10 Comments
May 21Liked by Denyse Allen

I love the idea of using the Sandborn maps. Several of my ancestors' homes were caught up in the urban renewal craze so nothing is there except buildings and concrete. I know so many people think genealogy is about dates and names. There is so much more. Great article!

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So many cases of long gone homes! This may be a long shot, but public works departments in cities often took photos before major reconstruction projects. These might not be digitized on a website, but the city would have them filed somewhere. They are public documents, so free to use without copyright.

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May 21Liked by Denyse Allen

Love this! My family was heavily affected by the year of no summer 1816 when they moved from Ohio to Illinois. I have all of the details of their journey but no photos of course. What a great way to illustrate the year in paintings of red sunsets. I'm stealing this idea!

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Steal away! The other image I saved of Friedrich's is "Greifswald in moonlight" https://www.wikiart.org/en/caspar-david-friedrich/greifswald-in-moonlight which shows something worse than LA smog in the 1970s. You are the first person I've met who has noted they had ancestors affected. So glad you are capturing it in your family history.

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May 21Liked by Denyse Allen

This was an important rabbit hole for me. Wm. Morris was part of the great Socts Irish migration from Abbeville, SC to Preble Co. Ohio and then on to Randolph Co. Illinois. This was a Presbyterian group of many hundreds of people. We discovered he was three years into 4 year money borrowed to buy 160 acres in Preble Co. Just as the balloon payment was coming due, the year of 1816 hit and he had to give up and move on. He moved his family of young wife, 14 year old, two toddlers and a two month old baby to Randolph County in December 1816 and moved into log cabin. The price of commodities that year was documented by the Bureau of labor and statistics. High prices equals crop failures. Thank you so much for the link!

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What a story! I can feel the stress he must have been under through your details.

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May 21Liked by Denyse Allen

There is a travel book written the same year tracing the same trail by an Englishman whose name I can not recall. By 1816 you could ride the trail from Preble County to Randolph County and find a tavern (there is no good term for it but a barn for your horse and a dry bed for your family with a hot meal) every night except a couple when you camped under the stars. I like to think he was a planner and made sure his wife and children had the comfort of shelter. But yes, financial ruin, growing family and starting over in a new land was a lot to handle.

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What a great idea! It sparked an idea to request all that my cousins have both as stories and images. Even descriptions could be great as they would give me starting ideas for images. Thanks for this post.

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Great idea! I need to do this with my cousins too.

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This is actually what I plan on doing: incorporating everything I can find, like antique maps, material from the Library of Congress, and especially photographs that I take myself (especially black and white) when I go back to the places my people lived. All this can be included in what scholars call the "deep map," the way we try to describe a place from every angle possible.

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