Category Archives: Surnames

The surnames I am researching.

Am I Related to X Hamilton?

On a social media platform for a non-genealogy interest, someone asked if I was related to William Rowan Hamilton. Below is my answer.

Probably not. I know who he is. My parents got back to Isaac Hamilton born about 1830 in Ohio, and we can’t get past that. My Dad participated in the Hamilton DNA study and we only matched distant cousins from the lines of Isaac’s grandchildren. That is, my paternal grandfather’s cousins.

I’m thinking there is either a name change or a non-paternal event (AKA bastard) that has no paper trail we have not yet found.

I’ve got some DNA matches to the English/Inglis surname DNA study, so that leads me to believe maybe the mother was a Hamilton and the father an English. But I had so little success with that line of reasoning, that until I can travel to courthouses and research primary documents, I may never make the connection.

What About Alexander Hamilton?

People also ask about Alexander Hamilton, the first secretary of the U.S. Treasury. Most people who think they are related to him is in name only.

Only two of his children lived long enough to have children who themselves had children.

He has about 250-300 living descendants and they have participated in the Hamilton DNA study. So if you have a living male relative named Hamilton, you can participate and possibly find out who you are related to.

Scottish clans gave their name to the lords and all their subjects, so while some Hamiltons are related to each other, not all Hamilton’s are related to all other Hamiltons.

My Y Chromosome DNA looks like my male ancestors were either Vikings or ancestors of the vikings.

Nearly every other surname in my tree my parents got to the boat or back to Europe.

But my oldest Hamilton is stuck in 1830 Ohio.

Mickey Sketch

R.I.P. Blaine Gibson – Disney Imagineer

Today, I saw a post on my sister’s FB wall that our maternal grandmother’s cousin, Blaine Gibson, died.

Many don’t know his name, but he is a credited artist in several Disney cartoons: Fantasia, Bambi, Song of the South, Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, Sleeping Beauty, and One Hundred and One Dalmatians, and others.

His desire was to always be an animator, but when Walt Disney found out that his hobby was sculpting, Walt made Blaine the chief sculptor.

Blaine always sent hand made Christmas cards to my dad and others, with sketches of him walking his dog in the snow. He also sent a nice color sketch to my parent’s for their 40th Anniversary.

As a sculptor, his first famous work was the head of Abraham Lincoln for the audioanimatronic exhibit at the 1964 World’s Fair. He went on to do the heads of all the presidents, except Obama, and came out of retirement to add H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and G.W. Bush. His apprentice did Obama. My mom’s favorite story from Blaine about creating all the audioanimatronic heads was the response from a glass eye manufacturer when asked for pairs of glass eyes. The mere idea was absurd and took some convincing that it was a serious request.

He also did the sculpture, Partners, that has Walt and Mickey holding hands.

The Haunted Mansion, Pirates of the Caribbean, and other figures also relied on his sculpting talent.

I wonder how many more of the rides and attractions with your sculpted heads will be made into movies?

Hall of Presidents? Partners?

Way back in fourth grade we had to write a letter to someone and have them write us back. Getting a letter back from a real Disney artist with a sketch of Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck on official Imagineer paper was a big hit. I wish I still had his letter. I do still have the sketches.

Cousin Blaine will be missed. He was the last of his generation on that side of the family.

As the keeper of the family tree started by my parents, it is with sadness that I enter the last piece of information about Blaine. He is survived by his son and grandson, who will miss him most of all.

Mickey Sketch
Mickey Sketch

Several news outlets mentioned him:

http://www.ocregister.com/articles/disney-670361-walt-sculpted.html

http://paleofuture.gizmodo.com/blaine-gibson-designer-of-lifelike-robots-at-disney-pa-1716008151

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/07/06/blaine-gibson-dead_n_7732992.html

http://www.themeparkinsider.com/flume/201507/4646/

http://thedisneyblog.com/2015/07/05/disney-legend-blaine-gibson-has-died/

He doesn’t have his own Wikipedia page, but has an IMDB and d23 pages, and is mentioned on lots of other Wikipedia pages.

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0316863/bio?ref_=nm_ov_bio_sm

https://d23.com/blaine-gibson/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Moments_with_Mr._Lincoln

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disney_Legends

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Disney_Main_Street_window_honors

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deaths_in_2015

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hall_of_Presidents

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Disney_Gallery

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/It%27s_a_Small_World

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Haunted_Mansion_characters

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disney_Partners_Statue

Your Family Tree Is Never “Done”

I just found out from my oldest son that I am to be a grandfather.

Time to start adding new branches for the next generation.

No matter if you are going back in time, sideways in time, or keeping current, your family tree is always growing.

The importance of a system for research and organization are critically important.

H is for Hamilton

H

There are lots of stories that people with an ancestor named Hamilton are related to Alexander Hamilton, the first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury.

I know that I am not related to him. I also know that 90% plus of families with a story that they are related are wrong.

The man only had two of his children who had children that lived long enough to repeat the process. After a little over 200 years later, he has about 250 known living descendants. It is very unlikely you are descended from the man. A known descendant is a participant in the Hamilton Surname DNA study, so if you have a living male relative with the Hamilton surname, you can quickly determine if you are a descendant or cousin.

