All My Ancestors

30 June 2009

Uncle Sam Wants You

Filed under: Carnival of Genealogy, Osborne Family — allmyanc @ 8:13 pm

COG75Justice and Independence

Written for the 75th Carnival of Genealogy

This 1951 photo is the only picture I know of that includes all my dad’s siblings plus their parents.

osborne group1951Four of his five brothers served in the military.  Kneeling down in front is my Uncle Ray, the only one of this group still living.  He served in the Korean Conflict.  The youngest at the left is my Uncle Landrum who was in the Army, as was Uncle Pete, the rather round (ahem) man standing at the right.  Uncle Jack, the man standing next to Uncle Landrum (in the hat) was in the Navy.  I believe Uncle Pete and Uncle Jack were part of World War II.  My guess is that each of these men were drafted, but I have not done enough research to know this for sure.

When I asked my dad why he didn’t serve, he told me I was his “out.”  He and my mom married in 1950, I was born in 1951 and my brother was born in 1952.  I’m grateful for the service my uncles provided and wish I’d asked them more questions when I had the chance.

I don’t remember celebrating July 4 as a family in any of the “typical” ways–it was too hot to cook out  and there was no body of water near enough for swimming or boating, even if those activities had been part of our family activities.  I’ve posted previously about the July the 4th rodeo we attended the years we were in South Dakota.  Whether at home in Texas or in South Dakota, my brothers and I always had firecrackers and various other fireworks–we made rockets out of tin cans and put firecrackers in the ends of the clothesline poles–just so they’d make more noise–no harm to the iron poles.  We managed to survive and some of my friends put themselves through college on the proceeds of their summer fireworks stand.  It was a different time.

15 June 2009

Plan B

Filed under: DNA, North Carolina, Osborne Family — allmyanc @ 8:14 am

A few weeks ago, I posted about Moses Osborne and the possibility that he might be part of the North Carolina Osborne mystery that has plagued my family’s research for well over 70 years.

In a genealogical frenzy than could only be matched by the Tasmanian Devil, I tracked down Moses’ descendants.  I was determined to find someone to DNA test to see if there was a link with my Christopher.  I’d been contacted by one of Moses’ descendants, but he was not an Osborne so I couldn’t ask him to do the test.  I did ask him if he knew any of his Osborne cousins and he did not.  So I was thrilled when I found another descendant.  It was a female but her birth name was Osborne and maybe she had brothers or uncles.

I composed my letter (despite my best efforts, I couldn’t find an email).  I had to re-write that letter after I asked a colleague to read it.  He works with me and he’s a great sounding board because he all this “genealogy stuff” is new to him.  He’s very interested but he’s very new.  He indicated that I might want to not mention the DNA test in the first letter.  :-)   He was right.

When I heard back from my contact, she, as she said, “couldn’t be of much help.”  Actually, though I didn’t make a contact for testing, she did help quite a bit.

I learned a lot from this experience.  Assumptions, as we all know, can be dangerous, but I was making all sorts of them.  One assumption was that because this line had stayed in the same region for generations, they all must know their family history.  And, because this sort of research is central to my being, I assume that everyone is interested.  That is just not so.

So what is Plan B?  I have the names if not contact information for a couple of other Osborne males.  I’ll see if I can find them.  I’ll also keep working on looking for additional descendants.  It is interesting to me that there’s not much information out there about this Osborne line–they are “dead-ended” at Moses, which adds to my belief that there is some connection between he and our dead-end Christopher.

1 June 2009

The Good Earth: Family Ties to the Land

cog73

The Good Earth: Family Ties to the Land

Written for the 73rd Carnival of Genealogy

Writing about this topic could fill a book for me.

As far back as I’ve traced on both sides and all branches of my family, there have been land-owners and farmers.  I learned very early what was meant by a section or a quarter section of land, that there was nearly always a road on the section line, and I learned that land is organized by counties.  I used to take my dad to the county courthouses with me to read the deeds–he taught me to cut through the standard legal language to the “meat.”  He could read the land descriptions which looked like hieroglyphics to me–I still have to be very deliberate when I’m reading and mapping them.

