Sunday, October 13, 2024

Week 42: Full House (52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks – 2024 Version)

The theme for Week 42 is "Full House." Builders, homemakers, card players, parents with lots of children... who in your tree does this this theme make you think of? (Remember: There's no wrong way to interpret the theme!) Click here to see all the 2024 themes.

Sometimes a Full House doesn’t necessarily mean how many people, but who the people are. For example, in the 1900 US Census for Nekimi, Winnebago, Wisconsin, my great grandfather, Orville Charles Hiltz is living with his sister and her husband who are living with his sister’s in-laws.

My great grandfather is listed as a boarder, because there is no direct relationship between the head of household and my great grandfather.

However, this census gave me hypothesis that later was proven partially correct. I hypothesis that Orville and Mable’s parents have passed away. Otherwise, why wasn’t Orville living with his parents.

Orville Charles Hiltz was born Jul 28, 1873 in Ripon, Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin to Seymour and Wilinia (Booth) Hiltz. He was the first-born child. His sister was born three years later on Dec 3, 1876 in Green Lake County, Wisconsin, a neighboring county of Fond du Lac.

In 1880, these two siblings are living with their parents in Chicago, Cook County Illinois. At this point I was unable to find either parent after 1880. During a later research day, I found a newspaper article stating that Seymour wrote a letter to his sister-in-law inquiring about his wife and children. I previously blogged about the disappearance of Seymour in 2022; Week 26: Identity for 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks.

Anyway, in the article, it stated that Wilina had remarried and later died about 1899. It also stated that Seymour was last seen by the family about 1882. So my hypothesis was partially correct, his mother died. His father had abandoned the family, something that wasn't on my radar at the time.

During another research day, I found a birth certificate for a third child of Seymour and Wilna. Which I blogged about this year’s in Week 40: Least. This unnamed male was born Sep 8, 1883. Therefore, if Seymour is the biological father of said child, then he would had been with the family nine months before the child was born, if the child was a full term baby.

In 1890, Wilina married her second husband George Pansie. Did Orville and Mable go live with their mother and stepfather? In 1895 Mable married William Buehring. Did Orville move into the Buehring home before or after his mother’s death? Wilina and her husband and the parents of William Buehring were all living in the Nekimi, Winnebago County, Wisconsin area. In fact, William’s parents and Wilina and George Pansie are buried in the same cemetery, in nearby graves.

Remember to have fun and Just Do Genealogy!


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