Wednesday, June 6, 2018

CCC - the Civilian Conservation Corps

Growing up in central Ohio, my family often would picnic and attend family reunions at Mount Gilead State Park. The park is very small and located just outside the small town of Mount Gilead in Morrow County. It features two small lakes and two small dams. It has camping and fishing. And a small forest of pines. The pines stand in rows about 8 feet apart.  During family reunions, the older relatives would remind us that Uncle Joe had helped plant those pines while working with the CCC - the Civilian Conservation Corps.

The pine trees at Mount Gilead State Park. Photo courtesy of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources




The Civilian Conservation Corps was created by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933 as part of his New Deal policies to pull the U.S. out of the Great Depression. The legislation was passed within the first month of his presidency and days later its first employees were at work. The program ran until 1942 when America's entry into World War II and the war industry replaced the jobs that the CCC had provided.

At its height, the CCC employed 300,000 men and over the life of the project over 3 million men found employment. It was open to boys and men aged 17-25 years old, single, unemployed and in good physical health. Because of pressure from the unions, no training could take place and the CCC men could not do jobs that would replace union workers. That meant the work would have to be simple manual labor. The men were paid $30 a month, of which $25 was sent home for support relief for their families. Shortly after is inception, the program was opened up to veterans, who could be of any age, and any marietal status. They just needed to need the work. Veteran CCC members received a larger paycheck of $36-$45 a month. The men enrolled for 6 month commitments, but could re-enroll for a total of 2 years of service.

The CCC helped rebuild the C&O Canal in the 1930's. Photo courtesy of the Digital Public Library of America






Unfortunately, segregation was the rule and the CCC maintained separate camps for African Americans and Native Americans.

The CCC was supervised by four different government departments. Department of Labor recruited the young men and set quotas for each area. The Department of War operated the camps which functioned just like military camps with barracks and ranks. And the Departments of Agriculture and Interior organized and supervised the work.The projects were to focus on protecting our natural resources by battling erosion and setting up parks to preserve natural areas.


CORPS ACCOMPLISHMENTS:
  • 3,470 fire towers erected
  • 97,000 miles of fire roads built
  • Fighting fires
  • 3 Billion trees were planted
  • Erosion Control on 20 million acres of land
  • Public camp and picnic ground development
  • Protecting natural habitats of wildlife
  • Stream improvement
  • Restocking fish
  • Emergency work during the flood of 1937 and the New England hurricane of 1938.
  • Once the draft started in 1940, the Army policy made CCC alumni corporals and sergeants.

Ohio had over 100 camps. The nearest camp I have been able to document was Camp Anthony Wayne near Wooster and there was a Camp Mohican near Loudonville.

SOME OF THE MEDINA COUNTY AND LOCAL CCC PROJECTS WERE:

  • Widening and paving of Route 18 between Medina and Akron
  • Widening of the CCC Road from Medina south. In this case CCC refers to State Route 3, which connects Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati.
  • Clearing of roadside ditches.
  • Clearing of the drainage ditch for the Chippewa Lake Inlet
Crane used to clear the ditch for the Chippewa Lake Inlet. Medina County Gazette 22 April 1938, page 6

Bridge for a bridle path at Sand Run Creek, part of the Akron Metroparks system. Photo from the Cleveland Memory Project.
The program was never officially terminated, but Congress defunded it in 1942. It still serves as the model for numerous conservation programs across the nation. Two successor programs  are:

  • The Corps Network - formerly known as the National Association of Service and Conservation Corps, works to expand corps type programs.
  • The National Civilian community Corps- part of  Americorps, where young adults work for non-profit & government organizations for 10 months. The focus of their work is often on conservation efforts.


With all the different government agencies involved and the millions of men that enlisted with the CCC, a LOT of paperwork was created. And that is an opportunity for every genealogist!


RESEARCHING A CCC WORKER:
Personal Records
If you have a relative who was a CCC worker, the National Personnel Records Center in St. Louis should have his personal file. You can visit the Center in person, hire a researcher to locate the records or submit a request in writing.

