Thank you for correcting me. I thought it would be the same.
 
I also have Melo on my line, who are yours and where are they from??
 


 
                   
Karlushko - Itajai/SC/Brasil
Pesquisando: 
Santa Catarina, Alemanha, Franca, Holanda, Belgica, Espanha
Portugal, Italia, Luxemburgo
Reinert, Jungklaus, Van der Gocht, Ottekier, Hesse, Laux, Schumer, Bertemes, 
Schilling, Fiorenzano, Feijo, Martins, Costa, Dutra, Dias, Silveira, Gato, 
Sodre,
Andre, Arruda, Aguiar, Lemos, Machado, Mattos, Silveira, Mello, Miranda, Leal
Quadrado, Rebello, Marques, Brasil, Teixeira, Baptista, Jorge, Van der Burggerie

--- Em sex, 28/8/09, Cheri Mello <gfsche...@gmail.com> escreveu:


De: Cheri Mello <gfsche...@gmail.com>
Assunto: [AZORES-Genealogy] Re: BRICK WALL...
Para: azores@googlegroups.com
Data: Sexta-feira, 28 de Agosto de 2009, 12:17


Carlos, 

Not quite.

End of line is when you run out of the records.  You take the line back 
probably to about the Middle Ages (1400s or 1500s, unless you hit a royal line).

Brick wall seems like an end of line, but the person is probably stuck in the 
1800s still.  For the Portuguese researcher, it may be because it's the 
immigrant and the researcher doesn't know where to look next, or has looked and 
hasn't found the freguesia written on that document.  They get the records that 
state "Azores" or "Western Islands."  They haven't given up, they just haven't 
found the right document.  

In American research, ancestors get labeled brick walls because there are many 
courthouses that burned during the American Civil War (I don't know how many 
burned courthouses are in Canada).  We don't think of these as end of line, but 
as a brick wall, because we think there has to be a better way around these 
records.  I had one American ancestor, born 1814 in a "burned out county."  
That means that there was a fire at one time that destroyed all or most of the 
records that are kept in the American courthouse back then.  I thought I knew 
who his parents were, but since the county burned, I couldn't look up the will 
that his father wrote.  I knew he wasn't the end of the line, but I was blocked 
(brick wall) from doing any further research.  I eventually used DNA to figure 
out that line and was able to take it to the 1600s.

In my Portuguese research, I have Manuel Furtado & Marianna da Trindade.  Both 
from Vila Franca (he's Sao Miguel Arcanjo and she's Sao Pedro).  They should 
have married in the 1770s.  We've searched about 5 freguesias west and 5 
freguesias east and can't find their marriage.  The Sao Pedro church has about 
5 missing pages in the 1770s.  We think that is where their marriage is. We 
don't think this is the end of the line because sooner or later we'll either 
find them as godparents or witnesses to something or I'll have to use DNA to 
figure it out. 

Does that explain the little bit of difference between the two?  

Cheri Mello
Listowner, Azores-Gen
Researching: Vila Franca, Ponta Garca, Ribeira Quente, Ribeira das Tainhas, 
Achada





      
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