I don’t think I’ve shared this one. I was going through some of my Flickr albums, because I realized I’d restricted the privacy on them when I didn’t mean to. I love this photo of my grandpa Mert. Those cheekbones! I think this had to have been taken sometime between 1948 and 1950.
Category: Genealogy
Old Photos
I love this photo. The man in the middle is my great grandfather, Logan Louis Thompson. He and his friends are day drinking in Miami in 1925, so it was the height of Prohibition.
He’s on the left, here.
Left to right: Sterrett Pooser and Margaret Basquill, Nell Basquill and Logan Louis Thompson.
Margaret was my great grandma Nell’s sister, and Sterrett was Margaret’s husband. I feel like they all knew how to have fun.
Margaret Basquill in Florida
I absolutely adore that photo of Margaret.
All of these came from scrapbooks Margaret and Nell kept. The last time I visited my grandma Jeanne, before she died, I scanned all Nell and Margaret’s old photo albums, and then I sat down at the kitchen table with grandma and went through them with her. I wish I’d asked more questions and taken better notes, but I’m grateful I was able to record what I did.
A Cautionary Tale
I’ve been researching the family of James Basquil and Mary Holland/Londry. They married in 1838 in Balla, County Mayo. Their first child, Bridget, was born in 1841 in Millerhill, County Mayo. By 1851, James was living in Eccleshall, England, working as an agricultural laborer. I can’t know, of course, but I think it’s a safe assumption that he was among the millions who left Ireland during the famine, to find work elsewhere. Mary and the children joined him by 1861, where I found them in the census, living in Stockport, England. James died in 1879, and Mary died in 1895, both in England.
In 1864 Bridget married a man named John Toole. They had at least three children, that I’ve uncovered. The oldest was Margaret, born in 1867. Findmypast has some Cheshire baptismal, marriage, and burial registers, so I’ve been poking around there, to see what I could find, and this record popped up. Great! I have a burial date. Only no, I don’t.
Folks, don’t rely on the index entry. This one, the top image, purports to be part of a burial collection, but the linked record image is for a baptismal register. Which, I’m not mad about! I have a birth and baptism date for Margaret. But I do not have a burial date. I mean, the burial date may be correct. She could well have been baptized, died, and then buried on the same day. That absolutely happened, at that time. But until they fix the problem (and I did report it, along with a correction to the transcribed mother’s maiden name, which was Baskwell, not Barkwell), I can’t know what’s going on with the burial date.
I’m using that baptismal register image, though! Even though it’s linked wrong.
Denis Basquil
Denis was the brother of my great great grandfather, Walter Basquil. I’ve gotten to know one of his descendants, and we’ve collaborated on researching the family. I think she got this photo of Denis from another cousin in Australia. (Denis’ son, William, immigrated there, while Denis came to the US and Walter stayed in Ireland.)
Denis was quite a character. Reading between the lines, he was likely an alcoholic. His wife, Ellen Carney, died in 1908. In 1910 Denis was living in the Fall River alms house, destitute. He died in 1911.
Names
Every genealogy group I’ve ever participated in gets regular posts from people who are hung up on the idea that names have one correct spelling. They don’t understand that until very recently spelling was an art form. If you look at original documents, you’ll often find the same individual’s name spelled multiple ways. Sometimes you’ll see family members who spell their surname differently.
I’ve been working on a one name study for years, and this is the list of name variants I’ve found in the wild. Some of them are make more sense than others, but none of them are wrong. So I wouldn’t spend too much time worrying about whether or not Runkle and Runkel are the same name. They are.
Ancestry Shenanigans

image 1: screenshot of Indiana marriage certificate index entry at Ancestry
Image 2: Indiana marriage certificate previously downloaded from Ancestry
image 3: Indiana marriage certificate on Ancestry website
Y’all, I have no idea what’s going on at Ancestry.com. Maybe they’re just updating their existing Indiana certificate databases? Or maybe they’re slowly removing certificate images? I tried looking up a 1944 Indiana marriage certificate yesterday. It should have been there, but there were no images showing. All the entries looked like the first image, with the “No Image Text-only Collection” notice.
