Monday, September 30, 2013

Last survivor of the last slave ship to enter the United States.

Cudjo Lewis is considered the last survivor of the last slave ship to enter the United States. Born around 1841 to a Yoruba family in the Bante region of Dahomey (today Benin), he was given the name Oluale Kossola. In the Spring of 1860 soldiers from Dahomey raided Kassola's town where he was captured and imprisoned in a slave compound, where he was transported via a slave cargo ship into the U.S. Upon his emancipation, he took the name Lewis and purchased land to form a settlement named Africa Town.
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In 1865, with general emancipation, Cujdo regained his freedom and took the name Lewis. He married Abile, a young woman who also had been on the Clotilda. Like their companions, the couple's objective was to return home, but when they failed to raise enough money for the trip, they decided to stay in Alabama and create a town of their own. Because Timothy Meaher had been responsible for their ordeal, they decided to ask him for reparations in the form of free land. Cudjo was chosen as the spokesman. Meaher refused their demand, and they purchased land from him and others and established African Town on a hill north of Mobile. Cudjo worked as a shingle maker but after being injured in a train accident in 1902—for which he sued the railroad company—he became African Town's church sexton.

He and his wife had five sons and one daughter. To mark their attachment to their culture, they gave American and Yoruba names to four of them and Yoruba names only to two. Sadly, all of the children died young: Celia/Ebeossi died of sickness at 15, Young Cudjo was killed by a deputy sheriff, David/Adeniah was hit by a train, Pollee Dahoo disappeared and was probably killed, and James/Ahnonotoe and Aleck/Iyadjemi died after short illnesses. Abile passed away in 1908, just one month before Aleck died.

 During the last years of his life, he achieved some fame when writers and journalists interviewed him and made his story known to the public. Alabama-born author Zora Neale Hurston filmed him, and he is thus the only known African deported through the slave trade whose moving image exists. Cudjo Lewis died of age-related illness on July 26, 1935, at about 94. Although he had always wanted to go back home, he was buried among his family in the Africans' cemetery that opened in 1876. Today, a tall white monument marks his grave. Some of his descendants still live in Mobile.

Encyclopedia of Alabama Published December 6, 2007

'Genealogy Roadshow': PBS Traces 3 Detroiters' Roots Monday Night

Genealogy Roadshow explores the ancestries of two women and a man. One participant says: "I was adopted at two days old, and as an African-American, I need to know where I came from."

Genealogy Roadshow: Detroit  premieres Monday, September 30, 2013. See what all the tweeting is about at PBS.org/ Questions have been submitted by the people of Nashville, TN. Watch the quick Detroit - Preview!

Friday, September 27, 2013

Searching for my Ancestors

Hello Everyone, just dropping a quick note...

Have you ever had a family line that is just a stinker? Well, 6-7 years ago I was corresponding with my Great Aunt Lena's daughter, Dee Sterling Nelson, about her mother's (& my Great Grandmother Mary Ann's) family.

She sent me a 4 page letter, but at the time I was a bit overwhelmed and I lost it! According to Dee, G Grandfather Chris Christensen was not a well liked man. He was cruel, mean and especially after G Grandma passed (trying to give birth to their 10/11? child) his girls had to hide from him at night.

Being a business owner with the website, AncestorEbooks.com,  I am signed onto LinkedIn & work with other genealogists and one day Birthe Mylius Gronvold Kroman was offering to help folks with Danish genealogy problems. What a kind and great woman she is, and she leads a large group of folks who do this for free. What a blessing.

If you are stuck on a problem in Denmark, this group is the one to reach out to! Be sure and leave remarks below if you have anything to add/share/want.

Cristina Besendorfer, AncestorEbooks.com

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Remembering Otzi, the Ice Man - Found September 19, 1991

AncestorEbooks.com remembers the discovery of the mummy, known as Otzi, in 1991 by two German hikers, Helmut and Erika Simon, who were vacationing in northern Italy. A Chalcolithic or Copper Age mummy, Otzi was well preserved within the glacier of the Tisenjoch Pass. Because of the bad weather when Otzi was found, and their mistaken thought that he was a climber who had died, his removal from the glacier was not very scientific.

In a formal dig, according to the Learn North Carolina, archaeologists study what is known about an era and people before they begin. That preparation would have prevented Otzi’s bow from being used as a pry-bar to remove him from the glacier, pulling & shredding his clothing & the use of a jackhammer, which accidentally drilled a hole in Otzi's hip.

Since 1991‘Scientists have pieced together an incredibly detailed picture of the iceman’...from where he lived to what he ate and how he died,’ according to LiveScience.com.

