Google your way to a Quilt
Sometimes after I’ve tried the library, the archives, ancestry.com and NEHGS- I next resort to finding genealogy information is just Googling names to see what comes up. Now, with the addition of Google Books, I’m often surprised at what happens. And sometimes names that didn’t draw any hits six months ago suddenly have interesting results. This is what happened to me last week.
My Munroe lineage…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on November 6, 2009 at 11:37am —
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Leavitt Cemetery, Chichester, New Hampshire
Not too far north of Nutfield is Chichester, New Hampshire. My mother’s grandmother was a Batchelder, and she was born in Chichester, but the family lived in Boston. Their roots were on the New Hampshire seacoast, because the first Batchelder in the New World was the Reverend Stephen Batchelder, who founded Hampton. The Batchelders didn’t have their roots in Chichester, but all the brides,…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on November 4, 2009 at 2:32pm —
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Country Girls in the Big City
Years ago I took my Londonderry Girl Scout troop to Lowell National Park, to see how the mill girls lived and worked. The girls were about twelve years old, not much younger than some of the mill workers in the 1830s and 40s. We took a canal boat ride, and toured the noisy Boot Mill (a big hit for kids) and finally went into the boarding house. We earned a merit badge with some of our activities in…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on November 2, 2009 at 8:28pm —
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Pinkerton Tavern Ghosts
A Post for Halloween!
In October, thoughts of ghosts and witches come to mind. There were plenty of accused witches, even one who was found guilty in the 1600’s, and New Hampshire has its share of ghosts. When we first moved to Londonderry over 25 years ago, the first ghost we heard about was the one haunting the Pinkerton Tavern, in Derry. At the time, this building was an unfinished furniture store, and…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on October 28, 2009 at 2:30pm —
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Photo from "The pride and joy of Ernest Ballard, 84, is this rare, water-powered up and down sawmill he erected at his home in Derry, New Hampshire." (There'll Always be Water Wheels; by Neil M. Clark, December 3, 1955.)
The Taylor Sawmill at Ballard State Forest, Derry, NH
The Ballard State Forest in Derry is 71 Acres surrounding a pond, with picnic tables and walking trails, but the main attraction is the…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on October 25, 2009 at 5:55pm —
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Princess Ka’iulani of Hawaii
The Barbarian Princess Controversy?
On the anniversary of her birthday, 16 October 2009 will be the world premiere of a new movie about Princess Ka’iulani of Hawaii. She was born Victoria Ka’iulani Kalaninuiahilapalapa Kawekiu i Lunalilo Cleghorn on 16 October 1875, and was Queen Liliuokalani’s heir to the throne. Her father was Scots, and her mother was sister to the Hawaiian King. At this point in…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on October 16, 2009 at 9:27am —
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Pepperell Family of Kittery, Maine
Photo by Rich Beauchesne seacoastonline.com
The William Pepperell Family
The original settlers of the Maine and New Hampshire coast were known as the “Piscataqua Pioneers.” Early settlements in Strawbery Bank, Portsmouth, Kittery and the Berwicks blended together before boundaries were settled between the colonies. York County, Maine was actually York County, Massachusetts, and the…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on October 13, 2009 at 6:06pm —
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In Memory
of
Mr Jabez Treadwell
who departed this Life
22d Day of Decr
1781
In the 67th year of his age.
"Bleƒƒed are the dead which die in
the Lord that they may reƒt
from their Labours; and their
works do follow them."
When I first applied for membership in the Mayflower Society, I had eleven different…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on October 11, 2009 at 7:00pm —
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Ocean Born Mary
The Myth:
A Ship of Ulster protestant passengers was on its way to Boston, Massachusetts when, on 28 July 1720, Elizabeth Wilson gave birth to a daughter. About this time a pirate ship attacked, and the captain intended to rob and murder the passengers. Just in the nick of time, the captain heard the newborn child’s cries. He said he would spare all the passengers if the child was named Mary in honor of his mother, and…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on October 8, 2009 at 8:41am —
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Dear Blog Readers,
www.nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com Many of the blog posts are duplicated here at GenealogyWise on my blog.
