Brick Wall Strategies

A genealogical “brick wall” is when you hit a barrier with a specific ancestor, and are not able to trace back farther than that individual. Brick Walls are frustrating and often rage-inducing. Sometimes, they are completely impenetrable (although DNA research may help where traditional genealogy cannot), but there are several strategies that can be useful, some of which I’ve had success with before.

 

1. Take a break!

A Brick Wall is an eyesore on your family tree, and may be hard to look away from, but the best way to solve it is… to not focus on solving it! Skip down to a different item on your genealogical to-do list, and do some research on a different ancestor or a different branch of the family entirely. When you feel ready, you can return to your Brick Wall with a fresh mind and a new approach.

 

2. Work smarter, not harder.

There’s no need to do something twice. Search the name of your Brick Wall on Ancestry or FamilySearch’s public member trees, look at personal genealogy websites, and published family history books. One of the great advantages of the internet to a genealogist is the ability to view and interact with the research of distant relatives, allowing insight to be shared across geographical barriers. Still, no one is perfect, and no research should be added to your own tree unless it has been properly cited and verified. Beware of certain fraudulent texts published by professional genealogists—some, especially prior to standards established in the twenty-first century, can be blatantly made up. 

 

3. Location, location, location.

Location guides are in-depth research guides to any type of location, usually a state, province, or county. Note what types of records are stored at the county, state, or national level, where you can access them, and what religious or cultural groups are present. Something that has been of particular benefit to me are published County Histories, often available on Google Books or other digitized archival sites due to their age. It may be tempting to ignore those books if your ancestor’s name doesn’t appear in the text itself, but pay attention to mentions of relatives and even neighbors of your ancestor. Knowledge of the activities of the people in your ancestor’s community can help you to understand and decode your ancestor’s activities as an individual, including things such as military activity and migration.

4. Ask for help.

Professional genealogists have access to experience, skill, and resources that amateurs often do not have. An accredited genealogist can also be a massive investment, but it’s worth reaching out to get a consultation if it’s something you care a lot about. Personally, I have used a similar, but slightly different avenue. Recently I contacted the DuBois Historical Society, which, like many other local historical societies, researches your request in their archives in return for a small donation. I’m still waiting on the results, but in my opinion, the service is very affordable, and I’m always happy to support such a cause.

Introduction – Rhetorical Analysis Essay

Introduction:

The Mausoleum of Augustus and the Lincoln Memorial—two architectural epitomes of cultural heritage, built with over a thousand years and an ocean between them. One is a tomb commissioned by the first emperor of Rome to be his final resting place; the other was built long after the subject’s death. One was a site central to Mussolini’s plan to reconstruct Rome into his fascist image; the other was the site of numerous demonstrations during the Civil Rights movement, a symbol of freedom, equality, and the American Dream. Despite their differences, these buildings carry the same stylistic traits, and present a larger-than-life image of leader in order to visually unify and legitimize a fractured nation.  

Short Outline:

  1. Neoclassical style and the Classical heritage -> historical precedence, tradition conveys credibility
    1. Symbolism (the fasces, etc.)
  2. Inscriptions -> Augustus’ Res Gestae, Cortissoz’ epitaph for Lincoln.
  3. Statuary & position in the landscape

Surname Chart

There are several ways of organizing information for family trees. Usually, these forms of organization prioritize recording information and connections. A useful tool for the intermediate genealogist to visualize information and form a “plan of attack,” so to speak, is a slightly different form: the surname table. 

My surname chart, made in Google Sheets.

As the name suggests, a surname table records surnames used in each generation—with maiden/birth names being used for female ancestors. The first row is the surnames of the grandparents (“GP”), and the second row is the Great-Grandparents (1st GGP or GGP in genealogist terminology). There are eight individuals in the 1st GGP generation, but only the names of the female ancestors are in this row, so there is no repetition of names. Because in each generation of ancestors, the number of individuals doubles, so does the amount of surnames in the row. In the 1st GGP generation, there are eight individuals and four new surnames. In the 2nd GGP Generation, there are sixteen individuals and eight new surnames, and so on and so forth. 

