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Hey gang! I think I have finally begun to dig up information on the Schmidts in PA who I can connect up to my Smiths! Has anyone had to do this? Matching up the old Germanic names with modern day variants? I'd been putting this off because I was still new, but now that I've found some stuff I never thought I would, I've gotten SUPER confident about what I'm doing.
I have an old LDS film with christening records from the area in PA where my Smiths came from. I was able to match my GGgrandfather and his sister from their birthdates and their parents' information. But I've been trying to see if I can take the family back any further than my GGG grandparents. I even had a male cousin take a DNA test to see if we could find any matches. Nothing so far.
I knew that my GGGgrandfather's brothers and sisters were acting as sponsors for the baptized kids, and I picked out three that were good candidates (all males with Schmidt last names). One, Jacob, also happened to possibly be a brother who helped my GGG grandmother process GGG grandfather's estate.
From that, I figured he had to be living closer to them in NY than in their original home in PA. I found a couple with Americanized versions of their names (Jacob and Maria became Jacob and Mary) living in a neighboring county. They also had a son John living nearby (whom I believe was the Johannes that was baptized under their name).
I've sent for death certs, that probably won't yield much, from the time period they died (1860s and 1870s, when not much was shown on certs). But I'm also ordering wills, land records, and death certs for their sons to see what is shown for childrens names. If any of them have the mother's maiden name, I'll be able to match them up, since she was listed with it in the baptisms.
I've also discovered some possibles in PA, but they're going to be MUCH harder to prove, since their birth/death records were spottier, and there are no RAOGK volunteers in Monroe County. Grrrrr....
Yay me! :D
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