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Friday, January 30, 2015

My 2015 New Year Genealogy Education Goals: Part 1

As challenged in a post by Randy Seaver in his genealogy blog, Geneamusings, I am going to list my genealogy education goals for 2015.

I am still employed full-time and so must limit my opportunities to after work, weekend and vacation hours. Still, I think I have managed to accumulate quite a list of opportunities for the advancement of my studies.

One very ambitious goal was just started this last week- I signed up for ProGen Study Group 25, which begins soon. I had signed up for a waiting list last summer as indicated in my earlier post here. I was unaware that there were some technical difficulties and some of the names on the waiting list were lost. After no word in over 6 months I decided to contact the new administrator of the program to find out when I might be included and found they had no record of my registration. Fortunately, I kept my copy and was able to promptly send it back. I was accepted into the newly formed group and am awaiting news of the first online meeting.

I also recently signed up for a week-long institute, the Institute of Genealogy and Historical Research at Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama that runs from June 7 through June 12. I am very fortunate in that my sister lives in a nearby suburb and has offered to put me up and to put up with me. I am signed up for the Intermediate Genealogy and Historical Studies course  - I can hardly wait to get there!

And I am currently in the Mastering Genealogical Proof Study Group 37; we just completed our second meeting. This study group will run concurrently with my ProGen Study Group 25 but just for the first 2 months of ProGen study. So I should be able to work it out especially since this is my second time through the MGP book. I do need the practice!

I've been a member of several genealogical societies for years. I joined a few others this past year. Most have a quarterly magazine or journal and some educational opportunities. These are the societies I currently belong to and the publications (if available) that are a benefit of membership:

Other family history/educational magazines I subscribe to:
  • Family Tree Magazine
  • American History

Some of these magazines are on my Kindle App on my iPad where I can read them on one of our many 3 hour summer car trips. Others, that arrive in PDF version, are on my iBooks app also on my iPad. I like being able to bring several months worth on one device.

I also have memberships in many genealogy and research websites. Some are free and some require a paid subscription. I will list these in a future post.

I am addicted to blogs! I have been following 50 or more (nothing like the 1500 that Randy Seaver follows) and find something new and helpful every week. I read them at least once a week, some post every day and so I read several days worth from that author. Many post weekly or slightly less often. I choose blogs that appeal to me based on interest, midwest genealogy or technology in genealogy, for example. Or blogs based on genealogy software that I use. I will list my old favorites, and some new ones, in a future post.

Webinars and videos, live and archived, are quickly becoming a favorite for me, too. I have several favorite sites which I will list in a future post.

And books! I love books; hardcover, paperback, e-books, it doesn't matter. In a previous post I indicated one of my last year's professional genealogy goals was to build a research library. I'm not finished yet but I have to say that it is a lot of fun.  It was somewhat difficult to find online references  listing "must have" books. I even posted online at Dear Myrtle last May to see if some of the others viewing would list their top ten. Dear Myrtle posted some of her favorites in her G+ post of December 26 (thanks, Dear Myrtle!) So I will follow suit and list some of my top favorites in a future post.

So I have lots of opportunities this year. My goals this year: I will...

  • make it to the end of 2015 still up-to-date with all my readings and homework in ProGen25.
  • successfully complete Mastering Genealogical Proof Study Group 37.
  • learn to critically read articles in professional genealogy registers.
  • follow the GenLaw Study Group on Dear Myrtle's YouTube channel.
  • continue to add to my research library.
  • visit at least one courthouse for research.

I have much to learn but lots of opportunities!





Sunday, January 25, 2015

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Ancestor # 3: Joseph Oliver Eken

As announced by Amy Johnson Crow in No Story Too Small, there is a 2015 edition of 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks. I may not make 52 but I am going to post whenever time permits to share what I have learned with my family as suggested by Michael J. Leclerc in his blog. In this blog entry, I am sharing information about my grandfather. 

Joseph Oliver EKEN was born on Jan 13, 1894 at Lake Sinai, Brookings County, SD. He had one older brother, Ole Christian Eken, and two older sisters, Clara M. and Selma Eken. Another brother, Peter O. Eken, died as an infant.

He appeared on the census of Jun 8, 1900 in the household of his father, Ole Olson EKEN at Lake Sinai, Brookings, SD. His mother, Johanne Olsdatter Froisland Eken, had passed away the year before. His father passed away in 1902.
Joseph appeared on the census of May 2, 1910 as an adopted son of Sivert and Mattie Haffdahl at Lake Sinai, Brookings, SD. His older sister, Selma, was also living with them as an  adopted daughter.


Joseph was a Corporal in WWI serving in the 341st Field Artillery, 89th Division, Battery D which returned to the United States on May 24, 1919. His 1917 WWI draft card describes him as tall, medium build with brown eyes and dark brown hair.

