Old family letters often open up further research
possibilities by introducing us to names and relationships not previously
anticipated. Ella Shields Bean’s letter home to her father in Fresno, California, certainly helped
introduce a few others in her family.
I already had the names and pertinent information on several
of Ella’s siblings, but a look at two resources told me I was still missing
something.
First, in the census after Ella’s father’s passing, I found
Ella’s mother listed as a widow next door to the home of some of her
grandchildren—and their father, Ella’s brother-in-law, along with a wife by a
different name than that of Ella’s sister who had married him. That, alone, tells
me there were some significant changes since the prior census was taken.
The key item in that census—a next-to-impossible page to read in the 1910 census, by the way—was that, even though Ella’s mom was now a
widow, the total number of her children, including those still surviving, was still enumerated
on the record. That number, incidentally, exceeded the count I had on record by
two.
Who were those two?
A lot can happen in a ten year span, and the distance
between 1900 and 1910 held a lot of changes for Ella’s family. I had that funny
feeling that I was missing something when I stumbled upon another helpful
resource—which also demonstrated the importance of not overlooking local
resources.
While the Internet may be the darling of many genealogy
researchers, it just doesn’t serve up every document detail that would help us
flesh out the picture of our families’ lives. On the other hand, local agencies
and organizations dedicated to archiving city or county histories are sometimes
a loosely-organized patchwork of exactly the documents that could help uncover
the answers to our family mysteries.
Connecting the needy researcher and the resource-rich but
digitally isolated local organization can be a challenge. Sometimes, though,
when those organizations create their own website—be it ever so humble—we researchers may then begin to access those far-flung local collections via our computers.
Sometimes, all it takes is a little time and patience with a
Google™ search.
Since I’ve been working on this series regarding the Bean
and Shields families, let’s take this instance of Ella’s siblings. Thanks to
one local collection, I’ve been confronted with names and details that I hadn’t
known about the family previously—stuff that tells me I need to dig deeper.
That collection was referred to online, thanks to the
website of the San Mateo County Genealogical Society. Unfortunately, that
website does not assign separate addresses for each page in their site, so I
can’t provide a specific URL for the page where I found Ella’s family
information. But I can tell you how to navigate the site to find it.
The collection that opened my eyes to the Shields family
information I had missed is called The Schellens Collection. This is a 191
volume manuscript, compiled by one local history enthusiast named Richard
Schellens. This was his lifetime labor of love, a collection of abstractions, newspaper
clippings, photocopies, hand-drawn maps, and many other secondary resources.
The original collection was organized into binders by the Redwood City Archives
Committee.
The only drawback was that the original collection lacked
one thing: an index.
This is where the local organization entered the project. The
San Mateo County Genealogical Society spearheaded the volunteer effort to
create the index for the immense collection. That index is now provided on
their website. You can find it by going to the main website page, looking down
the left margin to the heading, “Library,” then clicking on the entry labeled, “Databases.”
That brings up a new screen on the right. Scroll down that right screen about
mid-page, where it reveals the clickable choice, “Schellens Collection Index.”
That provides an approximate
alphabetical range to help you get started. (I say approximate because I had
to reverse gears and go to the slot labeled “Bar” to obtain my “Bean” entries!)
It was there, in a 1902 entry for Mrs. Leon Bean (that would
be Ella), that I saw the note, “death of David Shields.”
David Shields?
Could that be one of the missing Shields children referred
to in mother Elizabeth
Shields’ 1910 census entry?
To find out, I have a few options. First, I can take that
year and name and try some searches of my own in collections of archived
historic newspapers online. Ancestry.com provides me that option—though the
collection for Fresno
newspapers doesn’t always include the dates I’m seeking, and the search for which Bay Area newspaper also ran the article might get overwhelming.
There are other historic newspaper collections, too—such as a thorough, clickable resource Heather Kuhn Roelker mentioned in her blog, Leaves for Trees, or the list Kenneth Marks rounded up in his recent Google+ Hangout and recapped in his blog, The Ancestor Hunt.
There are other historic newspaper collections, too—such as a thorough, clickable resource Heather Kuhn Roelker mentioned in her blog, Leaves for Trees, or the list Kenneth Marks rounded up in his recent Google+ Hangout and recapped in his blog, The Ancestor Hunt.
In case I don’t want to be so thorough about my online
efforts, I can contact the San Mateo County Genealogical Society. Just like
many other genealogy societies, the San
Mateo organization offers to conduct research for a
reasonable fee, and locating items cited in the Schellens Collection is their
forte.
Then, another option—especially for me, considering the
short distance involved—I can make arrangements with one of the two libraries in which The
Schellens Collection is housed, and go there to do the research, myself.
With the many entries in the collection’s index for the
Bean, Shields, and related families in the Redwood City area, that last option suits me
best.
Just like the San Mateo County group did, hundreds of
other genealogical societies across the country have contributed countless
volunteer hours to collect, organize and house significant items of interest to
local area historians and genealogy researchers. While you may not be pursuing
family history in the northern California county of San Mateo, you likely could have your
own research augmented by material on hand at county organizations such as this
one. Thankfully, many of these societies have an online presence, whether
directly accessed through a website, or indirectly reached through a page on
Facebook or even a blog. Thanks to the capabilities of search engines, it makes
it easier for us to connect with the local societies concerned with the areas our ancestors once called home, and we can repaint that picture and soak up
that ambience through the help of those who call that same place home, now.
Thanks goodness for indexes and the people that volunteer to write them:)
ReplyDeleteIndexing is a lot of work--and can be such drudgery, if taken in large chunks. With the examples we've had lately, of everyone coming together to get the job done, we've done ourselves a great favor in producing a usable resource that will be tapped into over and over again.
DeleteI have made that 1910 Census a bit more readable Jacqi. Send me an email and I'll figure out how to get it to you.
ReplyDeleteGreat news, Peggy! Thanks so much. I'll send you an email.
Delete