Seven years ago, I started writing “Surname Saturday” posts
for my blog. As of now I have written
almost 350 sketches, each featuring an immigrant ancestor. I started working my way through my ahnentafel
chart, beginning with my paternal side of the tree, featuring one surname at a
time. Then my mother’s side of the tree, working through her side of the
family.
As I work through each name, I take a good hard look at what
research I have already done on that family.
(I even wrote a blog post on this process you can see at this link: https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/05/how-do-i-write-up-my-surname-saturday.html )
With some of these families, I did the
original research 40 years ago, so before I publish a "Surname Saturday" post I will recheck all the sources and see what new
research has been done. Back in 2015 I
wrote up my BATCHELDER sketch, showing my descent from the Reverend Stephen Batchelder
(1560 – 1656), the founder of Hampton, New Hampshire. I actually had three descents from Rev. Batchelder,
so it was a complicated sketch. You can read that post at this link: https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/10/surname-saturday-batchelder-of-hampton.html
As I wrote up this sketch I found a new source for the
BATCHELDER family that I looked at later, the year after I published the blog
post. This was a manuscript that is held
at the Lane Library in Hampton, New Hampshire.
Charles Hull Batchelder (1876 – 1948) collected notes on the BATCHELDER
family for many years, correcting the errors in the Batchelder compiled
genealogy book published by Frederick C. Pierce in 1898. This Pierce book is what I used for my
research, along with vital records and other local sources. It was the cause of
one big mistake I made on identifying the parents of Jonathan Batchelder (about
1800 – 1847), my 4th great grandfather.
Charles Hull Batchelder died in 1948 before publishing his revised
version of the genealogy book. I didn’t
know that all his notes were held at the New Hampshire Historical Society
Library. I knew that in 1985 a man named
Carl. W. Brage transcribed some of Charles Batchelder’s research into a 222
page manuscript (available online at the Lane library website http://www.hampton.lib.nh.us/ ), but that
document doesn’t include the generation where Jonathan Batchelder appears. I still didn’t know if I made a mistake with
my conclusions. So last year we went to the New Hampshire Historical Society
library to see Charles Batchelder’s original research notes.
Little did I realize, but Charles Batchelder’s notes were
kept in tiny notebooks and scraps of paper held in eleven large boxes! According to the Lane library website “196
handwritten notebooks in five boxes, handwritten and typed correspondence in
four boxes, about 2000 handwritten family group sheets in one box, and about
10,000 individual handwritten index cards in one box”. Happily, because Charles Batchelder was a
copious note taker, a meticulous genealogist, and a hoarder of information, I
was able to find Jonathan Batchelder, my 4th great grandfather, inside these
boxes.
In the next few blog posts I will describe how I decoded
Charles Hull Batchelder’s mysterious descendant numbering system to uncover Jonathan
Batchelder’s parents and ancestors. I
will also describe how to work with his enormous number of notes and their own numbered codes. And how I came to a new conclusion about my
family tree, where I had to prune off 29 surnames (and 29 branches!), but I
also added 31 new surnames and 31 new branches!
When you rely on other people's research, you have to be careful that you are looking at the latest research! Even if that research has been hidden in a box in an archive for decades!
Win some, lose some! Stay tuned for more...
Click here for part 2:
https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2018/09/batchelder-family-do-over-part-2.html
Click here for part 2:
https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2018/09/batchelder-family-do-over-part-2.html
Click here for part 3:
https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2018/09/batchelder-family-do-over-part-3.html
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I can't wait to read more!
ReplyDeleteVery interesting! I'm suspecting the same type of situation in my research!
ReplyDeleteWow, a cliffhanger. Looking forward to following along as you decode the notes and reinterpret what you know about your tree in light of new info!
ReplyDelete