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!

Showing posts with label Max. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Max. Show all posts

Saturday, April 24, 2021

When the DNA Produces a Paper Trail ~ It's In Your Blood

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks 2021: Week 16 (DNA)


When I received my DNA results I discovered I was 1/8th European Jewish (Ashkenazic). One of my great grandparents was Jewish or they were both 1/2 Jewish. In all the records I have found they belonged to the Greek Catholic church. I can find no records indicating they practiced the Jewish faith. 


My great grandparents
Alexander & Mary (nee Maximiw) Pellack 

This was the part of the tree that I knew very little about due to my grandfather recreating himself from a Ukrainian born in northern Saskatchewan to a Scots born in San Francisco. 

Clyde & Mary (nee Thomson) Robertson
Clyde was born Max Pellack
Photo taken in 1940


I was 29 years old when I discovered this mystery, and it was my primary reason for doing Ancestry DNA. It took me 20 years, but I finally confirmed my grandfather who I knew as Clyde Robertson was born Max Pellack. 

My dad, me, Grandpa


When I first received my DNA results I tried to use my matches to figure out the missing parts of my tree. I had great difficulty. I had no close matches. I had 1000s of distant matches. I was overwhelmed trying to find the in common ancestors. After I convinced my dad to do Ancestry DNA it was even worse because he had almost 20,000 matches. All his close matches were via his maternal line which we had solid research & connections for. Dad's paternal line past my X2 great grandparents remains a mystery. 


As I tried to connect the shared matches to create some sort of logical tree it never worked. I finally learned why. The majority of my matches on my father's paternal line were very far back. On first glance they appeared to be closer. It was only when I learned about Endogamy that I was finally able tease apart which matches were relevant to my modern day searching & which ones I could ignore for the current mystery solving. 


How to spot endogamous relationships
One way to help you tell the difference between someone who is closely related and someone who shares DNA because of endogamy is to pay attention not just to the total amount of DNA shared, or your relationship prediction, but to look at the size of the pieces of shared DNA. All of our testing companies provide this information. Here’s a screenshot of a father-daughter genetic relationship described at MyHeritage, showing the total amount of shared DNA, how many segments are shared, and the length of the largest segment:

Looking at the size of the biggest piece of DNA, you want that piece to be larger than 20 cM (centimorgans). If the biggest piece is smaller than that, it is unlikely you are related recently, and you can chalk up all that shared DNA to the tight-knit nature of your ancestral community, and not waste your time looking for a common ancestor. 1


In the years since the matches have grown to more than 30,000 for my dad and almost 25,000 for me.  I am no further ahead on my father's paternal side of this Bramble Bush, but I have found a lot of relatives that we didn't know about before via DNA matching.


In the years since I added our DNA to GedMatch & My Heritage I was able to connect with relatives who had information and photos to share. I have made little progress in climbing higher up this branch that was my initial reason to do genetic genealogy for. 

Although it wasn't my initial plan I have learned about mysteries on other parts of our Bramble Bush that have made for difficult researching. They usually start with a message from another researcher who we are related to.  

In July 2020 I received an Ancestry inbox message from a DNA match. She asked me how I was related to Artemissa Merrill (my 3rd great grandmother) because she descended from Artemissa's brother Thomas Forest Merrill who was known as Forrest. This message was the first I heard about brother Forrest. I didn't have him in our Bramble Bush. After adding him there was no doubt that he fit perfectly as expected due to the shared DNA with myself, my aunt, and my grandmother with this newly found cousin from the United States. 

My newly found cousin shared that her X2 great grandfather had disappeared in 1860 leaving behind a wife and young son. She wondered if the Canadian part of the family knew what had happened or had any ideas. I talked to my 95 year old grandmother who said she remembers the name, but no details. Grandma would have been 10 when her great grandmother Artemissa died. She wasn't born when Forest disappeared. 

As we understand what happened. 

Thomas Forest Merrill (known as Forrest) and brother Albert Forest Merrill (known as Albert) were loggers in Alpena, Michigan. They were born in Ontario, Canada. According to coworkers Forrest was heading home to Climax via Detroit. He was walking. Somewhere between leaving work in Alpena and arriving home in Climax he disappeared. 

