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, January 29, 2022

DNA & Geography ~ This Bramble Bush

This week's prompt CURIOUS is exactly how I came to dedicating time and money to the research of where this Bramble Bush came from. 

Without curiousity I would never have wondered where I came from, and discovered that my grandfather was not who he presented as. 

Without curiousity I would not have done Ancestry DNA. 

Without Ancestry DNA I would have continued believing I was Scottish, English & a bit Dutch. 

Without curiousity I would have abandoned my ancestors who gave me so much more than what I thought I knew. 

I really wanted to ensure our children grew up knowing where they came from. 

Where my ancestors originated

Where my husband's ancestors originated

Our children are a blend of my husband and myself

They received half from their father


And half from me


When my results came in the first thing I realized is that I had no Dutch heritage. It would seem my love of salted licorice has nothing to do with my ancestors. 

BUT wait --- salty black licorice is also traditionally found in Sweden & Denmark, and I do love Swedish Berries .... HERITAGE!!!

This is their heritage!

The research I do today is a legacy for our children. 

Someday when they are interested, and I'm not here to tell them -  this blog will tell the tale. 



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***




Photos:

DNA results, Ancestry,  Retrieved January 28th 2022 from Ancestry.

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!

________________________________________________________________

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

When a Photo Leads To a Canadian Hero ~ Samuel Smith

I have so many favourite photos I couldn't choose just one. 

Like last week, I decided I would choose a FAVOURITE PHOTO find of the week.

I decided to keep watch for photos during my researching this week. 

I'm as shocked as you are that the photo that inspired me showed up the morning after my decision was made. 

There are sooooo many great photos in researching where you come from, but sometimes a photo tells an amazing story.

This is a photo of my husband's X3 great uncle's gravesite marker. 


Not knowing anything about Samuel Smith as a family member or as a hero of the Battle of 1812 it wasn't hard to find details.

The details were just waiting to be found!

"Every American School child knows the story of Paul Revere. He’s the guy in the three-pointed hat who made the famous ‘midnight ride’ during the American Revolution, warning his neighbours that the dreaded red coats were coming.

But what almost no one knows is that a Lambton County boy played a similar role on the Canadian side of the boarder during the War of 1812. In fact, if it wasn’t for a teenager named Samuel Smith, Canada would probably be part of the United States today." 1 

When my husband's grandfather (Clifton) was 3.5 months old his mother,  Martha J Isabel (Mattie) Smith, died (September 5th 1902). Her death registry says she died of Angina of the heart - a few minutes, there was no physician in attendance, and her death was registered October 18th 1902. In current medical terms Angina of the heart for a few minutes is unclear. It was a month an half before her death was registered. The writer is left with a few questions that likely will never be answered.

One of the main questions is whether her son remained connected to the Smith family. His father remarried, but had no other children. It was common in the time that once a death occurred the family connection ended. I wonder if Clifton ever knew the role his great uncle played in forming Ontario as we know it today.

Samuel served in the Battle of 1812, and the Upper Canada Rebellion. He became a surveyor in the middle. 

"Smith worked for the Canada Company and helped survey the Huron Road from Guelph to Goderich. He surveyed many of the townships in Lambton County, including Sombra (1820), Euphemia (1823 – then part of Zone), Bosanquet (1828), and Brooke (1832). Smith settled in Euphemia Township and built a mill on the Sydenham River at Smith Falls." 2

In researching the areas he surveyed I realized I have visited many of the roads, and have family that live on them. My husband's X3 great uncle's legacy is connected to this side of the Bramble Bush too. 

Finding the photo of X3 great uncle Samuel Smith resulted in digging for more information about who he was as a person. 

