Monday, January 21, 2019

Week 3 - Unusual Name: "Zilpha"

It's Week 3 of the #52Ancestors challenge with the theme of "Unusual Name." 

This week's selected ancestor is my Great-Grandmother Zilpha Alice McCollum Elkin (1860 - 1927).

I'm one of those family researchers that not only catalog direct relatives but the siblings, their relatives, ancestors and descendants so my tree begins to look like the street map books of Northern Virginia. I'm mentioning this as it looks as if my Zilpha may have been named for her father, Adam McCollum's sister, Azilpha McCullom. Azilpha's name was also recorded as Zephyr, Zelpha, and Azelphia in other documents.

The name "Zilpha" is found in the Christian Bible, in the verses in Genesis; she was a hand-maid of Leah, one of the wives of Jacob, and mother of Gad and Asher. The name was popular in the 18th and 19th Century.

I wonder if my GG Zilpha was ever frustrated by her name? In doing family research I've found 13 variations of "Zilpha" in all sorts of records. I've begun to wonder if clerks (and this was a male-dominated position in the 19th century) ever asked a woman the correct spelling of her name? It doesn't seem to be the case from the evidence I've found though. And it's not only her first name that isn't consistent, either.  

An early record, the United States 1870 Census [1] surprisingly lists her name correctly - Zilpha McCollum, when she was 10 years old. My thinking is that the enumeration done in Hoosier Prairie Township, Clay County, Illinois was conducted in this small farming area where most people knew each other and names were recorded correctly.

A couple of examples of creative record-keeping:

Her marriage record in 1879 lists her as "Zelpha A Macallone."[2]  Recording what was heard perhaps?

There's also some variations on "McCollum" over the years, sometimes it's recorded as "McCullum", "McCullem", or even "McCullen."

She's Zilpah Alice Elbin (sic) in the "United States Census, 1920."[3] 

Here then is a spelling variation on her first name, too - Zilpha is now ZILPAH. Also in this particular record, the indexer can't distinguish between a "k" and a "b", reading "Elkin" as "Elbin."  

Elkin was also hard, too, as most people kept wanting to add an "s", making it "Elkins." One of her grandsons, David, (son of Charles Bryan Elkin) gave up on the additional "S" battle and just went with "Elkins" in all his subsequent records.

Somewhere along the way, it seems like her children gave up on using "Zilpha" and just listed her as "Alice" when they recorded legal documents, probably hoping that this would be the simplest solution for all involved.

A piece of advice from all this:  confirm the spelling of your name on documents. Don't make it harder for family researchers of the future. 


[1] "United States Census, 1870," database with images, FamilySearch 
(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M64J-TN9 : 12 April 2016), Zilpha Mccollum in household of Adam Mccollum, Illinois, United States; citing p. 22, family 149, NARA microfilm publication M593 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.); FHL microfilm 545,695.

[2] "Illinois, County Marriages, 1810-1940," database, FamilySearch  

(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X2GR-H5H : 4 November 2017), Isaac H Elkin and Zelpha A Mccallone, 1879; citing Clay, Illinois, United States, county offices, Illinois; FHL microfilm 1,008,795.

[3] "United States Census, 1910," database with images, FamilySearch 

(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MK5M-5MZ : accessed 22 January 2019), Zilpah Alice Elbin in household of Isaac Hodson Elbin, Indianapolis Ward 15, Marion, Indiana, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 262, sheet 3A, family 40, NARA microfilm publication T624 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1982), roll 369; FHL microfilm 1,374,382.


Wednesday, January 16, 2019

Week 2: Challenge - George W. Patrick, the elusive Great-Great-Grandfather

Week 2 of the 2019 #52Ancestors
Theme: Challenge


When you start out researching in genealogy usually your perspective is building and providing documentation with sources and citations for relationships from "you" outwards to your immediate ancestors, which seems so easy... or is it?

Let's see that's:

Me (Lynda)  >  my mom (Donna Duckworth Dye) >  Grandfather (Paul E. Duckworth)  >

Great-Grandmother (Eliza Ellen Patrick Duckworth)  >  Great-Great Grandfather (George W Patrick)

And then it all comes to a lurching stop when you realize that you there is a copy of the Marriage License from 7 June 1867 for your Great-Grandmother Rachael (Rachel?) Hopper and George W. Patrick but you really know nothing about him.

