Genealogy is like a jigsaw puzzle, but you don't have the box top, so you don't know what the picture is supposed to look like. As you start putting the puzzle together, you realize some pieces are missing, and eventually you figure out that some of the pieces you started with don't actually belong to this puzzle. I'll help you discover the right pieces for your puzzle and assemble them into a picture of your family.
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Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Sunday, May 10, 2026
A Photo of My Mother for Mother's Day
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| Myra (Meckler) Sellers, Janice Sellers?, Sam O'Connor |
It's Mother's Day today, so I went scrolling through the great photo bonanza to find a new (to my blog) and interesting photo of my mother to post, and I came across this one.
As usual, with all the photos taken by my father (and I'm sure my father took it, particularly because it is black and white), it is unlabeled and unidentified. But I recognize my mother on the left, and I'm now pretty sure it is Aunt Sam on the right. I think the child looking goofy in the center is me. My estimate for the year is about 1967.
This kitchen appears in several photographs from the bonanza. I think it's in our house in La Puente.
The photo appears as though it could be torn on the left side. As I do not yet have the originals (subtle hint to my sister), I can't verify that. It's possible that the big white void could be a refrigerator or freezer.
There was probably no occasion or special event. Sam happened to be visiting and my father simply liked taking photographs.
My mother has something in her hands, perhaps a small box. Maybe it was some kind of pills, such as aspirin. She's laughing, as though she thinks it's funny that my father is taking a photo of this scene.
Happy Mother's Day!
Saturday, May 9, 2026
Alphabet Magnets, But Which Alphabet?
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| Modern alphabet of Gurmukhi script Published under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license. |
There really are national days for just about anything, if you hunt around long enough. Such as today, which is National Alphabet Magnet Day. No, really, just check the page here.
See, I told you. I wouldn't make this up.
But the reason I'm writing about National Alphabet Magnet Day isn't to get you to look at the page for it. It's to get you thinking about alphabets. Because I'll bet when you read "National Alphabet Magnet Day", you automatically thought of the alphabet for the English language.
I'm right, aren't I?
But when you think about it, there are other alphabets out there. So that means there could be alphabet magnets for those alphabets, right?
And there are!
My favorite alphabet magnets that I own are for Gurmukhi, the alphabet used to write the Punjabi language.
What? You've never heard of Gurmukhi?
Well, I hadn't either. But when your ex is half-Indian, and his father was Sikh and came from Punjab, somehow you end up learning about it.
And one day I ran across something online for Gurmukhi alphabet magnets.
Of course I had to buy a set. And then bought a second set for my grandchildren. They haven't shown any interest in it yet, but one day they might.
Then I started wondering about other alphabet magnets.
My mother's family is Jewish. My mother never learned Hebrew and learned only a few words and phrases in Yiddish. But my grandmother was fluent in Yiddish (it was her first language) and knew some Hebrew. And Hebrew and Yiddish use the same letters (mostly).
So off I went in search of Hebrew alphabet magnets and found some. You can find all sorts of interesting things on Amazon. I found Swedish alphabet magnets, Cyrillic alphabet magnets, and more.
I have not yet learned to speak or write in Hebrew, Yiddish, or Punjabi. But I'm working on it, and when I do, I'll be able to post phrases and sentences on the refrigerator with my handy-dandy alphabet magnets.
One of the suggestions on the National Day Calendar page for how to celebrate the day is to use the letters to teach children the alphabet. Wouldn't that be a wonderful way to help children learn about their ancestry?
Go do it. Now.
Saturday Night Genealogy Fun: What Automobiles Did Your Ancestors Own?
It's either "everything old is new again" or a flash of déjà vu this week for Saturday Night Genealogy Fun, as another blogger contributes a topic that Randy Seaver has covered previously.
Here is your assignment, if you choose to play along (cue the Mission: Impossible! music, please!):
1. What automobile models did your ancestors have? Pick an ancestor and share something about his cars.
2. Share your information about your ancestor's car(s) in your own blog post, write a comment on this blog post, or put it in a Substack post, Facebook Note, or some other social media system. Please leave a comment on this post so others can find it.
NOTE: I can use ideas for different SNGF topics. Please e-mail me (randy.seaver@gmail.com).
Thank you to Lisa Gorrell for this week's SNGF challenge topic.
Randy asked us about family cars on November 25, 2017, and I wrote a very detailed post about our cars then, with comments from my father about even more cars, including many of which I had no memory. That post is here.
Since then I have not added any new vehicles, although I do keep thinking about finding another motorycle for myself. Maybe this summer I'll do that.
I have followed up on one thing my father wrote: He and my mother rode to Death Valley (who was taking care of my brother and me?) with the Norwalk Centaurs motorcycle club. I discovered that they still exist and have a Facebook page! I have contacted them and asked whether they have any photos of the 1963 or 1964 trip to Death Valley.
My father took photographs of cars everywhere he went. My guess is that any car that looked interesting to him, he would take photos. You can see some of those photos and read more about my father and cars by clicking here.
I really need to take a photo of my current car, the Toyota RAV4, for the family archive. Since I haven't done that yet, I'll include a photo of my brother and sister sitting on the Indian that was in my 2017 car post.
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| Mark and Stacy Sellers, probably in La Puente, California, 1967 |
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Who Are the Skilled Tradesmen in Your Family?
The first Wednesday in May was chosen to celebrate the skilled trades in this country. A company in Youngstown, Ohio founded National Skilled Trades Day to bring attention to the importance of skilled trades and to the shortage of skilled tradesmen in this country.
So I'm going to write first about my father, who was indeed a skilled tradesman. He was a mechanic, and by all accounts a very good one. I knew this from growing up and hearing people talk about his work. When my family moved to Australia, it was based on his skills as a mechanic. At the time, Australia was looking for skilled tradesmen to come as potential immigrants, and we qualified because of my father's skills.
This was really brought home to me when I wrote a blog post about my father and included an advertisement from the Sydney Morning Herald (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia) in which he was shown working with a piece of equipment. A friend of mine who reads my blog immediately recognized the machine as a Sun 1120 Engine Analyzer and said that you had to be a pretty smart mechanic to be able to use one. My father confirmed that my friend had identified the machine correctly. I figure if you have an independent assessment of your skills like that, you must actually be pretty good.
Saturday, May 2, 2026
Saturday Night Genealogy Fun: Your Ancestors in the 1930's Great Depression
I actually know the information for this week's Saturday Night Genealogy Fun challenge from Randy Seaver for most of my families without even looking.
Here is your assignment, if you choose to play along (cue the Mission: Impossible! music, please!):
1. What did your ancestral families do during the Great Depression (1930–1940)? Did they keep their jobs and standard of living? Did they suffer personally or economically?
