The New Hampshire Historical Society, Concord, New Hampshire |
We arrived at the New Hampshire Historical Society Library
in Concord very early one Saturday to look at the collected papers and
manuscripts of Charles Hull Batchelder (1876 – 1948). His lifetime work on the genealogical
research of the BATCHELDER family was held in eleven storage boxes. He died before he could publish his book,
which was a revision of Frederick C. Pierce’s compiled genealogy of the Batchelder
family published in 1898.
I was dismayed when I saw the large number of big boxes, and even more
dismayed when I saw how much paperwork was stored in each box! 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”. Fortunately, I had spent a lot of time
reading Carl W. Brage’s 1985 manuscript from the Lane Library in Hampton, New
Hampshire, which was a collection of four or five generations of C. H.
Batchelder’s work. I was looking for Jonathan Batchelder (about 1800 – 1847),
my 4th great grandfather.
From studying Brage’s work, we had figured out the numbering
system for C.H. Batchelder’s notes. I
knew we were looking for Jonathan Batchelder, who was probably #32,213 (See the previous blog post HERE ). One of the boxes held note cards on almost 10,000
individuals, so we found the card with this number. Another box held family group sheets using
this same numbering system, so it was easy to find Jonathan’s family group
sheet. Thank goodness that C. H.
Batchelder was such a meticulous note keeper and genealogist. Once you know his secret code, it is much
easier to navigate the boxes of notes!
Next to each line on the group sheet and across the bottom
of the family group sheet were mysterious lines more code numbers. It took a while to figure out what these
numbers could mean. Each number looked
like this “109-28&30” or “167-28 to 30”.
After looking through the boxes we could see that the first number in
each code was a notebook, and the second set of numbers was the page. C.H. Batchelder had numbered every note book
(or bundle of notes) and numbered each page in that notebook. Some of these notebooks were collections of
letters, others were transcribed records from deeds, newspapers, vital records,
and other official records. These
numbers were his proofs or sources for the dates and notes for each person on
his family group sheets.
Finding these notebooks was a bit tricky. Although each box was labeled with the numbers
of the notebooks it held, finding the proper notebook was trickier. These were fragile, old notebooks that were
falling apart. In most boxes the notebooks
were all different sizes, from small 3” x 5” notepads to larger book. Some of them were wrapped in butcher paper so
the pages wouldn’t fall out. Others were tied with ribbon. We had to carefully remove each notebook
while looking for the one we wanted from the codes. Then we had to carefully find the page
numbers. Then replace all the books back
into the box. It took a long time to
find all the relevant notes for Jonathan.
After finding Jonathan, I knew who his parents were, and the
search started all over again. We found
his parent’s group sheet (Nathaniel Batchelder (1763 – 1809) and Mary Perkins).
We carefully photographed that sheet, and then searched for all the notes. Then I moved on to Jonathan’s son, George
(1822- 1848), my 3rd great grandfather. Then George, Jr. (1848 – 1914), born
posthumously, my great great grandfather. I had time to photograph Jonathan’s
grandfather’s family group sheet (Nathaniel (17320 1778) and his wife Mary
Longfellow), his great grandfather’s information (Stephen Batchelder (1701 –
1748/9) and Jane Lamprey), and his 2x great grandfather’s sheet (Stephen
Batchelder (1675/6- 1748) and Mary Dearborn. The notes for all these generations
would have to wait for another trip because it was too time consuming, even
though it was very illuminating!
Family Group Sheet for Jonathan Batchelder, my 4th great grandfather |
"Notebook 154" was not a book, but a stack of lined paper, wrapped in craft paper, tied with a ribbon. |
Code 154-227 meant book 154, page 227 A note which was a transcription from probate describing a debt based on a wager "some trick with a pack of cards" |
Notebook 2 |
A family group sheet for Nathaniel Batchelder, my 5th great grandfather, Lots of notes here, all backed up with proofs from records in the storage boxes |
What a treasure trove we found in C. H. Batchelder’s boxes
of notes! He had collected all this
information by hand on thousands of individuals, combing through archives, deeds,
probate records, vital and church records, and newspapers all before the invention
of the computer or the internet. He had
invented his own system for organizing all this information without the use of an
electronic database. I am amazed and thankful for this man’s attention to
detail on this branch of my family tree.
Stay tuned!
If you missed the previous posts....
Click here for Part 1
Click here for Part 2
--------------------------
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Batchelder Family Do Over Part 3", Nutfield Genealogy, posted September 13, 2018, ( https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2018/09/batchelder-family-do-over-part-3.html: accessed [access date]).
Heather, this is just phenomenal on so many levels. I'm glad that Charles was that organized. Congrats on the new generations.
ReplyDeleteThis is so inspiring! I’ve been stuck on my Batchelder line FOREVER! Can’t get past Henry, married in Charlestown, NH, in 1822. I may have to check out these boxes!
ReplyDeleteIt took a cousin to fill me in on the Batchelder ancestors. My 7th great grandparents are Mercy Bathchelder and John James. I will be emailing you soon, the email on here is my husbands so i will give you my own
ReplyDeleteI can't wait for your next blog post on this! I know the farm in Chichester very well. As well as the Farms in Epsom, Loudon and in Pittsfield. Worked them with my father growing up. The Rec. Is my 11th Ggfather. And I come from Chichester myself. Lived in Pittsfield too. So this truly excited me!
ReplyDeleteMy gosh, you are phenomenal!!! Thank you cousin, I'll go back to the Bastard Case still trying to find John Batchelder!
ReplyDelete