Wednesday, August 28, 2024

August 2024 Newsletter

 We are dedicated to helping the DIY genealogists and family historians. Each of our podcasts have an associated blog post article. Matter of fact, even our YouTube channels have associated podcast episodes. Just subscribe to our one stop Genealogy Reference Guide (linktr.ee/hittinthebricks) for both the podcast and a3genealogy associated articles.

Get Started with This Free ancestryDNA Kit 
We are gifting an ancestryDNA kit for one lucky September "suggestion/feedback" giver. All entries must be submitted by 30 Sep 2024Free? Yes, the Feedback and Suggestions Campaign


Or You Can Use this Link to Purchase. AncestryDNA $39


The Woman Citizen
The Woman Citizen was one of the most influential of the American women’s suffrage periodical. UC Berkeley Library owns some print copies of both periodicals, and most of the issues of both publications are available online via the HathiTrust.

Underutilized Research Records
 Did You Know....?
There Were Laws Just For Women?
Use these laws to further your family research.
We know our female ancestors are hard to trace. But, on the otherhand, they can be our biggest clue to solving a family brickwall. They may have unexpected document that connects a couple generations.

                     Read
Our Ancestor's Love Cost Them Their Citizenship
5 Tips Using Misogynistic Laws to Solve Brickwalls


Where to find posted how-to articles?


We give you choices. We do suggest you bookmark, follow or subscribe to your preferred method.

1) All of our how-to articles since 2008 can be found on our a3Genealogy site.
2) If you are only looking for the longer explanation and cast studies for our podcast, just go to our Hittin' Bricks with Kathleen tab.
3) If you want everything written on a topic, either cleak on the tabs in gray, or there's a search bar in the upper left-hand corner. Just type in your topic or keyword (i.e. Civil War, that we narrow down all the titles that are under Military/NARA).

August Highlights
It was all about your ancestors' athletic dreams - high school to Olympian. We grabbed the popcorn and glued ourselves to the Olympic Games in Paris
26 Jul - 11 Aug 2024. It also raised family questions. Was Grandpa really that good at downhill skiing? Where's the scrapbook that we used to go through at Grannies' house? Were those families stories inflated? How can I research these ancestors? 

Check out these:

Article: Need step by step tips? Here's the accompanying article:              

Under the Umbrella

 Looking for a One Stop Shop? linktr.ee/hittinthebricks

Have You Watched the HTB YouTube 1 Minute Shorts?
Help our Fund Grow: tracingancestors.org
Donate Here: Zeffy for Hittin' The Bricks with Kathleen by TracingAncestors                                                       
Kathleen Brandt & The Board of Tracing Ancestors    

Monday, August 19, 2024

6 Tips to Tracing Athletic Ancestors

High School Athletes to Olympian Hopefuls
Our ancestors who trained or were able to compete in the Olympics must be able celebrated. We must be able to trace them. In 1900 and 1904 we know the Modern Games were up and running. It is in the 1900 Paris games that the first modern female athletes were  featured. We know a lot about the Olympics, but I'm always shocked at what we don't know.  In 2022, I followed a young man, Arthur Strom, my client's father. Arthur was a dowhill skier, and well known in Washington, for his skills. He had his goal set on the Olympic tryouts in 1939. Keep in mind though that the Olympics Games were cancelled in Summer Games of 1916 (WWI); Summer and Winter Games of 1940 and Summer Games of 1944 due to  WWII (1939 - 1945).

Even though our Arthur was unable to compete in the Olympics, I learned a lot about the sport, the person, and the perserverance and challenges that comes with that winter Olympics. Plus, the a3Genealogy team was able to create a scrapbook for Arthur and his athleticism.

I say start with the genealogical impact of Olympic athletes. These athletes were someone's ancestors or DNA cousins. So, let's put this all into a historical-genealogical context. How can you learn more? Was your ancestor exposed to competition in their upbringing? What and who inspired them. These are just some of my questionsWe know the ancient Olympic games were part of a religious festival to honor the Greek god Zeus, and originally competitors were limited to freeborn Greek men and boys. That is not the Modern Olympics of today. 