The table can have as many or as few rows as you’d like. I went up to the 4th GGP generation because I don’t believe I could accurately trace back any further, different genealogists might draw the line before or after where I put it. It should be noted that you don’t have to end the table where you stop knowing names. In fact, do the exact opposite. In my table, I have put question marks in cells where I do not know/cannot confirm those individuals’ surnames. This is one of the advantages of the format, because the genealogist can visualize where the gaps in their chart are, and which individuals to prioritize research on.  In general, it’s a good way to present data in a digestible format. Something like this can be shared with non-genealogist relatives to show them what you’ve discovered about your family.

There are several limitations to a surname table. First of all, it is certainly no replacement for a proper family tree. Obviously, vital information (birth/death dates, locations, first and middle names, non-direct ancestors) cannot be stored in it. Also, it becomes largely useless in certain times and spaces. If ancestors are from cultures that track surnames differently (such as some Asian cultures), lived in a culture or a time where surnames were not used or recorded at all, or changed their name/assumed an alias, this type of table cannot account for them. One of my personal problems with it is that it cannot accommodate different spellings of the same surname, which were very common up until recently, and most importantly does not reflect any name changes that may have happened during immigration or assimilation.

Are surname tables worth the effort? In my opinion: absolutely! It’s a wonderful thing to have in your genealogy pocket, and it is something can periodically be added to, so you can watch it change and grow.

 

Elevator Pitch Response

Effie’s speech on the Caduceus as a medical symbol and whether or not it is rhetorically effective in the modern day was very interesting to me, especially because I’m a Classics major. The consideration of how parts of the symbol, particularly the snakes, have different associations today than they did hundreds of years ago, is definitely relevant to the conversation of whether the symbol continues to effectively communicate its meaning. One thing I thought about was the fact that many people do think snakes are very frightening, so it would seem counterintuitive for a symbol that is meant to represent saving lives to be something that people dislike and could be considered dangerous. Someone from a pre-industrial, agriculture-based society, such as Classical Greece, probably would have had a more positive relationship with an animal that dealt with agricultural pests such as rats and mice. These positive associations are evidenced by the type of snake symbolism used in Ancient Greece. Snakes were decorative motifs in temples and private shrines, and they represented household gods that protected the home. Occasionally, live snakes were kept in temples, such as in Athens, where the snake functioned as a divine protector of the whole city. A snake curling around a staff would have elicited a connotation of protection and even divinity. Meanwhile, looking at the Caduceus from a modern perspective, it makes sense that people would see it as a confusing, overly complicated symbol, because much of the population are not subsistence farmers, nor are they constantly surrounded by serpentine religious imagery. 

On the topic of religious imagery, the Caduceus also includes two angelic-esque wings. If snakes have lost their religious (and therefore, positive) associations in modern society, will angel wings lose theirs as well? These elements may very well make the symbol completely irrelevant in the future.

Online Genealogy Resources

  1. Ancestry

Ancestry is perhaps the most popular genealogy tool because it’s paid model allows for a large marketing budget. The prices for a subscription can be scary, but luckily, a “library edition” that is functionally the same (except for the lack of a personal tree) is widely available, including through the Penn State University library.

 

Ancestry has a significant database of digitized records. Most of these records can be found elsewhere, but the search function can allow a name/place/etc. to be searched in multiple databases simultaneously. Additionally, public member trees compiled by customers can be searched. These can be useful, especially for a beginner, but be sure to check the person’s sources before adding their research to your own tree, because many of them are full of mistakes. 

 

2. FamilySearch

FamilySearch is a free-to-everyone website that has a similar search function to Ancestry. Unlike Ancestry, it does not have separate searchable user-made trees. Instead, it has one tree that all members work collectively on. This is advantageous for collaboration, but it also means that anyone can edit anything at any time, so it’s best to keep a separate copy of your tree on some other application or on paper in order to archive your research.