To submit the request in writing, use form NA 14136 Request for CCC Personnel Records - Then you have to identify the individual by providing: his full name, his date of birth, Social Security Number (if known), dates and location of service (again, if known).
Mail your request to:

National Archives & Records Administration
ATTN: Archival Programs
P.O. Box 38757
St. Louis, MO 63138

There is a flat fee of $25. If there are more than five pages, the fee is $70. Do not send money with the form. You will be informed of the costs. Once you pay up, they send the records.

INFORMATION FOUND IN THE RECORDS:

  • Name
  • Address
  • Date of birth & place of birth
  • Physical appearance
  • Allotte's name - the person receiving the money being sent home. Often was the mother.
  • Medical information
  • Education
  • CCC training courses
  • Camp & work assignments
  • Type of discharge
Sometimes this additional information is found:
  • Parent's names
  • Application for emergency relief
  • Record of Hearing for any disciplinary actions
  • Previous work history
  • Previous education
Information NEVER found in the records:
  • Photographs
  • Discharge papers - these were given to the enrollees.

Newspapers
Camp Newspapers
Most of the camps had newspapers. You can find out what CCC camp newspapers are available at the Center for Research Libraries site: http://catalog.crl.edu/search~S3

Here is a screen shot of the listings for Wayne County, Ohio:


Contact the Center about access to the newspapers. Also, check for other library holdings on sites like worldcat.org.

Local Newspapers

If you are lucky enough that your local newspaper is digitized, you can search them for information on local CCC camps and the men who served in them. That is how I was able to compile this partial list of men from Medina County who worked for the CCC.

Recruits were enrolled from Medina County four times a year. A list of  some of the men from Medina in the CCC:

April 1935:
  •      Charles Tomkins
  •      John Kazian
  •      Myron Buttolph
  •      Dale Hartell
  •      Dean Henniger
  •      Dwight Holcomb - Medina
  •      George Keifer - Medina
  •      Burton Williams
  •      Charles Engler
  •      Barney Chaney
  •      Mike Ivaney
  •      Amos Ruch
  •      Edwin Murray
  •      Edward Lange
  •      Kenneth Fritz - Wadsworth
  •      Wallace Fritz - Wadsworth
  •      Delane Bowman - Wadsworth
  •      Raymond Fiala
  •      Robert Kindall- Spencer
  •      Harry Reitz - Spencer
  •      Ivan Jones - Guilford
  •      Willard Jones - Guilford
  •      Roy Carlton
  •      Charles Taylor - Lafayette
  •      Alex Toth - Lafayette
  •      Virgil Vaughn - York
  •      Elmer Walden - York
  •      John Ramsey - Chatham
  •      Alfred Cameron - Hinckley
July 1936
  •      John Martin (sic colored) – Medina
  •      Donald Lutz – Wadsworth
  •      October 1936
  •      Donald Pelot
  •     Carrol Pelot 
Jan 1937
  •      Carroll Funk – Seville 
  •      Alexander Hege – Sharon 
  •      Floyd Wiesen – Wadsworth 
  •      Arthur Call – Medina 
  •      Kenneth Whitney – Hinckley 
  •      Thomas Weir – Medina
April 1938:

  •      Gordon Senz - Medina
  •      Dominic LoParo - Wadsworth
  •      Earl Euga - Medina

July 1938
  •      Victor Bayduk – Wadsworth
  •      George Hagedorn – Wadsworth
  •      Joe Kraski – Wadsworth
  •      Bert Hornyak – Wadsworth
  •      Dan Kinda - Wadsworth
  •      Frank Dundas – Wadsworth
  •      Donald Wright – Wadsworth
  •      Donald Simcox – West Salem
  •      Richard Norris - Spencer