The Folklore 
The family stories always begin the same. Grandpa bragged and repeated the stories told from his grandma, but someone in the early 1900's was in the Olympics. Or, they would have made the Olympics, but WWII clouded their future, like that of Art Strom (above).  The story may differ, but there was always a stumbling block. There's still proof that they did train or tryout for the team. 

Cultural. Was there a cultural emphasis on sports in the community; or maybe a beloved community pasttime of a particual sport encouraged players to be inspired to reach Olympic level? Were there cultural restraints? 

They didn't allow women to compete in the women until 1900. But it wasn't quite that simple: Hélène de Pourtalès of Switzerland who was the first woman to compete at the Olympic Game was a member of the 1 to 2 ton winning sailing team. Oh, and Briton Charlotte Cooper is known for being the first winning women's singles tennis competition. Twenty-two women competed at the 1900 Games -  sailing, golf, tennis, and croquet.

But, in as late as 1950's Carol Durand was not able to participate with the Olympic USA Equestrian Team. Did you know equestrian sports has been part of the Summer Olympics since 1900? This year, 2024, 200 riders, and their partnering four-legger, competed in Paris. In case you missed the USA jumping team got a silver in Paris. Durand, from my hometown of Kanas City, Kansas, made the Olympic team, but it was determined shortly after that it was a men's only team. 

1951, Missouri 

   

Black men could not compete until 1904 St Louis Summer Olympics. That year George Coleman Poage, born 1884 in Missouri, but raised in Wisconsin, and trained an graduated from the University of WI. in 1903. 

Economics. Did economics play a part historically in who could participate? I don't know if  Equestrian ttraining and competitions is the most expensive Olympic sport, but the cost of just the care and movability of a one-ton live competition-partner takes me to want to analyze the financial burden. Sure, I know I'm a bit too familiar with equestrian competition, but I did go to a Missouri women's college, Stephens College, that had the unique major of Equestrian Science. My classmates were forever going to England, or abroad, for competitions. When mentioning this over the Thanksgiving table my Freshman year, my father just looked at me side-eyed, and blurted an emphatic "don't even think about it!." That ended the discussion. 

But for athletes like George Poage, whose father died when he was a young boy, and money was rather strapped, how did they train for the Olympics? Were they sponsored? Poage was indeed sponsored by the Milwaukee Athletic Club. Ath this segregated Olympics event, Poage won bronze in the 200yard and 400 yard hurdles. Although Poage died in 1962, never married, no children, but he did have a sister, and an extended family. So we would do genealogy on the family, as always. 

Genetics. Was their athleticism passed down, maybe, genetically as is tossed around with Danny Bukantz, the fencer.

1938, Knoxville TN 

It is said that Danny passed his powerful, precise fencing skills to son. This story is captured in the book written by his son, Closing the Distance, Chasing a Father's Olympic Fencing Legacy. A

Speaking of genetics, I recently learned that studies have been conducted on just this topic.Yes, there is actually such thing as Sports Genomics.  One such study supported that high-altitude adaptations is appers to help distance runners. Although simplistic, another study suggests that certain genetic traits, such as fast-twitch muscle fibers, which are advantageous for explosive sports like sprinting and jumping, are more prevalent in people of West African descent. Hmmm... 

Where to Start Research on Your Athlete?
Now we know Art Strom, Carol Durand, George Poage, and Danny Bukantz  did not just wake up one morning and announce they were on the Olympic team. We want to know more- their childhood, their ancestors, their training, their influences, etc..