 

3. Findagrave

Findagrave is another free website with a search function. The search function, as its name suggests, is more limited than FamilySearch and Ancestry, because it only searches cemeteries. Each grave has a profile, and the large international user base can volunteer to photograph those graves. Additionally, users can attach valuable information such as death certificates and obituaries to grave profiles, so it is worth taking a look at.

 

4. Periodical Source Index (PERSI)

Before the popularity of the internet, many genealogists and genealogical societies published research in the form of newsletters or other periodicals. PERSI allows the user to search an index of those periodicals for keywords like a surname. The periodicals in the index may or may not be digitized, but more experienced genealogists can use PERSI for in-depth research.

 

5. Newspaper Databases

There are several paid-access newspaper databases, such as Newspapers.com, which is owned by Ancestry. If you are not willing to fork over the admittedly quite hefty fee, multiple more specific newspaper databases can be accessed through the Penn State Library. For example, I used the Pennsylvania News Archive to find this issue of the Daily Collegian from October 30th, 1948, which contains my grandparents’ engagement announcement.

There are still plenty of microfilms available for the intrepid soul to search, including at the university library. If you have family that went to Penn State, I would suggest searching the Daily Collegian like I did, and you can see all sorts of things that they got up to.

Good luck on all of your genealogical journeys!

Elevator Pitch

Two of the UN’s sustainability goals: action against Climate Change and supporting life on land.

 

PA Game Commission’s 2020 ‘Vision for the future’

 

Presents wildlife conservation solutions that would increase human-wildlife interaction instead of decreasing it. Reforms reflect the limits and advantages of the rhetorical situation:

 

  1. PAGC allotted minimal state funds, but a robust population of hunters means a “fixed income” on the sale of hunting licenses. The 2020 solutions include proposals of making hunting more accessible (including to hunters with mobility devices), thereby increasing funds. Hunting and trapping is heavily regulated so the Game Commission has access to population statistics of various species. 
  2. Capitalizes on charismatic game success. (charismatic animals include pandas, etc.). The logo of the game commission features a Bald Eagle, both a symbol of patriotism and also an example of successful reintroduction to the state. Elk are also a successful reintroduction and bring in tourism and Game funds from the hunting lottery (big, award-winning trophy). The literature specifically mentions deer, bear and wild turkey as charismatic animals popular with hunters. However, the initiative also prioritizes small game hunting to support the habitat of traditionally neglected species such as the ruffed grouse and pheasant. 
  3. Adaptation to an Anthropogenic (human-made) landscape. Most large native species of PA were extirpated over a century ago—wolves, moose, mountain lions, wolverines, martins. Elk and fishers have been successfully introduced, but Pennsylvania’s small size limits the viability of reintroduction programs, such as those with wolves in Yellowstone and parts of Canada. The 2020 proposals place an emphasis on supported endangered species and species of concern in PA that are mainly small animals and fish. 

 

Tie back into the state parks and game lands around State College, thank you.

A Trip to Gettysburg

In March of 2022, I took a very chilly excursion to Gettysburg with my dad. This was a very special event for me, not because it was my first visit to Gettysburg, though it was the first one I remembered (why my family insisted on dragging my four-year-old self to battlefields, I do not know). Although I still intended to make the most out of my Civil War nerdiness, it had a much more personal goal. I wanted to trace the steps of my great-great-grandfather, Calvin Dixon, of the 148th Pennsylvania Volunteer Regiment. 

Me giving a very cold thumbs-up at the statue of James Longstreet.

Growing up, I had no idea that I had an ancestor (actually multiple, because there are two more on my dad’s side) who fought in the Civil War. In 2023, 1860 seems like a very long time ago, but in reality, it was only four or five generations ago. My parents, born in the ’60s, met people during their lifetimes who were born in the 19th century. This is when it comes in handy to have an older relative interested in family history, because people generally don’t put much thought into remembering an uncle they met once in their childhood, or the details of their grandmother’s life. My great-uncle Boyd, unfortunately, died before I was born, but his love for writing newsletters helped me in my own genealogy journey. He would have gone to a physical library to search through microfilm to find Calvin Dixon on the 1862 muster roll; I was lucky enough to encounter it in a digitized form.

