Fraudulent Genealogies: Difference between revisions

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==Accuracy of Genealogies==
Genealogy is affected by forgeries, fakes, and frauds. Numerous fraudulent genealogies are known to exist and can be found in any major genealogical library, online or off.  
Genealogy is affected by forgeries, fakes, and frauds. Numerous fraudulent genealogies are known to exist and can be found in any major genealogical library, online or off.  
<blockquote>Armchair historians, family-tree climbers, and professionals are all among the guilty. Many are well-meaning folk who "just got carried away" by imagination, enthusiasm, or inexperience. Others are, yes, quite calculating in their deceit.<ref name="NGSQ87">Gary B. Mills and Elizabeth Shown Mills, "Hoodwinks, Tomfoolery, and Fakelore," ''National Genealogical Society Quarterly'' 87 (1999): 259.</ref> </blockquote>  
<blockquote>"Armchair historians, family-tree climbers, and professionals are all among the guilty. Many are well-meaning folk who "just got carried away" by imagination, enthusiasm, or inexperience. Others are, yes, quite calculating in their deceit."<ref name="NGSQ87">Gary B. Mills and Elizabeth Shown Mills, "Hoodwinks, Tomfoolery, and Fakelore," ''National Genealogical Society Quarterly'' 87 (1999): 259.</ref> </blockquote>  
As a result genealogy reseacher, Carmen J. Finley, warned that it is important to track down the original records cited in compiled genealogies. Carmen said,<ref name="NGSQ87_295">Carmen J. Finley, Ph.D., CG, "Checking the Authenticity of Cited Documents: A Finley-Hess Hoodwink in Colonial Pennsylvania," ''National Genealogical Society Quarterly'' 87 (1999): 295.</ref>  
As a result genealogy researcher, Carmen J. Finley, warned that it is important to track down the original records cited in compiled genealogies. Carmen said,<ref>>Carmen J. Finley, Ph.D., CG, "Checking the Authenticity of Cited Documents: A Finley-Hess Hoodwink in Colonial Pennsylvania," ''National Genealogical Society Quarterly'' 87 (1999): 295.</ref>  
<blockquote>Serious genealogists know not to believe everything in print. Honest mistakes happen. The accuracy of published record abstracts depends on many factors... Even more difficult to detect can be the misguided alterations and deliberate deceptions by seemingly sincere authors who tamper with evidence or manufacture it outright. No researcher really wants to consider such a likelihood. </blockquote>  
<blockquote>"Serious genealogists know not to believe everything in print. Honest mistakes happen. The accuracy of published record abstracts depends on many factors... Even more difficult to detect can be the misguided alterations and deliberate deceptions by seemingly sincere authors who tamper with evidence or manufacture it outright. No researcher really wants to consider such a likelihood."</blockquote>  
=== The Horn Papers  ===
===Fraudulent Genealogies===
==== The Horn Papers  ====


The ''Horn Papers'' were records of western Pennsylvania, southeastern Ohio, western Maryland, and northern West Virginia from 1765 to 1795. For more information, see:  
The ''Horn Papers'' were records of western Pennsylvania, southeastern Ohio, western Maryland, and northern West Virginia from 1765 to 1795. For more information, see:  
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*Arthur P. Middleton and Douglass Adair, "The Mystery of the Horn Papers," ''William and Mary Quarterly'', 3d ser., 4 (October 1947): 409-45; report proving ''the Horn Papers ''were a hoax.<ref name="NGSQ87" />  
*Arthur P. Middleton and Douglass Adair, "The Mystery of the Horn Papers," ''William and Mary Quarterly'', 3d ser., 4 (October 1947): 409-45; report proving ''the Horn Papers ''were a hoax.<ref name="NGSQ87" />  
*W. F. Horn, ''The Horn Papers: Early Westward Movement on the Monongahela and Upper Ohio, 1765-1795'' (Scottsdale, Penn.: Herald Press for the Green County Historical Society, 1945); published copy of ''the Horn Papers.''  
*W. F. Horn, ''The Horn Papers: Early Westward Movement on the Monongahela and Upper Ohio, 1765-1795'' (Scottsdale, Penn.: Herald Press for the Green County Historical Society, 1945); published copy of ''the Horn Papers.''  
*Jane A. Leavell, "The Horn Papers," ''Jane's Story Page'' ([http://littlecalamity.tripod.com/Genealogy/Horn.html http://littlecalamity.tripod.com/Genealogy/Horn.html]&nbsp;: accessed 10 December 2009); includes a bibliography.<br>
*Jane A. Leavell, [http://littlecalamity.tripod.com/Genealogy/Horn.html "The Horn Papers"]; includes a bibliography.<br>
 
