Showing posts with label places. Show all posts
Showing posts with label places. Show all posts

Sunday, January 31, 2021

Geography and Family Migration

My Mother's Long Journey to Norfolk, Virginia

On my mother's paternal side, our ancestors almost entirely came to America through New England: New Amsterdam (New York), Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island. 

Our ancestor Nicholas Stillwell came from Holland and was a first settler in Gravesend (on land now known as Coney Island). The Wandells also came from the Netherlands, settling in the Dutch community in New York and building a thriving shipping business on the Hudson River. Jacob Wandell married Catherine Stillwell. My 2X great grandmother, Olivia Wandell, moved westward with her husband Andrew Hall and their children, taking a northern route through Michigan and settling in the Dakota Territory, finally making a home in the Black Hills of South Dakota. 

The original Crawford immigrant, Horace, came to America from Scotland and worked as a millwright in the Geneseo area of New York. His son Calvin followed the shores of Lake Erie westward to Ohio where he joined with the Dillingham family, with them (for safety from Indians) to settle in Indiana. He married Anna Dillingham, and with their children, they moved westward to Missouri and finally settled in Lincoln, Nebraska. Their son, Horace Calvin Crofford (the name had changed spelling by then), went off to seek his fortune in the Black Hills of South Dakota after the Civil War. 

Horace Calvin Crofford met Ada Clemina Hall at Andrew Hall's ranch in the Black Hills during a meeting of ranchers in the area to discuss the problem of the Indian uprising. This was during the time of Wounded Knee and the Ghost Dancers. They married, and had four children, including my grandfather Horace Calvin Crofford Jr.

My mother's maternal side began as a complete mystery. An orphan in Paris, Texas, my grandmother Teresa (nee Ethelyn) knew nothing about her family and had no idea what became of her parents. I have not only discovered the identity of her parents, but was able to trace her ancestry back to the earliest days of our country's history in New England and Virginia. It was certainly shocking to find out that her father's family line came from Virginia, bringing our family's migration story full circle. From New Kent County, the Allens moved to Southside Virginia. They married into the Dozier family, descendants of Leonard Dozier, a French Hugenot. Their Allen descendants moved westward to Kentucky, eventually finding a permanent home in Hancock County, Illinois. 

Teresa's mother's family, the Bosworths, had deep New England roots. Through them we can claim our descendance from the original Mayflower passengers, John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley. Joseph Bucklin Bosworth of Providence, Rhode Island, fought in the War of 1812. He migrated westward through Pennsylvania to settle in Ohio and become an important prophet in the Mormon church directly under Joseph Smith. After a brief missionary stint in the deep South, he returned to Ohio. His son, Orlando Bosworth, moved to Peoria, Illinois, which is adjacent to Hancock County.

Augustus Allen married Eva Bosworth in Illinois. Their only child was a daughter, nee Ethelyn.

About the year she was born, my grandmother's parents moved just across the Mississippi River to Keokuk, Iowa. When she was about seven, they moved to Wichita Kansas, where there was a land boom happening. The family became prosperous, but in just a few short years, the family fell apart. My grandmother was sent to a boarding school in Paris, Texas and her mother was admitted to an insane asylum in Woodward Oklahoma. Her father went on to build a new life for himself in Wichita, but was eventually sent to an asylum himself where he died the very day he was admitted (suicide?). 

My grandmother, by then calling herself Teresa Allen, graduated from nursing school, worked in Oklahoma City, then moved to the Chicago, Illinois area (for reasons yet unknown). She lived in Waukegan and worked at a doctor's office. After WWI, my grandfather, Horace Calvin Crofford, moved in with his mother Ada at her home in Waukegan just down the street from Teresa. Ada had moved there to be near her daughter Miriam after Horace, Sr. died in Missouri. 

Horace and Teresa met and married in 1926. A search for employment during the Depression led them to move to Norfolk, Virginia with their two young children, "Sonny" and Virginia.