No one was a land baron, though I suspect a couple of great-great grandfathers had such dreams.  For example, John Osborne ((1808 NC – 1865 TN) bought a large amount of land at the intersection of two railroads in what became Humboldt in Gibson County, Tennessee.  My understanding is that this was not an all above-board transaction, but there is even now a part of that town that is called the Osborne Plat.   His son came to Texas and had 9 children, born in about 5 different counties– his letters that survive all refer to his search for land.

My grandfathers kept moving south and west as the nation developed and  land became available.  Everyone farmed.  Even the one professional man, who was born in New York City, William Green Ball (1806 NY – 1881 IA), country doctor, was a founding member of the Warren County Iowa agricultural society.  My third great-grandparents (2 sets of them) who immigrated to McPherson and Harvey Counties in Kansas in 1874 from Russia brought turkey red wheat with them from the steppes of the Ukraine and southern Russia.  I grew up in a town in Texas nicknamed the “Wheatheart of the Nation.”

My dad farmed, his dad farmed, and so did my maternal grandfather.  In fact, my paternal grandfather and uncles often planted and harvested a crop in the Texas panhandle, and then they loaded up their equipment and traveled 640 miles north up Highway 83 to South Dakota to harvest their crop there.  My maternal grandparents left the Dust Bowl scarred Oklahoma panhandle about 1952 for the very cheap land available in South Dakota, and my paternal relatives farmed part time up there as well.

All of the men in my family farmed and all of the women had gardens.  Later, my dad planted a garden out in the field near the irrigation well, but I well remember my mom starting lettuce and some of the more tender plants in hot boxes dad built.  My younger brother was recently recalling his “first job,” at age 7 or 8, hoeing our great-Aunt Eva’s garden– for $.75 per hour and all the candy he could eat.  Aunt Eva managed to make the desert bloom like a rose–the desert of the high plains of the Texas panhandle–she grew peonies and roses and dahlias and foxglove and water lilies in her ponds.  In her garden she grew tomatoes and green beans and cucumbers and onions and peppers and dill for canning.  She also wielded a mean hoe if a snake of any sort dared invade her domain.  Further north, in the even more desolate Oklahoma panhandle, another great aunt grew a garden so lush and beautiful, you knew it had to be tended by a person with very exacting standards.  Aunt Edna always brought us gallon (!) jars of her delicious dill pickles and her pickled, stuffed green peppers, tied with white cotton string.  Yum.  I know now that she learned her gardening and pickling skills from her German Mennonite family.  I’ve given it a try and I can do it, but it sure is a lot of work.

My dad died about 6 years ago.  His brother, my Uncle Ray, is still farming at age 80–just one more year, you know. Uncle Ray is the only one of my dad’s 7 siblings still living.  I suspect my agricultural heritage ends with that generation.  My other brother wanted very badly to farm, but he couldn’t make it pay enough to support his family.  His current place on the lake, though, is tended by a smaller version of his favorite John Deere tractor and his garden is luscious.  And I do have a cousin with a PhD in agronomy–his email “handle” is “Dr. Dirt.”

Every quarter or so, I get a newsletter from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), because I still am part owner of the 1/4 section my dad owned when he died, and am a part of the partnership that still “farms” our grandfather’s land in Texas.  It gives me a sense of pride to get that flyer–I know it is counted as junk mail and unnecessary government intrusion by many of my family members, but when it arrives in my urban mailbox, I like it.

I have my herb garden growing, and I have a couple of vegetable plants in my flower bed.  I started some hollyhocks on the back porch and will transplant them soon.  Every time I do that, I think of my family and how many generations we have worked the land.

“We know we belong to the land, and the land we belong to is grand” is part of the Oklahoma state song.  I hope my 6 generations of Texas relatives will forgive me for using it as a way to sum up this posting.


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