October 1938
  •      Paul Balind – Wadsworth
  •      Eugene Bowers – Seville
  •      Alfred Kmitt – Litchfield
  •      William Michaels – Medina
  •      Hobart Porter – Brunswick
  •      Raymond Ringler – Seville
  •      Charles E. Werner – Wadsworth
  •      Robert G. Logan – Chatham
  •      Robert Ellsworth - Medina
Jan 1939
  •      Wilbert W. Early – Seville
  •      Harold L. Jason – Medina
  •      Melvin W. Kirtley – Wadsworth
  •      Edgar C. Miller – Wadsworth
  •      Jack Myers – Seville
  •      Richard G. Perrin – Medina
  •      Virgil L. Price – Wadsworth
  •      Procter Shannon – Seville
  •      William A. Spias – Medina
April 1939:
  • Russell Bishop - Lodi
  • Paul Ginter - Lodi
  • Quinton Honroth - Medina
  • Ralph Jenkins - Wadsworth
  • Joseph Lamphear - Medina
  • Clayton Lautzenhieser - Burbank
  • Carl Nameth - Medina
  • Dallas Ringler - Wadsworth
  • Richard Tinstman - Medina
  • Calvert Ward - Wadsworth
July 1939:
  • William Lance - Medina
  • Thomas E. McKenna - Medina
  • Edward T. Zbiegin - Medina
  • Victor Bayduk - Wadsworth
  • Dale Leatherman - Wadsworth
  • Herbert Rittmiller - Wadsworth
  • Walter Mantz Jr. - Wadsworth
  • Michael J. Smith - Wadsworth
  • Carl Rumpf - Wadsworth
October 1939:
  • Max H. Bishop – Lodi
  • Seymour Lautzenheiser – Burbank
  • Merle L. Miller – Wadsworth
  • Carrol W. Pelot – Medina
  • Arthur Steghemper – Medina
  • Edwin Wagner – Wadsworth
Jan 1940
  • Wilbert Early – Medina
  • James Jason – Medina
  • Harry Johnson – Medina
  • Ralph M. Jones – Wadsworth
  • William R. Morrison – Wadsworth
  • Jack Myers – Seville
  • Dorlis Morgan – Medina
  • Robert E. Putt – Wadsworth
  • William K. Saunders – Medina
  • Robert L. Tubbesing – Wadsworth
  • Harry E. Yocum - Seville
Yes, some of the men are listed twice. Veteran CCC workers could sign up more than once.


SOURCES:

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Spring Grove Encampment

This Saturday the Friends of the Spring Grove Cemetery are hosting a first ever...

Spring Grove Civil War Encampment


This unique event is going to be packed with incredible activities for the whole family.
  • Re-enactors will portray the 8th Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Many of the original members of this Civil War unit came from Medina County.
  • An opportunity to tour the Miller House that was a stop on the Underground Railroad.
  • Civil War Musicians, displays and artifacts.
  • Tin-type photos taken in period costume.
AND
  • The Medina Library's genealogy team will be on hand to help you find YOUR family history. Yep, that would be Lauren, Lisa and me!




The Medina Gazette had a nice article on the event in Tuesday's paper: Civil War Encampment.

The weather is forecast to be fine weather to enjoy and incredible day of fun and history!

For more information visit the Friends of Medina Cemetery.

OR...

Listen to this interview with Teresa Merkle, President of the Friends of Medina Cemetery on WCPN's Sound of Applause.

Photo courtesy of WCPN web site.




Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Dandelion Drive






No, the Dandelion Drive is not a tour to highlight the dandelion-filled lawns of my neighborhood.


It is a tour of the local historical societies!

This year the tour is on Sunday May 20th! (Sorry for the confusion!)

The map is below:

Or click HERE for a printable version of the map.



Enjoy the beautiful Medina County countryside and learn more about YOUR Medina County History!


Wednesday, May 9, 2018

The Smith Cousin...

Genealogy is not just about reaching out to find dead ancestors. It is also about connecting with living relatives. This concept was highlighted recently when a gentleman came into our Tuesday afternoon Genealogist Is In session.

His name is Smith and he was looking for a long lost cousin also named Smith...

GROAN!

For anyone who doesn't already know, SMITH is the most common surname in the United States., with 2.376 MILLION people having the name. That is half a million more than the runner-up surname: JOHNSON. So tracking down a SMITH can be problematic just because it is so common.


