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More Grave Thoughts

16 Monday Sep 2024

Posted by Steve Mayne in Uncategorized

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Balitomore, Baltimore OH, Family History, Family Tree, Graves, History, Mayne, McNeill, Ohio, photography, Travel, united-states

It occurred to me that I hadn’t noted down any details of our trip last August to Fairfield County, Ohio, and the grave of Washington Franklin Mayne. We were in Columbus for the weekend on another matter, but couldn’t pass up the opportunity to visit old WF’s last resting place.

Why? You may well ask.

Washington Franklin Mayne was the third child of Henry Collins Mayne and his wife Anna Robinson, and was born in Loudoun County, Virginia, in 1826. Henry and Anna had arrived in New York from Leeds, in the English county of Yorkshire, in 1822 and made their way to Northern Virginia to set up a farm. Henry’s father, Joshua Mayne, is my great-great-great-Grandfather. Not only was Washington Franklin the third Mayne born on US soil, but he was the last to be born in Virginia as the family moved westwards, to Perry County, Ohio, after his birth.

Not much is known about Washington Franklin as he grew up in the Zanesville Ohio area, but we do know that he studied at Ohio Medical College to become a Doctor and started a practice in the village of Basil, Ohio. As well as being a respected doctor, Washington Franklin acquired a lot of land in Basil and was a well known figure in the area.

The land acquired by Washington Franklin Mayne was on the original lands of the Shawnee, Mingo and Delaware peoples, and their ownership of that land is fully and respectfully acknowledged.

Washington Franklin married Eliza Jane McNeill of Ross County, Ohio, in 1865 and they became the parents of four children while living in Basil.

All that is by way of background as to why I would want to visit a small and very pretty little village in rural Ohio. Washington Franklin died in 1884 at the age of 56, and was buried in Basil Cemetery, just yards from the home and doctor’s office he built in the village. Eliza Jane died in 1924 at the home of her daughter Gertrude, in Piqua, Miami County, Ohio. Although buried in Piqua, Eliza’s name is engraved on the handsome stone memorial that marks Washington Franklin’s final resting place.

As we motored south from Columbus, it’s only a 35-minute drive, we both remarked on how similar this part of Ohio was to our part of Ontario; the same crops in the fields, the same buildings on the land. As we arrived in Basil we came across a town parade, an annual event for the people of Baltimore Ohio, the larger town that swallowed up old Basil. I thought perhaps they were out in my honour, but alas, no. We found Washington Franklin’s gravestone easily, stood and soaked up the atmosphere, and I felt really quite humble to be there at the place were one of the founders of the Mayne’s American dynasty had built his life, and the lives of his family.

Washington Franklin and his siblings were the start of a vast family network covering a good portion of the USA, from Indiana to Tennessee, to Kansas and to Colorado, and many places in between. There are many more graves for me to visit, particularly in Indiana, but for now the is trip to see old WF’s grave and the village he made his mark in will have to do.

Family Trees

27 Tuesday Aug 2024

Posted by Steve Mayne in Opinion

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Ancestry.com, Data Entry, Family Tree, Sorting, Storing

At the outset, let me say that I’m a huge fan of Ancestry.ca (or .com, or .co.uk). The software and it’s underlying data has its detractors, not least because it’s very expensive, but it’s enabled me, and countless thousands of others, to document our families in ways that were simply not possible even just twenty years ago. I’ve met distant cousins, visited graves that I didn’t know existed, and even had them analyze my DNA, so I think the whole thing really is the Bees Knees.

But here’s the “but”.

Because the data entry isn’t controlled, the range and format of what people enter is never ending. All capital letters, no capital letters, abbreviations, codes, misuse of fields, it’s all there. I know it’s true that if you give fifty people a form to fill, it’ll be filled in fifty different ways, so I guess this is something similar. But what, you may ask, does it matter?

Well, it matters a lot. I don’t know if some of the users of Ancestry realise that other people get to see the data they enter; that’s rather the point of Ancestry, that we share information. But including a person’s nickname in the Name field helps no one, and like many of the other data input issues, really screws up sorting and searching. That the nickname is often accompanied by quotation marks or parentheses just adds to the confusion.

Then there are the people who invent their own coded method of data entry, including mothers’ names and spouses names in a person’s First Name and Surname fields not only confuses the database and makes reading the data hard, it’s all unnecessary because these nuggets of information are held elsewhere and linked by the system.

Perhaps what I’m really complaining about is having to go through and re-enter data when it pops up in my family tree, not just to keep it consistent and workable, but to make it look reasonable.

Anyway, nothing will change and I’ll spend a good proportion of my time righting wrongs, in data entry at least. In between times I can happily discover 164 people in my tree who were born in Newfoundland (a week ago I hadn’t heard of any), and realise that a long-lost cousin lived two streets away from where I lived in North London, albeit twenty years earlier. It’s nothing if not interesting in the world of Ancestry.

Bridge Across the Pacific

17 Sunday Mar 2024

Posted by Steve Mayne in Opinion

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Family Tree, Gwen Terasaki, Hidenari Terasaki, Mariko Terasaki, Mayne Miller

We watched a movie last night called Bridge to Sun.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_to_the_Sun

It’s based on the book of the same title, by the film’s leading character, Gwen Terasaki. It’s the true story of an American woman who marries a Japanese diplomat, Hidenari Terasaki, in the 1930s, and how she had to navigate the casual racism of her friends and family at home, and the trouble she had to endure as the wife of a Japanese national, and an influential one at that, after Pearl Harbor.

