Electronic Version of Cleveland Plain Dealer

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The local newspaper, the Cleveland Plain Dealer, has made the move to electronic distribution and cut back on the delivery of printed copies to four days a week: Sunday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday.

I still wake up in the morning ready to go out to the end of the driveway and pick up the paper. Oh, wait! It’s Monday, and there is no paper copy of the PD.

I have been reading the electronic version on my Windows desktop computer and on my wife’s Ipad. My opinion: it’s easier to read on the Ipad.

BTW, you have to be a subscriber to receive the electronic version, but much of the content has been available every day on the website http://cleveland.com for a number of years.

The German Research Companion

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I have acquired a useful book on genealogical research for my personal library: The German Research Companion, by Shirley J. Reimer, Roger P. Minert, and Jennifer A. Anderson. This third edition, published by Lorelei Press, contains 706 pages, and includes basic and advanced material about doing research on German ancestors both in the United States and in their original German-speaking regions.

Section headings in this book indicate its scope: German Lands, Past and Present; Tools, Contacts, and Resources; Emigration and Immigration; United States Resources; Language and Vocabularies; German Resources; Archives; Life in Our Ancestors’ Times; and Newspapers, Libraries, Museums, and Other Information.

In the section, Life in Our Ancestors’ Times, there is an extensive discussion of names and naming patterns, given names of Germanic and foreign origin, and name days. Reading this discussion cleared up for me why one of my German ancestors, Johann Matthias Flaugh, was generally known as Matthias rather than Johann.

This book is available from http://Amazon.com and other online booksellers.

My Grandson Wins Family History Writing Competition

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The following article was written by my grandson, Korey Wallace Huskonen, and entered in the Western Reserve Historical Society My Favorite Western Reserve Ancestor writing competition. He won $50 for first prize in the 18 and under category. Needless to say, I am quite proud of his article.

My Favorite Western Reserve Ancestor: Walfrid Herbert Huskonen
By Korey Wallace Huskonen

As I was browsing through my grandparents’ vast collection of memorabilia recently, I noticed a peculiar-shaped piece of wood staring up at me.  The wood had been carved to resemble a duck’s head, and appeared to be fairly old.  But who carved it, and for what purpose?  And why was it lying around my grandparents basement?

Hand-carved wooden duck cup.

Duck cup hand-carved by Walfrid Huskonen from a wood burl.

As I was about to find out, that little piece of wood is much more than it seems. It wasn’t long before I learned that it had belonged to my great-grandfather, Walfrid Huskonen.  He carved the wood himself, intending for it to be a drinking cup or bowl.  A small hole was even included so a string could be threaded through, allowing the cup/bowl to be hung from a belt.

At the time, I didn’t know much about my great-grandfather.  He passed away well before my time, so I never had the chance to meet him.  Being a curious-sort, I turned to my grandpa for help — thankfully, he’s a genealogist.

He suggested doing some research, during which I discovered that Walfrid Herbert Huskonen was born in Ashtabula, Ohio, on August 11, 1911.1  He was born to Evert and Ida Huuskonen, who had both previously migrated to America from Finland.  In fact, the trunk Ida brought with her to the U.S. is still in my grandparents’ house – I’ve walked by it enough times to know!

Walfrid was the sixth and final child in his family. The family lived on a farm in Williamsfield, Ohio, in 1920 and 1930, according to the censuses of those years.2,3

Continuing on, Walfrid accomplished a great deal in a relatively small amount of time.  He also has a lot in common with me.

First, Walfrid was a member of the Andover (Ohio) High School Orchestra.4 He had played the trombone, and donned an interesting band uniform that consisted of maroon and gold capes and hats.  I find this intriguing as Walfrid wasn’t actually a student at Andover.

Instead, he attended Williamsfield High School, which was apparently too small to put out its own band/orchestra.  To put “small” into context, Walfrid’s 1930 graduating class was only made up of seven students.5  My school, Buckeye High School, is fairly small by today’s standards, yet its graduating classes are at least one-hundred students strong.

