Archive for the 'Danko' Category

Oh! Baby - Is it Me?

Monday, November 10th, 2008

This month, the topic for the Smile for the Camera Carnival is Oh! Baby. I found this early portrait of myself in damaged condition but, using Photoshop, I was able to eliminate the worst of the wrinkles and tears.

Stephen J. Danko - 1955

Stephen J. Danko - 1955

SOURCE: Stephen J. Danko - 1955 (Albany, Albany County, New York). Photographed in 1955 by an unknown photographer.

Written for Smile for the Camera.

Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko

Grandmother was a “Helena”

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

My father received the results of the analysis of his mitochondrial DNA, representing his matrilineal heritage.

The results classify his mtDNA in haplogroup H11, a branch of haplogroup H represented by “Helena” in The Seven Daughters of Eve by Bryan Sykes.

Approximately 40% of European mtDNA are members of haplogroup H. Haplogroup H11 is an uncommon branch of haplogroup H and is one of the oldest branches of H. H11 can be found in the Near East as well as Europe.

Some recent journal articles discussing haplogroup H include:

Achilli A., Rengo C., Magri C., Battaglia V., Olivieri A., Scozzari R., Cruciani F., Zeviani M., Briem E., Carelli V., Moral P., Dugoujon J., Roostalu U., Loogväli E., Kivisild T., Bandelt H., Richards M., Villems R., Santachiara-Benerecetti A., Semino O., Torroni A.  The molecular dissection of mtDNA haplogroup H confirms that the Franco-Cantabrian glacial refuge was a major source for the European gene pool.  Am J Hum Gen 2004 75:910-918.

Pereira L., Richards M., Goios A., Alonso A., Albarrán C., Garcia O., Behar D., Gölge M., Hatina J., Al-Gazali L.,  Bradley D., Macaulay V., Amorim A.  High-resolution mtDNA evidence for the late-glacial resettlement of Europe from an Iberian refugium.  Genome Res. 2005 15:19-24.

Roostalu U, Kutuev I, Loogväli EL, Metspalu E, Tambets K, Reidla M, Khusnutdinova EK, Usanga E, Kivisild T, Villems R. Origin and expansion of haplogroup H, the dominant human mitochondrial DNA lineage in West Eurasia: the Near Eastern and Caucasian perspective.  Mol Biol Evol. 2007 24:436-48.

With these results, I now have the mitochondrial DNA haplogroups for both of my grandmothers and the Y-DNA haplogroups for both of my grandfathers:

  • Paternal grandfather’s Y-DNA: Haplogroup R1b1b2a1a (tracks with the Dańko surname)
  • Maternal grandfather’s Y-DNA: Haplogroup R1a1 (tracks with the Niedziałkowski surname)
  • Paternal grandmother’s mtDNA: Haplogroup H11 (Bryan Sykes’ “Helena”)
  • Maternal grandmother’s mtDNA: Haplogroup W1 (a sister of Bryan Sykes’ “Xenia”)

The sources of the DNA for these results were not my grandparents, all of whom passed on long ago. I supplied the DNA sample that represents my paternal grandfather’s Y-DNA and my maternal grandmother’s mtDNA. My Niedzialkowski cousins supplied the samples that represents my maternal grandfather’s Y-DNA, and my father supplied the sample that represents my paternal grandmother’s mtDNA.

Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko

Three in Hats

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

Photographs show us people as they were at a specific point in time. As such, we can see what our ancestors looked like, what clothes they wore, and what they did.

Old photographs of ourselves or of events in which we participated can do something even more. They can evoke latent memories and stir in us emotions long forgotten.

That’s the case of this photograph of my sisters and me from February 1960.

I think I remember the day this photograph was taken. I certainly remember the outfits my sisters and I were wearing. This photo is only one of two in which all three of us were wearing hats.

Three in Hats

Three in Hats

SOURCE: Three in Hats (Albany, Albany County, New York). Photographed in February 1960 by either Francis J. Danko or Jane A. Danko.

My younger sister’s hat is something like a bonnet. Mine has flaps to keep my ears warm.

My older sister’s headwear is just a narrow band of fuzzy material around her head and over her ears. Her headwear matches her muff, an accessory in which she took great pride.