Samuel Smith
BIRTH 22 APR 1795 • Grimsby, Ancaster, Hamilton Municipality, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 18 SEP 1857 • Euphemia, Lambton County, Ontario, Canada

On 25 Mar 1822 in Sandwich, Essex, Ontario, Canada Ontario, Canada Samuel married:
Sarah Holmes
BIRTH 8 JUN 1799 • Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 15 APR 1844 • Wentworth, Ontario, Canada

They had 9 children:

Baby Boy Smith
BIRTH 6 DEC 1822 • Ancaster, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 6 DEC 1822 • Ancaster, Ontario, Canada

Mahlon Burwell Smith
BIRTH 27 MAY 1826 • Lot 46, Con 4, Center S 1/2, Ancaster, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 16 OCT 1862 • Saint Louis Missouri, United States

David Holmes Smith
BIRTH 18 JUN 1828 • Ancaster Township, Wentworth County, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 18 NOV 1838 • Ancaster Township, Wentworth County, Ontario, Canada

Hugh Holmes Smith
BIRTH 4 JUL 1830 • Lot 46, Con 4, Center S 1/2, Ancaster, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 4 NOV 1849 • L28, C4, Euphemia, Ontario, Canada

Oliver Tiffany Smith
BIRTH 8 OCT 1832 • Lot 46, Con 4, Center S 1/2, Ancaster, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 19 SEP 1902 • Lambton, Ontario, Canada

Sarah Ann Smith
BIRTH 3 MAR 1835 • Lot 46, Con 4, Center South .12, Ancaster, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 5 MAR 1854 • Euphemia, Lambton, Ontario, Canada

John Clapperton Smith
BIRTH 30 JUL 1836 • Ancaster, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 30 DEC 1842 • Ancaster, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada

Caroline Charlotte Smith
BIRTH 24 APR 1838 • Lot 46, Con 4, Center S 1/2, Ancaster, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 24 APR 1874 • Strathroy, Middlesex, Ontario, Canada

Abraham Holmes Smith
BIRTH 5 OCT 1842 • Ancaster, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
DEATH Unknown

Oliver Tiffany Smith
BIRTH 8 OCT 1832 • Lot 46, Con 4, Center S 1/2, Ancaster, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 19 SEP 1902 • Lambton, Ontario, Canada


As often happens one discovery leads to another.
The Samuel Smith fonds (details in Sources below) notes that the Archives of Ontario has the diary of Samuel's brother, Benjamin Smith (a Farmer & Methodist Lay Preacher). 

More information in the sources below for Benjamin's Fonds.
You will also find many links to articles about Samuel. 


When one photo results in a journey down the genealogical rabbit hole!!!


*** UPDATE --- Blogging as family bait works again!
This message from a relative:
"Clifton did have a lot of contact with the Smith relatives. He spent a great deal of time with his grandparents in Paris, Ontario where they had a home. Once he took his daughter to the home, and looking in the back yard discovered the grave of one of his ancestors."


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 War of 1812: He Sounded the Alarm: Lambton’s Sam Smith Saved Canada from American Invasion, McCaffery, Dan. Observer published Saturday December 20, 1997. Article 5, Paragraphs 1 & 2. Retrieved January 18th 2022 from 
https://uelac.ca/loyalist-trails/loyalist-trails-2011-51/

2 Samuel Smith: Early Surveyor of Lambton County. Lambton Heritage Highlights. Lambton County Museums. Paragraph 4. Retrieved January 18th 2022 from
https://www.lambtonmuseums.ca/en/lambton-heritage-museum/samuel-smith-early-surveyor-of-lambton-county.aspx


Sources:

Benjamin Smith fonds. Archives Descriptive Database. Archives of Ontario. Ontario Ministry of Government and Consumer Services. Retrieved January 18th 2022 from 
http://ao.minisisinc.com/SCRIPTS/MWIMAIN.DLL/221612313/1/1/400?RECORD&DATABASE=DESCRIPTION_WEB_INT

Lambton on periphery of 1812 War. Morden, Paul.  Sarnia Observer published January 21st 2012. Retrieved January 18th 2022 from
https://1812news.wordpress.com/2012/01/21/lambton-on-periphery-of-1812-war/

Samuel Smith (1795-1857), WikiTree Contributors.  WikiTree: The Free Family Tree, Retrieved January 18th 2022 from
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Smith-8727

Samuel Smith, Find A Grave. Retrieved January 18th 2022 from 
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/128526494/samuel-smith

Samuel Smith: Early Surveyor of Lambton County. Lambton Heritage Highlights. Lambton County Museums. Retrieved January 18th 2022 from
https://www.lambtonmuseums.ca/en/lambton-heritage-museum/samuel-smith-early-surveyor-of-lambton-county.aspx

