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I haven't been to the cemetery, but my dad's working on our family history right now and I'm sure he'd find it. |
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1600s - both sides
Court of Henry VIII - maternal Jernigan line |
Depends on the branch. One branch of my family tree was only traceable to mid-1800s, but another, I was able to trace back over 1,000 years.
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We can trace my mom's side back past the Mayflower. When we went to Plymouth when I was little, we met the woman playing our relative who came over on the Mayflower. I think my aunt scared her a bit...
My dad's side of the family is a bit harder, but he has roots to Spain and Armenia that we know go pretty far back, as well as Dutch roots. |
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I can get back to the 1700s with my mother's side. It gets a little confusing before that, but I could probably go back to the 1600s. I with RaggedyAnn. Most of our information before 1750 is from the Catholic records.
My dads is a little harder. We can get my great grandparents, but they were immigrants. My dad died when my dad was young, so that side was pretty much lost. My grandmother hated my great grandmother who hated my great great grandmother so that side is really tricky. Plus my grandmother is a little racist. Okay, more than a little and refuses to acknowledge certain aspects of our heritage so we can't determine if she is just being racist or if we are actually not from certain places. |
On my mother's side, I can go back 4 generations. She and most of her ancestors are British, but I have a Goanese great-great-grandmother.
On my father's side, I can go back 3 generations - that's the generation that immigrated from Poland. One of my MIL's hobbies is genealogy, and she's traced both her family and her husband's family pretty far back. She has also tried to trace my father's genealogy - she is on a quest to find some Jewish ancestors for me, but I'm afraid she'll have to go back nearly 2000 years for that :p |
I've only been able to go back to about the mid-1800's on both sides.
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My mom's brother drew up a family tree. I don't remember how far back he'd gotten, but I think it was only maybe four generations. I think my brother may have a copy of that family tree, but it's all in Chinese. I think my paternal grandfather had written a bit about our genealogy in his journals, but once again everything's in Chinese. My aunt wanted to take the journals to China to get them translated, copied, and bound into nice books for us kids. However, my grandfather fought for the Nationalist Party, so there may be some stuff in there denouncing the Communist Party.
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Welp, I think I posted something similar around here somewhere a few years back, but I don't know...
Aside from wanting to do the DNA Anscestry.com stuff, my side of the family can trace--especially my paternal lineage can trace to 2 slaves and 1 freed slave. My maternal lineage traces her to 1 freed slave. On my grandfather's maternal grandmother, we think she was not Black, there is strong evidence that she was an immigrant from Eastern Europe. Because her children has wirey hair, there was an attraction between African Americans and these "new Eastern European" children. The last name was Zeigler... In fact, family members that come to the reunions have a light complexion and fine straight, but wavy hair... The only children that do not clearly look Black are my niece and nephew at this time because their mothers (yeah, that is what's going on) are White. My grandfather's paternal grandmother was a 300 lb slave, never freed who was "married" to a biracial Native American/Irish man who had red hair... My grandfather's father did not have the red hair, but my grandfather inherited the ultra red hair--like "Bozo the Clown" red hair... My grandfather's father was a "rolling stone" he wound up with 63 children from various women, but he was married to my grandfather's mother... On my grandmother's side, she said she met an uncle who was a emancipated slave who lived until he was 106 years old. However her great-grandfather was a freed-slave that decided to leave the plantation and ran into the Cherokee nation (allegedly). Due to the "fugitive slave act" at the time, he married one of the women and had quite a few kids. One of them were my grandmother's grandmother named Honey. One day, a judge came by the house and said to Honey's brother, that he'll take that gal off his hands... And the brother gave Honey to the judge... She was like 12 years old... They had quite of few children, all except one could "pass for being white"--except my great-grandmother--who looks much more beautiful that J-Lo--even when my great-grandmother was old... On my mother's side, her biological father was Irish of the last name Dunn. He had 2 families: one Black, one White... I guess folks can figure out who he was married to... And in the middle of segregated, post-Civil War era Georgia... Well, guess what happened to my mother's family? Interestingly, my mother just found out that a maternal ancestor of hers was a former emancipated slave that attempted to fight for civil rights and unionize various activities who was lynched in the early 20th century... Apparently, the old folks in the family never spoke of what happened to pass it on to the young... |
<----- plans to make genealogy her second career.
On my mother's side, we're back to Jamestown (finally!) and starting England on the one lineage. Others go back to the 1600's, and we need one more proof for the Mayflower. We belong to several lineage societies, including First Families of PA and of Western PA, DAR, UDC & ( are applying to) First Families of VA. On my father's side, I didn't think we'd get back very far, but then received an email from a man who is a distant cousin. I assumed he was a Mormon, as the family legend was that my ggg-grandmother's brothers became LDS. For those who don't know, doing their genealogy is part of their religion. This cousin turned out to be in England, living on the same street as where my ggg-grandmother was born! So, we have his lineage back to 1713. There has been a lot of genealogical threads in the past. Try: Daughters of This & That DARs on GC Colonial Slave Links for starters, or just use the search function for genealogy. One of the most important things I've learned about genealogy is "NONE of us had anything to do with our ethnicity, but EACH of us has everything to do with our attitudes about it!" I don't buy into the "my genealogy is better than yours" bit, as frankly, I had nothing to do with the wheres & whys I was born. I do enjoy researching it, though. |
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