My Father's Journey to Norfolk, Virginia

In my father's paternal line, the Zauns and the Wellners came to America from Germany in 1865 (via Philadelphia). John Adam Zaun married Louise Wellner; their son, John Adam married Georgia Powell in Richmond, Virginia. 

I hit a brick wall in my research on the Powell family. Georgia's grandfather George fought in the Civil War and died soon after. The search for the family of his widow, Mary Ellen Stevens, was also a dead end. I am guessing that their origin was European, probably English, but that is just a hunch. 

Georgia's father, Jefferson Powell, married Marie Louise Judd in Richmond, Virginia. Marie Louise had moved to Richmond from New York. The Judd family roots run deep in New England colonial history.  Some of her ancestral lines can be traced back centuries into England's history. 

My father's maternal line also goes deep into colonial history in New England. The Abbotts came from England in the 1800's to build pianos in New York City and New Jersey. George Abbott's mother was the 2nd generation from Ireland. The original immigrant, John Abbott, married into a well-known Revolutionary War patriot family from Rhode Island, the Godfrey family. The Abbotts settled in the Palisades area of New Jersey, just across the river from New York City.

George Abbott married Ida Rene Bryant from Southampton County, Virginia. The Bryants had original land grants in Virginia from the king of England. Eley Bryant married Margaret Cobb, who was also from an old Virginia family. 

Ida Rene's daughter Jacqueline married Ernest Earl Zaun in Richmond, Virginia. Their first child was my father, John Zaun. They moved to Norfolk, Virginia where John later met my mother, Virginia Crofford. 


Monday, May 25, 2015

Places to go, People to see: Virginia

Most of our family in Virginia can be traced back to two areas:  Richmond and Hampton Roads.  My list of locations is far from complete, and the exact properties have yet to be determined.  I am including my questions concerning these locations.  However, these are the places on my genealogy itinerary:

Yorktown

  • Lt. Nicholas Stilwell owned a plantation on the York River "east side of West Creek." He was granted a patent on 200 acres of land, and was a tobacco grower and evaluator. In this capacity, he most certainly knew John Rolfe and his wife, Pocahontas. He was also a leader in the third Ango-Powhatan War, personally capturing Opechancanough. (Most of the male captives were sent to Tangier Island). In 1646, after the Anglo-Powhatan wars, Nicholas abandoned his plantation and and left for Graves End colony on Long Island.
Richmond

  • Henrico County - John Adam Zaun m. Elizabeth Louisa Wellner in 1868, about one year after immigrating from Germany.  How did they end up in Virginia from New York?
  • Brookland, Henrico - Mary Elizabeth Stevens m. George J. Powell from Ireland.  Son, Jefferson Monroe Powell, born 1862
  • Powell home, Henrico (see photo below) - three generations in my direct ancestry:  George J. Powell?, Jefferson Monroe Powell and Marie Louise Judd Powell, Georgia Ella Powell 
  • Tuckahoe, Henrico - George and Ida Rene Abbott, & three daughters Miriam, Audrey, & Jacqueline. 
  • Laurel Reformatory - Ida Rene's son Rawley Butler, inmate.  Ida's stepson Earl Butler worked there as a guard. 
  • Methodist Children's Home, Broad Street - residence of Earl, William, and Rawley Butler after their father's death in 1904.
Where is/was this Powell home located in Henrico County?

