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Storyline Genealogy

The Storyline

Real families. Real discoveries. Real stories.

From Research to Story
The Hamall Line: Owen Hamall
Hamall Family Series, DNA Mary Morales Hamall Family Series, DNA Mary Morales

The Hamall Line: Owen Hamall

Owen Hamall was born in 1847 in County Monaghan, Ireland—the year the Great Famine reached its devastating peak. He survived the emigration to Montreal, his father's early death, and his mother's remarriage that created a blended family. In Chicago, he built a life as an iron molder, married Kate Griffith, and had six children. Then tragedy struck: four children died within ten months. Owen went blind, appeared on Chicago's "Destitute List," and died at 51. A mysterious census entry—"Hammil, Thornton"—took seven years to solve, finally revealing the half-brother hidden in plain sight since 1880.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies From Research to Story

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The Hamall Line: Thomas Henry Hamall
Hamall Family Series Mary Morales Hamall Family Series Mary Morales

The Hamall Line: Thomas Henry Hamall

A mill worker's son who lost four siblings by age thirteen, Thomas Henry Hamall built a cottage in Riverside, Illinois for $300—then fought all the way to the Illinois Supreme Court to keep it. His 1928 victory in Hamall v. Petru created legal precedent still cited today, and the property he protected passed through three generations of Thomas Hamalls across 87 years.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies From Research to Story

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The Hamall Line: Thomas Eugene Hamall
Hamall Family Series Mary Morales Hamall Family Series Mary Morales

The Hamall Line: Thomas Eugene Hamall

He wrote that he didn't think he could attend. But there he is in the photograph, standing next to his ex-wife at their son's wedding. From bank teller to milkman to nurseryman, from Chicago to Miami, from divorce to reconciliation—this is the story of Thomas Eugene Hamall, the father who tried.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies — From Research to Story

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The Hamall Line: Thomas Kenny Hamall
Hamall Family Series Mary Morales Hamall Family Series Mary Morales

The Hamall Line: Thomas Kenny Hamall

Episode 5 of The Hamall Line Documentary Biography Series traces Thomas Kenny Hamall's young life from his 1932 birth in Evanston through his 1957 engagement at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City. Through birth certificates, census records, photographs, and his own handwritten autobiographical notes, we reconstruct the story of a boy uprooted by divorce at age nine who found stability with his Kenny grandparents in Miami, discovered a calling to the priesthood, served in the U.S. Navy, and ultimately built the foundation for the family man he would become.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies From Research to Story

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Photo Mysteries: The Art of Identifying Old Family Photographs
Photo Mysteries Mary Morales Photo Mysteries Mary Morales

Photo Mysteries: The Art of Identifying Old Family Photographs

Nothing brings genealogy to life quite like staring into the face of an ancestor who's been gone for a hundred years. If you're lucky enough to have old vintage photographs—tintypes, cabinet cards, formal portraits—each unlabeled image is a puzzle waiting to be solved. Here's how photo detective work brings our ancestors back.

From Research to Story—transforming fragmented memories into complete family narratives

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Tranchemontagne: Jean Bernardin fils – The Baby Who Survived
French-Canadian Research Mary Morales French-Canadian Research Mary Morales

Tranchemontagne: Jean Bernardin fils – The Baby Who Survived

His mother died giving him life. Against all odds in an era when infant mortality claimed one in four, this newborn not only survived—he thrived for seventy-six years. He married Marie Thérèse Migneron, raised seven children to adulthood, and on a single winter's day in 1799, watched two of them wed in different parishes. Through baptism records, marriage certificates, and burial documents from 18th-century Quebec, we trace the remarkable life of the baby who survived.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies From Research to Story

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Tranchemontagne: Jean Bernardin Suliere
French-Canadian Research Mary Morales French-Canadian Research Mary Morales

