31 May 2015

Genealogy Questions


 Many of you have asked that I take some time to more fully explain a few things which have cause problems in your research into your family's past.  For those of you who are not interested in this subject, please bear with us. Perhaps you  just might happen to find something that will be of interest to you later in your life.

We will begin at the beginning to ensure that we are all on the same page in regard to our terminology as words, as well as things, are not always as they may first seem.

There are two distinct objectives or goals which must be carefully considered before it is possible for one to succeed in  research of this type.  There is no right or wrong choice; however, you are the absolute only person who can decide which choice is the best one for you to make as it must be based upon what you want to achieve.

1. Genealogy is the study of one particular family.  In the United States one normally begins with  the immigrant ancestor and works to the present while documenting all of the children in each and every   generation as one progress from the past to the present. A good numbering system is crucial for the         success of this type of project.

2. Family history is the study of one person and of all of that person's ancestors. The number of individuals one must deal with doubles with each generation.  For instance, you and only you are the first generation.  Generation two is composed of your own two parents. Generation three is composed of your four grandparents, etc. Normally, it now takes about fifteen - eighteen generation for one to go back to the immigrant ancestor who came into the colonies, which for many of us is at Jamestown.  This means that you would be dealing with thousands of ancestors which all contributed to who you are via your genetic makeup.

Let's look at this and see how it works so that when I tell you to start with yourself, you actually pay attention.
Gen 1- 1x1= 1
Gen 2- 2x2= 4
Gen 3- 2x4= 8
Gen 4- 2x8= 16
Gen 5- 2x16= 32
Gen 6- 2x32= 64
Gen 7- 2x64= 128
Gen 8- 2x128= 256
Gen 9- 2x256= 512
Gen 10- 2x512=1,024
Gen 11- 2x1,024= 2,048
Gen 12- 2x2,048= 4,096
Gen 13- 2x4,096= 8,192
Gen 14- 2x8,192= 16,384
Gen 15- 2x16,384=32,768
Gen 16- 2x32,768= 65,536
Gen 17- 2x65,536= 131,078
Gen 18- 2x131,078= 262,156
Gen 19- 2x262,156= 524,212
Gen 20- 2x524,212= 1,048,424
Yes, that is correct.  In working back just to eighteen generation in a straight line you will deal with 262,156 people...Now, consider that this is absolutely without any cousins or their' families being added.

And, oh, just for the record, I absolutely do recommend that you do a "Family History" rather than  a "Genealogy" because most folk are more interested in the people who contributed to their very own genetic makeup rather than in bunches of other people who are only very distantly related to them.  If you want all of the work you will accomplish preserved in the future, you most probably should research something that will be of interest to the younger folk in your family.

This is why I will question you when you ask me which is the most important branch of your family for you to work with?  I am not attempting to evade answering your question, but am only trying to get you to understand that each of your own direct ancestors are all, each and every one of them, equally important due to the fact that without any single one of them, you would not be the person you are today.  This is true because each and every single one of them contributed to your very own genetic make up.

And no, it is not necessary for you to  have a computer to organize all of your ancestors. We will get into organization another time, if there is enough interest in the subject.

Now, let's move on to another very important issue.  A source is the reference citing where you obtained the documented proof for each statement that you have made. It positively is NOT the required proof which is required for each statement in either a genealogy or a family history.  For instance, a source might be a book reference or simply a statement made by your aunt telling you that she thought she remembered her  father saying that his parents were married in Rockingham Co., Virginia.

A documented primary proof is a birth certificate, death certificate, marriage record, deed, etc. meaning a legal document involving or made by a particular person when they were alive.

A gravestone, obituary, military record, etc. is considered a secondary proof as it is normally made by someone else.  Bible records may sometimes be considered a bit of both as a person may write the entries for his own marriage and his children's births but normally someone else writes their death entries.

Many of you have asked me exactly what facts are necessary to document.  There are four things: the birth, marriage and death of each individual in each generation PLUS a legal document such as a will, deed or Bible Record that connects each generation to the next one by stating the named person as a son or daughter.

Currently it is considered necessary to completely document with a legal record the first three generations plus each and every connection from the beginning of an application to the ancestor in order to join any lineage society. This brings me to another point -there are literally hundreds of lineage societies, each of which have a different purpose and therefore have different requirements for membership. Normally, the purpose of  each organization is to honor a direct ancestor by documenting the applicant's connection to him/ her and then the life, family and service of that particular ancestor.  This brings us to two more important words: Lineal and Collateral.  Lineal descent is in a straight line. Collateral descent may be via an aunt or uncle's service rather than in a straight or direct line. To the best of my knowledge the UDC [United Daughters of the Confederacy] is the only women's society which now accepts collateral applications.

