Archive

Archive for the ‘Discoveries’ Category

Map Shows De Backer Windmill in 1770′s

December 2nd, 2011 No comments

A few years ago a correspondent in Belgium sent me an image of a map of Ronse, Belgium made in the mid-18th century. He wrote that the structure depicted in the lower center of the map was of a windmill owned by my ancestor (ggggg-grandfather) Judocus (Joos) De Backer (1723 – 1797) and that the windmill stood in what is now a city park in Ronse known as the Bruul (see here for that image). Last night I came across a very detailed map of Belgium made by the Austrian cartographer, Joseph Jean François, count de Ferrari, in the 1770’s. The Ferrari Cabinet map, made between 1771 and 1778, was commissioned by the Empress Maria Theresa of Austria and her son Emp. Joseph II to detail their Austrian Netherlands, as Belgium was known in those years. A page of that map shows the city of Ronse (Renaix) in the 1770’s and upon close inspection one can see that two windmills are depicted in this sector. In the second image below the windmill in the lower left corner corresponds to the windmill drawn in the earlier map from the early 18th century.

 

The Ferrari map can be seen in detail by going to Ferraris Cabinet KBR Map Viewer.

Categories: Discoveries Tags:

Dobbs Dispatches from Valparaiso

September 10th, 2011 Comments off

In a previous post, I describe how I obtained on microfilm the dispatches that my great grandfather, J. M. Dobbs, Sr. sent from Chile while he was posted there as consul general to Valparaiso from 1893 to 1897. Below are links to images of only a few of the 200 pages I found on the microfilm.

5 July 1893 – JMD’s first dispatch to the State Department announcing his arrival in Valparaiso after first reporting in to the embassy in Santiago. The man whom my great-grandfather reported to, Ambassador Patrick Egan, was a controversial figure who was accused on occasion of attempting to incite a war with Chile over the control of the Panama isthmus and the west coast of South America.

6 July 1893 – JMD’s second dispatch to the State Department, where he and previous consul general sign over the office.

1893 – JMD’s drawing of floor plan of second floor of building on Calle Blanco where the US consulate is located. When he arrived in 1893 the consul office was located on the second floor of a dilapidated building at 140 Calle Blanco (behind the janitor’s closet). The annual rent was $58 and my great grandfather complains in one dispatch that the cramped office was “unclean” and that the furniture in the office is 25 to 35 years old. By July of 1894 he had gotten permission from Washington to re-locate to a two room office on the 2nd floor of 430 Calle Blanco, purchase new furniture, and hire a clerk. He reports that his offices are next door to the offices of the German consulate and that his residence is in an apartment on the third floor of that same building. His clerk was paid $400 a year and the rent for the new offices was $90 a year.

16 September 1895 – JMD files a report regarding the disappearance of Alfred E. Sutro, nephew of then mayor of San Francisco, Adolph Sutro. A search of the internet for Alfred E. Sutro comes up dry, so it is unknown whatever became of the missing Sutro.

2 September 1895 – Another report regarding the disappearance of Alfred E. Sutro.

10 November 1895 – JMD’s report regarding the wreck of SS Parthia, an American vessel which caught fire off the coast of Chile near the Juan Fernández Islands.

19 November 1895 – JMD was responsible for hiring “consul agents” residing in other locations on the Chilean coast who reported to him. In one dispatch he reports to Washington that he could not find an American citizen to act as “consul agent” in Punta Arenas (at the straits of Magellan) and that he had hired a Russian to act as the American representative in that town.

28 August 1897 – JMD files a three-page report regarding the shipwreck of an American vessel, the SS Nonatum, whose crew was stranded on Easter Island for 43 days before being rescued by a Chilean schooner.

23 October 1897 – JMD’s last dispatch from Chile as he signs over the office the new incoming Consul General.

Categories: Discoveries Tags:

The Plantation, 52 Plantation Road, Lisburn, Co Down, BT27 5PH

July 20th, 2011 Comments off

My great, great, great-grandfather, William Kelsey’s old home in Northern Ireland is up for sale. Asking price half-a-mil USD. I wish I had that kind of money laying around. See more info at PropertNews.com 

52-plantation-road

BANN2

Categories: Discoveries Tags:

Gambrinus March – an Ode to Beer?

July 2nd, 2011 Comments off

gambrinus2My gg-grandfather, Constantine Kollros (1838 – 1916), was a band leader in Louisville, KY around the turn of 20th century and as I learned last night, he was also a composer. In a search of Google Books, I found “Gambrinus March – copyright by C Kollros Louisville Ky July 7, 1898” listed in a publication of the Library of Congress Copyright Office in that year. Wikipedia defines Gambrinus as “an unofficial patron saint of beer or beer brewing.” The origin of the character is most widely believed to be John the Fearless (1371–1419), who some also believe to be the inventor of hopped malt beer.

According to an article that appeared on the front page of the Kentucky Irish American newspaper dated 24 Oct 1903:

The Mozart Symphony Orchestra directed by Prof Constantine Kollros will give its first grand concert at Phoenix Hill on Monday night… the programme will include Gambrinus March dedicated to the Gambrinus Society words by Frank A Lenz music by Prof C Kollros.

Note the title of Professor and it brings to mind Professor Henry Hill (aka The Music Man).

A further search of “Gambrinus March” turns up a different (?) composition by the same name. It lists lyrics by a H. Sallman, is dedicated to the Sieben’s Brewery Co. and copyrighted 1915 by Sieben’s Brewery Co., Chicago, Illinois, but it does not say who was the composer.

A trip to the Library of Congress may be in order, because according to the catalog there is one copy in the library. The LC on-line catalog mislabels the title as Cambrinus march (Published/Created: Louisville, Ky. C. Kollros, 1898. CALL NUMBER: M1540.K81 G3). Constantine Kollros

Constantine Kollros was born on February 17, 1838 in Sasbach am Rhein, Grand Duchy of Baden. He was the son of Joseph Kollros and Magdalena Ringwald. He married Maria Eichhorn, daughter of Georg Eichhorn and Catherine, after 1863 in Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky. He died on November 28, 1916 in Louisville at age 78. He composed at least two other musical pieces that I have found listed: Cleanse thou my soul; Asperges me (1883) and Cecilian Waltz (1907)

Categories: Discoveries Tags: ,