Friday, February 28, 2014

Warren A Styner, Military Records

I recently found a very interesting little booklet (US Naval Continuous Service Certificate) which has locations of service, dates, and the ships that my grandfather Warren A Styner served on.  It indicates that he enlisted into the military on March 13th 1917 in Portland Oregon and then began his training on March 31 in San Francisco.  With many multiple entries it indicates his Naval and Naval Reserve Service from 1917 through the 1920's and 1930's up until the last entry for his release of active duty on Oct 21, 1941 in San Pedro, CA.

 
These records show at the age of 17 Warren first served on the USS Pittsburgh from June 26th 1917 until April 29th 1919.  The Pittsburgh had quite a storied past, that included during this period cruising the South Atlantic on a mission to search and destroy German ships, and an odd close association to another ship 'lost' in the Bermuda Triangle and also a horrible outbreak of the Spanish Flu that ravaged the crew and forced the ship to abandon it's orders and return home.  Ultimately costing the lives of 58 on board. Though he served briefly on several other ships this was his longest continuous service on one ship and noted as in active 'War Service' between 4-21-17 to 3-27-19. 

 
USS Pittsburgh

In June of 1919 he was transferred briefly to the USS Ancon a troop transport retuning from Europe prior to it being decommissioned in New York City in late July 1919.   He then immediately boarded the USS Cap Finisterre and served on her until decommissioning later that year in November 1919, also in New York City.




On Sept 1, 1933 the records indicate Warren began service on the USS Arkansas and remained on her until July 1934.  During this time, it was was transferred to the Pacific Fleet after completing a refit in 1932 in Philadelphia.  While en route, it stopped in New Orleans to participate in the Mardi Gras celebration. The Arkansas then operated off the west coast through early 1934 at which point it was transferred back to the Atlantic Fleet, where it served as the flagship of the training squadron and conducted a training cruise to Europe in the summer of 1934 stopping in Plymouth England, Nice France, Naples Italy and Gibraltar.

These records also showed he was for very brief periods on the USS Cincinnati in 1935, the USS Broome in 1936 and the USS Sands in 1937.


Here is direct link to Warren A Styner on our family tree at Ancestry.com with updated information from these records and new uploaded photos. 
 

Monday, November 21, 2011

Barlow to John Wallace b 1277 Scotland-- this time no joke about back to the 'Braveheart' days.


Decided to follow a new line from another Barlow ancestor.  I was interested in 'Elizabeth Carlton Barlow' b 1750 Albemarle Virginia the wife of Thomas Barlow b 1730.  Elizabeth's mother had an interesting surname.  Wallace.  So I started the journey following the male line tracing the Wallace name as far back as I could go.  It has taken me back ""30"" generations, 921 years, and back to 
Scotland in 1090.

Now I have followed Barlow to the Kimbrough and Thompson family lines, and I have gone well back to medieval Scotland already before, joking about getting back to those 'Braveheart' days.  This time following back from Elizabeth Wallace, mother of Elizabeth Carlton Barlow, the family line does indeed go back straight back (on the male line) to the Braveheart days in Scotland during the Scottish War of Independence.  In fact the family line goes to directly back to John Wallace b 1277 Scotland, and he is reported as the brother of the famed William Wallace a main leader in the War of Scottish Independence fought against the English and portrayed in the movie Braveheart by  Mel Gibson.  Records indicate that John was killed by the English as was a second brother (Malcom) but not like the capture and public execution that his brother William faced.



Check out the Styner Family Tree link and follow the Barlow surname to Thomas Barlow and Elizabeth Carlton Barlow then just follow the Wallace name.  Pretty interesting.  I will let others determine the authenticity of this lineage, but I have not seen any obvious conflicts of information.  John Wallace would a 24th great grandfather for those family members of my generation.      

Saturday, October 29, 2011

William Lee (Biography) 1745 - 1803

Here is a extremely interesting and very detailed biography on  William Lee  that has some really good information including much on the times during his life.  He is with strong confidence indeed our 5th great grandfather, father of Susannah Lee, wife to Samuel K Barlow.  This research work was done the old fashion way with family descendents actually going back to England and Ireland and seeking real hard copy documentation including the inspection of gravestones around the old cathedral believed to be the burial location of earlier Lee ancestors.  I questioned a couple facts in this biography, mainly their DOB and marriage records seem somewhat outdated, otherwise it's a very interesting read.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Finding the ever ellusive 'Ellie' ?!! and confirming the Styner- Barlow link.

