Hilda (Johnson) Brungot


SEE article about Hilda (Johnson) Brungot

Portrait above located in New Hampshire State House, photograph taken by Janice W. Brown.  Portrait by Willy Fromm, 1978.
Presented to the State by friends, 1978.

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New Hampshire's Presidential Privacy

To the casual observer genealogists sometimes appear more like “scandal rag” reporters than the serious folks that we are. During these presidential primary months, family tree  researchers were portrayed as myopically focusing on whether the candidates owned slaves, whether they are they related to each other, and if they have connections to famous (or infamous)  people.  

When Damaris Fish of Central Point Oregon sent me an email asking how the presidential candidates stand on issues important to genealogists, I did not have an immediate response.  In my humble opinion a genealogist's greatest need is to have open access to vital records.  Keep in mind that such access used to be governed only by each state's laws, and it was not a matter of national concern (and rightly so).

Damaris asks, “Where is the balance point with access to vital records for historical research, and protecting privacy & identity theft? Have you heard any of the presidential candidates address this issue(s)? How do you allow access to records of interest to family historians, but not compromise privacy of living people?”  

Since I don't have any of the presidential candidates sitting in my living room (although all of them would be welcome) to provide the answers, I decided to look at an event that has shaped privacy policy for the past few years, and will continue to do so for years to come.

Following September 11th it was learned that the terrorists had falsified identification. PLEASE NOTE that all of the Sept 11 hijackers used their REAL names when boarding flights that fatal morning. This knowledge fueled a thoughtless knee-jerk response by legislators and decision-makers, who immediately created and enacted laws that restrict our access to vital records.   

These new laws resulted in making it horrifyingly difficult in some states to obtain or renew driver's licenses and to access vital records. I personally know of a World War II veteran who could produce a pile of paperwork demonstrating that he was alive, had married, had several children, had served in the army, etc. But this same man had spent several months unsuccessfully trying to renew a driver's license because he never had a birth certificate (he was born at home, and the doctor never completed it).

What is mind boggling is that making vital records more difficult to obtain is being touted as a method of preventing the wrong people from obtaining YOUR identification.  One might think that your birth certificate is the primary desire of identity thieves, and that they will use it to spend your money or steal your identity. If you believe this, you are SO WRONG!

The primary (no pun intended) methods of having your identity and/or credit cards stolen, BEFORE and AFTER September 11th are in this order:

1. Auto theft and home break-ins. Do you leave your insurance, driver's license, purse or wallet in your vehicle (on the seat or in the glove compartment)? Is your home burglar proof?

2. Mail skimming and mailbox theft. Someone walks or drives up to your mailbox and takes all or part of the contents. Is your mailbox locked?

3. Telephone scams. Thieves convince you and other people to provide your personal information to them. This is one good reason not to believe anything you hear.

4. Garbage Diving.  Someone sifts through your trash, finding your personal information on forms, receipts, etc.  Woohoo! They might even find a credit card receipt with your signature.

So why are both federal and state governments touting how they are helping us by restricting access to vital records and making drivers licenses harder to obtain? How is this keeping us safe?  Answer: They do it because the government knows it cannot force us to take action to keep our identity safe in the most effective ways.

The government CANNOT force us to:
— keep all personal documents out of our vehicles, install an adequately noisy security system in our homes, or at least buy a little dog that barks when strangers come near  (solving or at least deterring problem #1).
— keep a 24 hour watch on your mailbox, or purchase a locking one (solving #2).

And the government certainly cannot listen in on our telephone conversations (oh wait, maybe they do!) in order to prevent us from sharing confidential information. Passing a law requiring all citizens to shred personal documents before putting them in the trash (solving #4) would actually have a positive impact on the problem, but the odds of such a law being enacted is nil.

And so, instead of focusing on what would actually ease the problem, both state and national  government representatives have turned their attention to what they CAN do, even if it will have no or minimal impact. In the meantime those decisions make research more difficult for over 110 million American genealogists (estimated numbers from 13 years ago!)