SMITH is the most common surname in all but a handful of  states.
Map and key found on WikiCommons, contributed by User:MB298/Maps

Another complication is that the gentleman believes that this cousin is still living. More recent records, of people still living, can be harder to find just because of various legal restrictions put into place to protect privacy and inhibit identity theft.

But the gentleman had a fair amount of information, so I was willing to try to help him.

This is the information he had:

His cousin's name at birth was Doris Jean SMITH, born around 1945 somewhere near McKeesport, Pennsylvania. Her parents were Kathrerine (WALLACE) SMITH and Denis SMITH. She had a brother named David. She married a man named KENNEDY and they had a daughter named Michelle.

OUCH! KENNEDY? Another fairly common surname. Oh, well, we carried on.

McKeesport is in Allegheny County in Pennsylvania. You might be more familiar with another city in Allegheny County - Pittsburgh.

So, we are searching in the vicinity of a major metropolitan area for the surname KENNEDY, nee SMITH.

Kathryn and Denis had divorced and were both deceased. Kathryn never remarried. The gentleman had many little stories about the family and shared a handful of family photos. Everyone in the photos shared the surname SMITH.

We searched in both Ancestry LE and FamilySearch.org, but was only able to turn up one item that might be Doris Jean SMITH. It was a yearbook picture from Indiana University of Pennsylvania that said the individual was an Elementary Education Major and was from Clariton, PA. Clariton is also in Allegheny County. The record indicated that her birthdate was 1947, a few years off. However, there wasn't a clear link to his Doris Jean. But she was a possible.

We spent a full hour searching from different angles, like looking for her mother's obituary, but still wasn't finding anything. He shared that he had several living cousins, one who organized the family reunion, that he could call and ask. As we had run out of time, I encouraged him to phone his cousins and wished him luck.


The Genealogist Is In! is a weekly program held at the Medina Library
every Tuesday from 1-4 p.m. One of the staff genealogists works with
members to help solve family research problems.

He came back the next week. He had called his cousins and they had no information on Doris Jean.

Then he pulled out one of the little snapshots he had shown me before that included his cousin as a young child. And he pulled out the yearbook photo we had found. The smile, the dimples, the nose, the eyes were the same! While it wasn't a positive identification, there was a definite resemblance.

He shared something that he hadn't before, Aunt Katherine was known by the nickname "Kay". So we started searching for that name, hoping that her obituary would list information on her daughter. We weren't turning anything up, but then I noticed a detail that made all the difference. Katherine spelled her name Kathryn. Now both Ancestry LE and FamilySearch.org return close matches when displaying their results, so I didn't think it would have made that much of a difference. But it did!

Now, we were finding high school yearbook pictures of Kathryn WALLACE (maiden name) and those photos also bore a striking resemblance to the lady, mother of Doris Jean, in his snapshots.

So we went back to looking for her obituary, using the correct spelling of her given name. And  WE FOUND IT!

Now we were making some progress. The obituary listed her daughter as Doris Jean KENNEDY, wife of John and her granddaughter as Michelle. But seriously? John KENNEDY. We knew he hadn't been president of the United States, but still there had to be scores of John KENNEDYs.

And there were. DOZENS of them showed up in the Reference USA White Pages Directory for Pennsylvania. We tried cross referencing for Doris Jean KENNEDY and only 3 appeared. But none of them shared an address or a phone number with the dozens of John KENNEDYs.

Reference USA is a subscription database available to Medina County
District Library card holders. It is primarily a database for business
statistics, but has a very reliable White Pages section.


The obituary also gave a nickname for Doris Jean. "Dee".

Then we tried what I often try when hitting a brick wall. I Googled "Doris Jean Kennedy Pittsburgh Pa". And one of the first sites that popped up was the site Spokeo. Now I am not a huge fan of Spokeo, but one of the things it does is groups together people who might be related based on other records. And there they were: Doris Jean Kennedy, also known as Dee J. Kennedy. David Kennedy. Michelle Kennedy. John Kennedy. All the people we know are Doris Jean's relatives.

