Check It Out – Month 4 of 12 Ancestors in 12 Months

The Meckley Connection

One of my DNA matches on MyHeritage has the surname of Meckley.

Meckley is a well known name to me. My husband Gary’s paternal grandmother was born Anna Mae Meckley on March 3, 1911 in Elizabethtown, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Her parents were Samuel Kulp and Annie (Geib) Meckley. The Meckley family including her grandparents, Levi (1842-1897) and Catherine; her great grandparents, Samuel (1811-1886) and Mary Ann; and her 2nd great grandparents, Melchior (1775-1824) and Elizabeth, settled in Lancaster and Dauphin Counties in Pennsylvania. (Melchior may have been born in Germany.)

My DNA match with the surname of Meckley is estimated to be my 3rd to 5th cousin so the connection is not very close. She only has 12 people in her tree so there is not a lot of information  there. We have no  surnames in common. However, her line can be traced to her  great grandparents, Joseph Ray (known as Ray) Meckley and his wife Ida Rebecca Phleeger who was born in either Pennsylvania or Maryland (I have many ancestors from Maryland). Joseph was born on September 24, 1891 in Green Castle, Pennsylvania which is in Franklin County to Daniel M. Meckley and Maude E. Myers. Franklin County is in southern Pennsylvania.

If this DNA match is a 3rd cousin, then she has a great grandparent whose sibling is my great grandparent which means that we would share a set of great-great grandparents (the average person has approximately 190 third cousins). If however, this connection is actually a 5th cousin then that increases the possibilities to over 17,000 possible cousin matches and we would share a 4th great grandparent (which means that there are 12 degrees of separation between us). With maternal lines involved it is likely that the connection is not even a Meckley: “In the US and in most other countries, surnames are passed down from a father to his children, but only those male children will pass down their father’s surname to their children.  If the father only has female children, then the surname does not continue on his line.  If he has two sons and a daughter only the sons will carry the surname.  The daughter will take her husband’s name, and her children, the grandchildren of her father, will not share his surname (Mercedes).”

Geographically however, we very well may have an ancestor in common. I wrote about the two cousins with the same name, John Calvin Watkins, in my blog entry of February 11, 2022 https://journeyingwithjacque.com/maps-generations-cafe-ancestry-challenge/  My great grandfather was John Calvin son of Samuel and John’s cousin was John Calvin son of William. Both Samuel and William were born in Fayette County, Pennsylvania (which is a county in southern Pennsylvania) as was John Calvin son of William.

Any family connection? Who knows…but it was a fun discovery.

Sources

McDermott, Marc. “What Is a Fifth Cousin? Are They Considered Family?” Genealogy Explained, 22 Feb. 2022, https://www.genealogyexplained.com/what-is-a-fifth-cousin/.

McDermott, Marc. “What Is a Third Cousin? Are They Considered Family?” Genealogy Explained, 22 Feb. 2022, https://www.genealogyexplained.com/what-is-a-third-cousin/.

Mercedes. “Should You Have Surname Matches with Distant Cousin DNA Matches?” Who Are You Made Of?, 16 Jan. 2022, https://whoareyoumadeof.com/blog/should-you-have-surname-matches-with-distant-cousin-dna-matches/.

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Wordless Wednesday 4/27/22

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Wordless Wednesday 4/20/22

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Wordless Wednesday 4/6/22

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Sisters – Generations Cafe Ancestry Challenge

The Many Daughters of Maria Christina Schaefer Schmidt

Ten girls, eight boys…my great, great grandmother, Maria Christine Schaefer Schmidt gave birth to eighteen children.

Maria and her three youngest daughters

My great grandmother, Gertrude, was the first born child of Maria and her husband Heinrich Joseph Schmidt. She was born on August 8, 1867 in Barisdorf, Prussia, Germany. Gertrude and her parents immigrated to America, arriving in New York City from Hamburg on May 24, 1869. The family settled in La Crosse, Wisconsin. Gertrude’s sister, Catherine, was born on November 25, 1869 in La Crosse, Wisconsin. The rest of the siblings were all also born in Wisconsin.

Even though Gertrude, her husband John Peter Anthony, and their children settled in San Bernardino, California after my grandmother was born, Gertrude “Trudy” and her sisters remained close.

