ShogunGrumpyBear
Chieftain
Anyone here into Genealogy? I think it’s interesting mostly come from farmers innkeepers shoemakers and some soldiers. Wish I had some one famous but in a good way of course.
I have some relatives that dug into our genealogy.
My father's parents were something like 3rd cousins, who shared a common ancestor (on their respective mothers' sides) who lived during the American Revolution. He was a cousin of Francis Scott Key, who wrote the poem that became the US National Anthem, and similarly supported Independence.
My father's mother's was born on the same plantation where her father had been born during in 1864. His father spent the first half of the war in medical school in Philadelphia before joining the Confederate Army as a Surgeon. (I believe his father and grandfather immigrated from Germany in the early 19th century.) He got a commission to work at fort conveniently located about halfway between the plantation he personally owned (with almost 100 slaves) and a larger plantation owned by his mother (a widow who owed 300 slaves), near Selma Alabama. In the last year of the war (at age 26) he was reassigned to join the army in the field. We have a copy of the journals that he kept from late 1864 to early 1867. My father's mother's father went on to exploit the descendants of his father's slaves who became share croppers and kept them indebted to him as he owned the only store close enough for them to purchase any supplies.
My Father's Father's family descend primarily from English Gentry. I have a fairly detailed detailed pedigree for them filed away somewhere. The first man with my surname to visit America was knighted and married a daughter of George Calvert, the 1st Baron Baltimore. The family included a few Royal Governors and several other officials. They spent generations in American Colonies but remained loyal to the Crown and ended up fleeing back to England during the American Revolution. The family moved back to America around 1840 and founded a small town here in Georgia, which I visited once during their annual Watermelon Festival. I heard as a child that he was an importer who introduced the very first Watermelon to America, but most sources agree that it has been introduced by the Spanish centuries earlier. I think he really just introduced one particular new variety. My father grew up spending the summers on his grandfather's farm near that town, a farm which was the remnant of a former plantation which my ancestors owned (along with two dozen slaves) before the civil war. I think I recall there being another Confederate Army Surgeon on this side of the family too.
My mother's father traced his descent back to men-at-arms who fought on both sides of the Battle of Hastings in 1066. Mom said that when she was growing up her father often spoke of how he was proud to be English but also proud to be a Mutt, insisting that Hybrid Vigor improves the human race. His ancestors were mostly commoners who lived in Northern England before becoming some of the earliest indentured servants to come to America. One of our ancestors fought under George Washington at Valley Forge and was later paid in the form of title to land in what would become Alabama. They briefly held a few slaves but mostly relied in having a large number of children to work the land. (It seems like everyone on that side of the family had at least 6 children, and often more than 10.) Several were involved in the American Colonization Society, which aimed to buy slaves to free them and ship them back to Africa. There was yet another Confederate Army Surgeon on this side of the family. I don't have such detailed records about him, but my grandfather insisted he was moderate Abolitionist who spoke out against Secession before it happened but still felt it was his patriotic duty to fight for his State rather than the Federal government after the decision was reached. That side of the family has been staunchly Republican since Reconstruction, when it meant standing up against the Klan.
My Mother's Mother's family were mostly German, Scotch-Irish, and Cherokee. My grandmother seemed to sincerely believe the rather dubious family tales that she was descended from a Cherokee Princess, who was a mean woman and the only member of her family to ever beat or abuse any of the slaves they owned, and that the slaves loved their masters so much that they could not convince them to leave once they were set free. She was also descended from some Southern Unionists who were involved in leading their county to try to secede from the State of Alabama as a response to the State seceding from the Union. They stayed neutral during the war, refusing to be drafted by either side.
I suspect a lot of family trees traced to famous people in history have been by scammers like this
Most family lore is bunk. People believe what they want to believe. Half the folks in New Orleans think they have some distant claim on the Bourbon throne.
The Old Ones came from Donegal, where they had farmed rocks and cut peat since just after the flood (yes, that flood). Peasants, in the fullest sense of the word. But this guy can't be ruled out: https://www.irishcentral.com/roots/niall-of-the-nine-hostages-descendants
One of my maternal ancestors had the name Kostrzewa, which is pretty neat, and a departure from the Anderssons and Erickssons that make up about 99% of my home state if you include Olson. But I’m not Swedish. So again, only the conquered countries, never the conquerers.
Changing my name to something cooler would be too much of a hassle.