Calvin Dixon’s name on the list of troops mustered at Brookville, PA in August of 1862.

A muster roll is a very useful document for military ancestors because it has several pieces of information associated with it. I can conclude Calvin’s age at enlistment (21), where he enlisted (Brookville, although the regiment was assembled in Harrisburg), his company (“I”), and his regiment (the 148th Pennsylvania Infantry). His presence in the 148th Pennsylvania is significant because it marks him as a volunteer rather than a drafted soldier, and also because the 148th, like many other regiments of the Civil War, created a record of their wartime experience. The story of our regiment; a history of the 148th Pennsylvania vols., written by the comrades., available on the Library of Congress website, provided an invaluable resource for me in tracing Calvin’s journey. Although his was not one of the accounts recorded, the perspectives of his fellow soldiers provide a vivid description of the regiment’s campaigns, from muster at Harrisburg, to the Battle of Gettysburg, all the way to Lee’s surrender at Appomattox. Additionally, Calvin’s name does appear in the book, in a story of how he captured a “Reb” at Gettysburg.

Seeing Calvin’s name (circled in green) on the monument dedicated to the 148th was a deeply fulfilling experience for me, because it drove home the fact that genealogy isn’t just sifting through censuses and tax lists, it’s also the act of encountering the physical presence the people of the past still have in our world.

Passion Pitch

One of the hobbies that I devote the most time to is genealogy. Whenever I mention it to people, I tend to get responses that they would love to work on a family history project, but they just don’t know where to start. I remember when I was first starting out that it was very intimidating, and there weren’t many resources geared towards complete beginners who had very little knowledge of their ancestry. A blog with tutorials, guides to specific resources, and also write-ups on my own research could serve as both an accessible aid to people interested in amateur genealogy, and also a way to record my own progress in researching my ancestry and local history.  

 

I also love historical fiction and reading in general, especially older, more obscure authors. Another blog concept I have is a series of book reviews and/or recommendations for historical fiction, cataloguing both the good and the bad. The aim of the blog would be to help introduce readers to a good book they wouldn’t have heard of otherwise, as well as a place to showcase my analysis of the novel and why I like it (or don’t).   

 

Rhetorical Commonplaces

Much of the campaign material for the 1960 Kennedy-Johnson campaign centers on the idea of social progress, reflecting the chief concerns of the Democratic party during that time—the growing Civil Rights movement and push for legislation, as well as advancement in science and technology perhaps best encapsulated by the USSR/USA space race, following the successful launch of the Sputnik satellite in the late fifties. This campaign advertisement utilizes the rhetorical commonplace of “human rights” to introduce the audience to the moral elements of Kennedy’s platform. 

Most audiences will agree that the advancement of “human rights” is a morally just goal, explaining the phrase’s prevalence as a buzzword in political ephemera of all types. However, few audiences will share the same definition of what constitutes a “human right.” Although it is a term applicable to pieces of real, physical international legislation, in practice, the definition varies based on the individual. By titling the central panel “human rights,” the campaign captures the interest of a large audience, but on its own, it is not particularly compelling. The campaign narrows in to a smaller, more clearly defined audience by listing what the campaign platform defines as a human right, and centering in on the Civil Rights movement via photographs, as well as mention of Johnson’s pivotal role in passing important legislation. Not only does the advertisement display the Kennedy-Johnson platform, it also displays their effectiveness in passing the legislation their constituents want, thereby strengthening their appeal (evidenced by the moniker, “the Winning Team”). 

By framing such a broad concept in the context of the struggle of Black Americans for equal rights in the fifties and sixties, the advertisement takes advantage of rhetorical exigence and is able to make an appeal to a specific audience. The advertisement is a good example of the utilization of a rhetorical commonplace because it capitalizes on a broad concept with positive connotations, but also relates it back to the present moment and the desired audience.