Southhampton County/Isle of Wight County

  • Lazarus Cobb, 1764-1829; son John born 1740
  • John Monroe Bryant m. Deborah Joyner 1782; Bailey Bryant born 1787
  • Bailey Bryant m. Dizzy Underwood, 1803; son Jacob B. Bryant born 1804
  • Jacob B. Bryant m. Temperance Owens, 1827; Eley Bryant, born 1829
  • Margaret Cobb m. Eley Bryant, 1858; twin daughters Ida Rene and Addie born 1868

Map of southampton county va
Southhampton County

  • Ridly's Mill Pond - Bailey Bryant in his will left his property "bounded by the Heirs of Amos Stephens and Ridley's Mill Pond" to be sold.  He left his wife the "land formerly owned by Thomas Fitzhugh," to be loaned at her death to Jacob B. Bryant. 
  • John Bryant m. Mary Monroe, 1760; John Monroe Bryant born 1762
  • Joshua Joyner born 1730; daughter Deborah born 1762


Map of isle of wight county
Isle of Wight County
Princess Anne County

  • Land of Promise Plantation, Pungo - Blucher & Addie Fletcher, Margaret Cobb Bryant
  • Princess Anne - Ida Rene Bryant m. ? Williams
  • Princess Anne - Ida Rene Williams (widow) m. William Butler, 1895
  • Norfolk - Ida Rene Butler (widow) m. George Wright Abbott, 1904
  • Norfolk - Addie Blucher (widow), boarder, Ocean View
  • Norfolk - Ernest Earl Zaun, boarder at 10th Street.
  • Norfolk - Ernest Earl Zaun, bookkeeper, Dalton-Bundy Lumber Co. (renamed Randolph-Bundy Inc. in 1985 after bankruptcy reorganization)
  • Norfolk - 35th Street - Earnest & Jacqueline Zaun, John and Gail
  • Norfolk - 37th Street - Horace C. and Teresa Crofford
  • Norfolk - Llewellyn Ave - Horace C. and Teresa Crofford, Sonny & Virginia
  • Norfolk - Newport Ave - Earnest & Jacqueline Zaun, John & Gail
  • Virginia Beach - Earnest Earl & Jacqueline Abbott Zaun, Witchduck Road
  • Virginia Beach - Mayflower Apartments, Jacqueline Zaun


Lynchburg

  • William B. Butler and Ida Rene, at intersection of Cabell and Rivermont.
  • Earl, William, and Rawley Butler - sons of William & Ida (Earl may have been a stepson)
  • Southern Railway - William Butler, engineer
  • Masonic Lodge - William Butler, member
  • Spring Hill Cemetery - William Brown Butler, 1842-1904




Sunday, May 24, 2015

Places to Go, People to See: Westward Ho!

This is a continuation of my genealogy world tour.  From New England, my family traveled westward by way of Ohio (western end of the Connecticut reserve), to Minnesota, Michigan, Dakota Territory and Wyoming, Indiana, Nebraska, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Oklahoma.  All of these places are connected to my mother's maternal and paternal sides - my dad's folks tended to stay in New England or migrate south to Virginia.

OHIO

Copley

    LDS directory of church leaders and members
    josephsmithpapers.org
  • Joseph Bucklin & Lucinda Hopkins Bosworth - farmer, millwright, LDS church high priest; elected one of the first constables.  1819 - (July 15) Citizens of Copley Township met and elected the first officers to govern the newly created area.

Firelands
  • Land given as restitution for Connecticut property burned by the British
  • John and Clarissa Olcott (1st wife) Dillingham
  • John m. Hannah Hickok near present-day Cleveland

Western end of the Connecticut reserve http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firelands#/media/File:Western_Reserve_Including_the_Fire_Lands_1826.jpg
Perry Lake - Jotham Chester and Hila Bradley Judd resided 1840-1850.  Jotham

Middleburg - 1st settler Jared Hickcox, 4th great grandfather on my mother's paternal side (daughter Hannah married John Dillingham - see Liberty, Indiana) - memorial at Hepburn cemetery in Hickcox Park.

