Last Minute U.S. Errands

We are in Utah. Our plane to Italy departs in three days. Last week we went to the LDS Church Archives on Temple Square in Salt Lake City. I called a traveling notary (who only charged me $20 for all three documents, travel included. Yay for Utah and great deals on everything) and she met us there. After we got our official badges and went through security, we spoke with the person at the desk to see if we could talk to the person who had sent the letters. It turns out he is now retired, and only comes in some Fridays.… Read more

Wooo-hoo-hoo-hooooooo!

We are going to Italy. March 26.

Circumstances detailed in my other blog have made a fairly sudden move possible. Luckily, I have most of the documents. I’m only waiting on Elva’s death certificate before I can take all the California documents to be Apostilled. Then I just need to find out what the hang-up is with the Utah documents (stuck somewhere on the way to being Apostilled). Also, in Utah I need to take a traveling notary to get someone from archives to notarize the letters they sent me for birth certificates for Elva and Louis and the marriage certificate for Harriet and Domenico, and then get those Apostilled as well.… Read more

Documents so far

I finished the requests for documents about a month and a half ago. I have received quite a few. However, there are several outstanding. I should probably start following up with the agencies that have not sent me anything.

Following is a list of documents I have:

Birth – Domenico
Missing: Death
Birth – Henriette
Missing: Death
Louis – Marriage
Missing: Death
Elva – Birth (missing Apostille)
Missing: Death
Josephine #1 – Marriage
Missing: Birth, Death
Samuel: Birth
Josephine #2 – Marriage
Missing: Birth
Michael: Birth (missing Apostille)
Anthony: Birth, Marriage (both missing Apostille)
Sarah: none yet
Axa: none yet
Raj: Birth

So I’m missing Elva’s death certificate, which Josie requested for me, but has not yet arrived.… Read more

Harriet

Harriet’s birth certificate came in the mail a few days ago. The pastor wrote a very cordial letter apologizing for the delay, and saying that there had been construction in the Church. He also transcribed the birth certificate, since it’s old-fashioned calligraphy. Domenico’s was in Latin. Harriet’s is in French. The other documents have also begun to trickle in. In a month or so, I should be getting a large package from the Lieutenant Governor’s office in Utah, since most of the significant events of the family took place there.… Read more

Proving no Naturalization

Yesterday I called the District Court of Utah to see if they had a record of Naturalization for Dominique. The very helpful clerk looked through the old files going back to the late 1800’s. He didn’t find Dominique’s naturalization. But afterward, he searched around on the internet and found him in the 1880 census. That was the census that did not collect naturalization data, and I’ve already searched it. But it was very kind of him to go the extra mile and try to find my ancestor. He is sending me a letter on official letterhead stating that they have no record of Naturalization for Dominique.… Read more

New Year, New Findings

Merry Christmas, and Happy New Year.

The week after Christmas, my microfilm of the Probate Docket in Utah County for 1858 arrived. I did not find Dominique and Harriet’s marriage. However, I did speak with someone in the LDS Church archives, who says they can send a letter regarding a blessing or a sealing. I’m pretty sure we could get Italy to accept those in lieu of birth and marriage certificates.

Today I’m sending off my requests for all the birth and death certificates from Utah, to be sent directly to the Lieutenant Governor’s office for Apostilles.

Also, the Denver NARA searched for Domenico’s naturalization record for me and found nothing, and if I email them will send me a letter to that effect.… Read more

Success!

Tony just brought in Domenico’s baptism certificate from the parish of Lagnasco. It came in the mail today. That is the most important document I need to collect. I got goosebumps looking at it. It’s all really going to happen. I can feel it.… Read more

Missing Records

Well, I have been working on this for nearly a month, and I have nothing to show for it. Not only do I have no documents in hand, but nobody has even confirmed the existence of any of the documents I need. In fact, most evidence points to their nonexistence. Luckily, I’m pretty sure the Italian records are findable, and they are the most important. However, not only will I probably have to substitute some kind of L.D.S. marriage record for Domenico and Harriet’s marriage license, I’ll most likely need to do it for the birth records of Louis and Elva (his wife), who were both born in Cache County before 1900.… Read more

More Boudreros

Yesterday Tony talked to two of his second cousins (once removed, I think). They are sons of his mother’s Uncle Blaine, Josephine’s brother, so Louis’ son. Uncle Blaine was a fervent genealogist, and the information I have right now about Domenico is all from his collection, copied by Tony’s mom. Richard and Randy Boudrero went to Italy last year and actually visited some Bodreros in Lagnasco, Domenico’s hometown. Said Bodreros are planning a visit to Logan, Utah this coming spring. Richard confirmed what I suspected: Domenico and his family were Catholic, not Waldensian. Jeffery, his youngest brother, remained Catholic throughout his life.… Read more

And what is it to work with love?

. . . It is to sow seeds with tenderness and reap the harvest with joy,
even as if your beloved were to eat the fruit.

It is to charge all things you fashion with a breath of your own spirit,

And to know that all the blessed dead are standing about you and watching.

Before I started requesting all the birth and marriage certificates,
I wanted to be sure that I understood exactly how the certificates need to be. Here, experiences (of individuals) and opinions (of consulates) diverge. The Los Angeles consulate (from which I took my list of required documents) requires all documents to be translated.… Read more