2. Share your information about your ancestors in the Great Depression in your own blog post, write a comment on this blog post, or put it in a Substack post, Facebook Note, or some other social media system. Please leave a comment on this post so others can find it.
NOTE: I could use ideas for different SNGF topics. Please send me a message at randy.seaver@gmail.com.
Thank you to Marian B. Wood for this week's SNGF challenge topic.
My paternal grandfather, Bertram Lynn Sellers, was still married to his first wife at the beginning of the Great Depression. They had two daughters. In the 1930 census, the four family members were enumerated in four different locations. My grandfather was living at home with his mother and two siblings in Mount Holly, Burlington County, New Jersey; he was working at the large textile mill which provided most of the employment in that city. The older daughter was in the Burlington County children's home. The younger daughter was in Camden County, boarding with a well-off family who was otherwise not connected to my family. And the girls' mother, Grandpa's first wife, was also living in Camden County, working as a live-in private servant to another unconnected family.
I interviewed Grandpa for a civics class while I was in high school. We were studying the Great Depression, and we were told to interview a family member who had been alive at that time. I can't find the interview notes (I don't know if I kept them!), but I remember him telling me that he did have financial problems, particularly that he mentioned trouble supporting his family. I really hope I kept that interview, because it will be even more relevant to me now that I know more about the family.
Grandpa's mother, Laura May (Armstrong) Sellers Ireland, was living at her home in Mount Holly in 1930, as I wrote above. She was married at the time to John Ireland, whom she married in 1929. I don't know when he was no longer in the picture, but I was told she didn't keep him around long. She kept the name Ireland, though, and was known in the family as Nanny Ireland. In 1940 she was still living in the same home, but her address was not enumerated in the census. She was able to keep her home throughout the Depression, even though she was not listed as having an occupation in 1930.
My paternal grandmother, Anna (Gauntt) Stradling, who was at least separated from her husband (if not divorced), was living in Mount Holly and was working at the same textile mill as my grandfather. I have always guessed that's where they met/got together, which had to have been at least by about March 1935, because my father, Bertram Lynn Sellers, Jr., was born in December 1935, but in an entirely different county in New Jersey (Bergen). I have been told the family moved around quite a bit during the Depression as my grandfather found construction and civil engineering work in New Jersey and New York. They were missed by the enumerators in 1940, but they apparently lived in three different locations that year, so they were probably either just ahead of or just behind the census takers.
Nana's parents, Thomas Kirkland and Jane (Dunstan) Gauntt, were living in Mount Holly in 1930 and 1940. They owned their home, and both were retired. They lived in a rural area, and I've never heard that they were affected much by the Depression.
My maternal grandmother, Lily Gordon, was living with her parents, Joe and Sarah Libby (Brainin) Gordon, and two older brothers in Baltimore, Maryland in 1930. They moved there sometime after 1924, because they were enumerated in 1925 in the New York state census in Manhattan. My grandmother told me they moved to Maryland because her father had some trouble finding good work in New York, but I don't know what year, so I don't know if it was related to the Depression. By 1939 they were back in New York, but in Brooklyn instead of Manhattan. From what I have learned my great-grandfather had continuous employment throughout the Depression working in the garment industry. The 1940 census recorded Joe and Sarah as retired and as owning their residence.
Sarah's parents, Morris and Rose Dorothy (Jaffe) Brainin, were living in Manhattan as documented by the 1930 census. Neither was working. Morris died in February 1930 and Rose died in November 1934, so they did not make it through the Depression.
My maternal grandfather, Abraham Meckler, was enumerated with his parents, Morris and Minnie (Nowicki) Meckler, and four of his siblings in 1930 in Brooklyn, New York. His father was working as a carpenter. I have no stories that reported them as having financial problems during the Depression. Minnie died in August 1936; Morris was still in the same house in Brooklyn in 1940.
Abraham and Lily were married in October 1939 in The Bronx for some reason, but they were living in Brooklyn according to the 1940 census. Their occupation was retail candy store, and I even have a photo of them in the candy store they owned. (My mother was born in November 1940, so she isn't quite enumerated in the census.)
My great-great-grandparents Gershon and Dora (Yelsky) Novitsky, Minnie Meckler's parents and Abraham Meckler's grandparents, were enumerated in the 1930 census living with one of their sons in Brooklyn. Gershon was working as a Hebrew teacher. Dora died in February 1936. I know Gershon was alive in 1940, because he didn't die until 1948, but I have still not found him in the census. I'm pretty sure he was in Brooklyn, but I don't know if he was working. His son owned the building where he was living in 1930 and did well through the Depression, but Gershon was not living with him in 1940.
Sunday, April 26, 2026
Saturday Night Genealogy Fun: Who Is Your Ancestor #50?
This week's Saturday Night Genealogy Fun challenge from Randy Seaver was an interesting exercise, even if I didn't come up with much concrete information.
Here is your assignment, if you choose to play along (cue the Mission: Impossible music, please!):
1. Who is Ancestor #50 in your Ahnentafel list? What were his birth date and place, his parents, death date and place, spouse's name, and marriage date and place. How many children did he have, and which of his children do you descend from?
(Note: if you don't know your #50, then choose #25 or #12, or some other number).
2. Share your information about #50 (or other) ancestor in your own blog post, write a comment on this blog post, or put it in a Substack post, Facebook Note, or some other social media system. Please leave a comment on this post so others can find it.
Thank you to Lisa S. Gorrell for this week's SNGF challenge topic.
I don't routinely use Ahnentafel lists, so I had to look up how to figure out who #50 is on my list. I used the reverse method #1 described on the Wikipedia page about Ahnentafels. If I did it correctly, then #50 is my mother's father's father's mother's father, who is one of my 3rd-great-grandfathers. It also means that the example using the method isn't accurate, because #1 is yourself. But since Randy and other people who responded got 3rd-great-grandfather, I think I'm right.
So that means the person I should be writing about is:
mother Myra
grandfather Abraham
great-grandfather Moshe
great-great-grandmother Bela
3rd-great-grandfather UNKNOWN
I don't know Bela's maiden name or anything about her other than her given name. I have her given name from my great-grandfather's death certificate. I don't remember who the informant was for that, but it had to be one of his children, because his wife died 17 years before he did. The older children may have known their grandparents, depending on when the grandparents died, because they were born in Kamenets Litovsk, where the family emigrated from. So the name Bela might be correct. My great-grandfather had a niece named Bela, so that lends some support to the name.
Even though I don't have any documented information about my 3rd-great-grandfather, I decided to write this about him to see what I could guess based on information I do have.
