Mining for gold will not be easy, but what we find will be priceless!



HOW TO: Experience genealogy, family history activities, family photos and pedigree charts while we search family connections and collections. Write your life story, or keep a journal. Become the caretaker for precious family photos. Learn the stories, and how to protect treasures of family significance.

Friday, September 30, 2011

What was Happening in 1949?

1949
This is the year that my mother, Glenna, met my father, Allan.

What else was happening that year?

  • Minimum wage is set at $.75 an hour
  • South Pacific , a musical by Rogers and Hammerstein
  • Records cut- Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer; Ghost Riders in the Sky; Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend; Mona Lisa
  • New radio show - Dragnet
  • T.V. shows - The Life of Riley; the Lone Ranger
  • The New York Yankees defeat the Brooklyn Dodgers to take the World Series
  • Silly Putty is introduced
  • Tokyo Rose goes on trial
It helps you put things in perspective to see what was going on around family members as important personal milestones where happening.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

William John Davies . . . continued

William and Sarah moved onto a farm in the Starline district with their five children and in 1910 Victor was added to the family and in 1916 Mary was born. Mary died in young childhood at the age of eleven and a half.

William Davies bought and farmed several parcels of land in the Starline district and was a very successful farmer from 1908 until his death in 1935.  Sarah and sons Glenn and Charlie farmed a few years, then Sarah moved to Claresholm, then on Christmas day in 1945 she passed away after several years of failing health

Janie married Harry Taitinger, a son of Nick Taitinger. George married Carrie McMurray of Cardston. Ivan married Rachel Lepard of Claresholm.  glen remained unmarried.  Charlie was married to Zelpha Newby of Lethbridge and victor married Mabel Johnson of Claresholm. There were nineteen grandchildren.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Ahnentafel Numbers

Ahnentafel - a German word that means "ancestral table".

It is quite easy to prepare an indexed list of all your ancestors by using the ahnentafel numbering system.

To do this you will assign each ancestor a unique identification number and move backwards in time.
If  you are the subject of the pedigree then assign yourself number 1, and your father will be number 2, your mother number 3, your paternal grandfather will be number 4, and your paternal grandmother will be number 7, etc.

The males are always assigned an even number. 2, 4, 6, 8, etc.
Identify the father by doubling the ancestor's number, then add one to that number to identify the mother.

By listing all numbers sequentially, you can prepare an index to your entire pedigree.

If you are using one of the many genealogy software programs they can compose the ahnentafel from the information you key in.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

William John Davies


On November 25, 1896 William John Davies and Sarah Amanda Nowlin were united in marriage. They farmed in the Shelton district in Idaho, their nearest town being Idaho Falls, Idaho.  Mr. Davies was born in Wyoming in 1872 and Mrs. Davies was born in Utah in 1878.  Their were five children born to them in Idaho, Janie, George, Ivan, Glenn and Charlie.

In March 1908, Will decided to sell his farm and come along to Canada along with several other families, brother and sisters of Will and Sarah.  In early March all their belongings, such as machinery, household effects, livestock and, yes, the family, were loaded onto a train and headed out for Canada.

However, upon arriving in Great Falls, Montana, they found all their livestock had to go through inspection and had to be put through disinfection, so there was a delay of several days.

All the women, with the children, went to a hotel.  There were five or six women and somewhere around eighteen children in one hotel, so the children had a hilarious time, lots of noise and excitement with lots of mad patrons in the hotel.

One man was so mad because George Davies and Leland Nowlin knocked on this door; he opened the door and said he would kill them if they didn’t stop, so they went out on the street looking for a policeman.  While they were looking they ran into Charles Nowlin’s family, who had left a few days later and were looking for the group. They returned to the hotel with the boys.

In a few days however, it was discovered that Charlie Davies, seven months and Harold Nowlin, four months, had chicken pox. The babies were wrapped in their shawls, and all the women and children left for Claresholm by train with Jabus Nowlin, as leader and protector.

Upon arriving in Claresholm, the group was met by a brother of Sarah and Ernest Nowlin, from Carmangay, so the two men with the women and eighteen children marched from the station to the Wilton Hotel, with all who were able, carrying bags, suitcases, etc. As we went along the street, we heard people say, “There goes a bishop and his family”

To be continued . . ..



