Sunday, April 16, 2017

Adding in Names, Dates, and Places to Your Scans


I recently read somewhere that when a person dies, a whole library is lost too. Think of all the knowledge and experience the person had acquired during their lifetime. Did they pass on any wisdom to  the next generation, including knowledge of their family tree? Hope so.  

Speaking of the library you carry around in your head,  some things will out-live you, so make sure you pass on what you know about your family. Write down and share some of the best stories of you and your family, things you would be happy for your descendants and extended family to know. Along with that should be paper copies of photographs with labels as to who is in the photo, when it was taken, and where it was taken.

"Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable--if anything is excellent or praiseworthy--think about such things." ~ Philippians 4:8

My husband and I enjoy adding to our knowledge of history by attending events at local historical society museums and genealogical libraries. At one such lecture, the speaker, David Jackson, said we should make paper copies of all our history to preserve it as technology changes way too fast. As an example, he asked everyone in the audience if anyone remembered reel-to-reel audio tapes, 8-tracks or VHS video's and nearly all the mature set raised their hands, while most of the youngsters only looked puzzled. Yeah!

However, it is easier to swap information by email with distant relatives and scanned photographs through attachments in email. Before you share, consider adding in names (take care to spell names correctly) and dates to photographs, either with a permanent blue photograph pencil (most hobby stores carry these in the scrapbook or photograph department) before you scan OR digitally enhance  the scan afterwards by using the Paint or photograph editing program that came with your Windows computer package. You can also use Photoshop or any other photograph editing program, but I can't tell you about how to use those other programs as I self-taught myself to use the Windows Paint program that came with my computer and I am happy to share what I know. Be sure to preserve your original photos in acid-free document sleeves, photograph albums  and/or boxes. DO NOT put them in those cheap magnet albums as the "protective" plastic attached to the pages off-gass and will fade your photos. Ask me how I know this! 😒

This is what the Paint program looks like open. Click on photo to enlarge.
















1. To import a scan into the program, click on  "File" and "Open" on the left-hand side of the screen. Select a scan from  "File Explorer > This PC > Picture > Folder"  saved on your computer's hard drive.  Play around with your Paint program. Push buttons and figure out what they do. That's how I learned.




2. You may use the "select" button to crop or delete the scanner bed from the sides of your photographs. You can also resize photographs or rotate them around here also. 

TIP: Create a new photograph from the original by clicking on "File", scroll down to "Save As", find the folder you want to save it in, in "Pictures" on your computer and renaming it before editing. When I save ancestor's photos, I usually name them first with their surname (last name), then a dash or dot - and next, the proper name (first name) and a year date (if I know it)," so the photo at the end of this article of me, would be "Rush-Dolores" in the .PNG file extension or .JPEG format as those seem to be the most used online. 

Keep the original file as a back-up, in case something goes hay-wire in the paint program or you hit the wrong button accidently and the photo goes, poof!, off into cyber-space. Apparently that has happened to quite a few of us. 😬  After you get done with the editing of the second photograph, you'll be saving all the edits you have added to it.


3. The rest of the buttons are the "Tools," "Brushes," "Shapes," "Lines," (gauges thickness of lines), and "Colors" (I wrote an article on my craft blog here on how to figure out the digital color formulas of popular marker colors.)


4. After you have imported your scan into the paint program, click on the "Select," then scroll down to "Transparency" and click on that (I like the transparency as it allows the background to show through the additions to my photographs.) Then move over to the "A" on "Tools", click on it and then move the cursor to a point on your scan to open an "enter" box to add in the information you want (the above sample of my stick figure shows an "enter" box).   You can put the information in anywhere on the photograph, but it's best to stay away from your main focus, usually the face.

I went back up to the tools and chose the font I wanted for the name and date, then went back down to the "enter" box and began typing in the information I wanted to use on the photograph. Since my "photograph" of the stick figure's background was white, I used the contrasting color of black to type in the name and date. But you can choose another color if you so desire, by clicking on the color menu on the toolbar. 

If you decide you want a different font or alpha color, you don't have to erase the current wording (before the dotted enter box disappears). Just highlight the words and change to to the other font or color.  If you make a mistake as you type, you can hit the backwards arrow at the very top of the toolbar to delete it. 

5. If you are happy with everything on the scan, click again on "File," scroll down to "save" and you will have a lovely photograph to share with the relatives through email or at your next family reunion (printed copies). Great-aunt Jane won't have to roll her eyes upwards, tap her cheek with her finger and try to remember who you said that was in the photograph, because the person's name will be right there on the photograph in front of her.

This photograph was taken at the New Santa Fe Historical Society Trails Center after an event there.  Do you see where I placed my name?























Article written by Dolores J. Rush

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Yes, Library Cards Can Be Genealogical Documents!

As we've moved into the digital age, library cards have become a thing of the past. Someone asked me just the other day if a library card could be considered a genealogical document and I said, "Why, of course! If it has a name, date, & place on it, then I would consider it a genealogical document." Just think of all the library card treasures that could still be floating around out there! Please rescue them for future genealogists.


