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Harrison County TXGenWeb project and all of the information here is
FREE for you to
use. If you are being charged to view/use any of this information, please
contact
Sharon or Elaine.
DO
YOU WANT TO KNOW YOUR HARRISON COUNTY CONNECTION?
By
Edna Sorber
From
the December 2001 Ancestor Issues,
Newsletter for the Harrison
County Genealogical Society and the Harrison County Historical Museum
Because genealogy is becoming the
fastest growing ‘hobby”, even those unfamiliar with what is
involved are beginning to ask, “Who are my ancestors?”.
The Harrison County Historical Museum Research Library
is a fancy name for a place where you might find the answer.
Besides general history of the area, and other areas involved
in the migration, this library has specific information on families
that have lived here, or have simply passed through.
History tells that early on the settlers in the North
American colonies tended to move from eastern ports where they
landed from Europe or Africa to southern and western areas of
what is now the United States.
Migration followed definite patterns.
This research library tries to help by filing whatever
information it can find and afford on those patterns and the
persons involved.
But the question “Who are my ancestors?”
takes in much more than a history lesson from printed, or even
manuscript materials.
The first question anyone interested in his forebears
should ask is “Who am I?” Then, “Who is my father?”
Then, “Who is my mother?”
The very first rule of thumb is to document, by writing
down in a logical way, the information about yourself, and then
to work backward. Too often enthusiastic researchers will say,
“I know I’m related to Charlemagne.
How did this come about?”
It’s impossible to go that way, since Charlemagne had
numerous descendants, and even following the offspring of his
children (legitimate and illegitimate) would be daunting.
But imagine trying to document all of his grandchildren,
and all the great grandchildren for generations between the
700's and the 2000's.
Step I, then is to list what information
is known about you, your parents, your grandparents, and, if
you know your great grandparents, those too.
Basic information such as birth, marriage, death, and
burial, is material that can be documented by finding the sources
where the items are officially listed.
Most often county courthouses are the answer, but there
are other sources, too.
If, for example, you don’t know your great grandfather’s
first name, so that you can’t easily go to the courthouse to
look for his marriage license, try the census.
This library has all Harrison County
censuses up to 1910, as well as some from surrounding counties,
and even some from other areas on the migration trail.
The 1920 census will be available next year, since it
will have then been the lawful 72 years since it was taken.
Incidentally, the 1890 census for the whole country was
destroyed by fire. A
few small areas survived that mammoth fire, and a few counties
may have kept copies of what was submitted to the federal census
bureau, but for the era from 1890 to 1900, other sources will
have to help. If you know the full name of one ancestor who
lived in Harrison County before 1910, looking him up may be
the easiest part of getting started.
You will probably find him in a family, with all his
existing brothers and sisters, as well as his father and mother,
if he was a child at that date.
If he was living away from his family, you will find
that information. You
will find his occupation, his place of birth (at least the state),
if living at home his father’s and mother’s place of birth (at
least the state), ages of all, and possibly other information.
Reading the census should give a beginning to finding
out who the ancestors were.
It is possible to go back to previous census lists to
see earlier generations.
With at least this much information,
it is possible to ask questions.
Before asking for additional data, however, it is desirable
to be able to furnish what you have from your own knowledge,
and from census data in some logical form.
Most researchers prefer to use a diagram type of “pedigree
sheet”. This
shows at a glance the relationship of the person asking the
question. If, then
you find that Harrison County figured in your ancestry from
several generations back, you would be able to ask if there
are “vertical files” about that family. The file drawers so labeled contain manuscript material, letters,
and other types of material. The library also has picture drawers,
artifact drawers, ledgers, loose papers, maps, scrapbooks, not
to mention books that contain family histories, or even whole
biographies of a specific individual.
The fine points of census searching
should include finding the actual residence site, and the names
of neighbors because they often figured in family history. With
at least this minimum information, it is possible to ask a specific
question. However,
it should be remembered that there are possibilities that cannot
be covered by insisting that your surname (as seen in the census,
for example) is always spelled just the way you use it, or that
you know the man was John, not Jack, or that his wife was Mary,
not Marie, or Polly. Flexibility
takes into consideration that census takers are not perfect, nor
are the persons who give the information doing it with the intent
of making it easy for genealogists.
The ability to ask specific questions
will separate you from the individual who reportedly said at the
information desk at the huge Salt Lake City library of the Mormon
Church (the largest genealogy library in the world): “I’d like
to have my family history. I’m parked in a 10 minute zone outside.”
Harrison County Historical Museum
Research Library cannot answer every question that is asked,
but with a specific request, you’d be surprised at the amount
of detail that can be furnished.
Ask away!
Links to help you get started:
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Martin & Etta Withers Copyright
© 2003-2007 by Elaine Martin & Sharon Pierce
Copyright © Gail Brown, 1999, 2000, 2001,
2002, 2003
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