
Wenatchee Area Genealogical Society How the Homestead Act Shaped My Family



| TIP OF THE WEEK – FREE EDUCATIONAL SERIES FROM THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES The National Archives has loads of fantastic records that can help your research, but did you know they also host seminars as well? Every year, the National Archives hosts a free, educational genealogy event broadcast on YouTube. The sessions offer family history research tools on federal records for all skill levels. Join thousands of family historians participating during the live broadcast event. Presentations are pre-recorded, but viewers may ask questions during each session’s YouTube video premiere. The presenter will respond in real time. After the initial showing, the video and handouts will remain available on this web page and YouTube. There are still three broadcasts coming, one is today. June 4 at 1 p.m. ET — Captured German Records Related to American Prisoners of War During World War II June 18 at 1 p.m. ET — Alien Files (A-Files): Researching Immigrant Ancestors at the National Archives June 25 at 1 p.m. ET — World War II Enemy Alien Records Related to Japanese Americans at the National Archives Three previous sessions are still available on the NARA YouTube channel. | |
| June 4, 2024 SGS eNews! comes out the first of every month. contact eNews! forward this email to a friend | |

ANNOUNCING 2024 SGS VOLUNTEERS OF SPRING QUARTER
Carol B. Jenner, Karen Knudson, Shirley Mouer and Karen Portzer
Last month eNews reported about four volunteers who helped local Facebook group, Friends of Magnuson Park, find living relatives of the Army Corp Fliers who departed Sandpoint Airfield April 6, 1924 to become the first persons to circumnavigate the world by air. Now those same volunteers are being named SGS’s Volunteers of Spring Quarter 2024.
Carol P. Jenner joined SGS in 2016 and this was her first volunteer project.
“This project drew me in,” she said, “because of the chance to explore a new family and also my interest in aviation. I’m a licensed pilot and have flown float planes in the same airspace as the aviators! As I read the accounts of the ‘round the world flight, I am amazed at the confidence and courage they all displayed.”
Jenner researched Lowell Herbert Smith. He had joined Pancho Villa’s air force to get experience and played a role in many other aviation firsts. He had no children. Jenner searched for nieces and nephews and was able to identify and provide contact information for descendants of Smith’s brother, sister and a half-brother.
Karen Knudson, who was previously Volunteer of Summer Quarter 2023, has been a member of SGS for 16 years and was the treasurer for eight years. Knudson’s paternal side is “completely Swedish,” which is likely why she started the Scandinavian special interest group, which she now co-hosts with SGS Librarian, Kathi M.
Knudson researched pilot Alva L. Harvey. He became a test pilot for the B17 bomber and flew important missions for the Air force. He was also instrumental in the construction of the B29 bomber. Harvey married twice and had two daughters and one step-daughter. Knudson found a distant relative on Ancestry who was able to provide contact information for a grandson and granddaughter, that she shared with the Friends of Magnuson Park.
Shirely Mouer joined SGS in 2022 and this was her first volunteering experience.
“As a beginning genealogist, I was a bit intimidated to do the research on my own,” Mouer said, “but Kathi, SGS Librarian was helpful and encouraging. I was surprised by how emotionally connected to this family I began to feel. They became so real to me. Although I have felt that in researching my own family, I wasn’t expecting it with this project.”
Mouer researched General Leigh Wade. He enlisted in the National Guard in 1916 and became an aviation cadet one year later.
For the 1924 flight around the world, Wade served as a first lieutenant and was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal in 1925 for his services as pilot and supply officer. He reverted to inactive status in 1926. He returned to active duty as a major in 1941 with the Air Corps and continued with the Air Force. In 1952, he because Chief of the Air Section of the Joint Brazil-U.S. Military Commission at Rio de Janeiro. He did not have any children. However, his oldest sister, Allene, had 12 children and many of Leigh’s grandnephews/nieces and great grandnephews/nieces were found.
Karen Portzer loves volunteering for short term projects. She began genealogy in 1987 and wrote her first article for the SGS Bulletin in 1992. Since then, she has written more articles and, also chaired a Pennsylvania interest group. In Pennsylvania, she has direct lines living in 29 counties!
Portzer was thrilled to participate in this project because of her love of genealogy and aviation. She grew up near SeaTac International Airport and fondly remembers going to the side of the road near the airfield with her father, an airplane mechanic and private pilot, to watch planes take off and land. She researched First Lt Leslie P. Arnold, and although he didn’t have children, his sister had children and grandchildren that Portzer was able to share with the Friends of Magnuson Park. Karen also researched Henry H. Ogden, the youngest of the flyers. He had five daughters. He became a vice president of Lockheed.
“This was an incredible flight,” Portzer declared. “I found excerpts from their diaries in the newspapers with a byline for Lowell Arnold. I found their passport applications which listed every planned stop along the way. These men lived incredible lives afterward, many becoming executives or key people for the major airlines or aviation.”
This flight was followed closely and made worldwide headlines. When they returned to Sandpoint Airbase on Sept. 28, 1924, they were welcomed home by 50,000 Seattleites
To learn more and participate in the Centennial in September 2024 visit the official site: https://www.firstworldflightcentennial.org.
CDG MENTORSHIP PROGRAM COORDINATOR
HONORED BY NGS

