I don’t know how life is treating you right now, but here in
California,
we are having what can only be described as perfect Spring days. Hush, you who
want to bring up the obvious—“But we need the rain!”—and just enjoy what we
have now. No sense grumbling about current blessings.
The same seems to go for my online sniveling about missing pages in genealogical books I want to study. There is always a way around a
roadblock, even in family history research.
I’m not exactly sure how to target my gratitude right now,
but I’m certainly glad there are several organizations out there, pursuing the
mammoth project of digitizing a universe of diverse publications. Specifically,
while I tend to prefer the Internet Archive resource, I’m glad there is also an entity known as HathiTrust.
As I suspected the other day, HathiTrust did indeed have the 1911
volume I was looking for: The Tilson Genealogy by Mercer V. Tilson. And thankfully, they hadn’t used the same
source copy to do their scanning. The missing pages 37 and 38 were right
where they belonged.
That means I can read up on the 1714 will of Ephraim Tilson
of Plymouth County, Massachusetts, which detail filled almost
the entire first of the missing pages. Then, I thankfully could continue the
genealogy of the Tilson line with Ephraim’s son Edmund—the next step in the
direct link between the Tilson immigrant Edmond and me.
More importantly, the missing pages detailed Ephraim’s
married life and which of his children belonged to which of his—count them, now—four
wives.
It’s a good thing all that detail was provided—more importantly,
that I was able to find it in a second digital resource—for my direct line
descends from not the first, not the second, not even the third, but the fourth wife, Deborah Caswell. Of her two
children with Edmund Tilson, the oldest—Stephen Tilson, born April 6, 1717—is my
direct line. His entry doesn’t appear until almost the end of page 38—and then
doesn’t reappear until his own family is listed on page 147.
From there, I can easily pick up the narrative with Stephen’s
son William—whose family entry is directly below his father’s—and then to Peleg
Tilson, William’s son. That is my fourth
great grandfather.
It was during those two generations—that of William and
Peleg—that the line moved from Massachusetts
to Virginia, and then ultimately to Tennessee. While that
seems like an extraordinary distance—and one traveled over rough terrain,
undoubtedly—for times such as the mid-1700s, there was an explanation for how
the move came about.
The end result also provides some small details on how the
family came to settle in such a small and seemingly obscure place as Erwin, Tennessee—the
very place where the family remained up to, and even beyond, the time of my
grandfather’s birth and childhood.
Above: 1875 painting by Albert Bierstadt, "California Spring" looks pretty much like the usual springtime view from the foothills east of California's great Central Valley--all except for the clouds, that is, owing to our current drought conditions. Courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Above: 1875 painting by Albert Bierstadt, "California Spring" looks pretty much like the usual springtime view from the foothills east of California's great Central Valley--all except for the clouds, that is, owing to our current drought conditions. Courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Hurray for HathiTrust. Take THAT, WorldCat.
ReplyDeleteSo glad there's more than one way to...um...look up online references.
DeleteSo glad you found it! :)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Far Side. I was rather relieved to have found it. I know there is always the library recourse, but that would have been a day-long trip.
DeleteAh! Excellent news indeed!
ReplyDeleteDefinitely! Those few pages left a big gap in the family picture. Much more helpful to have them back in their places.
Delete