Photo credit to Phil Tomlinson 
(also a descendent of Rachael & George)

A short look of some of the facts from George & Rachel's marriage:

  • June 1867 - George & Rachel are married in Moultrie County, IL (one county over from Coles County where she's lived all her life).
  • February 1869 - a son, Lilbern D. Patrick (named for Rachael's Uncle Lilbern Dixon) is born and dies the next month in March.
  • January 1870 - a daughter, Eliza Ellen (my Great-grandmother), is born.
  • August 1870 - North Okaw Township, Coles County, Illinois. The 1870 US Census [1] records George as 24 years of age, estimating his birth about 1845-46, making him possibly too young to have served in the Civil War which started when he was 15, and lists his birthplace as "Virginia."
  • 1873 - Rachel dies and *poof* George disappears. There is no further mention of him in any known records to date. 
This leaves me with some of the following questions:

  • Where in Virginia did this George W. Patrick reside? 
  • Was this George W. Patrick related to the Dixon family and how is it that he came to Illinois?
  • Who actually is this George W. Patrick and what the heck happened to him?  
Finding any trace of George is the challenge that lies ahead.  DNA just might hold some clues.

_______________________________


[1] "United States Census, 1870," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M64V-G46 : 12 April 2016), George Patrick, Illinois, United States; citing p. 3, family 20, NARA microfilm publication M593 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.); FHL microfilm 545,696.














Monday, January 7, 2019

FIRSTS - Telephonic Pioneers, the Elkin Sisters


Intro
I've been doing genealogy for a while, mostly for my own knowledge and on occasion will try and share something I've learned with family and friends also involved in researching.

Last week on WikiTree, I read posts about #52Ancestors and discovered that Amy Johnson Crow developed a challenge to highlight family members and encourage writing. Ms. Crow provides the prompts, which it seems, may be interpreted any way that you want. This challenge sounded intriguing so I thought, what the heck, let me give it a try.

Of course, with this challenge, came the opportunity to learn how to blog. I selected the easiest template for me to attempt this adventure (suggestions welcome, of course!).
___________________________________

FIRSTS - Telephonic Pioneers - Nellie, Edna, & Thelma Elkin

For the theme "Firsts", I chose my maternal family: The Elkin Sisters. My grandmother, Edna Elkin and an older sister, my Great Aunt Nellie Cleveland Elkin, and their youngest sister, another Great Aunt, Thelma Elkin. Growing up, my mother often mentioned that there was a telephone switchboard in my grandmother's family home. I always wanted to know if this family story was true. It was.  Perhaps they could be considered the first teleworkers? Along the way, I learned that each of these women had a long career in the telephone industry.

Nellie was born in 1892, the 5th child; Edna came along as number 7, in 1897; and number 8 was Thelma, in 1903, all born in Fayette County, Indiana near Connersville, Indiana to Zilpah Alice McCullom and Isaac Hodgen (I.H.) Elkin. Connersville was and is a small city located in Eastern Central Indiana. Population in 1900 was 6,836.

As of the 1910 U.S. Census [1], the Elkin clan moved to the 10th Ward in Indianapolis, with Mom (Zilpah), Dad (I.H.), Grandmother (Mary Richardson McCullom Beal), and 6 of the 8 children still living - Annie, Nellie, Charles, Edna, Thelma, and Everett. About this time, the population of the city was 233,560. That's a big jump from a small city to a metropolitan area with an increase in population size of 3316%! 

R.L. Polk's 1914 Indianapolis Directory [2] reveals that Nellie was working from the family residence as a telephone operator for John S. Spann & Co. Dad (I.H.) is listed as a carpenter, and also worked from home, too. Nellie would have been about 22 years old at this time.


I imagine that the switchboard (see below) might have been about triple this size to accommodate the needs of businesses in Ward 10. Indianapolis and the Indiana and Ohio region had, in 1913 catastrophic flooding [9] of up to 10 feet of water from unexpected rain. Telephonic communication would have been essential to convey information quickly and efficiently. Keep in mind, too, that not many people at the time had telephones in their homes, lines were still very limited, although businesses were beginning to install them in offices. 
(This photo features Alton, SD telephone operator, Florence Morrison. The picture was taken on November 7, 1914. All those cord pair connections that she has up equate to individual telephone conversations.
I count 12 cords, which is six pairs--so six conversations taking place.
~Photo submitted by volunteer Larry Lundeen,
with added research done by Linda Ziemann, Sioux County Coordinator.)

To give you a sense of the times - July of 1914 was the beginning of World War I in Europe at the Austrian-Hungarian border with the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand.  May 1915 the 
RMS Lusitania was torpedoed, which was a harbinger for the United States to later join the war effort in 1917.  

In 1915, my grandmother, Edna, at the age of 18, followed Nellie, beginning her career as a telephone operator, according to R. L. Polk's 1915 Indianapolis Directory [3].