And locations: Lived in: Pittsburgh, PA.  Notice the past tense? Lived in? And then we looked at the current location. A totally new location. But a totally plausible location for someone of retirement age.

Back at the Reference USA database we did a new search using the new city and state name and found a listing for Doris Jean KENNEDY that totally matched up with a John KENNEDY at the same address. And a phone number.

Now the gentleman is only a phone call away from reconnecting with his cousin.


Remember to utilize all types of techniques when doing family history research! Don't limit your searches to genealogy resources.

NEW BOOKS!

The following books were added to the local history collection in the month of April:
April 2018:
  • First Congregational Church of Lodi 
  • Granger’s Greats in Coddingville Cemetery 
  • Granger’s Greats in East Granger Cemetery 
  • Granger’s Greats in Reid Hill Cemetery 
  • New Lakeshore Electric 
  • Trolley Trails through Greater Cleveland and Ohio 
  • Trolley Trails through Greater Cleveland and Ohio from 1910 to Today

SOURCES:

Ancestry Library Edition
FamilySearch.org
Findagrave.com
Reference USA - White pages
Google
Spokeo
Surname frequency in the US
Smith surname

Thursday, May 3, 2018

Military Records of our Ancestors

Picture courtesy of Wikimedia.

Just in time for Memorial Day!


On Tuesday, May 8th, the Medina Library will be offering a class on the Military Records of our Ancestors at 6:30-7:30 p.m. in Community Room.



Focusing on U.S. Military Records, this one hour class will cover:

  • How to tell if your ancestor served in the military
  • The different types of military records
  • What information you will find in them and 
  • Where to locate the records. 

Space is limited, so please REGISTER HERE!


Dates of inception for the different branches of the U.S. Military:

  • United States Army - 14 June 1775
  • United States Navy - 13 October 1775
  • United States Marines - 10 November 1775
  • United States Coast Guard - 4 August 1790
  • United States Air Force - 18 September 1947







http://www.arradondo.com/datesfound.html

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

The Medina Fire That Wasn't

Many people are aware of the two large fires that devastated Medina, one in 1848 and one in 1870.

The 1870 fire in particular is well documented in newspaper articles of the time, and in subsequent history books. In the 1970's, a University of Akron student, Edward Kilbane, wrote his thesis paper on them. And they were a topic for a Medina Bicentennial talk by assistant Fire Chief  Mark Crumley earlier this month. Gazette  article HERE.

The first edition after the fire is dated 27 May 1870.
The above headline was top and center on the front page.


The Medina Gazette's offices were at the corner of Washington and Court street and were among the burnt buildings. It took them over a month to get up and printing again.



The site Everything Medina site has a picture from the Medina County Historical Society of the 1870 fire:

Photo from the Medina County Historical Society.

But if you go to the Cleveland Memory Project and search for Medina Fire, two of the five results are to photos of the Medina Fire That Wasn't.

This is the first of two photos that are attributed to the Fire of 1870.
Caption reads "Business people and citizens of Medina, Ohio watch as Firefighters attempt to put out
the blaze in the historical buildings of Medina County Square, Ohio.
"

This picture is taken from a slightly different angle.  Its caption reads "After the disastrous fire of 1848, Medina again
 "rose from the ashes" like the mythical phoenix in 1870 after another fire that wiped out the historical business district. Given the massive reconstruction required, Medina is considered to provide one 

of the most complete examples of late 19th century architecture in the state of Ohio"

Notice how the second two pictures look nothing like the one from the Historical Society. Most of downtown Medina was destroyed in the 1870 fire, not just one building. Also, notice the "electrical" poles and hanging light in the two pictures. Look at the clothes on the people. See the bowler hat, the caps, the large flowered hats of the ladies?  All of these clues point to a later time period than 1870.

And that is because these pictures are NOT from the 1870 fire in Medina.

They are from another devastating fire that occurred in Seville in 1910.

Medina Gazette  9 Dec 1910, page 1.

The photo is quite dark in the above headline clipping. So I lightened it to get more of the detail:


Compare the roof line in the Cleveland Memory photos with the newspaper photo. Identical, right?
Even the rubble where the building walls used to be and the scorched sign on the half wall match up with the photos.