While looking at lots of old photos of my sisters and me, I’ve noticed one peculiar phenomenon. My older sister rarely looked directly at the photographer, but usually seemed to be preoccupied with something outside the view of the camera. Her distracted appearance, while no doubt disappointing my parents who would have preferred a photo of all three of us looking directly at the camera, lends charm to the photo, revealing something about my sister’s personality - a keen observer of everything occurring around her.

Written for the 5th Edition of Smile for the Camera - Crowning Glory.

Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko

Mother and Son

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

Mother and Son

Mother and Son

SOURCE: Mother and Son (Albany, Albany Co., New York). Photographed about 1950 by Jane A. Danko.

This snapshot of my father, Francis J. Danko with his mother, Marianna Dziurzyńska, was taken in about 1950 in Washington Park, Albany, New York. From the way the two of them are dressed, I guess that this was taken on a Sunday after going to church.

Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko

The Dańko Family and the Changing Borders of Poland

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Continuing my efforts to record the locations of events in my database as they were known at the time of the event, I’ve researched the geography and history of the area where my Dańko ancestors lived, and I’ve developed a system for recording the events in several different geographical areas.

The information I’ve compiled will assist me in correctly recording both the locations of events and the source citations themselves.

The names of the locations in which my Dańko ancestors lived changed over the past two and a half centuries, but much less than the names of the locations in which my Niedziałkowski ancestors resided.

Prior to the first partition of Poland, my Dańko ancestors lived in Nienadowa, Powiat przemyski, Wojewódstwo ruskie, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

On 05 Aug 1772, the date of the first partition of Poland, the area in which the Dańkos lived was annexed by Austria and the name of the place in which they lived became Nienadowa, Powiat przemyski, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, Austria.

In 1804, Austria extended its reach and became the Austrian Empire. The name of the location where the Dańkos lived became Nienadowa, Powiat przemyski, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, Austrian Empire.

After the defeat of the Austrian Empire in the Austro-Prussian War in 1866, Austria attempted to reinforce the power of the empire by negotiating with the Magyars.

After the Ausgleich of February 1867, the Austrian Empire became the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and so the Dańko family resided in Nienadowa, Powiat przemyski, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, Austro-Hungarian Empire.

World War I ended in 1918. 

On 28 Jun 1919 with the Treaty of Versailles, Poland reemerged as the Second Polish Republic. The Dańkos now resided in Nienadowa, Powiat przemyski, Wojewódstwo lwowskie, Second Polish Republic.

The names of these places didn’t immediately change on the exact dates cited. However, the events that occurred on those dates were pivotal for the resulting changes in place names. For the purpose of my genealogy database, I will use the dates cited as the defining dates for the changes noted above.

This summary should provide me with a good reference for recording the names of the places in which my Dańko ancestors lived at various points in time.

Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko

On the Glider

Saturday, August 9th, 2008

Trying to select my favorite photograph for the next Smile for the Camera Carnival was difficult, but while browsing through my photo albums, this photograph of my sister and me on one of the gliders in Washington Park just struck my fancy.

On the Glider in Washington Park, Albany, New York

On the Glider

SOURCE: On the Glider (Albany, Albany Co., New York). Photographed by either Francis J. Danko or Jane A. Danko in July 1957.

During my youth, my parents often took my sisters and me to Washington Park. I remember how I wanted to play on the gliders every time we visited the park.

I love the expressions on our faces in this photo. No wide smiles of delight (how delighted can you get on a glider?), but you can tell we’re enjoying ourselves. I have my eyes fixed on the photographer, while my sister has found something fascinating to her left, out of the camera’s view.

And take a look at my shoes. Now, I don’t know much about fashions for little boys in 1957, but I suspect I was wearing hand-me-downs from my older sister.

Written for the 4th Edition of Smile for the Camera.

Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko

Military Map of the Region of Dubiecko and Nienadowa, Galicia - 1894

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

While at my local Family History Center this past week, I discovered that the center has maps of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. I found the map for the Dubiecko-Nienadowa region where my paternal ancestors lived.