The number of existing genealogists (who hopefully all vote) is nothing to sneeze at. An article at genealogy.com states: “According to the poll, approximately 60 percent of the U.S. population is interested in family history, up from 45 percent just five years ago. Beyond that, the poll also showed that about 35 million people have used the Internet for family history research. This means that nearly half of all Internet users have done genealogy online.” 

If there are so many of us, then why aren't we, as genealogists, making more noise in order to obtain better vital record access?  Perhaps this is because we, like the rest of our nation's citizens, are also confused about the causes and cures of identify theft and privacy issues.

And so, when I read that email from Damaris Fish, I decided that the presidential candidates don't talk about “privacy issues” because the term  means something different to each person. The term “privacy issues” encompasses many concerns including: 1) companies sharing your consumer information with others; 2) government surveillance of individuals; 3) the no-call telephone list; 4) keeping health care documents safe; 5) safeguarding our social security number; 6) civil liberties, etc.   Also as I mentioned earlier, the type of privacy that genealogists are mainly interested in, such as making vital record access easier, is still an emotional issue.  The candidates will want to respond to what most people THINK is the problem, not what it actually is.

Before you say, “Wait, you are wrong about the bad guys not wanting my birth certificate,” I'd like you to read two excellent articles about this topic written by my blogger friends Craig Manson and Randy Seaver. You will find the links to those articles below.

And thank you Damaris, for sending the email that gave me a reason to explore the REAL concerns we should have about identity and credit card theft. I took the time to visit several of the presidential candidate's web sites. A few of them mention the topic of privacy, but not a single one of them speaks about the real causes of identity and credit card theft (as outlined above) and none of them indicate that we ourselves have the responsibility and the power to prevent it from happening.  Perhaps we don't want to believe we have that power. Maybe what we really want instead is for our next President to solve that and all our other life problems for us.

Be advised that when I vote, it is irrelevant that Hillary Clinton's family came from the same part of England as George Washington, and that Mike Huckabee is a distant cousin to Amelia Earhart. It will not matter a twit to me whether Barack Obama's ancestors owned slaves, or how Mitt Romney's ancestors worshiped. 

What genealogy has taught me is that I can be (and am) a distant cousin to President George Bush (and a lot of other people) but I do not necessarily share his or their views and personal traits.  The same goes for everyone else.

Janice

Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your

government when it deserves it.” –Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain)

*Additional Important Reading*

-Craig Manson at GeneaBlogie: Privacy, Public Records, and Genealogy-

-Randy Seaver at Genea-Musings: Identity Theft and Privacy Concerns

Take the Genealogue poll (How Popular is Genealogy?)

Note: as mentioned in my list of 2008 resolutions, this article is the first of more “political” articles that I need to write this year.

Also see.

Miriam Midkiff at AnceStories: “Privacy, Open Access to Records, and Politics.”

Tom MacEntee at Destination Austin Family: “I Want To See Living People; I Want To See Dead People.”

Posted in Current Events, Genealogy | 1 Comment

New Hampshire Glossary: Bannock

Bannock  is a simple or quick- bread cooked on a hearth, or in a frying pan. This type of bread also was easy to make on the trail, when it was rolled into a strip, wound around a green stick and cooked over an open fire.

When cornmeal and an egg were included, it was called a “bannock cake.”  Bannock is a popular foodstuff in Scotland and Ireland, and it is possible this type of bread originated in the British Isles–see origin of the word below.

The history of Wolfeboro New Hampshire (page 537) describes how bannock was prepared: “Thick batter was spread upon a plate or small sheet of iron, sometimes upon a bit of board, and set up edgewise before the kitchen fire. Where the family was large, a considerable number of these would be before the fire at the same time. Rude as the method may seem, it required some skill to properly manage the baking.  Care must be taken that the bread did not burn or slide down on the hearthstone. When one side was sufficiently baked, the bannock must be “turned,” that the other side might be presented to the fire. To do this skillfully was regarded as a very desirable accomplishment.”