Joseph appeared on the census of January 3, 1920 as the head of household at Lake Sinai, Brookings, SD. 





Joseph Oliver Eken married Julia Emelia MOE,  daughter of John Johnson MOE and Marie NELSON, on Mar 30, 1921 at Arlington, Kingsbury, SD. They became the parents of six children: 5 daughters and one son.
Joseph and Julia Eken appeared on the census of Apr 23, 1930 at Sinai, Brookings, SD. 
Joseph was the coach of the 1935 Junior Legion’s baseball team in Sinai, South Dakota. He is pictured with the team in the History of the Sinai Community, Sinai, South Dakota 1879 - 1979. The same book recounts that he was Commander of the Sinai American Legion in 1937.

Sometime between 1937 and 1940, the Eken family moved to Brookings, Brookings County, SD. Joseph and Julia appeared on the census of Apr 16, Joseph retired from the South Dakota Highway Department on December 31, 1961 after 24 years.

Joseph died from colon cancer on Jun 9, 1963 at Brookings, Brookings, SD at age 69. He was buried on Jun 11, 1963 at Brookings Lutheran Cemetery, Brookings, Brookings, SD, USA. 








Saturday, January 17, 2015

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Ancestor # 2: Myrle Piper Puncochar

As announced by Amy Johnson Crow in No Story Too Small, there is a 2015 edition of 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks. I may not make 52 but I am going to post whenever time permits to share what I have learned with my family as suggested by Michael J. Leclerc in his blog. In this blog entry, I am sharing information about my grandmother.
Myrle Eva PIPER  was born on Jan 25, 1901 at Bertha, Todd, MN. She had an older sister, Althia, and an older brother, Leon. In 1903, when Myrle was less than three years old, her mother, Julia Alice Riggs Piper, passed away.
Myrle appeared on the census of Jun 5, 1905 in the household of her father, George Edwin PIPER at Bertha, Todd, MN. Her father met and married Florence Draper, born in Rhode Island, in 1906 in Todd County, MN. George filed on a land claim in Scranton, Bowman County, ND. He had attempted a land claim earlier, in 1901, but failed when he and his family had to return to Minnesota due to his wife's health.
Myrle appeared on the census of May 6, 1910 in the household of George Edwin PIPER at Scranton, Bowman, ND. By this time her stepmother, Florence Draper Piper, was no longer with the family. Florence Piper was found in the Lamm household, in Deuel County, SD, in the 1910 census. She was the housekeeper for the family and had twins, Constance and George E. Piper, born in 1909. Family lore indicates Florence couldn’t handle the isolation of the land claim in North Dakota.
Myrle appeared on the state census of 1915 in the household of George Edwin PIPER at Scranton, Bowman, ND. By that time, Myrle’s father married again, this time to Estelle, last name unknown.
In 1915 and 1916, Myrle’s father sent her to a Sacred Heart Academy, a Catholic boarding school in Fargo, ND. The family wasn’t Catholic so it’s bit of a puzzle as to why she was sent there. She returned to Scranton to continue her high school career there. By this time, Myrle's father had married a fourth time, to Saxie Piatt Eisinger.
But Myrle didn’t graduate high school. In those days, a student could enter nursing school after her junior high school year.
Myrle attended St. Luke’s Nursing School in Aberdeen, Brown Co., SD and graduated in 1922. She remembered going to Pierre, SD, to take the nursing exam for her license and passing with flying colors.
Myrle married Francis Paul (Frank) PUNCOCHAR , son of John J. PUNCOCHAR and Anna PAVLIK, on Jun 16, 1925 at Aberdeen, Brown, SD. Due to Frank's job, the family moved frequently: 
  • They moved circa Mar, 1926 to Watertown, Codington, SD where her first son was born.
  • They lived in 1926 at Palace Apartments, 311 E. Kemp, Watertown, Codington, SD where they were listed in the directory.
  • They lived at 216 9th Ave SE, Aberdeen, Brown, SD in 1929 and 1930 as listed in city directories. 
  • They appeared on the census of Apr 3, 1930 at 216 9th Avenue SE, Aberdeen, Brown, SD. 
  • They appeared on the census of 1935 at 715 S 4th Street, Aberdeen, Brown, SD. 
  • They lived in 1936 at 816 w. 22nd Street, Sioux Falls, Minnehaha, SD, in the Sioux Falls directory.
  • They lived in 1937 at 816 W. 22nd Street, Sioux Falls, Minnehaha, SD, in the Sioux Falls directory.
  • Frank died Mar 22, 1940 at home at 1320 S. 1st Street, Aberdeen, Brown, SD. 
  • Myrle appeared on the census of Apr 10, 1940 at the same address: 1320 S. 1st Street, Aberdeen, Brown, SD. 
  • The family moved to Miller, Hand Co., SD shortly after Frank's death, probably 1940-1941.  An article in 1948 indicates Myrle had been the public health nurse for Hand County for eight years. She remained the public health nurse until her retirement.
Myrle liked to keep contact with her sister and friends via letters and saved many of them. She enjoyed playing and teaching piano to young students. 
Myrle Eva Piper Puncochar passed away Oct 19, 1990 in Hennepin Co., MN and is buried at St. Timothy's Cemetery, Maple Lake, Wright, MN, next to her husband, Frank.


