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Author: Jonathan

The Auguste Charle mystery

This is an ongoing project.
Please let me know if something is incorrect, or you have new information
.

My great-great-great grandfather was Auguste Charle. And everything regarding him and his family, prior to arriving to the United States in 1867, is a mystery.

The earliest record available of him, and his family is their arrival on November 15th, 1867 to the United States. He was traveling with his wife, and three children on the SS City of Cork which sailed out of Antwerp, Belgium.

The family is recorded as:

Auguste Charle – 43 – male – mechanic – birthplace France
Auguste Charle – 44 – female – wife – France
Auguste Charle – 9 – male – child – France
Auguste Charle – 8 – female – child – France
Hugo Charle – 6 – male – child – France (this is my great-great grandfather).

Not super helpful names for research purposes. August/Auguste/Augusta were very common names, usually used in combination with other names.

In the United States Census for 1870, they were living in Illinois. And their family is recorded as:

August Charle – 46 – male – school teacher – birthplace Prussia
Augusta Charle – 47 – female – “keep. house” – Prussia
August Charle – 11 – male – no occupation – Prussia
Augusta Charle – 10 – female – no occupation – Prussia
Hugo Charle – 8 – male – no occupation – Prussia

This helps clarify their names a little better.

10 years later, in the United States Census for 1880, they were living in Williams Township, Benton county, Missouri. Their family is recorded as:

August Charle – 56 – school teacher – birthplace Germany
Bergham Charle – 58 – wife – Germany
August Charle – 21 – Germany
Augusta Charle – 19 – Germany
Hugo Charle – 17 – Germany


What we know about each individual:

Auguste, father

In the 1900 Census, his date of birth is recorded as August, 1824, when he was 75 and living in Quincy, Illinois. This is the last record that I was able to find for him.


Augusta, mother

In the 1900 Census, she was 78, and her date of birth is recorded as January, 1822. The 1900 Census is the last record that I was able to find for her.

In the 1880 US Census, her name is recorded as Bergham Charle. On Hugo Charle’s death certificate, her name is recorded as Augusta Bergman.

I’d assume that her maiden name was either Bergham or Bergman.


August, son

August, married Anna Henrietta Meyerand in Adams county, Illinois in 1884. His name is recorded as August G M Charle. I haven’t been able to figure out what the G or M stand for.

August and Anna Charle (or Annie Charle) had three children.

  • Freida Charle (later Freida Beckglad), born November 8th, 1884, died January 24th, 1937. She married William H. Beckglad.
  • Herbert Herman August Charle, born January 11th, 1889, died August 7th, 1944. He married Helen G Kewney and they had three children, Herbert Charle, Virginia Charle, and Evelyn Charle.
  • Erwin or Irvin Charle, born June 15th, 1892, died May 29th, 1917 at the age of 24.

 

Augusta, daughter

In the 1900 Census, she was living with her parents in Quincy, Illinois. Her name is recorded as Augusta C.T. Charley. So she had other names although it is unknown what the initials stand for. Her date of birth is recorded as March 1860.

Augusta Charle should not be confused with Hugo Charle’s wife, whose name also became Augusta Charle after marrying Hugo. Her original name was Augusta Fredericka Johanna Menke. She was born in Illinois in 1864.

There are no indications that Augusta Charle was ever married, or had any children.

There is an Illinois death record for an Auguste Charle in Cook county, white female, age 90 who died March 3rd, 1950. This would match her age.


Hugo Robert, son

Hugo Robert Charle’s date of birth is the only one known definitively, based on his death certificate from Missouri. He was born on February 13, 1862, and died on November 8th, 1930.

Hugo Robert married Augusta Fredericka Johanna Menke in Adams County, Illinois, in 1884. Their marriage was recorded as Robert H Charle and Johanna F A Menke. Based on census information, she later went by Augusta Charle.

In the 1920 US Census, Hugo’s name is reported as Robert Charle, birthplace Germany, married to Augusta Charle.

His son Edwin G. Charle provided Hugo’s birthplace in his World War I draft registration form as Remscheid-Rheinprovinz, Germany.

Hugo and Augusta Charle had six children:

  • Paul William Charle, born April 6th, 1886, died February 6th, 1952. He married Edith Anna Borgmann. They had two children, William Walter Paul Charle and Virginia A Charle.
  • Harry Fred Charle, born February 8th, 1893, died July 7th, 1970. He married Genevieve Ardelle Walter.
  • Myra Charle, born 1902. She married William O. Saunders.
  • Flora Charle, born December 1889.
  • Elenora Charle, born January 1888. She married August J Herbert. They had a daughter, Dorothy Herbert who married Edwin A Bescherer.
  • Edwin George Charle, born September 17th, 1896, died February 1978. He married Mary Hazel Waller, and they had three children, Marie, Edwin George Jr, and Jeanne Muriel.