Gertrude Schmidt Anthony1867-1943
Catherine Schmidt Merfeld1869-1937
Mary Schmidt Smizek1871-1950
Barbara Schmidt Finn1873-1939
Anna Schmidt1877-1889
Louise Schmidt1878-1880
(Unnamed female Schmidt)1881-1881
Christina Schmidt Brey1882-1919
Wilhelmina “Minnie” Schmidt Neibergall1883-1957
Mathilda “Della” Schmidt Oldenburg1887-1960
The Schmidt Sisters
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Wordless Wednesday 3/30/22

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Wordless Wednesday 3/23/22

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St. Patrick’s Day

Paying Homage to my Irish Ancestors

While St. Patrick’s Day was originally celebrated in Ireland as a religious holiday, today it’s a holiday where everyone claims to be Irish, wears green, drinks green beer, bakes Irish soda bread, and has a wonderful meal of corned beef and cabbage.

I am lucky to be able to actually claim Irish heritage on both my maternal and paternal ancestral lines. I am able to trace my roots to three surnames:

  • McElroy which means son of the red-haired lad;
  • O’Rea which means having a gentle disposition;
  • Ligget or Leggett which means ambassador or deputy.

According to the Irish Genealogy Toolkit, “In 1771-1773, more than 100 ships left the Ulster ports of Newry, Derry, Belfast, Portrush and Larne, carrying some 32,000 Irish immigrants to America.” They came for religious freedom (they were often Protestant) and cheap, plentiful land. My 4th great grandparents, Thomas McElroy and Elisabeth O’Rea emigrated in 1773. They were the parents of Margaret McElroy who married Joseph Hanslap Watkins.

Thomas was an interesting person. Even though he only lived in America since 1773, he enlisted in the American Revolutionary Army in Chester, Pennsylvania in 1776. As I stated in my blog post on June 4, 2021 titled Military, “Thomas served as a wagoner or wagon driver. The American colonies at the beginning of the Revolutionary War were mostly rural. Much of the land consisted of forests, marshes, and swamps. The terrain was extremely rugged. Existing roads were inadequate. Travel was slow. Because of these issues it became policy to hire wagons and drivers to provide transportation for the troops and supplies. Sometimes local people were hired for this duty while at other times, soldiers (such as Thomas) were given this responsibility.”

After the war, Thomas applied for his Revolutionary War pension since he was a soldier in the American Revolutionary War in his newly adopted country. Sadly, his claim for a pension was denied because the job of a wagoner was not considered military service.

My maternal Irish 2nd great grandfather, Oliver Ligget or Leggett, immigrated to Canada from Armagh, Northern Ireland. Oliver was a farmer and it is possible that he emigrated because of the devastation of the Irish potato famine. (He married Catherine Stewart in Canada. Catherine was born in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada. According to the 1891 Canadian Census, both of her parents were born in Scotland. According to her obituary, Catherine moved with her parents to Bruce, Ontario, Canada when she was a young girl.)

Oliver settled in Bruce, Ontario where he met Catherine. They had two children including my great grandmother, Sarah Jane Ligget McLeod.

As you celebrate St. Patrick’s Day, enjoy those characteristics that truly make each one of us Irish including being charming, a dreamer, a storyteller, passionate, good-natured, friendly, easy going yet a bit stubborn.

“May the luck of the Irish be with you!”

Sources

“Discover the Meaning and History behind Your Last Name.” Last Name Meanings and Origins | Search Surnames at Ancestry.com®, https://www.ancestry.com/learn/facts.

“Irish Emigration to North America, Britain and Australia. Coffin Ships.” To North America, Britain and Australia. Coffin Ships., https://www.irish-genealogy-toolkit.com/Irish-emigration.html.

“Rea Coat of Arms, Family Crest – Free Image to View – Rea Name Origin History and Meaning of Symbols.” IrishNation.com, https://www.irishsurnames.com/cgi-bin/gallery.pl?name=rea&capname=Rea&letter=r.

“Thomas McElroy Sr. (1751-Unknown) – Find a Grave…” Find a Grave, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/83439990/thomas-mcelroy.

Year: 1891; Census Place: Bruce, Bruce West, Ontario, Canada; Roll: T-6328; Family No: 1

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Wordless Wednesday 3/16/22

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Wordless Wednesday 3/9/22

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