The animal hair from his clothing, goatskin leggings, a bear fur cap, and shoes made from hay, deerskin and bearskin, suggests that Otzi herded sheep, cows and goats.

Over 50 tattoos, created by making incisions and rubbing in charcoal, covered Otzi’s body and because they are near joints and back, were probably placed during pain-relieving treatments and follow acupuncture lines.

Otzi’s body was so well preserved that the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology commissioned two reconstruction artists, Dutch brothers Adrie and Alfos Kennis, to recreate the mummy’s face using both art and forensic science. They created an ‘extremely lifelike’ replica of how he would have looked like at his death.

According to LiveScience, by analyzing Otzi’s stomach contents, equipment, and isatopes researchers have determined he grew up in either the Isack or Puster Valleys of Northern Italy, and lived SW of there the last 10 years of his life. Most likely a shepherd, Otzi died when he was about 45 years old, had bad knees, was lactose intolerant, had type O blood, and had been infected with Lyme Disease.

As interesting as these forensic discoveries are, it is the decoding of Otzi’s DNA that is truly exciting. Albert Zink, Head of the EURAC Institute for Mummies and the Iceman, together with Carsten Pusch, from the Institute of Human Genetics at the University of Tübingen and Andreas Keller from the biotech firm febit in Heidelberg have ‘pooled’ their skills to decode the building blocks of Otiz’s genome to create a DNA library which contains the largest data set ever recovered.

Through studying Otzi’s mitochondrial DNA, scientists discovered he shares a common ancestry with at least 8% of modern Europeans, a genetic group thought to be extinct. His Y chromosome has mutations most commonly found among men from Sardinia and Corsica. “That makes sense, says Eske Willerslev, a palaeogenomicist at the University of Copenhagen. “Sardinians are a group that people have considered distinct from other Europeans, and in this regard it would be interesting if they were more widely distributed in the past.”

“At the recent Southern California Genealogical Society’s Jamboree the three day event focused on the theme of DNA in Genealogy” said Cristina Besendorfer, owner of AncestorEbooks.com. “Dr. Spencer Wells, leader of The Genographic Project spoke of analyzing DNA samples from around the world to find out where our ancestors lived on Earth.” [bit.ly/13q6aei]

AncestorEbooks.com is in the business of helping families share their family history through interactive Ebooks and DNA research is becoming a big part of that. Mrs. Besendorfer suggests, “If you would like reasons for using DNA in family history research you should read Roberta Estes’ Blog, at DNA-explained.com. Ms. Estes’ has written 15 reasons for using DNA in family history research that are easy and fun to read.”

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Natural Disasters

We at AncestorEbooks want those affected by the flooding and mudslides in Colorado to know that we are thinking and praying for you. As we realize that natural disasters are a part of life, from flooding and mudslides to tornadoes, earthquakes, and forest fires, we also realize that how we react to those hardships will make all the difference.

Take life as it comes, be as cheerful as possible, and know that better times are yet to come.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

In Remembrance

Pearl Harbor, Kennedy Assassination, the Moon Landing, Challenger Explosion, and the Twin Towers. Every generation has that one moment that you will remember where you are and what you were doing, your thoughts, and the emotions that coursed through you when if happened.

The Twin Towers and the Pentagon attacks were heart wrenching moments in the history of our country. We were attacked simply because an organization did not like what the United States of America stood for. We suffered more than the loss of life that organization so desired, we lost trust in fellow mankind, we lost the ability to see the best in others, and we lost reason in looking at the countries where that organization was rampant.

However we gained an America that banded together to support and love those who were left behind and an America that wept together. We gained heroes who sacrificed their own chances of survival to save many more lives. And finally we gained an appreciation for our firemen, police officers, emergency workers, and military personnel.

Unfortunately after a dozen years of the War on Terror, America has grown tired of war. They have forgotten the pain and grief experienced in those moments. Many who have just graduated college were barely a decade. Did they understand the scope of the tragedy they were witnessing?

It saddens me to see the loss of America that prayed together during those tragic times. I see Americans fighting again and again. Compassion is disappearing.

I am choosing to remember how I felt in those moments; I am choosing to teach my children tolerance and love; I am choosing to believe that heroes still exist; AND I am choosing to pray. I will pray for the world to gain love and compassion. I will be praying that  men and women will once again give support to one another. And i will be praying that the world will gain an understanding that violence is not to solution. Anger begets anger.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Your an Open Book!

