Not every cemetery moves from one county to another, but that's what
Sauktown Cemetery did in 1850. The cemetery did not actually move,
only the boundaries changed when Wills Township was shifted from St.
Joseph County to La Porte County.
On June 8, the La Porte Genealogical Society will meet early (6 pm) to
go on its annual cemetery adventure. This year members and friends
will visit and learn about this old rural cemetery, where the oldest
known burial occurred 172 years ago. John Cuson of the Sauktown
Cemetery Association will be our guide. The cemetery is located on
150N between 875 and 925E, and it is expected to stay put. All are
welcome -- you do not need to be a member to attend!
The society meets at 7 pm on the second Tuesday of every month at the
Swanson Center for Older Adults, 910 State St., La Porte. The public
is welcome at all meetings. For a list of upcoming programs and more
information about the society's activities in awards, research,
publication, and records preservation, visit our web site.
Also at our web site those who believe they have La Porte County
ancestors, and can prove
it, can find information on how to apply for First Families of La
Porte (before December 1840), Pioneer Families (1841-1860), Settler
Families (1861-1880), and Civil War Families (1861-1865).
UPDATE AND CORRECTION 22 May, from Fern Eddy Schultz: Wills Township did not become a part of La Porte County in 1850--it was already in La Porte County. What happened 14 January 1850 was that Sections 22, 23, 26, 27, 34 and 35 of Township 37 North Range 1 West were added to La Porte County from St. Joseph Couunty. Sauktown Cemetery is located in Section 27.
Monday, May 17, 2010
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
May 2010 meeting on treasures of La Porte County
County historian Fern Eddy Schultz spoke at the La Porte County Genealogical Society meeting Tuesday, May 11. She encouraged those attending to be more ambitious when they go to the courthouse to research their ancestors. Most people look only for a few things -- records of marriages, wills, landholdings, and naturalizations. In La Porte, we have much more, including partition records (division of property after a family member's death), tax duplicates (starting in 1864), county commissioners' records (from 1832), mortgages, insanity records, and Miscellaneous Record books that include many Civil War veterans' discharges.
The county historical society also holds records that have been discarded, including licenses for junk dealers, physicians, nurses, dentists, and teachers; coroner's records from the 1950s to 1979, and numerous old school and township records. Some were in such bad shape when acquired that she had to piece them together in order to index or transcribe them. The society also has very detailed La Porte marriage applications 1890-1905, a full fifteen years before they were required statewide.
Concerns were expressed in the talk and the discussion afterwards about inadequate security in the vault in the La Porte courthouse, and excessive security in the Michigan City courthouse, where employees have forbidden visitors to examine public records.
The society's April 21 bus trip to the Allen County Public Library in Fort Wayne was a success, with the largest group ever. Our bus driver was able to do some research as well!
Future plans include a visit to the Sauktown Cemetery in June, and programs for July (research when the record you want isn't there), August (how to organize and continue to improve your genealogy after the first steps), and September (movie stars in Michigan City).
Two indexing and abstracting work projects continue at the courthouse. Applications for residency societies and genealogist of the year are available; the awards will be made at the December supper meeting.
The society meets at 7 pm on the second Tuesday of every month at the Swanson Center for Older Adults, 910 State St., La Porte. The public is welcome at all meetings. For a list of upcoming programs and more information about the society's activities in awards, research, publication, and records preservation, visit our web site.
The county historical society also holds records that have been discarded, including licenses for junk dealers, physicians, nurses, dentists, and teachers; coroner's records from the 1950s to 1979, and numerous old school and township records. Some were in such bad shape when acquired that she had to piece them together in order to index or transcribe them. The society also has very detailed La Porte marriage applications 1890-1905, a full fifteen years before they were required statewide.
Concerns were expressed in the talk and the discussion afterwards about inadequate security in the vault in the La Porte courthouse, and excessive security in the Michigan City courthouse, where employees have forbidden visitors to examine public records.
The society's April 21 bus trip to the Allen County Public Library in Fort Wayne was a success, with the largest group ever. Our bus driver was able to do some research as well!
Future plans include a visit to the Sauktown Cemetery in June, and programs for July (research when the record you want isn't there), August (how to organize and continue to improve your genealogy after the first steps), and September (movie stars in Michigan City).
Two indexing and abstracting work projects continue at the courthouse. Applications for residency societies and genealogist of the year are available; the awards will be made at the December supper meeting.
The society meets at 7 pm on the second Tuesday of every month at the Swanson Center for Older Adults, 910 State St., La Porte. The public is welcome at all meetings. For a list of upcoming programs and more information about the society's activities in awards, research, publication, and records preservation, visit our web site.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)