  1. Newspapers. These newspaper articles tell the contemporary news.  Great place to get face images, and team pics.  Also they post scores and placement in races and competitions. Was your ancestor always on the best team, or placing in most races?  
  2. State's Athletic Hall of Fame. Lot's was written up on Poage in 1998 when he was elected to the Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame.This is the best place to get team pics.
  3. School/University Year Books
  4. Sports Periodicals and Sports Journals. 
  5. Sports Museums
  6. State Historical Societies




















Research Obstacles


The 1916 World War I Summer Olympic Games were cancelled, as was the 1940 Summer and Winter Games and the 1944 Summer Games. As an Olympian hopeful, Arthur Strom who was training in 1943. was unable to tryout in 1944. But he proudly served his country as a Marine.

Another resource: Tracing College & Professional Athletes

We love feedback.  Feel free to drop us a note. 

Kathleen Brandt
a3Genealogy


Thursday, August 8, 2024

5 Tips Using Misogynistic Laws to Solve Brickwalls


Our Ancestors' Love Cost Them Their Citizenship 
Hannah Smith, born in Pennsylvania in 1897, married 20 Mar 1921. On that day she no longer was American. She was British! You'll see below Herbert was a British immigrant. Hannah automatically was stripped the citizenship of her birth county upon marriage. It was the Law.  


Before seeing red over the 1907 Expatriation Act, a law designed just for USA women, jump with joy. This unfair, misogynistic law gives family researchers more document to identify their proper family line. The best way to use this data is for common names: which Herbert and Mary Smith was yours?

What Was The Expatriation Act?
The Act states that an American woman who married an alien would lose her citizenship and take on her husband’s nationality. If her husband's country did not allow wives to gain derivative citizenship, the previously born American citizen would then become stateless.

But, We Love Paperwork
Whereas, the Expatriation Act of 1907 was a head-scratcher, we love the paperwork generated due to Amendments, Repatration, and law mendments. The further we go back in history, the more common the given and suranmes become. How many John Smith's were there anyway.  The only way to pluck your correct one is to be prepared and hope for a woman that married an immigrant between 1907 - 1930.  

Know there's not one Act, there were Amendments, and other Acts to override the original Amendments and Acts.  This means that once your ancestor was in the system, researchers were given a couple of decades of great genealogical paperwork that others may not have. 

Where to Start?
  1. You've traced your ancestors (parents, grandparents to grandparents) and extended family. 
  2. You pulled census records, vital records, marriage records, dates and locations. You are now ready for the timeframe you are looking for 1907 - 1930 (or before).  Either way it's time to crossfingers and start digging. 
As genealogists, the Expatriation Act of 1907, a law designed just for USA women,  might be the answer to your brickwall. Know that when the law was changed, researchers were given additional document sets to identify their proper family line. Yes, I'm an optimist!

Be patient, just like any other naturalization record research, you may have to research in several relevant courts and maybe even adjacent states. We recently located a 1927 repatriation document for our South Dakota Klein family, in Colorado records.  
 





Take a look at this newspaper article. If your USA born female ancestor married a non-naturalized man, perhaps from Canada, Hungary or any other county, she automatically lost her citizenship.

5 More Opportunities to find a Naturalization Updates?
  1.  IF the husband became naturalized the American born wife could apply to regain her citizenship.
  2. The wife could repatriate IF the marriage was annulled
  3. The wife could repatriate IF divorced from the alien
  4. Or IF she became a widow.
  5. IF the wife was living abroad, she would have to register within one year through an American consul.

What Was the Impact?
 Oroville Daily Register, 6 Oct 1923, Oroville, CA

This citizenship restriction had major impact on Amerian born citizens:
  • Losing their citizenship barred women from certain kinds of employment and made them vulnerable to detention and deportation.
  • Some states, mostly western, allowed women to vote before the 19th Amendment. But American born wives of aliens who attempted to register to vote in those states were no longer allowed to vote until the Act was revised by the Cable Act of 1922. 
    The Cable Act.deserves it's own blog. 
But, American Men Didn't Fear
If an immigrant - alien woman married an American man, through the 1855 Act of Congress, these alien wives were granted automatic citizenship. Even through terminiation of their marriage, these women were able to retain their citizenship.

Where to get more information?

We love feedback.  Feel free to drop us a note. 

Kathleen Brandt
a3Genealogy