Friday, September 23, 2011

Thomas Fowler ---- Handcart Pioneer

My paternal great-great grandfather...

Emigration - Thomas Fowler was on the very first Perpetual Emigration Handcart Company (the Edmund Ellsworth .Co. of 1856).
He responded to the following call from the First Presidency of the LDS Church to "Come to Zion" from Worcestershire, England.  He submitted his one pound note as a deposit to the Church Elders (which her received back once arriving in the Utah Territory), and signed on the sailing ship "Enoch Train".

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Thomas Fowler - my great, great-grandfather

Father: Samuel Fowler (12 March 1813 - 24 Dec 1893)
Mother: Ann Linton (21 Jun 1811 -  30 June 1891)

Individual Facts -
Birth - 28 May 1837 in Droitwich, Worcestershire, England
Baptism - 11 May 1853 in Droitwich, Worcestershire, England (age 15)
Emigration - 22 Mar 1856 in Liverpool, England (age 18)
Emigration Ship - 5 May 1856 in Enoch Train (age 18)
Pioneer Company - 26 Sept 1856 in Edmund Ellsworth company (age 19)
LDS Endow - 7 Aug 1857 in Fort Heriman, Utah (age 20)
Patriarchal Bl - 12 Feb 1858 in Fort Heriman, Utah (age 20)
Death - 14 Feb 1901 in Lehi, (Utah). Utah (age 63)
Burial - 16 Feb 1901 in Lehi, Utah County, Utah (age 63)
Obituary - 16 Feb 1901 in Deseret News, Salt Lake City, Utah (age 63)

Occupation - Law Enforcement (1871 to 1900)
Description - Medium sized build with dark hair and a large handlebar mustache most of his life.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

George Davies --- by Caroline Davies


This was page 405 of an unidentified book.  I only have a copy of this page.  But since my grandma wrote it, I have to include it, even without the source.

The George Davies family came to Carmangay district in April, 1928.  We had two daughters, Shirley Maxine, two years old, and Glenna Elaine, three months. We bought the Stanley Robinson farm of three quarters, seven and one-half miles west and south of Carmangay. It was a real struggle the first few years -- so much wind and the soil was so light, so had lots of soil drifting and I guess that's why they called it the dirty 30's.

1930's tractor
We farmed with horses for a number of years, later we were able to buy another quarter section joining our south quarter from Jack Gillespie. We were able to sell our horses (although many tears were shed) for a second-hand tractor and later a Johnson blade and that was the answer to soil drifting.

Russian thistle



Grasshoppers were terrible for a number of years and took so much of our time spreading bait. Russian thistles were also a menace and we used to burn them in the spring.
grasshopper

We had to haul out drinking water in a stone-boat in barrels, baling it by hand for our own use and the livestock, later getting a pump.

gopher
Gophers were plentiful too -- the municipality offered one cent a tail so we bought traps and I trapped for days.  Earl Blaine was teaching school at Prairieville and boarded at our place -- he used to shoot the gophers and let me have their tails.  I made $7.50  -- so that was quiet something!

We took in the Christmas concerts at all schools for miles around and also went over to the Starline every two weeks to dance to Mackie Russell's orchestra.  We didn't have a babysitter those days so we took the girls tucked in the bottom of the buggy.

Glenna went to Burwash School when she was five years old to help keep the school open as they needed six pupils.  Miss Hazel McAllister was the teacher.  Pupils at that time were Pearl Russel, Eileen and Phyllis  Simmons, Helen Anderson, Shirley and Glenna. After the school closed the girls went to Ryckman.  Josie Hubka was teacher. They went to Rykeman for a number of years and then were vanned to Carmangay.

During the country school days dances were held in one school or the other every week, and those were the best times ever.  Everyone was welcome. Ladies brought lunch and everyone enjoyed themselves.  We had the best stampedes at Carmangay for years and people came from many miles away. Agricultural Fairs were an annual event, also Bobbie Burns concerts.

coal bucket
On January 31, 1939 our only son, Murray George came to our house and our family was complete.  We hauled coal from east of Carmangay and Champion as we had only coal stoves and furnaces.  What a treat when we could finally afford a wind-charger, 32 volt electric plant.  We got plenty of wind and could really enjoy some of the comforts of living.  Had my first power washer when I was 46 years old. Later we got Calgary Power. First telephone June 4, 1945.