Author Archive

Cousin Barack and Me

By Howard Wolinsky • Jul 8th, 2008 • Category: Features

How close do two people have to be to claim a relationship? That really is all relative.
Based on America’s peculiar and unfortunate “drop of blood rule,” a person with a single drop of “black blood” is considered black by the majority.
That’s why Barack Obama, with an African father and a Caucasian mother, is described as “black” and is billed as a black candidate for president.



Closer Than You Think

By Loretto Dennis Szucs • Jul 8th, 2008 • Category: Editors Note

[The National Archives] is the raw essence of history—millions of documents attesting to the building of this nation and to the everyday affairs of common individuals. It is Americana at its best: the story of who we are and what we have accomplished.



Big Book, Big City

• Jul 8th, 2008 • Category: Features

If your ancestors attended Ben Reitman’s “hobo college,” shopped at the Fair department store, took in a show at the Regal Theater, or worked for Swift or Armour, you can learn more about the town they called home in the Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. And it’s all right on your desktop.



Beloved Scoundrel

By Myra Vanderpool Gormley, CG • Jul 8th, 2008 • Category: Features

How often does a plain brown envelope reveal a good story, some historical scandal, and a few too many wives?
Like a few other treasures I’ve received through the years, this one—the pension file of Civil War veteran John Anthony Vanderpool—arrived in a plain brown envelope. It came from the National Archives, cost me a small fortune, and was worth every nickel.



Are We in Line for the Polish Throne?

By Ceil Wendt Jensen • Jul 1st, 2008 • Category: Features

Editor’s note: When we asked for family legends, you sent us hundreds of stories—here’s the first of many we’ll be featuring (this one answered by expert Ceil Wendt Jensen). If you have a legend you’d like us to prove, send the story and your contact information to editor@ancestrymagazine.com. Due to the volume of submissions, we won’t be able to answer every one.



If You Could Pick Your Ancestor, Who Would You Choose?

• Apr 28th, 2008 • Category: You Said

If you could put anyone in your family tree, who would it be–and why would you want to be related to him or her?



Old Wives Tale or Foolproof Cure-all?

• Mar 1st, 2008 • Category: You Said

Did your ancestor have an interesting way of fixing everything?



Worth Your Salt: March/April 2008

• Feb 1st, 2008 • Category: Editors Note, SALT

QUESTION: My grandfather, John Charles Izard, died July 18, 1954, near Wellington, Kansas, while on vacation. He was returning to his home in Santa Rosa, California. I need a death certificate for him to obtain a Certificate of Blood from the Choctaw Nation, but I’ve not been able to find one. Neither the state of Kansas nor the state of California has a record of his death.



Walking in Their Footsteps?

• Mar 25th, 2007 • Category: You Said

Visiting the homeland? Climbing the same mountain Grandpa did? Tell us how you spent–or how you’re spending–your summer vacation, ancestor-style.

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She Had Me at Junkyard

By Megan Smolenyak Smolenyak • Mar 1st, 2007 • Category: On the Web

I never thought I’d begin an article like this, but I have to start this one by asking you to pay close attention. This orphan heirloom case was such a doozy of a ride that it was hard for those of us involved to hang on, so it’s going to require some careful explanation. It began, as usual, with an e-mail.