Each family book is a compilation of individual family group sheets, each detailing the subject and his or her immediate family. The first webpage assigned to a family surname contains the first two generations and then subsequent generations are given their own pages. A typical record looks like:
Ancestral Overview
England-Massachusetts
From the perspective of arrival in America, our family reportedly begins with the Edward Fuller (1575-1621) who sailed to America from England aboard the Mayflower and arrived at Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts, in 1620. Edward and his wife died that first winter and their son Samuel was raised by Edward's brother. George Bonham (~1609-1704) also migrated to Plymouth where his son married Edward Fuller's granddaughter.
Deacon Edward Convers (1588/9-1663) sailed to the Massachusetts Bay Colony aboard the Arbella with Winthrop in 1630 and established the Puritan First Church of Woburn, northeast of Boston. His prolific family expanded into Connecticut and Vermont. Erastus Convers (Sr.) (~1804-~1847) came from one of the Vermont branches that resettled in Erie County, Pennsylvania, by 1820. From there the line moved west to Iowa and then followed the California Gold Rush to Coulterville, Mariposa County, California.
Pennsylvania Dutch
The German lines start right at the founding of William Penn's Germantown Colony on the outskirts of Philadelphia in 1683. The Küster (Kester) family, Mennonites from Kaldenkirchen/Krefeld of the Rheinland-Pfalz (Lower Palatinate), near Düsseldorf, arrived in Germantown about 1685. Later the Müller (Miller) and Stutzman families, German Baptist Brethren (“Dunkers”), arrived in Germantown from Steinwenden, Rheinland-Pfalz, near Kaiserslautern, in 1727. Next came the Greib (Cripe) family, “Dunkers,” of Hessen or Baden in 1733.
The Fishers, likely from New Jersey, may also have had roots that go back to Germantown.
These families migrated across Pennsylvania, Maryland, Western Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, and Nebraska before leaping across to California after the Civil War.
Virginia Colony
The Chapman family settled in Virginia's middle peninsula, between Richmond and Fredericksburg, by 1700. From there they moved inland to Amelia County, southwest of Richmond. After the American Revolutionary War, the Chapmans moved further inland to Amherst County in the Virginia Blue Ridge mountains. From there they crossed into Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, and Iowa, where Harriet J. Chapman6 (1842-1936) married John Jackson Fisher3 (1843-1906) in Wapello County, Iowa.
California Gold Rush
John Converse3 (1829-1909), of English Puritan roots, arrived in Coulterville, Mariposa County, California, in 1851. That same year, the Goodwins, Scottish coal miners from Ayrshire, Scotland, arrived in Pennsylvania and began working the coal mines of Northumberland and Schuylkill counties. James Goodwin2 (1829-1864) began investigating California in the mid-1850s, finally settled in Coulterville in 1856, and sent for his family around 1857. They came by way of the Isthmus of Panama.
Andrew Goss1 (1840-1912) arrived in California from Sweden in 1853 or 1854 and settled in Coulterville. He married Elizabeth Goodwin3 (1852-1942) and their son married Alice Converse4 (1879-1951) to produce my paternal grandfather, Lloyd Goss3 (1912-1981).
The Greeley and Barrett families of Mariposa County also married into the Converse and Goss families, respectively.
Italian Swiss
The Cerinis of Giumaglio, Ticino Canton, Switzerland, began investigating Marin and Sonoma Counties in California, as early as the 1880s and finally made their permanent migration with the Maluganis in 1892. The Maluganis, short in physical stature, became allied with the Fishers of tall, robust German-Pennsylvania Dutch stock in the hills above Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, and produced my paternal grandmother, Hazel (Malugani) Goss5.
Polish Roots
My mother's Wargin family arrived in America in 1890 by way of Ellis Island from north-central Poland, then ruled by Prussia. They probably settled first in Chicago, Illinois, before putting down roots in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Around the same time, the Sikorskis arrived from Poland, probably originating in central and eastern Poland, which was under Russian rule. After arrival, they operated saloons in iron ore towns in northwestern Wisconsin and northeastern Minnesota.