Whether you know it or not, all you like, dislike, the friends you choose, the language you think is OK or funny is available to most of the public either on your page or through a friends page. It will still be there in 10, 20, 30 years. Will you laugh out loud about your choices or hang your head? Now's your time to decide!

FamilyShare.com has some ideas for cleaning up your act. Click below
http://familyshare.com/yoursquore-an-open-book-make-sure-itrsquos-one-worth-reading

Friday, September 6, 2013

Crater Lake Chapter of The Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) Events

AncestorEbooks.com is honored to announce the next DAR meeting at the Crater Lake Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution being held on September 6 at Rogue Valley Genealogical Society Library in Medford, Oregon to kick off the new year. The program for this meeting will be genealogical research. All current and prospective members are encouraged to attend. [bit.ly/18BhofC]
The Daughters of the American Revolution in Crater Lake will also be hosting a display at the Medford Library, at 205 South Central Ave, during the months of September and October. This special display is to commemorate the signing of the U.S. Constitution on September 17, 1787. Part of the display will include memorabilia and information about the Constitution and the Daughters of the American Revolution.
The National Organization of the Daughters of the American Revolution, have a museum with over 30,000 pre-Industrial Revolution artifacts to choose from for their display, including toys, costumes, furniture, paintings, period rooms, Ceramics and Silver. [bit.ly/17qtFlO] 
The DAR Museum has several exhibits, Folk Art, Samplers and Needlework, and Artifacts of the Abolitionist Movement and has an amazing collection of American History, the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) are committed to the restoration and maintenance of historical sites. Along with the preservation of genealogical records, artifacts, and historical documents, they are also dedicated to locating, restoring, and marking Revolutionary War patriot grave-sites and headstones.
Not content to concentrate solely on the past, the DAR have been investing in the future since 1903 by helping children in remote mountain areas receive an education that emphasizes responsible citizenship. Two schools in the Appalachian region have their support; the Kate Duncan Smith DAR School of Alabama, and the Tamassee DAR School of South Carolina.

Gayla Mendenhall of AncestorEbooks.com adds, "The DAR, having realized the needs of Americas children, and work within communities to provide hope for their futures. At AncestorEbooks, our commitment to preserving our past is important, but the future of our special needs children must be preserved as well. All American citizens deserve the opportunities our great country can provide."
The DAR invest over $1 million dollars annually to support dedicated to serving the special needs of children from Massachusetts to Oklahoma. Programs such as Attention Deficit Disorder, Dyslexia, Adult Literacy and Children and Family in Crisis; and individualized programs especially created to satisfy the needs of their students. [dar.org/natsociety/edoutrech.cfm]
In their commitment to Historic Preservation and Restoration, the DAR National Society has partially funded many memorials and monuments. Such Monuments as the World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C., the Women in Military Service Memorial in Arlington, Va., monuments of George Washington's mother, Washington and Lafayette, the martyrs of a British Prison Ship, and a series "Madonna of the Trail" monuments which commemorate the lives & sacrifices of pioneer woman.
The DAR have contributed to the restoration of Independence Hall in Philadelphia and the Statue of Liberty & Ellis Island in New York. In response to the drought conditions of the 1930s, the DAR planted hundreds of thousands of trees in a reforestation project for the U.S. Forestry Service, on public and private lands from New Hampshire to Oregon. [bit.ly/17CKf48]
The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution have 175,000 members in 3,000 chapters worldwide that have volunteered over 250,000 hours annually to veteran patients alone and have awarded thousands of dollars in scholarships.
"The members of the Daughters of the American Revolution take pride in their family heritage and have managed to incorporate good works into this organization of women. They are proud of their lineage, and work to help others to be proud as well," says Gayla Mendenhall of AncestorEbooks.
The DAR are especially dedicated to the preservation of family history,” states Cristina Besendorfer, owner and designer of AncestorEbooks.com. ‘Women, 18 years old or older, regardless of race, religion, or ethnic background, who can prove lineal descent from a patriot of the American Revolution are Eligible to become members of the DAR.’
“These proofs of lineal descent are preserved, along with Civil War Artifacts, in a building, ‘Encompassing an entire downtown city block. The DAR National Headquarters houses one of the nation's premier genealogical libraries, one of the foremost collections of pre-industrial American decorative arts, Washington's largest concert hall, and an extensive collection of early American manuscripts and imprints.’
AncestorEbooks.com is dedicated to the preserving & sharing of family history,” continues Cristina Besendorfer. “And we are honored to write about this amazing group of dedicated women who are committed to the preservation of our American Heritage, The Daughters of the American Revolution.”