Friday, December 1, 2017
Springerle Christmas Cookies
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
NORWAY ROOTS???
Boyce: The Personal Name in the Eidson Family
by Robert Griffis Eidson
We Eidson's of Darke and Preble Counties, Ohio, have long wondered about the personal name Boyce in our family. My father, and a brother, carry the name. My father was proud of his name. He told me that his grandfather of Preble Co,. and his second and third grandfather's of Bedford Co., Va. were also named Boyce. But he, nor anyone else, knew how the name had entered the family—where a Boyce woman had married an Eidson man. Its origin was unknown.
Having the time at 86 years [of age] we decided some months ago to record for our descendants what we had learned of the Boyce subject [but] to do the subject justice…would require a book. So, we devised the method here of placing the pertinent details …and put[ting] in writing how the records were found, their place in our ancestral line, and, most importantly… the surprising origin of Boyce—from the handsome, influential Frisians.…
The "Original" Boyce of 1732 Va. and The Eidson-Boyes Marriage 1600
We had no possible connection between 1732 Va. and ca 1600 England until in 1979 Mrs. Wanda Eidson, Weatherford, Tx., found the 1680 record in Dublin, Ireland, of the baptism of Edward Eidson, son of Denys and Hannah Eidson. The evidence points to this Edward of Dublin being the same person as the 1732 Edward of Virginia.…
The Boyes Family of Yorkshire, England
Having obtained a somewhat plausible ancestral line for we American Eidson's back to Isabel Boyes Eidson of Yorkshire, England, the obvious questions were: Who were the Boyes family, and from what European nation had they come to England?
Our study has taken two surprising turns: They came to England from Norway, but their origin was not Norwegian but Frisian. The variants of Boyes, and the Frisian "Boy" are numerous in Norway… the Oslo telephone directory… has 49 variants of the names from Boye, Boyes, to Boyesen.
The finding of the Frisian connection with our Boyes family of Leeds Parish in England was again quite fortuitous. Our Norwegian correspondents had written us that they doubted that Boyes was of Norwegian origin. In the old Webster's Collegiate Dictionary that our daughters had used in their school days we found "boy, Frisian origin".
It appears that the Frisians have never received their "just dues" regarding their influence on the development of the English nation. It has been usurped by the term Anglo-Saxon England. As author Blair has written, the term Anglo-Saxon has become established by long usage although the Frisians have obviously had a greater effect on the nation as shown by the close relationship of the English and Frisian languages. Apparently we should not use the term Anglo-Saxon England; a more appropriate term would be Frisian England.
The Frisians are an ethnic group, not a nation, occupying "since the earliest times", the islands along the southern coast of the North Sea, which are owned by Holland, Germany, and Denmark. Their language is a Germanic dialect. It is the closest to modern English of all the continental languages.
The Frisians were a seapower before the Scandinavian Vikings of 750-1030 AD. One author has suggested that they may have taught seamanship to the Vikings as they had traded along the Norwegian coast as far north as Tronder, some 400 miles north of Bergen.
Our Frisian Ancestors The Frisians colonized eastern Britain starting with Kent, East Anglia, and Sussex.
The Frisians are among the blondest people of the world, blue eyes to light mixed; they are tall, long legged, broad shouldered, with large heads, faces, and noses.
The Frisians occupied their present home about 150 BC.
The Frisian language of low German is still spoken in the Friesland province of N.E. Holland, and many of the nearby islands along the North Sea coast. Other Low German tribes were the Old Saxon, Anglo Saxon, and the Franks.
Ptolemy, 77-147 AC, Egyptian geographer, placed the Frisians between the rivers Ems and Rhine (Holland).
Procopius, ca 550 AD, Byzantium historian, wrote: "The people of Britain are the English and Frisians".
From 450 to 785 AD the Frisians were far wandering seafarer's along the borders of the North Sea. (The Vikings of Scandinavia appeared later....700-1030).
In the 600's and 700's missionaries from Britain attempted to convert the Frisians. they accepted the Church of Rome in 1234.
Sources: Encyclopedia Brittanica, 9th. Ed., 1895 Wells "Outline of History" 1922 Blair's "Anglo-Saxon England" 1972 Coon's "Races of Europe" 1939 Coon, Ripley, and Beddoe "Races" Larsens "History of Norway"
Note: The above text has been edited from an article by Robert Griffis Eidson that appeared in the Eidson Newsletter, number 14, October 1982.
http://www.nezperce.com/~gedison/eidson/pafg02.htm
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Every day I seem to find something very interesting! So far, I have found out that, yes, Henry D(uke?) or D(uncastle?) or B(oyce?) Sherman (my elusive great-grandfather) was born in Alabama, not Virginia. Because his grandfather Thomas Duncastle Sherman had two sons, Thomas D(uncastle) or D(uke) Sherman (b. 1789) and Mexico B(oyce?) Sherman. These guys married Eidson sisters (Frances Ann and Mary "Polly" respectively) and seemed to live near each other for much of their lives.