Saturday, January 10, 2015

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Ancestor # 1: Frank Puncochar

As announced by Amy Johnson Crow in No Story Too Small, there is a 2015 edition of 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks. I may not make 52 but I am going to post whenever time permits to share what I have learned with my family as suggested by Michael J. Leclerc in his blog. I am starting with my grandfather.

I never met my paternal grandfather as he died when my father was not quite 15 years old. But I have enjoyed learning about him over the last 25 years as I researched my family history.

Francis Paul PUNCOCHAR  was born on Oct 2, 1898 at Maple Lake, Wright, MN, and died on March 22, 1940 in Aberdeen, Brown, South Dakota at the age of 41.

He appeared on the census of Jun 20, 1900 in the household of John J. PUNCOCHAR and Anna PAVLIK at Maple Lake, Wright, MN. His father was born in Bohemia, came to America in 1883 and was a farmer. His mother, Anna Pavlik was born in Illinois to Bohemian parents, and died on November 14, 1903.

He appeared as Frank PUNCOCHAR on the census of Jun 5, 1905 in the household of John J. PUNCOCHAR and his second wife, Frances PIRAM, at Maple Lake, Wright, MN. 


He appeared on the census of May 5, 1910 in the household of John J. PUNCOCHAR and Frances PIRAM  at Maple Lake, Wright, MN. 

According to his obituary, he attended business college in Minneapolis. He was bookkeeper on Sep 10, 1918 at McLaughlin Gormley King Co, 1715 5th Street SE, Minneapolis, Hennepin, MN, when he filed for WWI draft. His draft registration shows that he was short, of slender build and had blue eyes and brown hair.

He was clerk at McLaughlin Gormley King Company in 1919 at Minneapolis, Hennepin, MN, where he lived at 1609 Stevens Avenue, Minneapolis, Hennepin, MN when he appeared in the Minneapolis directory. This address now appears to be where the Minneapolis Convention Center is now located.




He appeared on the census of Jan, 1920 at 1609 Stevens Avenue, Minneapolis, Hennepin, MN. His occupation was listed as drug salesman. McLaughlin Gormley King Company dealt with importing spices and herbs when it was first formed in the early 1900's. It now deals with pest control.


He was a manager in 1923 at J. I. Case Threshing Machine Co. in Aberdeen, Brown, SD, when he was listed in the Aberdeen Directory. 

He married Myrle Eva PIPER, daughter of George Edwin PIPER and Julia Alice RIGGS, on Jun 16, 1925 at Aberdeen, Brown, SD. 

He and Myrle Eva PIPER  moved to Watertown, Coddington, SD circa Mar, 1926 and lived  at Palace Apartments, 311 E. Kemp when he was listed in the Watertown directory.


He and Myrle Eva PIPER lived at 216 9th Ave SE, Aberdeen, Brown, SD when they appeared on the census of Apr 3, 1930 

He and Myrle Eva PIPER appeared on the South Dakota state census of 1935 at 715 S 4th Street, Aberdeen, Brown, SD. He and Myrle Eva PIPER lived in 1936 at 816 w. 22nd Street, Sioux Falls, Minnehaha, SD according to the directory listing.

Frank suffered from a long illness before he died. He was seen at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota for his illness but they were unable to determine a cure.


From the Obituary of Frank Puncochar: Long Illness Fatal to Frank Puncochar

Frank Paul Puncochar, 41, died Friday evening in his home at 1320 1st St. S., after an illiness of a year and a half duration.

Mr. Puncochar had been with the J. I. Case Co here for 20 years. He was a member of the Blue Lodge of the Masonic Order in Aberdeen.

Mr. Puncochar was born in Maple Lake, Minn, Oct 2, 1898, and graduated from high school there. He later attended business college in Minneapolis. 

Survivors besides the widow are two sons, Robert, 14, and Glenn Allan, 7, his father, John Puncochar of Maple Lake, three brothers, Ernest and Joseph of Maple Lake, and William in St, Paul; a sister, Mrs. Edwin Blizil of Buffalo, MN.

Services will be in Huebl Chapel at 4 p.m. Saturday with the Rev. Arthur Atack of the Methodist church officiating. The body will be taken to Maple Lake where another service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Monday and where burial will take place.