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Discovering your family's history and legacy is both exciting and time-consuming. Dancestors Genealogy focuses on the time-consuming parts so you can focus on the exciting part! We help you make sense of your disorganized boxes of family photos. By bringing them to life, we help you understand the story of how your family came to be what it is today. We also provide extensive research as it applies to your family's history, ancestry, and archives. Through this information, we'll develop an exquisite Narrative Family Legacy book. Are you looking for more insight into your family?
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Posted at 15:02h
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Newsletter
THE QUAKER ANTI-SLAVERY MIGRATION FROM THE SOUTHEAST TO THE NORTHWEST
John Woolman (1720-1772) was an American merchant, tailor, journalist, Quaker preacher, and early abolitionist during the colonial era. Based in Mount Holly, near Philadelphia, he traveled through the American frontier to preach Quaker beliefs and advocate against slavery and the slave trade, cruelty to animals, economic injustices and oppression, and conscription.
Beginning in 1755, with the outbreak of the French and Indian War, Woolman urged tax resistance to deny support to the colonial military. In 1772, Woolman traveled to England, where he encouraged Quakers to support the abolition of slavery.
Woolman published numerous...
Posted at 13:10h
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Newsletter
MOTORING ON MICHIGAN HIGHWAY 185 IS IMPOSSIBLE
Out of more than 4 million miles of public streets in the United States, there’s an 8.2-mile stretch of road on Mackinac Island that stands apart. M-185 is the only state highway in the country where motor vehicles are not allowed.
Instead, the traffic on Mackinac Island consists of pedestrians, bicyclists and horse-drawn carriages.
Horses first arrived on Mackinac Island around 1780 when the British used them to haul parts of Fort Michilimackinac from the mainland near present-day Mackinaw City over the ice to the island.
By the mid-1800s, Mackinac Island was evolving into a tourist destination...
Posted at 23:35h
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Newsletter
HAVE YOU EVER GONE CEMETERY HUNTING?
Yes, it is part of Genealogy. I had come across a comment in an old newsletter saying that my 3rd Great-Grandfather, Gilbreath Falls Neill, was buried in the Neill Cemetery across the railroad tracks in Beech Bluff, TN. So, in about 2013, I was in Jackson, TN, for business, and I drove down to Beech Bluff.
I checked around and asked some folks about the cemetery, and I was referred to old cemeteries, but no one seemed to know about a cemetery near the tracks, which were long gone, and there was just a railbed.
I went...
Posted at 10:32h
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Newsletter
THE ROSE OF LONG ISLAND AND HER HERITAGE
Julia Gardiner was the daughter of David Gardiner, a landowner and New York State senator (1824–1828), and Juliana MacLachlan Gardiner.
The Gardiners had a prestigious heritage, were a wealthy and influential family, and she was taught to value social class and advantageous marriages.
She was educated at home until she was 16 years old. Julia then attended the Chagaray Institute in New York, where she studied music, French literature, ancient history, arithmetic, and composition. She was raised as a Presbyterian.
As a young woman, Gardiner was a budding socialite who closely followed fashion trends and courted...
Posted at 13:34h
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Newsletter
COULD YOU GET A PENSION FOR YOUR DESCENDANTS IF YOU HAD A JOB WITH NO SALARY?
The answer is yes if you are a former First Lady. The president's wife receives no salary, but they can receive a pension.
I became aware of first ladies' pensions when we visited Sherwood Forest. The former first lady Julia Gardiner Tyler, known as the "Rose of Long Island", at 22, married 52-year-old President John Tyler as his second wife and was the first to broach the subject. Tyler served as president from 1841-1845. Julia was known as a grand hostess in the Washington social scene....
Posted at 14:47h
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Newsletter
ANCESTRY- THE HOLLYWOOD VAMPIRE
Ancestry, The Hollywood Vampire. The Richmond Vampire (locally called the Hollywood Vampire) is a recent urban legend from Richmond, Virginia. Richmond residents claim that the mausoleum of W. W. Pool (Dated 1913) in Hollywood Cemetery holds the remains of a vampire. Supposedly, Pool was run out of England in the 19th century for being a vampire. Oral legends to this effect were circulating by the 1960s. They may be influenced by the tomb's architecture, which has Masonic and ancient Egyptian elements, and double W's look like fangs. Because this cemetery is adjacent to Virginia Commonwealth University, the...
Posted at 21:42h
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Newsletter
5 MILLION PEOPLE LIVE IN IRELAND. THERE ARE 39 MILLION AMERICANS OF IRISH DESCENT WHO ARE INTERESTED IN GENEALOGY
You can imagine the demand to discover Irish records for genealogy purposes; however, Ireland is one of the most challenging first-world countries to find information. Here is one of the reasons why and how it may get easier.
In June 1922, the opening battle of Ireland's civil war destroyed one of Europe's great archives in a historic calamity that reduced seven centuries of documents and manuscripts to ash and dust.
Once the envy of scholars worldwide, the Public Record Office at the Four Courts...
Posted at 15:09h
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Newsletter
BEFORE THERE WAS WOKE THERE WAS WIDE AWAKE, ARE THEY PART OF YOUR ROOTS?
The Wide Awakes were a youth organization and later a paramilitary organization cultivated by the Republican Party during the 1860 presidential election in the United States. The organization introduced many to political participation through popular social events, an ethos of competitive fraternity, and even promotional comic books. It proclaimed itself as the newfound voice of younger voters. The structured militant Wide Awakes appealed to a generation profoundly shaken by the partisan instability in the 1850s, offering young northerners a much-needed political identity.
In early March 1860, Abraham Lincoln...
Posted at 11:29h
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Newsletter
THE GRAYBEARDS OF THE CIVIL WAR
In the last edition I mentioned from my family tree, my three- times Great Grandfather, John Van Vliet (pictured) of Brighton, Iowa, enlisted on December 27, 1862, at age 58 in Company H, 37th Iowa Infantry Regiment. The unit was the Graybeard's regiment, as you had to be 45 or older to serve. They mostly guarded prisoners and such.
By enlisting in 1862, he would have left behind his 13-year-old son, my Great-Great Grandfather Luther. When Luther enlisted at age 16, he was a resident of Davenport, Iowa.
On July 13, 1864, in Memphis, TN, John was...
Posted at 10:34h
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Newsletter
THE 14TH AMENDMENT, THE SOUTHERN CLAIMS COMMISSION, AND GENEALOGY
We’ve heard much lately about the 14th amendment and the barring of insurrection officers from serving in the government. It made me take another look at my southern ancestors whose attempts to rejoin the United States as citizens in good standing were well-documented by the Southern Claims Commission.
The Southern Claims Commission (SCC) was an organization of the executive branch of the United States government from 1871 to 1880, created under President Ulysses S. Grant. Its purpose was to allow Union sympathizers who had lived in the Southern states during the American Civil...