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, June 26, 2021

Strange Groupings ~ Mosquitoes & Homestead Grants

 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks 2021: Week 25 (GROUPS)


British Columbia, Canada is in the middle of a heat wave that is shattering long held records. This week our community is set to break the record for hottest day ever, and yet officially summer has barely begun. 

We live on the WEsT COAST - we get a lot of rain here. When we have a hot dry spell areas normally kept wet year round experience the hatching of a bizzillion mosquitoes. Those eggs have been just waiting and waiting and waiting for this type of drying to finally hatch & begin their search for blood. 

Standing in our yard you can see GROUPS and groups of swarming mosquitoes the moment a living thing arrives. 

My husband and I take turns going out to water the hanging baskets. If only one of us went daily during this hot spell we might be in need of a blood transfusion before the weather turns back to our normal cooler temperatures.  


The photo above is a close up of the shirt that I gave my dad many years ago. He's retired Canadian Military, and lived in Manitoba at the time. The Canadian Prairies are well known for their large mosquitoes. 


This is one of the treasures we have found while helping my dad declutter & downsize for his move to a smaller place.

I also found this Homestead record which I didn't know about when I ordered copies of my own from the Saskatchewan Archives several years ago. I opened an envelope, and realized I could have seen the homestead grant years before I paid to get a copy. 

I also found the documents for my maternal great grandparents home in Calgary, but that will wait for another day!

Back to my theme of groups of mosquitoes. When my great grandparents arrived to Canada in June of 1909 from Ukraine they were introduced to mosquitoes while traveling by oxen & wagon with all their worldly goods from Star City to brother Mikita's homestead in Gronlid where the family would eventually obtain the nearby homestead above.

The family of 5 (Alexander, Mary, 11 year old Johanna, 6 year old Harry, 3 year old Stephania) traveled on the ship Willehad. They left the Port of Bremen on June 2nd 1909, and arrived in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on June 19th 1909.  


I can't be sure they didn't already know mosquitoes because my searching suggest Ukraine does have mosquitoes even though the memoirs I read of the Ukrainian immigrant experience suggested they didn't. Maybe it was just the size of the Canadian mosquitoes that were different. 

"... 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

"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 ...2

112 years & 1 week after their arrival in Canada I write this blog.
I am Canadian because my great grandparents left all they knew behind to call Canada home. All that I have, and all that I am, I owe to their desire to make a new life. 






Keeping the stories of our ancestors alive!!!






Cause ... 




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




This is why I search - 







***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) 62


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!


________________________________________________________________


Sunday, June 20, 2021

First Father's Day in 1910 ~ Celebrating George Albert Williams Father of 12

 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks 2021: Week 24 (FATHER'S DAY)



While visiting my father today to celebrate Father's Day I read that Father's Day was first introduced in 1910.
It was a question in a trivia about Father's Day. 

It got me to thinking about who in our tree was celebrating the birth of a new child on that FIRST Father's Day, June 19th 1910.

My husband's X2 great grandfather on his father's maternal line was celebrating the birth of his 12th child, Baby Bertha, born on March 31st. 

Celebrating the FIRST Father's Day in 1910 was:
George Albert Williams
BIRTH 1 AUG 1866 • Houghton Tp., Norfolk Co., Ontario, Canada
DEATH 15 JUN 1952 • Houghton Tp., Norfolk Co., Ontario, Canada

His 12 children in birth order were:

Lloyd Alvin Williams
BIRTH 12 AUG 1889 • Houghton Tp., Norfolk Co., Ontario, Canada
DEATH 1962

Zella Williams
BIRTH ABT 1891 • Ontario
DEATH Unknown

Iva Maud Williams
BIRTH 7 APR 1891
DEATH 10 APR 1892
who was not alive for the first Father's Day in 1910

Cyril Williams
BIRTH OCT 1892 • Ontario, Canada
DEATH Unknown

Bruce Sylvester Williams
BIRTH OCT 1892 • Beach Cane, Houghton To., Ontario, Canada
DEATH 1978

Elmer Lee (Lee) Williams
BIRTH 1 MAR 1895 • Houghton Township, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 9 APR 1967 • Ontario, Canada
Who married into my husband's mother's maternal line

Arthur Williams
BIRTH 25 JAN 1897 • Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 7 FEB 1897 • Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
who was not alive for the first Father's Day in 1910

Herman Sears Williams
BIRTH 4 DEC 1899 • Houghton Township, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 21 DEC 1985 • Detroit, Wayne, Michigan

Vera Catharine Williams
BIRTH 27 SEP 1902 • Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 25 MAR 1981 • Tillsonburg, Ontario, Canada
My husband's great grandmother

Ila Irene Williams
BIRTH 6 SEP 1906 • Houghton Township, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 1975

Cora Mildred (Mildred) Williams
BIRTH 18 SEP 1908 • Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
DEATH Unknown

Bertha Hazel Williams
BIRTH 31 MAR 1910
DEATH 15 OCT 1910 • Norfolk
who sadly passed away 4 months after that first Father's Day.