For example, a girlfriend gave me a book out of her homeschool library her children had read, because I am studying about steamboats on the Ohio, Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. She must have picked it up at a book sale somewhere as it was stamped with the name of the former repository -- Saint Augustine School, which has since closed.





Although there are no family members of mine or my husband's on the library card below, I have transcribed the names and dates for a future generation to find. The stamp inside the book cover has given the school's name and address and the little card inside the library card pocket has given clues to a child's name, when the child attended school there, what they were interested in at the time, and what classroom they were in.


Due Date -- Borrower's Name -- Room Number
5-22-1966 -- Mike McMurray -- 205
1-19-1968 -- Joe Davis -- 206
11-25-1968 -- Tom Turner -- 205
2-5-1969 -- Marie Brancato -- 206
10-27-1971 -- Mark Seilold -- 205
no date -- Shahon -- no room
Library Card for: Frontiers of America Series: Steamboats to the West. By Edith McCall. Children's Press, USA., 1959.
Repository: Saint Augustine School, 1800 East 79th St, Kansas City, Missouri.

Update (9-21-2016): This library card has been added to the Jackson County, MO USGenWeb site and approved here! My very first contribution!

More to Read:
1. I have found many of the riverboat pilots mentioned in the book on Findagrave and added them to a virtual cemetery here. I eventually hope to find information about a ferry and/or other boats my 3rd great-grandfather may have traveled on.
2. "Finale: St. Augustine's, KCMO" By Curmudgeon. Blog post.

Thursday, August 18, 2016

The Rush, Stout and Wyckoff Allied Family Tree

STOUT 
Penelope Van Princis Kent Stout (1622-1732) + Richard Stout (1615-1705) = 10 children
|
#9. David Stout (1667-1732) + Rebecca Ashton (1672-1725) = 8 children
|
#4. James Stout, Sr. (1694-1727) + Catherine Simpson (1692 - 1749) = 7 children
|
#2. James Stout, Jr. (1715-1754) + Jemima Howell Reeder (1719-____) = 6 children
|
#1. Abel Stout (1740-1797) + Williampy Wyckoff (1750-1782) = 7 children
|
#2. James Abel Stout (1770-1855) + Abigail Holloway (1777-____) = 6 children
|
#2. Margaret Stout (1802-c. 1880) + Henson Rush (1794-1848) = 6 children
|
1. James M. Rush (1826-1890)
2. Ephraim Henson Rush (1828-1895)*
3. John William Rush (1831-1904)
4. Joshua Rush (1832-____)
5. Amanda Jane Rush Loveall (1835-c.1880)
6. George O. Rush (1838-____)
~~ <> @ <> ~~
WYCKOFF
Pieter Claesen Wyckoff (1625-1694) + Grietje Corneli Van Ness (1627-1689) = 11 children
|
#6. Cornelius Pieterse Wyckoff (1656-1746) + Geertje Charity Simonse Van Arsedalen (1659-1746) = 4 sons
|
#1. John Cornelise Wyckoff (1682-1746) + (1.) Geertje Stryker (?) = ?
(2.) Neeltje Roelofse Schenck (1683-1757) = ?
|
Jacobus Jan Wyckoff (1725-1800) + Catlytie (Catelyntie) Gulick (1722-1775) = 9 children
|
#4. Williampy Wyckoff + Abel Stout (1740-1797) = 7 children
~~ <> @ <> ~~
More to Read:
1. Penelope Stout on Wikipedia
2. Penelope Stout's Memorial on Findagrave,  6082496
3. Stout Family History. By Captain Nathan Stout (1748-1826). Philadelphia, PA, 1823.  
          (Source received from Treva Poe.)  
4. Bill Stout's Rootsweb List of 12 Generations of Stout Descendants.
          (Source received from Treva Poe.)
5. Penelope: A Novel of New Amsterdam. By Jim McFarlane.
6. The Story of Penelope Stout: As Verified By the Events of History and Official Records.  Thomas Hale Streets, 1897 reprint.  
7.   The Stout Family of Delaware with the Story of Penelope Stout. Compiled and Published by Thomas Hale Streets, Philadelphia, PA, 1915. Internet Archive.                       
8. As Good as Dead: The Penelope Stout Story. By Paula E. Phillips. 2006. (Treva Poe also owns this book.)
9. Descendant - David Stout's obituary on Fold3 
10.  Descendant = Zebulon Montgomery Pike
11. Abel Stout, Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) genealogical records.
12. The Stout Family of Delaware. By Thomas Hale Streets. Reprint paperback, 2015.
13. Stout & Allied Families. J. D. Stout. Privately published, Chariton, IA, 1991.
14. Sugar Creek: Life on the Illinois Prairie. By John Mack Faragher.
15. William Bowne, of Yorkshire, England and His Descendants. By Miller K. Reading. p. 8
16. Wyckoff House Museum, Brooklyn, New York. Genealogy CD available.
17.  Cornelius Pieterse Wyckoff, Franklin Twp., New York.
18. The First Record Book of the Society of the Daughters of Holland Dames. June, MCMVII.
19. A History of Monmouth & Ocean Counties. By Edwin Salter. 1890.
20. The Rush Report. By Gaynelle Jenkins Moore. 2003. Internet Archive. 
21. Genealogy Roadshow, Season 3, Episode 1; May 18, 2016 television series. 
22. A Stout Bible Record at the Allen County, IN Public Genealogy Library
23. The Forman Genealogy also mentions the Wyckoff family. 
24. Stout and Allied Families. By Herald F. Stout, Captain, United States Navy. The Eagle Press, Dover, OH; 1951. Vol. 1. pp. xxii, 1, 5, 16, 40, 85, 158. Internet Archive.
25. Primitive Baptist churches in New Jersey. 
26. Founders and Patriots of America Index. National Society of Founders and Patriots of America, Park Lane Bldg., #615, 2025 Eye St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20006. Mrs. Herman E. Weston, National President (1973-1976). Genealogical Publishing Co, Inc., Baltimore, Maryland, 1975, reprinted 1989. p. 212, 246. Home Library.
27"Four Women In A Violent Time" by Deborah Crawford. 1970. (Treva Poe)
28. "His Family History" YouTube Playlist
29. Descendant = Brett Allen. Flickr family tree. 
30. The Story of Penelope Stout as Verified by the Events of History and Official Records. By Thomas Hale Streets. Press of Alfred J. Ferris, Philadelphia, PA, 1897. (Kessinger's Legacy Reprints) 
31. The Staudt-Stoudt-Stout Family of Ohio and Their Ancestors at Home and Abroad. By Herald F. Stout. 1935. Internet Archive. 
32. Stout and Allied Families. By Herald F. Stout. Eagle Press, Dover, OH; 1951. Internet Archive. 
32. Historical and Genealogical Miscellany: Early Settlers of New Jersey and their Descendants. by John E. Stillwell, MD. New York, 1916. Internet Archive. p. 357



