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Monday, May 17, 2010
Grandma Elda Through the Years
Pleasant Grove
Tonight three pictures highlighting the funniest woman I've ever known, my Grandmother Elda. She was stubborn, pig headed, at times rude, opinionated, and when you got her laughing she would never stop. It was common for her to laugh to the point of having an accident and rushing to the bathroom in mid story. We loved her visits and dreaded her departure. She was truly lovely and held on to life with both hands tightly.
She didn't go easily into that good night when her time came. She fought death with everything she had and took no prisoners, just ask anyone who spent time at her bedside at the hospital in Bismarck. In the end she lost her battle - as shall we all, but what a fight she fought.
She loved life, yes every minute of it. I tried to think of something fitting to be written on her tombstone, but in the end stopped out of frustration. How could you encapsulate the life of Elda Vercellino into a sentence? One thing I was certain, the phrase "Rest in Peace" didn't belong either. She was not the kind to rest. If heaven allows a bit of mischief and mayhem then you'll find my Grandma Elda at its center.
At her death Earth unleashed a spirit untamed. Give it to 'em Grandma.....
Simply,
Victor
Sunday, May 16, 2010
A Tribute to our Family's Lutheran Heritage
Luther Attempted to Reform Catholic Doctrine and Practices and in theend, started a faith of his own.
From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove
Hello All,
Before turning in for the night I thought I'd post a musical tribute to the faith of our Lutheran ancestors. Our family's religious history is rich in Lutheran traditions through the Mattson Swedish lines to the Williamson Phlegar and Goodykuntz German lines.
In keeping true to their worship I found an old Lutheran hymn they would all have known. It had to be a popular hymn sung during Sunday services.
I think I found just the hymn (not being Lutheran so this is a best guess). The hymn is called "Wer nur den lieben Gott lässt walten" and is sung here in German.
Simply,
Victor
New Information on Great Great Uncle Archer Glen Williamson
From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove
Hello Williamsons,
In yesterday's post I mentioned wanting to learn more about Great Grandfather William Jonathan Williamson's brothers and sisters. Today I can report a bit of luck. I found our 1st cousins twice removed from Great Great Uncle Archer Glen Williamson. He and his wife Mamie had ten children. I found additonal information on the children of cousin Vera. It is all located in the chart above (click on the chart to enlarge). The chart is missing one of the children. According to Ancestry.Com there is still one living child of Archer and Mamie. Because this person is living their information is not given.

Again, if anyone has information on any of the other brothers and sisters please let me know, and if any of you live near or in Douglas Wyoming, you may want to contact the Reeves family and let them know of your kinship.
ALSO,
We are approaching graduation season. I'd like to know if anyone in our distant family is graduating from high school or college this year. If so, please share the news with all of us. If you can a photo would be very much appreciated along with a paragraph or two about this cousin. Let's celebrate educational achievements in our family.
Yes, spoken by a teacher and Pat will back me up on this I'm sure, being a former educator herself!
Simply,
Victor
Saturday, May 15, 2010
A Search for Our Great Uncles and Aunts (Williamson Line)
Pleasant Grove
Hello All,
Back from a long two days at Space Camp. We hosted a group of students from Teton Middle School in Wyoming. Good camp all in all and very glad to be home.
I'm curious about our Williamson Great Uncles and Aunts and would like to learn more about them. Does anyone attending these digital online reunions know anything about the brothers and sisters of William Jonathan?
This is what I know. I start with the very basics, The Relationship Chart traceing to me (this allows everyone to see where they link in through your own line). Remember, click on the chart to enlarge.
George and Margaret had a large family. Imagine how many descendants there are today! This spikes my curiosity. I'd like to know if some of the Williamson's I bump into from time to time are related. For instance, we have a bus driver in our school district named Williamson. Are we distant cousins? The only way to find out is to attempt to find the family lines for each of the ones that had children.
All searches must start with information. My dad (Charles) says he knew of a line of Williamsons that lived in Sturgis who descended from one of these Great Great Uncles and Aunts. He tells me that colon cancer ran through that line of the family.
A few other things I found in my limited time tonight. This information below comes from a cemetery in Dorris California. There are four burials under the name Williamson:
It appears that four of our Great Great Uncles and Aunts are buried in the same location nearDorris California. A picture of the Cemetery is below (click to enlarge),
Why did four of them end up living in the same place at the end? I'm assuming there must be relatives living there now.
