SAR - DancestorsGenealogy.com
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 13:35h
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GENEALOGIST- NOT YOUR GRANDPA'S MARCHING BAND
My wife’s grandfather was a drummer in the Straughn, KS, Concert Band, standing to the left of the drum in the colorized picture below.
My wife inherited the legacy and was in marching band in high school and college. Later in life, she joined the local community orchestra and a traveling “second time around band” that performed in the 2019 Macy’s Parade and the 2021 Dublin, Ireland, St. Patrick’s Day parade. That band has transformed into a traveling symphony and has performed in Germany, Austria, Italy, and will next year perform in Belgium, France, and Germany.
As...
Posted at 12:34h
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ANCESTORS-GRANDPA AND THE GREAT CHAIN
My wife’s 4th Great-Grandfather, Haynes Bartlett, was born in Newburgh, Ulster County, New York, on March 4, 1757, when the village was mostly comprised of rail fences. He learned the blacksmith trade in his early days in Newburg. He lived in Cornwall, Orange County, NY, when he enlisted in the Revolutionary War for five of the seven years, with three terms of enlistment ranging from 1 to 9 months. At one point, he served in the Dragoons. He was in New York City when the British captured it. After returning to Orange County, he helped in...
Posted at 11:16h
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ANCESTRY- FROM EXTORTION TO WASHINGTON'S APPOINTMENT
My 5th Great Grandfather, Joseph Greenway, was baptized on August 4, 1756. He was taxed as a cooper in 1774. He was commissioned as an Ensign on January 20, 1776, for the 1st Pennsylvania battalion, Continental Line. Later that August, he was commissioned as a 3rd lieutenant to serve on the Frigate “Delaware”. In July 1777, he, along with 11 other Lieutenants, were dismissed from the Navy for attempting to extort higher pay and allowances. Before action was taken, the “Delaware” was captured, and the British in Philadelphia imprisoned him along with the rest of...
Posted at 12:49h
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Newsletter
ANCESTRY- ANOTHER COLEMAN'S BROKEN HEART
In the last edition, we covered the death of millionaire industrialist Robert and Coleman and future president James Buchanan’s fiancé Ann Caroline Coleman Ann Coleman
It turns out Coleman had another daughter, Sarah, who is also believed to have committed suicide. Around 1824, William Augustus Muhlenberg (1796-1877) (pictured), co-rector of St. James Episcopal Church in Lancaster, courted Sarah.
Robert Coleman served on the vestry of St. James and had a bitter dispute with Muhlenberg over the latter offering evening worship services. Coleman then banned Muhlenberg from his house. Muhlenberg wrote in his diary, “But for no earthly consideration...
Posted at 12:26h
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HOUSTONS PAY THEIR DEBTS
In several past editions, I wrote about my three times great-grandfather, William Harper Smither. His father, John Smither (pictured), was born on May 27, 1779, in Richmond County, Virginia. He moved to Culpeper County, Virginia, and married Mary Polly Greenway in Chesterfield County, Virginia, on July 18, 1808. He was a Captain in the Virginia Regiment during the War of 1812. He failed in business in Culpeper Co. and then moved in 1824 to Huntingdon, Carroll Co., Tennessee. From there, William Harper moved to Mississippi. John, Mary, and the younger children moved to New Orleans, Louisiana.
In 1839, John...
Posted at 11:54h
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GENEALOGY- MORE ON THE SMITHERS
My Great-Great Grandfather Gabriel Neil Smither served in the Confederate Army. He enlisted at age 17 on March 10, 1862, at Oxford, Mississippi for one year. Less than a month later he reenlisted for three years or the duration of the war. He served with the 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment, Co G. Lamar Rifles (pictured below in Oxford). His regiment was involved in both Confederate excursions into the North with Antietam and Gettysburg.
He participated in Lee's Virginia Peninsula campaign and during 1862 was present at Seven Pines (May 31-June1), Gaine's Farm (June 27th), White Oak Swamp...
Posted at 17:39h
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GENEALOGIST- MORE ON THE SMITHERS OF HUNTSVILLE
In the last edition, I shared my Smither ancestor’s store accounts book, John Smither, which showed Sam Houston’s debts, and that our client, who is Houston’s second cousin five times removed, paid off Sam’s debt.
As a genealogist, I received a copy of the Smither account book from James Patton, the long-time Walker County Clerk, who found the ledger amidst the many stacks of books and papers in his office when my oldest daughter and I stopped by to meet him.
James was ever the gentleman and spent some time chatting about the early days of...
Posted at 08:41h
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GENEALOGY- HEARTBREAK FOR A FUTURE PRESIDENT
We visited the Cornwall Furnace National Monument in central Pennsylvania. There was a personal interest as my wife and my son-in-law’s (they’re tenth cousins) many times Great Uncle Peter Grubb (c.1702—1754), founded the Grubb Family Iron Dynasty in 1737, developed Cornwall Iron Mines and established Cornwall Iron Furnace, together there were one of the largest ironworks in Colonial Pennsylvania. The Cornwall Iron Mines are the largest U.S. iron mines ever discovered east of Lake Superior.
Another early industrialist, Robert Coleman (pictured below), later known as Pennsylvania’s first millionaire, acquired a 1/6 interest in the Cornwall Furnace...
Posted at 13:19h
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ANCESTORS- GIVE ME LIBERTY, OR...
Posted at 13:25h
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ANCESTRY- WILLIAM COOPER, DANIEL BOONE, AND SIR ALEX
Years ago, while researching one of our clients’ ancestors, I came across his sixth great-grandfather, William Cooper. I reported on that in 2021. Included below are some recently discovered excerpts documented by a Scotsman.
William was an Indian Trader who lived amongst the Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Cherokee.
In May 1769, Daniel Boone and General James Robertson (pictured bottom left) first set out for Kentucky from Hillsborough, NC, with William Cooper (Cool) as his guide, when the firm of Cohen & Isaacs hired him to survey lands that eventually formed Kentucky and Tennessee. In...