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Time in a bottle

6/4/2022

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We're so excited to offer this unique at home experience for you and your friends!  

How does it work?
  • You invite 6-8 of your besties over for some wine, charcuterie, dinner... whatever you choose.
  • Two weeks before the event, each attendee will be sent a brief survey to help give the Genealogist some background on their family history.
  • The Genealogist will conduct preliminary research on each individual, focusing on their desired branch/situation.
  • At the party, the Genealogist will cast a presentation to the television or screen of your choice, introducing each attendee to a new ancestor or two from their past. 
  • Much conversation, laughs and even a few tears ensue. 

What does it cost?
$20 per person.  The host can choose to pay for everyone, or ask each guest to contribute.

Does the host get anything special?
Yes!  The host gets a free a 3-generation family tree, including full color printed poster.  

Is there a sales pitch?
There is no hard sale here.  If the guests are intrigued to take their family research further, they can contact the Genealogist after the party.  Any party guest receives 15% off our typical family research rates.

What if a guest doesn't want their information shared publicly?
The Genealogist can present information to "shy" guests privately, or contact them after the party with their findings.

What if a guest is adopted?
We have helped many adoptees find their birth families and would be happy to help your guests if they desire it.  Or we can provide lineage information on their adopted families. 

Where do the parties take place?
Currently within a 2 hour drive of Clearwater, Florida and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.  Travel options to other cities/states are available, but will incur some travel expenses. 

How do I schedule a party?
Drop us an email here and let us know the general time frame you are considering. We'll get back within 24 hours with availabilities that suit your schedule.


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John Donovan'S GHOST

9/7/2017

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John Donovan, circa 1891
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Note: John's daughter Annie is mistaken for his sister in this account.
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The developments in ancestral research and genealogy in recent years have been groundbreaking.  From the public availability of DNA testing to the digitizing of everything from newspapers to church registers to county and civic records, there has never been a time in history that we have been so close to understanding our past and the people who made us who we are.

For me personally, these new facts have affected me in the shape of my 2x Great Grandfather John Donovan.  For many years our family was under the impression that he simply decided to pick up one day and leave his wife and twelve children to return to his homeland of Wales.  It was an easy assumption, as at the same time of his disappearance in Scranton, a John Donovan of the same age did appear in the records of his home in Monmouthshire, including a death in 1909. 

John Donovan of course is a very common name and appears dozens of times in the records of Montmouthshire, so we were never sure.  But thanks to an increase in the digitizing of newspaper records from across the world, we now know that he did not go home to Wales, but rather left Scranton for Altoona, Pennsylvania, where he found work in his trade as a puddler for the American Steel Hoop company of Duncansville in December 1900.  

Although it's not clear when he left precisely, we do know that it was sometime between late 1898 and early 1900 for two reasons: his name appears in a Scranton city directory in 1898 and he was not present at the time of his wife's death from stomach cancer in February 1900. It is assumed that he left sometime in 1899 to find work and likely did other odd jobs around the area before coming to work at the American Steel Hoop company. 

For many years, the story ended with the mystery of John's disappearance, but sadly, the news of the time, now digitized, gives us the unfortunate detail (some of the accounts on the left). As reported in  On Saturday evening, February 18, 1901, John Donovan died on the train tracks near the Gaysport Bridge in Hollidaysburg.  

For several days following the death there was some speculation on the method of his passing. A co-worker, Thomas Baird, reported that earlier in the evening John had asked him for a loan of 25 cents, promising to pay him back at his next pay.  He obliged and didn't see him again. Another man, George Estep, reported seeing John laying on the tracks later in the evening "in a stupor" and yelled to him that he should move before he may be injured.

Though foul play was entertained briefly, further investigation by the coroner revealed that John Donovan had in fact chosen suicide by train.  It seemed that he did lay down near the tracks and placed his head across the rail.  The front portion of his head was shorn off, in what was surely a gruesome death.  

The county attempted to contact his family to come and claim his remains, but they were either unwilling due to family dispute or unable due to financial hardship.  He would be buried in St. Mary's Cemetery in Hollidaysburg in a pauper's grave. With the help of the genealogical society in Altoona and the cemetery record keeper there, I've determined that there is no marker and no way of knowing precisely where he was laid to rest. 

I can't help but feel for the tragic John Donovan.  If we give him the benefit of the doubt, he left his family in order to find work. His wife died while he was away and just a year and six days after her death, he laid down on the tracks and took his life. Though he was estranged from his children and in spite of the fact that he was reportedly "a man of drinking habits", it seems he was truly heartbroken. 

For those who believe in spirits, I'll share a post script on this story.  My daughter had a gift when she was very young.  She often spoke to me about seeing things like "the man in the light" or calling me into her room late at night to "tell the man to go away".  A particularly noteworthy incident came one evening while we were sitting on the living room floor playing a board game.  I think she was about 4 or 5 at the time.  She looked up mid-game and said, quite plainly and with no alarm, "Mommy, why is that man's head going down the hallway?" We always thought it was a bit odd, just a head, but with her other sightings of the time, we chalked it up to special sight or just a child's imagination.  

