Monthly Archives: January 2012

Gardner Spangler Eichelberger (1848 – 1918)

Gardner Spangler Eichelberger (Phillip, John, George, John, George) was born on August 17, 1848 in St Louis, Missouri. He was the second youngest of eleven children to parents George Forsyth Eichelberger and Maria Gardner Spangler. Gardner was obviously named after his mother’s side of the family. Share and Enjoy Facebook Twitter Delicious Digg Google Buzz StumbleUpon Add to favorites Email RSS

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Tech Tuesday – To Share Or Not To Share

In researching your family tree, most people will come to a point where geographic location or a lack of digitized resources available online has your research at a standstill.  To make a sweeping generalization, for the most part, our families rarely stayed in one place their whole lives and the chances that we, as family tree researchers, now live in those towns is slim.  We live all over the world and do most of our research utilizing resources available online. The digitization [...]

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Tombstone Tuesday – Samuel S Van Blaricom

Samuel S. Van Blaricom was born in 1777 in Shrewsbury, New Jersey.  He married Mary Ann Strawser in Pennsylvania and they went on to have at least nine children in the Shelby, Ohio area.  He took part in the War of 1812 and eventually died in 1856 in Liberty, Indiana and he is buried at Reed Cemetery in Fulton.                      Share and Enjoy Facebook Twitter Delicious Digg Google Buzz StumbleUpon Add to favorites [...]

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Matrilineal Monday – Catherine E Costello

Today’s featured women from my family tree is my great-grandmother, Catherine “Kate” E Costello.  She died long before my father was even born, so I obviously never even met her.  However, her story makes me believe that she was someone who I would have enjoyed knowing. Share and Enjoy Facebook Twitter Delicious Digg Google Buzz StumbleUpon Add to favorites Email RSS

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Maritime Monday – Castle Garden

Over the holidays, my husband I took a trip to New York City on vacation.  We saw so many things while we were there but the one thing I was most excited to see was Castle Garden.  All of my ancestors came through there and yet I know nothing about it.  All you ever hear about is Ellis Island but between 1855 and 1892, over eight million people immigrated through Castle Garden. Share and Enjoy Facebook Twitter Delicious Digg Google [...]

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