My great-grandparents Moshe and Mushe (Morris and Minnie in this country) named their first son Simcha, after Moshe's father. I know that the second son, Herschel, was not named after Minnie's father, Gershon, or either of Minnie's grandfathers, Abraham or Ruven. Maybe he was named after Moshe's grandfather, Bela's father. I know that Moshe's sister Sore also named a son Herschel, so it's not an unreasonable hypothesis. Moshe and Sore's grandfather was named Zvi, however, which is the Hebrew equivalent to Herschel, so their sons could have been named for him rather than their maternal grandfather. But both men could have had the same name. So now my 3rd-great-grandfather has a given name, even if it has a question mark after it.
I don't have a birth record for my granduncle Herschel, but the birth date he used in the United States is January 14, 1905. So I can guess that my 3rd-great-grandfather had to have died before that date, because this part of my family followed the Ashkenazi Jewish minhag ("custom") of naming children after deceased ancestors.
To estimate 3rd-great-grandfather Herschel's birth year, I have to work from another hypothesized year. I wrote recently about my great-great-grandfather Simcha Dovid Mekler, for whom I have no documented birth or death dates. I estimated his birth year to be before about 1862 based on him being at least 21 when my great-grandfather Moshe was born. Simcha Dovid was married to Bela, the daughter of 3rd-great-grandfather Herschel. So if I say that Bela was two years younger than Simcha Dovid (just to pick a number), which would make her birth year before about 1864, and use the same logic that her father was at least 21 when she was born, that makes him born before about 1844.
I can estimate 3rd-great-grandfather Herschel's marriage to Bela's mother based on my estimate of Bela's birth year. Since I made that before about 1864, the marriage year can be before about 1863. As for whom Herschel married, the only other child I know of from Simcha Dovid and Bela's marriage was a daughter named Sore. So maybe Bela's mother was named Sore. I know that Simcha Dovid's mother's name was Esther, so Sore was not named after her. On the other hand, Simcha Dovid had a sister and a niece named Sore, so the name was used in the Mekler family.
Because a common pattern seen in Ashkenazi Jewish families is that names skip one or two generations, it's possible that 3rd-great-grandfather Herschel's father was named Moshe. Simcha Dovid's father was Zvi, as mentioned above, so my great-grandfather was not named after him.
Because the only location I have associated with my Mekler family is Kamenets Litovsk, Russia (now Kamyenyets, Belarus), my only guess for where 3rd-great-grandfather Herschel was born, married, and died is there.
I can put together the information from all of these hypotheses thusly:
Herschel (unknown family name), father possibly Moshe, mother unknown; born before about 1844 in Kamenets Litovsk, Russia; died before about January 14, 1905 in Kamenets Litovsk, Russia; married possibly Sore before about 1863 in Kamenets Litovsk, Russia. I know of only one child, Bela, who is my great-great-grandmother.
Thursday, April 23, 2026
I Used to Talk Like William Shakespeare
Well, maybe. Kind of.
I performed at the Renaissance Pleasure Faires (unfortunately now part of Renaissance Entertainment Corporation) in California (originally held in Calabasas and Novato, then later in Devore and Vacaville [and Gilroy after that]) for several years. (You can read more about the history here.) They were nominally set in the Elizabethan era (as in Queen Elizabeth I of England) in an English village, roughly in the 1580's. When they started, there was a strong focus on history and education. At some point that included trying to sound like Elizabethans theoretically would have sounded.
And that brings us to Basic Faire Accent (BFA). I was told it was originally inspired by the actor Robert Newton and how he spoke when he portrayed the pirate Long John Silver in the 1950 movie version of Treasure Island. Apparently he was told at some point to make the character sound distinctive, so he used the local West County accent, where he grew up in England. And it stuck. That's how everyone thinks pirates should sound.
But someone thought that's close to how regular people would have sounded in the 1500's, and BFA was built on that logic. So when you worked at the Faire, you were taught BFA in pre-Faire workshops (yes, we took workshops to educate us on what life and people would have been like in the Elizabethan period; like I said, it was started with an educational focus). A good breakdown from someone who used to work at the same faires can be found here.
As written there, the short "a" is one of the more distinctive sounds, because it is always like the "a" in "apple." You never say it the way we pronounce that letter in the word "want" nowadays. Short "e" and short "i" are pretty much how we say them now, though.
Our warm-up in the morning to get us in the right linguistic mindset was reciting the 23rd Psalm from the Bible. Here's the beginning, as best as I can write it with the pronunciation. Don't forget that all those short a's are as in apple!
Thee loord is muh-ee shep-herd, Uh-ee shall not want.
He me-keth mee to luh-ee do-oon in green pas-tyoors.
He lay-deth mee bee-suh-eed thee still wa-ters.
He re-stoor-eth muh-ee so-ool.
He lay-deth mee in the path of ruh-ee-tee-us-ness foor his nems sek.
Yay, tho-oo Uh-ee wak throo the va-lee oov thee sha-duh-oo oov dayth,
Uh-ee shall fair no ee-vil,
Foor thuh-oo art with mee.
Thuh-ee rood and thuh-ee staff thay coom-foort muh-ee.
Now, whether Shakespeare actually sounded like this, I don't know! I haven't heard anyone refute that BFA is a reasonable approximation of how people spoke in that era. But today is "National Talk Like Shakespeare Day", celebrated on the anniversary of his death, which gave me an opportunity to remember fondly my days of speaking in Basic Faire Accent.
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Saturday, April 18, 2026
Saturday Night Genealogy Fun: An Unexpected Record Find
I'm sure everyone has something that would qualify for tonight's Saturday Night Genealogy Fun challenge from Randy Seaver.
Here is your assignment, if you choose to play along (cue the Mission: Impossible! music, please!):
1. Have you found an unexpected record recently (or at any time) in your genealogy and family history research? A document, a book, an article, a letter, etc.
2. This week, please tell us about that unexpected record find and how it helped your research.
3. Share your unexpected record find and how it helped your research with us in your own blog post, by writing a comment on this blog post, or put it in a Substack post, Facebook Note, or some other social media system. Please leave a comment on this post so others can find it.
Many years ago, I was searching for my great-great-grandfather's name in Google. Many of the hits for Morris Brainin (searching in quotation marks) were on Ancestry, but one was more unusual. It was on Google Books in a printed book. I remember wondering why my immigrant great-great-grandfather's name was in a book.
The book is The Jewish Community Register of New York City, 1917–1918 (second edition), published and copyrighted by the Jewish Community of New York City in 1918. The printer was Lipshitz Press of New York City.