Samuel Smith fonds. Archives Descriptive Database. Archives of Ontario. Ontario Ministry of Government and Consumer Services. Retrieved January 18th 2022 from 
http://ao.minisisinc.com/scripts/mwimain.dll/144/PROV/PROV/REFD+F+565?SESSIONSEARCH

War of 1812: He Sounded the Alarm: Lambton’s Sam Smith Saved Canada from American Invasion, McCaffery, Dan. Observer published Saturday December 20, 1997. Retrieved January 18th 2022 from 
https://uelac.ca/loyalist-trails/loyalist-trails-2011-51/




Photos:

Samuel Smith, Find A Grave. Retrieved January 18th 2022 from 
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/128526494/samuel-smith

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, January 15, 2022

Collaboration ~ Helping Others to Advance Your Own

This week's prompt FAVOURITE FIND had me pause for a giggle.

How could I choose just one?

The list of favourite finds is sooooo long, and getting longer every week.

It was then I realized this week's blog would be about my favourite find this week.

This week my 2nd cousin on my step-father's side of the family sent me a family tree going back to the early 1600s in Belgium. This was a line I had been having minimal success finding records for.  The tree was in an excel spreadsheet, and I manually entered them to my tree on Ancestry. 

The cousin in question did not have an Ancestry account before I sent him the invite to see our Bramble Bush. After I was done with our tree I went into his account, and completed his tree.

I had initially asked for a GedCom of the family tree research done by his uncle. All of the research had been done traditional paper trail, and no GedCom existed. 

Now that I have set up the tree for my 2nd cousin a GedCom is available for anyone who is seeking. 

Through connection & collaboration I was able to advance my tree back 300 years, and set up a digital version for my cousin. 




Helping others to advance your own!!!




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***



Photos:

Chalkboard, Collaboration. Retrieved January 15th 2022 from Alpha Stock Images https://www.picpedia.org/chalkboard/c/collaboration.html

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!

________________________________________________________________

Monday, January 3, 2022

This Bramble Bush Foundation ~ Us

Welcome to Week #1 of the 52 Ancestors in 52 weeks 2022.

This is my 4th year participating, and I am super grateful to Amy Johnson Crow for inspiring me to write about the folks in our Bramble Bush. 

If you want to sign up there is a link at the bottom of this blog.

The challenge took me from an uncommitted relationship with my genealogy blog (2014-2018) to telling the stories of our ancestors every week (2019 to 2021).

I look forward to sharing more stories for those who are interested now, and for those who will become interested in the future.

Primarily I write for me. It's a way to turn the list of names and places into living breathing people.

These are the people who impacted who we are today. They need to be remembered.

This first week's prompt is FOUNDATIONS.

To start this year I will focus on the bottom of this Bramble Bush. 

US!

First there were two people living their own lives:

Chris

He's the tiny baby in the carriage with his parents

from the newspaper on the day he was born - with his mom


with his little sister


with his little sister and grandpa

with his little sister

with his little sister

with his little sister



With his great grandfather, Alonzo Vannatter

with his little sister

with his little sister



with his uncle - his dad's youngest brother



with his mom

Basic Training Canadian Military


Deb 

with mom

with my brother and dad

with my brother and dad


with my aunt, my mom's younger sister

with my mom, dad, and two uncles (mom's youngest siblings)

with mom & dad, and the puppy whose name I don't know


with mom, dad, brother, great grandmother, and aunt (mom's younger sister)

mom and I

with brother, dad, mom

with younger brother



dad trimmed my hair for school photos while mom was away

with cousin, brother, uncle (mom's youngest brother)


with cousin & brother




with aunt (mom's younger sister)

with mom, stepfather, and younger brothers

with younger brother

with brother and great grandmother (Nellie May nee Cannon Graham)

with brother and great grandmother (Nellie May nee Cannon Graham)

with brother and great grandmother (Nellie May nee Cannon Graham)

with brother

with mother





with mother




with brother and cousin

with mother and brother

with mother and brother

with mom

with aunt, mom's youngest sister

With friend Karl Turner for his Grad

with brother, step-father & grandparents

about a year before meeting Chris

Not too long before meeting Chris

They became a couple:







They became a family:








  






























And the family grew

AND grew

Their nest emptied:

































Once the nest empties there is more time & money for genealogy --- errr I mean fun!!!




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!

________________________________________________________________