Walfrid Huskonen in Williamsfield Class of 1930.

Walfrid Huskonen, top right, in Williamsfield Senior Class of 1930.

While I never played in an orchestra, I did partake in my Buckeye Elementary School’s band program.  I played the trumpet, which is somewhat like the trombone and a member of the same family – brass. Unlike Walfrid, I only stayed with the band program for one year – it wasn’t really something I enjoyed. This may partly be attributed to the fact that band was one of the two B’s I have posted on a report card in the past five years.

Outside of the band room, Walfrid was also a member of the Williamsfield High School basketball team in 1928.6 Basketball is another thing we share, as I currently play for Buckeye High School’s freshmen team.  We also both have similar physical characteristics, such as height and a lengthy frame.  These characteristics are quite useful when it comes to basketball.

Moving forward in Walfrid’s life, he lived in Andover, Ohio, and worked at Glauber Brass in Kinsman, Ohio, in 1940.7  There he made foundry patterns used by the company to produce plumbing goods.  However, it wasn’t long before my great-grandfather made the jump from employee to employer.

In 1952, Walfrid and business-partner Roland Totten founded the Andover Pattern Company, which also was involved in the patternmaking business.8  Upon Walfrid’s death in 1965, the company was transferred entirely to Roland, and remained fully-operational. Eventually, it was passed down to Roland’s son, Tom.

Overall, Andover Pattern was a very successful company.  In 1992, the company celebrated its 40-year anniversary, and at that point was considered “a staple of the local economy.”  Unfortunately, the company is no longer around today.

Surprisingly, Walfrid accomplished such success without a secondary (college) education, as money had been tight at the time.  Obviously, such a feat is quite inspiring, and I shall keep it in mind when pursuing my own career.  I myself am very involved in business and economics.  In particular, I frequently partake in the researching and trading of stocks (via simulators, of course).

As far as his personal life went, Walfrid married Mary Jane Dingman.  The couple had three children:  Wallace, Viena, and Walfrid.9  I am quite familiar with one of his children (Wallace Huskonen), seeing as he is my grandpa!

As mentioned before, Walfrid sadly passed away in 1965.10  He was 54 at the time, and had been suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, the painful inflammation of one’s joints.  In my opinion, Walfrid lived a pretty inspiring, though fairly short, life.  He enjoyed many of life’s joys – high school, owning a car, getting married, owning a business, and being a father.  Thus, because of his success and character quality, Walfrid Huskonen is my favorite Western Reserve ancestor.

I fully intend to carry on the Huskonen name with honor, pride, and integrity.

Korey Wallace Huskonen won first prize in the 18-and- under category of the 2012 My Favorite Western Reserve Ancestor writing competition.

End Notes
1. Certificate of Birth, Walfrid Herbert Huskonen, State of Ohio, Bureau of Vital Statistics, 1911
2. 1920 U.S. Federal Census, Ohio, Ashtabula County, Williamsfield, Evert Huskonen household
3. 1930 U.S. Federal Census, Ohio, Ashtabula County, Williamsfield, Evert Huskonen household
4. Andover High School Orchestra photograph, 1928, Silliman Studio, Ohio
5. Alumni of Williamsfield High School, Williamsfield Memories, Carol Weese, published 1993
6. Williamsfield High School Basketball Team photograph, 1928-29
7. 1940 U.S. Federal Census, Ohio, Ashtabula County, Andover, Grace Tripp household. Walfrid was living with wife, Mary, and son Wallace in his mother-in-law’s home.
7. Photograph of Walfrid at Glauber Brass, Kinsman, OH, 1940
8. “Andover Pattern an area fixture for 40 years,” James Roethler, Pymatuning Area News, Wednesday, March 4, 1992
9. “Letter from Uncle Walfrid to relatives in Finland,” 2008
10. Certificate of Death, Walfrid Huskonen, Ohio Department of Health, 1965

A Second Grader’s Heritage Project

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Holiday gatherings are an opportunity for families to talk about relatives and ancestors. Sometimes children are interested and sometimes not so much. On this 2012 Thanksgiving, I had a wonderful sharing experience.