Tranchemontagne: Jean Bernardin Suliere

His first wife died in childbirth just fourteen months after their wedding. The baby survived. Jean Bernardin Suliere would live another fifty-four years, remarry, raise a second family, and see his descendants spread across L'Assomption. Through parish registers that document both tragedy and resilience, we trace one man's eighty-one year journey through colonial Quebec.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies From Research to Story

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Tranchemontagne: Jean Suliere dit Tranchemontagne
French-Canadian Research Mary Morales French-Canadian Research Mary Morales

Tranchemontagne: Jean Suliere dit Tranchemontagne

Jean Suliere dit Tranchemontagne lived a life that traced the expansion of French colonial settlement from the Île-d'Orléans to the fertile lands along the Rivière L'Assomption. Through parish registers, notarial records, and the careful handwriting of priests, we reconstruct the story of a pioneer who raised twelve children and established roots that continue through his descendants today.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies From Research to Story

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Uranium Glass: The Heirloom That Glowed
A Genealogist's Discovery Mary Morales A Genealogist's Discovery Mary Morales

Uranium Glass: The Heirloom That Glowed

For decades it sat on her table, then on mine. A beautiful clear green bowl and candlesticks—gifts from my father's side of the family. I always liked it. There was something about it, something that drew me to it. After my mother passed in 2022, a coworker suggested I try shining a black light on that green glass. What I discovered changed everything: Cambridge Glass from 1930, possibly a wedding gift for my grandparents, glowing with a secret four generations of women never knew. Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies — From Research to Story

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Quimper Pottery: A Genealogist's Discovery
A Genealogist's Discovery Mary Morales A Genealogist's Discovery Mary Morales

Quimper Pottery: A Genealogist's Discovery

I have always been drawn to Quimper pottery. The hand-painted Breton figures, the vibrant blues and yellows, the graceful curves of pitchers and vases—there was something about them that felt familiar, though I couldn't say why. Now I know. While tracing my French-Canadian ancestry, I discovered that Nicolas Sulière Tranchemontagne—the immigrant who carried that bold name to New France—was born in Quimper, Brittany, around 1665. The same town where faïence pottery has been made for over three hundred years.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies — From Research to Story

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Prologue: Nicolas Sulière Tranchemontagne
French-Canadian Research Mary Morales French-Canadian Research Mary Morales

Prologue: Nicolas Sulière Tranchemontagne

In November 1740, a priest in Saint-Sulpice recorded the death of a man from "la paroisse de Quimper, evêché en Bretagne." That man was Nicolas Sulière—and the name he carried, Tranchemontagne, would echo through seven generations to the present day. Born in a Breton pottery town, he crossed the Atlantic to New France, married on Île d'Orléans, and fathered nine children. This is where the story begins.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies — From Research to Story

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Tranchemontagne: Jacque Souliere
French-Canadian Research Mary Morales French-Canadian Research Mary Morales

Tranchemontagne: Jacque Souliere

Jacques Souliere married Elisabeth Poulin in 1799 at the Oka Mission—he was 30, she was 17, and neither could write their names. They built a family in Rigaud, Quebec, raising six children before tragedy struck in the spring of 1814. Within two months, three of their children died in Montreal. Jacques would father four more children, then disappear from history entirely—his death unrecorded, his story preserved only through Elisabeth's survival.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy Series: Documentary Biographies — From Research to Story

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Tranchemontagne: Janvier Soulière Sr.
French-Canadian Research Mary Morales French-Canadian Research Mary Morales

Tranchemontagne: Janvier Soulière Sr.