Congratulations to Pam Pracser Anderson for her Award of Merit from the National Genealogical Society. Anderson, a volunteer, was recognized for her work for the Certification Discussion Group, an SGS managed program. Pam manages the CDG Accountability Group and Mentorship Program, which provides the only formal program of its kind in the country. Created and maintained by Anderson, the program is composed of CDG graduates who are pursuing the certification through the Board for Certification of Genealogists (BCG). While not affiliated with BCG, the program provides incentive and motivation for those who are writing their portfolios and other work products. The program began three years ago and presently has over 90 people enrolled in either the small accountability writing groups or with one-on-one mentors. Congratulations, Pam! JOIN GENEALOGY WRITER’S GROUP
Get inspired to write about your ancestors, share what you have written and get feedback. Join SGS’s Write It Up special interest group. This group of enthusiastic genealogists meets virtually on the second Monday each month at 6 p.m. Members may share any type of writing they are working on. Share anything from a research proof to a collection of your grandma’s stories. This group covers it all. To join or learn more, contact SGS Director of Education (education@seagensoc.org).
Some writing prompts to inspire you:
SGS MEMBERS, REMEMBER TO RENEW
Take a few moments now to renew your membership as we begin our next century! When you renew online you can pay your dues with a credit/debit card right away or print out your invoice and send it with your dues payment to SGS. First log in at Members Home then click the green “Renew Membership” button. If you haven’t logged in before or have questions, send an email to membership@seagensoc.org.
NOT AN SGS MEMBER YET?
Join online today and enjoy a full year of discounted class and event fees, free research requests, special interest groups, and access to exclusive SGS publications and databases. Find out more about membership at Join SGS.
TOUR EXPLORED SEATTLE’S CIVIL WAR HISTORY