By 1917, three siblings worked in telecommunications, even recruiting younger brother (and 7th child) Charles Bryan, as an installer in this nascent industry, according to Polk's directory for that year. [4]


Late 1919 most of the immediate family moved to Detroit, probably to be in on the economic prosperity of Henry Ford and the booming automotive market. The 1920 US Census [5] reports Nellie, 27, is now an "Instructress", and Thelma, at age 16, is a telephone operator. Within the next year or so, Edna, along with her husband, Paul, and their young daughter, Betty Louise, joined her family, moving from Indianapolis to Detroit. 

Edna continued to work in the downtown Detroit area, eventually retiring in 1967 from the Detroit Telephone Answering Service after working for 25 years as a supervisor. Nellie [6] and Thelma [7] continued to work for many years as telephone operators, as well.

I remember as a young child visiting my grandmother's office and watching as the women manually connected telephone calls as they provided answering services for professionals throughout the city. I have no idea how they kept all the lines straight and made the correct connections!
Detroit Telephone Answering Service circa 1959
(on left white blouse w/headset - Millie Bertalino,
center, white blouse no headset, my grandmother, Edna Elkin Duckworth Martin, supervisor) [8]

What times they lived in - World War I, women voting in 1920, World War II, the Korean (War) Conflict, the Cold War, Vietnam, and through it all these professionals worked behind the scenes providing the skills needed to enhance and support the blossoming telecommunications industry.

Thanks for joining me on this adventure!

Sources
[1] "United States Census, 1910," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MK5M-5MZ : accessed 7 January 2019), Zilpah Alice Elbin in household of Isaac Hodson Elbin, Indianapolis Ward 15, Marion, Indiana, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 262, sheet 3A, family 40, NARA microfilm publication T624 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1982), roll 369; FHL microfilm 1,374,382. [Note: Family name indexed as "Elbin" instead of "Elkin"]

[2] R. L. Polk & Co.'s Indianapolis City Directory for 1914, Thirty-eighth year, A Classified Business Directory and A Directory of Householders, Volume LX, Price, Eight Dollars,, R. L. Polk & Co, 1914, Indianapolis, Indiana, Indiana State Library [Elkin, Nellie, pg 503], http://archive.org/stream/citydir1914cdap

[3] R. L. Polk & Co.'s Indianapolis City Directory for 1915, Thirty-ninth year, A Classified Business Directory and A Directory of Householders, Volume LX, Price, Eight Dollars,, R. L. Polk & Co, 1915, Indianapolis, Indiana, Indiana State Library,  [Elkin, Edna, p 435], http://archive.org/stream/citydir1915cdap

[4] R. L. Polk & Co.'s Indianapolis City Directory for 1917, Forty-first year, A Classified Business Directory and A Directory of Householders, Volume LX, Price, Eight Dollars,, R. L. Polk & Co, 1917, Indianapolis, Indiana, Indiana State Library [Elkin, Chas B, Edna, and Nellie, pg 504],  http://archive.org/stream/citydir1917cdap#mode/1up

[5] Elkin, Nellie and Thelma in "United States Census, 1920," database with images, FamilySearch
(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZWD-FTM : accessed 7 January 2019), Alice Z Elkin, Detroit Ward 10, Wayne, Michigan, United States; citing ED 316, sheet 6A, line 39, family 118, NARA microfilm publication T625 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1992), roll 809; FHL microfilm 1,820,809.

[6] Elkin, Nellie in "United States Census, 1940," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KHSJ-C8L : 15 March 2018), Nellie C Elkin, Ward 21, Detroit, Detroit City, Wayne, Michigan, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 84-1503, sheet 8A, line 31, family 160, Sixteenth Census of the United States, 1940, NARA digital publication T627. Records of the Bureau of the Census, 1790 - 2007, RG 29. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2012, roll 1885.

[7] Watson, Thelma in "United States Census, 1940," database with images, FamilySearch  
(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KHMY-T6V : 16 March 2018), Edna Duckworth, Ward 6, Detroit, Detroit City, Wayne, Michigan, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 84-282, sheet 7B, line 45, family 183, Sixteenth Census of the United States, 1940, NARA digital publication T627. Records of the Bureau of the Census, 1790 - 2007, RG 29. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2012, roll 1849.

[8] Photograph - Millie Bertalino and Edna Elkin Martin at Detroit Telephone Answering Service, circa 1959. Elkin-Duckworth-McCann Private Archives. Privately held by Lynda McCann.

Also consulted:




Week 3 - Unusual Name: "Zilpha"

It's Week 3 of the #52Ancestors challenge with the theme of "Unusual Name."  This week's selected ancestor is my Great-G...