Adam Geldmacher (1839/Germany – 1912 Farmdale, IL)

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Adam Geldmacher

Name: Adam GELDMACHER


Birth: 24 Nov 1839 Schwarzbach Kur Hessen, Germany 1
Death: 14 Dec 1912 Farmdale, Tazewell Co, IL
Burial: Farmdale Cemetery, Tazewell Co, IL 2
Occupation: Farmer 3
Father: GELDMACHER
Mother: UNNAMED

Spouses


1: Louise LUDWIG
Birth: 18 Nov 1848 Niederaula, Germany 1,4
Death: 25 Aug 1905 Peoria, IL 5
Burial: Farmdale Cemetery, Tazewell Co, IL 2
Father: Henry LUDWIG
Mother: Christine
Marriage: 9 Nov 1872 6
Children:
Henry (1872-1950)
Catherine (1873-1948)
Elizabeth ‘Lizzie’ (1875-1955)
Dorathe ‘Dora’ (1878-1925)
Anna (1880-1943)
John Adam (1882-1950)
William (1884-1963)
Mollie B. (1886-1983)
Lena (1888-1956)
George C. (1891-1962)

Family Hunting: Three Levels of Info

For almost two years now I have been bitten with the Genealogy bug in a very big way. It started innocently enough, when after dinner on a Sunday night my son Will announced he had homework yet to do before bed. “I need to create a family tree”, he told us, “and it has to include everything we know”. Yikes. I knew a little bit, had some collected papers and a few generations of info in an old Hypercard stack. But it was far from ‘everything’. We cobbled together what we could, and Will’s homework was complete. But for some reason, it was not enough for me. An obsession began, to learn all that was knowable about my own family history.

Fortunately, my obsession was well-timed. Facilitated by the explosion of the family tree information available on the Internet, it is easier than ever for a research to quickly find success in the ancestor hunt. In my efforts, I have found there are three basic levels of family tree information that you will encounter, and I share them here because… well, just because.

First, there is the first person account, the first step in any family search. The most important info you can find on your family is in the memory of living family members. Start with the living before you go chasing the dead, you’ll find a great deal of information this way. Also, you’re likely to find that you’re not the first to pursue at least some research on your family. So locate the other family historians and get their latest info. My hunt started with a couple of printed histories, copies of which had found their way to me. In each case I contacted the authors (usually some distant cousin), and begun a correspondence on their previous efforts and latest findings.

Second, there is the tangible type of information, in which you track down actual records from the paper trail your ancestors have left behind, hoping to discover additional information and new leads. In the last six weeks I have searched Census records online an at the National Archives. I’ve ordered copies of birth, marriage, and death certificates from County Clerks Offices, a copy of a Social Security Application from the SSA, and burial records from the cemeteries where my relatives are buried. This type of search can be slow and painstaking. Documents might provide no new information, but often provide helpful clues. For example, finding my Great-Great Grandfather, Chris Ross listed as a widower living with his daugher’s family in the 1920 Census, helped to narrow down the possible death date on his wife Josephine. This will likely lead to her death certificate (she was still there in the 1910 Census), and that in turn might lead to her parents names.

And third is the undocumented connection of your tree to the work of others. The Internet is awash with family trees. Self-published histories, and the wealth of data on the great Mormon web site (familysearch.org – check it out, you WILL find your family here). Take the name of your oldest known relative and try a search on Google or FamilySearch.org. As you click through the results, you’re likely to find that someone else has researched your family and posted information online. Be skeptical, and look for clues that provide real evidence of a match such as dates, locations, and children’s names that match. In many cases you’ll find discover a tree that pushes back for many generations further than your information. But can you trust this info? Without any source documentation, or direct knowledge of the researcher, you must take a leap of faith in the quality and accuracy of this information. This type of search can be fast and exciting, pushing you back hundreds of years in a single leap. So what if you can’t be certain about the details. I’d rather have a family tree full of long plausible theories than just short documented branches, wouldn’t you?

