Uh, maybe.
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Annoying inner voice: "Does River mean the river or River Street, the first street east of the river and the first street east of Huron?"
River means the Huron River, since (lucky flash of memory) on old maps Congress east of the river is labeled East Congress, whereas Congress west of the river is labeled Congress.
Researcher's Rule #1, for City Planners: Don't muck around with East and West versions of streets please. Pick different names already. And don't call the street next to a major geographical feature by the name of that feature. OK?
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In 1874, William L. would have been 20, a tad young even then to marry but certainly not impossible. Hm.
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Annoying inner voice: "No!"
Researcher's Rule #2, for Parents: Do not name your child after anyone in your family. Sorry. Not allowed as of now. Honor old Aunt Tillie with a trip to Bermuda instead of naming your child after her. OK?
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Annoying inner voice: "The source is probably the same directory! Fail!"
Researcher's Rule #3, for Obituary Card Scribes: list your dangnabbin' sources; you have enough ink left in your pen already, it won't break.
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WAIT! GOLD MINE! Here's some scribbly mess from the McCullough family file that says William L. was married in... 1874--NO! --1879... 4 ...9 ...wait, the 4's are different. It's a 9! IT'S A 9! William L. was married January 28, 1879 and had Caleb in...hm, census was taken June 18, 1880 and Caleb was 7 months old, so he was born around November of 1879. A honeymoon baby, perhaps.
Annoying inner voice: "You don't know the source for the scribbly mess, though it does say "Bible" on there. Also, you don't know if William L. established his own household when he got married."
Researcher's Rule #4, for People Who Write Scribbly Messes and Then Put Them in Archive Files: Three choices: print it, write it in immaculate copperplate handwriting, or type the bloody thing. Did I mention including sources?
As far as William L. establishing his own household, it's clear that Lora got pregnant right away, so it seems pretty likely. Can we let it rest there, annoying inner voice, and say Allie lived at 6 W. Michigan? Please? Just throw in a "probably" and call it a day?
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I know. Jeez, it's always something with you, isn't it?
7 comments :
As a geeky aside, it was cool how the business listing included, "They use a six horsepower engine and employ five men." It suggests that the size of a factory's single steam engine, distributing power via belts and rotating shafts, was one way of rating the sizes of businesses.
I like that the image at the top, from the City Directory, includes one of our famous (former) residents.
For Real.
Great! I was wondering where she lived! I didn't realize that Michigan Ave used to be Congress.
Fritz: Yes, all the businesses advertised their (meagre by today's standards) horsepower in the various articles in that "businesses" feature in the Commercial. Back then seems it was a big deal to harness (heh) by mechanical means the power of horses.
BF: Yessir, when possible I try to include tidbits in the items I scan for posting here.
Although the myth that the expression "the real McCoy" came from an obscure train part is the biggest load of steaming-hot historical buncombe I've ever heard of. Put plainly, it's flat wrong and nothing more than a bit of self-congratulatoey PC puffery. It's nonsense.
The expression actually came from a famous and piratical bootlegger from Prohibition times, but I'll save that story for another day.
K.P.: Yep, Michigan Ave. used to be called Congress, until the name was changed because...well, it's actually an interesting story; why don't I file that in my "future posts" file? Thank you for the idea!
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