Some questions

  • Auguste Charle and Augusta Charle/Bergman/Bergham
    It is clear that they changed their last name when leaving to America, because there is no record of them before departing. Did he have any other first names, along with August/Auguste?  Was Bergman/Bergham her original last name?
  • August G M Charle and Augusta C T Charle
    What do G. and M. stand for? What does C. and T. stand for? Learning more about their initials might help find other records of them, and possibly provide clues about their parents, or ancestors.

This is an ongoing project.
Please let me know if something is incorrect, or you have new information

Richard Henry Corfield, Charles Darwin’s friend in Valparaiso

Charles Darwin and the HMS Beagle were in Valparaiso, Chile for parts of 1834 and 1835.

While in Valparaiso, Darwin stayed with Richard Henry Corfield.

There isn’t very much information about Richard Corfield, and I thought it would be interesting to see how much I could compile. I’m mostly interested in what I can find out about his time in Chile, and where he would have lived in Valparaiso.

 

Richard Henry Corfield was born in January, 1804 in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England to Richard Corfield, an ordained deacon and Diana Margaretta Peele.

Corfield and Darwin both went to Shrewsbury School (founded 1552) in Shropshire, England. Corfield entered in 1816 and left in 1819. Darwin entered two years later in 1818, staying until 1825.

According to A History of the British Presence in Chile, Richard Corfield was a shipping agent and merchant in the port of Valparaiso. Corfield seemed to work independently, working without any headquarters or a partner based in the United Kingdom, according to The British Textile Trade in South America in the Nineteenth Century.

The HMS Beagle was in Valparaiso from July 23rd to November 10th, 1834 and then from March 11th to April 27th, 1835.

July 29th, 1834. Darwin wrote to his sister Emily Catherine Langton, from Valparaiso:

R. Corfield is living here, I cannot tell you how very obliging & kind he is to me.— He has a very nice house & before long I am going on shore to pay him a visit; he presses me most goodnaturedly to make his house my headquarters.—

April 23rd, 1835. Darwin wrote to his sister Susan Elizabeth Darwin, from Valparaiso:

I arrived at this place a week since, & am as before living with Corfield. I have found him as kind & good-natured a friend as he is a good man.—

According to Darwin’s diary on the HMS Beagle, Corfield lived in the El Almendral neighborhood of Valparaiso. El Almendral was a primarily commercial neighborhood. Almost the entire area was later destroyed in the 1906 Valparaiso earthquake or by destructive fires directly after the earthquake.

Corfield married Mary Smith on February 15th, 1838 at St David’s Church, Exeter, Devon, England.

He had a son also named Richard Henry Corfield who was born in 1840, in South America, according to the 1961 England Census. He worked as a clerk at the Sankey Sugar Works on the edge of Newton-in-Makerfield, Lancashire. He died in St John’s, Antigua in the West Indies, at the age of 24.

In a compilation of the London Gazette for 1840, there is a notice published dissolving a co-partnership between Corfield and William [Leycester] Cumberlege and Robert Edward Alison, by mutual consent on the 31st of October, 1839. The firm Corfield, Alison & Co was changed to Alison, Cumberlege & Co. They filed for bankrupty around 1847.

Robert Edward Alison was an English author and resident of Valparaiso, who assisted Darwin, providing him with geological observations that he made about the coast of Chile. He later was the managing director of a Chilean mining company. In 2005, the neighborhood of Guayacan, Coquimbo, Chile became protected by the Counsel for National Monuments in Chile. Alison’s home in particular is identified as being of special note, Lira St # 1200, on the corner of Errazuriz St.

Richard had a daughter Eleanor Corfield who was christened May 26th, 1844. There is conflicting information about her age given to the census. In 1871, her age was 25, but 10 years later, in the 1881 census, it was recorded as age 30. She married Edward K Ellison, who worked as a wine merchant, and later as a general merchant.

Corfield showed up in the England Census four times. In 1861, at the age of 56, he was working as a Merchant’s clerk at the Sankey Sugar Works where his son would have been working as well. 10 years later, in 1871, he was a Commercial clerk for an East India merchant. The address given to the census was 109 Falkner Street, Liverpool, Lancashire, England. In 1881 and 1891, his profession was as a retired general merchant.

