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26th July 10, 11:43 AM
#31
 Originally Posted by Cygnus
Well I'll be..!
I just checked my local library's website and there's a link to Ancestry.com hidden down at the bottom - all I have to do is enter my library card number!
I have to admit, it's nice having a librarian around to direct us to the references we need - thank you, Cajunscot!
Always happy to be of service. 
T.
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26th July 10, 12:56 PM
#32
 Originally Posted by gilmore
It's true that family stores often get mangled over the years, but sometimes they can have a grain of truth that verifies more reliable research, and they can also be helpful in pointing you in the right direction.
There is an example in the Gilmores. One of my relatives in the 1930's wrote down a family history based solely on what she had been told over the years. She started with a mangled version of the story of the first of the Gilmore/Morrisons being shipwrecked and clinging to driftwood, etc, as is told in the clan histories. She got the location wrong, as well as several other bits of information, but the fact that the story had been passed down for some 200 years since they/we came to America lent it its own kind of credibility.
I'm aware of an intentional brick wall in one line of my family a few generations back. What ever happened, they ain't going to tell.
The other side had it all mixed up and it turns out, they are Irish and English, along with a bunch of other things, but I have found no proof of Scottish ancestors. Just playing the surname game, I could have claimed to be of Gordon or MacMillan, or several other clans, but it's all English or Irish, or misspellings.
I tried to ask my inner curmudgeon before posting, but he sprayed me with the garden hose…
Yes, I have squirrels in my brain…
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26th July 10, 01:40 PM
#33
Because we live in a computer age, with on-line spell-checkers, it is easy to forget that only two generations ago spelling was an adventure and not a science.
Dictionaries were only introduced into the majority of UK schools in about 1910. It is said that for many British men, the first time that they saw their own name in print was when they signed up for war in 1914.
For those who could read and write their own name, it was mainly not them who were writing it. Civil servants, Parish, Town, Army, Military clerks, Census takers all did the writing themselves - and spelled things as they understood them.
Finally, on my mother's side of the family the name is Jackson. Two generations before her, were two brothers who lived in properties side by side. One was a Jackman and the other was a Johnstone. The father of both was a Jackson.
Spelling is interesting, but should never be taken as Gospel.
Regards
Chas
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26th July 10, 02:31 PM
#34
 Originally Posted by Chas
Because we live in a computer age, with on-line spell-checkers, it is easy to forget that only two generations ago spelling was an adventure and not a science.
Dictionaries were only introduced into the majority of UK schools in about 1910. It is said that for many British men, the first time that they saw their own name in print was when they signed up for war in 1914.
For those who could read and write their own name, it was mainly not them who were writing it. Civil servants, Parish, Town, Army, Military clerks, Census takers all did the writing themselves - and spelled things as they understood them.
Finally, on my mother's side of the family the name is Jackson. Two generations before her, were two brothers who lived in properties side by side. One was a Jackman and the other was a Johnstone. The father of both was a Jackson.
Spelling is interesting, but should never be taken as Gospel.
Regards
Chas
Plus there is the whole word Meme evolution going on as the cultures and ruling class change. I guess sometimes the only way to settle it is to draw blood... and have it DNA tested.
I tried to ask my inner curmudgeon before posting, but he sprayed me with the garden hose…
Yes, I have squirrels in my brain…
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18th August 10, 07:53 AM
#35
I have made a decision!
While I may still go ahead with DNA testing in the future (at the moment a bagpipe purchase is taking first priority over genetic testing), I have decided to throw my lot in with the MacQueens.
Don't worry, though, since bagpipes cost what they do, it will be a while before I go spending money on MacQueen paraphernalia!
There are a number of reasons for this, not least of which is the possibility that "Swan" and "MacQueen" share etymological roots (and the fact that evidence points to the name Swanson being associated with clan Gunn to the near exclusion of all other variations). The greatest reason, though, is my mother's side of the family. Her maiden name is French, so it makes sense to throw my lot in with a clan that supported the Jacobite cause as part of Clan Chattan.
So, in essence, this is my way of honouring both sides of the family.
If that is not the "correct" clan, I can only hope that my Father's ancestors will content themselves with the fact that I am involving myself in Scottish traditions.
Again, I'd like to thank everyone for your sage advice and assistance!
Last edited by Cygnus; 23rd November 10 at 06:39 PM.
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