I wish I could assure you that there was an easier, less time consuming way to  complete a genealogy or family history, but there simply is not.  Many of you are aware that Dr. John W. Wayland started me in research before I was quite eleven years of age.  Those of you who know my daughters, well understand that the long standing joke in our family is that, "Mother wrote books before there were ball point pens!"  Well, while not exactly the truth, its very close as I wrote before ball point pens were easily available in our area.
The Library of Virginia 
And yes, I do remember having to drive to Richmond to the Virginia State Archives in order to simply look at just one census record because that was all that it was possible to accomplish in any one day as there were no copy machines, no microfilm and in reality no really good indexing system by which the library staff could easily honor your request for original material.  But, there was one big plus... if you were a Virginia resident, you could check out a book [if the archives/library had two copies] and then return the copy you borrowed by mail within two weeks.

This now brings me to another question which so many of you have asked, "What's wrong with me using internet services such as Ancestry.com and/or what is the problem with this type of thing?"  Well, to begin with, it is necessary to fully understand that Ancestry.com is a business based upon compilations of what people may think or believes to be true.  It absolutely, positively is not documentation because it does NOT make a copy of the actual court record/document available to you to print to be included in your records.

I know from experience teaching classes that many of you "cheat" because I always catch you at it.  You assume that if fifty people have something recorded on an internet service as being true then it must certainly be so...WRONG..WRONG...WRONG!!!

This simply means that someone wrote down something incorrectly and forty-nine others copied it in hopes that it was correct.  While in reality, this only means that fifty people copied incorrect information because they chose not to take the time to even attempt to document the point in question. A good example of this would be the maiden name of the wife of Abraham Estes who lived in Virginia in the 1650's. There are more than fifty entries on Ancestry.com which cite this woman's maiden name as being Barbara Brock. This is positively wrong information!!!  Abraham Estes was married at least twice and perhaps three time, but never once was he married to a woman named Barbara Brock.  He did marry a woman named Barbara which was an exceedingly common given name at the time. The Brock  surname was assumed to be correct because a novel was written about what someone "thought" Abraham Estes's life might have been like...

One time, just to make this point positively clear to a class full of adult students whom I was teaching who had more or less disbelieved what I had said about using such sites, I  attached the Cherokee National Flag next to the Frazier surname with absolutely no comment.  Without any doubt Frazier is a Scottish/Norman French surname. Please also know that I did not have my own  lineage posted, nor my name nor my own Frazier family connection.  I simply put the Cherokee National Flag near a Frazier surname that was already on the Ancestry.com site.  Before the end of the class period, nearly seventy people had incorporated the Cherokee National Flag into/with their own Frazier family data. My class was absolutely stunned by this fact. I would imagine that many of those who had attached the Cherokee flag to their Frazier ancestors spent a lot of time trying to figure out where the original flag had come from as I promptly removed it before the class period was over.  My students felt that I was "mean" but no one has ever questioned me again concerning this particular point.

With that being said, Ancestry.com does have Federal Census records available on their site.  It is fine for you to use them, but in dealing with Census Records it is imperative to understand and remember that they are not always accurate because during the early years, the census taker rode horseback and stopped at houses in hid given area.  Many times he stayed the night with whomever he was interviewing when dark settled due to the fact that hotels were not available.  If he spend the night he might ask his host about the family who lived across the mountain from him or farther back in the hollow. The person most probably would do his best to get things right but just as you might not know the given names and birth dates of all your neighbors families, most likely this individual also did not know the correct ages or full names.
National Archives - Washington, D.C.
An internet site that is available by subscription that does contains proofs is Fold 3.  This site contains records from the National Archives in Washington, DC.  It was designed primarily to make military records available to anyone who paid a fee.  This site also includes many Native American records which were recorded by the United States Government and some Federal Census Records.

Another thing is that I truly wish that I could tell you is that with perseverance it is possible to find solutions for all of your research problems.  But alas, at this time, even with all of our technology, it is impossible for me to do so.   For example, at the time of the American Revolution there literally were fourteen men named Abraham Morgan which is an uncommon given name in the Morgan family.  Morgan is a Welsh surname meaning most all of these men or their families originated in Wales.  All of these men chose to live relatively close together when they had the whole frontier to chose from. Also, each and every one of these fourteen men were in and out of the same geographic areas. Most, if not all, of these men had Quaker ties.  Most of these men were military leaders in their own right or were very closely related to those who did.  For instance, Daniel Boone's mother was a Morgan and both of his parents were Quakers. Most of these men were dismissed or kicked out of the Quaker church for their military persuasion.