Who the heck was Ellie Barlow and why were there no records (I mean not one documenting record) of her existence anywhere except that her name ‘Ellie’ which was entered onto this handwritten family tree that I had been given a copy of?  Ellie was listed as the daughter of William Barlow and mother to Effie Adams, my 2rd great grandmother.  The assumed link to the Barlow family line and to Samuel K Barlow.  I understood that my father and my grandmother had spent countless hours working on our family history and specifically on the link to Barlow.  Though major omissions still existed and finding nothing of Ellie had me wondering about this long believed family connection to Samuel Kimbrough Barlow.   Was it really true or rather just a big fantasy that had been passed down?

   
My first research efforts began by looking at the most recent family ties.  I had found good census information on Warren Styner with ties to his mother Effie Adams but then the research went very cold.  So my next research tactic was to work further back from William Barlow, who as a notable pioneer of Oregon and was well researched with lots of documentation.  However, even with good information on William there was no sign of Ellie.  This tactic was also difficult because the box next to William Barlow on this family tree I had been given was empty.  No record of William’s wife. 

Turns out William had married twice. His first wife Rachel Larkins passed away only one year after their marriage in 1848, they had no children together.  William’s second wife, Martha Ann Partlow had married several times bringing children from each and then having three children with William.  It was at this point I became very discouraged thinking that if Ellie was to be found anywhere she was likely a child from one of these previous marriages and our ties to Barlow was all fiction.  However I still couldn’t find Ellie.  The obvious thought was that Ellie could have been a nickname.  Maybe for Elizabeth?  However, none of William’s children had a name you would likely think could have gone by Ellie.  Again the trail for Ellie was dead cold.  A 'brick wall,' as I have learned - the term genealogists use for a dead end. 

All of this research I had been doing was simply through countless hours Googling every possible combination of names, dates, locations, and any other reference material I could find or simply guess at trying.  Not even close to being a genealogy guy, I hadn’t joined any websites like Webroots, Ancestry, etc.   Though as the summer of 2011 was fading away, one evening I finally entered another Google search and hit gold.  In a WOW moment - I had found a somewhat obscure, but fortunately very detailed of record Effie Adams and Thomas Styner’s marriage.  This Cowlitz County record included information for both the parents of Thomas and Effie, and listed as the mother of Effie, was one Callie Barlow.  Not Ellie but 'Callie' and it made sense!  That over 150 years since her birth the name passed down could have been understood as Ellie that in reality was Callie. 

So now the research could finally progress towards documenting our ties to Samuel K Barlow.  Except for another slight hitch.  There were no records of Callie Barlow located in either Oregon or Washington.  Again, amazing research has been done on the Barlow name including Samuel and William Barlow, but no suggestion of a Callie Barlow, believed daughter of William Barlow was to be found.  There was however, a Caroline ‘Callie’ Barlow born 1847 in Ellenville, New York.  She had no relationship to Samuel K Barlow of the Oregon trail, but if there was one Caroline going by Callie maybe there could be another.  Turns out I was indeed able to find a few other Caroline's that also went by Callie, but still none that matched the location or dates making them Effie’s mother.


Back to more Googling but now with naming combinations of Callie, Caroline, and Barlow.  Then one day my searches uncovered a view of the (above) headstone.  Caroline Adams!  It was linked to an Ancestry.com file and this really looked like maybe the final link to solving the mystery and finally locating Ellie/ Callie/ Caroline Barlow.   It was inside this world of shared family trees and shared documentation that finally revealed the long sought after 'Caroline F Barlow Adams', and she was not the daughter of William Barlow, but rather of his brother James K Barlow, son of Samuel K Barlow and Susannah Lee.  To add a little more insult to those trying to track her down, Caroline aka Ellie, aka Callie, actually went by another nickname of Carrie.  Her birth name is Caroline F Barlow, and I have not learned what the F stands for, nor at this point do I care.  Finally the link and the documentation to Samuel K Barlow had been accomplished.   

Now another amazing find.  Below are photos found just in the last week from a family album we can assume was passed down to Hannah & Warren Styner that actually include photos of Caroline and her family.

Below from left to right Joseph Adams, daughters Celia, Effie, Winnie and mother Caroline on the far right.  Taken in Portland, Est 1890.



Below photo of Effie Adams Styner with her baby son Warren A Styner Sr., Est 1899-1900.

 

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Barlow lineage progress and new additions

So some recent findings.  I recently had a really big breakthrough getting past Samuel K Barlow and his father William Henry Harris Barlow.  The family tree now follows the Barlow lineage back another 7 generations.  Of note is Edward Barlow, Esq b 1570.  As an Esquire he was a member of the gentry in England and had the rank directly below a knight.  This entire body of information also takes one towards the possibility that our family through Barlow may indeed includes ancestors that were one of the first colonists from England. Possibly Thomas Barlow b 1635 England.  Good to view Isle of Wight Virginia history, this is where the early Barlow family's settled.  

