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Showing posts from 2015

Karen "Mary" Kjeldgaard - From Denmark to Iowa, Wyoming and New York City

I am always amazed at the distances our ancestors traveled at a time when it was not very easy. Immigrants would come across the ocean, spending weeks on boat, oftentimes in horrible conditions. And then they would travel by horse and wagon, stagecoach, river boat, or train to their new homes. Karen Marie Kjeldgard was my wife's great grand aunt. She is the best example I have found of an immigrant who made major moves. She was born in Skarp Salling, near Aalborg, Denmark, May 11, 1857 to Peder Kjeldgaard and Mariane Jacobsdatter. Peder was a tailor and no doubt passed his knowledge on to his daughter, Karen. They left Denmark in 1875 and settled near Elk Horn, Iowa. Karen Marie Kjeldgaard Hollenbeck Karen married Coleman Edward Hollenbeck May 10, 1879. What is remarkable about the marriage is where they married - Fort Fetterman, Wyoming. Fort Fetterman was in cold and remote northern Wyoming, near present day Douglas, and in the 1870s, was actively involved in indian s

Martha Brennan Davis - a Short and Forgotten Life

I have updated this since first publishing it in 2015, adding the last paragraph discussing Martha's possible Indiana origins. There are too many ancestors, even relatively recent ancestors, who it seems nearly impossible to know anything about. Martha A. Brennan is one of those. I believe she came from Ireland, died young, perhaps even in childbirth. Her daughter was Lillian Davis (Stephenson), my great grandmother. Martha was the first wife of William Davis, marrying him in Jefferson county, Iowa, 18 December 1862. The Davises had settled in that area, which explains why William married there. I'm not sure what lead Martha there. Their daughter, Lillian Evelyn Davis, was born 15 April 1864, Galesburg, Illinois. William Davis became a railroad worker, and perhaps got his start in that industry in Galesburg, which was a major railroad hub as the railroads expanded west across the Mississippi during that time. And perhaps Martha had family there as well. If Martha was from I

Squibbs in 17th Century Tipperary, Ireland

It seems like Ireland has always had a lot going on, and often not much to the benefit of the Irish. The Squibbs, many of whom were wealthy, landed, gentry in England, had a presence in Ireland as well, although for just a brief time in the long history of Ireland. Of particular interest to me are the ones that were in southern Tipperary, in lands between Cahir and Clogheen. A Col. John Squibb was listed as a co-owner of Castlegrace, just east of Clogheen, in Pender's Census of 1659. Castlegrace is reported by the Down Survey website (http://downsurvey.tcd.ie/) to have been owned by Thomas Butler, who held the title Baron Cahir, both in 1641 and 1670. So, why is John Squibb listed as running the place in 1659? History is essential to understanding genealogy. In the 1640s "Adventurers" from England and Scotland invested money in Cromwell's army and navy to invade Ireland and replace the Irish with English settlers. In return for their investments and back pay, the

David Brady's Possible Family

The following is a story that I added to one of my trees on Ancestry. I thought by posting it here, I'd get a few more readers. David Brady was my 3rd great grandfather.Another post on David Brady is at  http://mesenbrinkphotos.blogspot.com/2014/12/the-twenty-children-of-david-brady.html . The information on David Brady's origin is sketchy. He is said to have been born in 1785 in Sussex county, New Jersey. When he died on July 12, 1878, he was 93 years, 1 month and 14 days of age according to his death certificate. Based on that, he was born May 28, 1785. His ages from the 1850, 1860 and 1870 censuses, when you consider the actual enumeration dates, confirm that birth year exactly. His obituary gives his birthplace as Sussex county, New York (not New Jersey). But there is no Sussex county in New York, so this is clearly an error. A biography in Glover's 1906 county history states his birthplace as Sussex county, New Jersey. Otherwise, there isn't a lot of evide

The Origins of William Combs, Husband of Barbara Baum

William Combs was my 3g grandfather. He has many descendants and the Combs name isn't uncommon. But his origins have always been a question for me and others. He was born in Pennsylvania ca.1789, married Barbara Baum in Ross county Ohio ca. 1808, lived in Crawford county, Ohio, Buchanan county, Missouri and Madison county, Iowa, where he died in 1872. It is  common for people to trace him back to Job Combs of Shenandoah county, Virginia and Jefferson county, Tennessee. But I don't know what evidence there is for that. It seems reasonable. William claimed to have been born in Pennsylvania, not Virginia. But Shenandoah county was only 50 miles or so south of Pennsylvania, across the Maryland panhandle. Families were somewhat mobile. It is possible that Job Combs lived in Pennsylvania for a time, when William would have been born. But I haven't found evidence of Job Combs being in Pennsylvania. It is also possible that William was wrong about his birthplace. We really aren