Then, lo and behold, before Virginia declared war on Great Britain, one Abraham Morgan was tried for being a Tory. This man was given, "thirty-nine lashes for being an ignorant man with small children".  From that time forth, there are multiple statements each saying that each branch of Morgan family are unrelated to any other by that surname in the colonies.

After fifty plus years of research, I can tell you all of the parents of the Abraham Morgans.  I can tell you who each man married, but still after fifty plus years of work, I am unable to state conclusively whose children belong to which couple.  By process of elimination, which does works in most cases, I still know that I have more work to do on the problem.  My husband laughingly says that the solution to this problem gives me a good reason for living.  Who knows, he just maybe right...

24 May 2015

A Journal - Elkton - McGaheysville, Virginia Area

Miss Lottie M. Davis
PART THREE
Massanutten Mountain as viewed from Elkton, Virginia
[Notes by BJM:
1. It's fascinating to learn that it took sixty years from the time The War Between The States ended until our folks here within the Shenandoah Valley, who had bore much of the devastating effects of that war, got around to admitting that, "New matters too." [p.10 - April 1925].
2. Only one year later some of our valley families started installing indoor bathrooms [p. 11- 27 Dec 1926 and p. 14 - 28 Dec 1926].
3. An airplane wrecked in Elkton [p.10 - 18 Sept 1925].
4. Cover Tannery burned [p. 10 - 13 Dec 1925].
5.  Mr. T.A. Merica store burned [p.11 -  28 Jan 1926].
6. G. Downey store burned down. [ p. 11 - 5 Feb 1926].
7. Merchand [Merchant?] Grocery. Safe robed [robbed] [p. 12 - 16 Mar 1926].
We must not forget that there was no such thing as fire insurance for the majority of folk at this time.  

Page 10
1925
8 Aug 1925 - Uncle John Mills.
5 April 1925 - Mr. Walter Flick died age 65 years.
5 April 1925 - Mrs. Frank Hammer died.
30 March 1925 - Mr. A.P. Yancey broke limb.
March 1925 - Mr. G. House moved to Elkton.
April 1923 - Lawrence and Mary goes to Housekeeping.
April 1925 - New matters too.
24 April 1925 - Mrs. Ella Powell died.
19 Jan 1925 - William Kyger Birthday.
26 Jan 1925 - Chas. Fogle Birthday.
11 Jan 1925 - R.B. Pennington died.
22 Dec 1925 - Mr. Lee Shifflett moved.
13 Dec 1925 - Cover Tannery burned.
5 July 1925 - Warn [Warren's ?] Birthday.
18 Sept 1925 - Airplain [airplane] wrecked in Elkton.
23 Sept 1925 - Conference UB [United Brethern] met in Martinsburg,WV.
18 Dec 1925 - Aunt Sarah Davis Died.
26 Sept 1925 - Guy's tonsils removed. [Guy Monger, son of Clark & Lelia Davis
   Monger.]
8 Nov 1925 - Mr. A.P. Shifflett died.

Page 11
1926
Nov 1926 - Clarence Life moved to Elkton.
1926 Spring - Lena Clifft moved to Washington D.C.
27 Dec 1926 - Bathroom put in.
8 Dec 1926 - Mr. Moses Powell died.  Age 87 years.
17 Dec 1926 - Mr. Clarence Baugher died.
27 Dec 1926 - Mrs. Haney Walton Died. Age 46.
20 Dec 1926 - Mr. M.M. Jarman Died. Age 74 years.
22 Oct 1926 - Mrs Hugh Frye new baby.
11 Oct 1926 - Mrs. John Wyant new baby.
Nov 1926 - New truck.
29 Dec 1926 - Mr. Chas. Marshall killed at I [Island] Ford. Age 63 yrs.
6 Jan 1926 - Mrs. Ella Rogers died.
6 Jan 1926 - Mrs. Ruth Hammer Meadows died.
28 Jan 1926 - Mr. T.A. Merica store burned.
27 [29?]Jan 1926 - Mr. Joe Lucas died.
29 Jan 1926 - Mr. Chas. Zetty died.
1 Feb 1926 - Hubert Thomas child burned to Death.
5 Feb 1926 - G. Downey store burned down.