Last month Family Tree Magazine ran an article and solicited suggestions for the Top 40 Genealogy Blogs. Someone nominated my blog, Nutfield Genealogy. The contest is still on and the nominations were released today. Over 130 blogs are on the list in ten different categories.
You can vote for your favorites (Hint, Hint Nutfield Genealogy…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on October 6, 2009 at 9:41am —
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Spanish ‘Flu of 1918
Years ago I heard the story of a family member who died during the 1918 Influenza Pandemic. It was interesting to me at the time, but even more interesting now and worth revisiting and re-investigating the story.
Between 1918 and 1919, an estimated 21/5 million people died of the “Spanish Flu” worldwide. However, the exact numbers are unknown. It is thought that about 675,000 Americans died, more than the…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on October 6, 2009 at 8:07am —
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Buried at a Mall?
Robert Wilson, 3rd died in 1797 in what was then part of Danvers, Massachusetts, at a farm which no longer exists, and the family plot is now located in Peabody, behind the Kappy’s Liquor Store. The Wilson family wouldn’t recognize this land. Where the farm stood is now the cloverleaf intersection of routes 114 and 128, and the North Shore Mall.
Robert Wilson served in the Revolutionary War as…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on September 23, 2009 at 6:07pm —
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A photo, early 1950's, of Carrie (Batchelder) Allen wearing the gold nugget, surrounded by her descendants
George Emerson’s parents were from New Hampshire, raised in Milford and removing to South Boston, Massachusetts sometime soon after their marriage in 1810. George was born in 1817, and married Mary Esther Younger in 1845. He was listed as a “boot and shoe worker.” This young family had two babies by the time gold was found in…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on September 2, 2009 at 10:56am —
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The Boyd Farm in Londonderry, now Rolling Meadows Town Houses
A few years, ago two portraits were donated by a descendant to the Londonderry Leach Library, and their story was printed up in the Derry News. They were primitive style paintings of Robert W. Boyd and his wife, Mary Lund Towne painted by the itinerant portrait painter Horace Bundy in 1851. In the days before photography it was common to hire these roaming self taught artists to…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on August 5, 2009 at 12:30pm —
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Although I have many ancestors who came from England on the Mayflower or with the Winthrop Fleet, I also have some ancestors who came to Massachusetts via Ellis Island in 1915. My grandmother, Bertha Louise Roberts, was just nineteen years old at the time, and she traveled from Leeds, Yorkshire with her parents and her older brother, Horace. My great –grandparents were John Peter Bowden Roberts and his wife, Emma Frances Warren. John Roberts had a job…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on July 27, 2009 at 1:00pm —
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I love this story. "Just regular folks" in the family tree. Thomas Varney was born about 1630 in the Barbados and removed to Massachusetts to settle at the Chebacco section of the town of Ipswich before 1650. His first wife was Abigail Proctor, who was also just a "regular folk" except that her brother John was hung as a witch in 1692. Perhaps being a bit different from all the other puritans in town ran in the family.
Uusally all the women in the family tree have blank spaces next…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on July 24, 2009 at 10:30am —
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It started back when I took the AP American History class at Wachusett Regional High School in Massachusetts. When our teacher told our class we could all write a final paper on any topic (with her approval, of course) I knew that I was going to write about Queen Liliuokalani and how she lost the Hawaiian throne. I was the first student to ask to have my topic approved, and the teacher looked puzzled. It was a topic we barely covered in class, and there was nothing on the subject in our school…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on July 22, 2009 at 9:30am —
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Prisoner of War aboard the ship “John and Sara” From Scotland to Boston, 1651
This is part three of my miniseries of Thanksgiving blogs on the immigration of certain ancestors to America, during the week when our thoughts usually rest with our Mayflower passenger ancestors. My 7x great grandfather William Munroe arrived in Massachusetts a little more than thirty years after the Pilgrims settled in Plymouth. His immigration was forced as a…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on November 30, 1999 at 12:00pm —
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