INDIANA

Liberty Township

  • Dillingham Settlement founded in 1837 - John and Hannah Dillingham, original settlers
  • Anna Dillingham, teacher, 1st school at Dillingham home
  • Calvin Crofford m. Anna Dillingham (widow of Daniel Lyons)
  • Olcott Dillingham's home & burial ground (John Dillingham grave)

Map

Jackson Township

  • Calvin Crofford, original settler


Valparaiso

  • Horace Calvin Crofford born in 1846


ILLINOIS

Chicago

  • Mercy Hospital - Sisters of Mercy
  • AMBU Engineering Institute - Horace C. Crofford Jr.
  • Sisters of Mercy WWI Veterans Dispensary  In 1921, the Sisters of Mercy took over a World War I Veterans’ Dispensary to offer medical and surgical services to the poor. During the depression, the Mercy Free Dispensary served the jobless until the national economic tragedy forced it to close down. Yet in 1938, the dispensary opened again, providing needed health care services to tens of thousands.
Waukegan

  • Horace and Teresa Crofford - 640 Mill CT and 2000 W. Washington Street 
  • Horace C (Sonny) & Virginia Maude Crofford born at St. Theresa's Hospital
  • Spaulding Elementary School
  • Ada's residence - 214 314 S Sheridan rd

St Theresa's Hospital, Waukegan
Littleton, Hancock Co.

  • Joseph & Lucinda Bosworth, eleven children moved from Copley, Ohio
  • Orlando M. and Eliza Applegate Bosworth , daughter Eva Louise Bosworth
  • Eva Louise m. Augustus D. Allen


MICHIGAN

Detroit area

  • Andrew Hall recruited by the army 1862
  • Andrew reunited with his family here after he returned from the war
  • Jackson Furnace - Andrew worked as a watchman


Marquette

  • Andrew Hall did maintenance work on trains


Ontonagon

  • Minnesota Mine - Andrew Hall was present at the discovery of the largest single mass of copper ever taken from the ground.  He also saw the tools and remains of ancient miners in the area mines (speculation is that these miners came up from Mexico in ancient Mayan times).


DAKOTA TERRITORY

Fargo

  • 1st frame home built by Andrew Hall
  • Red River Valley
  • Grasshopper Plague 1874
  • Andrew Hall built a store and another frame building in nearby Brainerd

Fort Lincoln

  • Ada was teaching school when Custer left for Little Big Horn
  • Ada was friends with Elizabeth Custer
  • Andrew Hall and family traveled the Overland Trail with the army from Fort Lincoln to the Black Hills. Two fellow travelers were killed and scalped by Indians on the way. 

Black Hills

  • Horace C. Crofford came from Lincoln, Nebraska, to search for gold; quartz miner 1880
  • Andrew Hall ranch on the Cheyenne River at Bear Butte Creek near present-day Sturgis
  • Fleur de Lys horse ranch - Percherons and Arabians
  • Horace m. Ada Hall, 1891
  • Horace, Custer County commissioner
  • son, Horace C. Crofford born 1894 at Buffalo Gap
  • Lame Johnny Creek - Horace Sr. killed cattle rancher John Taylor over grazing land, 6 mi. N of Buffalo Gap
  • Messiah Craze - Wounded Knee massacre


WYOMING

Newcastle 

  • Andrew Hall signed over his ranch to daughter Ada.  
  • Horace and Ada raised their family on the ranch.  
  • Ada ran a boardinghouse.  
  • Andrew and Miriam Olivia buried at Greenwood Cemetery.
  • Barnum Brown, paleontologist - discovery site of T. Rex on Crofford ranch.


NEBRASKA

Lincoln

  • Oregon Trail
  • Calvin Crofford received 154 acres of land through the Homestead Act, 1864
  • Grasshopper Plague 1874
MISSOURI

Rochester
  • Calvin & Anna Crofford and family resided here for a year or less, abt 1860..

Polk, Dade County
  • Horace C. Crofford moved to Polk from the Black Hills in 1916 and died that same year
  • burial at Humansville Cemetery
KANSAS

Wichita
  • Augustus, Eva, and Ethelyn Allen, Eliza Applegate moved here by 1900.
  • A.D. Allen Real Estate, 121 E. Douglas Ave.
  • Bureau of Immigration, Douglas Ave.

