I fully believe that it is up to each one of us to take care of our history. Men and women through the generations have died for our rights and liberties. Whether it be family chart, library or quiet battlefield, soil rich with our ancestors blood, we are the caretakers of what they have given down to us trusting we will take the job seriously. I wish I understood why a Walmart is more important than a battle field or why richly appointed board rooms was more important than a library. Higher government, don't you think you can do without one less Cross pen or skim 10 percent off your entertainment budget just to save ONE Library. America, wake up!
Contact info: s1klight@aol.com.
My website: http://familyknitsnspindles.com/main/spage.htm
Confusion Runs in the Family
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Robert Turner was born in 1735 in Leicestershire, England. Maybe. The
confusion is over where. It's a pretty common name. His parents' names are
in dispu...
Steve Goes to Reform School
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Back in October, I wrote about how my children's paternal ancestor
reportedly blew up the local schoolhouse and that his younger sons took the
fall so that...
Online genealogy, week of May 31-June 6
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Wishing you all a good Memorial Day weekend. Here is our weekly roundup of
upcoming genealogy events. Numerous associations offer online genealogy
class...
1949 ~ Remembering Brook, Today ~
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Brookery Louise Elliott
1949 ~ 2005
Brookery Louise Elliott, would have been seventy-one years old today . . .
she was born in 1949, in San Diego, Calif...
Melungeons and your Tennessee Ancestors
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In 2005, a new book on the Melungeons was published: Elizabeth Caldwell
Hirschman. Melungeons: The Last Lost Tribe in America. Macon GA: Mercer
University ...
Road Trip to St. Joseph – Part Two
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Wednesday morning, we started our day at the Cracker Barrel around the
corner from our motel. We don’t have one close to where we live, so it is
always a t...
Canadian Ancestors
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Happy Canada Day! A few of my branches stopped in Canada on their way to
Buffalo. Below are the generation that came to Canada through the
generation tha...
Digital State Archives site
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I just stumbled across this useful site, which attempts to round up
statewide digitization projects:
http://www.digitalstatearchives.com/
Maybe now I'll s...
I knew it.. Knew it… K.N.E.W. I.T.!! Yes, I knew it! <---- this is a genealogical happy dance.
I have a lot of blog space dedicated to William F. Duncan and his father, George W. Duncan. William filled out that glorious Tennessee Civil War Questionnaire that gave a lot of information and clues to follow. But there is one big.. Huge! Gaping! bit of information he did not put on that questionnaire…. Ready? His Confederate service. I thought it strange his father joined the Confederate Army in 1862 and William joined the Union Army in May of 1864 at the age of 21. So then I thought maybe he did something else those two years but my mind was constantly brought back to that two years difference in their service. So the other night I was checking out what Footnote had by way of War of 1812 records as I might have War of 1812 Veterans. I didn't have any luck, that collection is in its infancy yet so something drew me back to the Civil War record section. It might have been me feeling cocky, I had just found a census record I had been looking for what seems forever. Spelling was off on the surname and a County I would not have looked for them in! Who knew. George W. Duncan and his family were very transient. Something made me take a stab at Confederate records and look for William and I have to say that even if I knew I was looking for him I was still very surprised to find him. The two years that puzzled me makes sense. There are 8 pages to this compiled record of Company Muster Rolls. There won't be a pension record since he defected I have his Union service documentation so will now have to figure out if there is another service file with more information. I am not very good finding records like these, NARA boggles my mind completely. I will be going through the State of NC Archives online catalog and hoping I can find something there. I struck gold there by accident once before over this family!
I am a dreamer… I want to know the why's. Dates of battles can be interesting, kind of, I love history but its about the people. What were they thinking, what did this split do to he and his father and how did it affect the rest of their family. Did William keep in touch with his mother after the war was over? His father died a month after he enlisted in the Union Army, they were both in Tennessee, did he know? So many questions that I will probably never have the answers to. To find even the smallest bit of information to give a better understanding to this would be so exciting.
The last Muster Roll for William Franklin Duncan in the Confederate Army:
2 comments:
What a find! Civil War records can be so hit and miss, so frustrating, but sticking with it paid off - congratulations!
Thank you!!
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