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I discovered that Morris Brainin was the president of the Abraham Lincoln Lodge No. 297, which met at 62 E. 6th Street on the 2nd and 4th Sundays of the month. Morris was living at 1575 Madison Avenue, an address with which I am familiar because my grandmother was born there, at her grandparents' house. The Secretary of the lodge was Henry Harrison of 367 So. Boulevard, a person and an address which I have been unable to identify yet.
The Abraham Lincoln Lodge was listed as being part of I.O.B.S., something else which I still have not identified. I have been guessing that IO stands for International Order, but I can't find an organization with the initials. B might be for Brother or Brotherhood. But what is the S?
Whatever it is or was, Morris had been president of this lodge since 1914. The short description included a birth year of 1859 in Russia and an arrival year of 1906 to the United States. I have found the passenger list for his arrival, which was in 1906, and the birth year helped narrow down the range of years I had for his birth, which had previously been 1860 to 1863. Now I lean more to him being a little older, born about 1859–1860. He may or may not have known his actual birth date, and I haven't found it yet in Russian records.
The statement that he received a "general Jewish education" is interesting, because he was enumerated in at least one U.S. federal census as being a rabbi. Apparently his education was not specifically that to become a rabbi, but he declared himself one here anyway.
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Happy Birthday, Mark!
It's my brother's birthday! And I've managed to put together a short (random) timeline of photos from over the years.
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| July 1963 |
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| Circa 1964-1965 (with me) |
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| 1967 (with me) |
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| 1971 |
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| 1990's |
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| 2001 (with our father and sister) |
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| Early 2000's (with our stepnephew) |
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| Circa 2010's |
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| Circa 2010's (with our father) |
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| 2016 |
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| 2018 (with his son, wife, daughter, and me) |
Saturday Night Genealogy Fun: An Ancestor without Exact Birth and Death Dates and Places
I'm posting a little late for this past Saturday Night Genealogy Fun from Randy Seaver, but since this topic is practically perfect for Jewish research, I had to weigh in.
Here is your assignment, if you choose to play along (cue the Mission: Impossible! music, please!):
1. Do you have an ancestor with no defined birth and death dates or places?
2. This week, please tell us about that ancestor and what clues you used to estimate birth and death dates and places.
3. Share your ancestor and his estimated birth and death dates and places with us in your own blog post, by writing a comment on this blog post, or putting it in a Substack post, Facebook Note, or some other social media system. Please leave a comment on this post so others can find it.
And here I go.
1. Do I? Hoo, boy! I have at least a dozen just on my Meckler line! But every single one of my Jewish lines has ancestors like that.
2. The ancestor I decided to write about is my great-great-grandfather Simcha Dovid Mekler (before about 1862–before about November 16, 1903). I have his name from the yizkor book about Kamenets Litovsk, former Russian Empire (now Kamyenyets, Belarus). He was the father of my great-grandfather Moshe Mekler, who went by Morris and Max here in the United States and eventually spelled his last name as Mackler.
I have no original documents about Simcha Dovid Mekler from Europe. I have his parents' names, Zvi Mekler and Esther, from the yizkor book and from a cousin who was born in Kamenets Litovsk.
I estimated Simcha Dovid's death date based on the birth date that my granduncle chose after he immigrated to the United States. Simcha Mekler was my grandfather's oldest brother. He used the name Sam in this country, and Mekler became Meeckler at some point. He was named after his grandfather Simcha, and because my Ashkenazi Jewish family members followed the minhag ("custom") of naming their their children after deceased ancestors, that means Simcha Dovid had to have died before my granduncle was born. But because he didn't know his exact date of birth and I have no documents for it, it's a rough estimate. The birth date he used for his Social Security application was November 16, 1903, and it's all I have to work with.
I based my very rough estimate of a birth year for Simcha Dovid on the ages for my great-grandfather Morris in the records I have found for him, including his incoming passenger list and several censuses. He apparently was born roughly around 1882. I have no documents with an actual birth date, so it's another estimate (he didn't apply for Social Security, as far as I can tell). I don't know if Morris had any older siblings, but I figure his father was probably at least 21 years old when he was born, so I backdated it to before 1862.
As for where Simcha Dovid might have been born or died, we have another guessing game. In his will, Morris Mackler left a bequest for a new tombstone for his father's grave in the cemetery in Kamenets Litovsk. Morris Mackler was said to have been born in Kamenets Litovsk himself. So my guess is that Simcha Dovid died in Kamenets Litovsk. Because I have no other location associated with him or Mekler family members, my guess is that he was also born there.
Maybe someday I will find documents relating to Kamenets Litovsk about my family members, but I'm not holding my breath. The Nazis were extremely thorough in destroying almost all archival material about Jews in Grodno gubernia, so there's hardly anything left. I do want to investigate what is there, just in case there's something about my family, but I need to save a bunch of money to have the research done. So this is as far as I can get for now.
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Remembering My Family Members on Yom HaShoah
Yom HaShoah, the annual day of remembrance commemorating the deaths of the approximately 6 million Jewish victims of the Holocaust during World War II, falls on 27 Nisan of the Jewish calendar, which measures days from sunset to sunset. This year it began last night, April 13, at sunset, and ended today, April 14, at sunset.
The following are my known family members I believe died in the Holocaust. They all are from the Mekler/Nowicki branch of my family and lived in what was fornerly called Grodno gubernia in the Russian Empire (mostly now in Belarus). I repeat their names every year to ensure that they are not forgotten. May their memory be a blessing.
Beile Dubiner
Eliezer Dubiner
Herschel Dubiner
Moishe Dubiner
Sore (Mekler) Dubiner
Aidel Goldsztern
Golda Goldsztern
Josef Goldsztern
Pearl (Gorfinkel) Goldsztern
Tzvi Goldsztern
Esther Golubchik
Fagel Golubchik
Lazar Golubchik
Peshe (Mekler) Golubchik
Pinchus Golubchik
Yechail Golubchik
Mirka (Nowicki) Krimelewicz
— Krimelewicz
Beile Szocherman
Chanania Szocherman
Mobsza Eli Szocherman
Perel Szocherman
Raizl (Perlmutter) Szocherman
Zlate Szocherman
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| Beile Dubiner was my 1st cousin 2x removed. She was likely named after her grandmother (my great-great-grandmother) Beile. |
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Saturday, April 4, 2026
Saturday Night Genealogy Fun: What Was a "Turning Point" in Your Parents' Life?
I'm still trying to catch up from missing last week's Saturday Night Genealogy Fun, but I'm happy to participate in this week's challenge from Randy Seaver!