Corfield’s wife Mary died in early 1892 at the age of 90. Richard Corfield died on April 6th, 1897, at the age of 93, at the Rectory in Llangattock, Monmouthshire, Wales.


Is something incorrect? Have something to add? Please let me know.

I’m still trying to figure out exactly where Richard Corfield would have lived in El Almendral, Valparaiso, Chile.


Two letters that Corfield wrote to Darwin in the Darwin Correspondence Project:

26th & 27th of June, 1835
14th & 18th of July, 1835


There are two Richard Corfields who were born only a few years apart, and that is definitely a cause of confusion. One was Richard Henry Corfield, born in 1804. And then there was a Richard Corfield who was born in 1810.


Sources

I got a lot of information from The Corfield Family Tree. But some of the information between Richard Henry Corfield and Richard Corfield is conflicting, largely due to the similarities in age, as well as the fact that they both headed to South America.

Shrewsbury School register, 1734-1908. Thank you, Internet Archive.
page 31. “Entrances in 1816.” “Richard Henry Corfield, b. Jan., 1804; left 1819; Died April 6, 1897.”
page 35, 37. “Entrances in 1818.” “Charles Robert Darwin … left 1825;”

A History of the British Presence in Chile by William Edmundson.
page 44. “In Valparaiso, Darwin stayed with Richard Corfield, a school friend from Shropshire who was slightly older than Darwin and a shipping agent and merchant in the port.”

The London Gazette, for the Year 1840
page 309. “It is hereby agreed, that the Copartnership existing between the undersigned, In Valparaiso, under the firm of Corfield, Alison, and Co., and in London, under the firm of Alison, Corfield, and Co. was dissolved by mutual consent, on the 31st day of October 1839, as far as relates to Richard Henry Corfield.
R. H. Corfield.
Wm L. Cumberlege.
Robert Edward Alison.”

Thomas Powditch’s Memoirs
“In August I was sent up to Valparaiso in the N.American Schooner “Active” to take the post of a Junior Clerk in the firm of Corfield Alison & Co.  I was then 13 years old.  The firm was after a while changed to Alison Cumberlege & Co.”

Acta Sesion Ordinaria del Consejo de Monumentos Nacionales – Miercoles 9 de Julio de 2008 / Normal Session of the Counsel for National Monuments – Wednesday, 9th of July, 2008.
“Vivienda particular calle Lira Nº 1200 esquina calle Errázuriz: su data de construcción corresponde al siglo XIX, fue propiedad del señor Robert E. Alison, colaborador muy cercano de don José Tomás Urmeneta en la administración comercial de Urmeneta & Errázuriz (sic).”
translation:
“Private home Lira street N. 1200 corner street Errazuriz: construction dates to the 19th century, was the property of Mr. Robert E. Alison, very close partner of don Jose Tomas Urmeneta in the commercial administration of Urmeneta & Errazuriz.”

Darwin Correspondence Project
You can read and search over 7,500 of Darwin’s letters. Complete transcripts of all known letters Darwin wrote and received up to 1869.

Diary of the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle – Darwin
page 235/6 “August 2nd. Took up my residence with Mr Corfield, who has taken the most obliging pains to render me all assistance in my pursuits. His house is situated in the Almendral, which is an extensive suburb built on [a] small sand-plain, which very recently has been a sea-beach. The house is a very pleasant one; one story high, with all the rooms opening into a quadrangle; there is a small garden / attached to it, which receives a small stream of water 6 hours in the week. Another gentleman lives with Mr Corfield;”

The British Textile Trade in South America in the Nineteenth Century – Manuel Llorca-Jaña
pages 67-68. “In Chile, R. H. Corfield, having neither a headquarters nor a partner in the United Kingdom, used the services of agents…”


If I ever manage to get a copy of The Corfields: A history of the Corfields from 1180 to the present day by Justin J Corfield, I might learn more.

How to fix skippy full-screen video in Chrome on Ubuntu

I’ve got two monitors, and I like to watch something while I use the second monitor, to read or maybe chat. After doing some updates in Ubuntu, including updating Ubuntu 15.04 to 15.10, full-screen video in Chrome 47.0.2526.73 (64-bit) would get choppy, the second I’d try to use another window. It didn’t matter if it was Flash or HTML5.

Googled a bunch, tried a few different things (such as disabling Adobe Flash Player via chrome://plugins — always a good idea, but didn’t help my problem). Ultimately what worked for me was turning on GPU Rasterization.

In Chrome, in the address bar, type chrome://flags

Then scroll down to Enable GPU Rasterization.
Change it from Default to Enabled.