I also found this bit of information from the 1900 US Census. (Click to Enlarge)
In it we see George and Margaret Williamson and their dependants living with them at the time. Above their names you'll see an entry for George B. Williamson, a Great Great Uncle and son of George and Margaret. His wife's name is listed as Kate. There are a few children listed as well so at least one of the older children (George) set up a household near his parents.Any Help? Any Information?
Simply,
Victor
Friday, May 14, 2010
Sir Francis Willoughby and Elizabeth Littleton. Our 12th Great Grandparents. (Mattson Line)
12th Great Grandparents.
Sir Francis Willoughby and Elizabeth Littleton
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Henry Hastings and Dorothy Willoughby
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John Hastings
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John Seaborn Hastings
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Joseph Hastings
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Matthew Hastings
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Hannah Hastings
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Nathanial Evans Jr.
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John K. McCrillis
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Joseph E McCrillis
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John Mayberry Dennis
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Walter Edward Pierce
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Violet Mae Pierce
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Luella, John, Linda, Marvin
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From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove
Hello All,
If its Friday, I'm about to venture into the darkness for another Overnight Space Camp. Before I leave for the school I thought I'd post something on our 12th Great Grandparents on the Mattson Line from the Tudor Era in England. Their beautiful home, Wollaton Hall, still stands today. It is one of those places on our "Must See" list when we all make the family trek to England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland to visit our family's historical sights.
And now a short biography of Sir Francis and Elizabeth
Francis was the second son of Sir Henry Willoughby and his wife Anne, née Grey, and was probably born at Woodlands in Dorset.
His father inherited the Wollaton and Middleton estates on the death of Sir John Willoughby in January 1548/9, but died in August the same year while fighting in Kett's Rebellion. Francis's mother had died the previous year, and Francis spent the early part of his childhood being looked after in Essex by his guardian and uncle, George Medley. His other uncle the Duke of Suffolk, guardian of Francis's elder brother Thomas, was executed in 1554 following the failed plot to place Lady Jane Grey on the throne, and Medley was incarcerated in the Tower of London for a short time, bringing more confusion to Francis's life.
Francis was educated in London, Saffron Walden, and Jesus College, Cambridge. In 1559 Thomas died and Francis unexpectedly became heir to the Wollaton estate (which he came into full possession of in 1564), comprising the two principal manor houses of Wollaton and Middleton and extensive land and coal mines in a number of counties. He also maintained town houses in Nottingham, Coventry and elsewhere, and lived the life of a wealthy country gentleman. He was knighted in 1575.
Sir Francis's marriage with Elizabeth Littleton was stormy, and not helped by a large number of servents who, according to Cassandra Willoughby in her history of the family, interfered in the couple's affairs. Their problems were made public by Francis's sister Margaret, Lady Arundell, who had always disapproved of the match. After some violent clashes in 1578 and 1579, the couple separated, before reconciling in 1588.
In 1580, work began on a project by Sir Francis to build a sumptous modern residence, in which he hoped Queen Elizabeth would stay. Robert Smythson (d 1614) was the architect and general overseer. Work on the new Wollaton Hall was completed in 1588, although Sir Francis did not move into the mansion. Revenues from Sir Francis's coal pits declined in the late 16th century, and the vast expense of the new Hall led to financial difficulties for Sir Francis, who borrowed large sums from various lenders.
Sir Francis was interested in agricultural and industrial innovation. He engaged in woad-planting schemes at Wollaton and in Ireland in the 1580s, and in the 1590s invested in ironworks at Middleton in Warwickshire, Oakamoor in Staffordshire, and Codnor in Derbyshire.
His relationship with his son-in-law Percival Willoughby, whom it was intended would inherit the bulk of Sir Francis's estates, was often strained. Soon after Lady Willoughby died in 1595, Sir Francis married Dorothy Tamworth. He died in London on 16 November 1596, amid suspicions that he had been poisoned, leaving Dorothy pregnant. The pregnancy threatened to disinherit Percival altogether, but in the event the baby was a girl, and soon died.
Thursday, May 13, 2010
The Plague Struck our Ancestors. Terrible Sadness (Williamson Line)

From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove
Hello Everyone,
I walked six miles today and am proud of that fact. With the coming of Spring, I’m feeling the need to try to work off a bit of winter’s providence. In other words, my belt is too tight and its time to work off a few pounds. Will the drive to trim continue or will it evaporate with tomorrow’s alarm in the early hours of the morning? I’m not sure; the Spirit is willing but the flesh is weak.
