Welcome!

I reunite identified family photos that I find in antique shops and second hand stores with genealogists and family historians. If you see one of your ancestors here and would like to obtain the original, feel free to contact me at familyphotoreunion [ at ] yahoo [ dot ] com. I also accept donations of pre-1927 images to be reunited. I hope you enjoy your visit!
~The Archivist


Friday, July 26, 2013

Thank Heaven for Negative Numbers: Jens Peter Nielsen and Johanne Cathrine Jensen, Kaas Mark, Jetsmark, Denmark, 1902




I'm a bit hesitant of posting photographs to be reunited when they originate from Tönnies Studio in Aalborg, Denmark.  My own family roots are in North Jylland, and I have several carte de visites of my family taken in that very studio.  There is a chance these people might even be my relatives, however distant.  Heinrich Tönnies operated his studio in Aalborg from 1856 to 1903.  After his death in 1903, his family took over the business and it remained in operation until 1975.

I am so happy that Tönnies' photograph records are actually available online, thanks to the Aalborg Stadsarkiv.  You can search for an image by negative number, or name.  Guess what?  This one has a negative number (135051) which tells us, hopefully correctly, that the image is of  "Nielsen, Jens Peter og Kone," [Nielsen, Jens Peter and wife] Kaas Mark, 13-09-1902." 

Kaas Mark is located Jetsmark Parish, Hvetbo, Hjørring, Denmark.  I went to Archivalieronline to have a look at the 1901 Folktælling (Census) for Jetsmark Sogn (parish).  I found only one Jens Peter Nielsen family living in Kaas Mark1:

Jens Peter Nielsen, born 24/6/1849 in Haverslev parish.  Father. Landbruger (farmer).
Johanne Cathrine Jensen, b. 19/6/1851 in Aarup parish. Mother.
Niels Nielsen, b. 18/6/1880 Jetsmark parish.  Child. Unmarried. Karetmagersvend (Carriagemaker's helper).
Karen Marie Nielsen, born 9/7/1888 Jetsmark parish. Child. Unmarried.
Marie Nielsen, born 9/7/1892 Jetsmark. Child. Unmarried.
Otto Peter Nielsen, born 1/8 1894 Jetsmark. Child. Unmarried.

Jens Peter and Johanne were married in 1875.  The couple had eight children, two of whom died. Jens Peter would have been 53 at the time this image was taken, and Johanne Cathrine, 49.



1 1901 census of Denmark, "Folktælling." Hjørring, Hvetbo, Jetsmark, Kaas Mark, Matrikel-Nr. 13, page 1219, entry for family of Jens Peter Nielsen. Digital image, Arkivalieronline online (http://www.sa.dk ; accessed 23 Jul 2013).

Friday, July 19, 2013

The McLeod Family Album? Hallock, Minnesota and Selkirk,Manitoba, 1890-1920

I am very pleased to announce that I received a "Lucky Thirteen Grant" from Megan Smolenyak to reunite this album with a family member.  If you think you might be connected to the family in the album, please contact me.

UPDATE July 29, 2013:  It's a reunion!  This album is now on its way back to the great grand-daughter of Angus and Mary Ellen McLeod.  I hope the new owners have as much fun with it as I have.



I like a good challenge, and this item is certainly that.  When I purchased this cabinet card album from an antique dealer in Nanaimo, BC, I knew that it would be a minor miracle if the person who owned this collection of photographs, dating from the 1890s to about 1920, could be identified.  Only two photos of the 29 in the album are identified with a first and last name.  Three more have been addressed with a first name.  One,  "to Luella", another "to Eleanor" and the other "to Ray".  Another photograph, of a man, is inscribed on the back "Martha Gibbs."  The majority are unidentified.  Yet, being the optimist that I am, I thought I'd have a go at it.  There are a number of clues to follow that just might help us figure this one out.

Let's start with the inscription.  The inscriber hasn't given us their name, only initials.  It's not quite a name, but still quite helpful:


"M. E. McL"   Just a few more letters on that surname abbreviation would have made all the difference.

