Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Susan's Story

 


Susan Gallyon Dechant, president of the Northeast Washington Genealogical Society, does have a beautiful smile but she was not smiling when she gave a thoughtful presentation to her group on Wednesday, November 12.

Susan knew that her father, Charles Gallyon, had served in WWII in the Army's10th Mountain Division but not much more. Upon her brother's death, Susan inherited their father's trunk containing treasures. These included artifacts, photos, notebooks and some 400 letters he'd written to Susan's mother during his service years.

The 10th Mountain trained in the high mountains of Colorado for nearly two years before being sent to Italy in 1944. Their mission was to wipe the German presence from northern Italy. It was winter; the terrain mountainous...just what they'd trained for. And they succeeded. AND Susan's father lived to return home.

Susan tearfully recalled reading the letter dated May 1, 1945, telling his wife what he had been doing in the war ....... that very day Susan was being born in far away California. 

In September, 2025, to mark the 80th anniversary of the 10th Mountain's success in Italy, Susan, her two sisters, and Lora Rose (another member of the NeWGS group whose father was also attached to the 10th Mountain) went on the anniversary tour. They tearfully walked the very places where their fathers walked. To their amazement, they were feted every day of the trip by the Italian people still in thankfulness for their liberation some 80 years previously. 

Why share Susan's story? To remind you that every family has family stories! Every grandfather did something to be remembered for. And it's up to us, you and me, to ferret out those stories and tell them. 

Friday, November 21, 2025

Mudlarking

 


Don't recall how I discovered mudlarking, but once I watched a few of Nicola White's mudlarking adventures walking the foreshore of the River Thames in London, I was hooked. London has been there for 400 years and as it sites where the tide sloshes the shores twice daily, Nicola (and many others) find all sorts of treasures, from old to new from valuable to silly.

Google defines mudlarking as "the activity of scavenging the muddy foreshore of a river, most famously the River Thames, for historical objects that have been lost or discarded over centuries.

Hers is not the only YouTube website for this type of adventure. Briefly there was Below the Plains, where the fellow would (with permission) dig into old outhouse pits and find hundreds of old bottles and other artifacts. 


And there are other good places to watch while eating lunch. SiFinds is one; Adventure Archaeology is another (they walk the banks of rivers in the US south); Bottle Fever is one. And if your interest is piqued, I'm sure you'll find others. 

Remember: these mudlarkers of any ilk are finding the artifacts from our ancestors' lives. 



Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Washington Place Names


There are so many itty-bitty places in our state that I'd never heard of or could pinpoint where they were on a map. How about you?

Venersborg, Clark County. This community was established in 1909 by the Swedish Land Co. on land owned by a farmer named Vener. 

Venice, Kitsap County. Known as Venice Landing, site of the longest wharf on Puget Sound (780') circa 1908, this Bainbridge Island community is the namesake of California's once artificially canaled copy of the Italian city.

Veradale, Spokane County. Namesake of Vera McDonald whose father helped plat the district in 1911. First named Vera but changed to Veradale in 1923.

Victor, Mason County. Source of the name was selected in 1892 when ships delivered mail to the "pigeon hole" post office house in the community's general store is unknown. This tiny community is near Belfair. 

Viti Rocks, Whatcom County. Names by Wilkes for Viti Levu, one of the Fiji Islands that was the home of a cannibal the expedition took prisoner and brought to the Pacific Northwest. 

Vega, Pierce County. Community on Anderson Island derived its name from Vegatorp, Sweden, home town of the first postmaster.

Friday, November 14, 2025

Stolen History

 


In September, two historic bridge marker plaques were pried loose and offered for sale on Facebook. Luckily, both plaques were recovered and returned to the Spokane Streets Department for re-placing on the Latah Bridge and Marne Bridge.

This sad occurrence got me to ask the question, "How many other historic markers, specifically tombstones, have been stolen?" BOY!

May 21, 2012, story on a Memphis, Tennessee, TV station: "A Memphis man was shocked to find more than one dozen tombstones in his backyard when he was clearing the area for landscaping. He said, "They were all buried in the dirt." Now he's on a mission to find the families to which the tombstones belong.

August 15, 2025, Girard, Kansas, story on a local TV station: "A routine event for the Crawford County Sheriff's Office turned into an amateur archaeology project this week when the department recovered a stolen pickup truck. In the bed of the truck they found a worn, broken headstone belonging to a gravesite. Time and exposure left the headstone difficult to read but it marked the grave of an unnamed infant and gave the simple epitaph: "Daughter of J.M. & ?? Johnson, born March 20 187?.  (?? means illegible). So sad.

August 30, 2025, Woodlawn Celestial Gardens, Compton, California: "Thieves took and damaged more than a dozen headstones from a historic cemetery in Compton...... one of the oldest and most historic cemeteries in the area. Celestina Bishop, the owner of the cemetery, said she believes the thieves took the headstones for the bronze and copper plaques. "It's just sickening!" Bishop mourned.

Googling for bits for this post, there were hundreds! Going back years! So, so sad. Let's hope our ancestors' cemeteries, wherever they are, are safe. 