Just before my wife and I left to drive to Rochester, NY, for our Thanksgiving get-together, my daughter called and said that our granddaughter had to create a heritage poster for a second-grade assignment. Was I interested in helping out during our visit? Was I ever!  I quickly said yes, and proceeded to review our photo files and check on the Internet for images that a second grader would appreciate and understand.

On the day after Thanksgiving, I sat down with my granddaughter (and her mother) and reviewed the possibilities. The following are the images she chose to use, and the captions she wrote:

Finland’s Flag: “The colors of the Finnish flag are blue and white. The blue is for the 1,000 lakes. The white stands for the snow that covers the ground in the winter.”

Native Costumes: “These are the hand-made costumes that kids wear on special occasions.”

Santa Claus Village in Rovaniemi on the Arctic Circle: “Finland’s so close to the North Pole that Santa has a village there.”

Angry Birds logo (for the popular video game by Rovio Entertainment): “Angry birds were invented in Finland.”

Snow castle and hotel in Kemi, Finland: This is a giant Snow Castle Hotel.”

Breakfast Bread Bear: “This is a bread that they have for breakfast in Finland. It’s called Pulla.”

Grandma’s Immigration Trunk: “My great, great Grandpa and Grandma came from Finland.”

S.S. Aurania: “This is the boat my grandma sailed to get to America. Her whole trip took two weeks. This is her trunk.”

Midsummer Night: “Part of Finland is in the Arctic Circle which means in the Summer it never gets dark at night. This is the midnight sun.”

What a wonderful opportunity to talk with my granddaughter—and my daughter—about their Finnish ancestors. The poster she created (see photo) she shared with her second-grade classmates—and she’ll be able to share it with her younger sister and brother as they grow older.

First Impressions: Using Family Tree on FamilySearch.org

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I have started using the Family Tree feature developed by FamilySearch.org. As you may know, this has been available for use by LDS members for some time. Well, now it is out of beta testing and available to non-LDS members.

Development continues on Family Tree, which is termed an update that will eventaully replace FamilySearch.org, believe it or not. You can experience Family Tree for yourself by registering to use it at http://familysearch.org/invite/familytree_tab.

I was particularly interested in trying out Family Tree to research my parternal ancestry in Finland. I entered some preliminary information through my paternal great grandparents and Family Tree found and added several more generations–to the middle 16th century, in fact. I’m pretty comfortable with what it generated for my paternal grandmother’s line, but my grandfather’s line appears to me a bit shaky. The new information is based on family relationships researched by others and on the International Genealogical Index.

At the moment, there are few sources included in my FamilySearch Family Tree, but I am confident that I can find and add them as the parishes in central Finland kept good records. It’s just a matter of checking each generation of ancestors back through the records, which are becoming available online.

A reference guide for using Family Search Family Tree is available at http://broadcast.lds.org/eLearning/fhd/Community/en/FamilySearch/FamilyTree/pdf/familyTreeUserGuide.pdf.

I will also be adding information on my mother’s ancestry, which happens to go back to pre-colonial days in America. That also should be interesting.

Brecksville Bicentennial Book Offered for Sale

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I just obtained a copy of the book commenorating the bicentennial of Brecksville, my home town. The bicentennial of Brecksville Township’s founding actually was celebrated last year in a year-long celebration, with a specially emphasis during Home Days in June. A historical subcommittee had been working for a couple years on the book and originally hoped to have it available during the Bicentennial Year, but the deadline for copy was gradually pushed back until December 31 2011. Then came the production process of copy editing, submitting photographs, laying it out, and proof reading the pages.

