How hard is it to find a name like Kusharvska?
When I run across an unusual surname to research—like Aktabowski,
another tidbit in my father’s line—it always impresses me as an easy
accomplishment. Why? Because the oddity of the surname should increase the chances that the
right person will be quickly located.
Silly me. That is only in my mind, where the theoretical
reigns supreme.
In real life? Not so much.
So now that I’ve agreed to take on the mission of locating
Anna Kusharvska—whether potential great grandmother or not—I thought I’d be led
directly to her front door with signed, sealed and delivered documentation in
hand.
As you’ve seen, that isn’t exactly how things turned out.
Not only have I not located any
passenger listings including her name, but I haven’t found any for her supposed
son, Theodore Puhalski. Tracing her daughter, Rose Kober, hasn’t been any more helpful. Yes,
they all reported their country of origin to be Germany. Yes, they all showed up in
census records in Brooklyn,
New York. But how they got there
may well remain a mystery.
The beauty of digitized documents and search engines is that
it allows genealogists to drill down to just the right level, be it census
records or passenger lists, to find the right person. Some of those first
offerings on these wonderful genealogy websites, a few years back, were indeed
amazing in the amount of research struggle they spared us.
There were caveats, however. First among them were technical
issues of indexing: unreadable enumerator handwriting, faded or damaged
documents or other such stumbling blocks. Thinking about that, in retrospect,
makes me wonder whether the “Kusharvska” appearing in the New York City Death Index might have been a poorly-deciphered rendering of an entirely different
name. I won’t know for sure until I receive my own copy of Anna’s
death certificate.
Back at that stage in the development of genealogical search
engines, though places like Ancestry.com or FamilySearch.org were helpful, they
didn’t ace every search request. Sites providing search capabilities for passenger
records at Ellis Island or Clinton
Garden, for instance,
sometimes bordered on frustrating.
That became the niche where Steve Morse’s One Step website
really shone. It could bypass the more inept search engines and get to the core
of the matter quickly. The unfindable became findable through the many One Step
utilities.
So, I thought, why not revisit the One Step site and see if
it could do its traditional magic on the names that had me stumped last week:
Anna Kusharvska and her children, Rose and Theodore.
The only thing I had not banked on was the evolution of the
search capabilities at these other genealogy sites. What used to be the
impressive search prowess of the One Step site may now be par for the course,
compared to the new and improved versions at all our usual places. Ancestry,
for instance, just rolled out their latest updated search form, where
parameters for many variables can be more accurately specified. I found myself
going through the One Step site, performing searches that merely brought me
back to the very same processes I had just completed in the original websites,
nothing more.
Having not experienced any further success in my quest to
locate the immigration records for my paternal grandfather or his mother and
sister, I was exhausted enough to call it quits—at least for now.
But not before performing one last-ditch effort to find something. I decided to take that
unusual Kusharvska surname—including its masculine variant, Kusharvski—and run
it through its paces in various search engines.
I started with Google. Nothing. I tried the newspaper
searches via Genealogy Bank and Old Fulton NY Postcards. No results. I mean
zilch. I tried the name in both Ancestry.com and FamilySearch, without any
other delimiting variables. Surname only. Wide open—but no results.
Oh, I had several hits with the variant Kucharski. But
nothing specific to Kusharvska or Kusharvski.
Which leads me back to the thought: could that surname be
merely the unfortunate result of someone misreading impossible handwriting?
After all, the newspaper report of Anna’s death noted her as having the surname
Kraus—same as all the census records I had found. Could someone have read that
writing wrong? Could it actually be a different name that I should be looking
up?
Whoever Anna, Theodore and Rose might have been—and, though
I don’t know anything else about them, I have good reason to believe they were
all my blood relatives—all I know is that I can’t find any of them prior to the
1905 census, when I found Theodore living in his in-laws’ household in Brooklyn.
Anna and Rose didn’t surface in government records until 1915. And that may be
the best I’ll be able to do in pursuit of my paternal line—until more
documentation shows up, some time in the future.
I hate when I come to that moment of defeated acceptance.
ReplyDeleteAgreed, Wendy. It's so hard to accept that spot. That's why I prefer to think of it as taking a rain check.
DeleteI'll be back. Eventually, something will surface. Sometimes, we have to lay these things to rest...temporarily!
Us OCD types take a long time to get to that "defeated acceptance" but I think I'm nearly there now. :)
ReplyDeleteIt is hard to do...
Delete