Richard Heisler (in group photo, front row, first from left) of Civil War Seattle, lead SGS attendees on a tour of Seattle’s historic Civil War cemeteries on June 1. He shared the stories of the veterans buried there and spoke of the contributions the region made to the war. Washington once had more Civil War veterans per capita than any other state
Look for more outings to places of genealogical interest offered by SGS in future months
SAVE THE DATE
Family Tree Maker SIG
Eastside Genealogical Society
June 21, 2024, 10:30 pm-12:30 pm
Join Eastside Genealogical Society and SGS to learn and share tips and tricks for using Family Tree Maker by Software MacKiev. The meetings open about 15 minutes in advance. You can join and/or leave whenever you have to, and you may email your question(s) in advance or bring them up during the meeting.
Jewish Genealogical Society of Washington State,
usually 2nd Monday meetings
usually 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm Pacific Time
JGSWS meets on the second Monday of each month, from Sept-June. Doors open at 6:30 pm unless noted otherwise. The next meeting is Monday June 10, 2024, “Crossing the Ocean: US Records to Ancestral Towns” presented by Susan Weinberg. For more information see http://www.jgsws.org/meetings.php
SGS CALENDAR OF EVENTSGood Shepherd Center, Suite 302
4649 Sunnyside Ave N
Seattle, WA 98103
206 522-8658Hours : Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday
** 10:00 a.m .- 3:00 p.m. ** Always check the SGS Website Calendar of Events for the meeting links, registration, or for last minute updates or changes to the schedule. Be advised you may need to register in advance to join a meeting. All times listed are Pacific Time unless otherwise notedWednesday, June 5, 2024, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m., Pacific Northwest Interest Group (Virtual), This month’s focus in on Oregon resources. Register on the SGS website.
Monday, June 10, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists.
Monday,
June 10, 2024, 1:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m., SGS Board of Directors Meeting (Virtual), All SGS members are welcome to attend. SGS is an all volunteer organization. Please be involved. Members must sign in to website to see Zoom link.
Monday, June 10, 2024, 6:00 p.m.-7:30 p.m., Write It Up! SIG (Virtual), Join this group to share and discuss writing projects, resources, and ideas. To join or learn more, contact SGS Director of Education (education@seagensoc.org).
Tuesday, June 11, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m., Tech Tuesday (Virtual), informal consultation time on DNA, genealogy software, or genealogy-related technical issues. All are welcome. No appointment necessary. Bring us your problem; we’ll try to help.
Saturday, June 15, 2024, 10:30 a.m.-noon, Irish SIG (Virtual), with Susan McKee. Share information and discuss Irish ancestral research. Note the later time, this month only.
Saturday, June 15, 2024, 1:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m., German SIG (Virtual), Speaker Lisa Oberg will present “From Sauerkraut to Liberty Cabbage: Anti-German Activities during World War I.” Register on the SGS website.
Sunday, June 16, 2024 1:00 p.m.-2:30 p.m., Virtual Sundays: Something Old, Something New, Series finale. Topic “AI: Live.” Join Jill Morelli for an impromptu AI experiment (or two). Please visit the SGS website to register in advance for this event.
Monday, June 17, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists.
Tuesday, June 18, 2024, 1:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m., “Pass It On” Writers’ Group (Social Interest Group), Create your family history and share with others in an effort to improve your writing. Please note: The Writers’ Group is at the maximum number of participants and is not currently accepting any new members.
Monday, June 24, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists.
Tuesday, June 25, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m., Tech Tuesday (Virtual), informal consultation time on DNA, genealogy software, or genealogy-related technical issues. All are welcome. No appointment necessary. Bring us your problem; we’ll try to help.
Saturday, June 29, 2024, 1:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m., DNA SIG, Learn how to calculate DNA coverage, collaborate with relatives who have already tested and figure out who to test next for the best coverage. Message SGSDNASIG@gmail.com to join.Wednesday, July 3, 2024, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m., Pacific Northwest Interest Group (Virtual), This SGS-sponsored special interest group meets monthly on the first Wednesday of the month. Register in advance.
Monday,
July 8, 2024, 1:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m., SGS Board of Directors Meeting (Virtual), All SGS members are welcome to attend. SGS is an all volunteer organization. Please be involved. Members must sign in to website to see Zoom link.
Monday, July 8, 2024, 6:00 p.m.-7:30 p.m., Write It Up! SIG (Virtual), Join this group to share and discuss writing projects, resources, and ideas. To join or learn more, contact SGS Director of Education (education@seagensoc.org).
Tuesday, July 9, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m., Tech Tuesday (Virtual), informal consultation time on DNA, genealogy software, or genealogy-related technical issues. All are welcome. No appointment necessary. Bring us your problem; we’ll try to help.Wednesday, July 10, 2024, 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m., MAC Computer SIG, Jointly sponsored by SGS and Fiske. Meetings address topics and resources for Macintosh (Apple) computers and the Reunion genealogy software program. A link to login will be sent to the MAC SIG email list. If you would like to join, send an email to macusersig@seagensoc.org to be added to the email list.

