|
| |
First Families of Henry County
At the June 1989 meeting of the Henry County Genealogical
Society the First Families committee presented Requirements for Membership and
Rules of Evidence for approval by the general membership. Those present at the
meeting accepted the papers presented. If you are interested in becoming a
member of First Families of Henry County please read the following rules
carefully and submit proper papers to the committee.
 |
Over 50 ancestors have been awarded Gold or Silver
status through the Henry County First Families program. These are
available now with date of birth, death date, marriage date, and
spouse. Click HERE or on the image to the left to see a list of those
names. |
OBJECTIVES OF THE FIRST FAMILIES OF HENRY COUNTY
The prime objectives of The First Families of Henry County are
to identify and honor the memory of the earliest pioneers of Henry County and to
show the proved pioneer's lasting mark on the county they helped develop, by
honoring their descendents.
The research and work necessary to discovering the pioneers and their
descendents is intended to foster and encourage increasing interest in the
people who contributed in any way - great or small - to establishing the County
of Henry, and in Henry County customs, culture, genealogy and history.
REQUIREMENTS FOR MEMBERSHIP IN THE FIRST FAMILIES OF HENRY COUNTY
Only members of the Henry County Genealogical Society may apply for membership
in The First Families of Henry County (FFH). Applicants in the First Families of
Henry County must complete an FFH application form, showing their Henry County
pioneer ancestor(s). Applicants must list their own descent from these pioneer ancestor(s)
and prove their descent and the pioneer ancestor(s) settlement in what is now
the County of Henry, before the appropriate date(s) (see below).
The First Families of Henry County application
must be accompanied by clear, readable copies of all documents necessary to:
-
prove
the pioneer's settlement(s) in Henry County before December 31, 1870, to be
considered as a Gold member and/or before December 31, 1885, to be considered as
a Silver member;
-
prove each step of descent from the pioneer(s) to the
applying Henry County Genealogical Society member.
Proof may not be omitted for any step.
These document copies must be either:
-
copymachine, photostat,
photo of the original document; or
-
exact, typed, or handprinted copies of
the original document, certified as "True Copies" by a courthouse official,
genealogical librarian, or other official, with the certifier's signature and
title.
All proof documents must show their source. Reference alone
to a document is not enough.
Original applications for membership in the First Families of Henry County must
be accompanied by a $10.00 application fee, which covers as many pioneer
ancestors who settled in Henry County before the appropriate date. The
applicant can prove these ancestors either at the time of his original application, or later.
All applications must be in by April 30 of the current year for review by the
committee.
When further proof is requested, the application shall remain inactive until the
requested further proof is filed with the FFH Committee to reactivate the
application.
The final step in the FFH application is presentation by the FFH Committee to the Henry County Genealogical Society's current President for
acceptance and signature. The awards will be given out at the November meeting
if the application is approved and accepted.
Mail correspondence and documentation to:
Henry County Genealogical Society
Attn: First Families of Henry County
P.O. Box 231
Deshler, Ohio 43516
Please remember: a statement is not
necessarily true just because it is in print.
The application, information, and all supporting documents
and data become the property of the Henry County Genealogical Society.
THE FIRST FAMILIES OF HENRY COUNTY, OHIO
RULES OF EVIDENCE
The rules of evidence applying to membership in The First Families of Henry
County, are listed below. These rules are the standards by
which all First Families of Henry County proof is judged.
Basic Rules of Evidence
- Primary or collateral evidence from vital statistics, courthouse
or other government records, church or school records, etc., are considered
usually to be beyond a doubt.
- Secondary evidence, such as census records, newspaper clippings, old letters,
Bible records, county histories, published biographies or other family records
contemporary to the facts reported, are considered almost as authentic. Title
page and copyright page are a must when appropriate.
- Circumstantial evidence, implied facts, or hearsay are not considered proof,
unless backed up by primary or secondary evidence.
- Oral, written, or published family traditions are often
wrong, and are NOT accepted as proof.
Specific Rules of Evidence
- Printed or manuscript genealogies; genealogical records; or genealogical
compilations; family group sheets; ancestral or descendant charts; family
reunion records; or like records, including unsupported information from a
professional or amateur genealogist, are not considered as proof. This includes
any of these types of records printed in any genealogical, historical or other
type of publication.
- Lineage papers, accepted or unaccepted, from other patriotic
or hereditary societies, by themselves are not considered proof. The document
copies that were used to prove the lineage might be considered proof for FFH if
they follow the Rules of Evidence.
- Material authored by the applicant, or a member of his family cannot be
considered as proof.
- Documents used as proof must, either by themselves, or in
conjunction with other acceptable documents, actually state the fact to be
proved. If the document merely implies the fact, it is not to be considered proof. An
example is the expression "Heirs" or "Heirs-at-Law" used in some estates. This
indicated different things in different states, and at different times, and is
not necessarily a proof of direct descent. If these statements are to be used as
proof of direct descent, the applicant must include with his application a copy
of the inheritance law of the state, showing that, at the year the proving
document was dated, it was proof of direct descent "in the blood line," and must
also include proof that the testator had no will, and had at least one child.
Ohio's laws of inheritance have changed many times through its history, and what
was true during one period, may not have been true at another. Other examples of
implied evidence which are not acceptable as proof, are:
- Census records that show the name of the head of the
family only, with "numbers" by age grouping to represent the other residents
in the household. These unnamed persons are NOT proved as children or wife of
the family head, nor as residents, no matter how well they match other
records. Next-door or close neighbors on a census or tax record are not proved
as related merely by their closeness on the census or tax records, or by
similarity of names.
- A father is not proved as being in the area just because
his child was born there. The birth proves only that the mother was certainly
there on the birth date!
- Owning the same
land as an earlier owner does not necessarily prove blood descent by the same name, whether the land was received by
inheritance or by purchase.
- Documents written or printed in a foreign language must be
accompanied by a translation into English, and the translation certified as a
"True Translation" by the translator, who must not be the applicant.
- The ancestor(s) proved in Henry County before the
appropriate date must be in direct line back from the paternal or maternal
ancestors of the applicant. "Collateral descent" as sometimes used recently in
other hereditary organizations is not descent at all, but relationship to a
brother, sister or even cousin of a direct ancestor and is not an allowed line
for The First Families of Henry County, Ohio.
- All proof documents must indicate their source. Bible records, diaries and
other book proofs must be submitted with their title page, showing the
publication date and owner or writer's name. Newspaper clippings must be
identified by the name of the newspaper.
- Typed, hand-written or printed copies of original documents,
to be considered as proof, must be certified as a "True Copy" by a courthouse or
other official, notary public, librarian, etc. An applicant or member of his
family cannot certify his own copies as true! If copy machine or photo copies of
an original document show changes or corrections to the original document, those
changes must be verified and signed as "True Copies" by the same type of
unbiased official.
- If more than two ancestral lines are to be submitted, an ancestral chart
must be included to show the inter-connected relationships, and ease the burden
of the reviewer, trying to puzzle it out.
- Photographs of tombstones usually prove only birth and death
dates. However, sometimes relationships are shown and are usually considered
good proof. Printed compilations of cemetery inscriptions are usually accepted
as proof, unless it is obvious or known that the compiler has added information
which doesn't appear on the tombstone.
|