Showing posts with label Family - Thornburg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family - Thornburg. Show all posts

Monday, June 25, 2007

June 25, 2007

Friday I spent the morning searching the Akin line to try to answer a question that Akin historian, Larry Akin, asked me to help answer. Larry has a wonderful website on the Akin History (www.akinfamilyhistory.com) that he painstakingly put online a few years ago. We "collaborated" on some of the data, and even did research together in Albany, Quaker Hill, Hoosick Falls area, and Glens Falls, NY in 2002. I haven't really searched the US Census for Akin too much since they've become available online, I guess because I got so much information first hand during my "Vagabond Travels" of 2000-2002, especially in Chautauqua Co., NY. The picture on the right is of the land around the Akin lands in Pittstown Twp, Rensselaer County, NY in 2002.

Suprise for me later in the evening when I was searching for my Thornburgs when Larry Akin's website came up as a resource! The Akins and the Thornburgs are on opposite sides of my family tree. As I researched how Larry came to have Thornburghs on the Akin tree I stayed up until 4am. That is way too late, but very exciting to put puzzle pieces in place! It turns out his Ethan Akin III ancestor, in Iowa in 1882, married a granddaughter of Hannah Thornburg. Hannah may be the sister to my GGG-grandfather, Amos Thornburg. Extensive research has been done tracking Larry's Thornburg/Griffith family through the Midwest, through Virginia (West Virginia/Tennessee) and back to Ireland and Wales. I don't know if further research can really prove the relationship since Amos and Hannah were born before the US Revolution.....but I can't wait to contact Larry and see what we can find out. If that doesn't work, I do have Griffiths in Wales in the 1500's! To be continued!

Lucille, my traveling companion from the Adventurers' Club, just returned from her trip to Peru, Ecuador, Machu Pichu, the Amazon River, and the Galapagos. I relayed the procedure to send her passport in to get visas for our upcoming trip to China and Cambodia in September. She is really a world traveler and just put her photos on a slideshow on a photo website. They are wonderful. The last meeting of the club had, Thursday, was a nice presentation of traveling to Egypt. I was amazed at how close hotels and other buildings are now to the Pyramids.

I've downloaded 6 lectures from last year's Federation of Genealogical Societies in Boston to my computer from lulu.com (They are listed under "Talk Radio" ) then synched them to my iPod. They cost $1.99 each mp3 lecture and are certainly a savings over attending the conference in person. Since I will be going to this year's conference in Ft Wayne, Indiana, I decided to listen to some of the lectures that weren't offered or are repeats that I won't have a chance to attend do to conflicts in the schedule. I chose one lecture to download called "Pianos to Popcorn Makers-our ancestors inventions" ----- because I wanted to figure out how I can find the patent information for the inventions of my Grandfather, Alfred G. Hague. I know you can go to the US patent & Trademarks Office's online site, but you have to know the patent numbers, which I don't have.

Great Discovery!!!! Thanks to podcasts!
On my iPod today I listened to the lecture on Inventions and Patents and found that there are 50 libraries in the US designated "Patent & Trademark Depository Libraries " - they have indexes to the patent numbers by using the inventor's names. At home I found that the Hawaii State Library is one of the libraries. Since they didn't answer their phone, I continued looking online, and thought I'd click on to the Iowa State Library which also has the index by names. I figured I would visit Des Moines this August. Much to my surprise they are one of the only libraries that have a complete listing -online- of all the patents that have issued for their state - in this case Iowa inventors!!!!! How great is that?! I found ten inventions that my grandfather patented, and was able to access some of the drawings of these patents back at www.uspto.gov.

My grandfather did the drawings for his patent applications, and others where he worked at Orwig & Hague because he started out as a draftsman. One of his best inventions is a car dumping apparatus (to dump grain out of train cars-picture on left); some others are a trolley catcher, a needle to repair runs in knits; a caster, a culvert, a silo, and a photographic device (see upper right). It is really amazing to find out all of these inventions. I only had heard of the car dumping device when I interviewed my father many years ago. It was a good thing I did, or I never would have thought to look for patents that my grandfather made!