Page 12
1926
9 Feb 1926 - Mr. Harold Sours died.
12 Feb 1926 - Mrs. George Monger died. Age 79 years.[Mary Ellen Dearing Monger,
     daughter of Thomas & Hannah Ann B. Goff Dearing].
13 Feb 1926 - Miss Mollie Jenning died age 79 years.
April 1926 - Roy Comer married Shifflett.
10 May 1926 - Mr. Walter Price died age 36years.
12 May 1926 - Mrs. Charles Breeden died.
14 May 1926 - Mrs. C.W. McGuire operated on.
16 Mar 1926 - Merchand [Merchant?] Grocery. Safe robed [robbed].
20 Mar 1926 - Mrs. Lester McGuire new baby. Frances.
20 Mar 1926 - Mrs. Bill Hammer new baby.
15 Mar 1926 - Mrs. Ella Hammer moved.
13 Feb 1926 - Miss Mollie J. died.
25 Mar 1926 - Mrs. Ed Kite new baby.
29 Mar 1926 - Carpet goes to loom.
16 Mar 1926 - Mrs. J.W. Stearn goes to Hospital.
31 Mar 1926 - Mr George Monger died. [George Washington Monger, son of William
     Henry & Nancy Ellen Burk Monger].
1 April 1926 - Mr. J.W. Rhode moved.
19 Jan 1926 - Dr. Marshall killed. Miss Mae Detrick gets 10 yrs. in pen [prison].

Page 13
March 1926 - Mr. King leaves & Mr. Compton comes.
18 April 1926 - Snow fell.
4 June 1926 - Amos Davis house burned.
14 June 1926 - Cave & Breeden married.
4 July 1926 - Shipp & Herring accident.
14 July 1926 - Mrs. Meadow died.
15 July 1926 - Mrs. Jim Rhode died. Funeral at Dayton.
16 July 1926 - Hitt child dies at RMH [Rockingham Memorial Hospital].
8 July 1926 - Uncle Frank Merica died.
28, 29, 30 July 1926 - Alice & Chas. Eppard visited us.
7 Aug 1926 - Blackie was killed.
2 Aug 1926 - L.[Ladies?] Aid Lawn Party. Made $100.00.
7 Aug 1926 - Chas Palmer married.
9 Sept. 1926 - Mrs. Joe Taylor died.
8 Sept. 1926 - Rev. S. Baugher died.
9 Sept. 1926 - Aunt Ruddin Jome [Jerome or Jones?] died.
Aug 1926 - Rev. Ed Callwell had meeting.
30 Sept. 1926 - Mrs. William Downs died.
16 June 11926 - Mrs. Comer died.  Daves mother.

Page 14
Sept 1926 - Mrs. M.V. Leap went to Ronoke [Roanoke]
Sept 1926 - Mollie Merica moved.
9 Nov 1926 - Dr. Kale died at RMH [Rockingham Memorial Hospital].
6 Nov 1926 - Mrs. Joe Taylor Sale.
28 Nov 1926 - Mrs. Jeff Meadows died.
13 Nov 1926 - New truck.
2 Dec 1926 - Mrs. Ida Marshall house burned.
28 Dec 1926 - New bathroom.
17 Dec 1926 - Mr. Clarence Baugher killed.
Dec 1926 - Lula Comer operated on.
To be continued.












ild dies at RMH

17 May 2015

Sassafras I

Springtime in the Blue Ridge
Springtime in the mountains is a wondrous thing to behold as all of nature rushes to renew itself.  If you are lucky enough to begin your journey near one of the foothills or in a hollow, you just might find a creek overflowing with rushing water to guide you into the mountain and up to its very top.
Look carefully at your surroundings; be careful where you step as the whole world is in the process of renewing itself at this time of year.  If you only look to see the filtering sunlight through the redbud bloom you just might miss seeing the lethargic snake which is blending in amid the rock and last winter's leaves that you are about to put your foot upon.
Sassafras trees are found in the eastern United States, from Canada to Florida, and also in Mexico.   This tree has a unique leaf pattern in that it produces leaves of three different shapes on the same tree. 
Some of our early local farmers saw the sassafras tree as a nuisance as it was normally found cluttering the cleared, "old Indian fields" which they needed for cropland.  Others believed that its wood would prevent chicken lice.  They used it to build their hen houses and the roosts for the chickens to perch on at night. Some believed that if it was burned, someone would die when the wood cracked and sputtered.
Regardless of whatever this tree was used for, everyone knew of its magical healing properties when the roots were chopped into pieces and used to make a springtime tea.  The tea was a tonic that was very well known by many of our nation's Native Americans.  The Cherokee used sassafras to purify the blood.  They also used it for a wide variety of other ailments including skin diseases, rheumatism and ague [a malarial fever characterized by regularly returning paroxysms, marked by successive cold, hot, and sweating fits, accompanied by malaise, pains in the bones and joints].  Some Native American tribes built their dugout canoes from sassafras wood.  Cajun folk use the sassafras leaves to make gumbo.  Sassafras is referred to the as the "Ague Tree" in many cultures.

