The Lost Branch
Now available - Descendants of Frederick Zorger 1817-1893. Eight generations of the Ohio branch of Zorgers from Frederick Zorger to present day. Also included are the ancestors of Catharine Wilhelmina Schneck his spouse.
This book is 360 pages, 8.25" x 10.75", casewrap-hardcover binding.
Now you can own this keepsake book
Enjoy your visit and we hope you are able to locate some of your
relatives.
Search our site. You can search our site
from above or from the convenience of our database page. This search
will not search the database but will search all other reports and
documents.
WHY?
My dad, David Ross Zorger, passed away on 17 June, 1993
and shortly thereafter I began my life in Genealogical Research. When I
first started I had my mom to help and a few Aunts and Uncles still
living. I never knew my grandparents as they had died or would die soon
after my birth.
01 October, 1999 began another segment in my life as that
is the day I became an orphan with the death of my mom Laura Belle
(Cheshire) Zorger. I am glad that she had the opportunity to see the
growth of her relatives through my research and the help of many others
in the Genealogical Community and throughout the world. The internet is
truly an amazing thing.
On 19 February, 1999 Marian suffered with the loss of her
dad, Richard Otis (Sollee) Yancey, . She still has her mom and two
Aunts to enjoy the information we keep uncovering.

Although my addiction may have deminished somewhat it is
still here. I made a commitment in my dad's memory to obtain the most
complete and accurate facts available surrounding Our Ancestry. I will
continue my research in his memory and the memory of my mom's as well
as that of Marian's dad.
A question that pops up from time to time is "Why do you
have individuals in your database that are not directly related to you
or your wife. The reason is simple - At least part of the information I
have on some of our direct relatives was obtained through coming in the
back door. Virturely every individual in the database is connected and
it does help others locate their relatives as evidenced by the
following e-mail I received 08 November, 1998.
Mr. Zorger,
Sometime ago, I gave you my line back to Thomas & Alice in Ipswich,
Massachusetts.
I just wanted to let you know because of your posting my info, a father
and daughter have been reunited (via email, so far) this weekend after
30 years!!! They are both overjoyed!! The daughter went looking for
family and was shocked to see that just, maybe, her father was still
alive. Her mother had implied to her that the father had passed many
years ago!
My father, Albert H., passed this June 4, 1998. Again because of your
pages, a nephew and 2 great nephews, got to visit just a month before
he passed. The nephew we hadn't seen in over 40 years! This has been
one heck of a year around here.
Thanks so much for posting my lines. I was only hoping, at the time I
sent you the info, that the two great nephews would get in touch
because they were all my father asked about. When his nephew came
forward, he couldn't/wouldn't believe I had really found the nephew
until they see each other just a month before he passed. Indirectly you
made my father's last days truly a joy! The visit by the nephew was all
he talked of!
Thank you from deep within me. I know my Dad is smiling with the events
of this past weekend.
Carolyn
Just knowing that having Our Ancestry on-line helped in
so many ways made me realize its importance.
The information that is maintained in this database is,
for the most part, a matter of Public Record. I have fought over the
years because some people object to seeing their name here. I have
taken this into consideration and have removed the birth dates of any
living individuals. DON'T ASK to have your name
removed as somewhere someone has provided it to me. It could have been
a parent, an aunt or uncle, a sibling, a son or daughter, a cousin, or
even your spouse.
You will find in your Genealogicial Research that
assumptions have been and are used. For you beginners, and even the
more seasoned, remember - -
Let the facts speak for themself and leave
the ASSUMPTIONS to the scientific community.
Genealogy
1. a record or account of the ancestry and descent of a person,
family, group, etc.
2. the study of family ancestries and histories.
3. descent from an original form or progenitor; lineage; ancestry.
4. a group of individuals or species having a common ancestry.
To some that is what Genealogy is but to me it is more
than just that. It is a giant jigsaw puzzle except this puzzle does not
have an end or sometimes even a beginning. There is always that one
piece missing. You can not write to the manufacture to send you the
piece that you lost although you probably will be doing a lot of
writing.
It is more than tracing your Ancestors.
If and when you are comfortable with, or believe you
found, the beginning of your lineage you then will become curious. You
will begin again only in the opposite direction. Curiosity may have
killed the cat but now you will want to know who your Ancestor's
Descendants were. And so the cycle continues, never ending, and with
that one last piece of the puzzle always eluding you.