In my researching I came across an something sadly interesting about our 12th Great Grandparents on the Williamson line through the Willis family and with that, something to celebrate with our 11th Great Grandparents.
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11th Great Grandparents
Mary Atwaters and Robert Honeywood
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Katharine Honywood and William Gent Fleete
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Mary Fleete and William Willis
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Henry Willis and Mary Pease
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John Willis and Ester Brinton
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Henry Willis and Mary Rachel Underwood
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John Willis and Phebe Bennett
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Bennett Willis and Katherine Nosseman
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Jonathan Willis and Anabella Phlegar
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Margaret Ann Willis and George Matthew Williamson
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William J. Williamson and Effie Helen Victor
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Vennie, Ima Della, Inez, Lillie Ethel, Josie, Emmett, Walt, Charles, Maurice.
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US
Robert Atwater married Catherine Bright of Royton shortly after 1500. They had 12 sons and 2 daughters. The sons all died of the plague before the birth of the daughters. Their daughters were Joyce, who married Humphrey Hales only son of Sir James Hales of The Dungeon, Canterbury, and Mary the youngest born in 1527 who married Robert Honeywood of Henewood in Postling in Kent.
Imagine living at this time in history, never knowing when a terrible plague would strike. They all knew of the black death. Outbreaks occurred on a regular basis throughout Europe. All they could do was pray and hope God would spare them. Well, according to family history our Great Grandparents were not spared. Imagine the grief at losing twelve sons knowing the importance of sons in society at that time. Life was not easy. It was a daily challenge to live.
Dying of the plague was gruesome. This is a description of the course of the disease:
The symptoms of the Black Death included high fevers, fetid breath, coughing, vomiting of blood and foul body odor," says Rebecca Ferrell, graduate student in anthropology. "Other symptoms were red bruising or hemorrhaging of skin and swollen lymph nodes. Many of these symptoms do appear in bubonic plague, but they can appear in many other diseases as well.Our Great Grandfather and Grandmother survived the plague and prospered. Robert Atwater became a man of fortune and a Justice of Peace in the County. In the list of tenures and in the histories of the County of Kent, Robert Atwater appears as owner of the following Manors during the reign of Henry VIII.
Puttwood in Osprings, Providers in Norton
Bewley in Boughton, Malherbe in Charing
Pette in Charing, Newcourt in Charing
Downcourt in Lenham, Royton in Lenham.
Of course there was some happiness in the Atwater family, which brings us to the story of Mary Atwater.
Our 11th Great Grandmother, Mary Atwater was the youngest of the two daughters of Robert Atwater and Catherine. She was born at Royton in 1527. When she was 16 year old she married Robert Honeywood of Postling in Kent in Feb of 1543. She was given the following Manors from her father: Pette and Newcourt in Charing and Dawn Court and Royton in Lenham, which became the property of her husband as soon as she married according to law.
Mary and Robert resided at Royton in Lenham and Pette in Charing. Robert died in 1576 and was buried in the Church of Lenham. They had 16 children, 2 died young.
The following is an extract from an article entitled "Posterity of Mary Honeywood by her son Robert.
"My father married my mother in 1543" .. "my mother departed this life at my house in Markeshall upon Tewesday ye 16 day of May, 1620 in ye 93 year of her age and according to her desyer was buryed in Lenham Church in ye County of Kent, uppon Saturday then following" . Mrs. Homewood lived to see three hundred and 67 of her descendants, 9 of them in the fourth generation.... ("a dinner was once given by her to a family party of two hundred of her descendants").. who had at here decease ... descended from her 367childern, 16 of her own, 114 grandchildren, 228 in 3rd generation, 9 in 4th ... on many accounts distinguished, but chiefly for her Christian character.
Life continues with all its ups and downs. I'm hoping this post finds all of you on the upswing.
Enjoy your day!
Simply,
Victor
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Charles and Joel Williamson. First Cousins. September 1942.
From the Fortress of SolitudePleasant Grove
When dad was a young boy he and Grandma Elda took long 3 mile walks from Lead to Deadwood in the afternoons to visit their Williamson relatives. Some days they visited Walt and Francis. Other days it was Morris and Josie. Grandpa Charles picked them up when he got off work in Deadwood and drove them back to Lead at the end of the day.
