Author: darylohare.vault

  • Found in the Records: The Murder of Cato

    Found in the Records: The Murder of Cato

    The Murder of Cato Colonel’s Island, Liberty County, 1846 There are some days in my research when I dedicate an entire afternoon to a single FamilySearch collection for one county, hoping that by moving page by page, front to back, something overlooked will finally emerge. Names like “Baker” or “Thomas” can become almost impossible to Read more

  • Tracing Eliza: From Harris Neck to New York

    Tracing Eliza: From Harris Neck to New York

    Part III: Movement, Constraint, and Adaptation Finding Eliza Huguenin Thomas Magill in the Record In this third part of my second great-aunt Eliza Huguenin Thomas Magill’s life, I return to a question that has followed me through every document and every attempt to piece her together: how do I find her within the record that Read more

  • Chasing Shapeshifters: John W. Magill

    Chasing Shapeshifters: John W. Magill

    Fragments of a Family Story About a year ago, I began creating folders for individual family members, gathering whatever evidence surfaced as my research intensified. What started in 2023 as a vague, single folder—with a Word document summarizing what I thought was my family tree—quickly unraveled. That document went through multiple rewrites, additions, and hard Read more

  • What the Record Keeps: Following Eliza Huguenin Thomas Magill

    What the Record Keeps: Following Eliza Huguenin Thomas Magill

    The Names That Return In my previous post on “Cousin Rosa,” I introduced her as the daughter of Eliza Huguenin Thomas and John W. Magill. As I have noted in earlier writings, tracing female ancestors often requires the application of different guideposts than those typically employed for men. It is precisely this challenge that made Read more

  • Unraveling Cousin Rosa: A Genealogical Puzzle

    Unraveling Cousin Rosa: A Genealogical Puzzle

    Tracing family history often feels like assembling a puzzle with missing pieces—and sometimes a few pieces seem to belong to an entirely different puzzle set. One of the most elusive figures in my ancestral search is Eliza Huguenin Thomas Magill, the eldest sister of my second great-grandfather, Edward Jonathan Thomas. Like her sister, Mary Jane Read more

  • The Life and Shadows of Mary Jane Thomas Gaden: A Story Waiting to Be Told

    The Life and Shadows of Mary Jane Thomas Gaden: A Story Waiting to Be Told

    If I were a fiction writer, I’d already have a novel on my hands. This story has all the elements: a strong protagonist, mystery, wealth, betrayal, spiritualism, social reform, crime, and ruin. But it’s not fiction—it’s the real-life story of my 2nd great-aunt, Mary Jane Thomas Gaden. And I’m piecing it together, fragment by fragment, Read more

  • Follow the Women

    Follow the Women

    Where I started over two years ago in genealogy research and where I am now are two very different places. My skill set for this work has steadily progressed. Still, I catch myself in frustration when I try to locate evidence of my female ancestors. When I spent a month in August of 2024 in Read more

  • Harris Neck

    Harris Neck

    The name “Harris Neck” first entered my consciousness when I was a young girl visiting my grandmother. It was mentioned during trips near Savannah until her passing in 2009. Yet, as far as I can recall, I never set foot on the land of Harris Neck. Still, it had been a part of my identity Read more

  • Land

    Land

    Part of learning about my family history has focused on learning the counties and towns/cities where past generations lived. My grandmother told me the earliest stories of places, but I couldn’t get a grasp beyond Savannah,GA and Hilton Head, SC: the two locations I remember the most when visiting my grandmother. On trips to Savannah, Read more

  • Starting with my Grandmother

    Starting with my Grandmother

    Putting together a family “tree” is more complicated than I thought. Especially to someone who struggles with basic Excel skills or doesn’t know exactly how to manipulate a plug-in for a website (yet). After attempting some screen shots of trees from the genealogical sites I use, I decided to use Adobe Express to see if Read more

  • Operating Instructions

    Operating Instructions

    Whenever I unbox a new gadget, I often ignore the operation manual. I usually fumble around, perform a bunch of unscripted tactics, and voila, I figure it out. Or not. Then, maybe, I pull out the instructions to witness the breadcrumbs of predictable mistakes I could have skipped had I considered the proper steps, all Read more

  • Opening the Vault

    Opening the Vault

    In my family, I am the unofficial keeper of the family relics. Over the past 30 years, I have also amassed a collection of imperfectly scribbled notes on strewn pieces of old yellow legal paper and notecards that have been tucked away into an old, tall file cabinet—each time staring at me to decipher their Read more