Category Archives: Genealogy/family

Falling down another family rabbit hole

I didn’t mean to go digging around in family history again on Friday.

I was actually trying to do a bit of cleaning, and found myself looking in a box out in the garage trying to find stuff that could be thrown away.

But instead I found an old leather wallet and when I opened it, the name of my grandfather–my mom’s father, Duke Yonge– was embossed on the interior in gold letters.

Just click on the photo to get a closer look.

Inside the wallet was a small stack of well-aged papers, which turned out to include an original Social Security card as well as a 1923 drivers license.

My grandparents lived in Waipahu. He died when I was just three years old, and I never had a chance to know him.

So, of course, I had to drop my plans to throw things out and instead took the wallet and papers back inside in order to look through them.

First, I found a copy of his obituary published in one of the Honolulu newspapers.

Obituary

He died in May 1950, and the funeral was held under the auspices of the Masonic Lodge 443 at Schofield.

I was able to find a couple of photos of him. One shows my grandparents at a luau in their home in Waipahu in 1946. Another is from an identification card from a period where he worked as collector for Mutual Telephone Company, the predecessor of Hawaiian Tel.

I tried to give them a little digital cleaning, which accounts for a little unnatural sharpness for old photos.

Then I started looking through the scraps of paper, where I learned something that surprised me.

In April 1923, he obtained a “Chauffeur’s License” from the Sheriff’s Office in Honolulu, which stated he had “been examined and found competent and hereby licensed to operate a motor vehicle, to wit, Automobile propelled by Gasoline….” There were blanks on the form where the words “automobile” and “gasoline” were written in by hand.

The license described Duke Yonge as standing just 5 foot 6, and weighing 118 pounds. He was, it seems, a small man. I outweigh him by about 100 pounds!

And he had blue eyes, like Meda! My mother used to joke that the only people with blue eyes out in the country were the bill collectors. I didn’t realize she might have been talking about her father.

Territory of Hawaii IDENTIFICATION CERTIFICATE

This was issued pursuant to the Hawaii Defense Act, first passed in 1941 and updated after the December 7 attack on Pearl Harbor. Although undated, this ID card appears to have been issued in 1942.

The stamps on his ID card indicate he was issued a gas mask on January 6, 1942, and received a liquor purchaser’s permit on February 27. In addition, he received smallpox and typhoid vaccinations in 1942, and a typhoid booster in 1944.

I got one additional surprise. His ID card indicated he had a “crooked 5th finger on his rt hand.”

This could be a coincidence, but I’ve got some arthritis here and there, including the last joint on the little finger of my right hand which makes it appear, well, crooked. It has developed only late in life. A genetic “gift” from him? Who knows.

And I also noted that the birth date on the ID certificate is 1878, where all the other sources indicate he was actually born in 1877.

And there’s one additional document of interest, a small advertisement cut from an unknown source. It offers a “humane poultry killer” available for $1.75 from a company in Kansas City, Missouri.

It’s a little gruesome by current standards (“Blade cuts artery, pierces brain, perfect bleeding. easy picking.” And, it adds, “Fully guaranteed.” It also offers a “free folder” containing “latest killing methods.”

But folks in the country grew a lot of their own food, and my grandparents raised both chickens and pigeons, meaning this might have come in handy. My mother recalled enjoying meals of chicken and squab in Waipahu.

TravelBlogue/Auckland: Doppelganger

On Friday, August 1, I received a Google alert flagging the appearance of my name in an online publication.

But it took only a quick glance to realize that this story of a garden featured another Ian Lind, one who lives here in New Zealand’s North Island.

I sent a message off to the author of the story, asking if he would forward a message off to the NZ Ian Lind.

On Monday, the author let me know that he would pass my message along.

Now I wait, hoping that Ian Lind will reply.

Could this be another Lind cousin?

I’m hoping to get a response so that we can check it out.