Here is your assignment, if you choose to play along (cue the Mission: Impossible music, please!):
1. Family stories are often about "turning points" and "major decisions."
2. This week, please describe a "turning point" in the life of one of your parents (or for both of them, or for grandparents). Describe the decision and discuss the outcome of it.
3. Share the turning point with all of us by writing your own blog post, writing a comment on this blog post, or putting it in a Substack post, Facebook Note, or some other social media system. Please leave a comment on this post so others can find it.
From my perspective, probably the most important turning points in my parents' life was when my mother decided to go to a party with her best friend. They were living in Miami at the time. Their car broke down on the way to the party, and my mother was fretting about what they could do. Her friend said, "Don't worry, my uncle is a mechanic. I'll call him and he'll come fix it." And that uncle became my father, because my mother's best friend was my first cousin.
I don't know when exactly this happened or the specifics of how things developed from there, but I do know that my parents were married October 21, 1961 and shortly thereafter left Florida and drove across the country to Los Angeles. I'm pretty sure the first place they went was my godmother-to-be's home in Whittier. Ruthie was my maternal grandmother's best friend. My mother told Ruthie that she was pregnant (with me!) before she told my grandmother.
So if my mother hadn't decided to go to that party, I might not be here. I guess my brother and sister wouldn't be either. And maybe my father would have become a famous musician!
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Monday, March 23, 2026
99 Things Genealogy Meme
I found this meme accidentally because Banai Lynn Feldstein, the Ginger Genealogist, had her blog hacked and some of her older posts, including the 99 Things Genealogy Meme, were sent out as new items. I discovered that Saturday Night Genealogy Fun, which I use as weekly inspiration for posts, covered this topic, but in 2009, two years before I started blogging. So I'm going to do it now.
Because my Jewish ancestry is a huge focus of my research, I'm using Banai's Jewish-focused version of the meme, although I do not agree with her logic on removing American Revolution, Civil War, and DAR as topics. For several of the items, I changed "ancestor" to "relative" because not only did I not think it was realistic for all of those items to be for ancestors, my collateral relatives are also important in my research. And I did a few edits just because I'm an editor and found things, and I couldn't help myself.
The list should be annotated in the following manner:
Things you have already done or found: bold type.
Things you would like to do or find: Italicize (color optional).
Things you haven’t done or found and don’t care to: plain type.
- Belonged to a genealogical society.
- Researched records on site at a court house.
- Transcribed records.
- Uploaded tombstone photographs to Find-A-Grave.
- Documented ancestors for four generations (self, parents, grandparents, great-grandparents).
- Joined Facebook.
- Helped clean up a run-down cemetery.
- Joined the GeneaBloggers Group on Facebook.
- Attended a genealogy conference.
- Lectured at a genealogy conference.
- Attended SIG/BOF meetings at a genealogy conference.
- Spoke on a genealogy topic at a local genealogy society.
- Been the editor of a genealogy society newsletter or journal.
- Contributed to a genealogy society publication.
- Served on the board or as an officer of a genealogy society.
- Got lost on the way to a cemetery. Because my father refused to ask for directions first.
- Talked to dead relatives.
- Researched outside the state in which I live.
- Knocked on the door of an ancestral home and visited with the current occupants.
- Cold-called a distant relative.
- Posted messages on a surname message board.
- Uploaded a GEDCOM file to the Internet.
- Googled my name.
- Performed a random act of genealogical kindness.
- Researched an unrelated family, just for the fun of it.
- Have been paid to do genealogical research.
- Earned a living (majority of income) from genealogical research.
- Wrote a letter (or e-mail message) to a previously unknown relative.
- Responded to messages on a message board or forum.
- Was injured while on a genealogy excursion.
- Participated in a genealogy meme.
- Created family history gift items (calendars, cookbooks, etc.).
- Performed a record look-up for someone else.
- Went on a genealogy seminar cruise.
- Was convinced that a relative must have arrived here from outer space.
- Found a disturbing family secret.
- Told others about a disturbing family secret.
- Combined genealogy with crafts (family picture quilt, scrapbooking).
- Think genealogy is a passion, not a hobby.
- Assisted finding next of kin for a deceased person (Unclaimed Persons).
- Taught someone else how to find their roots.
- Lost valuable genealogy data due to a computer crash or hard drive failure. More than once, in fact.
- Been overwhelmed by available genealogy technology.
- Know a cousin of the 4th degree or higher.
- Disproved a family myth through research.
- Got a family member to let you copy photos.
- Used a digital camera to “copy” photos or records.
- Translated a record from a foreign language.
- Found an immigrant ancestor’s passenger arrival record.
- Looked at census records on microfilm, not on the computer.
- Used microfiche.
- Visited the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.
- Visited more than one LDS FamilySearch Center.
- Visited a church or place of worship of one of your ancestors.
- Taught a class in genealogy.
- Traced ancestors back to the 18th century. [From Banai: Removed 17th and 16th centuries for the Jewish version. Ashkenazi Jews are not likely to go beyond the 18th. There just aren’t records for us.]
- Can name all of your great-great-grandparents.
- Found an ancestor’s Social Security application.
- Know how to determine a Soundex code without the help of a computer.
- Used Steve Morse’s One-Step searches.
- Own a copy of Where Once We Walked.
- Helped someone find an ancestor using records you had never used for your own research.
- Visited the main National Archives building in Washington, DC.
- Visited the Library of Congress.
- Found at least two relatives who came over on the same ship on different journeys.
- Have a relative who fought in World War I.
- Have a relative who fought in World War II.
- Took a photograph of an ancestor’s tombstone.
- Became a member of the Association of Graveyard Rabbits.
- Can read a metrical record in Polish, Russian, and/or German.
- Have an ancestor who changed his name.
- Joined a RootsWeb mailing list.
- Created a family Web site.
- Have more than one genealogy blog.
- Was overwhelmed by the amount of family information received from someone.
- Have broken through at least one brick wall. Well, I don't have any real brick walls, where I have exhausted every possible record and still haven't found an answer, but I did answer a longstanding research question.
- Borrowed a microfilm from the Family History Library through a local Family History Center.
- Have done indexing for FamilySearch Indexing or another genealogy project.
- Visited the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center in Fort Wayne, Indiana.
- Had an amazing serendipitous find of the “Psychic Roots” variety.
- Have used Border Crossing records to locate a relative.
- Used maps in my genealogy research.
- Have a convict ancestor who was transported from the UK.
- Found a bigamist among my ancestors. No, but I have found bigamists doing research for others.
- Ordered records from the Polish State Archives, Ukraine, or German archives. How about Swedish archives?
- Visited an ancestral village in Eastern Europe and did genealogy research.