Military Map of the Dubiecko -  Nienadowa region of Galicia in 1894

Military Map of the Dubiecko-Nienadowa Region - 1894

SOURCE: Militär-Landesaufnahme und Spezialkarte der österreichisch-ungarischen Monarchie [Military Ordnance and Special Maps of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy]. Österreich: Militärgeographisches Institut, 1894. Family History Library microfiche 6,000,218, image 6. Family History Library, Salt lake City, Utah.

Click on the map to enlarge it. 

This map shows in great detail the area of Nienadowa (highlighted by a rectangular box around the name of the village) where my grandparents (and earlier Dańko ancestors) lived. the map even shows the locations of the individual buildings in the village. I don’t know which house was my great grandparents’ home, but since this map was dated 1894, I know that they were living in one of them.

The map also shows the village of Dubiecko where the parish church was located, the location of the San River to the south, and the locations of several other small villages in the area.

This map is similar to the online maps from the 3rd Military Mapping Survey of Austria-Hungary, but is dated about a decade earlier.

Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko

My Genetic Ancestry

Sunday, July 6th, 2008

As I mentioned in the two previous posts, I’ve begun DNA studies on my Danko and Niedzialkowski lines. Not all the results are in yet, but the results so far have provided good start on understanding my genetic ancestry. At the Southern California Genealogy Jamboree, I was able to meet with two of the folks from Family Tree DNA (the company who is conducting the tests on my family) who were kind enough to help explain the results obtained so far.

Max Blankfeld and Associate from Family Tree DNA

Max Blankfeld and Associate from Family Tree DNA

SOURCE: Max Blankfeld and Associate from Family Tree DNA (Burbank, Los Angeles Co., California). Photographed by Stephen J. Danko on 29 Jun 2008.

Because of the way DNA is inherited, the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) tests provide information on a strictly maternal line (my mother’s mother’s mother’s mother …) and the Y-Chromosomal (Y-DNA) tests provide information on a strictly paternal line (my father’s father’s father’s father …). For this reason, each of these tests provides information on only a small portion of my genetic makeup.

On my own DNA, I have had three tests performed:

  1. A 67 marker Y-DNA test for short tandem repeats (SNPs)
  2. A Y-DNA single nucleotide polymorphism test (SNP)
  3. A mtDNA test that sequenced my entire mitochondrial genome

Three of my Niedzialkowski/Niedzialkoski cousins also had a 67 marker Y-DNA test.

My father recently sent in a DNA sample for a mtDNA test that will sequence his entire mitochondrial genome.

The results indicate that:

  1. based on the STR analysis of my Y-DNA, my strictly paternal line belongs to haplogroup R1b;
  2. based on the SNP analysis of my Y-DNA, my strictly paternal line haplogroup can be refined to R1b1b2g, otherwise known as R1b-U106;
  3. based on the STR analysis of my Niedzialkowski cousins’ Y-DNA, my mother’s paternal line belongs to haplogroup R1a; and
  4. based on the sequence of my mtDNA, my strictly maternal line belongs to haplogroup W.

When my father’s mtDNA analysis is complete, I will also know the haplogroup to which my father’s maternal line belongs.

Thus, when my father’s results are in, I will have genetic information on my ancestry from all four of my grandparents. I know of relatives who can provide mtDNA from my father’s father’s mother’s line, and I hope one of those relatives will be willing to participate in this study.

Using the Sosa-Stradonitz Method for numbering ancestors, I have highlighted in bold those ancestors whose mtDNA (women) or Y-DNA (men) will be covered by the tests I’ve already conducted, and I have highlighted in italics those ancestors whose genetic signatures will be covered by the tests in progress or which I hope to conduct:

  1. Subject
  2. Father
  3. Mother
  4. Father’s father
  5. Father’s mother
  6. Mother’s father
  7. Mother’s mother
  8. Father’s father’s father
  9. Father’s father’s mother
  10. Father’s mother’s father
  11. Father’s mother’s mother
  12. Mother’s father’s father
  13. Mother’s father’s mother
  14. Mother’s mother’s father
  15. Mother’s mother’s mother

So, what’s the point of all this? Through these DNA studies, I hope to provide genetic evidence for the information I obtain through traditional genealogical methods, I hope to confirm or disprove some tenuous linkages, and I hope to find missing cousins.

In a larger context, I hope to discover if the various Niedzialkowski families come from the same genetic stock, and I also hope to learn if any of the many Danko families in Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Ukraine, and Hungary have a common genetic ancestry.