Researched by Lori Frisch, Terry Heaps, Dorthy Mack (Lincoln; Boone Society) Gaynelle Jenkins Moore, Treva Poe, David W. Rush and Carolyn Vosburg. Typed by Dolores J. Rush. Updated: 2/28/2025. 

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Decoration Day

Facsimile of US Flag
In the Rush family, I have observed that Decoration Day is practiced religiously. I don't know how it came to be such an important tradition in the life of this family, but it has been practiced every year by both David's grandparents and continuing the custom, his parents. 


 Right after I met David, I was invited to come down to meet his grandparents and to their Decoration Day commemoration picnic at the Rush Chapel Cemetery. I was unfamiliar with this ritual of eating together at a cemetery, because my immediate family did not observe it nor did any in my circle of friends. Most of our family members were scattered across Kansas and Oklahoma and we only saw them twice a year -- during Christmas and mid-summer holidays from school. Only after I had become a member of the Rush family, did I learn there had been a pioneer Methodist church on the spot where their picnic was held that had been torn down sometime in the 1960s. Family came from near and far to decorate the graves of their loved ones with flowers and it was almost a family reunion of sorts. Since the cemetery is located in hilly terrain between Mary's Home and Tuscumbia, Mo., when driving between all the parked cars on the downhill slope of the gravel road became somewhat of a problem, someone suggested moving the family reunion to Eldon where it has been held every year since then at the Air Park, however, decorating the graves is still practiced. 

Recently I learned about how Decoration Day came to be. It seems that on May 5, 1868, the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) Commander-in-Chief, John A. Logan, Jr. of Illinois, by General Order No. 11, had assigned May 30, 1868, as a memorial day which was to be devoted to the strewing of flowers on the graves of deceased comrades who had died in the defense of the country during the Civil War. The Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) was a national organization begun in Decatur, Illinois on April 6, 1866 for former Civil War Union soldiers and sailors who served between April 12, 1861 and April 9, 1865. It was organized to preserve brotherly feelings between veterans and to provide for those in need of assistance -- orphans, widows, and disabled servicemen.

Ironically, John A. Logan, Jr. was the son of Dr. John Logan, Sr. whom Logan county, Illinois was honorably named for as suggested by his friend, Abraham Lincoln. My third-great Grandfather, Elder Martin White, was the first elected representative of Logan and (Dane) Christian Counties in the Illinois State House of Representatives (1840-42) after both counties were divided from Sangamon County, IL. in 1839. The surveyor, friend of Lincoln's, John Calhoun, began a petition to have them split off.  

Decoration or Memorial Day has come to be a national holiday, not only for decorating soldier's graves but also for decorating the graves of family members who have passed on. To David's knowledge, there were no GAR members in the Rush or allied families, however there were several who fought on the Union side, namely Jacob Bittle, Granville Carrinder, Wm. S. Golden, Levi Morgan, Rufus B. Roberts, James M. Rush, John Wm. Rush, and Alexander Sullens. 

 More to Read:
1.)
How Rush Chapel Came to Be
2) The Photographic History of the Civil War: Armies & Leaders. Edited by Robert S. Lanier. Fairfax Press, New York, 1983.
3.)
Elder Martin White biography