One warm September afternoon in 1942 Elda checked dad out of first grade to take the walk.
"I remember that day," dad said. "I remember it because she checked me out of school. We walked the three miles to visit my Uncle Morris and Aunt Josie."
The picture above was taken that afternoon. Dad is pictured holding Joel Williamson, his first cousin and firstborn of Morris and Josie. Joel was six months old in this picture. Morris and Josie lived on William's Street in Deadwood.
"That house is still there today," Dad said. "Its about four or five houses south of our house on William's Street." (referring to the vacation home Dad, Kevin and I own in Deadwood).
"I remember something else that happened that very day," Dad said when I asked him about this picture. "They had a thermometer on their front porch. I though that if I bit on the red end of the thermometer it would force the mercury to go up." Dad, the ever curious, took the thermometer's bulb in his mouth and bit. The bulb broke and he had his first taste of mercury.
"Everyone panicked," Dad remembered. "They thought I was going to die."
Dad told me that Grandma Elda and Great Aunt Josie were the best of friends. When they got together they'd practice smoking while walking their young sons down Deadwood's main street.
"Everyone smoked in those days," Dad said.
On another visit Dad recalls they visited the Railroad Car Cafe in Deadwood. He and Grandma Elda sat down in a booth. Aunt Josie made an attempt but couldn't quite squeeze in. He said that Elda and Josie laughed about that experience for years afterwords.
Joel Williamson died of colon cancer in 1992. He was 50 years old.
Simply,
Victor
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Saint Helena, Roman Empress, Mother of Constantine. Our 46th Great Grandmother
From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove
Hello to Everyone,
Tis gloomy outside. Rain again and low gray clouds swirl around the Fortress up on the mountainside. I sit by my reading lamp to write tonight's post on our 46th Great Grandmother, St. Helena. She was the mother of the Emperor Constantine (see the post of May 10th)
The Empress Helena was one of history's remarkable women. We owe her a great debt of gratitude for her work to uncover the history of Jesus in Jerusalem and her work to establish Christianity as the Roman religion.
St. Helena was the daughter of an innkeeper in England, and despite her lowly station, was married to Constantius Chlorus, a Roman general. They had one son, Constantine. After 22 years of marriage, her husband was named Caesar under Emperor Maximian, and immediately divorced Helena to marry Maximian's stepdaughter for political gain. Fourteen years later, Constantius died, his son was proclaimed Caesar, and 18 months later, Emperor. Constantine made up for the neglecte his father paid to St. Helena, ordering all honor be paid to the mother of the sovereign. She converted to Christianity about the same time, when she was 63 years old, in the years 312-313.
It was her son who issued the now famous "Edict of Milan", permitting Christianity in the Empire. Constantine sent his mother Helena to Jerusalem to try to find the cross on which our Lord was crucified. When she arrived, she bade all the Jewish Rabbis of the whole land gather to meet her. Great was their fear. They suspected that she sought the wood of the cross, a secret which they had promised not to reveal even under torture, because it would mean the end of Jewish supremacy. When they met her, sure enough, she asked for the place of the crucifixion. When they would not tell, she ordered them all to be burned. Frightened, they delivered up a man named Judas (not Iscariot), saying that he would tell. She gave him his choice of telling or dying by starvation. At first he was obstinate, but six days of total abstinence from food brought him to terms, and on the seventh he promised. He was conducted to the place indicated, and in response to prayer there was a sort of earthquake, and a perfume filled the air which converted Judas. There was a temple of Venus on the spot, which the queen had destroyed. Judas set to digging vigorously, and at the depth of twenty feet, found three crosses, which he brought to Helena.
The true cross was tested by its' causing a man to rise from the dead, or according to others, by healing a woman, or according to others, by finding the inscription of Pilate. After an exceedingly vigorous conversation between the devil and Judas, the latter was baptized and became Bishop Cyriacus. Then Helena set him hunting for the nails of the cross. He found them shining like gold and brought them to the queen, who departed, taking them and a portion of the wood of the cross. She brought the nails to Constantine, who put them on his bridle and helmet, or according to another account, two were used in this way, and one was thrown into the Adriatic Sea.
