Quotidian Genealogy

  • 2010 August Trip - Tooling around the countryside
    Since I was getting to Minnesota on a Sunday when there are no courthouses, libraries, museums, etc., open; I came prepared to visit properties I knew the Van Hoesens owned because of the records on the Bureau of Land Management site.  Since finding the records there, I have obtained the homestead files from the National Archives.

    I could show some photos of the countryside, but I'll probably save that for a photo album later.  Robert C. Van Hoesen (my 3X-great grandfather) had taken out a homestead claim in Pipestone County, MN. His son Byron Wells Van Hoesen (not my ancestor) had taken the adjoining property for his homestead claim. They both proved up after their five years were up by 1885 or 6 or so.  They moved to Rock County very near the Iowa border although right now my only evidence for that is that Byron Wells did get property there through GLO and my 3X great grandmother died in that township in 1889. 

    Here is the house that is on the property that was homesteaded by Robert C. Van Hoesen:

    PipestonehouseNo one was home or answered the door. I was going to ask if they knew anything about the history of the house. Usually it's been obvious that the house was not original, or the property (for my other ancestors) has become a subdivision or an interstate.  This was the first time I wondered if this might be the original house.  I do have measurements from the homestead file, but not so that I could lay my hands on it while on the road.  I doubted that this might be a house from the 1880s until later today I went to the Pioneer Village in Worthington.  Those behind the Pioneer Village have collected many buildings and artifacts related to pioneer life. It is truly fascinating.  Since Worthington was where the land office was located that my ancestors had to visit to put in their homestead claims, it seemed worth the trip to the neighboring Nobels County.   They had a land office building. Some buildings are truly the buildings they claim to be (a town hall, a church, etc.), but the land office building is just an old building housing land office and surveyor artifacts.


    landofficeworthington








    There are lots of other very interesting buildings including three different house types.  One house was that of James Green a pioneer in the area who homesteaded in the 1880s. Just at the same time as my ancestor.  I thought the house very similar in style to the house on my ancestor's property.






    WorthingtonhouseThere are a few little differences.  When I went back to my ancestor's property later in the day hoping to catch the owners, I looked at the foundation more carefully.  it was mostly covered with a foam board, but in one corner of the building, you could see the rotted wood that was very close to the ground and some bricks under it.  The bricks had been added later, I'm sure.   I left a note with contact information explaining why I wanted to talk to them.


  • 2010 August Road Trip- Scrapbook
    scrapbookcoverEmma Lou called this a "scrapbook" and so shall I.  This is the cover:


    The following photos of my ancestors were inside.








    LanyVanBuskirkVanHoesen















    GarretVanHoesen
  • 2010 August Road Trip - Cousins
    ELSPLHOne purpose of this trip was to meet my Van Hoesen cousin Emma Lou who lives in western Iowa just a few miles off I-29.  I've told how I first got in contact with Emma Lou and how she helped me HERE. It was such a pleasure to finally meet her. She is an incredibly bright woman and would be considered such at any age. It's inspiring to see someone of her age use her brain the way she does.

    Emma Lou let me comb through her genealogical files and took me over to the historical society museum where a scrapbook kept by one of her ancestors is kept.  This ancestor was a collateral line for me, but  one never knows what will be found by following the collaterals.

Quotations

Always vote for principle, though you may vote alone, and you may cherish the sweetest reflection that your vote is never lost.

John Quincy Adams

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odds 'n' ends of things of interest to me

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Summer 2009 PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Patti Hobbs   
Sunday, 02 August 2009 18:43

The summer has just whizzed by. It started out with the Hobbs family flying out to Oregon for Sam's graduation from Gutenberg College. Everyone was able to make it.  I had to be in Birmingham, Alabama, for the Institute for Genealogy and Historical Research on the Sunday following the Friday evening graduation, so we all ended up flying in and out of Portland for the graduation.  Sunday morning saw us all heading in different directions in the airport. Sam was flying to Anchorage, Alaska, for a month-long job working on a fishing boat. Ben headed back to Chicago, Illinois, to drive home to Peoria. Nate and Amy flew back to State College, Pennsylvania.  Jed flew to Boston, Massachusetts, to take a bus back to Maine where he's working this summer for a radio station.  I flew to Birmingham, while Steve and the girls flew back to Kansas City.

After the five days at Samford taking the Advanced Research and Methodology course, I returned home, only to prepare to leave in a week for a two-week research trip en-route to Washington, D.C., where I was signed up for the National Institute for Genealogical Research at the National Archives. (I'll probably write more about these on my genealogy blog.)  By the time I got home, Sam had returned from Alaska for a two-week visit before going back to Eugene, Oregon to live for another year.  Ben came home for the weekend, and then the Nate and Amy came and have spent the better part of a week here.  It's been nice to have them all home, almost all at once.

They all pitched in on two new bookshelves for the genealogy books a wonderfully gracious soul gave to me. Sam and Ben did the construction, and then Sam and Nate did the finishing.

While Ben was home, we had a couple of interesting times. One was at friends' house and if they shared the photos with us, I might be able to do something with them here.  Their boys and our boys rigged up a contraption using a truck with its rear end jacked up backed up to the pond and a tireless rim used to wind up rope that pulled a "skier" across their pond using a sled as the "ski" and an axe handle sans axe head for the handle on the rope.  What made the picture even funnier was  the battery died on the truck, and so another truck had to be brought down to jump start it.  Then the truck overheated and it was necessary to have an external fan blowing on the engine compartment to help with the cooling.

The second interesting thing you can see here.  Click on the first thumbnail to get larger versions. You have to use your imagination to see them in continuous motion as they rotated around each other.


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Happy 20th BIrthday to Jed PDF Print E-mail
Family
Written by Patti Hobbs   
Tuesday, 02 June 2009 22:18

JedHappy 20th birthday to Jed!


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Gingerbread Massacre 2008 PDF Print E-mail
Family
Written by Patti Hobbs   
Saturday, 30 May 2009 14:41

 

Amy's done it again:

 

 


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Happy birthday, Sam! PDF Print E-mail
Family
Written by Patti Hobbs   
Sunday, 26 April 2009 06:59

 

Happy birthday to Sam who is 22 years old today.

samwalkst

sameurope

 

 


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Sam's Quilt PDF Print E-mail
Family
Written by Patti Hobbs   
Friday, 20 February 2009 17:18
quilt 001R
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