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2018 4 Davie Dossier page 1 DAVIE DOSSIER Issued by Davie County Historical and Genealogical Society Mocksville, North Carolina October 2018, Issue 4 Preserving special things Davie Dossier page 2 DAVIE COUNTY HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY President, Linda Leonard Vice President, Marcia Phillips Secretary, Pat Mason Treasurer, Marie Craig Board of Directors, Claude Horn Dossier Editor, Marie Craig Webmaster, Marie Craig Our Website is https://sites.google.com/view/dchgs . Historical Data to research is http://www.daviecountync.gov/440/Genealogy-Local-History . Other Websites about Davie County genealogy and history: http://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Davie_County%2C_North_Carolina http://ncgenweb.us/nc/davie/ Meetings are on the fourth Thursdays at 7 pm at Davie County Library History Room. January 25, Bring item related to Valentine’s Day February 22, Field Trip to Register of Deeds Office, Brent Shoaf, Registrar March 22, Floods of July 1916, Western North Carolina video, and discussion of Davie County flooding April 26, Speaker: Ed Southern, The Race to the Dan: The Retreat that Won the Revolution May 5, Help with Daniel Boone Festival on the Square in Mocksville June 28, Marcia Phillips description of her new book, Davie County Mavericks September 27, Lecture by Robert Alvin Crum, “Return to the Land of My Ancestors” October 25, Marie Craig sharing World War One stories from her book, Davie County in World War One November 15 FUTURE CONFERENCES Federation of Genealogical Societies: August 21-24, 2019, Washington DC https://fgs.org/conferences/ National Genealogical Society: May 8-11, 2019, St. Charles MO. https://www.ngsgenealogy.org/ RootsTech: February 27 – March 2, 2019 in Salt Lake City. https://www.rootstech.org/ Talks are archived. Back issues of the Davie Dossier are online at http://www.daviecountync.gov/440/Genealogy-Local-History . More and more research items about Davie County are being uploaded for use on your computer at home. See http://www.daviecountync.gov/440/Genealogy-Local-History . Genealogy data in Bibles, Daniel Boone Family info, and Flossie Martin records. Davie Dossier page 3 PRESERVING Three Situations : 1. In the 1980s, a man came into the Family History Center where I volunteered and wanted to buy blank genealogical forms, such as pedigree charts and family group sheets. I knew he had compiled a big history of his family, so I asked about the forms and if he was helping someone. His response: “My house burned and all my work is gone.” 2. A man, about 65, supervised his aunt’s stay in a care center. She had stored all her belongings including very old letters and vintage photographs of the family in his basement. At her death, he took them all to the dump. 3. Lois had a valuable piece of furniture that had belonged to an ancestor. She had two daughters who both wanted to inherit it. Lois didn’t know what to do about the problem, so did nothing. One of the daughters hurried to the house at her mother’s death and took the item to her house. Her sister was so angry that she never spoke to her again. WHAT ARE YOU DOING TO PREVENT THESE PROBLEMS? Discussion in 2018: 1. Luckily, it is easy to make copies of genealogical data today. In 1980s, not so easy. Copy machines were just being installed, and the quality was not good. It was a paper world with a few extras by means of carbon paper. We live in a totally different world with most people owning computers and printers that also serve as copy machines. External hard drives, CDs, and flash drives make it easy to create backup copies of data and photographs. Storing your hard work on the cloud with DropBox, Google Drive, etc. is a good idea. If you’ve spent money and lots of effort on your family history research, you certainly don’t want to lose it. Other methods are saving your family trees, photos, videos, and stories to Ancestry.com, FamilySearch, and/or MyHeritage. There’s no reason for you to lose all your genealogical data in this wonderful technology age. 2. If you have drawers of files and boxes of original photos and a big library of reference books, you need to decide what to do with those before your children or executor has to decide. Everybody is not as zealous and excited about family history as you are. Don’t assume that the local library would love to have all your papers. They may not be helpful to