What’s in a One Name?: Navigating a Forest of Family Trees for Carews of Ontario

We love a good genealogical mystery. Here’s one that comes from Illinois, searching the Ontario collections, guest blogger Emily Bayma Santos, MLIS.

If you happened to ask most researchers how they came to their projects and experiments, they could most likely give you a straightforward answer. They perhapshad a single thought, a what-if moment, that drove them to push boundaries and learn a little bit more. They could be expanding on a previous line of inquiry. They were, possibly, just bored and it sounded fun. Sometimes, it’s all three, and that is how I became the principal investigator of the Carew One Name Study, registered with the Guild of One-Name Studies.


A one-name study, alternatively called a surname study, differs from traditional genealogy in that it researches the name itself. It can and does cross multiple family lines and continents. Such a study tracks not only the distribution of the surname (locations where the surname is concentrated) but can also attempt to reconstruct as many family lines as possible or identify a single origin location for the name. When I first started to seriously research my family about fifteen years ago, I had no idea people even did that, but I came to it the same way my predecessor did: trying to get
over a genealogical brick wall through any means possible.

Charles Carew. RCAF pilot in the second world war and a cartoonist from Lindsay. From the Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive


The original Carew One Name Study was begun by a woman named Joan A. Carew Richardson in the early 1970s and continued up until her retirement in the early 2010s. She regrettably passed away before I had the chance to speak to her myself, but when I re-registered the study in 2024 I received the bulk of her materials. For her, she wanted to find out where her Carew forename came from, and she traced it back to the family of her 2nd great grandmother, whose name was Eliza Carew. When she couldn’t make any further headway, she began casting a wider net and indexing any Carew individuals she came across. In time, she had amassed an enormous collection of people and
pedigrees, registered her study, and assisted people worldwide with their own Carew
families—but she never was able to trace hers any further. At last count, it totalled over
eight thousand individuals organized into over a hundred family trees, enriched by
parish registers, newspaper articles, and vital records. This material was donated to the
Guild of One Name Studies, who digitized and preserved it so that the study could be
continued later.


For me, the road started with Madeline Carew Immel, my second great grandmother,
but it’s my eighth great grandfather who became the brick wall. When I couldn’t document his parentage, I began to look at contemporary Carew families he could conceivably belong to, and before long I had my own stack of family lines and individuals all linked by the name Carew. A fellow Carew researcher suggested that I look at the Guild of One Name Studies, and I took over the study started by Mrs. Richardson.


Even though Mrs. Richardson began Carew lines on five different continents, there’s still more to learn, and recent advances in digitization have really opened doors in those genealogical brick walls. With the help of the Ontario Community Newspapers search site , I have documented Carew families in Peterborough, St. Catharines, Lindsay, and Cobourg (a simple search for “Carew” brings back 3100 records, including full text news like the contemporary example on the left, plus photos, military records, and BMDs). The Peterborough and St. Catharines families have a common ancestor in Ireland, but I have not yet found a link with the Lindsay and Cobourg families. Chances are, they came from Ireland in the 1850s, as many families did, but which county?


Carew families can be found in Wexford, Waterford, Tipperary, and Cork during the 1850s. There were also families in just about every county in England as well as Spain and France. How closely are they related to the families in Peterborough and St. Catharines?


Until we can tell for sure, we’ll start by reading the newspapers, taking notes, and
building the trees one puzzle piece—or one click—at a time.

Emily Bayma Santos is a librarian and genealogist in Illinois conducting the Carew One
Name Study. You can find her on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/eabayma/

Back to School with OurDigitalWorld

SS#7 – Humphrey-Rosseau 1946 School Bus with Bill Gates and girls
courtesy of Rosseau Historical Society Digital Collections

Whether you’re homeschooling, heading back to class or helping others with their research, ODW has school project resources for librarians, teachers and students of all ages…

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Three virtual exhibits highlighting items from the VITA Toolkit user collections, arranged and researched to tell the chronology of multicultural experiences in Ontario. Both the Exhibits and Curriculum Resources are a great starting point to learn about topics like the Abolitionist Movement, Japanese Internment, Women’s Rights, and the evolution of Ontario as the home and product of our multicultural histories.

Explore the site and download Curriculum Resources


Agnes Macphail Digital Collection
Explore the life, history and politics of the first woman elected to Canadian Parliament.

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Search across 12 publications in Italian and English for news covering 1930-1946.

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Learn more first hand history and about the impact of the Famine in Ukraine, 1932-1933.

Announcing the Abolitionists Collection

Today we’re offering a new free resource brought to you by the OurDigitalWorld team:

The Abolitionist Newspapers of the 1850s digital portal.

abol
Click to visit our VITA collection of Abolitionist resources!

As one of the first places for fugitives from slavery to end up after their travels on the Underground Railroad, and a place where many people called for a new black utopia, Ontario has a rich history of black publishing. This new site, built with our VITA Digital Toolkit, offers full-text searching and browsing of three publications:

  • The Voice of the Fugitive
  • The Provincial Freeman
  • The True Royalist and Weekly Intelligencer

Along with digitized microfilm of the Provincial Freeman and the True Royalist, we are delighted to announce that, for the very first time, low-quality microfilm of the Voice of The Fugitive has been replaced with high-quality, full-colour digital photographs of each and every page still available.

Continue reading Announcing the Abolitionists Collection

Check out our updated digitization resources page

We’ve recently updated our well-loved and frequently-used digitization resources list. We’ve removed a number of outdated resources, and added new sections on Indigenous materials, privacy, and general industry resources.

Capture

As always, if you have anything to recommend for inclusion on this page, we’d love to hear from you. Continue reading Check out our updated digitization resources page

Applications are open for the Virtual Museum of Canada Exhibits Investment Stream

The Virtual Museum of Canada has opened up its annual call for applications for its Exhibits Investment Stream. This funding, up to $250,000, can pay for digitization, metadata, research, curation, writing, and creating virtual exhibits on a subject of your choice. This is a great opportunity to digitize a special collection that will benefit from contextualization, research, and wider public engagement. Continue reading Applications are open for the Virtual Museum of Canada Exhibits Investment Stream

West Vancouver Memorial Library’s “Research to Remember” project

logoIn November, the West Vancouver Memorial Library commemorated the 100th anniversary of Armistice by releasing their “Research to Remember: In Their Own Words” project – a collection of three new video interviews with veterans.

The library held a screening and live discussion with veteran Ted Langley on November 11th, and launched the online collection on November 1st. All the interviews are edited into short topical segments, fully transcribed, and text-searchable. This part of the project follows upon the library’s educational resources work developing primary-source packages about some of the soldiers whose names appear on the West Vancouver cenotaph. Continue reading West Vancouver Memorial Library’s “Research to Remember” project