Thursday, June 14, 2007

June 14, 2007

It's been an extraordinary couple weeks, and eventful last few days. First, I must mention about volunteering for the television series "Extreme Makeover - Home Edition." The season premier, which will air Sunday Sept 23rd, 2007, was filmed yesterday in the Honolulu neighborhood of Kalihi. A very deserving woman and her family received a gorgeous new house and a children's learning center (Keiki o ka Aina). Work to build the house began a week ago. On Sunday I heard on TV news that they really needed more volunteers to help because they were behind due to the daily rain. So I went to Pier 38 to volunteer and board the shuttle bus to Kalihi Valley. Well, there were enough volunteers for Monday, so I signed up for Tuesday and Wednesday. On Tuesday I helped set up the kitchen and living room, and tried to keep the dust to a minimum on the floors. On Wednesday I reported back to Pier 38 for the shuttle at 7:30am and stayed at the house until 5pm. After 3,000 volunteers and sponsors, the 2-story house went up. It was very exciting to see the television cast, crew and all the designers, etc. at work. I was attached to "The Maids" a local cleaning company, and went to work on detail cleaning of the kitchen. After that people were being released. Since I wanted to stay inside working until "the reveal" when the family got to see the house, I kept finding work to do. Besides it was raining outside and very muddy. So while the crowds were practicing "Move That Bus" and cheering, I quietly cleaned the kitchen, then the stairs, and the upstairs hallway on my hands and knees. No one kicked this hard-working lady out of the house, and eventually I was about the only one who was not a part of the cast left. By then the cast was calling me in to one room or another to help tidy up here and there. Believe me the bedrooms for the three children, and the nursery were amazing - as was the master bedroom / suite... which included an outdoor jacuzzi in a private garden with waterfall. Finally when the rain had stopped and it was about time for the family to drive up in the limousine, I went out to wait with the crowd. It was a thrilling and heart-warming moment to see the reaction of this humble family when they saw their new home as the busses blocking their view were pulled away. I'm very happy for the experience, but I had no idea I'd bruised and scraped my knees so badly. Well, it was for a good cause.

In the midst of this I was busy submitting and resubmitting a video I made at the Hawaiian Plantation Village Genealogy Workshop June 2nd. I took a couple all-day efforts in editing it, adding music and narration before it looked OK. Then I found out my knowledge on the "output" phase is severely lacking. I didn't -- and still don't-- know the best file type to output the video in for the internet. The first time I uploaded it up as an e-mail file. Much to my surprise it became a "featured" video on www.rootstelevision.com within one day. When I saw the poor quality and pixelation, I quickly went back to my original and edited out 30 seconds to get it down to 5 min 33 seconds. Then I had to find a output format so it would be as close to 100 MB without going over. I finally stumbled on something called "H.264" which turns out to be an MP4 file. At any rate, it compressed the video to 45.8 MB and Sam at Rootstelevision was able to switch out the old video for the new better version. It's called "Genealogy in Hawaii" and is in the "New & Featured" category at the website. Rootstelevision.com is an excellent genealogy resource, both informative and entertaining.

Also this week, all this my paperwork arrived to fill out for my visa applications to China and Cambodia. I put those in the mail at the post office today to PVS International. They handled my visa requirements last year when I went to Mongolia and Russia. I hope I get them back with my passport before I have to travel! In addition the "health form" arrived to fill out for my Elderhostle Intergenerational Program to S.W. Utah in July with my grandkids, which needed to be filled out and mailed. Lots of important paperwork, don't want to be disorganized!

I've been getting various immunizations and tests, etc. before my trip to China, Tibet and Cambodia this September. Unfortunately I missed the second in the Japanese Encephalitis innoculation series yesterday, and will have to get it tomorrow. I've got some "Diamox" pills for the high altitude (12,000 ft) for Lahsa, Tibet. I hope I don't get altitude sickness. If I were still living in mile-high Denver, it wouldn't be such a transition to go to those Tibetian altitudes.

Last Saturday our monthly Honolulu Genealogy Society meeting was held and I made a presentation on the "Family Tree Maker" software, while Richard Souther presenter "The Master Genealogist" software. With a laptop projector and many members with their own laptop computers, we had a very good and productive meeting. About thirty people were there. Afterwards many of us went to the Tree Tops Restaurant at the end of Manoa Valley again for lunch.

Tuesday, Mark Bennett, our Hawaii State Attorney General, spoke to us at the East Oahu Breakfast Club meeting in Hawaii Kai. I enjoyed talking to him, as I'd seen him often at various state hearings during the legislative session at the Capitol... including his own re-confirmation hearing.

And all this while I've been eager - chomping at the bit - to get to the packet of papers that arrived this week in the mail from the Lilly Library at the Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. The packet is correspondence in the Grace Marks collection in the Manuscripts Department. It is all about the Thornburg(h) family who, it's said, came to the Barbados then to Virginia, then Kentucky and in 1811 came finally to Indiana. There is also information on the Harbisons, and they are quite confused as to who Rachel Harbison's father was. Rachel married Amos Thornburg. I have visited Perrysville, KY and Salem, Indiana and know the areas of which the letters refer. It's been very difficult not to push everything else aside and delve into the papers, but with all that I've described, above, I just couldn't. Maybe if I don't have anyone log on to my genealogy support session at Family History Live Online, Friday, I'll be able to devote some time to reading and comparing the information. Amos Thornburgh and Rachel (Harbison) Thornburgh were my 3rd great grandparents on my father's side. I have a photo of their son, Richard Hope Thornburg. The Hope name came from a family friend or relation in Kentucky, and probably before that. So much to do...so little time.