I am proud to have been a subcommittee member working on the book. I researched and wrote the first draft of the first chapter which summarized the founding of Brecksville. It was an interesting and challenging assignment. I did much of the research on early families for this chapter in Ancestry.com.

Honor the Past, Embrace the Present, Envision the Future can be purchased for $45. The book also comes with a 2-hr DVD containing videos and photos of the 2011 year-long Bicentennial celebration. You can purchase the book at the following locations:
Brecksville City Hall, 9069 Brecksville Road
The Human Services Center, Two Community Drive
The Brecksville Historical Association Archives, Blossom Hill, Oakes Road
Western Reserve Bank, 8751 Brecksville Road
Faulhaber Funeral Home, 7915 Broadview Road

Books will also be available at several events during the coming months.
August 26, Concert on the Square
September 8, Firefighters’ Clam Bake
October 7, BHA Apple Butter Festival
October 28, Booville
November 4-5, Heartfelt Holiday Alternative (maybe, maybe not)
November 8, Chippewa Garden Club Design Program
December 2, Christmas Parade

Please pass this information on to your friends and neighbors. Thank you for your support of the Brecksville Bicentennial!

Newspaper Article about a Dog Named Buster Adds Information

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One day last week I received a phone call from Carl Feather, a feature writer for the Ashtabula, Ohio, Star Beacon. He was calling at the suggestion of Penny Redmon, my wife’s first cousin once removed, to see if we had a photo of Buster, the beloved pet of my wife’s grandfather, James Van Court. He was writing a feature article about Buster, and his devotion to James, even after James’ death.
We didn’t have a photo in our family files, but I did a Google search for “Buster” and “Dog Mourns His Master.” Several search results showed up as appearing in the online database, NewspaperArchive.com. I have a subscription to this database so I signed in and searched for Buster.
Many results appeared in papers across the country on or around June 15, 1936. It seems that an article was distributed by a newspaper syndication service that told the story of Buster up to that point. Some of the search results included a photograph with the story.
Accompanying this article is the photo that appeared in the June 15, 1935, issue of the Circleville, Ohio, Tribune—on the first page no less. [A side note: the price for the issue was three cents.]

