The theme for Week 47 is "Random Number." This is a fun exercise -- pick a random number between 1 and 100. Then, either take a list of everyone in your tree and scroll down to that number or print out an ancestor chart and pick the person in that number slot. (You might need to go to a second chart if you picked a big number!) Then write a little bit about that person. Click here to find out all the Themes from 2024.
I decided to print out an Ahnentafel Report using my Family
Tree Maker software. This report numbers my ancestors with myself as person 1.
It will give the father of each person a number twice their number and their
mother will be twice plus one.
I am confident that Sarah Agnes Long is my ancestor, however, I am not so positive of her birth information, since I obtained it from Find A Grave.
Therefore, my research will start with her.
Using the hints on Ancestry, someone posted a 50th Anniversary newspaper article about Sarah and her husband George Tyler. It states that both Mr. and Mrs. Tyler came from England when children. Thus, Sarah was born in England, not Canada. It also means her parents came to America. George served in the civil war and at the close was married. The couple traveled overland from Illinois to Audubon County, Iowa in a covered wagon. But they did not remain long, returning in a short time to Illinois to be near Mrs. Tyler’s Parents. Thus, Sarah’s parents were still alive after the Civil War. Also, this probably means that they most likely died and are buried in Illinois. Later, the couple came to Iowa again, settling on a farm near Chapin. I don’t have a wedding date for George and Sarah and the article states that the anniversary was September 21st. The article was from the Mason City Globe Gazette, dated Oct 5, 1915 on page 5. Thus, their marriage date most likely is Sept 21, 1865.
Also, among the Ancestry hints is a Baptism record, dated Nov 1, 1844 for Sarah Long with a father of William Long and mother of Mary Thompson Long. No birthdate is giving in this transcription only record.
The hints have her Wisconsin marriage record, with image with a marriage on Sep 21, 1865 in Gratiot County, Wisconsin. It has George’s parents of Peter and Sarah Tyler, stating George was born in England. Sarah Long’s parents are listed as Wm and Mary Long. No birth place for bride is asked on this certificate. The place, town or township and county where the marriage was consummated is difficult to read. I do know it is in Lafayette County, per the label from Ancestry. I use google to look up, Gratiot, Lafayette County and there is a town by that name in Lafayette County.
Sarah is found in the 1870, 1880, 1900 and 1910 US Federal
Census and her birthplace never changes from England. Her age starts at 26 in
1870, 36 in 1880, 56 in 1900 and 66 in 1910. She is found in the Iowa State
Census for 1915 and her birthplace is England and her age is 72. Her
immigration Year is listed as 1848 in the 1900 census. The 1910 census states
she had eight children, and only 7 are still living. This matches previous
information I found about her second born child who died at the tender age of
6.
I don’t find any Census records for Sarah before 1870. She should
be in the 1850 and 1860 US census if she immigrated in 1848.
The only other England records I find are for a Sarah Ann
Long who is born in 1843, her parents are John Long and Mary possibly with a
maiden name of Booth.
When I follow a hint from Mary Thompson Long from Sarah’s
baptism record, I find Mary age 20, living with her husband, William and son
George 10 months old in England. Further research would be needed to see if
this William and Mary are my Sarah’s parents. I don’t have a George as a child
of my William and Mary in my records.
When I look at other people’s tree’s on Ancestry for Sarah
Agnes Long, no one has a census record before 1870. Some appear to have records
for the Sarah Ann Long attached to their tree for Sarah Agnes Long.
If I want to figure out who my ancestor #100 is, I will need
to first investigate Sarah Agnes Long parents and see what kind of records I
can find for them.
Remember to have fun and Just Do Genealogy!