TEXAS

Paris
  • Teresa (nee Ethelyn) Allen lived at St. Patrick's Academy run by Sisters of Mercy, CA 1900
  • 1st Catholic School in Paris, next to church - 238 Clarksville St., site of 1st St. Joseph Hospital (now a parking lot).  Note: Fire destroyed much of Paris in 1916.
  • Teresa graduated from Paris Sanitarium Training School for Nurses, 1919, 7th graduating class with friend Maud Marshall
  • Evergreen Cemetery, burial site of Mother Teresa Muldoon
San Antonio
  • Sisters of Mercy moved from Paris after St. Joseph's Infirmary closed, CA 1912.

OKLAHOMA


Oklahoma City

  • Teresa Allen lived in a boardinghouse on 11th Street in 1920, with friend & fellow boarder, Maud Marshall.  (a hospital and nursing school are nearby)
Woodward
  • Eva Allen resided in a mental hospital at Old Fort Supply from about 1908-1911.
  • Fort Supply cemetery for hospital inmates - see Eva's gravestone.


Saturday, May 23, 2015

Places to go, people to see: New England

Today I started compiling an itinerary.  It is organized by country, state, then by town, city, or county.  Each location is given a page or two in my journal, and I listed everything in each place and told how it is connected to my family.  If I should travel somewhere listed in my journal, I will know exactly what to see and do, and will be able to tell my family's story there.  It is amazing how many places are linked to both my maternal and paternal ancestors at the same time!

Here are the New England places I have included so far:

Massachusetts

Boston - Roger Williams (paternal) - arrived 1631 from Essex, England on the Lyon
Boston - Richard Lyman (maternal) - arrived 1631 from Essex, England on the Lyon
Plymouth - John Howland, John and Joan Tilley, and Elizabeth Tilley (maternal) arrived on the Mayflower
Boston - William Almy & wife, Elizabeth Audrey Barlowe immigrated from England, 1636
Northhampton & Westhampton - Robert Lyman (maternal) - discovered the first lead mines; "Robert's Hill" and "Robert's Meadow" were named for him.
Boston, Harvard University - Orrin Bishop Judd attended one year.
Boston (from findagrave.com):
"Thomas Dickerman of Dorchester in New England, Taylor" purchased a lot in Boston near the commons area for a tailor shop on August 26, 1656. He died the next year without a will at about 60 years of age. His estate was valued at 150 pounds for land and house in Boston, 47 pounds for house, barn, orchards and land in Dorchester plus moveables such as books, thread, leather, scissors, a sword with belt, and livestock, which totaled 235 pounds. (paternal)
Rehoboth - William Sabin, one of the founders - m. Mary Elizabeth Wright, 1640.  Burial Kickemuit Cemetery.

Rhode Island

Providence
    Roger Williams founded the
    first Baptist church in America.

  • Roger Williams (paternal)  founded Providence after being exiled from the Mass. Bay Colony.  
  • Sabin's Tavern (family of Patience Sabin m. Godfrey - paternal), meeting place of the Sons of Liberty
  • Greene Hold - surgeon John Greene (paternal) purchased land from Miontonomi on the Occupasituxet Bay.  He is buried there in the Spring Green Burial ground.  His son, Major John Greene, sold the property to the Brown family (of Brown University).  The land is now an active archaeological site.  
  • Joseph Bucklin Bosworth (maternal), b. 1790
  • Capt. Samuel Godfrey (paternal), Gaspee Affair 1772 - Providence River; burial St. Johns Cemetery.
  • Timothy Sabin m. Rebekah Ashton, 1744; burial St. Johns Cemetery.
Newport County
  • William Almy & wife, Elizabeth Audrey Barlowe - William was the county assessor for the town of Portsmouth.
Hartford, CT
Founders Monument