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Home Life in Colonial Days: Female Servants

 


Would you have qualified to be a housekeeper in 1780 in Pennsylvania? This ad was placed in the Pennsylvania Packet on 23 September 1780:


"Wanted at a Seat about half a day's journey from Philadelphia, on which are good improvements and domestics, A single Woman of unsullied Reputation, an affable, cheerful, active and amicable disposition; cleanly, industrious, perfectly qualified to direct and manage the female concerns of country business as raising small stock, dairying, marketing, combing, carding, spinning, knitting, sewing, pickling, preserving, etc, and occasionally to instruct two young Ladies in those Branches of Oeconomy, *, who, with their father, compose the Family. Such a person will be treated with respect and esteem and meet with every encouragement due to such a character."  (* Oeconomy: the practice of mangaing the economic and moral resources of the household for the maintenance of good order." 

Or how about this diary entry written by Abigail Foote in 1775 in Connecticut. She set down her daily work and the entries run like this:

"Fix'd gown for Prude,--Mend Mother's Riding-Hood,--Spun short thread, -- Fix'd two gowns for Welsh's girls,--Carded tow,--Spun linen,--Worked on Cheesebasket,-- Hatchel'd flax with Hannah, we did 51 lbs apiece,-- Pleated and ironed,--Read a Sermon of Doddridge's, -- Spooled a piece, -- Milked the cows, -- Spun lines, did 50 knots, -- Made a Broom of Guinea wheat straw, -- Spun thread to whiten, -- Set a Red dye,-- Had two Scholars from Mrs. Taylor's,-- I carded two pounds of whole wool and felt Nationly (sic),-- Spun harness twine,-- Scoured the pewter."  

Dear Abigail also told of washing, cooking, knitting, weeding the garden, picking geese, dipping candles and making soap. AND she had time to visit friends!

(Donna: And these were the good old days???)

Friday, November 7, 2025

"Home Life in Colonial Days: Wigs"

 


Home Life in Colonial Days, by Alice Morse Earle, 1974,  is a book I keep on my genealogy shelf and refer back to often. Such interesting information about our ancestors!

Take the subject of wigs for men. Author Earle waxes poetically about this fashion:

"There was one fashion which lasted for a century which was so untidy, so uncomfortable, so costly and so ridiculous that we can only wonder that it was endured for a single season.... I mean wig-wearing by men. The first colonists wore their own natural hair. The Cavaliers had long and perfumed love-locks; and though the Puritans had been called Roundheads, their hair waves, also, over the collar and often hung over the shoulder. The Quakers, also, wore long locks, as the lovely portrait of William Penn shows. But by 1675 wigs had become common enough to be denounced by the Massachusetts government and to be preached against by many ministers while other ministers proudly wore them.

Wigs were called horrid bushes of vanity and hundreds of other disparaging names which seemed to make them more popular. They varied from years to year; sometimes they swelled out at the sides or rose in great puffs or turned under in heavy rolls or hung in braids and curls and pigtails. They were made of human hair, calves' and cows' tails, of thread, silk and mohair. They had scores of silly and meaningless names such as "grave full-bottom," or "giddy feather-top." 

They were bound and braided with pink, green, red and purple ribbons and sometimes all these colors on one wig. They were very heavy and very hot and very expensive, often costing what would be equal to a $100 today. The care of them was a great item, often ten pounds a year for a single wig and some gentlemen owned eight or ten wigs! Even children wore wigs!

After wigs had become unfashionable the natural hair was powdered and was tied in a queue in the back. This was an untidy, troublesome fashion which ruined the clothes for the hair was soaked with oil or pomatum to make the powder stick." 



Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Family Tree Magazine, Best Bet!

 

 
 
FamilyTree Magazine is my go-to-tutorial these days for holding-in-my-hands genealogy learning. I like "real" books; I like "real" magazines. If you do too, FT is for you!

For example, in the July-August 2025 issue there were articles on these topics:

  • Ancestry.com has a digitized book collection! This includes local histories, directories, memoirs and more. Click to www.ancestry.com/search/collections/catalog and then search by title or keyword. (This is NOT a link; copy and paste it.) 

  • Annual list of 101 Best Genealogy Websites; marked if free or pay and whether first time on the list or was on previous lists. What a glorious guide!

  • "Signs of Life" was an article offering to "re-energize your efforts for strategies to access vital records."

  • I've read where most men in the late 19th century belonged to a Masonic lodge. Our ancestors were joiners and not just for the comradeship but for financial support to each others' families in times of trouble. So likely YOUR ancestor belonged to some fraternal organization. This article lists the basics of searching for such records.

  • Sunny Jane Morton is a regular (and top notch!) contributor to Family Tree Magazine. Her article in this issue on how to really evaluate and use the millions of new records' hints that are appearing on the major genealogy websites all the time. She offers 12 good tips on understanding this resource. 

  • DNA Ethnicity Estimates. This was the back page article by DNA expert, Diahan Southard. The submitted question was "why do my DNA ethnicity estimates keep changing?" How come last year my test showed I was 25% Swedish and this year it says I'm only 15%? What gives? Diahan wrote: "Think of it like this: When trying to match a paint color, you'll have a harder time with just THREE paint swatches than if you had 300. That's exactly what's happening with DNA testing. DNA testing companies are constantly expanding their reference panels (their paint swatches, if you will) to give you more accurate results."