Genealogy versus lifewriting

BlogHer’s Find Your Roots prompt for today asks whether I am interested in genealogy and whether I’ve made a family tree. You know from my last post that I can’t make much of a family tree since most of it is overseas and unknown. I do like genealogy and would make a family tree if I could, but I’m most interested in the stories, not just names of strangers. I would create a book with the lineage, what stories I could get, photos, copies of documentation, and additional information to place the people into their historical and cultural setting.

I have an impressive and unusual historical and genealogical book that captures not one family but a whole rural community in Tennessee. The 8.5”x11” book was printed at a copyshop and I don’t know how the two staples can hold the 160 pages together—the thing is bulging. The community was tightknit and interconnected as children married into local families and settled nearby, so this book was popular and a valuable resource. I know a lot of the names, at least, since the book includes half my husband’s side of the family and their friends. Country singer and actor Eddie Arnold was born and raised in this community. Below is a list of types of information included.

Intro to the community
History, descriptions of churches
History and stories of the community center and fire department
History and stories of the schools
Names of the teachers and rosters of students (these were very small schools)
Short news clippings (retyped) of community happenings
History of the cemetery and list of everyone buried there up to publish date
History and genealogy of each family (back to 1800s if known)
An index of families and the pages they appear on
Photos, including class photos, group baptisms in the pond, family photos

These insular communities don’t exist anymore what with everyone moving around so much these days, but a lot of the general information included in the book would be interesting in any one family’s history book.

Friendship History

Friendship Snippet

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Genealogy: How deep are your roots?

The BlogHer Find Your Roots prompt for today: Three generations ago, where were your family members living?

My Japanese grandparents lived in the small town of Tokorozawa, now a bustling suburb of Tokyo. My grandmother’s family was probably from that area since her sister and brother lived around there, but my mom had no idea where her father’s family was from. When my mother was a child, Tokorozawa had dirt streets, and the storefronts went right up to the street, with merchant families living above their shops. Mom’s dad was a shoemaker carving the wooden geta shoes, and was known for the homemade noodles he made and sold for special occasions like wedding celebrations. Mom’s mother sewed silk kimono, and I have inherited some.

My dad’s father grew up farming in the very northeast of the Netherlands, around Groningen, a very old city and now the largest city in northern Netherlands. I just got a geography lesson looking this up. The country is made up of provinces, and Holland was one of them, on the western edge, but now split into North Holland and South Holland provinces. Often the whole country is referred to as Holland. Dad’s father came to the Chicago area in 1912 and farmed.

Dad’s mother’s parents were from Delfseil, a seaport near Groningen. Her grandfather was born in Indonesia (Dutch East Indies) in 1828 to a preacher and his wife whose maiden name was Boer. Very interesting! Can you tell I’m researching online as I write this? Boer is an Afrikaan name meaning farmer, so Eskede Boer’s family must have been Dutch settlers in South Africa. Dad’s mother’s parents moved to the Chicago area and farmed. There were lots of Dutch truck farmers in Chicago then. They loaded their produce into open-bed trucks and drove them to market, reminiscent of today’s farmers markets.

I love the Dutch side of my family, too. Even though I can trace farther back in the lineage, I don’t have any traditions or know much about their culture. I like the names of my relatives. My grandmother’s real name was Grietje, and her mother was Tryntje. Grandma pronounced that with the rolled r and made it sound like it was twinkling … Trent-ya. A great-aunt’s real name was Frientje. My paternal great-grandmother’s name was Aaltje. Of course we have Pieters.

I’m curious. For those whose family trees come right out of another country, how far back have you managed to trace your roots? I’m particularly curious if the language is different.

Note: Not many novels are set in the Netherlands so it’s odd the two I know of are about the artist Vermeer. Girl With the Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier is the best known, but I enjoyed Susan Vreeland’s Girl in Hyacinth Blue, which follows the ownership of a (fictional) lost Vermeer painting.

 

Old truck

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BlogHer’s Find Your Roots in June

Thanks to someone on the Hafu Facebook group I recently joined, I’m participating in BlogHer’s June NaBloPoMo in which participants will write daily blog posts about their roots. “Hafu” is a term meaning half Japanese (the Japanese have trouble saying the English word “half” correctly), and I am one. My other half is Dutch. The book Dutch Chicago by Robert Swierenga has a photo of my dad’s family in it.

The original NaBloPoMo (National Blog Posting Month) is November, coinciding with NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month). BlogHer has apparently decided every month is NaBloPoMo, and gives each month a different blogging theme. I liked the idea of June’s: Finding Your Roots. Today’s blog post prompt asks how many generations can I go back in my family. My family trees on both sides have their roots, trunks, and most branches overseas to countries where I can’t understand the language, so I’m out of luck finding my geneaology. My mother emigrated from Japan after she married my dad. My dad’s father and maternal grandparents emigrated from Holland.

My mom and dad met at dance lessons at Johnson Air Base near Tokyo, when Dad was stationed in Japan in the late 1950s. My mom’s family stories are written into her memoir, Cherry Blossoms in Twilight. She never met any of her grandparents and didn’t even know their names. Her father had family somewhere in Japan, but they lived too far to visit. Her mother’s sister and brother lived in the area, but she didn’t remember their names. I could ask one of my Japanese friends to request a koseki, an official family registry document, from my cousin Kyoko, but then I’d need it translated and it probably wouldn’t mean anything to me. I like stories to go along with names.

My Japanese grandparents

My Japanese grandparents

On my dad’s side, his father died when I was very young, so I don’t remember him. My Dutch grandpa was a quirky guy, I hear, and had a quirky older brother, my great uncle Ben. Uncle Ben’s wife Bina was a bit quirky herself, and had two scary Siamese cats. Grandpa Peter and his brother Ben had a quirky father, who died before I was born. It’s a wonder my dad is fairly normal, although he did marry a non-Dutch girl and then divorced her, so the rest of the conservative family probably thinks he’s quirky, too. My Dutch grandma was a nice lady. I still love those windmill-shaped cookies she used to serve. She prayed for the souls of her younger son’s family since we didn’t follow the strict Dutch Reformed religion. She was worried we wouldn’t go to heaven. Her older son took after her since he’s not quirky either (he married a Dutch girl). I’m trying to get my dad to write all his stories down so I can see exactly how quirky his family was. He says he’s working on it. He probably just doesn’t want to scare me.

Grandma

My Dutch grandma and her brothers

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