At 80 years old, St. Helen went to Palestine where she found the True Cross. She built Churches in Bethlehem, Egypt, the Mount of Olives, and Mount Calvary, and died in Palestine during these activities.
St. Helena's Mausoleum
St. Helena's Chapel in Jerusalem
She was buried in a mausoleum attached to the basilicas of Sts. Marcellinus & Peter. Her remains are now located in the Vatican Museum. Although St. Constantine does not appear on the Roman calendar, he is recognized as a saint by the Catholic Church.
46th Great Grandmother Empress Helena and Emperor Constantius Chlorus
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45th Great Grandfather
Constantine and Fausta
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The Elder Theodosius
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Honorius the Emperor of Western Rome and Maria
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Flavius Eparchius Avitus and Clodereius Avitus
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Papianilla of Rome and Ferreolus Tonantius
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Miss Tonantius and Sigimaerus I Bishop of Auvergne
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Ferrolus Duke of Moselle and Wambertus Duchess of Moselle
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Ausbert of the Moselle and Berthe Queen of Kent
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Arnoldus of Saxony and Oda De Savoy
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Ansigisen Mayor of the Palace of Austriasia and Beggue of Landen
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Pepin Li D’Heristal and Adpaide Concubine of Austrasia
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Charles Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia and Rotrude Duchess of Austasia
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Aldane (Aude) d’Heristal and Theuderic Duke of Toulouse.
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Comte William Toulouse and Waldrate de Hombach
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Cunigunde De Gellone and Bernard Di Italia King of Italy
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Pepin II De Vermandois, Count of Senlis and Countess of Vermand
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Hubert Count of Senlis and Countess de Senlis
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Sprote De Bretagne and Longsword William
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The Fearless Richard I, Duke of Normandy and Gonnor De Crepon
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Richard Il “The Good” Duke of Normandy and Papie Duchess of Normandy
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Guilaume De Normandie and Miss De Ponthiue
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Leceline and Baron William Pantulf I
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Robert Pantuff and Wife
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Ivo De Pantulf 3rd Baron and Alice Verdon
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Emma Pantuff and Robert Corbet Baron of Caus
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Margaret Corbet and Prince Owain Gruffydd of Powys
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William De La Pole and Elena Rotenhering
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John De La Pole and Mabilla De La Poyle
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Margaret De La Pole and John De Gaynesford
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John Gaynesford and Christina
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Sir John Gaynesfor and Margaret Elizabeth
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Margaret White and John Kirton
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Stephan Kirton and Margaret Offley
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Helen Kirton and Richard White
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Robert White Jr and Bridgett Algar
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John White and Lucy White
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Ann White and William Thompson
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John Thompson and Sara Woodman
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Sarah Thompson and Samuel Hill
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Benjamin Hill and Betsey Dudley
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Betsy Hill and Nathaniel Dearborn
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Deborah Dearborn and Phinas Swift
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Almira Swift and Joseph McCrillis
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Isabel Deanora Helgerson McCrilles and John Mayberry Dennis
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Vesta Althea Dennis and Walter Edwin Pierce
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Violet May Pierce and Walter Albert Mattson
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Luella, John, Linda, Marvin
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US
Monday, May 10, 2010
Our 45th Great Grandfather, Constantine The Great, Emperor of Rome (Mattson Line)

From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove
Hello All,
Tonight we become reaquainted with someone we learned about in our elementary, junior high, high school, and religious schools. He is St. Constantine The Great, Emperor of Rome. He legalized Christianity in the Roman Empire and stopped the persecution of Christians. He embraced the new faith and made it the state religion. Constantine is our 45th Great Grandfather (my generation) on the Mattson, McCrillis line. How does one begin to write about someone so famous in history that hundred of books have been written about him? That alone could be a seperate blog unto itself.
Constantine and Fausta
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The Elder Theodosius
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Honorius the Emperor of Western Rome and Maria
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Flavius Eparchius Avitus and Clodereius Avitus
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Papianilla of Rome and Ferreolus Tonantius
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Miss Tonantius and Sigimaerus I Bishop of Auvergne
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Ferrolus Duke of Moselle and Wambertus Duchess of Moselle
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Ausbert of the Moselle and Berthe Queen of Kent
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Arnoldus of Saxony and Oda De Savoy
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Ansigisen Mayor of the Palace of Austriasia and Beggue of Landen
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Pepin Li D’Heristal and Adpaide Concubine of Austrasia
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Charles Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia and Rotrude Duchess of Austasia
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Aldane (Aude) d’Heristal and Theuderic Duke of Toulouse.
