Showing posts with label Orval Calhoun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orval Calhoun. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Index To Orval Calhoun's Our Calhoun Family Vols. 1-4



I think I've finally figured out how to do this. For several years I've had the index some of our members made in the early 1990's of a 4 volume set of genealogy gathered by Canadian Orval Calhoun.
This index was originally sold for cost on 31/2 inch discs and was in an early MS/DOS form that couldn't even be read on my new computer without a special program.


A page from the contents

Thanks to Sue Gilbert (Alice Calhoun book in earlier post) I was able to convert the index to a PDF file and post it on Google Documents.

The Index to Volumes 1 & 2 is here.

The Index to Volumes 3 & 4 is here.

Preface

Glen Ethier originally volunteered to index the books; Glen had done this professionally before he retired. We acquired 8 other volunteers (I have their names somewhere and will post them here when I find them again) including Bob Ed and Sue O'Connell. They each took a section of a volume and followed Glen and Bob's instructions to list each name mentioned.
It was decided to list the name first then the birthday. The reason for this was to distinguish people who have same name over the years. For instance, there are thousands of people named after John C. Calhoun, especially the first 100 years after the Civil War. The Roman Numeral after each entry is the volume (I through IV), then the page.

Copies of the books are mostly held by individuals. There are many copies in libraries and The Church Of The Latter Day Saints have all four volumes.

If I remember Orval's story correctly, he retired in the mid 1970's and took up researching his own family tree.

The search ended in Ireland; like many others he couldn't cross the Irish Sea to find out who originally came from Scotland. Like many of us he was seriously bit by the Genealogy Bug. He started attending Calhoun family reunions and Scottish games in the US and Canada and started collecting everyone else's genealogy. To prepare the first volume he typed out these genealogies on a manual typewriter (something readers under 50 years old have probably never experienced). The pages look like this:


The first volume was an immense success and people started voluntarily sending him their genealogies. One thing everyone should remember is everything in these books are only as accurate as what was submitted to him.

I know there are a few mistakes in the books. Corrections were published in later books when possible. Orval organized a "family reunion" at Clemson University in South Carolina (site of John C. Calhoun's home), but he died just before that happened. It was well attended and we were able to meet his widow, Glad. I feel the Clemson reunion and indexing of these books were a tribute to Orval and the Herculean effort it took to make these four volumes of Our Calhoun History.


I donated a pair of the index discs to my old library I spent a lot of time in growing up.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

E Mail From Leslie Cahoon

Les sent me an e mail about what I wrote in the last newsletter:

"Hi Tom
I received your E'mail of the death Lady Kathleen and Stephen L. Calhoun from Skeets. I already knew about Lady Kathleen's death from the Calhoun Society of U. K.
The main reason for this E'mail is to correct misconception which I believe may have been started by of S. L. C. [Steven Lance Calhoun] in the manuscript he supplied to Orval Calhoun and published in Volume 3 of his book. S. L. C. lineage was from William Cahoon (abt1702-1774) of Delaware. There is no documentation that connects this William with the Mass. Cahoons and the first William Cahoone (abt 1633-1675) of Mass. although most researchers believe these Delaware Cahoons did migrate from Mass. Documented brothers of William Cahoon of Delaware were Marmaduke, Samuel, and Thomas. Among the known grandsons of William Cahoone (abt1633-1675) there is no Marmasduke or Thomas. We may be descendants of William Cahoone but as serious genealogists we should not state that as a fact.
There are many errors in the draft which S.L.C. provided to Orval and it appears that Orval added many to that which was published.

Les Cahoon"