Sunday, October 23, 2016

Unknown Relatives

Recently, someone noticed a posting I'd done on a website re: genealogy.  After comparing some notes, it turns out we have the same GrandAunt Anna!   Which means we're second cousins of sorts.  More discussion and she grew up in San Francisco, and I grew up in Santa Clara - 40 miles apart and we never knew of each other!    Turns out we're also both avid photographers, love vintage photos and genealogy as well, and are a year apart in age.  Isn't life strange sometimes?


GrandAunt Anna Pape

I found someone had written "Ann was an intelligent, patient lady. Never judgmental. Would drive her sons' race cars around the track for fun. Skied when she was in her 60s."

Sounds like she would have been fun to get to know! 

GrandAunts


Pape Girls:   Marie, Anna, Minnie

These would be my  grandaunts, born in the 1890s.  All three are holding what I assume to be a rolled certificate - confirmation at their church perhaps?  School diplomas?  How curious to know what it might be!  This is the first time I've seen a photo of any of them.  They're my maternal grandaunts, sisters of my grandfather, Robert Pape.   

Minnie born in 1891, died in 1914.
Marie born in 1895. 
Anna born in 1898.
The girls look to be teenagers perhaps, so I'm guessing the date of this photo to be about 1910-1913.

What fun it is to learn about my ancestors!


Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Solving Mysteries - Emma!


Mrs Emma Pape Beckman

Yes, this is her!

I was told over again and again that my great grandfather Wilhelm traveled to America in 1882 with his sister "Anna".  And yet when I discovered the entry on the ship's log, her name was written Emma.

After lots of trial and error and searches resulting in nothing for "Anna Pape" ... I switched up to "Emma".  Nothing in Minnesota, so going from the stories written how they traveled by train as far as they could go, then walked the last 14 miles in snow - it was still April/May in 1882 - to the German community where his sister had been writing to friends or acquaintances.  Wilhelm didn't like the land there, and decided to head for the Red River Valley.  Apparently Emma stayed there.

North Dakota's records are limited when it comes to online searches, but spending a weekend with my mom and her sister, we chatted about family history a bit, and they opened up and told a story about going to Tolna, ND to visit relatives.

Somewhere in the 90s, I'm thinking 1992, my parents were visiting Minnesota and their father, Bob, got everyone loaded up into the suburban and headed out for a drive.  He never told them where they were going, or why.  After driving a bit, my father, Oliver speaks up "I know I'm going back home to California, but I had no idea we were driving!!"  (Such a sense of humor he had!)

Turns out they're going to meet Bob's cousins, people my mom and her sister had never met, nor heard of.  They visited, had a meal and turned around to come home.  On the way, Marge spoke up, "I just got paid, how about I treat everyone to dinner?"  They stopped and got food, and the bill came.  She reached into her purse, and all her cash was gone!   As expected, this memory hasn't faded a bit!  Bob gave everyone a hard time about it the entire rest of the trip!

Just chatting back and forth between the sisters, the managed to come up with a few details:  His name was Vernon Jorde.  His wife's name is Phyllis.  When reading Vernon's obit, both of them said the name "Beckman" was familiar.  That's Phyllis' maiden name.  More research, and Phyllis' father is Ernest Beckman.  Ernest is the son of Charles and Emma Beckman -- Emma being my great grandfather's sister!  I wasn't 100% positive because her maiden name isn't listed in sources I was able to find, until this little blurb on a North Dakota University search for the name Beckman, and it shows Mrs. Emma Pape Beckman as part of these two written pieces of history.

I'm tickled pink to be able to know what became of this long lost relative.  This family has always been big on secrets and untold stories ... how many of them are lost now, and to me, that's sad.

Great grandaunt Emma .... welcome to the family!