Showing posts with label Documents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Documents. Show all posts

Sunday, April 25, 2021

Letters to Home: Forrest Van Wert's Writings to His Wife and Kids

The Collection

Among the many artifacts of interest I received from my great-uncle Everette Van Wert (and subsequently scanned) were the letters and postcards I have included in this post. Each one is a letter from Forrest Everette Van Wert (my 2nd great grandfather) to his wife Carrie Blanche Smith (my 2nd great grandmother). Forrest was a risk taker. While this may have contributed to his success in business it also contributed to his early death aged 38 on the 21st of October, 1918- the result of his car rolling down an embankment. It is rather incredible that he survived as long as he did- he was a man who had brushed paths with death numerous times before. He had previously survived his car getting hit by a train and before that survived an accidental shooting. One of the postcards in my collection also suggests he may have narrowly escaped death by carbon monoxide poisoning after parking his car in a shed for the night. Given Forrest's propensity for beating the odds it seems fitting that after over 100 years his writings home have survived for me to scan and preserve.

In my preservation of these letters I attempted to provide faithful transcriptions. In old letters it isn't uncommon for the 'voice' of the writer to leak through the text in the form of grammatical and spelling decisions. A lot can be derived from how an ancestor writes; I particularly enjoy spelling errors that reflect the person's accent or manner of speaking. I have attempted to keep as many of these misspellings and grammatical deviations in my transcriptions as possible. It is entirely possible however, even likely, that I have made mistakes in some of my transcriptions. If you see one, I invite you to notify me in the comments below and I will correct the error.

Undated Postcard

Postcard with elaborate heart design that says Affections Offering
Postcard Front

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Opening a 1949 Remembrance Book pt. 1

About the Book

When rifling through my grandpa Schmidt's box of family heirlooms and photographs, I had the good fortune of coming upon a book. Inscribed on the cover were the words "remembrance book", and inside I found a trove of loose letters of condolences, telegrams, and funeral documents. Contained within the pages I was also pleased to find a wealth of genealogical information concerning John Bernard Dwyer, my third great uncle. Seeing as John died in 1949, it is reasonable to assume that nearly everything contained within the book is from around the 1940s - 50s. The contents of the book, both in the loose and bound portions, primarily concern the portions of my family bearing the last names "Burnes" and "Dwyer". The Burnes and Dwyer families were of Irish descent and resided primarily in Minnesota.

Loose Papers

As mentioned previously, the book has bound pages stocked with information as well as miscellaneous loose documents concerning members of the family beyond John Bernard Dwyer. This post will detail the contents of the latter, while a future post will show the contents of the former.

Photo of John Bernard Dwyer

John Bernard Dwyer
A remembrance book would not be complete without a photograph of the deceased you wish to remember. The above is a photograph of John Bernard Dwyer.

Thursday, December 21, 2017

The Mysterious Origins of William Smith: A Tale of an Insane Irish Man

Nearly every family has one; a seemingly-eccentric-nutter-turned-black-sheep. The ancestor who lived under a guise of normalcy for years until a seemingly insignificant event turned them sour. On the Van Wert side of my family, this person is the Irish born William Smith, my 4th great grandfather by the following line:
Generated by Parallax View's SVG Family-Tree Generator V4.4.1. See http://parallax-viewpoint.blogspot.com/2017/05/interactive-trees-in-blogs-using-svg.html Renee Schmidt Gregory Schmidt Tonya Wesselowski Timothy Wesselowski Joan Van Wert Reuben Van Wert Frances Gustafson Forrest Van Wert Carrie Blanche Smith Charles Henry Smith Tryphena Wonnacott William A. Smith Sarah Adaline Skinner

Tree made using SVG Family tree utility

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Saving a Full Image from ArkivDigital


Today is the last day of the free weekend for ArkivDigital and I am very happy with the number of genealogical records I have grabbed. However, I wasn't too happy with their options for saving images. If you have used ArkivDigital before you will know that when you save an image it saves only the part visible on your screen. If you zoom way out the resulting picture will be very pixelated and near impossible to read.

Sunday, October 29, 2017

Wesselowski Family Postcards

Thanks to my first cousin 1x removed, Sonya Wesselowski, I have some postcards and photographs of Kurt Wesselowski and James Wesselowski, both of whom were soldiers during WW1, and several of the photos have them in uniform. They were the children of Martin Wesselowski and lived in Germany. You can see them below:

James Wesselowski Postcards

Photo of James Wesselowski

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Transcription Tuesdays: The Burial Record of Albrecht Kruszynski (Kurrentschrift)


This was one of the more difficult transcription pieces I have done. It is written in the old Kurrentschrift, a nightmare script that was eventually outlawed by Hitler. It is no longer used and is a bit of a pain to learn to read, especially if you don't know German (like me- I only know English and can get by in Spanish). I might make a post later about how I learned to read it. It was not a very fast process and I still have difficulty depending on who wrote the document.

Sunday, October 1, 2017

Analyzing Sources

As an IB school, my high school is very focused on teaching good writing and researching standards. A lot of these apply very directly to genealogy. For analyzing sources, we use the acronym OPVL.


The letters each refer to a different element of a source to analyze. O stands for ‘origin’, P stands for ‘purpose’, V stands for ‘value’, and L stands for ‘limitations’.

Friday, September 29, 2017

Transcription Tuesdays: 1933 Contract for Deed of Henry H. Dwyer and Winnifred Carey

So I know this is not a Tuesday but I wrote it on a Tuesday and forgot to post it and in my book that counts :) This is the contract for Deed between my third great grandparents (Henry H. Dwyer and Winnifred Carey) and a woman named Celestine Friedmann. I found it in my grandpa's basement.
Page 1

Monday, May 1, 2017

Funeral Cards

I was searching through my basement when I came across a box stuffed full of old pictures and old items. It turned out it was my dads old family heirlooms and keepsakes. Inside were some old funeral cards for lots of my relatives both distant and direct. Since I don't think there are any other surviving copies of some of these cards I figured I'd post them here for posterity:

Agnes York Funeral Card
Died September 3, 1950