Relaunch Chrome.

Success? Hope this helps someone.

 

Now back to season 2 of Fargo.

I won NaNoWriMo; what I learned about my writing

NaNoWriMo stands for National Novel Writing Month. It’s a writing competition run in the month of November, and you’re supposed to write 50,000 words in 30 days, averaging 1667 a day (and then 1657 for the last day).

I attempted NaNoWriMo back in 2011, and made it only to about 11,500 words.

I did Nano in 2011, and now in 2015, because I wanted to kickstart a writing habit for myself. I’ve got lots of ideas to write about, and lots of good intentions, but I’ve slacked when it comes to actually sitting down and doing the writing.

The “novel” I wrote this year is called Apocalypse Null. I really like the name. It’s a play on Apocalypse Now and nerds. A basic plot line would be: a journalist attempts to infiltrate an online destructive cult. And I “won” today with 50,253 words.

The first time I did Nano in 2011, I had a very basic idea of what I wanted to write about, and that is one of the reasons that I lost steam less than 12,000 words in. I found it was harder to continue writing when I don’t know what is coming next.

For this Nano, I wanted to make sure that I didn’t lose steam in the first week, and was able to continue writing strong for the whole month. There are various methods for planning or outlining your writing, and I used the Snowflake method. I didn’t buy any guides or software, and just followed what I found in this article here.

So first, I wrote a basic plot line:

an unemployed journalist attempts to infiltrate an online destructive cult

Then I expanded this sentence into a paragraph.

Then I expanded each sentence of the paragraph, into its own paragraph.

And basically I did this multiple times, until I ended up with 3 pages, and 1400 words of a plot summary.

I thought I was set. But I barely made it past 20,000 words before I’d gotten through the 3 pages of my plot summary. Oops.

So I ended up expanding the story, and instead of ending my story with the good guy journalist turning in valuable cult information to his local FBI office… I needed my story to keep going quite a bit more. The plot does kind of go off the rails a bit, including flights across the United States, kidnappings, and more craziness.

I did like some of the new ideas that I was forced to come up with. But since my plot summary failed me, I did make up a bunch of crap too.

So some things that I learned, and some things I hope to continue with my future writing:

  • Don’t stop writing. Even if it sucks, don’t even slow down! First draft, worst draft.
  • Write a more extensive plot summary? My 3 page summary failed me. I don’t know what I’m going to do next time. Maybe I’ll just try a better outline.
  • Don’t waste time doing research, or going back and changing things when your ideas change. Just add notes for yourself in brackets [just like this].
  • I write best in the morning right after I’ve woken up, had a few minutes to check my email, the news, and got my coffee in front of me. I have to wait a few minutes so that my brain wakes up.
  • Same with research, don’t waste time on deciding the perfect name (although I think the main characters’ names should be decided in your summary). You can always go back and change something that you don’t like. But visiting a site for ideas for names is a huge timesuck and you’ll regret it.
  • I try not to listen to music with lyrics because that is distracting. Mostly I just stuck with Noisli. I generally just went with the rain and thunderstorm sounds.

I typed my “novel” into Google Drive, so I really didn’t have any distractions. I own a copy of Scrivener, and maybe I’ll try that for my next project. For ideas that I wanted to incorporate into my writing (that didn’t require me to go back and change things), I’d just write it on a piece of paper and keep it next to my keyboard, and refer to it as I go.

Will this year’s Nano novel, Apocalypse Null, ever see the light of day? I don’t think so. I don’t plan on looking at it again for little while. But even when I do get around to it, I think it’s pretty hard to polish a turd.

By the time the next NaNoWriMo comes around in 11 months, I hope to have several completed novels done.

NaNo-2015-Winner-Banner

Hello world!

Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start writing!

I am another gringo*.

I wanted my own place so that I can keep track of things that interest me. When I go off on a tangent of a topic, I can write a post, instead of just saving hundreds of bookmarks, which it is impossible to keep track of.

I track what I watch by rating things at IMDB (1,284 ratings as of this amazing post).

I try to track what I read using LibraryThing, but I really slack at this. Too many books I haven’t added.

I keep track of books I want to read with Amazon wish lists. Not super effective when you have hundreds of books.

Random ideas / crap get saved as email drafts. And eventually I’ll clean out my drafts, and shuffle and organize things into Trello.

And otherwise, I try to find a website’s Facebook page, so I can “Like” them. Right now I’m liking 535 Facebook pages, so it becomes kinda dumb, and a really bad way of getting updates.

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