someone else, and the library may be too full to contain them. If you’d like to inherit papers and photographs from a researcher in your family, let the person and the executor know that. 3. Many years ago, in the comic strip For Better or Worse, the elderly parents were moving to a smaller home. Their son and daughter flew up to help them declutter and move. On the plane, they got into a terrible argument about who was going to end up owning the old pump organ. They pouted the rest of the flight. When they arrived, the father told them that he had already done some of the sorting and discarding and given “that old organ that nobody wanted” to the church. So, neither one of them received it. If you have belongings that are special, try to decide who will inherit it and make a note of it, tell all heirs about it, and possibly include it in your will. Perhaps you can eliminate future arguments. The nicest people can turn greedy over property and money. TOMBSTONES Special care must be taken when you find an old tombstone that is difficult to read. Very old stones can be brittle, so they need a tender touch. Pushing on them to do a rubbing, or using caustic cleaning chemicals can damage them in a hurry. One of the greatest helps to us is the Website www.FindAGrave.com. Perhaps someone has placed a photograph of your ancestor’s marker on that site that is much clearer than the tombstone is now. If you have photos you took in the past, you should upload those onto this free site. Davie Dossier page 4 CONSERVATION of HEIRLOOMS ENVIRONMENT: A. Light - Ultraviolet is most damaging (fading, staining); infrared and visible light are harmful, too. 1. Don't let sun fall on heirlooms 2. Apply UV-filtering solar-window films 3. Use low wattage incandescent lamps B. Temperature - Each thing has its individual rate of expansion. 70 degrees is best temperature. C. Relative Humidity - 50% is best. D. Air Pollution - particulate: smoke, dust, fireplaces, oil burning furnaces; gaseous: fresh carpeting, oil-based paints, plywood, adhesives, oak lumber, wool. You should vent your kitchen and furnace. Change filters often, and clean the building often. E. Pests - insects, rodents, birds. Eliminate source. Don't have house plants near your valuables – they have bugs and spiders. Don't have food near your valuable. It may spill, or it may attract bugs. MISCELLANEOUS NOTES: Silver is damaged by tarnish. Wood and silver don't like each other -- store separately. Silk and silver don't like each other. Bronze is tin and copper; brass is zinc and copper. Iron rusts. To clean it, wear rubber gloves. Use mineral spirits with steel wool. Use good ventilation -- it's inflammable. Rinse with mineral spirits. After 24 hours, seal with floor paste wax and then buff. To display an item, you should use low light level and correct temperature and relative humidity. Item should be placed to discourage handling. Display case should not be of oak. Paint should be latex enamels. Papers should be acid-free. Fabrics should be plant fibers, but not wool or silk. Special UV-filtering plastics are available. Furniture: keep away from vents. Don't use oil to clean. Wax it with paste wax annually. Buff. Vacuum upholstery gently -- don't pull into vacuum tube. To clean off mildew, use 1 quart distilled water with 1 capful Lysol. Textiles: to clean, used distilled water in clean basin with Ivory liquid. Wash gently. Pat between towels. Store clothes on padded hangers or acid-free paper. Put this paper inside folds. When you open the fabric, fold it the next time at a different place. It is best to roll instead of fold. Use Lysol with swab to kill mildew. Books: storage at 70 degrees temperature and 50% relative humidity in low light. Vacuum gently. Store books so they don't sag or lean at angles to damage pages and covers. Scrapbooks: Use acid-free paper and mylar. Don't use PVC plastic --it will make photos discolor and fade. Scrap-books should lie flat -- a curved page will put stress on the pictures and cause them to crack. Davie Dossier page 5 STORAGE: Artifacts should be stored clean and dust-free. Containers and wrappings should be acid-free. Do not use newspaper and old liquor boxes. Shelving used for storage purposes should be firmly secured to the floor or an adjacent wall. It should not lean or move. Items should be placed on the shelves to avoid sliding and scratching. They should not touch. When transporting, wear cotton or latex