He outlived two wives. He buried children who died as infants and children who died as adults. He worked as a mason for sixty years, building homes that would outlast him. When he died at eighty-eight, he left behind a family scattered across two countries—and a daughter who would live to ninety-one, carrying his story into the twentieth century.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies From Research to Story

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Guilbault-Soulier Family Photo Mystery

Guilbault-Soulier Family Photo Mystery

Among the treasured photographs passed down through generations, one image puzzled researchers for years. A little girl with ringlet curls clutches a teddy bear on wooden steps—but she isn't who we thought she was. Through careful photo analysis and census records, we uncover Frances Hamel, a daughter deliberately erased from family memory.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy Series: Tranchemontagne: Seven Generations of French-Canadian Women

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Tranchemontagne: Elisabeth Emma Guilbault
French-Canadian Research Mary Morales French-Canadian Research Mary Morales

Tranchemontagne: Elisabeth Emma Guilbault

She divorced her first husband on October 18, 1907. Five days later, she married another man in Indiana. Five days. But before we judge Emma Gilbert for that desperate flight across state lines, we need to understand what it meant to be a divorced woman with a three-year-old son in 1907. This is the story of the voyageur's daughter who became the working woman—and never stopped surviving. Part of the Storyline Genealogy Series: Documentary Biographies From Research to Story

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Tranchemontagne: Marie Louise Souliere
French-Canadian Research Mary Morales French-Canadian Research Mary Morales

Tranchemontagne: Marie Louise Souliere

A boy fishes beside an ancient woman in Miami. She is in her nineties, he barely ten. Seventy years later, that boy will tell his daughter about the great-great-grandmother who taught him to fish—but he won't know her story. Born in Quebec before Canada was a nation, married to a voyageur, twice widowed, mother of six. This is her story, recovered from the records she left behind.

From the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies From Research to Story

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When Newspapers Tell the Whole Story

When Newspapers Tell the Whole Story

No birth record. No marriage record. No official death record. For Terrence O'Brien, the newspapers told the whole story — his rise, his troubles, his secrets, and his death. A case study in what happens when traditional genealogy sources fail.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Methodology From Research to Story

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Hidden Bonds: A Colorful Life and a Secret Untold
O'Brien Family Stories Mary Morales O'Brien Family Stories Mary Morales

Hidden Bonds: A Colorful Life and a Secret Untold

He hosted the Rotten Corks—a society of liquor dealers whose motto mocked the very Excise Law he was being prosecuted for violating. He fed elegant dinners to seventy-six members of the John J. Scott Guards. He erected a 148-foot liberty pole topped with a famous racehorse. He ran an illegal distillery. He was arrested multiple times. And when he lay dying in November 1874, he tried to tell a priest where he had hidden something valuable for his children. He died before he could finish. What was the secret Terrence O'Brien took to his grave?

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies Research to Story

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Newsletter : Scattered Stones — The Robertson Family of Blairgowrie
Newsletter Archive Mary Morales Newsletter Archive Mary Morales

Newsletter : Scattered Stones — The Robertson Family of Blairgowrie

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: the inaugural newsletter announcing the completion of Scattered Stones — a documentary biography series tracing the Robertson family across two centuries and two continents, from a Scottish weaver still at his loom at 81 to a grandmother in New Jersey surrounded by nineteen grandchildren.

Storyline Genealogy: From Research to Story


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Scattered Stones: The Orphan’s Journey

Scattered Stones: The Orphan’s Journey

Scattered Stones: Episode 8

In January 1924, eighteen-year-old Lillian Robertson lost both parents within twelve days. Her father Joseph died of a cerebral hemorrhage; her mother Mary Agnes followed him, claimed by tuberculosis. The orphaned daughter of a stone cutter's son and a mat maker's daughter faced an uncertain future.

But Lillian didn't just survive—she built. She married a Brooklyn carpenter, returned to the New Jersey town where she was orphaned, and raised six children. She lost her only sister to tuberculosis in 1942, and her daughter Helen Grace at age eight in 1948. Yet by 1978, she celebrated her golden anniversary surrounded by seventeen of her nineteen grandchildren.

This is the story of resilience across six generations—from a Scottish stone cutter in Blairgowrie to a grandmother in Caldwell, New Jersey.

Part of the Storyline Genealogy series: Documentary Biographies

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