The key to quality genealogy is sound sources. Obviously, the farther back you reach, the more difficult reliable source information will be to find. The paradox of genealogy is that the greater your success in discovering past generations, the larger the problem becomes. In the end, all genealogists are doomed to fail. The fun lies in pushing as far back as possible along your tree until you hit that ‘brick wall’, and getting to know your own family along the way.

F the South

If you love a good rant like I do, then give this one a read. It’s not for the easily offended. But as a blue voter who lives not too deep in the red south, I found that it certainly strikes a chord. If you give it a read, be sure not to have a problem with harsh language, and check out the supportive links. I found the red state divorce rate statistics particularly interesting.

Fuck The South

thanks to Doug for sharing

Election Maps

Tired of seeing that same old map that paints large empty spaces of our country red, as if the desert itself supported Bush? I am. Check these maps out for a more accurate representation of Bush’s 51% ‘mandate’.

Maps and cartograms of the 2004 US presidential election results

update: Am I a newsbreaker or what? You read about them here on November 11th, and the Washington Post catches up with their story on the 13th. Stay tuned to the Casey Blog to stay informed 🙂

Election Map Makers, Exercising Some Latitude
The Washington Post, November 13, 2004

thanks to Nathanial for sharing the maps with me to begin with

Miss Saigon

The musical Miss Saigon is currently at the Warner Theatre in Washington, DC, and last night we joined a group of neighbors and took in the show from some great seats front and center in the orchestra. It was a good place for us to be, considering our special fondness for the orchestra. You see, my brother Kevin is the conductor. So you must expect some family bias to show through in this review of their production of Miss Saigon.

The MUSIC WAS AWESOME! An obvious product of superior conducting. It was absolutely masterful.

If you’re don’t know the story, think Shakespearian romantic tragedy set in Vietnam during and shortly following the fall of Saigon in 1975. I’m not going to re-tell the whole tale for you here, go see the play, or listen to the soundtrack, and you’ll get the story.

A sad tale, great music, and an especially great conductor. Two thumbs, WAY UP!

Still don’t believe me? Check the Washington Post’s review:
Warner’s ‘Miss Saigon’: Mission Accomplished
The Washington Post, November 12, 2004

Goodbye John, and Good Riddance!

John Ashcroft has resigned as the Attorney General of the United States of America. This is the guy who lost his race for re-election to the United States Senate to the late Mel Carnahan in 2000. Missouri voters preferred the dead Carnahan to the living Ashcroft, and they made the right choice. As George Bush’s Attorney General, Ashcroft initially ignored the threat of terrorism, and then following 9/11 used the fight against terrorism as an excuse to trample the Constution and shred the Bill of Rights.

So to say goodbye to John, tune in one more time to watch him sing his hit song, Let the Eagle’s Soar, not to mock him for his awful singing, but to celebrate his departure. Good Riddance.

for further reading: John Ashcroft from Wikipedia, John Ashcroft’s Patriot Games from Vanity Fair

The Countdown to /BUSH

Let the countdown begin. Four years won’t last forever. Watch is pass, one day at a time in this entry, and in the right nav bar on this site. For the non-HTML savvy, </bush> is web code for ‘end of Bush’, and that’s what’s coming in four years (follow the ‘continue reading’ link to find the source code you can copy to add this countdown to your own site).

<script language=”JavaScript”></script>

<SCRIPT LANGUAGE=”JavaScript”><!– Original: Alan Palmer –><!– Web Site: http://www.jsr.communitech.net –><!– This script and many more are available free online at –><!– The JavaScript Source!! http://javascript.internet.com –><!– Beginvar date = new Date(“November 4, 2008”);var description = “&lt;/BUSH&gt;”;var now = new Date();var diff = date.getTime() – now.getTime();var days = Math.floor(diff / (1000 * 60 * 60 * 24));document.write(“<H3><center>”)if (days > 1) {document.write(days+1 + ” days until<BR> ” + description);}else if (days == 1) {document.write(“Only two days until<BR> ” + description);}else if (days == 0) {document.write(“Tomorrow is<BR> ” + description);}else {document.write(“It’s” + description + “!”);}document.write(“</center></H3>”);// End –></script>

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