Hittin' the Bricks with Kathleen

Oct Mailbag & Navy Veteran Records

Kathleen Brandt Episode 33

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The October Mailbag: Naval Veteran Research and Heritage Month
Journey through the National Archives with us as we highlight the distinctions between researching Navy records and other branches. 

Let's celebrate in October:  Family History Month, Hispanic Heritage Month and  Naval Research. 

Family History Month Resources

  1. Family Search 31 October celebrations ideas 
  2. National Genealogical Society and Brain Health
  3. Library of Congress

September / October Newsletter 

This episode promises a blend of history, humor, and celebrations.

Be sure to bookmark linktr.ee/hittinthebricks for your one stop access to Kathleen Brandt, the host of Hittin' the Bricks with Kathleen. And, visit us on YouTube: @HTBKRB with Kathleen John and Chewey video recorded specials.

Hittin' the Bricks is produced through the not-for-profit, 501c3 TracingAncestors.org.

Family History Month Activities and Tips

John

Ladies and gentlemen from the depths of flyover country in the heartland of America, the Kansas City on the other side of the Mighty Mo, welcome to another episode of Hittin' the Bricks with Kathleen, the do-it-yourself genealogy podcast that features your questions and her answers. I am John, your humble hubby host, and we'll be taking a deep dive into the mailbag for some nautical military research and letting you know where to go to find fun activities for a family history month. All that and so much more. So let's start hitting the bricks. Perfect way to start Are you teasing me for yawning.

John

Starting with a big yawn, welcome to October everybody. It's cookie time, a little bit of milk and we're all taking a nap.

Kathleen

I thought this was pumpkin spice season or something that we don't eat at our house.

John

Yeah, we don't normally do, although I love the smell of it. Hey, we are in the middle of October, but we've just completed Hispanic Heritage Month. Is that what it's? Called it goes from the 15th of September to the 15th of October, and I noticed that on the A3 genealogy blog there was really an interesting article about researching Puerto Rican.

Kathleen

Yes, I did feature the Hispanic Heritage Month celebration. I also only did a newsletter that combined those two months. I did a September, october newsletter, so one newsletter.

John

Ah, one newsletter to rule them all the.

Kathleen

Hispanic Heritage. Yes, so I had a lot of fun with it because we had just finished a Puerto Rican podcast and I featured not only the podcast we did with Charlotte, but I also featured how to research. So it's no different than any other research, right, it's the same rules, the same types of records, but they're specific for Puerto Rican heritage. I also, on the newsletter, put in the Mexican heritage hints. The Puerto Rican one is in our blog. The Mexican heritage research is in our newsletter. So there's a little bit of everything because it covers so many countries and throughout the year, since we know the Hispanics are Hispanics 12 months out of the year.

John

I always have, but I'm very open-minded and progressive, like that.

Kathleen

Yeah, you're wonderful. I will be featuring other Hispanic heritage from the other countries, because, of course, there's other sets of resources that we have. One of the things that is very interesting about that is the DNA. There is no DNA for Puerto Rican, and I talk about how do you know that? What am I looking for when I'm looking at my DNA? Because a lot of people are looking for something that says Puerto Rican and that's not what happens.

John

So I'm assuming that when you something that says Puerto Rican and that's not what happens, so I'm assuming that when you're researching a Puerto Rican ancestor, that you have the same hoops to jump through and also the same resources, Because they're represented by the United States or because they are a US territory. Are records? Are they kept in the same place?

Kathleen

They are not Okay. So these records are primarily in Puerto Rico, unless they joined the US military or they came to America, the mainland, so you're going Military records are important.

John

You're back into researching it, almost as if it were a separate country from the United States.

Kathleen

That is correct, your approach, yep, and it's the same approach I would do if it were Samoan.

John

Okay.

Kathleen

And some of these records are with the State Department because they're territorial.

John

Mm-hmm.

Kathleen

You know they're not in our normal National Archive records that we could go and just grab.

John

I know the podcast had Charlotte who this played into with her research. But then I know too that your tips on Puerto Rican research on the A3 genealogy blog would be real helpful there.

Kathleen

It really is, because we're still looking at passenger lists, we're still looking at military records and passports, because they did use passports, which a lot of people forget A lot of times. Because of their work status, they did have a lot of passports.

John

So, along with that type of research, family research, we went to a celebration of Family History Month.