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Comte William Toulouse and Waldrate de Hombach
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Cunigunde De Gellone and Bernard Di Italia King of Italy
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Pepin II De Vermandois, Count of Senlis and Countess of Vermand
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Hubert Count of Senlis and Countess de Senlis
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Sprote De Bretagne and Longsword William
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The Fearless Richard I, Duke of Normandy and Gonnor De Crepon
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Richard Il “The Good” Duke of Normandy and Papie Duchess of Normandy
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Guilaume De Normandie and Miss De Ponthiue
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Leceline and Baron William Pantulf I
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Robert Pantuff and Wife
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Ivo De Pantulf 3rd Baron and Alice Verdon
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Emma Pantuff and Robert Corbet Baron of Caus
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Margaret Corbet and Prince Owain Gruffydd of Powys
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William De La Pole and Elena Rotenhering
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John De La Pole and Mabilla De La Poyle
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Margaret De La Pole and John De Gaynesford
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John Gaynesford and Christina
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Sir John Gaynesfor and Margaret Elizabeth
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Margaret White and John Kirton
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Stephan Kirton and Margaret Offley
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Helen Kirton and Richard White
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Robert White Jr and Bridgett Algar
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John White and Lucy White
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Ann White and William Thompson
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John Thompson and Sara Woodman
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Sarah Thompson and Samuel Hill
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Benjamin Hill and Betsey Dudley
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Betsy Hill and Nathaniel Dearborn
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Deborah Dearborn and Phinas Swift
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Almira Swift and Joseph McCrillis
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Isabel Deanora Helgerson McCrilles and John Mayberry Dennis
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Vesta Althea Dennis and Walter Edwin Pierce
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Violet May Pierce and Walter Albert Mattson
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Luella, John, Linda, Marvin
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US
I thought it best to find an article online that sums up this great grandfather's life. Take a moment to review what you learned about this famous ancestor by reading the information below.
Simply,
Victor
CONSTANTINE THE GREAT
Constantine, Roman Emperor from 306 to 337; was born in 274, at Naissus in Upper Moesia, a son of Constantius Chlorus and Helena, and was, after the death of his father at York (July 25, 306), proclaimed emperor by the legions of Gaul. He immediately took possession of Britain, Gaul, and Spain; and after a series of brilliant victories over Maxentius, ending with the bloody battle at the Milvian Bridge, just under the walls of Rome, he also became master of Italy (312). He now ruled over the ‘Western Empire, as Licinius over the Eastern: but war broke out between them in 314; and in 323, after the battle of Chalcedon, in which Licinius was killed, Constantine became sole lord of the whole Roman world. He died in 337, at Nicomedia.
Tradition tells us that he was converted to Christianity suddenly, and by a miracle. One evening during the contest with Maxentius, he saw a radiant cross appearing in the heavens, with the inscription, "By this thou shalt conquer." The tradition is first mentioned by Eusebius, in his De Vita Constantini, written after the emperor’s death. This miracle has been defended. with ingenious sophistry by Roman-Catholic historians and by Card. Dr. Newman (Two Essays on Biblical and on Ecclesiastical Miracles, 3d ed., Lond., 1873, pp. 271 sqq.), but cannot stand the test of critical examination. Constantine may have seen some phenomenon in the skies; he was no doubt convinced of the superior claims of Christianity as the rising religion; but his conversion was a change of policy, rather than of moral character. Long after that event he killed, his son, his second wife, several others of his relatives, and some of his most intimate friends, in passionate resentment of some fancied infringement of his rights. In his relation to Christianity he was cool, calculating, always bent upon the practically useful, always regarding the practically possible. He retained the office and title of Pontifex Maximus to the last, and did not receive Christian baptism until he felt death close upon him.
He kept Pagans in the highest positions in his immediate surroundings, and forbade every thing which might look like an encroachment of Christianity upon Paganism. Such a faith in such a character is not the result of a sudden conversion by a miracle: if it were, the effect would be more miraculous than the cause. Judging from the character both of his father and mother, it is probable that he grew up in quiet but steady contact with Christianity. Christianity had, indeed, become something in the air which no one occupying a prominent position in the Roman world could remain entirely foreign to. But the singular mixture of political carefulness and personal indifference with which he treated. it presupposes a relation of observation rather than impression. He knew Christianity well, but only as a power in the Roman Empire; and he protected it as a wise and far-seeing statesman. As a power not of this world, he hardly ever came to understand it.