Bannock is a great item to make when recreating an American colonial meal, and also as a treat on a camping trip (just remember to bring a large cast iron skillet, the deeper the better).

Janice

Recipe for Bannock

Irish Bannock

Online Etymology Dictionary: bannock

A Tale of A Scottish Bannock

Posted in History, New Hampshire Glossary | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

New Hampshire’s Unluckiest Family: The Bradleys

In the course of New Hampshire’s history, perhaps the unluckiest family was that of Bradley. Were their untimely deaths the result of a curse, or did they simply have the bad luck of being in the wrong place at the wrong time?

It started with the progenitor of this prolific New England family–Daniel Broadley. He immigrated to the New World on 8 Apr 1635 on the ship, “Elizabeth,” of London first settling in Rowley and later in Haverhill, Massachusetts. On 13 Aug 1689 a small party of Indians appeared in the northerly part of this town, and killed him. But not before he married and his wife gave birth to his nine children.

Some of his immediate descendants received a similar sad fate:

— 1695: His eighth child, Isaac (b 1679/80 in Haverhill MA) was abducted by Indians in 1695 but escaped. He married and had ten children.

— 1696: His eldest son Daniel (b. 1662 in Rowley MA) was killed by Indians in March of 1696/97 in what was later known as the “Dustin Massacre.”

— 1718: His fifth child, Mary (b. Apr 1671 in Haverhill MA) was killed 3 Sep 1718 by Indians. She was married twice, her first husband being killed by Indians in 1704. She had 6 children.

— 1727: His second son, Joseph (b. 1664 in Rowley) died Oct 1727.  Joseph’s wife Hannah (Heath) Bradley was captured not once, but twice by Indians and abducted to Canada.  During one of these captivities her newborn child was killed by the abductors. Three other of their children were killed by Indians.

–His ninth child Abraham (b. March 1683 in Haverhill MA) moved to Concord [then called Rumford] NH, where he sired 11 children. He died probably of natural causes.

— 1746: His grandson (by Abraham) Lieut. Jonathan (b 1713 in Haverhill MA) died 11 August 1746 in Concord NH killed by Indians. He had married and had four children previously.

— 1746: His grandson (by Abraham) Samuel Bradley (b 1721 in Haverhill MA) was killed on the same day as his brother Jonathan, in Concord NH on 11 August 1746. He had married and had three children.

–His grandson (by Abraham) Lieut. Timothy Bradley (b. 1711 in Haverhill MA) married Abiah Stevens and had twelve children. Timothy and his wife died of normal causes.  But such was not the fate for their children.

–1759: His great-grandson, (by gr-son Timothy, and son Abraham) Benjamin Bradley (b 1739 in Concord NH). He was one of Roger’s Rangers who perished after the St. Francis flight of Oct 1759. [SEE upcoming article about New Hampshire’s Lost Treasure: The Silver Madonna].

Janice

PS: This strange article is submitted as my contribution to the 4th Edition of Blog Carnival: Cabinet of Curiosities, hosted by Walking the Berkshires.

Posted in History, Oddities, Accidents and Crazy Weather | 7 Comments

President Daniel Webster, and Other Great Humorists, by B. Elwin Sherman

Daniel Webster, who I'm now nominating as the first official Humorist

Laureate of New Hampshire, was once asked to fill the Vice-Presidential spot on

the Whig Party ticket in 1858 with Zachary Taylor, the Party's Presidential

nominee.  He turned it down, saying: “I do not propose to be buried until I

am dead.”

 
Now there's a man who should have been President, or at least been given

his own sitcom.  Ironic, because had Mr. Webster accepted the role of

Executive second banana, he'd have been top banana 16 months later, when Taylor

died in office.  Instead, we inherited Millard Fillmore, our 13th

President, and the only Chief Executive whose name anagrams into: “Mr., I’m A

Filled Roll.”

 
Historically, I find this to be a fitting declaration, as Millard also once

turned down an honorary doctorate because he couldn't understand the diploma's

Latin text.  He said: “No man should accept a degree he can’t read.”