Now years later, with this new information, we can't help but wonder if her bodiless visitor was her great-great grandfather. Since this discovery, I've done everything I can to try and locate John Donovan (as mentioned earlier), thinking that perhaps he just wanted to be "claimed" before he could rest in peace.  While it's unfortunate that we will most likely never know the precise location of his burial, the St. Mary's Cemetery folks are working on pinpointing the Paupers Grave site for me and I hope to visit there someday soon to pay our family's respects.

After all, no matter his flaws, none of us Donovan's would be here if it weren't for him.  



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Where do we begin?

6/27/2017

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One of the things I love most about genealogy is uncovering the story beneath the facts.

It can be easy to get wrapped up in the data - census reports, wills, land records, etc.  But what makes this uniquely fun is using those details to give shape and substance to those living/breathing individuals who ultimately had a hand in creating you.  One of those individuals for me is my 2nd Great Grandmother, Ann Durkin Donovan.

Ann was born on June 21, 1856 in Middlesborough, Yorkshire, England to Irish parents, Michael and Ann (McQueeney) Durkin.  The first record of her living in England comes to us via the 1871 census. Ann had 11 siblings.  As of the census shown here, two had moved out of the home already and three had yet to be born. 
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Before the year was out, Ann would also leave the family home to marry John Donovan, a Puddler, when she was just sixteen years old.  As is evidenced by the "Entry of Marriage" below, their courtship came quite easily, as John was a border in a house just a few doors away from the Durkins on Charles Street in Linthorpe (a suburb of Middlesbrough). The two were married at St. Mary's Catholic Church on October 23, 1871.
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John had come to Middlesbrough sometime between 1861 and 1871 from his home in Newport, Wales, most likely to apprentice for his position as a Puddler.  While John's mother Ellen (Lewis) was born in Breconshire, Wales, his father, John Denis, had moved there from Cork, Ireland sometime after the start of the great famine in 1845.

Through research, it is believed that John Donovan left England, Ann and his family via Liverpool in 1881 aboard the American ship "Indiana" and arrived in Philadelphia in September of that same year. He was traveling by himself, so we can reason that he must have come to America to search for work.  Though it is not easily uncovered, we can assume that he made at least one return trip to England to prepare his family for passage to America, as the facts below suggest.

In 1884, Ann Donovan would board the Steamship "British Prince" alone with six of her children ranging in age from 10 to 3 (Mary, Ellen, Catherine, Ann, Sarah, and Agnes).  An infant (listed on the ship's manifest below), born aboard the ship, would be the couple's first boy and would be named after his father.  He would also be my maternal Great-Grandfather whom our family would come to call Gray Jack. 

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John and Ann settled in Scranton, Pennsylvania and would have another seven children between 1887 and 1897, for a total of thirteen. The photograph to the right is thought to have been taken in celebration of their 20th wedding anniversary in approximately 1891. 

For reasons unknown, John would leave Ann and the children sometime between 1897 and 1899 to return to his home of Wales, settling in Pontypridd where he worked as a knife sharpener.

​Ann, in the meantime, became very ill and died from stomach cancer in 1900 at the age of 44, leaving the older girls to raise their younger siblings in the family home at 1331 South Irving Avenue, Scranton.
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Ann and John (circa 1891). I know that my Donovan relatives will agree that the family resemblance is quite strong in these too.
PictureThe funeral notice of Ann Durkin Donovan from The Scranton Tribune (Feb 15, 1900).
John never returned to America or to his children and died in 1909 of a stomach ulcer at the age 61. 

Anecdotally, Ellen and Catherine (Kate) Donovan would marry and move to respective homes on Fig Street, just a few blocks from their siblings.  Ellen and her husband John Jackson lived in the 400 block of Fig, while Kate, and husband Michael Caffrey, lived in the 700 block, which, coincidentally, is the exact same street where I was born and raised.

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Our grandfather Gray Jack would go on to have exploits of his own.  Those I'll save for another chapter.  And his sisters and brothers would raise large families across the Scranton community.  Below, you'll find a passing glance at several of Ann and John's descendants - specifically, their eldest daughters Mary (Blake) and Ellen (Jackson), with their husbands and children.  

Looks like the kind of family gathering we Donovans have come to know well if you ask me.

Revised Update (9/8/17):  We now know that John Donovan Sr. did not go to Wales, but rather went west into Pennsylvania to find work.  See details of his tragic end in the next blog entry.
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Interested in uncovering some of your own family roots?  I would love to help.  Visit this website for more details.
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    Author

    Lori Roberts is well-studied genealogist, with roots in Pennsylvania, Wales, Ireland, Italy and Czechoslovakia. Her passion for research began with her career as a writer of historical romance fiction. Whether it takes a few minutes on the internet or hours in the dusty hallways of research repositories, Lori isn't satisfied until she's put the puzzle pieces in order.

    She is a member of the National Genealogical Society, as well as many regional societies and associations.

    As a bonus, Lori is also an accomplished graphic designer, and as part of her services offers beautiful lineage charts and books to share with friends and family members

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