Showing posts with label Hand-writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hand-writing. Show all posts

19 September 2013

Signatures -- is it the same person?

SC, 1807One of two signatures for an individual with the exact same name
Copyright 2013, Diane L Richard

MS, 1824
Second of two signatures for an individual with the exact same name
Same person or not?
Copyright 2013, Diane L Richard


Given that some families loved to use the same names generation to generation and across generations (e.g. it seems that every cousin, uncle and great-uncle has the same name), how do we tell them apart?  Do recognize that even for names that seem highly unique (e.g. Hezekiah Farrow) and/or where a middle initial is used (e.g. Wm S McKoy), there can and often is more than one person with that name.  It wasn’t just the Smiths and Jones who liked to use a common forename surname combination in their family tree!

Sometimes we can connect them definitively to wives and children through records or to land via other records or to in-laws and associates through yet other documents and sometimes we just cannot seem to make those linkages through documents.

What else can we do?  It might be time to look at their signatures.  Remember, that though many documents were written by others, our ancestors did sign them.  Sometimes that signature was a an “X,” sometimes it was a “mark” and sometimes it was a “signature” (as we think of today, first and last name).  Be very, very careful to determine whether you are looking at a copy of a document or an original document (e.g. a will book versus an original will, a deed book versus an original deed, court minutes versus loose court papers, etc).  Otherwise, the signature that you “save” may be that of the court clerk and not of your ancestor.

Know, for your area and time period, which types of documents were typically “signed” by a person.  Some examples include:
  1. One’s will or as witness to the will of another
  2. Administrator or executor of an estate
  3. Bonds – estate-related, marriage, court (e.g. appearance), etc
  4. Land grants (e.g. in NC, Granville grants bear original signatures of the grantee)
  5. Original deeds
  6. Petitions
  7. etc

Collect as many signatures as possible through time.  Remember, that our signatures don’t remain the same.  And, as a person was dying, they may have “signed” with a signature their whole life and just use an “X” on their will as they are too enfeebled.

Sometimes, it can be hard to tell – see the McCoy/McKoy signatures pictured above – the same or different?  My colleagues and I think they are “different” though the differences except for the C/K change (most people don’t change “how” they spell their name and can we guarantee they didn’t?) are subtle – the curve of a letter, the use of tails or not, loops, and more ...

Read the following for more about this topic:

                                                                                     
Have you used signatures to separate out like-named individuals?

What are other 19th and earlier century sources for original signatures?

What resources on this topic have you found particularly helpful?






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01 April 2013

Autographs -- Are you using them in your genealogy and family history research?



John Tew, in his blog Filiopietism Prism, recently had a post titled Why Start and Continue A Family “Autograph” Book?

John talks a bit about why you might want to start such a book and the history behind such books.

I had such a feeling of deja vu as I was reading his post?  Why does the idea of an autograph book seem to “ring a bell?”

Did I have one as a child?  I do remember getting one for my kids at Disney World so the characters could sign their autographs.

My high school and college year books have some similar characteristics in that I “collected” signatures in them.

And, the neat thing about this idea (whether I silence the bell ringing in my head or not) is that autograph books are another source of hand-writing and signatures.  Even if your ancestor’s didn’t have one, they may have signed the autograph book of another!  Additionally, they might identify those with whom your ancestors interacted – friends, associates and neighbors.  The more names we have the better our chance of learning all about our own elusive ancestors.



Have you found any autograph books kept by your ancestors or others in the community?

If not autograph books, something similar?

Were they helpful to you?



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copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
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09 November 2012

Have We Lost the Art of Writing Compelling Letters?

Image source: http://www.healthforthewholeself.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/iStock_000000052126XSmall.jpg


A post on Olive Tree Genealogy with the above title really struck a nerve with me ...

Possibly because while I was doing research at UNC Chapel Hill the other week in the folders of the LC Glenn collection, I was struck by how much and how regular a lot of this extended family corresponded.

The letters written between cousins, fathers/sons, mothers/sons, etc, especially during the civil war, just "touched" you ...

There was one series between a son and his parents and then next you see the notice from the army of his death and then paperwork as his father tried to collect unpaid benefits.  It made me feel incredibly sad regarding the outcome though I can image the solace the family took in having these personal letters from their son as he wrote them so regularly, even before his enlistment.  To “hear” his voice through his own words!

I perused through boxes and boxes of letters where people would talk about their life, extended family, politics, religion and so much more ... so personal that you feel you know them ... I don't think my texts, e-mails or FB posts could ever capture that same depth of detail nor so vividly create an image for my readers. And, speaking of images, I don't think in this case, pictures really could speak a thousand words, though these letters sure did!

It does make me a bit nostalgic for when my gran, and two of her cousins were alive and living in England.  We corresponded for years the old-fashioned way, pen to paper and then mailed.  In fact, I never met my grandmother’s two cousins and yet we shared this rich correspondence.  I was so sad when they died and yet I kept every letter they wrote as it allows me, in perpetuity, to be touched, once again, by their words.

In her post, Lorine McGinnis Schulze, captures the poignancy and power of letter writing as its being replaced by 144 character tweets, short FB posts, texts and other elements of social media where brevity is prized over all else.


Do read the full article.

Do you agree?



Editor’s Note:  A related Upfront with NGS post, But Who Will Read The Record? Does Not Learning Cursive Mean Our Descendants Will Be Less Able to Read Handwritten Documents?, has been viewed over 24,000 times!






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copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
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22 February 2012

But Who Will Read The Record? Does Not Learning Cursive Mean Our Descendants Will Be Less Able to Read Handwritten Documents?

Meridian Magazine published a provocative piece titled "But Who Will Read the Records?" by Carol Kostakos Petranek (one of the Directors of the Washington DC Family History Center) which discusses a possibly frightening movement underway to eliminate cursive handwriting from public schools (see Cursive Handwriting Getting Erased) and the impact this might have on genealogists.

My experience has been that an emphasis on cursive writing went by the wayside about 10 years ago – by the time my son was a 3rd grader, they spent much less time on cursive and even print writing than for my slightly older daughter.  As a result of that, he doesn’t have terribly legible hand-writing, though his typed documents look just fine?!?!?!

I don’t know my thoughts on whether his lack of schooling in cursive would make it more challenging to read handwritten documents?  As it is – between spelling variations, vagaries in handwriting, etc, I struggle to read handwritten texts, regardless of when or where written.

Do you think that a generation taught typing instead of cursive writing (with a reduced emphasis on even print writing for that matter) will be more challenged in the future to read hand-written documents or not?



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copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
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Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
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