 
Jon Stewart couldn't have quipped it quicker, but I must align myself with

brother humorist Dave Barry, who, in his book: “Dave Barry Slept Here,” cited

the highest achievement of the Fillmore Presidency as: “The earth didn'’t crash

into the sun.”

 
To his credit, however, Fillmore did set up the first White House library,

and later appointed Daniel Webster as his Secretary of State.  We all know

how now-nominated Humorist Laureate Webster then went on to utter this country's

most heralded battle cry: “Give me liberty or give me a dictionary!”

 
(Well … if he didn't offer that ultimatum, he should have, because neither

is worth much without the other.)

 
We'll soon be going to the polls.  In Presidential candidate

politicking, if Iowa is the springboard, then our Granite State is the

pool.  I'm not about to make an endorsement splash here, but if you're

still undecided, I will declare it vital that our next top banana have a keen

sense of humor, and you should vote as if your ballot depended on it.

 
I recently published a column suggesting how we might tidy up the process

of electing a President, but I don't see any evidence that my ideas are being

taken seriously.  For a humorist, this is a good sign.

 
Among other innovations, I proposed that we cancel the national

conventions, and instead of over-funding these grand old glitz and glamour

balls, apply the money where it will best serve the nation:  “to the

elderly, the disabled, our soldiers and their families, and generous grants for

working humor columnists.”

 
Thus far, that idea has generated nothing except my being able to quote

myself, something Millard Fillmore would have died for in any language.

 
I'd thought that our candidates could all be bib-jeaned, lined up and set

upon tractors.  Then, something simple but elegant, like a Thunderbirds

fly-over, would signal the start of the contest.  The first candidate to

finish planting an acre of corn and left outstanding in his/her field would be

President. 

 
Now, isn't this a much more homespun and truer method of evaluating

Presidential savvy than watching a bunch of ballyhoo-ers in funny hats anointing

a foregone conclusion?  That's what football stadiums are for.

 
I submitted this idea to the respective chairmen of our national political

parties, but the non-response has been greater than anyone has ever

non-responded to my columns before.  I suspect my letters were shredded,

burned, and mulched into convention placards, and will be distributed as genuine

simulated Uncle Sam top hats.

 
As stated, I'll stop short of endorsing anyone here, but my comic instincts

tell me that Barack Obama, Mike Huckabee and Dennis Kucinich are the candidates

most likely to know and make a good joke when they hear and see one.  Going

through early life with a funny name gives one a talent for the jeu

d'esprit.

Repeatedly fending off the early playground derisions of: “Yo Mama,

Obama!” or “Cluckabee Huckabee!” or “Eat your spinach, Kucinich!” in the

formative years, has a way of polishing a sense of humor into one worthy of

Presidential wit.  Consider:

 
OBAMA:  At a dinner attended by Dick Cheney, he addressed the

Vice-President, saying:  “For years, we Democrats have succeeded in doing

little more than shooting ourselves in the foot.  You taught us a valuable

lesson.  Aim higher.”

 
HUCKABEE:  “Jesus was too smart to ever run for public office.”
 
KUCINICH:  “Everyone should have health insurance?  I say

everyone should have health care.  I'm not selling insurance.”

 
A prominent New Hampshire newspaper whose name (Union) we needn’t mention,

(Leader) displays as part of its masthead, a quote from almost-President Daniel

Webster, now our state Laughmaster-in-Chief:  “There is nothing so powerful

as truth.”

 
As with most newspapers, it isn't what they say, but what they don't

say.  It omits (look it up yourselves) the rest of that historical quote,

which reads: ” … and often nothing so strange.”

 
An apt anagram for Daniel Webster is: “Wits, be learned.”  From a man

who also said that “Wisdom begins at the end,” I suggest that when we enter the

voting booths in 2008, that's a good place to start.

 
 

* * * * *
Copyright 2007 B. Elwin Sherman.  All rights

reserved.  Used with permission.
* * * * * 

Posted in Humor, New Hampshire Men | Leave a comment