Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Spotlight ~ Mystery Person M268

Documentarian Weblog ~ Stardate 12061.9


volgagerman.net

So, today I headed downtown to the Family History Library (Salt Lake City) to try to track down some information on John Jacob Lebsack. He was my husband's great-grandfather and was a German from Russia. (That's the part that is so interesting. I could never understand when the family would talk about their ancestors being German, but from Russia. I didn't get it, so I decided to learn about it.) I am working on gathering information for his story because he is such an interesting character. His story will be coming soon. 


This is the story of Mystery Person M268. I went up to the counter on the international floor and the fellow there, Alton Sissel, tells me it's my lucky day. His wife, he says, is a German from Russia (or her family was, I'm not sure). Anyway, he tells me this as I am showing him the printouts of things I had found online and wanted to look for at the library about the village of Frank and Brunnental (two German colonies along the Volga River in Russia, see map above). John Jacob (Elder Sissel says to me, Johan Jakob, ["Yohan Yacob"] in German and I smiled.) was born in Frank in 1858 and moved to Brunnental (a daughter colony of Frank) in 1863 and then immigrated to the United States in 1892. Elder Sissel told me that he himself had been on the board of the American Historical Society of Germans from Russia. He found me later and began showing me John Jacob's family tree from the AHSGR. He said I was very lucky to be able to see that and I would have to pay someone from the society to look up this information. This info he was showing me was from his personal flashdrive and not available on the internet. He is going to give me access to all of this information. I have some of it already on my Ancestry tree, but it will be great for confirmation.

So we found John Jacob and his father was Andreas Lebsack. Attached to all of the names on this tree was the number M268. Brother Sissel said he could show me what that meant as the library had copies of the AHSGR's magazine called Clues which would give us contact information for the person M268. So M268 was a person, the person who gave this information to the society. He took off to go find the copies of Clues, as we didn't find them on the floor we were on. He brought me the latest copy, 2008, and we looked up and transcribed contact information for eight people who were working on the Lebsack name. M268 was not listed in this copy and he said he would take me up and show me where the Clues were located and we could look and see if we could find M268. By now I began calling M268 "her", several times I had said "she" and then added "or he", but then I just started calling her "she". I just had a weird feeling.

While Elder Sissel was off looking for Clues, another lady found the two maps I had seen online and they were huge, something like 36" x 28" and had names listed for each of the houses. On the back, it gave information about who they were - like, Georg Löbsack was a farmer, etc. It was like hitting gold in a mine, except that it will be hard to prove that the Andreas Löbsack on the map is our Andreas Löbsack because all of the families gave their children pretty much the same names (Andreas also had a son, Andreas). I'll post more on the maps when I've had a chance to give them a good going over. I was able to scan them while I was at the library. 

Sister Sissel came with a book to try to help me find the Normannia ship manifest from Dec. of 1891. The Stroh family (my husband's grandmother's side) emigrated to the U.S. on the Normannia, but I have had no luck in finding the family on a ship's manifest. I had found John Jacob's original ship manifest on the Ellis Island website, (He emigrated with his family on the SS Aller in 1892 [see photo below].),
but I could not find the ship that his third wife (Mary Catherine Vogel Stroh) and her first husband traveled on in Dec. 1891. I have scoured the internet and can't even find a crossing with the dates I have. So back to square one on that. I need to firm up those dates. But I digress.

Elder Sissel took me upstairs to the top floor of the library. The third floor had the copies of Clues, something about they were from the "American" Historical Society of Germans from Russia and they were in English is what sent them upstairs. He took me all the way to a back corner, down a long stack of books to the very corner. We were at the very top back corner of the library looking to see if we could find M268. Most of the copies were hardbound and Elder Sissel could just check the index to see if "she" was listed. I asked why she wouldn't be and he said that the person could have let their membership in the society lapse or could have passed away. I was guessing that this was a person that had been working on the name quite a while ago. Well, we worked our way back from the early 2000's and into the 1990's with no luck. Then we found "her" in the 1980's, and, lo and behold, she was my very own mother-in-law. There was my husband's mother, there in the back corner of the Family History Library with all of her contact information from the 80's! She passed away in 1993 when my son, only her third grandchild, was just 3 years old. It took me aback. Literally, I stepped back. I was amazed because I had known somehow that this person was special. I had felt it the whole time. Elder Sissel asked me on our way back downstairs if I thought she was with me on my search and I told him, "She sure is!" So Mystery Person M268 is Evaleen Lebsack Mitchell, my husband's mother, my only son's grandmother.
Many thanks to the Sissel's and all of the others who helped me today. Elder Sissel spent several hours with me and he said he really enjoyed it. As did I.  :)      

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Documentarian Weblog ~ Stardate 12060.8

 

 Family History

I'm going to start blogging my family history as I'm working on my family tree on Ancestry.com right now. I have done some traveling and have had the opportunity to meet a number of my family over the years and I want to get those stories written down for future generations. So I guess you could say I'm starting today as the first day of the rest of my life. I'm heading into the unknown world of becoming a blogger, a writer, a family historian, a documentarian, a photographer, a genealogist, if you will. My life seems to have come full circle, from getting married and traveling to my roots and meeting some of my people, to having a family and staying close to home to get my son raised. Now I'm back to having the time to understand and experience my family history again. My life has come together with all of these things at this time for a purpose and that purpose is to document.

 

Random Readings and Postings

When I first started on the internet years ago, the in thing to do was chat-rooms. I met a number of people around the world this way and some of them are my friends to this day. I had a blog in a way that I created with a group of these friends and they were all on an email list where I would send out an email every day or so and it usually contained a quote and some thoughts from me. Then the group could respond. It was almost like Facebook is in a way today. When I first started on Facebook, I really enjoyed connecting with people that I hadn't had contact with for years. Now Facebook seems to be a lot of sharing of other people's thoughts. People share links and games, and posters. To me it's like sending a greeting card without adding any thoughts from yourself. I want to know what people think, how they are doing, what is going on with them. I love those kinds of posts. I love pictures and people's random thoughts. That's what I want to do share the thoughts of my wandering mind with all of you. Well, I have had some encouragement from folks who like the way that I write and I thought that I would like to continue what I started a long time ago.

A number of things have brought this to fruition ~

  1. Both my parents died in 2012 and I was spending most of my time taking care of them. 
  2. My (only) son graduated from the University of Utah in 2012. He began his first job at Boostability in 2013. He moved out on his own in August of 2014. He got engaged this past December and is getting married 9.19.2015.
  3. My thoughts on this part of my life are that I really don't want a paying job, but that I do need an identity.
  4. I always have a lot to say, but not always someone around to say it to. I need to stay connected.
  5. I'm inquisitive and always want to learn about something new.
  6. I love to document. I have been an avid photographer most of my life and I love grasping that fleeting moment and making it more permanent.
  7. I'm a good "detective": I don't give up. I know how to dig deep on the internet. I create good searches. I am "The Finder King" in many aspects of my life. I know how to "listen" for clues and direction. I am logical. It's not always about knowing what things are, but also knowing what they are not.