There are two varieties of sassafras:
1. White sassafras grown in thick clusters from the three to six feet tall.  It has basically the same characteristics as red sassafras, but the bark does not turn pink nor red when the root is damaged.
2. Red sassafras is the most prized variety.  It is generally found on hills and ridges.  In the mountains it usually reaches a height of thirty plus feet.

In Montgomery County, Ohio is a specimen which is ninety feet tall and has a diameter of almost three and one half feet.  In Owensboro, Kentucky there is a one hundred foot sassafras tree with a circumference of twenty-one feet [seven yards] that is believed to be over three hundred years old.[1]
Sign for the tree below. 

Largest sassafras tree in the United States
I have found records where it has been determined that some sassafras trees have lived to be over one thousand years of age.  Can you imagine the tales they could tell if they could only speak?

William Bartram in his, "Observations on the Creek and Cherokee Indians Food Traditions,"[2] stated that "the country people of Carolina chop the vines [Bigonia Crucigera] to pieces together with china brier and sassafras roots, and boil them in their beer in the spring, for diet drink, in order to attenuate and purify the blood and juices." Perhaps this is the source which influenced early white settlers to make a beer by boiling young sassafras shoots in water, adding molasses and allowing this mixture to ferment.
Before the Jamestown settlement in Virginia, a company was formed in Bristol, England which sent two ships to the New World with the purpose of returning with cargoes of sassafras bark.  This was most probably due to the investigations made by either Raleigh's men or  the Roanoke colonists. Sassafras was the first forest product exported from what is now the mid-Atlantic region.  Sassafras most certainly smells like springtime itself.  Can you imagine sailing with a whole ship load?
Sassafras in the fall. 
The Cherokee made poultices to cleanse sores and wounds; they steeped the root bark and used it as a treatment for diarrhea or for "over-fatness."  The Cherokee emphasized that sassafras tea should never be taken for more than a week at a time.  Even though they were unaware of the word, "safrole" they were very attuned to the effects of the long term use of sassafras.

In the early 1960's, sassafras was pulled from the American market due to the fact that the bark on the sassafras root contains violate oils, eighty per cent of which is "safrole" which was proven to cause liver cancer in rats and mice when given in large doses.
Sassafras tea set upon a sassafras leaf designed quilt.
An Early Recipe for Sassafras Tea
Two to three sassafras roots chopped in pieces two or three inches long.  One quart of water. Boil roots in water until water is dark in color.  Remove from the heat and strain into a gallon crock or pot.  Sweeten to taste.  Note - roots maybe boiled over and over for several days as the flavor increases with repeat boilings.  Roots should be gathered in spring before sap rises.  [A necessary disclaimer: It is important to remember that the United States federal government banned the use of Sassafras in the early 1960's; therefore, this recipe is being given only as a historic note about how our families once lived and not as a recommended form of medicine.]
____________________
Sources:
[1] The National Forestry Association’s National Register.
[2] Bartram, William.  Observations on the Creek and  Cherokee Indians food traditions. Transaction of the American Ethnological Society.  Vol. 3. 1789.
e American Ethnological Society.  Vol. 3. 1789.

11 May 2015

A Journal - Elkton - McGaheysville, Virginia Area

Miss Lottie M. Davis's Journal
PART TWO
View from the Skyline Drive of  the Elkton - McGaheysville, Virginia area. 
Folks interested in acquiring more information regarding Miss Lottie M. Davis's entries may wish to know that many of the earlier editions of the newspaper which served the Harrisonburg-Rockingam County area is available on microfilm at the Massanutten Regional Library in Harrisonburg, Virginia.  These papers are not indexed by subject; however, if you would take the date cited in Miss Lottie's journal regarding the person you are interested in, the staff may be able to help you find the exact obituary or news story, if it exists.  Be positive to check several issues of the papers before and after the date Miss Lottie cited in her journal to ensure that no error was made.  Some of her entries are obviously based upon personal knowledge, but likewise, she was an intelligent woman who read the local paper and most probably recorded things of interest to her from that source. Also, at times, it took several weeks for some things to be printed in the paper.

 If you choose to do this, be absolutely positive that you print a close up of the article in question as well as print the entire sheet showing the name of the newspaper, the date the article appeared and the article itself. Do not place any notations of any kind on these two copies.  If you want to make additional notations, do so on another sheet of paper and then use a paper clip to hold the sheets together [do not staple].  Better still put them into acid free sheet protectors and the sheet protectors into a three ring notebook.  This is necessary because it is considered standard genealogical procedure and ensures that the article will be accepted as proven documentation in the future.