Most of the images in this album were taken in Hallock, Kittson County, Minnesota.  Of those 20+ images, all were taken at the A.H. Anderson Studio.  Andrew H. Anderson (1867-1960) was a farmer-photographer who operated a photographic studio in Hallock between 1893 and 1902, and again briefly in 19361.  There are also pictures taken in Selkirk & Emerson, Manitoba as well as Chicago & Minneapolis.

The first fully identified photo gives us a bit of info.  It's a portrait of a man and woman, taken in Hallock and labelled, "Mr. & Mrs. John Thompson." 

I began by looking at the 1880 Federal Census, where I found a John J. Thompson, born abt. 1864, living with his parents William and Maria L. Thompson in Kittson County, Minnesota.  His Thompson siblings are:  Mary E., Elizabeth A., Laura M., George W., Richard C., and Thomas J. and Lewis J2.

Of course, it's a bit early on in the research to come to any conclusions, but as I was delving deeper into other censuses for John J. Thompson, I stumbled upon an entry in the 1895 Minnesota Census that intrigued me.  It was for the family of Angus and Mary E. McLeod, who lived in Hallock at that time.   Mary was 29, born in Ontario, Canada and Angus, 24 in Wisconsin.  They had four children:  Ernest, 9; Raymond, 7; Wm. H.,6;  and Louella, 4.  A man named John Gibbs, age 25 from Ontario also resides with the family3.

I immediately felt I had some sort of connection.  Mary E. McLeod could be M. E. McL.  She had children named Ray and Luella.  And, there is someone with the surname Gibbs in the household.  Most of the clues the photograph album provided have shown up in this one entry.  How lucky would that be? 

Then I went back to look at John J. Thompson's family again.  Do you notice that one of his sisters is Mary E?  Could Mary E. Thompson have married Angus McLeod?  We know Mary E. McLeod was born in Canada around 1866, and so was Mary E. Thompson.  It's a lead to follow, for sure.

Another clue the album yielded was a newspaper clipping about the early settlement of Selkirk, Manitoba.  As I mentioned previously, there were couple of photos taken in Manitoba as well, one in East Selkirk.

I discovered that the Angus McLeod family moved to Selkirk, Manitoba in 18964.  In the 1906 Canada Census for Selkirk, I find that Angus George and Mary now have a Canadian-born, one-year-old child named Eleanor L. McLeod5. Yet another match with the one of the clues in the album.  Angus opened a bakery in Selkirk, which he operated for a number of years.

I had another good look at the images just now, under a strong light, and made an interesting discovery.  On the back of one of the photographs that I assumed was not inscribed, I discovered there is actually a very faint pencil inscription on the charcoal-coloured back that reads "A.G. McLeod."  It was taken in Hallock, Minn.  Be still, my heart.  I think I'm on the right track here.



And this is the front of the cabinet card labelled, "A. G. McLeod":
 

It would be nice to locate other existing photographs from Hallock to see if we can identify the many other individuals in this album.




1 Minnesota Historical Society, Directory of Minnesota Photographers (http://www.mnhs.org); accessed 15 Sept 2012.
2 "United States Census, 1880," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MZ9D-M5Z : accessed 16 Sep 2012), J. John Thompson in household of William Thompson, Kittson, Minnesota, United States; citing sheet 121C, family 2, NARA microfilm publication T9-0624.
3 "Minnesota, State Census, 1895," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MQ63-T3H : accessed 30 Sep 2012), Mary E Mcleod in household of Angus Mcleod, Hallock village, Kittson, Minnesota.
4 1916 census of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, Selkirk, Manitoba, population schedule, enumeration district (ED) 10, subdistrict #4, p.24 (penned), dwelling 250, family 262, Angus McLeod family, digital image, Ancestry.ca (http://www.ancestry.ca : accessed Sept 15, 2012), citing microfilm LAC microfilm T-21929.
5 "Canada Census, 1906," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KHJG-D3X : accessed 16 Sep 2012), Mary E McLeod in entry for Augus G McLeod, 1906.