TravelBlogue/Auckland: Days 6 & 7-Family

We spent much of the weekend socializing with several of my Lind cousins. We were shepherded around for several days by cousin Brad and his wife, Sapi.

On Saturday, we headed to the home of another cousin, Pene Quin, in Manukau, about a 30-minute drive south of downtown Auckland. Pene is a complete and total animal person, supported by her husband, Richard, a retired engineer.

Their talking mynah is named “Morris.” If you know your old cars, you’ll get the joke. They recently added two Pappilon puppies to the household, joining Pebbles, who looks like she could be their mother. Pene has been a star volunteer at the Auckland Zoo for over 23 years.

Rick brewed up some killer coffee (“this will grow hair on your teeth,” he warned), while we ooh’d and ah’d over the puppies, Pene’s art work on display, and their beautiful home.

Then it was off for lunch at Pepper Jack’s Cafe in the Pine Harbor Marina, where their boat, the Lady P, is moored. It’s currently for sale, but there are tough economic headwinds, so it might take a while to find a buyer.

Sunday was another family day, this time hosted by Brad’s mother, Gaewyn. Her home is in the Massey district of West Auckland, the opposite direction from where we were on Saturday. The house has a wonderful view overlooking a large public park.

Gae retired from a career in catering, and it showed in the tasty spread she served up for lunch on her deck overlooking the adjacent park.

We had all met before. We first met Pene and Rick in 2012 after my late sister, Bonnie, tracked her down through meticulous genealogical research. And we just met Brad, Sapi, and Gaewyn, and two other cousins, when we visited Auckland a year ago.

It’s felt good to see a bit more of the Auckland area, deepen these family ties and learn more details about the history of this New Zealand wing of the Lind family.

Our flight home departs late Wednesday evening but arrives in Honolulu early Wednesday morning, courtesy of the International Dateline.

Time to check the obits

Early Sunday morning. It’s still dark. I’ve already checked email, looked at newspaper headlines. And now, being of a certain age, I’ll take a quick look through the Sunday newspaper’s several pages of obituaries looking for familiar people or family names.

It reminded me of something I posted back a number of years.

I’m reprinting that post below.

I opened another box of family things this week, as I try to slowly reduce the several generations of possessions that I boxed up after the deaths of my parents and my sister on the assumption that I would “deal with them” later.

This time I pulled out what appeared to be an old photo album. It turned out to be filled with newspapers clippings carefully placed on plastic-covered pages. On closer inspection, the clips are mostly from the obituary pages. Carefully cut out, most dated, and sorted into categories.

They led me on a strangely emotional journey past signposts in my mother’s life.

In any case, I open the album. It’s individual pages aren’t secured, and they’ll fall out of the album covers if I’m not careful.

The front page is marked simply, “Ohana.” Family. Unfortunately, not much there, just a single page.

The first clipping, top left, dated August 20, 1972. Mary Kawehiokalani Cockett, 83, of Wailuku. It lists out her surviving children by name, and then adds “43 grandchildren and 44 great-grandchildren.”

I know that she was our link to a number of cousins, including Pat Cockett on Kauai and Dr. Emmett Aluli. I had to dig back into my notes to try to recall how we’re connected. I think that I have it correct. She is a descendant of my great-great-grandmother’s sister. So our common ancestor is Kapehe, my great-great-great grandmother, who lived on Maui.

Next clipping: “Kaawalauole, Miss Edith. Age 36…passed away Jan. 14, 1972 at Waimano Hospital.” Now I’m caught short. I remember my sister talking about the Kaawalauole family, but I have no recollection of how or whether we’re related. So I dug into the copy that I made of the hard drive from my sister’s computer. There I find the answer.

Kaawalauole was a younger brother of my Hawaiian great-great-grandfather, Kahooilimoku. According to Bonnie’s notes, he was born on 11 Mar 1841, and died in 1892 at Niolopa, Jack Lane, Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii. So that’s our link to the Kaawalauole family.

