Monday, May 19, 2014

It Runs In Your Genes

(Published in the Janesville Messenger, 5-18-2014)


Had things gone differently in 1362, this column might have been written by Jim von Heinsberg.

I like to dabble in my family's history and genealogy. There is something fascinating about knowing what ultimately led to your existence. Thanks to the miracle of the Internet, this information now is much easier to find. Maybe web browsing lacks the romanticism of rummaging through courthouse files or graveyards – both of which I have done – but sites like Ancestry.com or a well-worded Google search can pan more gold with a fraction of the effort.

Recently, when I was searching for some background on my great-grandfather, I stumbled upon something totally unexpected – a photo of my father's tombstone on a website called FindAGrave.com. Most of my Rock County ancestors and relatives were cataloged as well, complete with family information. Do your own search and you might be surprised at what you find.

The Lyke family's presence in Rock County dates back to 1856. Prior to that, we were in New York for the better part of a century-and-a-half, in a part of the state settled by a large contingent of Germans from the Palatinate region.

When I was vacationing out east a few years ago, I made a side trip to New York to search the archives for data on my ancestors. What I found in the files was five different spellings of our last name. My great-great-grandfather, who is responsible for us being in Wisconsin, was most often listed as “John Like.”

The Lyke name has had a crazy history of revisions, from minor letter transpositions to major overhauls. All American roads seem to lead to Johannes Leick as the original Palatine emigrant around 1710. He was followed by several generations that included a John Lyke (the Anglicized version of Johannes' name).

But before Lyke and before Leick, there was Everhard von Lieck, who first showed up witnessing a document in 1362. According to the online entry, “his seal of 1380 shows the lion of Heinsberg...the same design that the brothers Lambert and Everhard von Heinsberg had. From this we can draw the conclusion that he was...the descendant and legal hier (sic) of Everhard who was fiefed with Oberlieck, meanwhile having laid down the name 'von Heinsberg' and named himself 'Lieck' after his residence.”

I like the sound of “von Lieck.” Had I known about that sooner, I might have even adopted it. It conjures up images of epaulets and swords. But wait...a coat of arms, too?

Score!

I found the Leick coat of arms, as well as the earlier Heinsberg, both with the same snazzy medieval lion. I am no longer Jim Lyke, ad salesman and part-time writer...I am armor-clad James von Leick, laying waste to castles. It is much more satisfying than finding out your ancestors were ax murderers or horse thieves. Or in the case of Albert Brooks in “Defending Your Life,” discovering your past life as a lion's lunch.
As soon as I got excited about my noble ancestry, however, I discovered that unlike most of Europe, in Germany you didn't need to be a member of the aristocracy to have a coat of arms. Any burgher could have one. Nein!

Genealogy research can also create questions rather than answer them.

On my mother's side, the story was that her Danish grandfather changed his name from Jacob Rasmussen to Rasmus Jacobson once he came to Wisconsin. Information I found now sheds doubt on that. Rasmus' father was named Jacob Pedersen. According to the Scandinavian naming traditions that were still in place at the time, Jacobson would have been his last name at birth. What we always regarded as fact is now a mystery.

Curious about what mysteries and stories lie in your past? The answers might be a click away. One thing I have concluded from my research: “Heinsbergminded” just doesn't have a ring to it.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Loved every word of it Jim even if I can't pronounce all of them. I'm sure we must be related at some point in history. - Rob Likes

Unknown said...

Loved every word of it Jim even if I can't pronounce all of them. I'm sure we are related at some point in history. - Rob Likes