Connecticut

Hartford
  • Monument to the founders - Welles (paternal), Bidwell (paternal), Hopkins (maternal), Judd (paternal)
  • Thomas Welles (paternal), founder, 1st Governor
  • Orrin Judd (paternal), Baptist theologian, held various public offices
  • James Bradley (paternal), 1729-1813, burial Oak Hill Cemetery, Southington

New Haven
  • Center Church on the Green - burial place of Eleazer Brown & Sarah Buckley Brown (maternal); Nathaniel Bradley & Ruth Dickerman Bradley; Alice Prichard Bradley (paternal)
  • John Hopkins operated a grist mill built by his father Stephen Hopkins (maternal)
  • Capt. Samuel Hickok m. Mary Hopkins (maternal); burial Bronson Library Park
  • Jemima Bishop M. James Bradley (paternal) of Hartford, 1751
  • James Bishop m. Elizabeth Perkins (paternal), 1725
Wallingford
  • Center Street Cemetery - burial place of Abraham & Sarah Doolittle Hall (maternal)
  • Doolittle Park
Farmington
  • Church of Christ, founded by 7 men, including Deacon Thomas Judd (paternal), 1652
  • Samuel & Hannah Hickok (maternal), members Church of Farmington 1679
  • Church of Christ has 9 handwritten volumes of early church history.
  • http://www.firstchurch1652.org/meetinghousegreen
  • Hila Bradley (paternal) born 1775
  • Elnathan Judd m. Lois Thorpe (paternal), 1758
Middletown
  • Washington Street Cemetery - burial site of Daniel & Thankful Lyman Hall (maternal)


New York

Gravesend
  • Lt. Nicholas Stilwell (maternal) came from Virginia in 1646 to settle on a plantation outside of Graves End.  Leader in Esopus Wars. Friend to Peter Stuyvesant, governor of New Amsterdam.
  • Interesting note:  Graves End was settled by Lady Deborah Moody, the 1st female landowner in America, religious leader/dissenter.  Nicholas had originally left England because of religious persecution.
Manhatten Island, Staten Island
  • Lt. Nicholas Stilwell (maternal) owned land; died on Staten Island.
  • St. Sylvester's Roman Catholic Church - formerly Wandell Memorial Chapel (maternal), bought in 1921 from the destitute Methodist church.  Located on Tangee St., coincidentally not far from the location of the Nicholas Stilwell property.
  • Vintage postcard of St. Sylvester's Church, formerly Wandell Memorial Chapel
Ossining
  • Samuel, Joseph, William Haight (maternal) were tenant farmers on Philipsburgh Manor; purchased the land from the government after the owner was exiled for treason.  
  • Interesting notes:  Deborah Sampson, revolutionary soldier, stayed with William Haight; Clement Moore wrote The Night Before Christmas here; The Legend of Sleepy Hollow was set here.  The Philips manor house is now a tourist attraction in Yonkers.


Brooklyn/Queens
  • Elizabeth MacDonald Judd (paternal), writer for the New York Tribune, born 1822
  • Alexander MacDonald, 1797-1872, buried at Cypress Hills Cemetery, Brooklyn
  • Sadie Wright Abbott (paternal), born 1864
  • Miriam Olivia Wandell (maternal), born 1824
  • Abbott & Son Piano Shop (paternal), 66 Walker Street, 1832
  • R&W Nunns Piano Factory - the four Abbott brothers apprenticed here:
  • Previously the Nunns and Clark factory, Setauket, Long Island.  Photo c1900

  • Orrin Judd, occupation - 6th Avenue Elevated Railroad, 1880 (investor?)