James Van Court was a farmer in Richmond Township in Ashtabula County. He moved there with his wife, Mary, and sons, Richard and Clyde, from Ritchey County, West Virginia, before the 1910 census, which shows them living in Richmond Township. James died in 1928, well before my wife, Mary Jane, was born. She grew up living on James’ farm so the setting of the story about Buster was very familiar to her. Otherwise, she knew little about her Grandfather Van Court.
I reported back to Feather that we didn’t have an original photo of Buster and forwarded to him a copy of the photo printed in the Circleville newspaper. In return, he sent me a copy of the article he had written. It is reproduced below:
Dog Mourns His Master
By Carl E. Feather, Staff Writer, Ashtabula Star Beacon
The most famous resident of the Richmond Township Cemetery rests in an unmarked grave.
At the northwest corner of this cemetery are the graves of James and Mary VanCourt, who migrated to Richmond Township from Richey County, W.Va., around 1915 [sic] and purchased the farm immediately west of the cemetery. A muscular man with a head of thick hair and a large, bushy mustache, VanCourt was a farmer and skilled horse handler.
However it was his herding dog, a tan-and-white Scotch collie named Buster, for which VanCourt would become most famous. And the fame would not come until after VanCourt’s death in the spring of 1928.
From that point on, Buster, who was 7 at the time of his master’s demise, kept a vigil beside VanCourt’s grave until the day of his own death, nearly eight years later.
Buster’s poignant story made headlines in at least 50 newspapers and was retold in A Book of Famous Dogs, by Albert Payson Terhune, published in 1939 by The Sun Dial Press.
The late Jim Fenton VanCourt [Mary Jane’s cousin], who died in January 2011, was probably the last living person who could claim to have known Buster. Jim was the grandson of James S. VanCourt and was named after him and his maternal grandfather, Fenton Gould. Jim VanCourt grew up in Richmond Township about a half mile from his grandparents’ farm. After his grandfather died, Jim and his father Richard cared for the herd, rising at 4:30 a.m. to walk the half-mile to the farm.
“Every morning Dad [Mary Jane’s uncle, Richard] would say ‘Come on son, we got to go milk cows.’ I used to walk behind him to help break the cold wind,” said VanCourt in a telephone interview in 2003.
James S. VanCourt hand-picked Buster from a litter of pups and trained the dog to be a herder, driver and watchdog.
“He was among a litter of pups that Uncle Perry had. Uncle Perry and Aunt Lena lived near Conneaut,” Jim VanCourt wrote in a letter. “They had a farm as well as … orchard. My mother and dad went there to get peaches and pears.” [Perry migrated to Conneaut Township, Ohio, sometime before the 1930 census.]
Terhune, in his Famous Dogs volume states that Buster was taught the precise boundaries of the farm and that he was never to broach those boarders.
Jim VanCourt recalls Buster as a smart canine who knew a variety of commands.
“Dad would say, ‘Buster, go get the bull,’ and he’d bring up the bull. Or he’d say, ‘Buster, go get the horses,’ and he’d bring up the horses,” VanCourt recalled in the 2003 interview.
As a youngster, VanCourt used Buster’s intelligence to his own advantage. If he were responsible for rounding up the cows for the evening milking, VanCourt would simply get a milk bucket from the barn, rattle it near Buster, and the dog would proceed to the pasture to herd the animals into the milking parlor.
“He’d hear that pail rattling and away he’d go,” VanCourt said.
He also recalls Buster as being very protective of him and his grandmother. “He’d always stand between her and any one who came into the driveway,” Jim VanCourt said.
Buster also protected the lad from ornery roosters that roamed the farm.
“My grandmother had this old rooster that would get me cornered,” VanCourt said. “She’d say, ‘Buster, get him!’ Boy, the feathers would fly then. He was quite a dog.”
VanCourt does not recall what illness claimed his grandfather, but Terhune’s book suggests it was a lingering one. [James Van Court’s death certificate states that the doctor attended him for five months before his death from apoplexy.] Buster stayed by his side throughout it.
Buster followed the funeral procession to the cemetery, and after the dirt was mounded upon the grave, the collie laid down upon it, a living bouquet of faithfulness. Mary VanCourt and the cemetery superintendent unsuccessfully tried to coax him from his watch.
The shadows of the barn slowly crept across the pasture and eventually enveloped Buster and the grave of his master. Some other animal or person had to round up the cows that night. Buster had a vigil to keep.
