Nellie May Concidine, c. 1905.
Unknown location, probably Grand Rapids, Kent Co., Michigan.
Original privately held by Miriam Robbins,
[ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Spokane, Washington, 2018.
(click on photo to enlarge)
Last night, I was lost in thought, looking toward my dining room wall, which I call my "Ancestor Wall," since so many of my ancestors' portraits grace it. My eyes fell on the portrait of my adoptive great-grandmother, Nellie May (Concidine) Holst (1883 - 1953). Nellie...hmmm. Was her first name really Nellie, or was it Eleanor? Maybe I needed to double-check her birth record to see how her name was originally recorded. Then I realized that I wasn't sure I had her birth record.
I looked in my family tree software, RootsMagic, and the only sources I had for Nellie's birth were family records, census records, and her death certificate. I looked in my electronic files and did not see a birth record for her. So off I went to FamilySearch to look in their Michigan Births, 1867-1902 collection.
It took some creative searching to locate Nellie's birth record. A search for "Concidine" with the Exact Search box unchecked (because Considine and Constantine are common alternate spellings) yielded results for Nellie's siblings, Ethel, Loid (Lloyd), and Manly (Manley), along with 151 other results, but no Nellie. After several unsuccessful other searches, I finally settled on leaving the name field blank and searched the birth location Byron (exact) and the birth years 1883 - 1883 (my family records stated Nellie was born 23 December 1883 in Byron Township). This yielded a list of all babies born in Byron Township in 1883, a total of 31. And one of them was an "Anna Corcadine" born 16 December 1883 to John and Anna:
Her name was...Anna? What in the world?
You need to understand how birth records in Michigan were created, prior to birth certificates being issued in 1905. The town supervisor or a city clerk would canvas his area once a year, going door-to-door to record all the births and deaths that had occurred in that township or ward the previous year. Remind you of anything? Yes, the census. Vital records, births and deaths, were recorded census-style in Michigan, from 1867 to 1895 (death records) and 1905 (birth records). After 1895/1905, death/birth certificates were issued.
So all the issues we have with people going missing or having incorrect information recorded on censuses applies to birth and death records in Michigan from 1867 to 1895/1905. To add to the rates of error, we're not exactly sure what happened to these original recordings. The information was copied into the county birth and death libers, many of which have been microfilmed by the Family History Library. Then the information was further copied and sent off to the secretary of state, and recorded in the state birth and death libers, also microfilmed by the Family History Library and now digitized and available online as the Michigan Births, 1867-1902 collection. I have not been able to find what the town supervisors or city clerks did with those original records they made when going door-to-door. They do not seem to be in existence.
So the record viewed above is actually the third recording of the information of Nellie's birth, copied from the county record, copied from the door-to-door record, which was recorded in May 1884, five months after Nellie's birth. We also do not know who gave out this information to the recorder: her mother...her father...a relative living in the home...or a neighbor?
I am now more stumped than ever. Was Nellie originally named Anna (after her mother), but then the family decided to call her Nellie? Was Anna a recording error made by the town supervisor, or did it get mis-copied from the original (for instance, did one of the recorders glance at the mother's name and write it as the child's name)? Also, our family records state Nellie was born on 23 December 1883, but this record says 16 December. Sometimes, finally being able to access the record generates more questions than provides answers! In these cases, careful comparison and analysis between multiple records that contain similar information must be made, and a reasonable conclusion must be drawn, understanding that more than one reasonable conclusion can be made.
What I am sure of is that Nellie was born to John and Anna (Higby) Concidine in Byron Township in December 1883. I will look for other sources to which to compare the birth record and come up with the best reasonable conclusion about her name and her birth date.
Lovely pictures -- to grace your wall. Nice story. Good research and article.
ReplyDeleteProbably she was officially named Anna and then Elenor or Ellen or some such thing.
ReplyDeleteIf Ann was already in use in the family, she would be named FOR the person and then have her own family name that was always used instead.
My late neighbour who was 103 was named Margaret after her mother but was called Ivy all her life. She of course named her daughter Margaret too to follow tradition.
My great grandmother was Mary and so was her eldest daughter who was then named Polly for every day use.
It does make hunting for family in census returns quite confusing :)
oops meant to add..my own daughter is named Annelise which we often shorten to Nan but could easily have been shortened to Nell or Nellie
ReplyDeleteI am so happy to find a website that really tries to search out the correct information. Too many researchers just copy what they see on someone's tree, and look no further. I must confess this is where I begin. I take the information, and at a later date, I research the names further. As you know, each name, to be verified, takes time. It's a long process, but worth it. I am an amateur researcher, but am trying to follow the proper techniques. Do you have any suggestions> Thanks again for being here.
ReplyDelete