Friday, May 2, 2025

An old genealogy

There is an old family origin story in my branch of the Wallaces that goes like this: Two brothers stole a pig in Scotland, and were being chased by the authorities, so they escaped to Northern Ireland. There, they were able to survive and live with friends or relatives, but they weren't happy. So they decided to go to Pennsylvania, where some other Wallaces had settled, and they did. And that's how our ancestors got to Pennsylvania.

Naturally I had questions about who they were: when did they live? Where did they start out and what was their transit point in Northern Ireland? It seems they were from Ayreshire in Scotland. There were thousands of Wallaces in Ayreshire (sp.?) at the time so the trail seems to have gone cold.

But I turned up a genealogy the other day, and got it off an ancient computer where it was actually in html form; I reformatted it and now have a word document that I can send around. I am not sure if it is the only one I have for the Wallaces, or how it compares to others that might be around. It had huge formatting issues and lots of typos which I only fixed if they were obvious.

I might now be able to answer a couple of questions from above. It seems my best guess would be John and Robert Wallace, born at the end of the 1700's, John about eight years older than Robert. They knew their siblings' names, as well as their parents and their grandfather William Wallace who is the only #1 character in this genealogy. Of course all of us Wallaces would like to think we are descended from a William, if not THE William.

So John and Robert are in the third generation, and many of the lower generation are listed. Nobody knew much about John's descendants but they knew when he died. Robert then had most of the ones we know, twelve pages of them, many of them Wallaces, including our own Wallace family with its twelve cousins me among them. Some dates and names are wrong. It doesn't go past my birth, and therefore was probably updated by my parents as early as the sixties when the Leverett one was made (the Leverett one now has my children, if not theirs, but that probably reflects the fact that my dad was still updating it for years. I'm not sure if there is anything updated on my mom's side, the Wallaces; this one is not updated though).

I may put it on this blog. I may even update it on this blog. If you're interested, contact me. I'll make sure you get one.

Update: found it on this very blog.

Wallace genealogy

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Wallace family

Below are pictures of a remarkable family. In the first one my Grandpa Jim and Grandma Margo were still alive, in front - and we have Marnie, Emmy and Betty across above them, and Uncle Bones (Jim Wallace) above.

When they got older they'd have reunions in the dry country out by Las Vegas or Arizona. I'm not sure where the bottom picture is, but we have the same four: Emmy, Marnie, Jim, Betty.


Monday, May 6, 2024

Uncle Bones

Here's my uncle, Jim Wallace, who lived most of his life in the deserts around Las Vegas, Utah and arizona. In this picture he was in the air force - (sorry, my capital-a's aren't working) - it could be said that this was the height of his success...

Monday, October 17, 2022

Wallace Monument

I ran across this somewhere, and now have lost track of where. My goal is to do the research. In the past I have stopped at the ocean, and not looked into any family as they were back in England or Scotland. For the Wallaces, this is a tragedy, although I strongly doubt I am directly descended from William Wallace, as I would like to think. I set out that goal, to find out more. This monument will be my inspiration.


Wednesday, April 20, 2022

One Woman's Voice continued

I published the book, and soon after found an account, of my own mother, that adds quite a bit to it.

The whole publishing thing is hard, and it involved fixing a few errors, including the front cover, which had the wrong date on it. So I have that fixed. There's the right date now. There are no blank pages or little typos.

But my mom's account really has to be chewed on for a while. There were apparently a few things that were passed down through the family; some are probably not true, but nevertheless they deserve full research. Why did I not have my own mom's account? It seemed to be in some papers that were not with the genealogy ones. So I really don't know why i hadn't seen it.

Mom says that, according to word passed down from her mother, Elizabeth 1) dropped out of school for lack of funds; 2) her request to make a speech at the college happened in her freshman year and there were actually two years, because she requested it again the next year; 3) her father at one point ran off with the Oneida Community and his name was not to be spoken in the house (this I would infer to be the house of Jessie and Elizabeth's mother, after she got old and ended up there in Indiana); and 4) John had an older son who had already grown up when she came into the picture.

I have already researched #4 a little and found nothing, but it's not really what I expect to find or not that matters. After mulling it over I've decided that I change a little of my understanding based on the family gossip and I really have to integrate it into the text somehow. Things like #4 are hard to prove wrong but it makes me wonder if I really even should say it. With #3, if he was with the Oneida Community it seems it would have to have been before they went to Michigan, maybe much more - but then did her mom split up with him or what? Or was that just not possible? I can see her ending up in Indiana bitter for any reason and maybe that got mixed up with any Oneida Community gossip. That gossip I had always assumed applied to one of many uncles, who all lived in the area at the time of the community, and any of them could have done it. Apparently mom checked and they had no record of Joseph, her dad, joining them.

So I will mull it over and decide when to rewrite. It may take a while, and will require a new index I'm sure.

Sunday, April 3, 2022

One Woman's Voice


One Woman's Voice:
Biography of Elizabeth Mansfield Irving (1852-1939), elocutionist, patriot, women's rights pioneer


Available on Amazon, Kindle and Kindle Unlimited
paperback %5.95 + shipping
Kindle $3.99
free on Kindle Unlimited
ACX version coming<
Non-zons (people who refuse to use Amazon), contact me & we'll work something out


This is a story of a woman who wanted to be an elocutionist, on the cusp of the nation's Centennial (1876), when women were not permitted to speak on important topics of the day. A gifted reader and orator, with a beautiful voice, she went into reading war poetry to reunions and encampments of Civil War veterans. She also inherited an insurance business when her husband got sick and died, becoming one of Toledo (Ohio)'s first women business owners. It's the story of using one's voice when one can, and getting one's voice when one is able. Her life corresponed with the rise of elocutionists as a united group, and the rise of the woman's suffrage movement, which ultimately gave women their voice in the political arena also.

Saturday, April 2, 2022

book finished

My book, "One Woman's Voice: Biography of Elizabeth Mansfield Irving (1852-1939), elocutionist, patriot, women's rights pioneer, is done. Amazon has not processed it yet, but it will, and you'll be the first to know.

Her daughter married a Wallace, my Grandpa Jim (or one of them, anyway). He was a Wallace from New Castle, Pennsylvania, and he married a Toledo girl and went out to Iowa for most of their lives. Recently my sister was in New Castle visiting an old house on Wallace Avenue (or is it Wallace Street?) and she got some pretty good pictures. If I can get on the ball, I'll put them here.

So things are happening. Stay posted; you'll see it here.

Wallowing? Take a breather

Yes I've taken a little break from this business. I'll explain. I was deep into the family of John Wallace (~1750), the one who cam...