Cowboy Clark Stanley was down on his luck when he heard a tale that the Chinese (back in China) made a medicine or treatment from snakes. Immediately a get-rich-scheme formed in his mind.
At the 1893 Columbian Expedition in Chicago, Stanley came onstage with a live rattlesnake. He slit open the snake and dropped it into a pot of boiling water. Skimming off the fat from the surface, he told his eager audience that this was the “gen-u-ine” cure for what ailed them. People believed and his Snake Oil Liniment was sold for 24 years.
So called “snake oil medicine” wasn’t only the “medicine of the west.” Similar schemes abounded in the 19th century. Wikipedia defines this as “any worthless concoction sold as medicine.”
A bit published in the Georgia Gazette on 29 Jun 1774 proclaimed a “Miracle Medical Cure!” Some 46 men signed their names as testimony that the stuff worked:
“We the under named subscriber of St. George’s and St. Matthew’s parishes, think it our duty to publish the following CURES perfected by Dr. John Patrick Dillon, for the good of the poor afflicted with the same, they they may know where they may expect remedy, as we have had, and affirm the same subscribing jointly that we have been CURED by him of: cancers of all kinds, fistulas, hysteric afflictions, rheumatisms, consumptions, fluxes, dysenteries, convulsions, epilepsies, apoplexies, hypochondrias, caries*, malignant ulcers, pleurisies and gravels**.”
( Caries is tooth decay/cavities. Gravels is kidney stones.)
QUESTION: Are “snake oil” cures still being passed off today as worthwhile medicines?
Saturday, June 1, 2024 10:30am – 12:30pm ZOOM ONLY
Zoom doors open at 10:15am .
Genealogy Series I: Discovering Your Ancestors
By Janet O’Conor Camarata
Genealogy is an enriching and rewarding way to discover our own families through their written records, photographs and artifacts. Tracing our ancestral roots expands our understanding of history and how they lived in earlier generations. The individual pieces of the family jigsaw puzzle consists of vital records, censuses, land records, immigration, naturalization, military records, church histories, taxes, court and courthouse records, DNA and much more. The tools and techniques used by genealogists today are extensive and include the Internet, specific genealogy programs and websites, i.e. Ancestry and FamilySearch. Learn in a computer environment the resources available online and off-line to investigate the various jigsaw puzzle pieces that document your ancestors’ lives.
Class #1 (of 6) Basic Forms – Accurate Data Formats – Vital Records: Death, Marriage and Birth
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85678460576
Thanks


Did you realize that rhubarb is classified as a vegetable?
And while we eat the stalks the leaves are quite toxic?
Did you know that Washington State has 175 acres of rhubarb cultivation? Some 92% of those acres are in Pierce County. Sumner boasts to be the Rhubarb Capital of the World.
Who remembers sitting on the back stoop eating a stalk of fresh rhubarb dipped in sugar or honey? I surely do, as do my children.
The Chinese called rhubarb “the great yellow” and have used it for medicinal purposes for nearly 2000 years. Yes, this hardy plant has been around for a long time. Bet you have a patch growing in a corner of your yard.
Rhubarb was used medicinally as a laxative. Back in the day, purging one’s system was a common component of many treatments…. riding the body of ill humors it was thought.
Rhubarb was harvested in Scotland in 1786 and came to America in the 1820s through New England. Rhubarb grows best where there is a few months of cold weather.
Whether your favorite is rhubarb sauce or rhubarb pie, my guess is that rhubarb has a love-hate relationship with most people.
There are dozens of YouTube videos, and several websites, teaching how to grow, harvest, cook and prepare those delicious red stalks.



During the long history of Egypt, many millions of people (and animals) were mummified. “Far rarer are mummy portraits…detailed paintings of the living, buried with their mummies when they died.” (Thanks to National Geographic Magazine bit by Daniel Stone and photos from Google.)
The portraits were mounted on bands of cloth used to wrap bodies (mummies). Some 1300 mummy portraits are known to exist and most have now been removed and placed in museums.
Egyptians spent up to a year’s wages to arrange funeral ceremonies and goods, often including portraits. Such portraits reveal the melting pot of cultures living in Egypt between the 1st and 3rd centuries. This was when Roman culture predominated and this is reflected in the portraits. Some of these portraits are identified!
Imagine having an image of your ancestor’s face who lived 2000 years ago???
For more information, click to:
BritishMuseum.org/blog/depicting-dead-ancient-Egyptian-mummyportraits


“Join Twin Rivers Genealogy Society on July 4th for the annual Walking with Ancestors at Normal Hill Cemetery, 1122 7th St, Lewiston, ID 83501. The free presentations will start at 8:30 with 10:30 am as the last tour.
This year we will be in the mausoleum. You will hear about the lives of the Choate’s, Joslin’s, Gibbs, Walker’s, and Clark’s!
Bring your lawn chair, as the presentations are outside and then go inside and tour the mausoleum. We hope to see you there! Any questions, Sue @ 509.780.7592.”–
Sue Gehrke