Friday, February 7, 2014

My Lithuanian ancestors.

For years I've been researching my Lithuanian ancestors.  I didn't have much information other than that my paternal grandfather's parents came to the America from Lithuania.

My initial search began with my great grandfather Julius Dawson.  I quickly found he had an older brother Peter.  They spelled their names many ways until eventually they all used Dawson.  The most common Lithuanian spelling is Dausinas (for the men) and Dausinaite (for the unmarried women).

So, I've found 2 Dawson brothers:
- Peter Dausinas
- Julius Dausinas

MEMORY BOOK: Julius' eldest son, my Uncle Lawrence, wrote about his family in a Memory Book.  He said, "Aunt Sofia (father's sister) knew all about mushrooms. She had a mean son named Walter."  One of Lawrence's daughters said that Walter used to terrorize Lawrence and his brothers with snakes.

Now I have 3 Dawson siblings:
- Peter Dausinas
- Julius Dausinas
- Sophie Dausinaite

Uncle Lawrence also wrote, "Sofia's husband, Uncle Joe was a quiet man.  He was found dead in a fishing boat of a heart attack."

CHURCH RECORDS: Using Catholic Church Records from Providence of God Church, I searched for Sophie and found Julius had not one, but two sisters, Anna and Josephine (who I assume to be Aunt Sophie). They married two Raczkowski brothers (Frank and John respectively). 

Oh - I'm up to 4 Dawson siblings:
- Peter Dausinas
- Julius Dausinas
- Sophie Dausinaite
- Anna Dausinaite

I found a number of records for Anna Dawson and husband Frank Raczkowski but have never located Josephine and husband John Raczkowski in the Census records.  I did, however, find baptism records for 3 children:
- Joseph b. 1901
- John b. 1902
- Walter b. 1904

Keep in mind that Uncle Lawrence said Sophie's husband was Joe, not John.  For years I've searched Census and other records for Aunt Sophie, Uncle Joe or John, and their mean son Walter without success.

ADDRESS BOOK:  In 2011, Uncle Lawrence's daughters, Doris and Christine, provided me with names of possible cousins listed in their mother's address book. They felt that Walter's last name started with a J, perhaps Janchusky or Janczewski. They said they may have had children: Lottie and Mickey. Although this didn't match the Church records, I searched with this name as well as with children Lottie and Mickey.  No luck.  I searched using first names only. No luck.  Something just wasn't right.

JACKPOT: Earlier this week I came across a 1905 marriage record for Stanislawa Dansinaite and Josef Janconski in Ancestry.com's Cook County Marriage Record.  I think I missed this record in the past because this is yet another spelling of Dausinaite.  Although I've done searches using Soundex and wild cards, Ancestry.com requires a minimum of 3 letters. I've searched for Dau*, Daw*, Doo*, Dou*, etc.  I must not have searched on Dan*.  Or I did and got too many results.

Now I have 5 Dawson siblings:
- Peter Dausinas
- Julius Dausinas
- Sophie Dausinaite
- Anna Dausinaite
- Stanislawa Dausinaite

BACK TO THE CHURCH RECORDS: I took the information from the Cook County record and headed to Familysearch.org to use the browsable Chicago Catholic Church Records.  Bingo.  Here's their marriage record, including parents names. Love these records!!
 
CENSUS: From there I headed to the Census records.  1910 - no luck.  However in 1920, I found a record for:

Joseph Janczewski
- Stella (Stanislawa, I assume)
- Madeline (Mickey?)
- Loretta (Lottie)
- Walter
- Stella

I think this is the correct family but it's not perfect. Then I found the same family in the 1930 Census and all doubt was removed when I saw Stella's brother, Peter Dawson living with them.

Joseph Janczewski
- Stella
- Madeline (Mickey)
- Charlotte (Lottie)
- Stella
- Peter Dawson - listed as Uncle

Peter Dawson is actually Stella's brother, not her uncle. I'm confident of this because her parents names are listed on her Providence of God Church marriage records. Peter is, however, uncle to the children.  This minor incongruity doesn't bother me as my brothers-in-law call me Aunt Lynn out of habit because they call me that for their children's sake.   

Enough for now.  This is a very exciting find for me and was only possible because my cousins, Doris and Christine, shared what they knew.  

Till next time, keep the blue side up ... Lynn

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Free Books & Old Web Sites

Like all genealogists, I love free books.
  • Google Books is tops but  PDFs are not necessarily searchable. If you download a book that isn't, try to find it on Archives.org.
  • Archive.org also has tons of free downloadable books and their PDFs are fully searchable. It's a snap to find a book if you know the title or author.  Note the website is: https://archive.org - NOT .com.
  • Muebooks.com has been popping up as a result when searching with Google for a specific book. The site tells me to insert my name and email and I'll receive a downloadable link.   Furthermore it says that "By submitting, I certify that I agree to the terms and conditions and privacy policy."  However there isn't a link for said terms, conditions, and policy.  Seems a bit fishy to me - how about you?
    I searched for reviews of this site to determine it's safety. It took awhile, but I found one review on Scam Adviser:  From João Sousa.
"The site tried to get my credit card number. Downloader tried to install lots of unwanted crap in a subreptitious [sic] manner. Promised book was not delivered."

If anyone has successfully downloaded from muebooks.com, I'd appreciate your feedback and will post another muebooks.com review. For now, I recommend skipping this site.  [Note: I am willing to pay for an e-copy of the Loudoun County Tithables book I was searching for but haven't found one.]

By the way, Archive.org has more than just books.  It's home to the Wayback Machine.  This site is a lifesaver when you get a dreaded 404 Not Found error, especially for old Rootsweb, GeoCities and AOL Hometown hosted sites.  Just go to Archive.org and put the old URL into the Wayback Machine. 





Want to try it?  Use the following link listed on FamilySearch.org's Loudoun County VA Taxation Wiki.  http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~vafccdar/dar1749.html

If you put the URL in your browser, you would expect it to take you to the Fairfax County DAR's web site which hosted a transcription of  the1749 List of Fairfax County, Virginia Tithables. This DAR site has moved to another domain and as far as I can tell, they no longer host this information.

Instead, put it into The Wayback Machine and it will take you to a snapshot of the old site: here. This snapshot from 2011 is the last one they captured. Earlier snapshots are available and although they may not be necessary in this case, it may be helpful in instances when you want an earlier version of the site.

Till next time, keep the blue side up ... Lynn