1899 Thanksgiving Menu in CENTS!

The DAY Family from Paterson, NJ and Related Families. (THIS Tree Is A Working In Progress)

First-degree family links are those between parents and children.
Second-degree links include brothers and sisters, and grandchildren and grandparents.
At the third degree, there are great-grandparents, uncles and aunts, and nieces and nephews.
At the fourth degree, we find a person’s first cousins.
MORE in the diagram.
In short, the degree of kinship represents the number of intermediaries between two people, going back to the common ancestor, then returning to them.


There were times in history when urine was used to tan animal skins. AND, when a whole family would pee in one pot and the contents sold to a local Tannery.
These were poor families. Once a day they would take the pot and sell the urine to live on the money.


These people were said to be, “piss poor.” And worse than that, there were families that could not afford a pot, there for “didn’t have a pot to piss in”.
(no visible connection to the McGee family on this site)

Found at: Mc Gee Equine & Livestock Farrier Service, Rescue, and Rehabilitation – The Horse Manure Problem of 1894
The 15 to 30 pounds of manure produced daily by each beast multiplied by the 150,000+ horses in New York city resulted in more than three million pounds of horse manure per day that somehow needed to be disposed of. That’s not to mention the daily 40,000 gallons of horse urine. Read the rest and check out their posts. https://www.facebook.com/McGeeEquineLivestockFarrierServiceandrescuecenter
For many years I have searched for the surname of my great-great-grandmother, Sarah Ann. A few years ago I found the marriage records for two of her sons which I blogged about at this link. A Mystery To Me:
https://jdswritersblog.wordpress.com/2023/08/07/a-mystery-to-me/

From the marriage records the spelling of their father’s name, George, was a major clue. Until I realized this Sarah’s last name looked to me to start with an S and spelt something like, Suchel or Siskil. But once I saw the similarity from the G in George to the first letter of Suchel/ Siskel I realized my search was for something more like Guchel of Giskil.
From there I searched the family trees of the people related to me through DNA looking for our common surnames. In this case the surname was GASKILL. Then I looked to see if the surname we shared linked us through common ancestors and especially Gaskill. That was how I found Sarah Ann Gaskill.