After a lengthy absence, I have decide to resume blogging. If so inclined, please commence the dance of joy.
Updates
In the year and a half since I last posted here, my sister and I have made many advances in our family research. We have discovered several more generations back on our Wacławik line and found our very first Polish 7th-great-grandparents: Józef and Salomea Łysak, and Jan Sławieński.
We are also working on finding our ancestors' death dates and more of their children's names on our Walczyk side.
On our Kashub side, I have broken through a few brick walls and found new information, new documents, and "new" ancestors on our Konkol/Kunkel, Abraham, and Freibis lines. When I last wrote about Joseph Freibis, I had not yet found his parents; now I know the names of his grandparents and even some of his great-grandparents and beyond - including a marriage record from 1720!
And I am happy to say that, on both sides, we have fun new discoveries about a few of our ancestors' occupations. Not all of them were simply peasant, laborer, farm laborer, day laborer... etc., etc.
Our DNA tests have also yielded many exciting matches which have given us clues for even more discoveries. Matches include new-found cousins on our Pionke, Abraham, Klawikowski, and Eland lines.
Changes
Because of this long absence, some features on the blog need to change. Unfortunately many parts of the How To section are no longer correct, thanks to changes on Ancestry and Blogger. If you are unable to leave a comment, please email and I will try to figure out the problem.
But on the positive side, we have more names to add to the Surnames page.
And although I loved the idea of the 52 Ancestors Challenge, we will no longer attempt to follow this fun group challenge. Instead, I may introduce an Ancestor of the Week feature.
Another new feature (which begins today!) will be Pionke Fridays. This title is a play on words: Pionk sounds like Piątk, the Kashubian word for Friday. Over the years, I have researched several Pionke families in addition to our own, and I will use this format to share that research.
Over the next month or two I will update these and other components of the blog, so please be patient if you notice outdated links, etc.
Thanks for reading!
NOTE ABOUT COMMENTS:
There is a problem with comments. So far our testing shows comments do work in Windows with Chrome but not with Firefox. We're unsure about other OS/browser combinations. Please disregard below suggestion to consult the How-To page; those instructions are now obsolete. We hope this problem will be resolved by switching our template. Meanwhile, our apologies if your comment disappears!
No comments:
Post a Comment
REMEMBER:
---------------------
You must be logged into a Google+, Gmail, or OpenID account before posting or your comment will seem to disappear when you try to post it!
(View the How-To section on posting blog comments if you need help).