Foto Friday

Niemoth grandparents with grandchildren

Art and Bertha (Noffke) Niemoth with Bonnie, Mardell, Sharon and James

Grandma and Grandpa Niemoth lived on a farm and Jim and his sisters enjoyed spending weeks there in the summer.

I don't usually post photos from my husband's family but thought I would post this one. We found it as we looked for photos for his tribute video.

Saturday Night Fun - Matrilineal Line

Randy's Saturday Night Fun assignment:

1)List your matrilineal line - your mother, her mother, etc. back to the first identifiable mother. Note: this line is how your mitochondrial DNA was passed to you!

2) Tell us if you have had your mitochondrial DNA tested, and if so, which Haplogroup you are in.

3) Post your responses on your own blog post, in Comments to this blog post, or in a Note or status line on Facebook.


Grace Jones, 1923-2009
Elizabeth Wilmot Worth, 1888-1985
Flora Lucinda Swift, 1859-1927
Eunice Calista Robinson, 1832-1906
Rachel Walker, 1807-after 1880
Rachel Cochran, 1768-1847

I have not had any DNA testing done, but I would like to. Too many other family history projects going on to do it anytime soon, I'm afraid.

What I'm Reading

Only a Few Bones by John Philip Colletta is a true story of two tragedies that happened to the author's ancestors: a mysterious fire that killed five people, including his great-grandfather, and just a few months later, the wreck of a paddle boat. The fire is a mystery that can never be solved and yet the author takes us on a fascinating journey through the possibilities, starting with a fragment of memory and traveling through sources and records to reach a possible conclusion. And all the while telling the story in a "can't put this book down" style. It is also an excellent example of using all the records a family historian comes across to build a life story of a family. Even though it reads like a novel, it is a true story and there are 82 pages of notes that show his meticulous research. It is a great inspiration to those who have a great family story to tell but are not sure how to tell it. Highly recommended.

Foto Friday

Foto Friday
My sister and I are going through mom's photo albums - about 30 or so of them - and I want to share some on Foto Friday. The photos in the albums we're working on now were taken in the 1970s and 80s. Photos in the 70s were taken when we lived on mom's old home place in Loup County.

Mom loved it when her kids and grandkids came to visit so what better way to start what I hope will be a weekly feature than with a photo them (as of April 24, 1977). Of course we are missing Melisa, (1973-74). Anyway. Here they are: Kendall, Cami, Amy, Lori, Travis, Yvonne, Tara, Jerold, Debra, Joy.

Christmas in March!

I am the recipient of an Act of Genealogical Kindness! "Dexter's Girl" read my blog and decided to help me out with some research. The deal was that she would do the research and I would act like it is Christmas when I receive the information from her. So Merry Christmas to me! I truly appreciate her help ESPECIALLY because she did this with her little ones in tow. Now that's a dedicated family tree climber!

One of the many things she discovered is the following, a mention of the death of Enos Newcomb: "An aged gentleman, the father of Mr. Newcomb, who resided near town, died very suddenly on Saturday afternoon, from heart failure. Funeral services were held Tuesday at the school-house north-east of Manchester." ~Manchester Press, Friday, April 17, 1891 (issue 1036), page 3 column 4 . I got the paper copies in the mail yesterday. THANK YOU!

The Mr. Newcomb mentioned is Enos' son, Edwin M. Newcomb, (1861-1944). He and his wife are buried in Mead Cemetery and DG kindly sent photos of their tombstones. The cemetery and a school house are on the same road, in the area where I think Edwin and probably his father lived. Was it the school house where his funeral was held? Was he buried in Manchester as the death register says, or in the Mead Cemetery? Answers always bring more questions. Isn't solving mysteries part of the appeal of researching family history?!?

Thank you DG!!! And Merry Christmas!

What I'm reading

Just finished A Slave No More by David W. Blight. Excellent book. Two slaves wrote manuscripts about their experiences in slavery and their escapes. Both manuscripts are included. The author also follows their lives and those of their descendants to complete their stories.

I recall reading Uncle Tom's Cabin when I was in high school and for the first time realizing that the life of slaves was not as I had thought, not what I had absorbed from the books and conversations I had contact with as a child. Slaves were not singing because they were happy. Masters were never benevolent. The first hand description of one of these men in Blight's book who as a boy in his late teens was taken to the whipping house for running away is too painful to contemplate. The resilience of these human beings to overcome the pain and suffering inflicted by their fellow human beings is beyond remarkable. I have no words to describe my sorrow at their treatment and my admiration for their courage.

It is coincidental that I read this during Black History Month. I have also enjoyed these books: Slaves in the Family by Edward Ball, The Hairstons, A Family in Black and White by Henry Wiencek, and the first book I read related to African American genealogy, Somerset Homecoming by Dorothy Redman. I would like to re-read it but apparently our library got rid of it. I would recommend all of these books.

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun

When I created a calendar as Randy Seaver suggested, I decided I had to post, even a day late. Several birthdays of note happened in January, including my paternal grandmother, Della May (West) Patch Russell, who was born 131 years ago. And with all the research I've done on Luther Kallam this past year, including applying for D.A.R. membership because of his military service, you'd think I would have noticed that 3 January was the 250 anniversary of his birth! Another January birthday was Betsey (Kallam) Newcomb, daughter of Luther and mother of Enos Newcomb, who was born on 30 January. Here's his story that I have so far...

On 30 June 1815, Enos Newcomb was born to John and Betsey (Kallam) Newcomb, in Montrose, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania. He was 12 years old when his father died. It doesn't appear that his mother remarried, although I haven't done an exhaustive search for this. He was a farmer. He was 30 years old on 12 Feb 1845 when he married Susan Ann Westervelt in Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania. They had seven children, Edgar Enos, Rachel Ann "Minnie", Salina Madaline, Elida May, John, Susan Emily and Edwin Marlin. John and Susan died in childhood. I am descended from Elida May, who married Henry Hunter Russell 22 Oct 1872 in Manchester, Delaware, Iowa.

On 2 April 1863, Susan Newcomb died. She was 40 years old. On 14 March 1866 Enos married Margaret (Hutton) Creedy or McCredie. They had one son, Charles Leon Newcomb who lived from 14 Dec 1866 to 20 May 1878.

1888 June 8 Manchester Press, Manchester Iowa

In 1888 it appears they moved to Kansas. I spent quite a bit of time looking for a death record for him in Kansas, but then just last summer I checked the USGenWeb, Iowa, Delaware County site and saw a listing for Enos "Newsome" on the Death Register Index. I sent an email and received an email reply that this Enos died in Greeley, Delaware County, Iowa. The record says he died 11 April 1891 at 2 p.m. of heart failure of 20 minutes duration, apparently a sudden heart attack. The date of birth matched so I am fairly confident this is my ancestor. It also says he was a 25 year resident of the state of Iowa. Did the plans in Kansas fall through? Had he moved back to Iowa from Kansas already? Was he back in the state visiting family when he died? I hope to follow up some day with newspaper research to find out more. I also hope to receive an image or paper copy of this record so I can double check the spelling of the last name to see if it was transcribed wrong.

I don't have a photograph of Enos although it is very likely one or several were taken.

His wife, Susan, is an end-of-line ancestor and is one I want to focus on this year, trying to find out more about her and to discover who her parents were.

Newspaper source: Manchester Press, Manchester, Delaware, Iowa, 8 Jun 1888, page unknown, column 2