Celebrating alongside father George was their mother:
Edith Gertrude Brisseau
BIRTH 27 MAR 1867 • Walsingham Tp., Norfolk Co., Canada West
DEATH 28 OCT 1937 • Houghton Tp., Norfolk Co., Ontario, Canada


George, front row left, around 20 years after that first Father's Day!
Fruit From Woods & Sands - Page 59, Sourced below






Celebrating all the fathers who came before us!!!






Cause ... 




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




This is why I search - 







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


Sources:


Fruit from Woods and Sands, The Story of Houghton Missin, Sider, E. Morris and Alonzo Vannatter, Evangel Press, Nappanee, Indiana, Messiah College, Pennsylvania, 1978


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!

________________________________________________________________


Saturday, June 12, 2021

BOB (The Big Orange Bridge) ~ My Hometown

 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks 2021: Week 23 (BRIDGE)

This week's prompt BRIDGE had me thinking about my hometown of Nelson. 

There is nothing that makes me feel homesick like seeing a photo of BOB (The Big Orange Bridge). 


I immediately think about my childhood where stopping before going onto the bridge meant we were going for ice cream at Dairy Queen. When we went over the bridge we were going to A&W for Teen Burgers delivered by the car hop and eaten in the car. I think about swimming in the West Arm of Kootenay Lake & gazing at the beauty of BOB as we floated below. I think about teenage hangouts under that bridge. The beach & park just beside BOB where the scene of so many of the best times of my childhood & teen years occurred. BOB was a major part of my growing up, and a big part of my attachment to my chosen hometown.

We moved a lot while I was growing up. I was born on an Air Force base in Quebec. I started school on an Army base in Alberta. My  parents got divorced when I was 8, and we began moving A LOT! I was in 5 schools in 3 provinces for grade 3,  3 schools in 2 provinces for grade 4. My brother was in Kindergarten and Grade 1 for all those moves. 

From all those moves I learned 'make a friend today because I might be gone tomorrow', and became very friendly building surface level friendships wherever I went. My brother learned 'why bother making friends today because I probably will be gone tomorrow', and stayed to himself building a few lifelong connections. Now that we are adults, and I look back over those years I'm not sure which one of us was better off.

Once I became an adult folks would ask me where I was from. I was always stumped for an answer. I would sometimes give a vague 'oh I have lived all over Canada' or I might explain the constant moving if it seemed they were truly interested. 

I'm not exactly sure when I claimed NELSON as my hometown, but I do remember feeling less confused by the question when I had a ready answer. 

I lived in Nelson for part of grade 3 & 4, all of grade 5, 6 & 7, the last week & final exams of grade 8, part of grade 9, all of Grade 10 & 12. When I add up where I lived the most Nelson definitely logs more residential time. I think this was the logic I used when I chose Nelson as my hometown.

When Nelson is near on my trips back home I immediately feel safe. Nelson is my hometown. 


Not matter how I old I get - I am a Kootenay girl, I am a Nelson girl!



When you don't really have a hometown, and you choose your own!!!




Cause ... 





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










This is why I search - 







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


Sources:

BOB photo, Retrieved June 12th 2021 from 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nelson%27s_Big_Orange_Bridge.jpg

City of Nelson Welcome You with Bob photo, Retrieved June 12th 2021 from 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/mytravelphotos/4958099993


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!


________________________________________________________________


Saturday, June 5, 2021

Waiting For Military Records ~ Library & Archives Canada

 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks 2021: Week 22 (MILITARY)

Recently my husband submitted the paperwork to receive his military records and release papers. The reply email from Library & Archives Canada said there would be a significant delay in providing the documents because they are currently working on the submissions received in October of 2019.

This got me to thinking about the submission I had done for my grandfather's records. I decided to check when I submitted them. 

I submitted for grandpa's in May of 2019. At that time they replied "Due to the large number of inquiries received, we are currently experiencing delays in our response time.  As our workload permits, we estimate that we will be able to provide you with a reply in approximately fourteen months." 

Realizing that it's been 2 years since I submitted, and several months before the date noted in my husband's reply I decided a follow-up email was in order.

After sending the email I received a rather quick reply letting me know they were currently working on requests submitted in October 2018, and at this time they are estimating 28 months for response.

The discrepancy in dates shows they are working on submissions for personal records before records from family members.

This made sense to me once I got my reply that included: 
"We understand that such delays are difficult for our researchers and we apologize. We assure you we are responding to your request as fast as possible and it will be processed in due course."

My husband's included a means of getting priority service. 
"
Due to the high volume of urgent requests, priority service will be given to requests where documentation is required for medical or employment purposes, bursaries, benefits and services, which clearly demonstrate an urgency or deadline."

Clearly those who are asking for their personal records do take priority over those of us seeking for research purposes as shown in the reasons an urgent request could be granted.

Those of us waiting for Military records from Library & Archives Canada need to be patient. 

I have waited my whole life for this information I can wait a little bit longer. 



Patience is a virtue!!!




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/


Online requests and forms, Requests for Military Service Files, Library and Archives Canada
https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/transparency/atippr/Pages/Online-requests-forms.aspx


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!



________________________________________________________________