- Found a cousin in a foreign country (besides Canada).
- Consistently cite my sources. I do this for my clients.
- Visited a foreign country (i.e., one I don’t live in) in search of relatives.
- Can locate any document in my research files within a few minutes. I used to be able to do this before I moved to Oregon. I still don't have everything organized well since the move. That'll teach me to tear a rotator cuff while moving boxes around.
- Have an ancestor who was married four times (or more). No, but I have found a cousin who did so.
- Made a rubbing of an ancestor's gravestone.
- Organized a family reunion.
- Published a family history book (on one of my families).
- Learned of the death of a fairly close relative through research.
- Have done the genealogy happy dance.
- Sustained an injury doing the genealogy happy dance.
- Offended a family member with my research.
- Reunited someone with precious family photos or artifacts.
So I have done 84 of the 99 items. There are eight I would like to do (a couple of which I could probably justify as putting in bold already) and seven I have no interest in. Seriously, who wants to get injured on a genealogy trip or doing the genealogy happy dance? Why are those even on the list?
Image from Wikimedia Commons and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Saturday Night Genealogy Fun: Celebrate and Participate In National Memory Day
I sent this suggestion for a Saturday Night Genealogy Fun topic to Randy Seaver a while ago to use this year. I thought it was perfect timing that National Memory Day should fall on a Saturday.
Come on, everybody, join in and accept the mission and execute it with precision.
1. March 21 is National Memory Day. How can we celebrate, and participate, in the day? I asked AI tool ChatGPT how, and it suggested "Capture a Memory before It[']s Gone"; "Rescue and Identify Old Photos"; "Record a[n] Oral History"; "Organize One Small Thing"; "Share a Story with Family"; "Visit or Virtually Honor Ancestors."
2. For SNGF this week, do one or more of those tasks or some other related task of your choosing.
3. Share your selected National Memory Day activity in your own blog post or in a Facebook, SubStack, BlueSky, or other social media post. Leave a link to your post on this blog post to help us find your post.
[Thank you to geneablogger Janice Sellers for telling me about National Memory Day and suggesting this topic.]
The emphasis on National Memory Day is your brain and keeping your memory functions in good shape. One of the many wonderful things about doing family history research is that it should help increase your own memory capabilities, because family history is really puzzle solving — figuring out which pieces belong to which puzzle, assembling them and helping make sense of them, determining where you can find additional documentation to add more pieces. I have often read that studies indicate puzzle solving is one way to keep your brain and your memory working well.
In genealogy, the aspect of memory we tend to focus on is remembering people and the past, which seems a natural corollary. I celebrated National Memory Day by teaching an introductory class in Black American genealogy and encouraging the attendees to share their research with family members, genealogical and historical societies, archives, libraries, and as many other people and institutions as possible to ensure that the memories of our families are not lost after we, the researchers, are gone. When we share our information, we increase the probably that others will remember our family members, and all of the work we have done will not be in vain. I guess that comes under Randy's suggestion to "Visit or Virtually Honor Ancestors."
I looked up National Memory Day and found one page that indicated it was first celebrated in 2017 and that it was started to honor memories. I like to think the people who created it would find the connection to family history appropriate.
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Perinchief Chapels of Mount Holly, New Jersey
It was in 2005 that I visited my sister in New Jersey and put 700 miles on her car in five days. I did that by driving in every borough of New York City and the two additional counties on Long Island while I met about 25 cousins on my mother's side of the family. I also drove around Mount Holly, New Jersey researching my father's family. In addition to finding the house where his mother (my grandmother) was born, I visited the Brotherhood Cemetery three different times looking for the grave of my great-grandfather Cornelius Elmer Sellers.
You see, I had been talking with my grandaunt Betty, my grandfather's youngest sister, who at that time was the only surviving sibling. I told her I was planning a trip to New Jersey and New York, and she asked if I could find out whether her father had a tombstone over his grave. If he didn't, she wanted to purchase one and have it placed. I adored Aunt Betty, so of course I told her I would try.
I knew which cemetery Elmer was buried in because I had his death certificate. I had also spoken with the cemetery sexton, a Mr. Szelc, who had confirmed the burial and had found records indicating that a few young children were buried in the same plot. I knew from my research that my great-grandparents had several children who did not live to adulthood, and I wasn't surprised that they were buried together.
The first time I visited the cemetery I walked up and down every row and path I could identify, looking for Elmer. I thought I had done a pretty thorough job, but I was not successful. I knew from my previous conversations with Mr. Szelc that he wasn't available during the day, so it wasn't going to do me any good to call him and ask where Elmer might be.
The only other option I could think of was calling Perinchief Chapels. That was the funeral home that had handled Elmer's burial in 1918, and it was still in operation. In fact, I learned that it was (at that time) the second-oldest family-owned funeral home in New Jersey. (They might be the oldest one now.) I was thinking that maybe they had a map of the cemetery, because they did burials there, and just maybe they could find Elmer on the map.
So I called and explained my request. Well, no, they didn't have a map. But the David Perinchief who answered the phone said that he would come out to the cemetery and help me look! What a wonderful thing to do! And a short time later, he arrived with his son, Patrick. And the three of us tromped up and down the paths in the cemetery, again thinking we were doing a thorough job of looking at every tombstone, and yet we still didn't find Elmer. I thanked them both very much, and they returned to work.
I decided to write about this today because it's National Funeral Director and Mortician Recognition Day, and I want to recognize the Perinchiefs for taking time out of their work day to help me look for my great-grandfather, even if we weren't successful. I'm not sure that every funeral home owner would have done the same.
Now, because we hadn't found Elmer, I called Mr. Szelc that evening and told him about my adventures during the day. He told me he knew exactly where Elmer was. He would put an orange flag next to Elmer's stone the next morning, and I should go back to the cemetery and look for it.
I did exactly that. I walked up and down those same paths and missed the flag the first time I passed it because it was very small. But I eventually saw it and discovered why the Perinchiefs and I had not found Elmer's tombstone the previous day. Not only was it small, it was made of marble, which had heavily eroded during the ensuing 87 years. It was very worn, and even with Mr. Szelc's flag to point me to it, I still had trouble reading Elmer's name on it. But I found him!
When I returned home, I told Aunt Betty about my search and that her father did indeed have a stone. Because it was so worn, she wanted to order a new one. And then came a strange wrinkle to the story: Mr. Szelc's primary occupation was making tombstones. But when I called him to order a new stone for Elmer, he didn't call me back. I tried several times and never received a response from him again. So Elmer still doesn't have a new stone, and I'm sure the current one has eroded even more over the past 20 years.