Day after day, Buster remained on the grave, despite the daily visit and coaxing of Mary VanCourt. She brought sustenance to him, as did neighbors who heard about his dedication and came to see this phenomenon for themselves. But he ate and drank little.
Word of the collie’s stunt spread beyond the hamlet, and Buster’s story was soon printed in both local and regional newspapers. It seemed as if the more press and visitations he received, the more determined the dog became to waste away on the grave of his master.
“At these increasing signs of pining away, human attention redoubled,” writes Terhune. “In scorching suns, in sluicing rains, Buster maintained his queer vigil; while the farm work suffered acutely from the chore dog’s absence.”
Eventually, the sight of a farm dog starving himself on his master’s grave no longer became a novelty. The crowds stopped coming. Buster got lonely. And very, very hungry.
On some unrecorded resurrection morning, Buster, by this time a skeleton with matted, muddy fur hanging from it, rose from the mound and galloped down the hill to the farmhouse. His arrival was greeted by the family’s joy and rewarded with a hearty breakfast and long stop at the watering tub.
His body thus nourished, Buster returned to the farm and resumed his duties of keeping things in order until evening, when he returned to the pasture and brought the cows in for milking.
But when his duties were done, Buster cast his eyes toward the knoll, trotted across the pasture, crawled under the wire fence between field and cemetery, and, with a sigh, laid down upon his master’s grave.
The next morning, Buster was back at the farmhouse, ready to begin his duties.
For the next seven years, this became Buster’s life: work on the farm when duty called; climb the hill to the cemetery when the grief became overwhelming. His myriad trips, always taken along the same direct route from farmhouse to grave, made “afresh each season a well worn path across fields of summer grain and winter snow,” according to an Aug. 11, 1932, article in the Ashtabula Star-Beacon.
The years of sleeping in wintry torment, of barking commands at the cows and living with a heavy heart finally took their toll on Buster. Age was wearing away at Mary VanCourt, as well, whose poor health often confined her to the same room where her husband settled his debt to youth.
Buster transferred his vigil to the widow, choosing a spot outside the kitchen door where he could monitor her well-being while keeping an eye on the grave across the pasture. His trips to the grave became less frequent as arthritis took its toll on his joints and time clouded his once bright eyes.
On March 31, 1936, Buster attempted one more trip to the grave of his master, but his tired body could not make the journey. Family members found him lying exhausted in the meadow. They carried him to the back porch of the farmhouse, where he lay whimpering and crying through the night, “his shaggy head between feeble forepaws,” according to a newspaper story.
At 4 a.m. April 1, Mary VanCourt awoke and instinctively listened for Buster’s whimpering. All was quiet, except for the wind moaning across the cemetery knoll.
Jim VanCourt’s father and his uncle, Clyde, buried Buster at 10:30 that morning, at the eastern border of the farm, just a few feet from the grave of James VanCourt. It was Mary VanCourt’s wish that the beloved, faithful dog be buried near her husband’s grave, at the spot in the fence where he had entered the cemetery countless times.
They chose for his coffin a treasured wooden toolbox that had belonged to his master.
Mary VanCourt died in 1945. Jim still cried when he thought of her and those days on the farm. “I can still see my grandmother going out to gather the eggs at the hen house and Buster tagging right along with her,” he said. “It was a good life.”
The farm passed to Clyde VanCourt, then to his son, Syd, who died in 2000. The VanCourts, like Buster, have faded from the Richmond Township scene.
No stone marks the grave of this faithful companion. Seventy-six cycles of life and death have reclaimed the path that Buster’s massive paws once cut across the pasture. Terhune’s book is long out of print and the sheets of newsprint on which his stories were printed are yellowed and crumbling.
“Many of us humans live too long,” wrote Terhune. “But I think all dogs die too soon.”
Standing on the Richmond Cemetery knoll on a summer afternoon, looking west toward the old barn and pasture, one who knows the story of Buster can imagine a happier scene in an ethereal world beyond our own.
“Today, one likes to believe,” a newspaper reporter wrote on April 1, 1936, “Buster trots beside his master in the warm sun of eternal springtime, happy; his body and eyes young once again, forever.”
Special thanks to Penny Redmon of Jefferson, the great-granddaughter of James and Mary VanCourt and daughter of Jim VanCourt, for providing a copy of the rare Terhune volume and family photos for this story.

