Mary Pellack, and it was time that I claimed her as mine. 





Descended from a long line of strong women!








This is why I search - 



Cause ... 





You can pick your friends, but you can't pick your family you know!
















***Any errors are my own. Please send me any updates or corrections via the comments at the bottom of this blog post***










Footnotes:

1 "Our Courageous Pioneers : History of Gronlid and Surrounding Districts of Argus, Athol, Edenbridge, Freedom, Maryville, Murphy Creek, Sandhill Creek, Taelman, Taras, Teddington,." (Melfort Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishers , 1991), 188

2 Rosenberg, Norman. "Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On." (Melfort, Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishing, 1980) 67

3 Rosenberg, Norman. "Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On." (Melfort, Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishing, 1980) 61

4 Usiskin Michael, "Uncle Mike's Edenbridge: Memoirs of a Jewish Pioneer Farmer." (Winnipeg Manitoba: Pequis Publishers Limited, 1983), 13

5 Usiskin Michael, "Uncle Mike's Edenbridge: Memoirs of a Jewish Pioneer Farmer." (Winnipeg Manitoba: Pequis Publishers Limited, 1983), 14

6 Rosenberg, Norman. "Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On." (Melfort, Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishing, 1980) 13

7 Usiskin Michael, "Uncle Mike's Edenbridge: Memoirs of a Jewish Pioneer Farmer." (Winnipeg Manitoba: Pequis Publishers Limited, 1983), 16

8"Our Courageous Pioneers : History of Gronlid and Surrounding Districts of Argus, Athol, Edenbridge, Freedom, Maryville, Murphy Creek, Sandhill Creek, Taelman, Taras, Teddington,." (Melfort Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishers , 1991), 189

9 Rosenberg, Norman. "Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On." (Melfort, Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishing, 1980) 13

10 Rosenberg, Norman. "Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On." (Melfort, Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishing, 1980) 14

11 Rosenberg, Norman. "Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On." (Melfort, Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishing, 1980) 17

12 Rosenberg, Norman. "Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On." (Melfort, Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishing, 1980) 62

13 Rosenberg, Norman. "Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On." (Melfort, Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishing, 1980) 40

14 Usiskin Michael, "Uncle Mike's Edenbridge: Memoirs of a Jewish Pioneer Farmer." (Winnipeg Manitoba: Pequis Publishers Limited, 1983), 35

15 Rosenberg, Norman. "Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On." (Melfort, Saskatchewan: Phillips Publishing, 1980) 11




Sources:


CBC, Story of Saskatchewan's Jewish farmers goes to national museum, published July 12, 2013. Retrieved March 6th 2020 from
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/story-of-saskatchewan-s-jewish-farmers-goes-to-national-museum-1.1302867


Find A Grave, Alexander Pellack, Retrieved March 6th 2020 from
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/137111772/alexander-pellack


Find A Grave, Mary Maximiw Pellack, Retrieved March 6th 2020 from
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/137112024/mary-pellack


Gronlid and District Historical Society,Our Courageous Pioneers : History of Gronlid and Surrounding Districts of Argus, Athol, Edenbridge, Freedom, Maryville, Murphy Creek, Sandhill Creek, Taelman, Taras, Teddington, Melfort, Saskatchewan, Phillips Publishers Ltd, 1991

JewishGen, Kehila Links, Homestead Maps, Edenbridge, Saskatchewan, Canada, Retrieved March 6th 2020 from 
https://kehilalinks.jewishgen.org/Edenbridge/Edenbridge%20Maps.html

Library & Archives Canada, Immigration, Passenger Lists, Page 16, Retrieved March 6th 2020 from
http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/immigration/immigration-records/passenger-lists/passenger-lists-1865-1922/Pages/item.aspx?IdNumber=5121&fbclid=IwAR0bFKIO58BlaeooRHtWlgBb6yrB7Ii6RlXBMf3dzADF_YdBLfITZJzNJtw


Manitoba Historical Society, The Contribution of the Jews to the Opening and Development of the West, Retrieved March 6th 2020 from
http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/jewsandwest.shtml


Rosenberg, Norman. Edenbridge: The Memory Lives On. Melfort, Saskatchewan. Phillips Publishing, 1980.

Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saskatoon, Church of St. Michael constructed 1949-1951 near Gronlid; R.M. 458., Retrieved March 6th 2020 from
https://www.skeparchy.org/wordpress/about-us/parishes/gronlid-st-michael/


Usiskin, Michael. Uncle Mike's Edenbridge: Memoirs of a Jewish Pioneer Farmer. Winnipeg Manitoba: Pequis Publishers Limited, 1983.







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