Welcome
wt4y | January 27, 2009 | 7:42 pm

Note: To access the Family Tree in its own window click HERE.

Mansion

This web site’s purpose is to gather and disseminate genealogical information about Descendants of Lunsford Griffin and hopefully discover Lunsford’s pedigree. To see if you are a descendant of Lunsford, select “3 Generation Chart” from the top menu.

Due to privacy concerns, access to information about living individuals and those with a birth date later than 100 years ago, is restricted to those who are known to be Descendants of Lunsford Griffin by blood, marriage or adoption. Private information if contained in the Family Tree area of this web site. The public can view information in the Family Tree, but without a login ID, privacy rules are enforced.

For access to the Family Tree private data, go to the Family Tree and select “Request New User Account”.

If you wish to share information in the Forum, go to the Forum and register for a Forum user account. There are separate logins for the Family Tree and the Forum. The process is automatic and only a valid email address is required. When you register, a temporary password will be emailed to you. When you login for the first time with your temporary password, go to your profile page and update your password and other profile data you wish to share. You do not have to be a descendant of Lunsford’s to register and make comments in the Forum.

The Family Tree and Forum accounts can have the same user name and password, but they are separate accounts. If you are logged on to the public area and wish to access the Family tree, you must enter your user ID and password again. At this time, there is no way to synchronize accounts between the Forum and the Family Tree.

Griffin Family Crest
wt4y | June 11, 2009 | 3:32 pm
Griffin Crest

Griffin Crest

I get a lot of hits on this web site from people looking for the Griffin Family Crest or Coat of Arms. I found this web page at “Yahoo Answers” (see: Answers.Yahoo.com) and decided I couldn’t have said it better myself. With the permission of  “Shirley T”, here is her response to a question about Family Crests:

A crest is part of a coat of arms. Coats of arms do not belong to surnames and actually they don’t belong to families, except maybe in Poland and France.

Coats of arms were granted to or assumed by individual men. In England, Wales, Ireland and Scotland they are granted by the specific heraldry authority for those countries. In some continental countries they are assumed by individuals.

There are numerous peddlers on the internet, at shopping malls, in airports, in magazines and recently I saw an ad on TV selling them like they belong to everyone with a particular surname and they don’t. There are no laws regarding heraldry in the U.S. Therefore you are free to display any coat of arms you wish, but to do so without documented proof that you are entitled to it is taking on another’s identity. If you have pride in yourself and your family, you wouldn’t want to do that.

Anytime you go into someone’s home and see one of those walnut plaques over their fireplace or on their den wall, you can pretty much be sure that it is one that belongs to someone with their surname and probably isn’t evey related.

What is so bad about these scam merchants that sell them is that a family history will usually come with them. That family history will not be the same family history for everyone with the same surname. A lot of people have been misled when starting their family history because of that.

The only thing you can do is to trace your father’s or your husband’s family male line ancestry to see if either are entitled to one. Another thing you can design and have your own made up.

DNA Match
wt4y | May 30, 2009 | 5:35 am

I was informed by Ancestry.com that our DNA has been matched with another Griffin. This Griffin has been contacted, but so far there has been no response. According to the calculations, a match this close indicates a common ancestor at around 150 years.

DNA Match

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Click on the image for a larger view.

Geocoding Project
wt4y | April 10, 2009 | 11:04 am

I just upgraded the Family Tree software to PhpGedView 4.2.1 and have turned on a feature that allows mapping of events for individuals and families. When you bring up a person’s data, you will notice a new tab called “Map” which will show the location of births, deaths, marriages, etc. I spent the past week correcting errors in spelling and format and for the most part, when you display an individual’s map, the little flags will show up in the correct location. If you find an individual whose map is displaying incorrectly, let me know and I will correct the location coordinates.

Now that locations are going to be geocoded, it is very important to enter locations properly. The proper way to enter a location is:  City, County, State, USA, for example, Troy, Pike County, Alabama, USA. Please spell out the word “County” or “Parish”. The location “Probably Alabama” or “Near Enterprise” is not a proper location. If you don’t know the location for an event, leave it blank and enter things like “Probably Alabama” in a Note. To find a County, a quick way is a Google search on the city. I’ve had good luck searching for terms like: “Macon GA wiki”. The first result is usually the Wikipedia page for that city and the first line in the article will usually tell you the County. If you know the City or Town, please find the County (unless it’s a city in Virginia for instance).

Remember, Louisiana has Parishes and Virginia cities are usually not located in Counties (something I learned recently).

Photos and Documents
wt4y | February 4, 2009 | 6:41 pm

gardeningMicrosoft just launched a new file sharing service called “SkyDrive” which allows up to 25 Gigabytes of files to be shared with the public. I have uploaded every scanned image used on this web site except for birth certificates of living individuals. This will allow everyone to more efficiently browse and download images of interest. Check it out at: Griffin Family History Fileshare.

Durden William Looper
wt4y | January 29, 2009 | 2:58 pm
Durden Looper and crew of the Lonesome Lady

Durden Looper and crew of the Lonesome Lady

An excerpt from http://www.outsider.gol.com/magazine/septmber/hiroshima.html: (link now broken)
On July 28, 1945, thirty-three B24 Liberator bombers from Okinawa attacked and sank one of Japan’s last battleships, the Haruna, in the heavily defended anchorage at Kure, thirty miles from Hiroshima.
Two B24s, Taloa and Lonesome Lady, were shot down. The surviving crewmen were brought into Hiroshima where they were held, together with other captured American airmen, in the local Japanese military police headquarters by chance, less than eight hundred yards from where the Enola Gay’s atom bomb was soon to explode. All the prisoners and their guards were killed, or died soon after.

Lt. Durden William Looper was on board the B24 Liberator Lonesome Lady.

The other crew members were:
2nd. Lt. James M Ryan 2nd Lt. Ralph Neal Sgt. Hugh Atkinson Sgt. Buford Ellison Cpl. John Long

see: http://www.interment.net/data/us/mo/stlouis/jeffbarr/l/jeffbarr_l12.htm for burial information.

Hazzard Been
wt4y | January 29, 2009 | 2:57 pm
Hazzard Been

Hazzard Been

Hazzard BeenHazzard BEAN/BEEN was born in Franklin County, Tennessee on 04 December 1815. His parents were John Hogan BEAN and Jane McFARLAND.
At some point before 1830, Hazzard moved away from Tennessee with his family-of-origin and eventually arrived in Marion County, Alabama. Also, prior to 1830, Hazzard’s mother died. It is not clear whether the family had already settled in Marion County by the time Jane died, or whether they might have still been living elsewhere. At any rate, when Hazzard was fifteen years old or younger, his father remarried. By the new marriage, his father and step-mother had at least two more sons. Family stories suggest that when this marriage took place, the children from the first marriage–including Hazzard and his sister Jane–left home.

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