gloves. Hold firmly with two hands. Have someone open doors for you. Secure in a box with packing material. CONSERVATION AND STORAGE SUPPLIES University Products, Inc. PO Box 101 Holyoke Mass. 01041 www.universityproducts.com/ Light Impressions 439 Monroe Avenue Rochester NY 14607 1-800-828-6216 www.lightimpressionsdirect.com Gaylord Brothers Syracuse NY 1-800-448-6160 www.gaylord.com FOR MORE INFORMATION -- BOOKS AND INFORMATION: Caring for Your Collections, edited by Arthur W. Schultz RECORD KEEPING Keep good records on your heirlooms by filling out a card or paper form: where you got them, who owned them, your memories of the objects, who inherits them Attach a photograph of the object. If the objects have monetary value, you might want to get extra insurance. Share the story of the object with your children and grandchildren. =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= COCO Walt Disney created a movie called Coco. At the insistence of a fellow researcher, I checked it out of the library and watched it. I thoroughly enjoyed this movie as it related to two of my own personal themes: importance of music and importance of family. It is based on the Spanish custom of “Day of the Dead” or Dia de los Muertos on November 1 each year. Families assemble a collection of photos of deceased ancestors and their favorite foods in a display in their homes to honor them. There is a belief that each of them should be remembered. What a neat idea to honor the deceased family. Some Spanish people say that a person has three deaths: when their heart stops beating, when they’re buried, and when nobody ever says their name again. Davie Dossier page 6 PRESERVING YOUR OWN PERSONAL HISTORY You need to write your life history. It could be in two formats (or combined into one): 1.) Diary/Journal/Written Form or 2.) Scrapbook/Souvenir/Photograph form. JOURNALS: To begin writing a life story may require time and effort, but it offers many satisfactions. Writing a life story provides a person with the opportunity to review his own life, the pleasant memories, the difficult experiences, and the goals he has formulated. In addition, the life story is a means of preserving an individual’s memory for future generations to appreciate. If a person illustrates his life story with pictures, it takes on a new meaning for him. He sees himself as he progresses through each phase of growing. He visualizes himself as a continually growing, progressing human being. If he provides visual records, his descendants can truly get to know him, and they will appreciate this. If he would desire to make this life story more meaningful, he will add pictures with narrative statements about each one and the date, time or event it represents. – from Hearts of the Children by Marjorie R. Judkins. What to include: spiritual experiences important events and accomplishments traditions feelings and opinions reactions and interpretations How to organize the material: chronologically or by categories Suggestions and items to consider in writing your personal history: The history of your family Parents, brothers, and sisters Your birthplace Early recollections Early church activities Home tasks, economic and religious conditions in the home Schools Youthful association and activities Military service and job experiences Courtship and marriage Your children Your hobbies Special celebrations and holidays Moving Your plans and hopes for the future Encouragement and counsel to your descendants SCRAPBOOKS: Collect your records and mementoes: birth certificate, marriage certificate, certificates of ordination or baptism, old photos, programs, honors, awards, newspaper clippings, and diplomas. You might find these in various unrelated places in your home. Keep these things together and don’t compile them (or copies of them) until you are sure you’ve found all your papers so that you can put them in order. Then, make some space on a big table or in the floor. Sort out all that you have collected. Divide your life into three periods: childhood, youth, and adulthood. Choose one section and box up temporarily the rest. Start with your childhood section and put these things into order chronologically. Then repeat for the other 2 sections. When you compile items and photos, label them with names, date, place, and event. Davie Dossier page 7 BOOKS AND MAPS FOR SALE, check to DCHGS Title Author Total Cost # Cost Davie County. A Brief History, paperback James W. Wall, 