Constantine's Arch in Rome
His first edict concerning the Christians (Rome 312) is lost. By the second (Milan, 313) he granted them, not only free religious worship and the recognition of the State, but also reparation of previously incurred losses. Banished men who worked on the galleys or in the mines were recalled, confiscated estates were restored, etc. A series of edicts of 315, 316, 319, 321, and 323, completed. the revolution. Christians were admitted to the offices of the State, both military and civil; the Christian clergy was exempted from all municipal burdens, as were the Pagan priests; the emancipation of Christian slaves was facilitated; Jews were forbidden to keep Christian slaves, etc. An [547] edict of 321 ordered Sunday to be celebrated by cessation of all work in public. When Constantine became master of the whole empire, all these edicts were extended to the whole realm, and the Roman world more and more assumed the aspect of a Christian state. One thing, however, puzzled and annoyed the emperor very much, - the dissensions of the Christians, their perpetual squabbles about doctrines, and the fanatical hatred thereby engendered. In the Roman Empire the most different religions lived peacefully beside each other, and here was a religion which could not live in peace with itself. For political reasons, however, unity and harmony were necessary; and in 325 the Emperor convened the first great oecumenical council at Nicæa to settle the Arian controversy. It was the first time the Christian Church and the Roman State met each other face to face; and the impression was very deep on both sides. When the emperor stood there, among the three hundred and eighteen bishops, tall, clad in purple and jewels, with his peculiarly haughty and sombre mien, he felt disgusted at those coarse and cringing creatures who one moment scrambled sportively around him to snatch up a bit of his munificence, and the next flew madly into each other’s faces for some incomprehensible mystery. Nevertheless, he learnt something from those people. He saw that with Christianity was born a new sentiment in the human heart hitherto unknown to mankind, and that on this sentiment the throne could be rested more safely than on the success of a court-intrigue, or the victory of a hired army. The only rational legitimation which the antique world had known of the kingship was descent from the gods; but this authority had now become a barefaced lie, and was difficult to use even in the form of a flattery. At Nicæa, however, the idea of a kingship of God’s grace began to dawn upon mankind. Constantine also met there with men who must have charmed and awed him by their grand simplicity, burdened, and almost curbed, as he was by the enormous complexity of Roman life. After the Council of Nicæa, he conversed more and more frequently and intimately with the bishops. his interest in Christianity grew with the years; but, as was to have been foreseen, he was sure to be led astray, for the needle lacked in the compass. He was more and more drawn over to the side of the Arians, and it was an Arian bishop who baptized him.
Sunday, May 9, 2010
The Man Who Might Have Been our Grandfather......
From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove
Hello All,
Another mystery solved. Grandma Elda's First Husband has been found. He name was William John Zderick, someone she rarely mentioned or spoke about except to say that he was a good man. There is nothing more about their marriage except they divorced or perhaps the marriage was annulled.
This is the marriage record of his second wife, Ida Werlinger. Notice that he is listed as a Bachelor (noting the option of stating he was divorced). Again, this leads me to think their marriage was annulled. I think I remember Grandma mentioning that. Anyone else know of anything she said about the subject?Simply,
Victor
An Update:
Our cousin Tharon was kind enough to shed new light on Grandma Elda's first marriage in an email received after reading this above entry.
Victor,
William "John" Zderic was born January 5, 1909 in Lawrence County. His parents were John & Anna, immigrants from Austria. He was 1 of 10 children. Grandma (Iris) Vercellino always said Aunt Elda married John to spite her mother. John's family were devote Catholics, so he wanted the marriage anulled. He married Ida Werlinger on July 4, 1936 in Dewey County (Timber Lake). John died in Las Vegas in December of 1984. They also lived in Washington State. Ida died December 2, 1999 in Bellingham, WA. Grandpa (Ed) & Grandma (Iris) Vercellino always received Christmas cards from John. I always remember going from Deadwood to Lead and Grandma would always say, "There's were Elda and John Zderic lived." It wasn't very far from where Mom, Uncle Danny, Grandma & Grandpa lived in Deadwood.
Tharon
