Wish me luck!

Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko

Katarzyna Dańko: Veterinarian, Witch, and Exile

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

My research indicates that Katarzyna Dańko is probably my second cousin, twice removed. She was born 10 Mar 1879 in Nienadowa, Galicia (Austria Poland), one of 14 children of Józef Dańko and Marianna Chruścicka.

Franciszek Tropilo and Katarzyna Danko Tropilo

Franciszek Tropiło and Katarzyna Dańko Tropiło

SOURCE: Franciszek Tropiło and Katarzyna Danko Tropilo (Galicia - Austria Poland). Photographed by unknown photographer in about 1915.

On 09 Feb 1898, shortly before her 19th birthday, Katarzyna married Jan Tropiło. While most couples living in that time and place had large families, Katarzyna and Jan had only one child of their own, a son named Franciszek, born on 21 Aug 1904 in Nienadowa. Still, circumstances and fate provided Katarzyna and her husband with a second child, a baby girl left abandoned in front of their house. Katarzyna and Jan named the child Marysia and raised her as their own.

The family moved to a farm in Packowice, Galicia (now located in Ukraine) where they raised cows, horses, pigs, chickens, geese, rye, wheat, beans, oats, corn, barley, potatoes, and beets on 13 mórgs of land (about 14.5 acres).

With a large number of animals on the farm, Katarzyna earned a reputation as a veterinarian, although a literal translation from the Polish is closer to “quack veterinarian”. She was thought to have supernatural powers and some considered her a witch. When passing her house with their carts, the local villagers would quicken their steps “just in case”. One story relates an incident when Katarzyna and her son Franciszek were on their way to mass at the local church. As they approached the church, they noticed a large group of people standing with their backs to them. Katarzyna whispered to her son, “Watch. They will all turn around and look at us now”. At that very moment, everyone turned around to look at the pair.

Katarzyna’s husband Jan died in Feb 1930 and Katarzyna continued to run the farm on her own.

On 17 Sep 1939, at the start of World War II, the Red Army entered Packowice and, in 1940, Soviet Soldiers entered Katarzyna’s home to arrest Katarzyna and Marysia for “exile in administrative mode”. No reason was given for their arrest, but the family believes they were exiled because they owned a large farm. The two were sent to Omsk Oblast in southwestern Siberia where they were left to fend for themselves.

Katarzyna, suffering both in mind and body, died in Siberia in 1941. She was buried on the steppes in a casket purchased with her daughter’s most important possession - an eiderdown quilt.

Written for the 51st Edition of the Carnival of Genealogy.

Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko

Gee, Mom, How’d You Get So Smart?

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

I know very little about my mother’s education, except that she attended public elementary and high school in Worcester, Massachusetts.

I don’t know the names of the schools she attended or what her favorite subjects were. I do know she had an excellent command of the English language and an aptitude for mathematics. She also possessed an incredible attention to detail.

I do have two school photographs of her. I believe the first was taken on 06 Oct 1936, meaning that she was 14 years old and probably in the 8th grade.

Jennie Niedzialkowski in Elementary School - 1936

Jennie Niedzialkoski in Elementary School - 1936

SOURCE: Jennie Niedzialkoski in Elementary School - 1936 (Worcester, Worcester County, Massachusetts). Photographed 06 Oct 1936.

The second photo was probably taken upon her graduation from high school, meaning that it was taken in about 1940.

Jennie Niedzialkoski in High School - about 1940

Jennie Niedzialkoski in High School - about 1940

SOURCE: Jennie Niedzialkoski in Elementary School - 1940 (Worcester, Worcester County, Massachusetts). Photographed about 1940.

Sometime, I’ll have to ask my aunt and uncles about my mother’s education. I suspect they’ll remember. After all, they probably attended the same schools she did.

In the 1940s, after graduating from high school, my mother worked for Graton & Knight Company in Worcester. Her job was variously described in the Worcester City Directories as Clerk, Computer Operator, and Keypunch Operator. I don’t know what business the firm Graton & Knight was in or why they would need to hire a Computer Operator or Keypunch Operator at a time when very few people even knew what these terms meant. Nonetheless, my remarkable mother was working with computers in the 1940s.

Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko