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Readers Add More Tips for Using Church Records

Grace Church, New York, 1850. (Smithsonian Open Access) Several readers commented on last week's post on finding church records , adding tips and insights that are too good not to share. My friend Barbara from Pennsylvania wrote, "Baptismal records often reveal children that were not known. I know this to be true from all the research I've done here in Pennsylvania in Catholic sacramental registers of parishes that existed long before civil records were in place. Those unknown children often died young and were 'forgotten'  because families didn't discuss losing small children, no one recorded the death, cemetery records were not diligently kept, or nothing appeared in the local newspaper. If it weren't for those baptismal records, they truly would be unknown or forgotten."  I was reminded by Barbara's comment that I had found the baptisms of three children I was not aware of previously in my Becker family in Catholic church records from St. ...

A Research Trip is Just the Ticket

Image by rawpixel.
 

This week's post will be brief. I am busy preparing for a research trip later this week. 

My paternal grandmother's ancestors are my focus. Mary Josephine Baker (1911-1981) had Belgian, Irish, German, and Scottish roots with families that first settled in the Buffalo/Sheldon/St. Catharines, Ontario areas. I've spent a good part of the past two years researching their stories and am anxious to set my feet on the ground where they lived:

  • Buffalo, Erie, New York - Cassidy, Sheridan, and Coats families
  • N. Evans, Erie, New York - Sheridan family
  • Grantham/St. Catharines/Port Dalhousie, Ontario - Becker/Baker, Schiltz, Cassidy, Darragh, Dyer, Manley families
  • Sheldon, Wyoming, New York - Schiltz, Becker/Baker, Cailteux lines 

Each of these locales is within easy driving distance from Buffalo, so that will be my hub with day trips out to the various locations.

I've set an ambitious schedule and am gathering visit info, making arrangements with my contacts, scouring library websites for resources I might want to check, and making lists of questions I hope locals can answer. Libraries with local genealogy collections, local historical museums, ancestral churches, and cemeteries are all on the agenda.

More than anything I hope to get a feel for the places they called home—something that can only be accomplished in person.  

I'll send some "postcards" from my trip with news, finds, and photos in the next couple of weeks—and maybe a few tips on planning and executing a research trip that might be helpful to readers.

Until next time...

© Nancy Gilbride Casey, 2025. All rights reserved. 

 

 

 

Comments

  1. Best of luck finding lots of great info with boots on the ground research!

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  2. The perfect genealogy activity for summer. Have a great trip! :)

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  3. Looking forward to seeing the postcards.

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  4. I know you'll have a great time. I just did this in Kentucky and Indiana. It's so wonderful to be in the place where they lived.

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    1. Getting started today. Stay tuned...thanks for reading.

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  5. Hello Nancy. I am jealous. Thank you for keeping us informed of your discoveries. If you could find a photo of our common ancestor Anne Marie Cailteux, that would be wonderful. Sorry I’m putting pressure on you. I'm as excited as you are. Thank you again. Daniel

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    1. Bonjour Daniel. I wish such a photo existed, but given that she passed away in the 1860s it's not very likely that one exists. I think the only chance that we find one is to ask other descendants. I know nothing came down through my family, sadly. Wish I could help on this one, but that's my best idea.

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    2. Bonjour Daniel. I wish such a photo existed, but given that she passed away in the 1860s it's not very likely that one exists. I think the only chance that we find one is to ask other descendants. I know nothing came down through my family, sadly. Wish I could help on this one, but that's my best idea.

      Delete

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