Kathleen

Yes, john, and you were my guest for your birthday because I take you to great places on your birthday and that was Union Station for a genealogy. But you got a wonderful dinner with cheesecake, the dinner was great.

John

The dinner was great. The chicken was wonderful and the cheesecake I had to look at that thing through the whole dinner. It was torture. But the speakers were really very interesting. Alvin Brooks was there, who was a lot of fun to listen to, and the Samoan singers were really really amazing. They were a lot of fun. Yeah, go ahead.

Kathleen

And Katie Smith from Midwest Genealogy Center was the other speaker.

John

And there were many people named Katie Smith because I met more than one, kate Smith, that night. Nothing confusing about that at all, but they were all very nice people and it was a really enjoyable evening.

Kathleen

There were quite a few Katie Smiths, because the NGS person was also Katie Smith.

John

And the.

Kathleen

Midwest Genealogy person was Katie Smith. Then there was a Katie at our table, but did you have any part of the evening that you really enjoyed? What about the artifacts?

John

No, I don't. I don't enjoy at any point in time when I have to talk about me.

Kathleen

I was excited talking about Joseph Chetister, and I took the dog tags and I was really proud to talk about it at our table?

John

No, but those are really excellent stories and everybody had really neat stories. Did we do enough on that?

Kathleen

So I know I do want to talk a little bit about Family History Month though, because that is also the month of October. There are a couple of places I want to highlight, because we still have more of October to do. Highlight, because we still have more of october to do. Okay, one family search has 31 ideas on on how you can celebrate family history month, and it was for one for each day. There's some really fun things there yes and then the library of congress.

John

I'm so one of the ideas, family search is what?

Kathleen

it's family search dot. Family searchorg, and I will put all of this on our newsletter too, john. Okay, but in addition to that, I thought the one I thought was most interesting was how did your ancestors celebrate Soul's Day or the Day of the Dead, because that's also October.

John

And what is this on? Is this on FamilySearch?

Kathleen

That's on FamilySearch. Yeah, that's also october, and who's right? What is this on? Is this on a family search? Family search, yeah, which?

John

and the question is how does your, how did your ancestors, celebrate the day of the dead? Yeah, that was one of the the ones I was really interested in looking up for my own, and I wanted to find anything I haven't done it yet.

Kathleen

That was the 31st. Oh, that's coming up first day, john, and then this did your family. Did your family celebrate halloween?

John

did you guys do anything on halloween? My brothers terrorized the neighborhood only on halloween, because that would seem like your brothers that was after school till nine o'clock or ten o'clock at night. That's what they probably were doing. It was kind of what we did, probably john, but on halloween they upped it.

Kathleen

But on Halloween they upped the ante, they upped the ante. They were not the pillar of the community that they are now.

John

Oh.

Kathleen

I see, so another one. Another site I want to highlight is the Library of Congress. The one way to celebrate Family History Month is to engage your kids, and they gave great ideas on their website and again I'll put this on the website. But they say use the KWL method, which means give them knowledge and tell them stuff.

John

That must be the K, but they're not interested.

Kathleen

Yep, that's the K. Tell great stories that are fun for them, and then let them do the W, which is wonder, and let them ask questions about it, and then learn, where you all can record and share what you had together with your child. Make it as a learning thing, but also a memorable thing.

John

Yeah, it's an interesting kind of concept to think of. I mean just recording family moments, as opposed to telling a story or writing a story about it years later that it's actually recorded real time.

Kathleen

And that takes me to the third one. So thank you for that segue. You're welcome. Ngs, the National Genealogical Society. They had a suggestion.

Kathleen

They had lots of suggestions on their website, but one was about photo preservation and actually having those photos and recordings where you could see people and what I thought was most interesting, it is partnered with the photo reminiscence therapy study.

Kathleen

It is partnered with the Photo Reminiscence Therapy Study. There is a new study for dementia and Alzheimer's on phototherapy. It's being looked at in several states in nursing homes and in memory care units at the nursing homes and it's really a cool way of thinking of your photos and sharing them with our elders. So I kind of gave an idea of what to do with kids and what to do with the elders. Which, john, that brings me to the last thing I want to mention and that is my heritage and its photo manipulation and its photo programs. So all genealogists should be engaging this with their elders and their children. So I just wanted to mention that, because MyHeritage is the leader in genealogy on this whole AI manipulation with photos, at least in my mind, and I want to make sure that we share them want to make sure that we share them.

John

Okay, so, going from the idea of maybe helping the older generation connect by using photographs, let me jump to the mailbag, because we're going to go back to World War II, and this is can I? I think I'm just going to read this, is that all right?