Journal of Miss Lottie M. Davis
[continued from 26 April 2015]
Page 6
1923 - New wire on porch.
1923 - New piano at UBC [United Brethren Church].
10 March 1923 - Riany Sto-e at sale.
8 Sept 1923 - Lawerence left  York Pa.
1 Aug 1923 - Joe Gilmore died.
3 Aug 1923 - Dr. Richards died age 96 yrs.
15 July 1923 - Went to Dr. Wright.
17 Nov 1923 - Lawrence and Mary married.
3 Dec 1923 - George Offenbacker died.
29 Nov 1923 - Old Red was killed.
1923 - Work on UBC [United Brethren Church]. 
5 Jan 1924 Rev G. W. Clegg accident.
16 May 1927 - Mrs. Warren Gahey died age __.
21 May 1927 - Fawley moved.
16 May 1927 - Papered 3 rooms.
24 Apr 1925 - Mrs. Ella Powell died.
8 May 1925 - Mr. David Petty died at Grove Hill.
30 Apr 1925 - New rug for dining room.
11 Apr 1925 - New Car.
11 May 1925 - Grover Meadows killed wife.
12 May 1925 - Miss Annie Shifflett died.
9 May 1925 - Mrs. Ed Herring died.
Page 7
27 May 1925 - Lucille Richards married.
6 June 1925 - Lightening struck Uncle Luther H.
18 June 1925 - Mr. John Wess Dean died.
5 July 1925 - Warn  Ed Davis birthday
13 July 1924 - Mr. Jarman barn burned.
1924
5 April 1924 - Mrs. Fannie Argenbright died.
17 April 1924 - Rev. Coffey left Elkton.
April 1924 - Aunt Mary Samuel went to Ohio.
17 April 1924 - Mr. J.L. Hopkins died.
28 April 1924 - Operated on foot tied off veins Dr M & W.
11 May - Came home.  The flood.
16 May 1924 - Magale & Brown drown in S. River.
25 April 1924 - Mr. Joe Taylor died. 
18 April 1924 - Mr. D. Offenbacker died.
25 April 1924 - Mr. A. Frazier died.
26 Dec 1924 - Mr. Tom Cash died.
21 Jun 1924 - Dan Baugher's baby died.
19 Jun 1924 - Dr. Argenbright died.
Page 8
1924
30 March 1924 - Mr. Dan Schuler died.
19 June 1924 - Mrs. Jammie Shifflett went jail.
1 July 1924 - Ralph Shifflett died.
1 July 1924 - Lester McGuire new baby.
June 1924 - Lucille Richard,Ola Lam, Margie Merica graduate from H school.
11 March 1924 - Iseman fire at Harrisonburg.
2 April 1924 - Shoemakers moved to Harrisonburg.
9 April 1924 - Edith Coffey new baby. [Mrs. Herbert L. Coffey]
April 1924 - Sallie Fogel new baby.
19 March 1924 - C.W. Breeden sold home.
1925
4 May 1925 - Miss Louise Davis died. 
15 March 1925 - Lena  baby.
13 March 1925 - Sold Jersey [Most probably her cow].
8 Aug 1925 - Lee Apal [?] Birthday.
August 1925 - Gurturde Breeden married.
8 Nov 1925 - Mrs. Mary Ann Davis died.
6 Nov 1925 - Mr. A. S. Shifflett died.
19 Nov 1925 - Mrs. Mollie J brakes collar bone.
Page 9
1923 Mr. Eaton new store.
Dec 1925 - Earl starts new home.
22 Jan 1924 - Mr. Long died.
Jan 1924 - Mrs. William Rogers died.
29 Jan 1924 - New piano from Bowman.
20 Feb 1924 - New cows.
16 Feb 1924 - Mr. Joe Taylor paralized.
Feb 1924 - Mr. Jack Lam died.
5 Feb 1924 - Vella Maude Monger Birthday [daughter of Clark and Lelia Davis           Monger and thus Miss Lottie's niece].
11 Feb 1924 - John Snyder died.
Dec 1924 - Hugh Frye new Supt.
Oct 1925 - Guy started to school [Guy Monger, son of Clark and Lelia Davis               Monger and thus her nephew].
1925 - New wall put around spring.
[To be continued....]

























02 May 2015

Early Pistols

Part One
European handguns played a major role in the settling of America.  From the early 1400’s through the early 1800’s, the mechanism for firing muzzle-loading guns was limited to two major types: the first depended upon a lighted wick or “match”; the second upon the Stone Aged principle that one could create fire by striking a piece of iron with a piece of flint.
                       
