The Red Dragon Inn - home of the Audalis campaign setting.  Online D&D gaming, art, poerty, stories, advice, chat, and more

Support the Inn! If you are doing holiday shopping online, please use this affiliate link for Amazon.
You pay the exact same prices, but the Inn earns a small referral fee. Thanks!

We currently have 4066 registered users. Our newest member is vibechecker628.
Online members:
Username Password Remember me
Not a member? Join today! | Forgot your password?
Latest Updated Forum Topics  [more...]
Q&A Threads - Shadows of the Empire Q&A (posted by Eol Fefalas)Shadows of the Empire Q&A
Dungeons and Dragons - Shadows of the Empire (posted by Octavia)Shadows of the Empire
Entertainment - Neva (posted by breebles)Neva
Common Room - Cringeworthy players... (posted by Eol Fefalas)Cringeworthy players...
Spamvertize - Twitch Links (posted by breebles)Twitch!
Latest Blog Entries
Revenge of the Drunken Dice
Latest Webcomics
Loaded Dice #80: Priorities
RPG MB #15: Master of the Blade
Floyd Hobart #19: High School Reunion IV
There are currently 6 users logged into DragonChat.
Is the site menu broken for you? Click here for the fix!

You are here: Home --> Forum Home --> General Forum --> Common Room --> Geneology Discoveries....
Jump to:    1   
    Messages in Geneology Discoveries....
RDI T-shirts!

Got Dice? Tee
Price: $17.00



RDI T-shirts!

Neutral Good Womens
Price: $16.50

Odyson
PUN-dit
Karma: 158/25
6327 Posts


Geneology Discoveries....

This is a family freindly place and there are a number of folks here that are from the same families. So I would guess that many of you understand family ties.

As most of you know I am not a spring chicken and nearing retirement age, but I am still making discoveries. I never meet my paternal grandfather, he died in mining accident in Pennsylvania when my father was 3. My father had only a little information and never kept any records. So my father's family knowledge stopped with his name.

Today my cousin, who does geneology research on my mother's side of the family, found the death certificate from my grandfather's mining accident. It listed his parents names!

After 62 years I know of my great grandparents Andrew and Anna and that they were from Austria / Hungery, maybe Zemplen county.(For years I thought we were Italian because of the spelling, which appears to be wrong.)

Now, if you wish, you can share your families discoveries.
I'll share if find my great great grandparents. But now the search may have to go to Europe.


Posted on 2014-08-27 at 02:35:36.

I-Binary
Resident
Karma: 10/0
251 Posts


Geneology is...

...fascinating. The whole study of family ties and how far back they can extend honestly amazes me, and the range of stories of how one's ancestors ended up where they did blows my mind.

Well, I'm sure I've shared information like this in earlier posts, but I descend from grandparents on my Mum's side who came to Canada from Europe. Oma (Mum's mum) was German and was born and brought up in Poland; she travelled around Europe until moving to Canada, where she met Papa (Mum's dad) in Vancouver at a friend's party. Papa was from Russia, at the time called the Soviet Union; he came to Canada when he escaped from his country during WWII. They settled down together, remained in Canada for the rest of it, and raised Mum and her younger brother.
Oma was of the merchant middle class, reasonably well-to-do, while Papa had a history of lower-class farming.

Dad's family were descendents of the Russian Protestant mennonites who were forced out of the country during those times, subsequently moving to Canada a few generations ago. Grandma was a child of these immigrants, but Grandpa had been in Canada longer than her. They married and raised Dad as the youngest child of five.
Grandma and Grandpa were also of lower-class farmers.

As for geneology, I know Oma traced her history back through Germany to the 16th century, mostly as merchants (I'm not exactly sure, I should ask about it one day). Papa's surname was changed when he fled from the USSR- we are almost completely certain that there is no way to find it again, leaving a whole portion of history lost forever...

...and Dad's family can be traced fairly far, as the Friesens were a pretty populous name over the centuries.

That leaves me. I guess I have bloodlines largely in Russia (though much of that was diluted through generations in Canada) and Germany. The rest is history!


Posted on 2014-08-27 at 21:25:15.

Odyson
PUN-dit
Karma: 158/25
6327 Posts


Nice..........

Well my cousin has found a lot of new information.

Although I knew my grandfather's family were coal miners in Pennsylvania but I just found out he had five brothers and sisters. Found out that my Great great grandfather had imigrated around the same time. So I can now five gernerations back. We will need to find a solid link in Hungary to keep the trace going.


Posted on 2014-08-29 at 01:04:35.

   
Jump to:    1   


  Partners:       Dungeons and Dragons resources, from 2nd to 4th Edition gamegrene.com | for the gamer who's sick of the typical Dungeons and Dragons Adventures, #1 resource for D&D Dungeons and Dragons 4th Edition  
View/Edit Your Profile | Staff List | Contact Us
Use of the RDINN forums or chatrooms constitutes agreement with our Terms of Service.
You must enable cookies and javascript to use all features of this site.




Page loaded in 0.075907 seconds