Quotidian Genealogy

  • 2010 August Trip - Tooling around the countryside
    Since I was getting to Minnesota on a Sunday when there are no courthouses, libraries, museums, etc., open; I came prepared to visit properties I knew the Van Hoesens owned because of the records on the Bureau of Land Management site.  Since finding the records there, I have obtained the homestead files from the National Archives.

    I could show some photos of the countryside, but I'll probably save that for a photo album later.  Robert C. Van Hoesen (my 3X-great grandfather) had taken out a homestead claim in Pipestone County, MN. His son Byron Wells Van Hoesen (not my ancestor) had taken the adjoining property for his homestead claim. They both proved up after their five years were up by 1885 or 6 or so.  They moved to Rock County very near the Iowa border although right now my only evidence for that is that Byron Wells did get property there through GLO and my 3X great grandmother died in that township in 1889. 

    Here is the house that is on the property that was homesteaded by Robert C. Van Hoesen:

    PipestonehouseNo one was home or answered the door. I was going to ask if they knew anything about the history of the house. Usually it's been obvious that the house was not original, or the property (for my other ancestors) has become a subdivision or an interstate.  This was the first time I wondered if this might be the original house.  I do have measurements from the homestead file, but not so that I could lay my hands on it while on the road.  I doubted that this might be a house from the 1880s until later today I went to the Pioneer Village in Worthington.  Those behind the Pioneer Village have collected many buildings and artifacts related to pioneer life. It is truly fascinating.  Since Worthington was where the land office was located that my ancestors had to visit to put in their homestead claims, it seemed worth the trip to the neighboring Nobels County.   They had a land office building. Some buildings are truly the buildings they claim to be (a town hall, a church, etc.), but the land office building is just an old building housing land office and surveyor artifacts.


    landofficeworthington








    There are lots of other very interesting buildings including three different house types.  One house was that of James Green a pioneer in the area who homesteaded in the 1880s. Just at the same time as my ancestor.  I thought the house very similar in style to the house on my ancestor's property.






    WorthingtonhouseThere are a few little differences.  When I went back to my ancestor's property later in the day hoping to catch the owners, I looked at the foundation more carefully.  it was mostly covered with a foam board, but in one corner of the building, you could see the rotted wood that was very close to the ground and some bricks under it.  The bricks had been added later, I'm sure.   I left a note with contact information explaining why I wanted to talk to them.


  • 2010 August Road Trip- Scrapbook
    scrapbookcoverEmma Lou called this a "scrapbook" and so shall I.  This is the cover:


    The following photos of my ancestors were inside.








    LanyVanBuskirkVanHoesen















    GarretVanHoesen
  • 2010 August Road Trip - Cousins
    ELSPLHOne purpose of this trip was to meet my Van Hoesen cousin Emma Lou who lives in western Iowa just a few miles off I-29.  I've told how I first got in contact with Emma Lou and how she helped me HERE. It was such a pleasure to finally meet her. She is an incredibly bright woman and would be considered such at any age. It's inspiring to see someone of her age use her brain the way she does.

    Emma Lou let me comb through her genealogical files and took me over to the historical society museum where a scrapbook kept by one of her ancestors is kept.  This ancestor was a collateral line for me, but  one never knows what will be found by following the collaterals.

Quotations

I am more and more convinced that man is a dangerous creature and that power, whether vested in many or a few, is ever grasping, and like the grave, cries, \'Give, give.\'

Abigail Adams

Hobbits8

odds 'n' ends of things of interest to me

Home Travel Facebook Foolishness
Facebook Foolishness PDF Print E-mail
Travel
Written by Patti Hobbs   
Monday, 16 March 2009 18:04

This is a very funny article relating the foolishness of Facebook.  I joined facebook because I wanted to keep up with what my kids were doing. I don't do any of the gift giving (such as it is ... meaningless) and snowball throwing.  I do enjoy the occasional thoughtful flair item.