The matchlock musket was the earliest firearm brought to the New World in the 1520’s by Spanish soldiers who waded ashore on the Atlantic coast.  This was a bulky weapon which was used on European battle fields. It required a forked brace to support it.  When a “musketeer” pulled the trigger, it brought a lighted wick into contact with a pan of priming powder which in turn ignited the powder in the barrel.  In 1540, Francisco Vazquez de Coronado and his men used this weapon as he searched the American southwest for the Seven Cities of Cibola.
Henry Hudson in 1609 suffered one of his worst encounters with Native Americans as he explored the banks of the river which was to bear his name.  Confronted with hostiles, he ordered his troops to set up their matchlock muskets in order to frighten the Indians with the noise and smoke that they made when fired and to then wait for the assault.  The natives looked skyward at the approaching rain clouds and they also waited.  Once the downpour of rain began they attacked.  Because the English muskets failed to fire in the rain, Hudson suffered heavy casualties. 
                          
Due to the ineffectiveness of the matchlock musket on the battlefield, European gunsmiths were encouraged to make better weapons.  In the 16th Century, gunsmiths developed the wheel-lock ignition mechanism.  This resembled a modern day cigarette lighter in that it incorporated  a spring which was set in motion by the gun’s trigger to turn a rough metal wheel against a piece of flint.  This action created a series of sparks that ignited the priming powder and fired the gun. 
Wheel-lock technology made the first functional pistol possible.  It is believed that the word pistol was derived from the 16th Century French word ”pistole” meaning “pipe.”  A large  number of early wheel-lock handguns made their way to the early English settlements because their ignition mechanism was far superior to the matchlock.  In 1586, Governor Ralph Lane of Roanoke Island, in a journal entry, cited several wheel-lock pistols in the Roanoke garrison.


Jamestown colonists possessed what historians have considered to be an ample supply of wheel locks, based upon the number of rusty parts archaeologists have discovered there.  Several accounts note that Captain John Smith wielded pistols against the Powhatans.  Martial laws in Virginia in 1611 required that all targeteers [shield bearing foot soldiers] carry pistols in addition to swords. A 1625 military census in Virginia tallied fifty-five pistols among the colony’s armament.
It has been debated as to whether many such guns made their way to the colonies because they were expensive weapons and the colonists were poor in comparison to their European counterparts.  One thing should be recognized and thoughtfully considered; people tend to acquire the best weapons they possibly can afford when their very lives depend upon them.  This fact has always been true for all peoples in all times.  A quality weapon is an important item to have in one’s possession when one’s very life may depend upon its dependability.  Without life, other commodities are useless and most colonial settlers understood this fact.

Dutch gunsmiths in the 1550’s introduced flintlock technology by attaching a piece of flint to a spring loaded cock that struck a metal plate over the pan and ignited the priming powder. This weapon was originally called a snaphaunce meaning snapping cock.  This technology was more efficient in its simplicity than the wheel lock and it was also cheaper to manufacture. German gunsmiths continued to produce the wheel-lock pistol for about another hundred years refusing to change. 
Other European gunsmiths developed enhancements to the new flintlock technology which shortened the reign of the snaphaunce resulting in fewer of them being produced and finding their way to what was to become known as the American colonies. 
About 1610, English gunsmiths streamlined the firing mechanism by the priming pan and the steel striking surface to develop the English lock.  This weapon was named “fizzen” meaning into a single piece. This gun did not need a separate mechanism to slide the cover from the pan. The powder was exposed instantly when the hammer struck the frizzen. This gun could no longer be carried in the cocked position without the danger of accidental discharge.  Gunsmiths added a small latch called a “dog lock” to secure the hammer in either a cocked or half-cocked position. John Thompson, a Pilgrim, arrived in Massachusetts in 1622 with one of these dog-locked weapons which is in the collection at Plymouth.  Within twenty-five years, this weapon was the most common firearm in the colonies. 
In France, about 1615, the last stage of flintlock development occurred resulting in the “true flintlock.” This form improved the way the dog lock’s internal latch, or “sear,” interfaced with the tumbler which controlled the hammer’s mainspring. By the 1660’s this weapon had been introduced to all of the American colonies.  Because the firing mechanism was refined, the gun operated by loading the flintlock by half-cocking the hammer and pouring a measure of gunpowder down the barrel. Then a lead ball was wrapped in a small piece of cloth or paper and rammed down the barrel until it reached the gunpowder.  Then a small amount of gunpowder was put into the priming pan.  The frizzen was snapped into place covering the pan.  Finally the hammer was cocked, aimed and fired when one pulled the trigger. 
A vast number of the “true flintlocks” in the form of both pistols and muskets found their way to the American colonies as both France and Britain transported their well-equipped armies across the Atlantic to do battle for dominance of the North American continent in first King William’s War [1689-1697], then Queen Ann’s War [1702-1713], King George’s War [1640-1748] and finally in the French and Indian War [1755-1763].  Britain won control by the end of the French and Indian War and set into motion conditions which would lead to the eruption of the American Revolution twelve years later.
As manufacturing techniques progressed, standardization became a normal part of the process which resulted in the barrels of British military pistols usually being fourteen inches long, .66 caliber with wooden ramrods and brass mountings. By 1720 pistols had twelve-inch barrels and were .60 caliber with an ornamental raised band at the breech and brass-capped ramrods.  By 1760 the barrel was standardized at nine inches, the caliber increased to .69 while the grip grew shorter and thicker.  About this same time, the “box-lock” moved into prominence with the firing mechanism located more to the center of the pistol and the pan sitting directly on top of the barrel.