Breaking News: Use Google to Search in 1940 Census

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I just discovered something interesting: You can use Google to search in Ancestry.com’s version of the 1940 Census database.
I was searching for information on my uncle, Wallace Dingman, using Google, and up popped a hit on his 1940 census record in Buffalo, New York. It actually was the No. 4 hit in the list generated by Google for Wallace Dingman when I entered no other information.
Then I tried the search again, this time entering “Buffalo” and “1940” along with his name. Guess what popped up first in the list: Yes, the same 1940 census record popped up but now it was first in the list.
I tried the same approach with other ancestors, including my mother and father, and the same process worked. It is much simpler than going to Ancestry.com and opening the 1940 search function.
I also learned that you can refine the search by adding additional terms. I looked for “Walter Dingman” and “1940 census” and the first hit was not my great uncle but another Walter Dingman. So I added “Ohio” to my search terms and now he appeared as the No. 1 hit immediately.
Apparently the programmers at Ancestry have figured out how to make their 1940 census database searchable by Google. I don’t know how they did it, but the results are wonderful. It will speed up the process of working my way through my list of persons of interest in the 1940 census.
So here is my working approach: Start with a first name and family name, particularly if the names or the combination are somewhat unique. My name is an example: Wallace Huskonen. This is a combination of a somewhat uncommon English given name and a Finnish Surname. So if you enter “Wallace Huskonen,” that’s all you need to search in Google to find me in the 1940 census. My 1940 census result pops up first in a list of results for me.
Another example of a direct search is my father-in-law: “Clyde Vancourt.” His 1940 census result comes right up first, in a list of results for Vancourt.
With “Walter Dingman,” I had to add details to come up with my great uncle’s 1940 census listing. With Google, it is easier and faster than using the search window built into Ancestry.com.
Now, there’s a caveat: the person you are looking for has to be in a state that has been indexed by Ancestry.com. At this writing, the number of states indexed stands at 38 states and territories. With the rate states are being added, we should be able to search the entire 1940 census by the time summer is over.
Is the indexing perfect? Sorry, but from my experience I can’t say that it is. I was attempting to look up my boyhood neighbor, Lawrence Betts. No luck in Ohio, so I tried Pennsylvania. No luck there either with the Google approach.
Being persistent, I went to Ancestry’s search window and entered “Lawrence Betts” along with his birth year, “1937.” He wasn’t in the first 50 hits, but scrolling down through the second 50, there was Lawrence Betta, with his father, Harold, and mother, Mary. Bingo! They were living in Pennsylvania just across the state line from Andover, Ohio, where we both grew up.
So, technology marches along and we have even more tools with which to do our research.
Oh, by the way, if you don’t have an Ancestry account, either paid or free, you will have to give your name and email address to be able to see the search results. Viewing the 1940 Census on Ancestry.com is free for now, but they do want to be able to let you know about new databases and subscription offers. In my view, that’s a very small price to pay to be able to use the research power programmed into Ancestry.com.

Googling for “Isaly Fire in Andover” in 1955

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In our emails back and forth recently, my brother, Walfrid came up with some events at home while we were growing up in Andover, Ohio. While I didn’t remember all of them, I did take note so that I can compile a time line of our growing up in Andover, and especially our house at 496 South Main Street.
That got me to wondering exactly when an explosion destroyed the Isaly Restaurant in Andover. I did a Google search for “Isaly Fire in Andover.” Google returned three hits with news reports of the blast and fire. Needless to say, these reports brought back memories of the horror of the event on Aug. 10, 1955.
The first report I looked at, published in a Van Wert, Ohio, newspaper, has a list of victims and I quickly scanned it for a high school classmate, Ruby Shellito, but she was not listed.
I did another Google search for “Ruby Shellito” and found a Find-A-Grave listing where she is memorialized along with her parents in the Padanarem Cemetery (about four miles from Andover). That search result provided the following information:

Ruby H Shellito
Birth: 1938
Death: Aug. 10, 1955
Andover
Ashtabula County
Ohio, USA
Ruby was killed in an explosion at Andover, Ashtabula County, Ohio. She was a waitress working when Andover Islay’s and Gateway Restaurant exploded.

These are just another example of the value of using Google as a genealogical research tool.

Identifying Year of a Photograph, with help from Google

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Today, I was comparing notes with my brother, Walfrid, trying to guess when a photograph of our grandmother, Ida Maria (Hytönen) Huskonen was taken, probably by our father. I was able to enlarge the digital file of the photo large enough to be able to read the days of the month on a calendar hanging on the wall behind Grandma Huskonen. The month was January, and the first day of the month was on a Thursday.
Using Google, I found a website, Perpetual Calendar, at http://www.searchforancestors.com/utility/perpetualcalendar.html
With this tool, I was able to determine that in 1948, the first day of January was on a Thursday. After comparing notes, we agreed that this was the proper year.