Source: Google Maps

The family wondered if he had been killed somewhere along the way. They wondered if he had drowned in a river. Maybe he had enlisted, and was killed in the Civil War?  Leaving behind a wife and son by choice didn't sound right. The family never knew what happened to Forrest. Brother Albert searched for him. No one ever found out what happened to Forrest. 

After adding Forrest and descendants to our Bramble Bush I began searching for more information. I found the record below:

U.S. Army, Register of Enlistments, 1798-1914
Name Forest Merrill|
Birth year 1837
Birthplace Canada
Enlistment Age 23
signed up in Detroit
Enlistment period - 5 years
profession - laborer
eyes - hazel
hair - brown
complexion - ruddy
height - 5' 8 1/2"
no regiment or company listed
Remarks: Deserted May 16 1860

When I sent the record to my newly found cousin asking if she had already found it she replied she had not. The question remains did Forrest leave his family by choice?  Did he sign up voluntarily?  Was he conscripted?

In looking at the document I suspect he was conscripted. Maybe he was found on the road between his destinations and the military gave him no choice?  

The reason I think he was conscripted is because of how many of these men deserted. That one document had the records for 41 men whose last names started with the letter M who enlisted in April 1860.
21 were discharged
17 deserted
3 died

In looking at the document I discovered another Merrill who I do not yet have in this Bramble Bush. Joel E Merrill who was a physician born in Concord, Minnesota. He enlisted on April 6th 1860, and deserted on May 22nd 1860. 

I'm no expert, but those desertion odds seem pretty high to me for anyone who enlisted by free will. 

If any of my readers have anything further to add for the mystery of Thomas Forest Merrill (known as Forrest) we would love to hear from you. 

Sometimes the cousins you find have family treasures to share. 

In 1860 when Forest went missing family members from Ontario sent letters to his wife Ana. There were also letters sent before Forest went missing, and some with dates unknown. The family kept those letters, and my newly found cousin sent me scans of the original letters dating 1860 & earlier. 

These letters from 1859:









These letters from 1860:












These letters from dates unknown:










Seeing the actual writing of my X3 & X4 great grandmothers & other relatives was an emotional moment. Reading their words, and hearing their thoughts when there was no chance of my every knowing them. 


Definitely a highlight of my genealogy researching. 





Family treasures from newly found cousins!








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 DNA Testing and Endogamy, Your DNA Guide. Retrieved April 19th 2021 from https://www.yourdnaguide.com/ydgblog/2019/2/23/endogamy



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, September 23, 2019

On a Virtual Walk - Visiting the Old Homestead

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: Week 39 (MAP IT OUT)


I sent away for the homestead grant information for my great grandfather, Alexander Pellack. When the envelope arrived from the Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan I was very excited to see what had been sent.



My grandfather claimed to have been born in San Francisco. He was born in Gronlid, Saskatchewan, Canada. A small town in the northern part of Sasksatchewan. His parents arrived from Ukraine (part of the Austrian Empire at the time) in 1909 with their three oldest children. My grandfather was the first born in Canada. He was born on the homestead that would eventually be the family farm. I can find no records of grandpa's birth being registered. His younger brother registered his own birth as an adult. Having never been registered it would have been easy for Grandpa to choose a new name for himself as he did.





I had previously found these two maps and record at the Library & Archives website.. 






Name:
  • Alexr Pelyck
Part:
SW
Section:
1
Township:
48
Range:
17
Meridian:
W2
Folio:
38
Liber:
633
Microfilm Reel Number:
C-6439
Item Number:
87918










I opened the envelope to find a Cummins map noting the homestead plots with the associated name. This is a very small piece of the 4 page map.



Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan, Cummins Map



Also included was all of the pages of the complete Homestead Grant file. I noticed that my great grandfather did not sign the document. His mark was recorded. I now understood how the name Pellack ended up spelled in so many different ways: Pellack, Pelyck, Pelack, Pelec, Pelyk, 



His mark, Alexander Pelyck (Pellack) 
Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan,


I loved seeing the farm grow




Pellack Family Farm is growing 
Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan,


On October 9th 1914 my great grandparents became landowners having met all the requirements of the homesteading terms.



Pellack Family Homestead 
Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan,


I tried to use Google Maps for a street view of the farm my grandfather had grown up on, but was not successful.   


I took a look to see where I might be staying if my virtual visit was real.




I then went looking for the church my grandfather attended as a child. The Ukrainian Catholic parish of St. Michael at Gronlid. His father wasn't included in the original church planning names, but his uncle was. Many of the names included are found throughout this part of my family tree. The original settlers began arriving in 1908, and by 1919 decided that a local church was needed. They began the planning and financing, and 


"By April 18, 1919 the framing was completed. On Palm Sunday
of that year the parishioners, without a priest, were directed by
Tymko Bodnarchuk and John Buriock in their first holy
service in the church. Subsequently, they met every Sunday
and on holy days for prayer services, hymns and Molebni.
There were very few priests in this area and they visited
the parish once or twice a year" 1








Using Google's Street View I decided to walk the streets of Gronlid, Saskatchewan finding:



The SALOON 





The FIRE HALL



The COMMUNITY HALL




I then took a walk down a rural road, and imagined my grandpa growing up on a farm that looked a lot like this one



Presumably not the family farm
I couldn't find the address using the homestead details
will need to visit in real life to see the family homestead


My first time visiting my grandpa's hometown via Google Street View!







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***






Related Previous Blogs:

Somehow Related Blog Spot,
First Things First - Going Back to the Beginning of My Genealogy Blog

https://somehowrelated.blogspot.com/2019/01/first-things-first.html

Somehow Related Blog Spot

Treasures from the Library - Interlibrary Loans

https://somehowrelated.blogspot.com/2019/01/treasures-from-library-interlibrary.html


Surprise -- I'm Ashkenazi Jewish



Max Pellack ~ I'm Not a Diamond Heiress with a Tiny Flluuuffy Dog in a Sparkly Flllluuufffy Handbag!


Reposting ~ If I Were a Man, and Wore a Cowboy Hat





Footnotes:

1 Church of St. Michael constructed 1949-1951 near Gronlid; R.M. 458. Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saskatoon, Retrieved September 15th 2019 from

https://www.skeparchy.org/wordpress/about-us/parishes/gronlid-st-michael/



Sources:

Alexander Pellack, Homestead Record, Libraries & Archives Canada, Retrieved September 15th 2019 from
https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/land/land-grants-western-canada-1870-1930/Pages/item.aspx?IdNumber=87918&



Gronlid hotel, Google Maps, Retrieved September 16th 2019 from
https://www.google.ca/maps/place/Gronlid+Hotel/@53.1565402,-104.5444177,11z/data=!4m8!1m2!2m1!1shotel+near+Gronlid,+SK!3m4!1s0x0:0x9720b62a7a558922!8m2!3d53.1638578!4d-104.4314218?hl=en&authuser=0



Streetview, Gronlid, Google Maps, Retrieved September 15th 2019 from https://www.google.ca/maps/@53.1012373,-104.4652601,3a,75y,101.76h,90t/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1se4AErGQd1vairtOFANbXZA!2e0!6s%2F%2Fgeo2.ggpht.com%2Fcbk%3Fpanoid%3De4AErGQd1vairtOFANbXZA%26output%3Dthumbnail%26cb_client%3Dmaps_sv.tactile.gps%26thumb%3D2%26w%3D203%26h%3D100%26yaw%3D109.11898%26pitch%3D0%26thumbfov%3D100!7i13312!8i6656?hl=en&authuser=0

Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan, Homestead Documents, received 2017

Church of St. Michael constructed 1949-1951 near Gronlid; R.M. 458. Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saskatoon, Retrieved September 15th 2019 from
https://www.skeparchy.org/wordpress/about-us/parishes/gronlid-st-michael/





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!


_____________________________________________________________________