Kathleen

Yeah, sure.

John

Okay, this is from Brett and he asks I was hoping to obtain any and all records related to World War II era military service in the United States Navy. I am specifically interested in records that would exist for the Pacific Theater. I have a service number for my veteran and have the vessel he was located on. I'm interested in getting deck logs and any other records that you would recommend. Would you have a quote and that I could be provided with thanks and have a great day so you don't need to dump your quote online, um well, I can, because I did not take the the job.

Kathleen

That's why we're answering it a little bit here online.

John

Oh, okay, so, yeah, Okay. So your quote is going to be listen up.

Know Your Records

Kathleen

Listen up. We have gotten over the years, John, a lot of questions on Navy, because the Navy is not exactly the same research pattern that we would do with the Army or Coast Guard there are some differences.

John

Each branch is different.

Kathleen

Right, there are coast guard. There are some differences. Difference, right there are. But what I couldn't tell was if he was looking for personnel records which are in st louis or if he was looking for more troop records which is in college park college park maryland, maryland yes, college park, maryland, that's the national archives and we call it Archives 2.

Kathleen

I want people to know that the Navy records are also digitized online. Boat 3 has certain things, ancestor has others, but there is a great article and I will put this also this week up on our blog about Know your Records US Navy Deck Locks. The National Archives has great articles and this is just one, but in general it tells you where to go to get your muster rolls. Those are already online under archivesgov People. People have not visited archivesgov. Who's doing military records or immigration records. These records are up there already digitized. A lot of them?

Kathleen

for which years I mean well, this is 1939 to 1949 and the muster rolls for the ships, the stations and other activities what's a deck log? I mean a deck log is literally like a muster roll in the field, right.

Kathleen

But you're literally on the ship, on ship, okay and it will also tell you if someone had to go to the medical or was out or was sick or they got injured. So all of that information is in the deck log also, Because there's also log books, and those log books of the ships and the stations, those go up to 1991. Those two are online and they also have what my favorite collection is. They have the World War II war diaries and with that they have different histories. They also have the US submarine war patrol reports. So all of this is in the information of Know your Records on the US Navy deck logs. But where to go to get them is different and most of it is in College Park Maryland Archives 2. But and most of it is in college park maryland archives too, but a lot of it is online at the archivesgov.

John

Yeah, that's, that's excellent. Do you prefer one branch over the other? Not, not them all.

Kathleen

Okay, I know you love I love a man in a uniform, John.

John

Yeah, I know, I know.

Kathleen

No, I do not have a preference. I really do love all things military. As far as research goes.

John

Yeah, my question is is there one branch that's easier to research or more comprehensive in their records? Or, you know, did the Army have a different form than, let's say, the Marines? That just gives you that much more information, or is it all pretty much shakes out they all?

Kathleen

have different information. Remember there was a fire in 1973 that destroyed a lot of records in St Louis. But there are all these other records that are in DC area and none of them are easier than the others except I love Civil War records you like the old ones. So the old ones, the Civil War records, are pretty much intact. It was kind of neat following them, but I don't have a preference.

John

You don't have to, you're not required to prefer one thing over the other.

Kathleen

Thank you.

John

Except general uniforms. I understand that.

Kathleen

Well, thanks for that too.

John

Now, is there anything else you want to cover today, Kathleen?

Kathleen

Well, one of the big topics that has been coming up this month, especially, probably because it's right before the election- is what is a poll tax? I have probably gotten almost a dozen people asking me something about a poll tax, one way or another, because a poll tax originally started out as a way to fund the government, a way to fund colonies and to fund states, it's noted for the Confederate states. During the Civil War, however, there were 11 other states that were not in the South, that were also that also used the poll tax.

Kathleen

Yes, I mean Minnesota, pennsylvania, ohio, wisconsin. There was 11 of them California, so we forget about that.

John

No way, and we're talking about the same time frame, though. Yes.

Kathleen

During about the Civil War time frame, but then, of course, after the Civil War there was a territory Are you talking about, like California as a territory? Ok, so they use poll taxes to fund colonies and to fund new states.

John

So as these new states were being funded it was not a oh, so they had an interest in it. It was revenue generation. Now were the poll taxes applied equally, because generally, when I think of poll tax, I think Jim Crow.

Kathleen

Exactly, that's after the Civil War, war that was during the reconstruction error okay.