128 pages $ 6.50 The Boone Families in Davie County Wall, Howell Boone, Flossie Martin $ 8.00 Davie County Marriages 1836-1900 Nancy K. Murphy $25.00 Davie County Marriages 1901-1959 Nancy K. Murphy $25.00 Davie County Cemeteries, a 2-volume set D.C. Historical/Gen. Soc. $55.00 1850 Federal Census-Davie County Forsyth Genealogical Society $15.00 1860 Federal Census-Davie County Nancy K. Murphy and Everette Sain $20.00 1870 Federal Census-Davie County Nancy K. Murphy and Everette Sain $20.00 POSTCARDS OF DAVIE CO. SCENES, (set of 8) $ 2.50 CD of all issues Davie Dossier since 1987 $ 7.00 Maps: Prices below, postage is $5, mailing tube is $2; All four maps cost $12, for example Lagle Land Grant Map, $2 Hughes Historical Map, 1700's, drawn in 1977, $1 J.T. Alderman Map, 1887 , $1 Wilson F. Merrell Map, 1928, $1 Davie County Heritage Book, cost is $45; Make check to Davie County Heritage Book. Use DCHGS address below. The Historic Architecture of Davie Co., cost is $30; History of Davie County, hardback, by James W. Wall, 449 pages; cost is $30; Make check to Davie County Public Library. Use DCHGS address below. Davie County History Books by Marie Craig. Check to Marie Craig, 276 Park Ave., Mocksville NC 27028:  History of Davie County Schools, 318 pages, has photos, locations, longitude/latitude, names of students, and teachers. There is an 18 page index of 3,222 names. 318 pages. $43  Davie County in World War One, 670 biographies of Davie men and women who served, photographs, old letters, description of military bases, and extensive index. 400 pages. $45  Davie County Veterans’ Memorial, has lists of all war deaths, biographies and photos of WW2, Korean, Vietnam, and Beirut Bombing deaths. Tom Ferebee’s 32 minute talk at the dedication in 1987 is included. 190 pages. $33.  Remembering Davie County Protection and Service Personnel, contains biographies of the five law enforcement personnel who died on duty and also photos and descriptions of the monument erected in their memory. The monument also honors all first responders in Davie County. Paperback, 14 pages. $17.  Davie County in the Spanish-American War, contains biographies of the 15 men who served in this war and the resulting war in the Philippines. 65 pages. $20  Mary Ellen’s Diary, 1924, the fictitious diary of a twelve year old girl in 1924 in Mocksville. Included are clippings and illustrations to verify the events. Paperback. 49 pages. $15. Cana Connections, 201 pages, by Betty Etchison West; Life in Cana in the Thirties and Forties and Special People with Cana Connections. There are many biographies and photos of people and buildings. Order from Betty West, 3532 NC Hwy. 801 North, Mocksville NC 27028. Make check to Betty West for $35, which includes tax and shipping. Looking Back at Davie County II by Charles Crenshaw and Ron Smith. $45. Mail orders to Charles Crenshaw, 421 Park Avenue, Mocksville NC 27028 Davie County Mavericks, Four Men Who Changed History, the stories of Daniel Boone, Hinton Helper, Thomas Ferebee and Peter Ney in Davie County, by Marcia Phillips. $25. Mail orders to Marcia Phillips, 315 McClamrock Road, Mocksville NC 27028. DCHGS 371 North Main Street Mocksville NC 27028 Davie Dossier page 8 Davie county historical/genealogical society 371 North Main Street Mocksville NC 27028 If you would like to receive your Dossier as a PDF attachment in an E-mail instead of a paper copy, please send an E-mail message to the editor at dchgslist@gmail.com. Please state “E-mail my Dossier instead of mailing a paper copy” and include your E-mail address. This saves money, time, postage, effort, and paper. The number beside your name, above, shows the year for which you last paid $5 dues. Example: if you have a 17 by your name, you have paid dues through 2017. 2019 Dues can be paid now! MEMBERSHIP for a calendar year is still just $5.00/year. Life Membership is $100 per person. We are 501(c)(3) and dues are tax deductible. Below is a registration form for your use; checks, payable to the Society. DAVIE COUNTY HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY (DCHGS) Davie County Public Library, 371 Main Street Mocksville, North Carolina 27028 NAME ________________________________________________________________________ ADDRESS _____________________________________________________________________ E-MAIL ADDRESS ______________________________________________________________ Send my copy by E-mail instead of paper; yes, no