Cyrus Van Gundy - An Old Man Looking Toward the West

Cyrus Van Gundy, or Vangunda as he would later be called, was my great great grandfather. Born in Ohio, he grew up in Iowa, and homesteaded in Kansas and Colorado. The lure of cheap land and the new possibilities of the frontier, led his father, John Van Gundy, to take his family from rural Sycamore, Ohio to Jasper county, Iowa, near Prairie City. And Cyrus, likewise, was moved to leave that area for northwestern Kansas, and then again for eastern Colorado, and yet again for northwestern Colorado. So when he came home for a visit to Prairie City Iowa in 1915, it was fitting that he described himself as "An Old Man Looking Toward the West" to the Prairie City newspaper. Cyrus was born February 3rd, 1835 in Crawford county, Ohio, in the part that would later become Wyandot county. His father was John, and his mother was Susannah Combs, daughter of William and Barbara Baum Combs. The Van Gundys moved with William Combs and his family to Andrew county Missouri where they lived

Class Picture 1931 - Highland Township Section 1 Palo Alto County Iowa

1931 Class Photo - Palo Alto County, Iowa - Highland Township, Section 1 Back Row - L to R: Arnold Maiden, Kathryn Brown, Allen Maiden, Maytha Smith, Ruth Iverson, Bob Brown. Middle Row - L to R: Edith Iverson, Lela Larsen (Jones), Betty Morck. Front Row - L to R: Esther Iverson, Dick Brown, Elliott Larsen, Rose Brown, Leo Wikert, Roland Wikert. Mary Doyle taught this class. The school was located on the southwest corner of section 1, Highland Township, about 4 miles east and 1 mile north of Ruthven, Iowa. You can see the Browns and Iversons on this 1929 plat map. Larsens purchased the Sullivan farm.

William Turner - Boiler Maker

William Turner was my 2g grandfather. His life was divided about equally between Scotland, Iowa, and Washington, with a brief time in England. He was born 13 July 1828 in Burnt Island, Fifeshire, Scotland, which is on the east side of Scotland, across the Firth of Forth from Edinburgh, son of Robert Turner and Isabella Cowan. His Turner ancestors had been minor landowners at Balgrochan, north of Glasgow. By the time William came along, the family fortunes seem to have gone. In 1851, the census showed that his father was a quarryman. In 1855, William married Margaret Bell, in Glasgow. Their first son, Robert, was born 16 October 1856 in Govan, Lanark, Scotland, on the outskirts of Glasgow. The second son, William, was born 8 March 1859 in Strathblane, Stirling, Scotland, not far from the home of his ancestors. The Turners soon moved to Sunderland, England, where William could pursue his boilermaker trade. Sunderland was known for shipbuilding and boilermakers were in great de

Before the Past Fades Away

Growing up in Iowa, I was surprised to learn that I had g.g. grandparents who had lived in Colorado. So after moving to Colorado myself, I wanted to find out more about their lives in Colorado. Cyrus and Hannah (Dippery) Vangunda homesteaded near Ramah, Colorado in 1906. I found the paperwork, located the land, and I went to see what was there. Even when you can identify a plot of land on a map, it isn't always easy to find it from the road. And this was rural eastern Colorado which doesn't have many people. No doubt the homesteaders filled up the land well in that day, but this wasn't prime farm land and families couldn't make it on 160 acre farms. People moved away, as did Cyrus Vangunda. I wasn't even sure the roads were still passable. But they were. By carefully watching the map and monitoring the car's odometer I came to the place I thought would have belonged to Cyrus Vangunda, and the land further back, to his daughter and son-in-law, Nancy and Norma

A Tribute to Einer Appel

Einer was my stepfather, really more than that. He had a huge impact on my life. From left to right: Hans, Ingvert, Einer, Henry, Paul - taken about 1936. Einer, taken around 1940.Here are the five brothers, Back: Hans, Henry, Einer; Front: Ingvert, Paul; taken about 1946. Confirmation Class: Taken around 1945. Einer 2nd row, farthest right. Virginia Bisgard to his left. Einer, Graettinger High School Class of 1949. Einer with his parents, Otto and Bothilde Appel, taken around 1955. Appels at dinner table:Henry, Paul, Einer, Ingvert, Hans, Gwenna, Bothilda, and Otto - around 1950. Einer with niece, Kathy Appel, 1958. Einer married my mother, Dorothy Mesenbrink, in 1970. Einer had been a bachelor for quite some time. Here we are, a new family. Milking cows was an important part of farm life. When we got the pipeline in we didn't have to haul the milk to the cooler, and we could sell Grade A milk. This w

Wedding Day for Robert and Salucia

On November 26, 1857, Robert Squibb left his home south of Elvira, Iowa to go get married. He had been into Clinton the week before with his bride-to-be, Salucia Sophronia Clark, to get the license, and now he had the necessary paperwork. The crops were generally harvested by then, so he had some time off. November 26th was a Thursday, the fourth one of November in fact, but Thanksgiving hadn't yet been established as a national holiday. Robert Squibb just had to take his bride to the Justice-of-the-Peace for the ceremony. The JP was William W. Beatty, who lived just a few miles north. This 1865 map of a portion of Clinton county, Iowa shows where Robert's father's farm was, in the lower left, and the Justice-of-the-Peace in the upper right, just four or five miles away. You will also see, not far from the Squibbs, an A. Clark. Could it be that Salucia lived on the road to the JP? Is it possible that A. Clark was father or, at least, a relative of Salucia Cl