In 1810-1815, the brothers both bought land in Alabama (Madison County records) and several of their numerous children were born there. The happy couples had numerous children, and unfortunately seemed to view each other as alter egos, for they gave their children very similar names, and it has taken a lot of US Census checking to sort them out. Mexico (or his namesake son) even appropriated his cousin & wife's names (Samuel Hawkins Sherman) for one of his offspring. How close—how confusing for us researchers— can you get?
But none of their offspring seem to have been named Adam—so that re-opens the puzzle of who was the Adam Sherman in DeSoto, Miss., who took in Henry & Mary Ellen's children in the 1870 Census? Grrrrr!
In the meantime, our ancestry seems solidly rooted in the Bedford and Henrico Counties, Virginia, and all of those German-Swiss forebears I was so eager to claim, must belong to someone else.
This new Sherman line, including lots of Thomases and Henrys, is edging back into the 1600s, and puts us solidly in the DAR both time-wise and record-wise. I’ve found at least one indentured Irish servant, and that, too is a story which will take some more digging. But Elizabeth Doncaster (Duncastle) is listed as having sailed as a “bonded” passenger on the ship “Justitia” in 1771, arriving in Philadelphia in Dec. of that year. She married Thomas Sherman and became the mother of the two brothers above.
However, (this is for you, Jill) In my searching I found a fascinating pedigree listed under Farrar, which takes that line back to early English royalty and finally leads up to a Cicely Farrar marrying a Sherman. “Cicely Farrar, born 1627 in Farrar's Island, Henrico Co., VA; died 1703; married Henry Sherman, Sr.”
http://www.poetsvisions.com/genealogy/farrar.htm
I’m not positive this is one of our Henry Shermans, but what an interesting pedigree! Hmmm. Does this mean those current West Point Farrar men are hard-wired for the military?
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
SHERMAN HISTORIC SITES
If you get close to Comfort, here is an opportunity to visit "my roots."
Welcome to Comfort Cloisters
http://www.comfortcloisters.com/propmap.html
Here is the link to the Comfort Cloisters—an historic location for many reasons. Although not yet honored by an historic plaque, a significant event occurred here:
On December 19, 1931, in the front bedroom of the cottage, a baby girl—Dorothy Charlton Sherman—was born under rather unusual circumstances.
Always the drama queen, I made my appearance there in the Methodist parsonage, rather than a doctor's clinic or the nearest hospital, because our family was quarantined. My eight-year-old brother was seriously ill with what was first diagnosed as diphtheria, but later identified as strep throat, both highly contagious in those pre-antibiotic days.
The family doctor, Dr. Charles Clinton Jones, performed an emergency tracheotomy on a card table in the living room, with my father, the minister, assisting, while my mother was laboring to deliver me under the supervision of the dr.'s wife, a nurse, in the bedroom.
In gratitude for the survival of both children, my parents named me Dorothy (for the medical couple's own daughter) and Charlton (a contraction of the Dr.'s two names). How many times have I explained that unusual middle name!?
So the cottage at Comfort Cloisters (then Gaddis Memorial Methodist Church) was my birthplace, as well as the place where I took my first steps, spoke my first words, and in general was the treasured baby sister for my two older brothers.
No wonder there are still wisps of "spoiling" hanging around my head.
I know this is TMI, but I love to tell stories.
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
HAIR
For my mother — Gladys Fern Hedges Sherman— the birth of a daughter six years after her second son was an answer to prayers—prayers so intense that she had at least one "false pregnancy" during those years of waiting. Oh, she dearly loved her sons, “Sonny Boy” (Robert) and “Bubs” (Lloyd), but as a seamstress whose skills would have carried her far in fashion design, her fondest wish was to have a little girl whom she could "dress up."
When I was born on December 19, 1931, her prayers were answered (almost). I was a healthy, precocious, baby girl. I immediately began to charm my brothers, who were old enough to be susceptible, but not old enough to be indifferent. My father, Val, did not spoil me (although some would say otherwise), but he was a tall, godlike presence from day one — especially on Sundays when he stood even higher in the pulpit. Nothing pleased me more than for him to come in the house and scoop me up to his eye level; I almost felt that I was flying up there, and from the safety of his strong arms, I could look smugly down at my brothers reaching up to embrace their father’s waist.
It was an idyllic picture with only one flaw—the baby girl with the soft smile and pensive eyes was almost totally bald. My oldest brother had brown hair in respectable quantity. My second brother had blonde angel ringlets thickly covering his cranium and cherished well after boy-hair cutting time. But the long-awaited daughter had little to none.