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Saturday Night Genealogy Fun: Describe an Ancestor/Relative's Activities
Randy Seaver is leading us down the AI path again for this week's Saturday Night Genealogy Fun. I decided to play along.
Come on, everybody, join in and accept the mission and execute it with precision.
1. Do you know what activities one of your ancestors/relatives engaged in? How much detail do you know about those activities?
2. Use the FREE artificial intelligence tool Google Gemini 3 to describe what your ancestor or relative experienced in his/her activities (e.g., military service, a ship he migrated on, an occupation, an office she held, etc.).
3. Share your ancestor/relative's activity of interest and description of that person's experiences in your own blog post or in a Facebook, SubStack, BlueSky, or other social media post. Leave a link to your post on this blog post to help us find your post.
This turned out to be more interesting than I expected.
I had not used Gemini 3 prior to this, so I really did not know what to expect. I used Randy's question about his uncle as inspiration and chose to ask about my father's service in the National Guard. After my father died in 2019, I learned he had been in the New Jersey and the Florida National Guard. He served in Florida from August 31, 1953 to August 30, 1956 and then from August 31, 1956 to June 5, 1957. The reason for his discharge as an SP-3 in 1957 was that he was "Moving from state."
Putting these dates together with what else was going on in his life around that time was enlightening. He married his first wife, Mary Lou Bowen, on December 11, 1956 in Miami. My half-sister Laurie was born in New Jersey on September 17, 1957. So he married Mary Lou while he was in the Guard, was discharged from the Guard, and they moved back to New Jersey (where both of them were from originally) before Laurie was born.
My father told us almost nothing about his National Guard service. I opted to focus on his last year of service to keep the question more manageable. So I went to the page from the link in Randy's post. I noticed below the data entry area there were "Tools" on the left and "Fast" on the right, but I did not investigate or attempt to change them. I typed my query in the text box:
"What did an SP-3 do in the Florida National Guard in 1956–1957?"
I got a couple of paragraphs I could see and then the text faded out. All I could read was:
===
In
1956 and 1957, an SP-3 (Specialist 3rd Class) in the Florida National Guard was a technical expert who held the pay grade of E-4.
This rank was part of a newly established "Specialist" system created in July 1955 to distinguish skilled technicians from Non-Commissioned Officers (NCOs) who held command and leadership authority.
===
I couldn't make the page scroll, so I wondered if I had done something wrong or somehow annoyed the gods of AI. I thought, "Maybe that's because I left it on Fast, so it's really short?" So I opened Gemini 3 in another tab and clicked the arrow next to Fast. I found "Thinking" as an option and chose that, then typed my query again. This time I got:
===
SP-3 Role in Florida National Guard
You said
What did an SP-3 do in the Florida National Guard in 1956-1957?
Defining the Role
My initial focus is on defining the role of an "SP-3" within the Florida National Guard during 1956-1957. I'm starting by clarifying the rank and its responsibilities, aiming to provide a concise explanation of what this role entailed. I believe that understanding the SP-3 rank will allow the user to easily understand and answer their initial question.
===
and again I couldn't scroll down the page. While I was trying to figure out what I was supposed to do, at some point I tried my down arrow, and that worked! Suddenly I could see more text. When I went back to my first query, it worked there also. No surprise, "Thinking" has more information and more detail than "Fast", so I'm using that response for this post.
===
SP-3
Role in Florida National Guard
You said
What did an SP-3 do in the Florida National Guard in 1956-1957?Defining the Role
My initial focus is on defining the role of an "SP-3" within the Florida National Guard during 1956-1957. I'm starting by clarifying the rank and its responsibilities, aiming to provide a concise explanation of what this role entailed. I believe that understanding the SP-3 rank will allow the user to easily understand and answer their initial question.
Clarifying the Pay Grade
I'm now zeroing in on the correct pay grade for an SP-3 in the 1956-1957 timeframe, which involved an adjustment. My previous assumption was incorrect, and I've verified that an SP-3 in 1955 was equivalent to an E-4, which is equivalent to a Corporal (not a Private First Class). It is critical to get the rank structure right. I am now working on understanding this rank's responsibilities.
Pinpointing the Grade
I've confirmed that the SP-3 rank was indeed equivalent to an E-4 pay grade, which is the same as a Corporal in the 1956-1957 timeframe. I needed to clarify this based on some conflicting sources, but I've now verified it. I also determined that Specialists were technical experts who did not command, but were compensated for their skills. I am working on the Florida National Guard context.
To understand what an SP-3 (Specialist 3rd Class) did in the Florida National Guard in 1956–1957, you have to look at a very specific, short-lived window in U.S. Army history.
In 1955, the Army overhauled its rank system to distinguish between Non-Commissioned Officers (NCOs), who led troops, and Specialists, who were technical experts.
The Rank: Specialist 3rd Class (SP-3)
In 1956 and 1957, the SP-3 rank was equivalent to a Corporal (E-4) in terms of pay, but not in terms of authority.
The "Technical" Soldier: While a Corporal was a junior NCO expected to lead a fireteam or squad in combat, an SP-3 was a "technical" soldier. They were paid for their proficiency in a specific trade rather than their leadership of men.
The Insignia: They wore a smaller version of the eagle (the "Bird") with one arc (stripe) underneath it. This is different from the modern "Spec-4" rank you might be familiar with, as the system was still being tweaked.
What did they actually do?
An SP-3 in the Florida National Guard during this era was likely the "go-to" person for a specific technical job within their unit. Since the National Guard at the time was heavily focused on Cold War readiness and local disaster response, their roles usually fell into these categories:
Maintenance & Mechanical: They were the mechanics keeping the Jeep fleets, M41 Walker Bulldog tanks (common in FLNG at the time), and transport trucks running.
Communications: Radio operators and repairmen. In the mid-50s, this meant dealing with vacuum tubes and heavy, temperamental field radios.
Clerical & Supply: Managing the massive amount of paperwork required for armory operations, payroll, and equipment requisition.
Medical: Serving as a company medic or technician at a field hospital.
The Florida Context (1956–1957)
Life for an SP-3 in the Florida Guard involved more than just "weekend warrior" duties.
Annual Training at Camp Blanding: During the summer, they would head to Camp Blanding (near Starke, FL) for two weeks of intensive field maneuvers. As an SP-3, they would have been responsible for the technical upkeep of equipment in the Florida heat.
The Pentomic Era: The Army was experimenting with "Pentomic" divisions—units designed to survive a tactical nuclear battlefield. An SP-3 would have been trained in new, specialized equipment designed for this high-tech (for the time) warfare.