  

For anyone doing family research again important to note Ancestry.com is not the do all, know all website.  Frustrated and getting no further with Ancestry I pounded away on Google for William Henry Harris Barlow and finally found this extended Barlow information on the website Ourfamilyhistory.com. It had some really good details of each individual in a tree format. 

Most recent family tree finds/additions:  James K Barlow found and attached a headstone photo, again he is now understood as my generation's 3rd great grandfather.  Edward Barlow, Esq. b 1570 attached a new story and the Barlow Coat of Arms.  Blog additions: New Links- History of Barlow Name, Barlow Isle of Wight Virginia, Barlow Genealogy.  New photos: James K Barlow headstone, Riggenberg Switzerland, and the Barlow Hall in Manchester England.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Learning about 'family tree hints' at Ancestry.com and other genealogy web sites.

Well I am learning more about Ancestry.com and their family tree hints which at times lack good documenting resources beyond family lineage.  It appears that a family tree can be created and or lengthened without multiple information sources.  My initial desire to research our family was to find good documentation and facts supporting the linkage to our real ancestors.  I should add that lack of documentation or simple leaps to an assumed ancestor looks to occur more readily on other genealogy websites.  Some that I have in some instances relied upon.  So while I have gone ahead and built this substantial family tree, I am now going back and seeking to find more solid sourcing for each generational link.

I am not going to immediately delete those believed ancestors I have now have in our family tree that don't have perfect lineage sources, however I am going to code those that do lack good sourcing or in some instances where research has conflicting views by entering them as *name*.

Most notable in our family tree is first *Thomas Styner* understood as the father of Warren A Styner from solid marriage documents.  Though conflicting information may indicate his real name could have been Jacob Styner and that he possibly changed his name at some point to Thomas.  That is certainly speculation, but it's not unthinkable given that I found records of both a Thomas Styner and a Jacob Styner with the same exact 'DOB' date of birth in the same exact town in Iowa.  Certainly this seems very unusua, though records show along with passed down family information that Thomas was indeed a transient individual.   More research to do.

The next possible ancestor with real conflicting research and lack of good records is that of Samuel K Barlow's 2nd great grandfather *Thomas Barlow*.  Lots of research has been done on this with several possible Thomas Barlow's and it looks to be a pretty solid brick wall.  Another problematic link is further back to Arthur Balowe and his marriage to *Ann West* who beyond her it does have a solid family line going all the way back to England's Royal family and Henry III with actually very good documentation.  However the research I was following here looks to have significant conflicts, and suggests she may not have been his wife.  Again more research to do.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Arthur Barlowe: New World Explorer for Queen Elizabeth

So in my research to follow the Barlow family back to earlier ancestors (approx 7 generations from Samuel) I reached an ending point that was Arthur Barlow(e).  Initially in my research I did not find anything to suggest he was an individual with any historical information or significance.  Well that was my initial research!  Note the 'e' added to his name.  Finding it's not unusual for slight spelling changes to occur during these times and especially in England.




Well it turns out that Arthur Barlowe was indeed a significant and very historical individual.  He was one of the first explorers of to find land in North America to claim for Queen Elizabeth.  Before the Mayflower, and before the first colonists, both Captain Arthur Barlowe and Captain Philip Amadas led a voyage in 1584 to the coast of North America under the direction of Sir Walter Raleigh, each commanding a small vessel for the purpose of selecting a site for the establishment of Raleigh's proposed colony as requested from the Queen.  It was Barlowe's journal  (noted that he was handy with a pen) during this exploratory voyage, and his favorable reports that helped Raleigh select Roanoke Island, off North Carolina as a future site for English colonization. 


Arthur's personal life still remains difficult to follow especially after this voyage.  It is reported he kept residence with Sir Walter Raleigh.  His marriage to Ann West whose family line goes back to Henry III still remains a question with conflicting documentation.
  
Lots of links and supporting documentation: 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Barlowe
http://www.carolana.com/Carolina/Explorers/amadasandbarlowe.html
http://www.genealogy.com/users/p/a/r/Charles-E-Parker/BOOK-0001/0012-0001.html
http://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/barlowe/menu.html
http://www.swarthmore.edu/SocSci/bdorsey1/41docs/04-bar.html
http://beatl.barnard.columbia.edu/maritime/MaritimeNation/documents.html
http://beatl.barnard.columbia.edu/maritime/MaritimeNation/Documents/RoanokePassage.htm
http://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Barlowe_Arthur_ca_1550-ca_1620
http://www.thelostcolony.org/education/Students/History/Elizabethan_Characters.htm
http://www.wisegeek.com/what-was-the-lost-colony.htm
http://jameslorenz.com/myfathersamerica/tag/arthur-barlowe/
http://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/barlowe/barlowe.html