It’s a powerful tale, that resonates today, especially with people like George Takei keeping the internment of Japanese Americans in the Second World War in people’s consciousness.

I haven’t read the book yet, but from various reviews and summations of that text, it looks like the film played a little fast and loose with the real story, not least with the timeline, but I think it did manage to convey the problems Gwen struggled with. It didn’t deal at all with Gwen’s work before and after Hidenari’s death in 1951 to set up a “peace bridge across the Pacific” to bring the two nations closer together after the war. Also, while the film and book featured the Terasaki’s daughter Mariko, it didn’t go any further to tell of her involvement in the movement to bring the two countries cultures together in the decades after the war.

However, this does raise the reason why we watched the movie at all. In my family tree research I discovered that Mariko Terasaki was married to a fourth cousin of mine, Mayne Miller. Mayne was a lawyer and was only four generations away from the first of my family Maynes to land in the USA in 1822, as am I, hence the fourth cousin designation.

Mayne was the same generation as my dad, and died in 1979. Mariko was a little younger and died in 2016. They had four sons, two of whom survive today, so there is still a living link with me and Gwen and Mariko Terasaki, of which I am very proud.

Gwen and Hidenari Terasaki

Mariko Terasaki Miller

Family Tree

08 Sunday Oct 2023

Posted by Steve Mayne in Opinion

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Cemeteries, Family Tree, History

Or: “How Big Does This Thing Get?”

I’ve been dabbling with my Family Tree, both my dad’s and my mum’s sides, for a while now, but only really took a serious interest when I was contacted by another member of my family doing the same thing. It was an unexpected contact, too, because it came from the United States, and I had always believed that both branches of my family were firmly rooted in the UK. My cousin on my dad’s side (4th, and once removed), for that was who it was, added an extra line atop my findings and all of a sudden I discovered an entire branch of the family in the US, and another in South Africa. Canada features in there as well, although not quite so directly. I had fondly thought that they’d never found their way out of Yorkshire.

I use Ancestry, expensive though it is, as my tool for compiling the tree. The links to various sources are almost instant, and are mostly correct. My relative count this year went from around a hundred to over a thousand, although the direct lines count for far fewer, of course. I’ve traced my dad’s family not only out of Yorkshire, before the bolder relations headed overseas, but to Exeter in Devon (UK), where my mother’s family come from, which is so much of a co-incidence. The oldest birthday for a traced relative is one Thomas Mayne, born around 1650, in Surrey, England. I haven’t been able to go so far back on my mum’s side, but there’s time for more research.

It’s quite exciting to delve into where the family has been. I vaguely remember my dad saying something about a relation coming from Silverton in Devon, but I dismissed it on the assumption that Yorkshire was the family base. He was right, though, and there is indeed a link to Silverton (now part of Exeter). I wish I’d not been so quick to ignore that hint. The bulk of the Maynes were in Victorian Leeds, many in the boot and shoe trade. They were poor and lived in some pretty squalid back to back houses in Leeds, and many died very young. Addresses are listed in census and burial records, but I could never find them on modern maps, especially since Leeds has gone through a few major urban renewals over the past one hundred years. That was until I discovered the National Library of Scotland’s online historic maps, and all of a sudden the streets that had long been swept away, reappeared and could be superimposed on modern maps. Schole’s Yard, Thomas’ Yard, and the rest, suddenly became real.

I also discovered the Leeds University project that has digitised the nearly 70,000 burials in the old Burmantofts Cemetery, now part of the University campus. I have found some detailed, and quite sad, records of my family there, like my Grandad’s three very young siblings who didn’t even make it to two years old. They weren’t visible through Ancestry either, probably because their births were not recorded, but the burial records are clear and accurate.

Finding out about the American branch of the family was fun, and I find that the city of Huntington in Indiana is where many of them made a name for themselves, and are buried in various local cemeteries there. There’s even a Mayne street. That’s only a few hour’s drive from me now, so next year I will head over there to explore.

The South African branch was successful, although the original Mayne who landed in Durban in 1849 came back to Leeds and died there after his wife died in South Africa. The bulk of their children stayed, though, and while most were farmers, some became involved with the DeBeer’s diamond mining operation and fairly made their fortunes. Curiously, one who certainly did well married into English money and spent her adult life at various smart addresses in London, including a big house on Portman Square. She died in Kensington, in the shadow of the Palace, and now rests with many of her family in Brompton Cemetery in London. The number of times I have been past that place and have known nothing of her.

Tracing your family can be all consuming, and you really have to keep a lid on things so you don’t fall into too many rabbit holes. I have joined forces with some other family members who are building trees like me, and we’re compiling quite a picture. I’m headed off to Leeds in a few weeks time to do a bit of family tree research, and to find a few of those graves so carefully catalogued over the years. I was born in Leeds, but have never really been back (except to get a cheap breakfast in IKEA), so it’ll be a voyage of discovery I think. I’ll also be in London, so I guess the Portman Square connection should be checked up on as well.

It’s all good fun, but beware if you’re limited on time, those family rabbit holes are everywhere.

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