So how did such a mix-up occur? Simple human error.

And I have to confess, I played a MAJOR role in the confusion. And this is my attempt to fix it.

A few years ago a couple of graduate students were working on a digitization project towards their Masters in Library Science. They were working with the Medina Library's small collection of photographs. They came to me with the two photos and asked if they were pictures of the 1870 fire. And I said that it was the only fire I was aware of.

MISTAKE #1 - I should NEVER have assumed that Medina County only had one (or two) disastrous fires.

MISTAKE #2 - I should have researched it better at the time. Because these students were in post graduate school, I felt they were capable of doing the research to verify.

MISTAKE #3 - They took my word for the photo identification.

 A few years went by and I started noticing that details in the picture didn't match the time period. I reached out to trusted experts in Medina County History - Joann G. King and Tom Hilberg. Both have been curators at the Medina County Historical Society Museum and past presidents of the Society. Both came back with the same answer. That the pictures in the Library's collection were most likely of a Seville fire. That information gave me a place to start. Browsing through Lee Cavin's book, A Book About Seville, Ohio 1816-1966, I found this photo of the Walker Block before the fire:


A Book about Seville, 1816-1966 by Lee Cavin, page 63.
Follow up newspaper articles detail how Pharmacy owner, Frank Saal  was fatally burned in the fire.
Parts of the roof line and the surrounding buildings were a match to the photos. With the information from Cavin's book, the newspaper articles were easy to find and confirmed Joann's & Tom's identification.

UGH!! I had made several horrible mistakes and now it all was immortalized on the Cleveland Memory Project web site.

I reached out to the then head of the project and explained the foul up. He said that he couldn't just change it on my word. The original people who had digitized and uploaded the photos needed to log in and change it. Unfortunately, the person who knew the sign in information has left the area.

MISTAKE #4 - No way to make corrections to a history site???

I will submit this information to the Cleveland Memory Project again. Perhaps it isn't too late to correct this fiasco.


"To err is human..." - Alexander Pope

UPDATE:

William Burrow of the Cleveland Memory Project worked with me to correct the mislabeling of the the Seville fire photos on that website. The updated information can be viewed HERE.


SOURCES:
A Book About Seville 1816-1966 by Lee Cavin
Everything Medina: The 1870 Fire: a Phoenix Rises from the Ashes
History of Medina County and Ohio 
Images of America Medina by Gloria Brown
"Lightening (sic) Strikes Twice" by Edward Kilbane, University of Akron, circa 1974.
Medina County Coming of Age 1810-1900 by Joann G. King.

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Genealogy SLAM!

Liz Pearson, speaker and specialist
 in English and Welsh genealogy
 research.
Elizabeth (Liz) Pearson

Liz Pearson is a native of England whose foray into genealogical research started about 35 years ago when an attempt to identify her grandmother turned into her very own family history addiction. Since then, she has spent thousands of hours combing the myriad English and Welsh archives in the UK, the US, and online for herself and others. Liz is an expert on ecumenical (1538-1837) and civil law (1837-Present) and the broad spectrum of Parish Chest Records.

Liz's two hour presentation covers three main areas and record sources:
1. Ecumenical Law; Parish Chest Records: (1538 - 1837) Baptisms, Marriages by Banns or License and Burials.

2. Civil Records of Birth, Marriage and Death. (1837-Present)

3. Census Records: Pre-1841; 1841- 1911, plus 1939 pre- WW2 Registry. 



Lisa Rienerth, Reference Staff &
Genealogy Specialist at
The Medina Library

Lisa Rienerth, Medina Reference Staff

Lisa is a 10 year veteran at the Medina Library and has been conducting genealogy research for 19 years. She completed the NGS American Genealogy Home Study Course and has taken numerous genealogy research classes through the Western Reserve Historical Society.  She has also taught countless classes for the library. 

The Family Search web site has undergone many changes recently. Lisa will describe these changes and instruct us on how to make the most of the one of the best FREE genealogy sites. 



Register HERE.