Friday, July 5, 2013

A Mixed Bag of Mystery: Bahr, King, Palmer and Shafer Ephemera, Richland County, Illinois, 1881-1926, Part One




I found this collection of items at a thrift shop in Parksville, BC earlier this year, and was told they arrived at the shop together, from the same donor.  I knew it would be a challenge to figure out how all of the pieces fit together, if they fit together.   But if I couldn't figure it out, then perhaps I could receive some assistance from some of my readers who I just know would love a good jigsaw challenge like this one.

Here's what I have:

1)  Postcard photograph of young woman and man, labelled "Sister & Brother. Sister is Dead."



When we look at the reverse of the post we see that it is a Solio postcard, never sent through the mail.  Solio postcards were made from 1903 through to the 1920s.  We can narrow that time frame that the postcard was produced to after 1907 since the postcard back has a centre line dividing into the back into two:  one side for the address, the other for correspondence. 



2)  A letter dated "Aug the 30 1881"  No addresses provided, no envelope.  The greeting reads, "Dear sister and Brother,"  and is signed off, "Mary King."  The letter describes the fact that Mary is leaving Mrs. Parr in search of work.  She tells her sister and brother that she doesn't have a new place yet but they can write her at Olney and she will have them forward their letter to her.  She asks that they give Minnie a kiss for her.

3) A report card, written on "First National Bank, Olney, Ill" stationery, dated April 15, 1896. 
"Miss Bahr:  Please find your grades...[listing of grades and subjects].  Yours truly, RN Stotler."

4)  Obituaries cut from newspaper.  Two obits for Dr. J. C. Shafer, one dated Dec. 30, 1930.  One obituary for Dr. E. L. Palmer, dated March 23, 1926, along with a photo from the newspaper.

So, you probably can tell, this is going to be a long analysis of clues.  We'll start with items #2 & #3 in Part One of this blog post.

Robert N. Stotler was a cashier at the First Bank of Olney as well as the Superintendent of Schools in Richland County, IL1.  Miss Bahr was obviously a student.

The only viable match I have been able to find for Miss Bahr is Minnie Bahr, born in either December 1873 or 1877 in Noble, Richland County, Illinois2 3 .  She was the daughter of Fredric Bahr and Tiberia King.  The only problem I have with Minnie, is that if the report card was hers, and she was born in 1873, that would make her 23 years old at the time of the report.  Far too old, I think, to be finishing her second year of high school, her highest grade attended4.  If she was born in 1877, as many of the censuses report, then it is a possibility, although I think it may still be a stretch.  The original date on the report card was preprinted 188_. When the report card was written, the digits 96 were written over the final 8 and the blank space.  I am fairly sure it reads 1896.  These details could be firmed up by locating Minnie's birth record and trying to find student records for Noble School.  Perhaps an archive in Richland County would have these.

What do you think?  Is this Minnie, "Miss Bahr?"  Her mother's maiden name fits in nicely with the accompanying letter signed "Mary King."  Of course, these items may not even be connected, except perhaps, geographically.  How they made their way to Parksville, BC is unknown, but perhaps we can eventually figure that out as well.  I will look into Tiberia King and possible King connections in Part Two.



1 F. A. Battey & Company. Counties of Cumberland, Jasper and Richland, Illinois: Historical and Biographical. Chicago: F. A. Battey & Company, 1884; p.783, digital images, Google Books (http://www/Google.com/books : accessed 30 June 2013).
2 "United States Census, 1880," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MXKC-22J : accessed 30 Jun 2013), Minnie Bahr in entry for Fredric Bahr, 1880.
3 "United States Census, 1900," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MSH4-N9R : accessed 30 Jun 2013), Minnie Bahr in entry for Fred Bahr, 1900.
4 "United States Census, 1940," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KWZW-68C : accessed 05 Jul 2013), Minnie Bahr, 1940.