The pragmatic side of me has always held to the idea that it
takes much more than mere desire to negotiate the challenges of genealogical
research. What do you do, then, when your heart wants to pursue the trail for
which your head warns, “No way!”
How to put together a research plan when you start with
almost nothing is a challenge, but it is not impossible. Admittedly, a lot of
us have had questions about how to start, judging from the popularity of that
very concept as a subject for genealogical workshops. My own genealogical
society recently completed an all-day seminar, for which that very topic was
selected—and capably presented, incidentally, in case-study format by a Bay Area genealogist and fellow blogger, Janice Sellers.
Listening to presentations on how someone else conquered their search problem is
all well and good. When it comes to doing
it on your own—well, that may turn out to be a different story. And I, as
volunteer lab rat, am willing to bring you along as this hopeless task puts me
through my paces.
Maybe I’ll find something.
Maybe I won’t.
My mission is to transform a handful of dim childhood
memories into a documented trail connecting my godmother, Genia Melnitchenko,
from her last days in New York City in 2004,
back through her post-World War II emigration from her native Marseilles, France,
and all the way to her parents’ generation somewhere within the reaches of the
former Russian Empire.
Only problem: I have no idea what the names of her parents
were.
Considering my dilemma, I took the very unprofessional
approach of logging on to Ancestry.com, clicking on the “Search” tab at the top
of the home page, and entering the only detail I knew for sure: the surname
Melnitchenko.
Hey, what did I have to lose? How many Melnitchenkos from France do you suppose would be in New York City in 1950?
Let me revise that approach…
I realized I had better conjure up even the vaguest memory
of what my godmother’s parents' names might have been. I really struggled with
this. While I could still recall the strong impressions I had when visiting
their apartment in New York—Manhattan,
of course; where else would one take
the train in from Long Island?!—my mind balked
at remembering names.
Could it have been Michael? And Lydia? That sounded reasonable. Of
course, I felt led down a deceptive trail, the more I pored over the search
results I had produced. There were all sorts of Michaels on the list—the passenger
lists seemed to grab me and pull me toward them.
“Click on them. Just one won’t hurt you.”
How very thoroughly unschooled I was behaving! This was
foolishness. How could I possibly find just one man, out of a city of millions
of people?
I clicked at random—“just for fun,” I promised myself—and found
myself awash in a sea of possibilities. There were so many Michael
Melnitchenkos arriving at the port of New York, many of them from France. Which
one would be the right one? How would I even know?
Perhaps his name wasn’t Michael after all, I mused. What if
it were something like Ivanivitch? That sounded like a bona fide Russian
possibility. I clicked on that one, and came face to face with a Russian sailor
working on the Hirondelle—although not, apparently, the S.S. Hirondelle which
was torpedoed in 1917. This Melnitchenko, serving as a “fireman,” sailed with
the crew from Marseilles, arriving in New York on April 6,
1924. He gave his age as twenty seven, putting his year of birth about 1897—a reasonable
age for someone whose daughter also happened to be born in 1924.
I kept poking through the passenger lists on Ancestry.com. I
am so prone to pursuits down rabbit trails. Michael? Ivanivitch? It didn’t
really matter. I was in search and rescue mode. I wanted to look at everything.
I needed to find them.
And then, I found something: a listing for a fourteen year
old “Eugenie” Melnitchenko, traveling to New York
on the Georgic from Southampton,
England, in
1938. Remembering what I had recently learned about that French name, Eugenie,
I grabbed the listing and opened it up.
The passenger list showed a group of aliens—almost all of
them of Russian heritage and, with the exception of the one listed as “stage
manager,” billing themselves as “artist”—traveling from London
to “Metropolitan Opera Co.,” their destination in New York.
You lead a charmed life, my friend.
ReplyDeleteBut no, my friend. This could happen to anyone. After all, with a surname like that...
DeleteI have found it really pays off double to be extra organized and keep the best track of what I specifically I have looked for... With three last names and possibly 2-3 first names, plus "theater names" and nicknames - the discipline is keeping track of what "rabbit holes" you already went in to!
ReplyDeleteRussian names make my head spin.... When I read Russian novels Have to substitute ordinary names like "Mike" when I see something like "Victor Ippolitovich Komarovsky" (from Doctor Zhivago), this helps me read the story but isn't a good habit doing family research!
Deletehttp://www.randolphcollege.edu/x14062.xml has a photo of her (about 3/4 of the way down) - she was a strikingly beautiful woman.
ReplyDeleteShe is on the cover of a magazine here:
http://exguyparis.tumblr.com/ (about 1/5 of the way down on the left)
Yes, Iggy, I see you found that photo. The other dancer in that black and white shot was the famed Nureyev in his much younger years.
DeleteThanks for sending the link to that other blog. Fascinating collection of photos. I got lost scrolling through them all! Spotted a photo of the dancer who founded the ballet school I attended, too! Interesting!
Way cool photos that Iggy found! You are so lucky when I just madly click on names I find nothing! You rock! :)
ReplyDeleteYes! Wasn't that fascinating? I think I got lost scrolling through all those photos for about an hour...
Delete