Elsie and Jens Eriksen |
Like many people who have been working on their family's history for a long time, I've plucked all of the low-hanging fruit. Sometimes I'll pick an ancestor, block out all other distractions, lay my head back and pretend I'm her (or him). I'll think about her life, imagine her daily routine and interactions, and sometimes come up with different avenues to pursue in my search for more information. The only caveat is that your assumptions about their lives need to be correct if you're going to have any success.
During one such creative session, I was pondering the life of my great-great grandmother, Elsie Eriksen. Her son, Peter Christensen, came to the United States at the age of 17 to learn the baking trade from an uncle in Omaha. What did I know of Elsie? Not much. I had one photo of her with her husband, Jens Eriksen. I had heard that her first husband, Mr. Christensen, was a mailman and had died. I didn't enjoy researching Elsie, as I knew so little and it was typically a frustrating exercise in futility. She lived her life in Denmark; I didn't read Danish, there weren't a lot of resources available, and I had no idea how to move forward. However, I had an idea that I don't even remember now, and began looking at various databases. To make a long story short, by the end of the night (or should I say the wee hours of the next morning) I had well-documented her life in Omaha, and identified her parents, who, surprisingly, lived in Iowa!
Peter Christensen |
I pulled out every bit of information I had on Elsie's son, Peter, to re-examine what I thought I knew. And there, on his 1901 ship manifest from his first trip here, it said that he was going to his grandfather, P. C. Larson in Exira, Iowa. There it was, right there the whole time. Suddenly I had a flashback to all those years earlier, when I first saw that information. The lines on the manifest were hard to follow, and there was writing in between the lines that confused things even more. That is my excuse for being so incredibly dense. I vividly remember thinking, "His mother was still in Denmark, so her parents surely were there too. He COULDN'T have a grandfather in Iowa. Besides, the last names don't match." I concluded that the information was for the person on the line above him. I'd love to travel back in time and thunk myself in the noggin for being so obtuse.
P. C. and Jacobine Larson |
However, the story does have a happy ending. I made contact with a descendant of Elsie's brother, who had abundant information and photos, and very generously shared them with me. Despite myself, I have a goldmine on a part of the family I truly never expected to know.
Many thanks to Elizabeth Swanay O'Neal of Little Bytes of Life for hosting the Genealogy Blog Party.
That is a happy ending. Congrats on getting to the bottom of it and finding cousins.
ReplyDeleteThe patronymic naming system can make research confusing, so I can see how it would be very easy to overlook grandfather P.C. Larson. Have you taken the line further back in Denmark?
ReplyDeleteGreat story! I think your original assumption was reasonable--even if it turned out to be incorrect. I've done the same, made assumptions that in hindsight were just not accurate. Thanks for the reminder to reexamine our assumptions.
ReplyDeleteGood tip to reexamine what you already know and reevaluate whether your assumptions are correct.
ReplyDeleteOh boy. That is a tough one. It feels wrong that a grandfather could be out there ahead of his grandkids. I'm pleased you got it all figured out in the end and found proof as well.
ReplyDeleteI love this story! You make me want to go back and re-examine some of the ancestors I'm done with. Maybe I'm not really done with them. And how lovely that you found a generous cousin, too.
ReplyDelete