The quizzes are inane. Last night I took one (and I rarely take the quizzes) to find the place I would most like to live.  It came up with Italy, which would be fun, but I did wonder that so many of my personal preferences were not considered.  Even though I wanted a historical spot, I would have preferred an American historical spot.  Right now, I'd love to live in some small New England town with four seasons and within an easy drive to Boston. Of course, Pennsylvania is pretty nice, too, and it's got that great old historical city of Philadelphia, which I found very friendly when I was there in September.  Did you know that Carlisle, Pennsylvania, was considered for  a possible location for the nation's capital? I read that in either Decision in Philadelphia or Founding Brothers.

I think particularly for those who have strongly resisted the urges of Facebook (Eva and Cherie, I'm thinking of you!), you will find much of your own views expressed in the article.  I laughed my head off -- particularly the part about one friend choice of the author's wife.

I'm going to do a Mary Sellers here, and ask if you had a choice of anywhere in the world you wanted to live, where would it be?  And why?

When I was reading the choices, I did have in mind the results of one friend who got Ireland, but I knew she'd picked "nature" and "sitting around drinking in pubs" type responses -- everyone would laugh at me for picking those types of responses. But I'd still like to live in Ireland!

The hat tip for this article goes to Kasey from Gutenberg, but I'm pretty sure she doesn't read my blog.

Comments

avatar Eva Blake
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I think I will continue to abstain from Facebook. My oldest daughter is on and she keeps me posted on her cousins and old friends. My next two are not interested, so I don't really have anyone that I want to keep up with right now.

I waste enough time as it is....
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avatar TeacherPerson
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Oooh, I've got an action named after me. Makes my day, just about.

I'd live in State College. But, if you made me leave State College, I'd probably knock around England for a while if I had sufficient money. Maybe London. But Cambridge was like an English State College, so that was great, too.
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avatar Deanna
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I've enjoyed your recent posts, Patti. The quilt is beautiful, that political article is great and timely, sobering, too.

I'm abstaining quite easily so far from Facebook, but I can find out anything I "need" to know from my kids (whose friends are all real ones, I think). If Victoria or James moves far away, I'll probably join the Facebook crowd. I love the article, though. I just emailed the link to Tim (who has a Facebook account).

The place I'd choose to live has to be here, though a lot of areas in the Pacific Northwest would fit the bill. I do love barren, wild places, but I need city comforts, and even the cities out here are beautiful. And though I was interested in the Old World and wouldn't mind visiting Africa or Australia, I think I'm just part of this part of the planet.
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avatar Grace
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you didn't mention time-wasting?? =P
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avatar Cherie
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Okay, better late than never, right, Patti. I finally made it over here to catch up on your posts and here I find my name as a Facebook abstainer. Gulp. My how the times change. I Facebook now to keep up with my sister, my nieces and aunts, long lost cousins (and I mean decades long lost) and that's about it. I have to say that I've noticed since I've begun Facebooking - with careful time-limitation s, mind you - that I have more to talk about with the folks at church since we all keep each other up on things. Not a bad trade-off. Still like face-to-face the best, and sure find those stupid Facebook applications annoying (!), but all in all, when it's under control, it can be used for good. I think I was being pulled into addiction for about a week in the first month, but being the age I am, well, it was easy to see it and stop it. You make me smile, Patti!

I, too, think Sam's quilt is gorgeous! I know he likes it a lot and I'm sure it has come in handy when the boys' heat croaked this winter. Builds character, right. Ha.

Look forward to seeing you all in June!
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avatar Patti
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I didn't realize I hadn't ever responded to the comments. Thanks everyone. Deanna and Mary, it's good you get to live where you'd most like to live!

Cherie, everything you've said about Facebook has been my feelings also. I did not realize that their heat wasn't working this winter! I'll have to find out more about that.

Yes, see you in June!
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avatar Cherie
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I think Joe said the heat in the bedrooms worked but not the living room heat. And he said the floors are so poorly insulated that the heat from the apartment below seeped up and warmed the boys some - and it was free, which they liked - immensely! Hope I didn't make you worry.
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