This is the blog for the Wormuth One-Name Study, including all the variants; with progress reports and other information.

Showing posts with label Wormuth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wormuth. Show all posts

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Slow Progress

Progress is slow, if I'm conscientious and complete, at least, the basic information for each individual.

I'm currently moving forward from Peter and Harriet Wormuth and his other marriages, making sure that each person in the family are given profiles @ WikiTree and added to the Study.  Then, the marriages and children of each individual is added and another generation is completed.  

Right now, I'm working on Joseph Wormuth's family, having added all his children.  I'm now researching each of his children's families; the spouses and children.  I will then move on to the families of Joseph's brothers: John, Stephen and Peter, Jr's.; then, on to his half brother's families.

They all had a lot of children back then so that's a lot of profiles, most of which haven't been created yet.

BTW, I'm going to do a little Study, at some point, about the number of children that some of the women had and how old they were when they gave birth to their last child.  I'm thankful that changes happened.

I have a checklist for each profile I create @ WikiTree.  Each piece of the profile is not always found which is frustrating and I try to take the time to look in as many places as possible.  One of the most difficult things about researching the Wormuth family branches is that so many individuals in the family were named the same in different branches of the family.  Some have the same middle names so there may be multiple people within OUR branch of the Wormuths with the exact same name.  It makes research more time consuming because I have to spend more time sorting out which Peter or Joseph or Leon I'm finding.

What you can expect to see in most of my WikiTree profiles, if found:

  • Birth, marriage and death dates and places.
  • Place of burial.
  • Parents
  • Children
  • A photo.
  • Military service.
  • Any unusual information found.
  • Any memories discovered.

Any of you reading this, can join WikiTree and the Study, if you want.  Any of you can send me information and photos, and I will include them.

Watch the Count on the right.

Leave a comment, if you visit and read this.  Thank you.


Thursday, April 18, 2024

Latest News

 I've added a Study Count to the right hand column so you can quickly see how many profiles are currently in the Study.


Since one task of a one-name study is to find all individuals with any of the variants of that surname, I had been doing just that, hunting and finding individuals.  Then, I realized that I hadn't finished with the my own branch of the Wormuth family; so, I shifted gears.  The Study count will increase but probably a little slower because I will be trying to fill in basic data in the profile and sources.  But I should also be adding wives and children.

I'm working to complete our Wormuth family branch, all the individuals, and to bring those family branches forward to find living relatives.

In so doing the following have been discovered:

  • There are a lot of repetitions of given names; lots and lots:  Peter, Joseph, Mary, Stephen and more.  
  • Some of the family trees, relating to our branch, posted online have large mistakes; mostly confusing those repetitious given names.
  • Some branches of the family had a very large number of children.
While working to improve the profiles of those already on WikiTree and adding profiles of additional members of specific family groups, I decided to trace direct male lines from Peter Wormuth, in Sullivan County, forward.  That gives us the direct male DNA for purposes.  Y-chromosomal DNA is passes from father to son only.  I'm not going to post that online for privacy reasons but I do have it so, if anyone reading this, in the Wormuth family, wants it, I can send it to you.  Of course, if you're male and your name is Wormuth, and recognize any of this family line, you're descended from Peter Wormuth of Sullivan County, New York.  Your DNA test will give you the origins of the family.  Please share it with me.


FYI, the Study includes all individuals with any of the variant surnames but also wives because they take the name at marriage.  Females with the surnames, at birth, who marry are, of course, included because their birth surname is Wormuth, but their children will not be included because the Study is of the name, not the relationships.  This is a clarification of the Study.

That's it for now.  Watch the count.

Please leave a comment to let me now you've been here.  Thank you.


Monday, April 1, 2024

Wormwood to Wormuth

A Peter Wormwood in Montgomery County, New York, was also Peter Wormuth.

When I first learned of this, I was confused.  How does Wormwood become Wormuth?

It's been quite a while since I learned of the 2 variants of the, apparent, same surname.  As I've been researching the variants recently, for the Wormuth Name Study, these 2 variants have appeared several times and something always makes me stop and wonder.

I know that Wormwood is the common name of a medicinal and toxic herb but I hadn't stopped during my family history research to remind myself exactly what plant that is.

Until last night...for no apparent reason....

You'll find wormwood in Shakespeare's Hamlet, "Wormwood, Wormwood." when young Hamlet learns that his mother knew that her brother-in-law, Hamlet's uncle, had murdered Hamlet's father, the king.  It's also found and in several other old English literary works.  The herb is bitter; the knowledge that his mother was aware that his uncle had murdered his father and then married him was bitter to Hamlet.

Wormwood is the English common name of a species of Artemisia. specifically Artemisia absinthium, also commonly called absinthe.  As you may know, absinthe is the herb that flavors, with other herbs, the liqueur of the same name.  Absinthe, the liqueur was banned for some time in various places, including the United States, because it was said to cause hallucinations and addiction, but has since been proven to be no more harmful than any other alcoholic drink.  

Artemisia is also used to treat a variety of ailments and diseases and I used it myself to treat one of my cats who was dying of renal failure and it did give him some relief.  It's a bitter herb, used in syrupy liqueurs.

"The French word absinthe can refer either to the alcoholic beverage, or less commonly, to the actual wormwood plant. Absinthe is derived from the Latin absinthium, which in turn comes from the Greek ἀψσίνθιον apsínthion, "wormwood".  from Wikipedia

Artemisia is an invasive plant in the United States and grows just about everywhere.  (I had quite a difficult time finding a public domain photo of the plant as I know it.  The picture below is much more substantial than most that I see around me, but you may recognize it anyway and it undoubtedly grows around you. I may take a picture myself in the next few months in case this is not a public domain photo as it said it was.)


Artemisia is also used to flavor vermuth.  Vermuth -- Wermuth/Wermut (German for wormwood [1]) -- Wormuth/Wormot.  

So we now know the meaning of our Wormuth name.  Whether other variants of the name, such as Warmuth, Warmouth, etc. have the same derivation is yet to be learned.

For me, it was a fun thing to learn.  Wormwood and Wormuth are the same name; as are all the variants mentioned.

1 - Wikipedia - vermouth