That can happen. Licensing agreements change, and whole collections can suddenly (and permanently) disappear. Always download images to your local storage when you find them. Don’t rely on the images being available in ten minutes, much less in perpetuity. It could be something benign, like they are extending the year range and adding newer records. I noticed that the index entry for my step-father’s 2016 death is now included. I think the Indiana death certificate database ended with 2013 or 2016 previously? But it could be that their licensing agreement for the images has or will soon expire. Or it could be that they couldn’t reach a new agreement with the state of Indiana. Or it could be that Indiana has decided to be a rat bastard because they could make more money requiring people to obtain certified copies directly from the state. That last one would really hurt, because you have to be close kin to order certified copies, and you don’t need certified copies for genealogy research.
Weirdly, I can still access the certificates I saved links for (thank you, Evernote!). They haven’t removed them. They just aren’t linked to the index entries anymore. But if you look at the last image, there is no information below the database name. There should be a year range and surname range. There’s nothing. Very strange. Personally, I don’t think this will really impact me. Most of the people I needed to research in Indiana were confined to my step-father’s family, and I’m done working on them.
Also weird is that some of the certificates that were not visible yesterday are back today. This gives me hope that the whole thing is just a temporary glitch, and that they’re actually expanding the Indiana certificate image holdings. But as of right now, there are no marriage certificate images accessible from the index entries. Birth and death certificates are a craps shoot.
A Cautionary Tale


Death Index Entry from Ancestry.com
Always look at the image, if it’s available. I submitted some edits a few days ago to the memorial for Theresa C. Rogers’ Findagrave memorial. The death date on the stone was 1965, and the birth date matched the Theresa Cecelia Partington I was researching Her parents were in buried in the same cemetery, and if you look at the wider photo at Findagrave, you’ll see she’s in the Partington family plot. Her husband, Frances Rogers, is not buried there. He was apparently cremated and his ashes buried on a golf course.
So when I saw this death index entry, I had a moment of panic. The entry is definitely for her. It includes both her maiden and married surnames. But the death date was 1958. Did I mess up and submit edits for the wrong memorial at Findagrave? That would be bad. I almost messaged the memorial owner to ask them to ignore the edits I’d submitted (they hadn’t been approved at that point). But then I looked at the death index image. Someone had mistranscribed the death date. They’d used the age at death instead. I added a correction at Ancestry.
Always, always, always look at the image, if there is one. The death index is short on details, but it also gives a death location, which I didn’t have. I’m glad I found it and took the time to figure out what was going on.
Lo-Fi
Grandpa Mert
I edited a few more of the negatives I scanned. These are 70mm negatives of my grandpa Mert, from when he joined the Navy in 1944. He was in the Seabees and spent most of WWII stationed in the Marshall Islands (on Kwajalein Island and Ebeye Island). The first photo must have been the keeper of the bunch, because it’s the one everyone in the family has seen. The rest were outtakes that I’d never seen. They were with my great grandpa John Meineke’s negatives, so I’m assuming he was the photographer.
The last photo is flippin’ adorable.
Grandma and Grandpa
I ended up with my both grandpa’s and my great grandpa’s negatives and slides. I started scanning grandpa’s negatives years ago, then got distracted by life. Then last month my mom sent me my great grandpa’s negatives. I ended up having to buy a new negative scanner, because the old one died. Probably for the best, because the image quality from the new one (Epson Perfection V600) is better. I’m going to go back and rescan some of over/under exposed negatives, to see if I can capture more detail.
This one of my grandparents was seriously overexposed. And at some point Piglet chomped it, which hasn’t helped (you can see the teeth marks at the top of the bottom image). Aren’t they adorable, though? I think this was probably taken on their honeymoon, so about 1946.























