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Surprise! From Disney to Ostfriesland

September 2, 2012 by Jill Holman


The Hand Behind the Mouse pic
The Hand Behind the Mouse: The Ub Iwerks Story

After 20 years of genealogy, I can still be surprised! How delightful. Here is the story . . .
Recently my mother was reading a biography about Walt Disney and a name leapt off the page: Ubbe Iwwerks. You see, we have an Ubbe Iwwerks in our family tree and that doesn’t seem to be a very common name.


With just a little digging, yes indeed, the Ubbe Iwwerks that worked with Disney (he later shortened it to Ub Iwerks) was grandson to our Ubbe. The man who first drew Mickey Mouse! They even wrote a book about him, The Hand Behind the Mouse, and made a documentary. I think my grandma would have gotten a kick out of that, her first-cousin-once-removed worked with Disney and won Academy Awards!


My grandma gave me a scrapbook with stories and photos she had collected and in there she wrote that Ubbee Rempt Iwerks was born 13 Sep 1817 in Holland and married Margaret Von Vekeum. They had Dina (my grandma’s grandma and sister to Ub’s dad), born 3 Nov 1847 in Hanover, Germany. Dina told my grandma stories of ice skating on the Rhine River. I am not sure of her sources for that information.


In the book, The Hand Behind the Mouse, they write that Ubbe Reemt & Maike Iwwerks lived in and raised their children in the village of Abbingwehr which is 6 miles from Uttum in the province of Ostfriesland on the northwest coast of Germany. They say the land was below sea level and had poor soil, so there was limited agriculture and a focus on grazing cattle. They don’t have any information about their sources for that either, but I’m hoping that is right.


Clearly, I have more work to do here since there are some inconsistencies. I find several summaries online from people who have done some work on this part of the family, but I haven’t been able to get my hands on any original sources yet. From a quick look at Wikipedia, it looks like an interesting area with a long history and there were many Frisian dialects so that the different groups of people couldn’t even understand each other!


You might also be interested in:

  • Ancestors of Renie Middendorp
  • John & Dena Middendorp
  • The Middendorp Kids

Filed Under: Discoveries Tagged With: Ubbe Iwwerks

The Mystery of Peter LeClair – The Cannon City Breakthrough

August 12, 2012 by Jill Holman


Tracking down Peter Leclair has been a big challenge (and the whole reason I started on this 20-year-long genealogical journey, by the way.) My grandma told me that her great-grandfather, Peter LeClair, was a fur trapper born in Canada and that he had married an Indian maiden. I wanted to find out if it was true. (Still don’t quite have an answer on that, so stay tuned here to learn what we discover.)


The other information I had to go on was that he was living in Wisconsin when he died and that he was survived by two daughters, Rose and Angeline. There was also a story that his body may have been shipped to Faribault, MN for burial, but no one knew why.


I had found several census records for Peter’s later years in WI. And one in Quebec in 1851, but I wasn’t sure if it was our Peter because they had all these girls that didn’t match with what I knew about his daughters. And where he was in the years in between was a mystery to me.

1880 Census for Peter Hall in Cannon City, MN
1880 Census Record for Peter Hall in Cannon City, MN


For today, let’s look at some crazy variations in census records. We had several problems with Peter:

  1. There are a lot of variations on his name: English and French versions, lots of spelling variations and imagine my surprise when I discovered that LeClair was a “dit name” – sometimes he went back to using Houle! (And Houde was used by his ancestors as well, but more on that another day.)
  2. We didn’t know where to look. Where was he between 1851 and 1895?
  3. His ages vary a lot (What a nightmare!):
    • between 1870 and 1875 he only aged 1 year
    • between 1875 and 1880 he aged 9 years
    • between 1880 and 1885 he aged 11 years
    • between 1885 and 1900 he aged 19 years
    • between 1900 and 1905 he aged only 2 years
    • between 1905 and 1910 he aged 8 years
    • between 1870 and 1910, he had aged 50 years (in only 40 years, folks).

Most of the markers that are normally used to recognize a person (name, age, place) were unreliable. And there was inconsistency with his spouse and children as well. Yikes.


Then along comes my clever and persistent mother. She is not messing around people! She first made a list of the years of all possible census records (Canada, US and states) and then she started going after them. She also dug into those kids and determined that this was the right family. She found various marriage records and obituaries of the girls saying that Peter LeClair and Angeline Parenteau were their parents.


So now she could use that to identify the family – if there was some form of several of the right names together, it was our family: Peter and Angeline with their children Mary, Nelson, Julie, Clarisse, Angeline, Eugenia, Marie Rosalie and Rosalie.


And she was perfectly willing to use the neighbor trick or even find a likely place and go through the census page by page since we couldn’t be sure of what name would turn up in the indexing. And she found the family in Faribault in 1870 and nearby Cannon City from 1875 to 1885! Good work! And this meshes well with another story – she remembers being told that her grandmother used to go stay with relatives in Faribault. Hooray!


Here is a summary – look at those name variations!:

YearCensusName in AncestryAgeLiving In
1851CanadaPierre Leclere24Sherbrooke, Quebec
1861NANANANA
1870USPeter Aclair44Faribault, MN
1875MNPeter LeClair45Cannon City, MN
1880USPeter Hall54Cannon City, MN
1885MNPeter LaCrane65Cannon City, MN
1895WIPeter LaclareNATurtle Lake, WI
1900USPeter Leclaive84Almena, WI
1905WIPeter La Claire86Turtle Lake, WI
1910USPeter Laclair94Turtle Lake, WI
1920USPeter Leclair104Barron, WI

It is kind of incredible to ponder all the potential problems with the census data . . .

  • They might not know the answer to something
  • English versus French
  • Spelling variations
  • Dit names
  • How someone asks a question can influence the response
  • They might lie to hide something or just because they don’t think it is anyone’s business
  • Not everyone could read or write back then
  • Handwriting problems
  • With each person involved there is a chance for more errors (remember playing telephone when we were little?) and several people are in the process: informant, enumerator, original indexer, microfilm quality, database conversion, etc.
  • Records get destroyed
  • Boundaries change
  • Names and ages were not taken so seriously in the past. No one had a plastic ID card that they carried around with them. Most people didn’t even have a birth certificate!

It makes you wonder how this process works so well so much of the time, doesn’t it?

The Basic Facts:
Peter LECLAIR HOULE
b. 27 Jun 1815, Quebec, Canada
d. 13 Oct 1922, Turtle Lake, Barron, WI
Angeline PARENTEAU
b. 6 May 1826, St. Michel, Yamaska, Quebec, Canada
d. 5 Feb 1911, Turtle Lake Baron Co WI
m. 20 Sep 1850, St. Michel, Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada

You might also be interested in:

  • French Tips for Genealogists (who don’t speak French)
  • The Mystery of Peter LeClair – The Birth Breakthrough!

Filed Under: Discoveries Tagged With: Angeline Parenteau, Peter Leclair

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