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Showing posts from September, 2016

The Rivers and del Rio Surname Connection

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       Genealogy has been one of my long time passions for a while now. But over the last few months I've developed another one. I frequent our local Goodwill stores searching for art that others have discarded. The photo on the left is one of those framed pieces that I've recently purchased.. When I saw it, it spoke to me and I knew that I had to take it home! Texas and Louisiana are a large part of my heritage. When I started my research to find out where my ancestors came from, I found that many had been there since Texas was ruled by Spain.    My research on my Rivers line was one that took me down that Spanish trail. I had no idea where my Rivers family came from and our "set" had always been told that they weren't related to the other Rivers in our community that appeared to be of Native American or Hispanic descent.  But over the years, I have collected enough information that leads me to the conclusion that my 2nd great grandfather Joseph “Hosea” Ri

Cora Alice Parker and her mother Emma Watson (c1858 - 9 Dec 1889)

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The search for our ancestors is never over! One discovery always leads to another and another. The less I know about an ancestor the more I want to know. My great grandmother Cora Alice Parker Rivers died in 1960. I was only two at the time and have no memory of her. I am from a small town in Louisiana and most of the people there can be traced back several hundred years in the same community. Cora was different, she was from Texas and she was a Parker! That fueled my curiosity! Prior to my research on this family, I had seen a copy of the death certificate for grandma Cora and it stated her parents were Henry Clay Parker and Emma Watson. As I begun my research on my great grandmother's family, I contacted her son, Clarence Rivers. Uncle Clarence was nearing 90 at the time and he was the only one of Cora's four children still living. He was thrilled to talk about his youth and what little he knew about his mother's family. Interviewing your older family members is imperat

All in a day of Genealogy: discovering new family, friends and helping others!

The world of genealogy is always offering new roads to travel, new cousins to talk to and new friends to help! Today has been an eventful day in my world! 1) A few days ago I  told one of  my "cousin/genealogy BFFs" (her term) that I needed an expert for our Mooney family line! Our ancestor is Alabama Mooney Craig, daughter of Andrew J. Mooney Sr., and Nancy Pierce, son of John Mooney and Mary Hubbard and then, not one, but 3 Hans Jacob Mooneys...when I look at the tree and I'm looking at hints for those 3 men, my head wants to explode. I'm second guessing each item...not sure if it's listed with the correct Hans Jacob, or even if I have the correct wife with each of them. So, this morning I log unto Ancestry.com to find that I have a message from a lady that I don't know. She messaged me to tell me about a Facebook page titled Booker and Southern Kin...it seems that there are some distant Mooney cousins on this page from Monroe County, Alabama which is wh

Helping Myrie – via the DNA Trail

There has been amazing progress in the field of genealogy over the years. The internet has put the world at our fingertips! With the stroke of a few keys we can find records, photos…information on our ancestors that would have taken years to gather before modern technology intervened! Now, there is something even more exciting. DNA and all the doors that it can open and sometimes even unlock. On May 2, 2016, I was contacted by a young lady. She was writing to let me know that we were somehow related. The problem was she had no clue how. She had just discovered that the man who raised her wasn’t her father. She had taken the DNA test to find her mom’s biological family (her mom was adopted) and realized that she did not have any matches to her dad’s family. She confirmed this by having a paternal 1 st cousin test and the outcome was that they weren’t related. As she studied her matches on Ancestry.com and uploaded her DNA results to third party sites, she began to see a few surn

Finding the parents of Lizzie Crowell (1887 - 1937)

Even though I've been at genealogy for many years, I occasionally find a new surprise. I come from a small town. A town where everybody knows everybody; or in most cases they are related to everyone. But I have one line on my mothers side that I'm still finding new ancestors to research. My mom and her sister were raised by their paternal grandparents. This, along with the fact that her mother died when she was 7 years old and her maternal grandmother had passed away before she was born, left us with limited information about her mother's maternal side. For years the only knowledge that I had on this line was that my grandmother was Mrytle Meshell and she was the daughter of Joe Meshell and Lizzie Crowell. The Meshells  have been well researched in our neck of the woods; but, who was this Crowell family. Finding Lizzie's parents was somewhat difficult because Lizzie was born after the 1880 census and she married Joe Meshell in 1899. You know what that means, Lizzie