Due to the fact that England desired to keep its own firearms exports secure, there was a shortage of gunsmiths resulting in it being several years before these weapons were made in the colonies. 
At the height of the American Revolution, French pistols became dominant because large quantities were imported and used by the Continental Army and state militias.  Until 1763, the French Royal manufactories had no standard pistol.  It then began producing two versions, one with iron mountings for the cavalry and one with brass mountings for the navy.  Both models were .67 caliber with round nine inch barrels.  The walnut stocks had a slight swell at the butt.  The ramrod was iron.
In 1777, the French began manufacturing a second standardized pistol with a .67 caliber, with a seven and one half inch barrel which tapered toward the muzzle.  The butt dropped sharply and was covered with a brass butt cap.  It had no fore stock under the barrel which gave the pistol a sleeker profile.  This weapon became the prototype for the first pistols made under contract to the new United States government after the Revolution.

A few German flintlock pistols came to the colonies with officers of the Hessian regiments which supported British troops.  These weapons were normally brass mounted and had a larger .75 caliber round barrel. 
Some few Europeans gunsmiths did migrate to the colonies but when they found themselves restricted to cleaning and repairing, they frequently left the trade for more lucrative positions.  Early Virginia census records reveal that there were only eighteen gunsmiths in a one hundred fifty year period who served approximately one half million colonists. 
Pennsylvania was the exception.  A concentration of German and French gunsmiths had chosen to locate in Lancaster County. They played the leading role in developing the famed American “flintlock.”  These gunsmiths were European immigrants who had left their homeland for religious reasons. Many were guild-trained or descendants of guild-trained gunsmiths. They knew exactly what they were doing, but seldom is a name found on the barrels of these guns.  This is due to the fact that these gunsmiths faced retaliation as England did not look upon American made guns with favor.
The heyday of the American flintlock which is often called the Kentucky or Pennsylvania rifle is from 1781-1814.  This weapon has a distinctive curved stock usually made of curly maple or cherry. European designs such as a lion or dog's face on the butt cap lost favor and were replaced by a plain or engraved surface.  They frequently used rolled brass which had become available during this period for the pistol's side plates and fashioned fully octagonal, rifled barrels engraved with the maker's name.  This lighter, more graceful weapon was noted for its beauty and exceptional performance.

The American military pistol became standardized in appearance and manufacture from 1814-1825.  It became less expensive and more popular resulting in the Pennsylvania or Kentucky pistol becoming more obsolete. The few that were made during this period were for gentlemen and officers. Normally they are either very plain or highly inlaid and engraved.

With the need to arm its new military, Congress in 1798 contacted for the mass production of firearms by awarding the contract for U.S. military pistols to Simeon North of Middletown, Connecticut.  Eli Whitney received a similar contract to produce muskets at New Haven which was about twenty miles up the road from Simeon North who borrowed the use of interchangeable parts from European clockmakers. 
The adoption in 1805 of the percussion-cap ignition mechanism which had been invented by a Scottish clergyman named John Forsyth, ended the era of the flintlock.
At this time, the smooth-bore musket evolved into two very distinct firearms.
1. With the addition of rifling and a two piece sighting system for accurate shooting at long distances it evolved into a rifle.
2.  With a smooth-bore and choke-bore with the addition of a single front bead sight it evolved into a shotgun for short range point ability.

During the transition period between smooth bore Muskets and the addition of rifling to the bore of muskets, these firearms were  commonly referred to as "Rifled Muskets."  Standard military nomenclature of the 1820-1860 period referred to Springfields, Enfields, etc. as "Rifled Muskets."