My mother was not deterred. She stitched away, dressing me in fashions copied after what the most-highly-placed baby girls wore at church and in the women’s magazines. She did not go to fantastic lengths to assist my hair to grow (even though later, when I had enough hair to work with, she did use curlers and curling irons occasionally). But my pictures don’t lie—up until I was over two years old, I had less hair than a Kewpie Doll.
This fact was brought home to me yesterday when I was going through some old scrapbooks. I found a picture of a large group of children on the front steps of a house that did not look familiar. I did not recognize it as a parsonage or the dwelling of some family member. When I detached the photo from the page and turned it over, I found my mother’s handwriting: “Annie Weatherby’s Birthday Party; Dorothy in Dorothy Jane Little’s lap.” I believe the location was either Comfort or San Saba, Texas.
Okay. That’s clear enough. Although there are actually three little girls in other children’s laps, it was not hard to pick me out. I was the one with the ears sticking out and less hair than the others. But when I showed this three year old girl to my husband, he said that it couldn’t be me—it was a boy! Look at the short hair. Only when I pointed out the fancy collar on my blouse and my long white stockings did he recognize that it was indeed his present wife.
By the time I was five, I had a reasonable amount of hair, but I did retain a somewhat boyish appearance. At the kindergarten celebration of George Washington’s Birthday—an elaborate presentation that included play-acting and dancing the minuet in hand-sewn period costumes—I was chosen to be one of the Georges in knee pants, rather than a Martha in long skirts with a bustle.
Perhaps that was when the theater bug bit me.
But the cross-dressing must have marked me, for, to this day, I really am more comfortable in pants than in skirts. Yet, as my hair thins with age, I sadly suspect that I may leave this life as I entered it—bald!
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Making Plans for Others, Dorothy Sherman Schmidt ©August 2009
In August of 1949, my father, Val Sherman, hatched one of his schemes for a travel adventure. This one was not a cross-country pilgrimage for himself; instead, he set in motion a series of steps that would send my mother, Gladys, and me, Dorothy, age 17, half-way across the country.
I’m not sure why he did not include himself in this elaborate plan. He could not have thought that Mother would be thrilled; she was not an eager traveler at best, but usually would do anything or go anywhere Val asked of her. Perhaps he had intended to go, but his pastoral duties kept him at home there in Edinburg, in the Rio Grande Valley of deep South Texas. Whatever the reason, he stayed; we went.
It came about in this way: Shortly after the onset of World War II, while we were living in Del Rio, my father had purchased a new maroon Dodge sedan. But after four years of driving hither and yon in the extended church parishes made necessary by the wartime shortage of ministers, the Dodge was beginning to totter. Daddy was ready for a new vehicle.
He shopped for one in a Buick dealership only a block away from the First Methodist Church in Edinburg. As was his custom, Daddy bought from his parishioners whenever possible. And H. B. Smith was a member of the church. The backlog of new car buyers which had accumulated during the war meant that dealers were short on inventory, and deals were difficult. But to “help out the preacher,” H.B. offered to make arrangements for the new Sherman car to be picked up at the Buick factory in Flint, Michigan. This allowed him to discount the price of the car by the $300 dollars normally charged for freight and shipping. Daddy jumped at the deal, which probably represented a sizable discount on an MSRP of about $2750.
The cost of going to get the car would probably not exceed $200-300, so that meant a cash savings and an opportunity for someone to see a good portion of the American heartland. That was such a good deal that he jumped at it. And I was excited, because with my two older brothers in the service, and my younger brother only 13, I was the only other available driver. And I was not my father’s daughter for nothing—I was just as hard-wired to crave travel as he was.
Poor Mother didn’t have a chance. She could drive, but not necessarily cross-country, so my skills and adventuring spirit were needed. Daddy’s plans didn’t stop there. He arranged that she and I would catch a ride with Dr. Hamme and his wife (also parishioners) who were taking a road trip to see relatives in Tennessee. Once that first leg of the trip was complete, we would catch a bus for the remainder of the journey to Michigan, pick up the car, and then mother and daughter could drive the 1800 miles back to Edinburg in the comfort of the new car.
Never one to leave any detail to chance or to let other schedules interfere, my father contacted Mr. Hodges, the vice-president of the local college (surprise— a parishioner, too!) and made arrangements for me to register late as a first term freshman at Edinburg Regional College (later Pan American).
And away we went. The tale of the journey is for another day, but my father’s benevolent manipulation on this and many other occasions are deservedly family legends.
Monday, March 30, 2009
She told of SW sitting close to the wood stove for warmth, with a lamp for light, and reading far into the night, even after a day's work on the farm. I wonder though, whether he might also have occasionally hired on at the shipyards in Seattle, especially since SW is absent as "head of family" from Coos Bay for the 1910 census—and since Val was employed at a shipyard as a teenager when he decided to enlist in the Navy.
Lots of stories to look for.