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08-05-2008, 07:26 AM
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Create Your Own Rainbows!
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Adamsville, TN
Posts: 8,492
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Re: Ancestry
Quote:
Originally Posted by Berkeley
That's better than More agua...
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I hate to see you frown. So wear a bag over your head until you cheer up!
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08-05-2008, 08:24 AM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Ohio
Posts: 7,374
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Re: Ancestry
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dedicated Mind
I just started looking at websites yesterday. I've only gone 4 generations back. I don't know what kind of searches I need to do next since Puerto Rico was captured from spain in the 1800's (I think). I need to check on that tomorrow. Do you know of any websites that specialize on catholic records from puerto rico or spain?
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The best place for you to start is on Cindy's list. There is an abundance of links of there that you can follow.
Also be sure to check out familysearch.org. That's the website for the Mormon church. They are huge in genealogy, so they have better records than anyone in the world. In fact, if you have an LDS church near you, it would be worth your time to go there to do research. They are always very willing to help you. You can usually research at their facility and then if you need something they will order it in from Salt Lake City for you to see. Most of that is at no charge to you except for the price of copying.
If you happen to live near Fort Wayne, Indiana (I don't know where you are, so I'm stabbing in the dark here) they have the second biggest genealogical facility in the world - second only to Salt Lake City. I've been there many times. Definately worth the trip. When you go, ask for help. The librarians are very knowledgeable. They will teach you how to do the research and even help you figure out what you should be looking for.
I'm going to see if I can find some direct links for you now. I'll let you know if I can find something
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Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of a battle ! ! ! ! 
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08-05-2008, 08:46 AM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Ohio
Posts: 7,374
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Re: Ancestry
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dedicated Mind
I just started looking at websites yesterday. I've only gone 4 generations back. I don't know what kind of searches I need to do next since Puerto Rico was captured from spain in the 1800's (I think). I need to check on that tomorrow. Do you know of any websites that specialize on catholic records from puerto rico or spain?
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try this site. It looks good. I don't know how much of it is not in English tho. You'll have to find that out. I didn't explore too much
Good luck
__________________
Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of a battle ! ! ! ! 
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08-05-2008, 09:50 AM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: May 2008
Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 897
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Re: Ancestry
I am an 11th generation descendant of Heinrich Felix Merkel, My son is the 12th generation.
Here is our family history as recorded by Rev. Herman F. Vesper of St. John's Lutheran Church, Canajoharie, New York, 1931.
MERICKEL FAMILY MIGRATION AND NAME HISTORY
The first of this family to come to America, arrived in the year 1710. They came as refugees from the German Palatine. Their trek to the New World had led them by way of Holland and England.
The name was originally spelled Merkel or Merckel and pronounced in German as "Mare-kil". The Palatines settled among, and intermarried with, the Dutch in Ulster County, New York. Here they soon were using the prevailing language which was Holland Dutch. (At Kingston chuch preaching was in Dutch until 1809).
The reasons behind the flight of our ancestors from the Palatine regions of Western Germany are given in the story set forth in the "Van Kocherthal Records", written in 1931 by Rev. Herman F. Vesper of St. John's Lutheran Church, Canajoharie, New York.
In 1673, twenty-five years after the "Thirty Years War" ended in 1648, Louis XIV of France began his marauding expeditions for the purpose of exterminating the Protestant heretics. Destructive raids laid waste to the Palatine countryside. This ruthless pillage continued until 1688 when the French King himself entered the land "to make it a wilderness" as he declared.
The villages, towns and farms of the Rhine regions were pillaged and burned, and their inhabitants tortured, ravished or slain. Few escaped the country. Those who survived were spared further horrors when, in 1705, England, Holland, Sweden, and Prussia intervened and threatened reprisals unless this carnage ceased. The way of Spanish Succession followed (1701-1713) but it touched only lightly on the already devistated country.
Added to the horrors of the war, there came further to harass the unfortunate Palatines the unusually severe winters of 1703 and 1709. Vineyards and orchards were blasted by the cold. Birds froze on the wing, fires failed to warm the shivering populace. Also, there came ecclesiastical regulations that made still more unbearable the life of these "poor, protestant, Palatines."
Their only salvation lay in migrating to other lands. The first group of 41 (men, women and children) left for England by way of Holland in 1708. They were led by the Rev. Joshua Von Kocherthal, a Lutheran minister, whose wife and three children were among the refugees. In London, they petitioned Queen Anne for permission to sail to one of the British Colonies in America. Hearing of their extreme poverty the good Queen granted them each a shilling a day towards their sustenance until a decision was reached.
