Cheri Mello,
Just saying THANK YOU! for being such a wonderful resource for us all.
I truly appreciate your posts and that you share so much of your knowledge.
: )
Timya


On Sunday, June 17, 2012 12:54:37 PM UTC-5, Cheri Mello wrote:
>
> Timya, 
>
> d'...de...do...da...
> All prefixes mostly mean "of" or "of the."  The d' is like a contraction 
> in English.  They left off the vowel.  "De" is of.  "Do" is "of the" in 
> masculine form.  "Da" is "of the" in feminine form.
>
> It's probably up to you to figure out how to handle it.  My "de" was 
> dropped somewhere between the east coast and California.  Because I don't 
> have the "de" I have all my ancestors listed as Mello and my genealogy 
> program allows me to put the de/da/do stuff in a pre-surname field.  For my 
> cousin, Altino Demelo, whose family kept the "De," I do have his surname 
> spelled as Demelo (that's his legal name after all), but my genealogy 
> program allows me to sort him with my Mellos.
>
> I've also listed ancestors with the first name of "Manuel de" and last 
> name Mello as well.  So that's another work around for the de/da/do stuff.  
> Other people on this list have other ideas as well.
>
> Your ancestor who married in the 1920s...she was probably born in the late 
> 1890s or around 1900.  She was born in the Azores in the time period where 
> women didn't use surnames or maiden names.  So she comes to America and 
> when asked about her name she says "Maria Candida" and they take the 
> Candida as her last name.  As she learns English and starts to understand 
> American customs, she learns what a maiden name is and starts to give her 
> mom's maiden name of Rocha as her own maiden name.
>
> Think about this...early part of the 20th century and your ancestors are 
> probably in a Portuguese community or working with other Portuguese.  
> Probably speaking the Portuguese language.  Sunday Mass back then was in 
> Latin.  So it takes awhile to acquire the English language.
>
> My grandfather, George, was born in 1912 in California to Manuel Mello and 
> Maria da Gloria Correia.  Birth registry in California began in the fall of 
> 1905, but it took a few years to reach full compliance, so the early ones 
> are spotty.  And they contain different information than the ones do 
> today.  So my grandfather's birth reads he's the son of Manuel Mello and 
> Francisca Correia.  Not Maria da Gloria Correia.  That's not even close!  
> Those early ones did not ask for the informant either.  But I know who the 
> informant was.  It was the father, Manuel.  They asked him who the father 
> was.  He was a proud father, so he gave his name.  The next box asks for 
> the mother.  So they asked him for the mother's name.  So, with his limited 
> English and understanding the word "mother," he gave HIS mother's name of 
> Francisca.  Not his wife's name.  They didn't ask him for his wife, after 
> all.  They did say the word "mother."  He just didn't understand that they 
> meant the baby's mother.  
>
> Think about scenarios and what it was like back then.  Think about limited 
> language.  And little to no education.  And some of these things our 
> ancestors did start to make sense.
> Cheri Mello
> Listowner, Azores-Gen
> Researching: Vila Franca, Ponta Garca, Ribeira Quente, Ribeira das 
> Tainhas, Achada
>

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