Chittenango - home of the Hall family; Ada Clemina Hall born 1856.
Rochester
  • John Dillingham (maternal), lived in Genessee County before moving to Ohio.
  • Horace Crofford (maternal), Genessee Valley Millwright
  • Note:  the Dillingham and Crofford families unite by marriage a generation later in Indiana.
Burlington - Joseph Bosworth (maternal), abt 1800
Pittsfield - Joseph Bosworth (maternal), early 1800s
Fishkill - Jacob Wandell (maternal), born 1747 m. Catherine Stillwell in 1770
Newburgh - Gen. Washington headquarters, Jacob Wandell (maternal) discharge papers stored there.
Havershaw - Jacob Wandell (maternal), millwright
Iona Island - Jacob & Catherine Wandell (maternal) died on this island in the middle of the Hudson River which had been in the VanCortlandt family for 200 years (was then called Weygant Island; now a part of Bear Mountain State Park).  For some interesting stories, look it up!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iona_Island_%28New_York%29
David's Island - Andrew Hall (maternal) spent six months at the civil war hospital
Auburn - Jacob Wandell was granted the land that is now Auburn.
Hamilton - Colgate University, formerly Madison University and Hamilton Literary and Theological Seminary, alma mater of Orrin Bishop Judd.  He was later a trustee of Colgate, and his descendants have maintained a tradition of attending school there.


New Jersey

Fort Lee
  • Abbott & Sons Piano Factory (paternal), Lemoine Ave, 1872 (building now torn down)
  • Church of the Good Shepherd, Parker Ave. - Abbotts, Bryants (paternal)
  • George Wright Abbott (paternal), born 1882

Newark
  • Robert Lyman (maternal), original proprietor, 1667
  • William & Rebecca Bryant (paternal) moved there from Princess Anne County
  • Charles Bryant (paternal), piano dealer (wife Mariah owned a boardinghouse in Ocean Grove, Monmouth County)
  • Thomas Whitfield m. Betsy Godfrey (paternal) of Providence, RI
Middletown
First Monmouth Baptist Church - founded by Rev. James Ashton (paternal) 1652-1705.

Hackensack
John Abbott (paternal) owned a hotel where his piano factory employees lived.

Pennsylvania

Valley Forge - Jacob Wandell, Quartermaster, obtained shoes for Washington's men.  

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Genetic Memory

New research has shown that it is possible for some information to be inherited biologically through chemical changes that occur in DNAI do not believe in reincarnation, though I have had personal experiences that made me understand why people do believe in it.  Now, I read about studies conducted at Emory University indicating that we inherit memories through our DNA, that we share in the experiences of our ancestors. This would explain a lot!  Chemical changes to our DNA occur when we experience a stressful or traumatic event, and experiments with mice show that these memories are passed down to subsequent generations. Experiences can alter our brains and our behavior, and these traits can be inherited.  Our DNA holds the recorded history of our family!  Natural aversions and instincts, and even phobias can be explained by this biological mechanism. I'm thinking that those mysterious deja vu moments can be explained by this as well.

Deja Vu
deja vu 
When I was about seven years old, my parents and a neighbor took me with them to Colonial Williamsburg. I remember very little about the visit, but one moment struck me so dramatically, I still get goosebumps thinking about it. The grownups were at Raleigh Tavern purchasing ginger cakes from the bakery there. (The smell still has very strong memory associations for me, which may explain why I must bake Raleigh Tavern ginger cakes every Christmas).  Anyway, I walked ahead of them and opened a little white gate leading out to Duke of Gloucester Street.  As I stood in the gateway looking toward the capitol building, an powerful sensation of deja vu came over me, and I have never forgotten it.  At that age, I could not even have known that deja vu was a thing.

Remembering Places I've Never Been
There are certain places that have always greatly interested me for no reason that I could figure - I have never set foot in any of them, but they are on my bucket list for sure:  Long Island and Cape Cod, The Alamo in Texas, and the particular areas of England associated with the legend of King Arthur.  Also, a story that greatly intrigued me as a child was The Boy at the Dike, set in the Netherlands.

Through my genealogy research in the past two years, I have discovered that my ancestors have solid connections with these very places.  It is truly an exciting thing for me, to believe that my inexplicable attraction to these places may be linked to my DNA!  I believe that this phenomenon might explain why some people get so hooked on genealogy once they get started.  It's like finding yourself.