England desired to expand her frontiers in the New World, so transportation for "these honest and laborious Palatines" was arranged on the British ship "Globe". A special act of naturalization made them "denizens of the Kingdom." (It is perhaps for reasons of gratitude that some of their immediate descendants, in the days of the American Revolution, seemed to have Tories and British sympathies-even to the extent of moving to Canada."
It was just 88 years after the voyage of the "Mayflower" that this first group of Palatines set sail. They landed 60 miles up the Hudson River and built a town they called "Neuberg", now called Newburgh, New York. Queen Anne supplied them with agricultural implements and foodstuffs for one year. In exchange, the Palatines were to supply lumber for the Royal Navy.
A year later, when pastor Von Kocherthal returned to England for additional aid, he found 3000 refugees there. They were living in tents on the Black Heath of London. The queen acceded to his wishes that they too be sent to America to join the others. This time a whole flotilla of vessels was needed. They sailed from London in the month of January, 1710. Among the ships was the "Globe", making it's second crossing with Palatine refugees.
For months this fleet of sailing ships with human cargo was tossed about on the stormy winter's sea. At least one ship was wrecked and 470 immigrants died during the voyage. Another 250 succumbed after landing in New York on the 14th of June, 1710. After a period of quarantine on Nutten (now Governor's Island, they proceeded upriver and settled on both sides of the Hudson, above Neuberg (New Town).
As time passed, some of the settlers moved on into the Schoharie Valley of New York and into parts of Pennsylvania. In the next few years Palatines migrated to the new land. Some of the ships landed at New York and some at Philadelphia.
One of the towns settled on the Hudson's west bank was West Camp (now Saugerties) near Kingston. Here the minister who worked with Pastor Von Kocherthal was Dominie Haeger of the Dutch Reformed Church. It is in the records of the Dutch Church atWest Camp that we first find mention of the name "MERKEL". It was here, on December 26, 1711, that a baby born on the ship "Globe" was baptized. It was Johan Adam Merkel, son of Fredrik Merkel and Barbara Alman.
We have no record of all the names in that second massive migration of the Palatine refugees, but from the baptismal record we know that Fredrik Merkel and his wife, Barbara, arrived with them.
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08-05-2008, 11:22 AM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 3,711
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Re: Ancestry
Quote:
Originally Posted by Margies3
try this site. It looks good. I don't know how much of it is not in English tho. You'll have to find that out. I didn't explore too much
Good luck
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Thanks, but you didn't post the site. I'm emailing a genealogist at tracingthetribe.blogspot.com.
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08-05-2008, 11:35 AM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Ohio
Posts: 7,374
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Re: Ancestry
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dedicated Mind
Thanks, but you didn't post the site. I'm emailing a genealogist at tracingthetribe.blogspot.com.
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LOL! So sorry! I guess my brain just went on vacation. Anyway, here it is...........
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~prwgw/
__________________
Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of a battle ! ! ! ! 
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08-05-2008, 12:03 PM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: in the north unfortunately
Posts: 6,476
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Re: Ancestry
very interesting might have to do this myself, yep
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A product of a pentecostal raisin, I am a hard man, just ask my children
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08-05-2008, 03:27 PM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 3,711
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Re: Ancestry
Quote:
Originally Posted by DividedThigh
very interesting might have to do this myself, yep
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ancestry.com has a 2 week free trial offer. after that you can use other websites.
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08-05-2008, 05:05 PM
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Administrator
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 12,362
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Re: Ancestry
Quote:
Originally Posted by Margies3
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YEs this is another great research site.
__________________
Happy moments, PRAISE GOD.
Difficult moments, SEEK GOD.
Quiet moments, WORSHIP GOD.
Painful moments, TRUST GOD.
Every moment, THANK GOD.
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08-05-2008, 05:09 PM
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Administrator
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 12,362
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Re: Ancestry
A couple of areas to consider searching:
1) Cementary records
2) Military records
3) Morman records
4) Census records
5) Ship records
Margie yes please post the sites you have found.
Thanks
__________________
Happy moments, PRAISE GOD.
Difficult moments, SEEK GOD.
Quiet moments, WORSHIP GOD.
Painful moments, TRUST GOD.
Every moment, THANK GOD.
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