Welcome to my blog about my genealogical research: my triumphs, my challenges, my research notes...plus some tips and links for you.
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Saturday, March 24, 2012
March 2012 Scanfest is Canceled
Due to unforeseen circumstances, I am going to have to cancel the March 2012 Scanfest. The next Scanfest is due to be held on Sunday, April 29th, from 11:00 AM to 2:00 PM, PDT.
A Tale of Two Sisters
The earliest complete Robbins family that I have been able to research holds many tales of tragedy, woe, and dark secrets. This is the household of my 4th-great-grandparents, Joseph Josiah Robbins, and his wife, Marinda Robbins (yes, a Robbins married a Robbins...were they related? Perhaps...) who had seven children, five boys--three of whom were named a variation of Ben--and two daughters.
Today I begin the tale of the two daughters, sisters whose lives were very different from each other, but who both lived lives of tragedy of one sort or another. I have no photographs of these women, nor do I have an idea if any have survived the passage of time. Records documenting their life have been difficult to come by and have taken years to collect. But they were women; living, breathing women who attained adulthood, who lived during a time when women had few rights and were not deemed important enough to have much written about them, unless they were extraordinary or notorious.
And ordinary women these two were. One married, had children--burying two, and died young, while the other--mentally disabled--lived the last years of her life in an asylum. Both died and were buried far from family. When I first learned about the Robbins family tree, I didn't even know about the existence of one.
Today I begin the tale of the two daughters, sisters whose lives were very different from each other, but who both lived lives of tragedy of one sort or another. I have no photographs of these women, nor do I have an idea if any have survived the passage of time. Records documenting their life have been difficult to come by and have taken years to collect. But they were women; living, breathing women who attained adulthood, who lived during a time when women had few rights and were not deemed important enough to have much written about them, unless they were extraordinary or notorious.
And ordinary women these two were. One married, had children--burying two, and died young, while the other--mentally disabled--lived the last years of her life in an asylum. Both died and were buried far from family. When I first learned about the Robbins family tree, I didn't even know about the existence of one.
The above are some notes my mother took in 1978 while visiting with my great-grandmother, Marie (Lewis) Robbins. The information was incomplete and somewhat inaccurate (Joseph never was incarcerated at Andersonville, for instance), but it did give four names of the seven children of Joseph and Marinda (Robbins) Robbins. They were, in order:
- Charles H. Robbins (1844 - 1934) - my great-great-great-grandfather.
- Emeline C. Robbins (1846 - 1917)*
- Joseph Uzza Benson Robbins (1847 - 1931)
- Benjamin Leander Robbins (1850 - 1929)
- Evaline L. Robbins (c. 1853 - 1880)*
- Ben Franklin Robbins (1858 - 1916)
- William Wallace Robbins (1867 - 1882)