John

So the reconstruction kind of changed the maybe the utilization of poll taxes from being a general fundraiser to being more discriminatory it was.

Kathleen

It was for the purpose of disenfranchising a group of people. Right right, let's take away their voting rights based on their affordability. So that is why they had that for Jim Crow era. I had to be reminded through all these questions that Jim Crow was actually a minstrel actor. The name of Jim Crowe because some people asked that was one of the questions when does Jim Crowe come from? Why do we call it Jim Crowe? And of course, it was named after a particular famous minstrel actor where he would blacken his face and do silly silly shows, blacken his face and do silly silly shows it was used for the disenfranchising of African-Americans, especially after the Reconstruction era.

Kathleen

But then there was that third thing, unpoled taxes. And that was with the 24th Amendment when they outlawed a federal tax for voting that did not apply to all the states. Some of the states could still require you to have a form of a poll tax in order to vote.

John

That was after the Reconstruction.

Kathleen

Yes, the 24th Amendment. The 24th Amendment was pretty late, John. Yes, it was 1964.

John

Are you kidding me? That's ridiculous. January 23rd 1964. Abolished and forbids federal and state governments from imposing taxes on voters during federal elections.

Kathleen

Because originally it was not for the states, it was just federal, and then the 24th Amendment had the states included had the states included.

John

Okay, so if we're going to say that, really, poll taxes or vestiges of Jim Crow were not eliminated nationwide until 1964, then I'm thinking there's 1968, and I believe there was a Voter Right Act. That was necessary, exactly, and so, apparently, the elimination of the idea of, hey, you can't infringe on people's right to vote. Apparently that didn't take and they needed to have a Voter's Right Act, but of course we know that just got gutted.

Kathleen

So the one beforehand was you couldn't add a tax to vote but, there were a lot of other ways to keep people from voting. Like intimidation and misinformation, and exactly, yeah, so that is something that we should know about, because, of course, our ancestors either went through it or they they were complicit or they fought against it. There was, our ancestors played a role in this, no matter who you are in america true, true.

Kathleen

You have to recognize where you've been, so that you first of all don't make the same mistake again which we teach our kids. So I'm not sure why adults have forgotten that rule and that you can grow. You can grow.

John

you can't correct.

Kathleen

Yeah, if you can't recognize it, then so, John, the only other thing I wanted to make sure we brought up winners maybe our winners, our winners. Let's hear it because we have.

John

I know, I know they're you're announcing two today, right?

Kathleen

they both have been rewarded and they both accepted.

John

Right, that is correct okay, and are we giving their names out, sure?

Kathleen

you are so silly general.

John

It's so we have both august and september august was uh laurie burdock miller, who has been a guest, and she has been a guest yeah, and she's got her research firm red bird red bird research out of st louis. I have a block on that red bird thing, because I just on it's like a cardinal right and so it's st louis and it's cardinal and that's why I have a block because all I think of is all I think of is royals so laurie was on the podcast, as you mentioned.

Kathleen

I've known her for years so I was really happy to award it to her because she was a subscriber and, as you know, these are random. We just go through and there's one person picked for that month and then for september we have laura hardman laura has will be receiving her certificate today, but yes, she accepted.

John

So they'll be receiving a MyHeritage Complete Package.

Kathleen

And they can start with their photo manipulation for brain health.

John

For brain health exactly Get your brain healthy, let's see.

Kathleen

So that's all I have, John. Do you have something else?

John

I'm looking, you look wonderful. You really do look good no, you really look nice over there, and and I'm saying this because I know I look fantastic too- so I'm thinking, john, because you're making it sound like I owe you lunch.

Kathleen

I am thinking about taking you to costco to get a dog. You'll love that lunch. No, okay, never mind.

John

Give me a chance. Let me put on my dress clothes.

John

Sounds great, let me put on my Sunday clothes and we'll go get us a hot dog. Well, congratulations, you made it to the end of another episode. Thanks so much for staying. Thanks to MyHeritage and Legacy Family Tree webinars. Thanks to Chewy Chewbacca Brandt, our part-time vexophile and full-time serologist, for his unwavering lack of interest in anything we're doing. The theme song for Hittin' the Bricks was written and performed by Tony Fisknuckle and the Wisdoms Watch for their next appearance at the Ratskeller behind the Student Union at Prairie View AFM University. You can find us wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts. Do you have a genealogical question for Kathleen? Drop us a line at hittingthebricks at gmailcom and let us know.