Civil Rights & Natural Disasters: This era saw the beginning of the Civil Rights movement and frequent hurricanes. The Florida Guard was often on standby for "state active duty" to maintain order or provide relief after storms.
Summary Table: SP-3 (1955–1958)
|
Feature |
Description |
|
Pay Grade |
E-4 (Equivalent to Corporal) |
|
Primary Focus |
Technical/Administrative Skill |
|
Command Authority |
Limited (did not usually lead squads) |
|
Common Jobs |
Mechanic, Radio Op, Clerk, Medic, Gunner |
In 1958, the Army changed the titles again, and the SP-3 rank was renamed Specialist 4 (SP4), which became the iconic "Spec-4" rank used for decades.
Would you like me to see if I can find which specific Florida National Guard units were active in your area during those years?
[My response] Yes, Miami
Since you were an SP-3 (Specialist 3rd Class) stationed in Miami during 1956–1957, you were almost certainly part of the 211th Infantry Regiment, which was a cornerstone of the 51st Infantry Division (known as the "Rattlesnake Division").
At that time, the 51st was a "split" division shared between the Florida and South Carolina National Guards. Miami served as the major hub for the Florida contingent.
Your Unit: The 211th Infantry Regiment
In 1956, the 211th was headquartered right in the heart of Miami. As an SP-3, you were likely assigned to one of the following Miami-based elements:
Regimental Headquarters & Headquarters Company (HHC): Located in Miami.
Service Company: Also based in Miami, responsible for the regiment's logistics, trucks, and maintenance.
1st Battalion, HHC: The command element for the first group of companies, based in Miami.
Medical Company: Provided healthcare and field medics, also stationed in Miami.
Your Post: The Miami Armory
Your "home base" for drills and administrative work was likely the Miami National Guard Armory, located at 700 NW 28th Street.
Fun Fact: This facility is now known as the Robert A. Ballard Armory, named after the Colonel who commanded the 211th Infantry during your era and through the late 1940s.
During the mid-1950s, this armory was a massive social and military hub, hosting everything from troop reviews to community dances and sporting events.
Your Role as an SP-3
The "Specialist" rank structure was relatively new when you were serving (it was established in 1955). An SP-3 was the equivalent of a Corporal (E-4) but focused on technical skills rather than squad leadership. Depending on your specific job (MOS), your day-to-day likely involved:
Maintenance: Working on the regiment's Jeeps, M35 "Deuce and a Half" trucks, or communication gear.
Logistics: Managing the supply chain for a regiment of over 1,500 men.
Administration: Handling personnel records or payroll at the Regimental HQ.
Annual Training
In the summers of '56 and '57, you probably headed north for "Summer Camp." The 51st Infantry Division typically conducted its two-week annual training at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, or Camp Blanding, Florida.
Would you like me to look up any specific details about the 51st "Rattlesnake" Division’s operations during those years, or perhaps find more information on the Miami Armory's history?
[My response] Yes
If you were an SP-3 (Specialist 3rd Class) in the Florida National Guard in Miami during 1956–1957, you were part of a very specific era of military history. Your unit was almost certainly the 211th Infantry Regiment, which was headquartered right in the heart of the city.
Here is a breakdown of what your life and service looked like during those two years:
1. Your Unit: The "Rattlesnake Division"
The 211th Infantry was a key part of the 51st Infantry Division. Because you were in Miami, you were likely based at the Miami Armory (now the Robert A. Ballard Armory) on NW 28th Street.
The Motto: You wore the "Paroneri" crest on your uniform, which is Greek for "Equal to the Task."
The Atmosphere: In the mid-50s, the Miami Armory wasn't just a military site; it was a community hub. You might remember the local buzz of the city, potentially even seeing the start of the "Great Migration" and the rapid post-war growth of Miami.
2. The Rank: A "New" Kind of Soldier
You were actually a pioneer of the Specialist rank system. The Army only created the Specialist 3rd Class rank in 1955, just before you joined or promoted into it.
SP-3 vs. Corporal: You had the pay grade of an E-4 (like a Corporal), but your job was about technical expertise rather than leading a squad.
The "Bird": You wore the smaller "Specialist Eagle" with one arc underneath. In 1958, the Army changed your title to Spec-4, meaning the "SP-3" title you held only existed for a few years.
3. Summer Camp: Fort McClellan
For your two-week Annual Training ("Summer Camp"), you likely traded the Miami humidity for the hills of Alabama.
1956: Training records show the 211th spent time at Fort McClellan, AL, and Fort Stewart, GA.
1957: Specifically, from June 6 to June 23, 1957, the regiment was at Fort McClellan.
The Training: This was the "Pentomic" era. The Army was obsessed with how to fight on a nuclear battlefield. You probably spent time in "Atomic War" drills, practicing how to disperse quickly to avoid being a target for a (simulated) tactical nuke.
4. Local Duty: Hurricanes and Civil Defense
As a Florida Guardsman, your "State Active Duty" was usually tied to the weather.
1956: In October, a "quasi-tropical storm" hit Miami, causing significant flooding and about $3 million in damage. Your unit would have been on standby for sandbagging, traffic control, and patrolling flooded neighborhoods.
Civil Defense: During your drills, you likely participated in "Operation Alert" exercises—city-wide drills to prepare for a Cold War emergency.
5. The Gear
In 1956–1957, you were in a "transitional" equipment phase:
You were likely still carrying the M1 Garand (the M14 didn't arrive until later).
Your transportation was the M38 Jeep or the legendary "Deuce and a Half" trucks.
If you were in a Heavy Mortar or Tank company (like those in Tampa/Palmetto that supported the 211th), you were working with Korean War-era steel.
Do you remember which specific company you were in (like Company A, B, or Service Company)? I can look up exactly which neighborhood armory that company called home.
===
And I currently can't find the papers I was sent about my father's service, so I can't tell Gemini which company he was in. As far as the specialties go, he was almost definitely a mechanic, because that's what he did the majority of his working life. He probably worked on Jeeps, rather than the tanks. I'm going to look for the papers and see what else I can learn.
I found the disclaimer on the bottom of the page amusing: "Gemini is AI and can make mistakes." One way that appears to have played out for this query is that when I did the "Fast" method, Gemini told me that the Florida National Guard did its two weeks of annual training at Fort Stewart, Georgia. The "Thinking" response was that the annual training took place in either Camp Blanding, Florida or Fort Jackson, South Carolina, but later it said Fort McClellan, Alabama and Fort Stewart, Georgia. There are some other differences between the two responses, but I noticed that immediately. Something's out of whack here.






































