The biggest bangs always are.Who would've guessed the Big Bang was an extramarital one?
The biggest bangs always are.Who would've guessed the Big Bang was an extramarital one?
Two! And two sisters! And a fuckton of nieces and nephews! And cousins!Been following this on facebook - just realized there was a HalForum thread. Congrats on finding a brother, Dave!
Oh god, your christmas list just got so much bigger.Two! And two sisters! And a fuckton of nieces and nephews! And cousins!
Whenever I'm stuck between warring parties that I like, I always tell them the following:Let it get weird, if there is a serious falling out between your folks and your sister, so what she is still your sister. Just don't take sides between your parents and sibling.
So I thought what the hell and sent a reply. Now I wait.Hello,
My name is Stephanie and I am a Producer with Lenzworks, the production company responsible for Relative Race. If you are unfamiliar with the show, Relative Race follows the journey of 4 teams as they race across America and meet new relatives.
I am contacting you directly because you happen to be a match to one of our contestants. My team would love the opportunity to talk to you about the show, and see if you may be interested in meeting your relative.
Please click the link below for more information.
http://lenzworks.com/201703trrcasting-group1b/
Note: If the link doesn’t work by clicking on it, you may need to copy and paste the URL into your internet browser (e.g., Internet Explorer, Google Chrome, etc.).
We hope to hear from you soon.
Thank you for your time,
Stephanie
LenzWorks Productions
http://lenzworks.com/
Time for a humorous update.
I got a message from a lady that is my second cousin that there was a new player in the game - a first cousin of hers! Wow! Uh...wait. That can't be your first cousin if I'm your second cousin. That's my dad, Richard. Interesting. See, second cousin is trying to find her grandfather as her MOTHER was adopted. We started looking through charts and graphs and centimorgan amounts to see what was up...and we found the only scenario that fits everything.
At 650 or so centimorgans, she thought that my father was her first cousin. But also at that range would be Great Uncle. And my cousin Ken (remember Ken?) showed as a first cousin as well (550 centimorgans or so) yet that made no sense since he is my father's nephew. But looking at the chart, a Half-Uncle would also fit the bill. Which means that Jen's mother is cousin Ken's sister! A sister cousin Ken did not know that he had.
But it gets even better. Second cousin's DNA results showed that the person SHE thought was her father was not. In fact, he's only the father of one of the couple's three kids.
Gotta hand it to DNA, man. All those cold, dark secrets aren't staying hidden any longer.
Time for a humorous update.
I got a message from a lady that is my second cousin that there was a new player in the game - a first cousin of hers! Wow! Uh...wait. That can't be your first cousin if I'm your second cousin. That's my dad, Richard. Interesting. See, second cousin is trying to find her grandfather as her MOTHER was adopted. We started looking through charts and graphs and centimorgan amounts to see what was up...and we found the only scenario that fits everything.
At 650 or so centimorgans, she thought that my father was her first cousin. But also at that range would be Great Uncle. And my cousin Ken (remember Ken?) showed as a first cousin as well (550 centimorgans or so) yet that made no sense since he is my father's nephew. But looking at the chart, a Half-Uncle would also fit the bill. Which means that Jen's mother is cousin Ken's sister! A sister cousin Ken did not know that he had.
But it gets even better. Second cousin's DNA results showed that the person SHE thought was her father was not. In fact, he's only the father of one of the couple's three kids.
Gotta hand it to DNA, man. All those cold, dark secrets aren't staying hidden any longer.
I guess it's not surprising when you consider the pressure to marry (young) and the difficulty in getting a divorce back in those days. And I think often if was not really a secret but something the "fathers" knew but ignored or preferred to keep hidden.Gotta hand it to DNA, man. All those cold, dark secrets aren't staying hidden any longer.
See? Easy.I did the Ancestry DNA and found my father through a cousin in Sioux City. Because I have proof of my father, I am able to isolate those who do NOT match with his DNA, which means anyone who shares a match there is from my maternal side. Most don't have very many people in their family trees, but one - Carolyn - who has 25,000+ people in her family tree. Since her and I are 3rd cousins, we share great-great-grandparents. So I went through her tree starting at the great-great-grandparents and working my way down. When I'd hit a dead end (usually because the people are still alive and are set as private) then I'd go look at both obituaries and the website find a grave. Working down through the great-great-grandfather, Andrew, I went to William Henry, then Bertha, then Fern - who was born in the right year to be my biological mother.
So I had a name, but her account still shows as living, which is obviously incorrect. (This is why I say these things are tenuous - we're not dealing with official paperwork or certificates, merely information entered by other people.) I then hit obituaries (nothing) and find a grave. On find a grave, I was able to find Bertha Pentz (link removed).
This gave me the names of her MALE children - for some reason it didn't show the females. But clicking on the link to Daniel gave me a picture with the entire family. I clicked on the name under the picture (K. S.) and went through the comments, which included an email address for her. So I emailed her. After a few back & forths, she sent me an email she received from Archie back in 2015. I sent him an email, but considering his age I thought it would be best to try and find more information. So I googled his email address, which took me to this webpage document called US Action. (link removed)
This gave me his city - [City], [State]- which when googled as "Archie [City]" took me to a site called Radaris. I clicked the "full profile" link thinking it was going to then tell me to pay for information, but instead took me to a page with "Related to". The "Related to" includes Melanie (I assume that's you), Betty, Daniel, Crystal, William, & Joyce.
I then went to Facebook and looked for people with those names that included friends in their list that also included any of those names and was from [State]. I found Dan and looked through his comments, then messaged people that were active and had the right names.
Yup. The 1940 census has been a godsend. Strange how difficult it is finding census data later than that, though.If you're going that far back you might actually find something useful in census records as well, if you hit another dead end.
https://www.census.gov/history/www/genealogy/decennial_census_records/the_72_year_rule_1.htmlYup. The 1940 census has been a godsend. Strange how difficult it is finding census data later than that, though.
Well, actually: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superfetation#HumansShe had 2 kids and her daughter was born in April of 1965. So unless she has super-human gestation periods, she couldn't have had me on October 3 of the same year.