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A Straight Tail

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 When my husband's daughter was young, she did a family history project at school.  She came home and proudly told us "I'm descended from an Indian princess!" To which we scoffed, because literally everyone born and raised in America is fed that tail. Well, yesterday I was following my husbands line up from his mother, a Woolsey, to the Hendersons, and started working on the Reno side. 'That's interesting,' I thought, as I followed the trail, 'they're French.'  Then, when I got to my husband's 9th great grandfather, things got REALLY interesting.  He was a man named Martin Chartier, and I was not prepared for what I found! Martin Chartier was born June 1, 1650 in Poitiers (St-Jean-de-Montierneuf), Poitou, France to Rene' Chartier and Madeleine Rangier. from France to Quebec in 1667 when he was 17, joining his paternal grandfather and uncle in Canada, but he wouldn't stay there long.  At age 22, in 1672 Martin and his brother Pierre ...

The Hutchinson Brothers - one for fame, one for glory

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 John M Hutchinson was born about 1810, somewhere between New Jersey and new York, to Samuel Hutchinson and Rachel Mount.  John married Rebecca Hansell October 19, 1834 in Hunterdon County, probably in Trenton, New Jersey.  The early boundaries of Trenton (then Hunterdon County) and Burlington County were both in “Trenton” with Hunterdon County on the north bank of the Assanpink and Burlington on the south side. This creek is only 10 feet wide. There were large families of Hutchinsons living opposite of Trenton across the Delaware River in Pennsylvania. They moved back and forth continuously by the ferries.   John and Rebecca moved to jersey co, Illinois sometime around 1837, with Rebecca's father joining them. In 1876 Isaac (Rebecca's uncle) gave an account of his trip and reasons for settling in Illinois that sheds some light on how and why the Hansell, Hutchinson and Sunderland families came to Illinois from New Jersey.  “In the year of 1844, ...

The Knights Templar

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 Today I was watching Monty Python's Search for the Holy Grail (as one does) and it got me wondering what notable Knights I may have had in my tree! While I can't exactly search and verify the Knights of the Round Table, we absolutely know and can follow the Knights Templar!  To be honest I was surprised to see just how many direct line ancestors I had that were Knights! All of them are from the same line, which doesn't really shock me because I am sure these families of Knights were all intermarrying and funneling down to the same line, which in my case all of them run through the Sutton/Dudley's (the same ancestors that give me Elizabeth Woodville and Edward IV) to my Wheeler/Weller line on my mom's side.  Knight's Templar: William de Ferrers - 23rd Great Grandfather William Marshal - 23rd Great Grandfather Fulk D'Anjou - 25th Great Grandfather Robert de Sable' - 26th Great Grandfather Robert de Craon - 27th Great Grandfather And just for shits and gig...

Double Lines - Cornelis Berentsz Sleght

 Cornelis Barentsz Sleght was born in 1616 in Woerden, Reeuwijk, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands to Barent Cornelis Sleght and Jaquemine Pietrtgen. In Woerden he was listed as a distiller and a brandy wine maker after taking over his fathers lands in 1640.  In 1645, he expanded his lands u 'One Morgan and 47 Rods" (or about 2 1/2 acres.)  Around 1635 Cornelis married Trijntgen "Tryntje" Bosch (Boz) but we do not have a clear record of this.  They had at least five children together - Heydnerick, Jan, Jaquemijne, Annetgen, Petronella, and Mattijs.  The last mention of Cornelis and Tryntie in Woerden was in March 17, 1653, where he gave power of attorney to Jan Corsz Rietvelt, where they sold what possetions they had and those left over of her parents' estate.  They were clearly planning to Emigrate. The family arrived in New York, then being called new Amsterdam, where Cornelis was named as the brewer.  The family lived in Esopus, later named Kingst...

The Queenmaker - John Grey of Groby

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My favorite monthly email is the ancestor connector from WikiTree - it selects a theme and then shows you how many steps away you are from a particular notable person or group of historical people. Last month was War of the Roses, and while I can't say that subject has ever been anything I've ever been particularly interested in, this email changed that! I really went down the connection rabbit hole with this one, and I'm still finding notable people on this line. WikiTree told me I was 20 degrees from Henry VII, but it wasn't a direct line (my main focus) or even close to it, my line only connects to Henry through his brother's, wife's, sister.  Now, typically that isn't even a line I would follow, but I did, and the son of that brother's wife's sister was Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset, son of John Grey and Elizabeth Woodville.  John and Elizabeth are my 15th Great Grandparents. John Grey of Groby was born in 1432, in Groby, Leicestershire, En...

Soon May the Wellerman Come - Not Just a Shanty

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 If you've been on TikTok at all in the last year I'm sure you've heard various versions of the popular sea shanty "The Wellerman," singing "Soon May the Wellerman come, to bring us sugar and tea and rum," referring to the Weller Brothers supply ships.   The Weller Brothers were Joseph, George, and Edward Weller, a wealthy family who had emigrated from Kent England to Otago Heads, Dunedin Australia in the early 1820s.  The move was originally made to attempt to cure Joseph's tuberculosis, but soon found himself interested in maritime trading, so after a short trip back home he brought his siblings and parents all back with him to Sydney where they founded a brand new business in  Otakou, on the Otago Peninsula .  Their first ship was purchased by George in 1826, named the Albion.  Soon they also had The Dublin Packet, The Joseph Weller, and The Lucy Ann, shipping large quantities of whale oil and bone, along with trade in timber, potatoes, and dried ...

Orndorff & The Mill

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 Johann Christian Orndorff, my 8th G Grandfather was born in Siegen, Germany August 15, 1692 to Johann Heinrich Orndorff and Agnes Giesler.  He married Elizabeth von Mueller in 1721in Nassau, and they had three children together: Johann Christian, Anna Barbara, and Mary Magdalena.  Unfortunately, Elizabeth passed away in 1741, and that, coupled with the religious prosecution of those of Protestant faith in Germany no doubt spurred Christian, and two of his children find themselves on the ship "St Mark" headed to the port of Philadelphia.  (It is unknown whether Elizabeth passed away on the ship en route or just before the emigration, as I don't have specific dates for her.  I also do not know whether or not Mary was with them on the ship, of if she had passed in Germany or on board.  Woman and children under 16 are typically not listed on ship manifests, but we know Anna was with him and arrived in PA, as she's listed in a deed as a married woman years late...