Wednesday 20 January 2021

#52 ANCESTORS IN 52 WEEKS 2021-Week 3

Week 3 - Namesake

As most of the people mentioned in this post are alive I have omitted their surnames as a courtesy.

I was never a fan of my middle name while growing up. Well who would like the name of Ruby? And why did I have to be named after my mother? How embarrassing! Well at least I didn’t get her middle name of Florence!

But how things change when you find yourself an adult! I cherished the name once in my adult years, more so once my darling mother was gone. I have been very proud to have it as my second name, Marcia Ruby.

The name of Ruby has appeared now over the years with my mother’s great grandchildren. We have my granddaughter Chloe Ruby and there are another three great nieces who also carry the name with an Ella Ruby, Tayissa Ruby and a Ruby Veronica.

We also have a trend for my father’s surname appearing as second names in later years with a Jessica Brandt [surname] and a Jethro Brandt William [surname].

As far as names of my ancestors go, there are many and varied names that have cropped up over and over. My tree is littered with the name Alfred, Bernard, Cornelius, David, Edward, Eliza, Elizabeth, Ellen, Fanny, Florence, Frederick, George, Henry, Isabella, James, Jane, John, Louisa, Mary, May, Rowley, Sarah, Sparrow, Thomas, William, to name just a few.

I am sure I am not alone with many fellow Family Historians having trees with names appearing over and over again.

Monday 18 January 2021

#52 ANCESTORS IN 52 WEEKS 2021-Week 2



Week 2 - Family Legend

When trying to think of something to write for this prompt, I kept on coming back to one Ancestor. I have written creative non-fiction stories about her before but thought I would share a few incidents that wave the flag of “legend” in front of me whenever I go back to researching her.

I would like to introduce my paternal Great Grandmother Louisa Barker (circa 1849 - 4 December 1915.[1] 

Louisa was married to Alfred Brandt and had seven children with him, the first in 1870 and her seventh in 1882.⁠[2] It was after the birth of their seventh that she and her husband were married in 1883.⁠[3]  That in itself is not legendary but when you also add the fact that they travelled from Gunnedah NSW to Launceston, Tasmania a distance of approximately 1600 kilometres including a dangerous body of water the Bass Straight (500 ks) you could be forgiven in thinking this lady was slightly legendary!

After this marriage this couple are found back in Gunnedah with their children. You would expect that things would now be fairly ordinary for Louisa. But no. Within six months Louisa’s husband fell down a well to his death in July 1883.⁠[4] 

Louisa takes over the licensee of the Sugarloaf Inn which up to this time, she had been running with her husband. Now she was on her own with seven children.⁠[5] 

Things looked up for Louisa a couple of years later when she married August Engstrom in 1886 and they had one child a girl in 1887, before her second husband died in 1888.⁠[6]  

This is a snippet of Louisa’s life. A Family Legend? I am not sure but she certainly is worthy of a story!

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1 NSW Family History Transcription Pty Ltd, NSW Death Registration Transcription Certificate Ref No 1915/152391, for Louisa Engstrom, printed 27 September 2016

2 Australia, Birth Index, 1788-1922 Index Reg #44 Alfred L BRANDT [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, http://www.ancestry.com.au

Australia, Birth Index, 1788-1922 Index Index Reg #17610 Ethel BRANDT; [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010 accessed 12 August 2015 http://www.ancestry.com.au

3 Australia, Marriage Index, 1788-1950 Index Reg 685 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. Accessed 12 August 2015, http://www.ancestry.com.au

4 Australia, Death Index, 1787-1985, Index Reg#8157 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, accessed 18 August 2015 , http://www.ancestry.com.au

5 Government Gazette Notices (1884, August 29). New South Wales Government Gazette (Sydney, NSW : 1832 - 1900), p. 5884. Retrieved May 26, 2017, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article225588522

6 NSW Marriage Registration Transcription, Ref No 1886/7445 Louisa Engstrom, Ref No 8938233 Printed 30 January 2017, http://nswtranscriptions.com.au

Australia, Birth Index, 1788-1922, Frances Engstrom (Provo, UT, USA,,Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010), http://www.ancestry.com.au

Australia, Death Index, 1787-1985, August Engstrom, (Provo, UT, USA, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010), http://www.ancestry.com.au

Sunday 10 January 2021

#52 ANCESTORS IN 52 WEEKS 2021-Week 1


52 ANCESTORS IN 52 WEEKS 2021


It is a couple of years since I last participated in the 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge although I still followed along with the weekly emails.

I haven’t as yet managed to complete a full year. But I use Amy Johnson Crowe's words as a sort of mantra to keep me writing……

“Anything you write is more than what you had before.[1] 

So with this in mind I will try to pen(type??) a few words for each prompt and see how far I can get this year, noting that in 2018 I made it to Week 24!

WEEK 1 - BEGINNINGS

I am going to start this challenge with an ancestor who I know well! Who, I hear you ask? Well me of course!

I was born on 10/08/1955 in Bulli, New South Wales, Australia.

My parents were Garvice Galvin Brandt and Ruby Florence Brandt ( nee Briggs). I was the fourth daughter that my parents welcomed into their family and I was given the name Marcia Ruby. My three older sisters were Janyce May (1942), Lorraine Jennifer (1946) and Kay Isabella (1948).

The beginning of my Family History journey happened well after my parents died and of course I had never asked the questions that I would love to ask them now. My parents were of the opinion that it wasn’t necessary to go over the past.

The beginning of my research took off, in the 1990s when I did a Family History course with the local library. I acquired lots of hand outs and a desire to pursue this research, but family life got in the way, as it does when you have four children, husband and work outside of the home.

The next beginnings of my Family History journey came when I signed up with Ancestry and started building my Tree. I found the process of researching on the internet a great bonus as I have mobility issues and find it hard to physically get to places and research in person. Although I am aware that not everything can be found on the internet!

Further down the track my adult children introduced me to Facebook and I enjoyed the interaction with friends and family. It never occurred to me that this platform was also going to be another beginning in my Family History journey.

One day in 2015 I saw an advertisement on Facebook for an Introduction to Family History course with the University of Tasmania. This sparked my interest once again and on looking into it further I found that it was:
  1. online 
  2. free, 
  3. the start date was June, (which was right away) 
  4. the course finished before my husband and I were due to go overseas in 3 months time. 
So what was a girl to do? Of course I signed up!

This was another beginnings! My first University study at the age of 60plus! Nether-the-less two and a half years later with the completion of eight Uni Units, saw me travelling to Tasmania to join fellow students for our Graduation in the Diploma of Family History!

So as you can see there are quite a few beginnings in my Family History journey and I am not going to add anymore at this time because I have learnt over the years that you don’t have to put everything you know about an ancestor in a story. 

You may just want to use something else down the line  and I am sure there will be further beginnings in my journey. After all I am an Ancestor in my own Family History story.
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1. Email, Amy Johnson Crow, 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: Week 1, Jan 5, 2021




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