Also on the same page, dated May 24, 1980: “Noa Tong Aluli, 60…a self-employed contractor, died Thursday at his home.” His wife, Mokihana, was (if I’ve got it right) a daughter of Mary Cockett. And mother of Dr. Emmett Aluli.

Smaller print on this one. “Mundzak, Rachel Toomey, age 59…September 18, 1960.” Now it gets tricky. Rachel’s mother, Florence “Flora” Toomey, was my grandmother’s half-sister. Put another way, our common ancestor was Kina Kahooilimoku, who was Rachel’s grandmother and my great-grandmother.

Then at the bottom of the page. “George McPherson, former regent at UH, noted executive, dies at 67.” It’s a Honolulu Star-Bulletin obit, May 19, 1987. He was one of my mother’s first cousins. His mother, Helen Kahooilimoku (Cathcart) McPherson, was my grandmother’s sister. He was still alive when Meda and I returned to Hawaii for graduate school. He was divorced, living alone, and we enjoyed socializing with him. He was one of that hard-drinking generation that were part of the Democratic Party “revolution.” He was part of the John Burns faction of the party, which accounted for his appointment to the Board of Regents.

There’s one final clipping on this page. It’s the obit of Bernice Lee, sister of Duke Kahanamoku. I don’t think we’re related, but I’ll file that away for later exploration.

Past the ohana page are several marked “Possible ohana,” and then on to “special friends.” Here are dozens of names, a few of which sound somewhat familiar to me. The one’s I recognize are friends from her youth, some family friends, some from her years at Kamehameha Schools or the University of Hawaii. Then there are spouses or parents of her close friends. There are a couple of 1988 obits of note. “Nina H.B. Read, Hawaii’s first Lei Day queen, dies,” reads one headline. The former Nina Bowman had five brothers, Wright, Kent, J. Pierre, Waldo, and Jan. Kent Bowman was a close friend of my mother’s brother, and the two of them were frequent guests at our home when I was a kid. Folks who grew up here will remember Kent Bowman as the creator of “K.K. Kaumanua,” who kept us laughing with his pidgin English comedy.

Also from 1988, Thelma Springer, who’s husband, Pilipo Springer, was a longtime friend of my mom’s. Then another familiar name, Alfred Giugni, father of Henry Giugni, former Senate Sgt. at Arms and longtime aide to Senator Dan Inouye, and grandfather of filmmaker Heather Giugni. I think my grandparents were friends with the Giugni family, and I know there was a period during which my uncle caught a ride daily with the Giugni’s from Waipahu to Iolani School.

These special friends quickly give way to pages of “Friends & neighbors.” I’m surprised to see an obit from 1988 of Charles Tassill. One of his brothers, Renwick “Joe” Tassil, died just last year. I had known Joe Tassil since we both participated in a protest in support of Sonny Kaniho back in the mid-1970s. Joe later became a fixture at the State Capitol, where he led tours for a number of years. There’s another obit of Leland Blackfield, whose family lived just down the block when I was in elementary and high school. He died in 1989 at age 45.

My eyes are getting fuzzy from the fine print. More pages follow, “Descendants of early settlers,” and “Alii descendants.” I’m tired, and now I’m just checking the headlines on the obits.

Okay. Pau for now.

I think that as my mother aged, more and more of the people she knew showed up in the obituaries, and she just couldn’t keep up with the sorting and organizing. Those clips just went into a pile to be organized when she had time. She died a few months before her 99th birthday, but never found the time.

I recall that as I was clearing out my mom’s stash, there were at least a couple of small boxes of unsorted obituaries from local newspapers. Apparently those were waiting to be organized and put into place in this album. Now I feel a little guilty about my decision to just trash them when I was stressed and under time pressure to empty the house and get her “affairs” in order.

I do recall her lament in her last years. “All my friends are gone,” she would say. She was matter-of-fact about it, but clearly it pained her.