Alexander had one brother, James, but there is no record of him every coming to the U.S.

It is possible that you could be distant cousins, but a paper trail is still needed to explain how you are related.

For the majority of people with the Hamilton surname, your relationship to Alexander Hamilton, the one on the ten dollar bill, is that you share the same surname.

Alexander is a very common name among Scottish people and their descendants. You may be descended from AN Alexander Hamilton, but not THE Alexander Hamilton.

Gaw/McGaw – The Big Rabbit Trail

My biggest rabbit trail was one that I inherited from my parents. I believe they used another researcher’s information and went with it. Unfortunately, this information is on many CDs and if all over the place online.

My Great-great-great-great grandfather was John Gaw. The confusion is that he supposedly was born John McGaw and dropped the Mc. The reason for this confusion is that there was a John Gaw and a John McGaw from South Carolina who both fought in the Revolutionary War, and both moved to the same region of Ohio.

In the days before the internet, it is easy to see how one person searching a microfilm and finding a John with almost the same surname and the right age to confuse the two.

I spent a lot of time trying to get John McGaw and his brother William and their father John back to Ireland. The confused source had them from Dunferaline, Ireland. I can find no such place, and think it is a confusion with Dumfermline, Scotland. They supposedly went to Ireland before they went to South Carolina. Again, it is easy to see how a confusion of hand-written notes could lead to a garbled name for a town in the wrong country.

After I found this, and had spent a couple of years off and on trying to find them there, I learned that I was researching the wrong people. I mentioned this to my Dad and he got upset over it. This is my Mom’s side of the family, why should he care? He’s the one who proved another of my Mom’s ancestors was not an unknown person among the Regulators hung by the British in North Carolina. There were several among that branch of the family that were not happy with this.

That is one thing in genealogy that one encounters quite often. Disproving the favorite family story, or proving something that no one else will accept. Genealogy stands on evidence, yet too many people take as gospel what they read in a book someone put together. If the book does not tell you where they found the information so you can verify it, how do you know it is true? In this way, genealogy is a science. Given the same sources and the same information, two people should be able to come to the same conclusion.

There is a lot of gray area in that last sentence. If the sources do not have names and dates or are not primary sources, there can be a lot of room for supposition. However, any supposition should be supported by the facts, not that we are trying to prove something because we want it to be true. That is why the study of genealogy begins with the present and works from what we know, and goes back one generation at a time.

We must make a good start of it, or how will two or three generations from now know that we gave them the right people? We have to document it. If we knew the people, such as our grandparents, parents, siblings, children, and grandchildren, we need to document that we had first-hand knowledge of that person, and that we asked our parents to give us all they knew. Documentation of such interviews, will go a long way to help future generations and help them avoid unnecessary rabbit trails.

Isaac Hamilton & Abigail Martin

My brick wall for my Hamilton’s are my great-great-grandparents. I knew my grandparents Claude Louis and Rowena Merle [Gibson] Hamilton, but both died by the time I was 6 or 7. My great-grandparents William Elmer and Carrie May [Cardwell] Hamilton, both died before I was born. My dad knew his grandmother, Carrie, who only died a few years before I was born. His grandfather, William, died when he was 7. But my grandfather, Claude, was 37 when his father William died, and he at least had information and knowledge, as did his sisters, Leona and Laura.

William Elmer’s parents were Franklin Pierce and Mary Pearl [Hill] Hamilton. Back to this point we are very solid, as family information and census records and death certificates attest. Franklin’s parents were Isaac and Abigail [Martin] Hamilton. We have them on the 1860 census, but they seem to have disappeared after that. Was there an epidemic? Did Isaac get killed in the Civil War? What about Abigail and Franklin’s two younger sisters? There is a Franklin Hamilton of the right age in 1870 in a school in Illinois, was this the right one? Then in 1880 we have Franklin and Mary and two children, one being William Elmer.

From there we have some of the Kansas State censuses, and the 1900 Federal Census. William Elmer and family are found on the 1910, 1920, and 1930 Federal Censuses. However, Franklin and Mary have not been found in 1910. Franklin died in 1912 in Missouri, and Mary died in 1924/5 in Oklahoma. The census takers make it hard to find ancestors, when they use initials for everyone. This seems very prevalent in Kansas for the head of household. In this case F. P. Hamilton. Even with the advances of the internet and indexes, if one keeps looking for Franklin, F. P. gets missed.

The only way to find out what happened to Isaac and family is to find a sibling of Isaac and/or Abigail, and try to track them down. Without some sort of paper trail, like land ownership, this is one brick wall that may never come down.

One high-tech hope was joining the Hamilton Surname DNA project. My dad joined in hopes of finding a distant cousin of a common ancestor. We ended up in Group X. Which means that no one else quite matches us. We did have a hit from someone who might be related within the last 500 years, but without a hint of a researched line with names to connect us, there is no way to know where to go from here.

The key to this is to gather every piece of information available on all the descendants of Isaac and Abigail, which at this point, only Franklin is known to have children, and he and Mary were prolific. As I organize what I have from my parents, I hope to find any hints or clues they may have missed. If they do not have copies of original records, I will have to be prepared to spend money to obtain them.