My Lineage Part II

My maternal side is a little more complicated to draw a nice little pie chart for, but I will make an attempt.  It was always thought that I was mostly Polish on this side of the family on further examination, different names not of Polish ancestry were discovered!  Here are the names I have for now with further reasearch needed!

Listing my great great grandparents from this side of the family names include:

Kowalczyk: Polish
Unknown name: ? Assumingly Polish
Smola: Polish
Unknown Name Assuming Polish
Norman: Swedish
Johnson: Norwegian
Conlan: This name gets stuck in Indiana in the mid 1800's, but based on the maiden names of the family I was tracing back, we know that its part German and English, Conlan is likely English or Irish
Matteson: her father was born in North Dakota, her mother from Germany.......

Now I've also always been told that one part of the family was part Blackfoot Indian and Irish.  The story was that a Blackfoot Indian women married an Irish trapper. 

Here is what we know "for sure"

I am.......
25% Polish
6.25% Swedish
6.25% Norwegian
12.5% some undefined mixture of English, German, possibly Irish and possibly Blackfoot Indian

Graph!

My lineage

Usually when listing names for ancestors I'm researching I go no further back than Great Great Grandparents since that would make anyone who shares a grandparent about a 3rd cousin to me.  But I'm discovering that is typically not enough because I have accounted for most of those people already!  I'll start with these names first though.

Surnames: Ferguson, Steele, Luckwich, Kitzman, Enger, Olson, Johnson and Thorson.

The country of origin for these names is:
Ferguson: Scotland
Steele: England
Luckwich: Poland/Germany
Kitzman: Germany
Enger: Norway
Olson: Norway
Johnson: Norway
Thorson: Norway

Subsequently it can be estimated that I am:
(Paternal side only)
6.25% Scottish
6.25% English
12.5% German (dependant on whether or not an ancestor was from Poland, there are conflicting records regarding this)
25% Norwegian 

A graph!

Why Genealogy?

I started this blog to chronicle my many adventures in genealogy.  I call it an adventure because it has taken me many places.  I have been to several libraries, cemeteries, farms, old houses and even to Norway to uncover how I ended up being born in Joliet, Illinois in 1981.  And in my research it's taken me many places and times that I knew very little about.  I've caught a glimpse of what it was like for a farming family in Grundy County  in the late 1800's, a boarding house run by a mother and daughter in downtown Morris and to countless places I knew very little about including Norway, Germany, England, Poland and Scotland.  These are just a few of things I've been exposed to researching my own family and have seen ever more since I began researching my husband Scott's family heritage.

Typically, when I speak to family members or go into research centers, it's always a surprise to those I'm working with how young I am.  I'm 28 years old now and I still get this reaction, but I have been doing this since I was 13 years old.  It all started in Mr. Clark's 8th grade Social Studies class.  We were assigned to do a family tree project, a typical assignment during the course of one's education.  I know that my grandmother had spoken of stories of her family and her mother's family, but I hadn't paid attention to most of it and just accepted it as one of the many stories that were shared at nearly every family function.  We had always been told her father had been part of a 9 brother baseball team, claiming to be the only one in the country at that time.  We had heard of a long lost fortune of the Fergusons and Steeles, estimated at 60 million dollars and included a castle that had been in litigation for years in the early 1900's.  The family had tried to claim the fortune and there was a torrid affair, a murder and a missing family bible with various inconsistent details that were all apart of the story. 

When I started to organize all the information and things began to unfold, it was like discovering a treasure you never knew existed and hadn't been seen or appreciated for years.  Those who I had interviewed to gain this information were all to eager to share this information and those who had were interested were eager to listen about what I had found.   It felt like a very important job to share this information unknown to someone that had a hand in shaping who they were.  Not only do the previous generations lives account for who we are, it has determined where we are and what kind of legacy we will  leave for our future generations.  It is even more important to me, to remember these people who are no longer here and for many family members didn't even know they existed. 

Through the years, I have spent thousands of hours in the library, on the internet and talking to family members.  Our trip to Norway took our search abroad and to the end of our line back to 1500s. We had a family reunion to share information.   I took a few years off as a break to complete graduate school and lost a little interest in research for awhile.  After getting married, I began to get interested in my husband's genealogy and traced his back very quickly and efficiently with the developments of internet research.  This renewed my interest in our own family.  After a promised trip to Scotland with my family, I began to get the bug again.  The Enger history had been so abundant and so easy to find, that it was almost a shock to get stuck very early on with other branches of the family.  But a part of the fun of genealogy is the challenge and digging through countless historical records and interviews with family members to find that one little piece of information that will lead you to an explosion of other information.  I have taken a few side roads off the Ferguson branch when I hit a wall and when I have an idea to further my search I'd explore it.  Usually I came up empty handed.  Unfortunately, I'm still at the same wall, which brings me to the most recent genealogical developments in the last few days.

We decided to try our luck with a DNA test.  After watching Who Do You Think You Are on NBC, it sounded like a viable option to possibly get some more information.  Dad was tested and we've gotten our results and in turn found some 4th cousins that could be matches and the link to some more information to further our search.  We're still waiting on contact, but it looks hopeful!

I wanted to start this blog to keep track of my search, share genealogy information in case there are other researchers can help and to help others start a family history search themselves.

The next few entries I will devote to what has been going on with the DNA results and post our own family information on the blog for family members and researchers to have access to.
-Sarah