== Known Fraudulent Genealogists ==
=== Gustav Anjou  (1863-1942)===
 
Gustav Anjou is perhaps the most famous author of fraudulent genealogies. Many of his works are available online and at reputable libraries like the FamilySearch Library.
 
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*Anderson, Robert Charles, CG, FASG, "We Wuz Robbed! The Modus Operandi of Gustave Anjou," ''Genealogical Journal'' (Utah Genealogical Association), Special Issue, Genealogical Deception: Vol. 19, Nos. 1 & 2 (1991):47-70. Describes the manner in which Anjou fabricated genealogies. Extracts of this article online at [https://www.genealogy.com/forum/general/topics/gen/37674/ Fraudulent Lineages forum] at Genealogy.com.
*McCracken, George E., "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," ''The American Genealogist'', Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: [https://www.bartonsite.org/Resources/roger-barton-and-rufus-barton-were-not-brothers.pdf Bartonsite.org], p. 9. Complete article at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)].
*Oliver, Harold, Director, America's First Families. "More Fraudulent Lineages". Contains a list of 305 Anjou genealogies. Online at: [http://web.archive.org/web/20120721013946/http://personal.linkline.com/xymox/fraud/anjousbu.htm Archive.org], [https://www.genealogy.com/forum/general/topics/gen/37674/ Genealogy.com] ("More Fraudulent Lineages" extract is a section of this article).
*Remington, Gordon L., "Gustave We Hardly Knew Ye: A Portrait of Herr Anjou as a Jungberg," ''Genealogical Journal'' (Utah Genealogical Association), Special Issue, Genealogical Deception: Vol. 19, Nos. 1 & 2 (1991).
*Remington, Gordon L., "Gustave Anjou - Forger of American Genealogies," ''Swedish American Genealogist'', Vol. 12, No. 4, Article 2 (1992). Online at: [https://digitalcommons.augustana.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2425&context=swensonsag Digital Commons]. Downloadable.
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustave_Anjou Gustave Anjou] at ''Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia.''
*[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Category:Gustave_Anjou_Fraud Gustave Anjou Fraud] at WikiTree
 
===Charles Henry Browning (1846-1926)===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Category:Charles_Henry_Browning_Fraud Charles Henry Browning Fraud] at WikiTree
*McCracken, George E.,  "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," ''The American Genealogist'', Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: [https://www.bartonsite.org/Resources/roger-barton-and-rufus-barton-were-not-brothers.pdf Bartonsite.org], p. 9. Complete article at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)].
*Oshle, Mahina. [http://www.gsswi.org/members/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Fakes-Frauds-and-Forgeries.pdf "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries"]. Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.
 
===Harriet (Bainbridge) De Salis (1829-1908)===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*Moriarty, George Andrews. "The Woodman Family." ''The New England Historical and Genealogical Register'', Vol. 97 (1943): 281-7. Online at: [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/202/new-england-historical-and-genealogical-register American Ancestors ($)].
*Reed, Paul C. "Whitney Origins Revisited ..." ''The American Genealogist.'' Vol. 69 (1994): 9-14. Online at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)];  [http://wiki.whitneygen.org/wrg/index.php/Archive:Whitney_Origins_Revisited Whitney Research Group], article used with permission.
 
===Charles Arthur Hoppin (1866-?)===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*McCracken, George E.,  "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," ''The American Genealogist'', Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: [https://www.bartonsite.org/Resources/roger-barton-and-rufus-barton-were-not-brothers.pdf Bartonsite.org], p. 9. Complete article at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)].
*Oshle, Mahina. [http://www.gsswi.org/members/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Fakes-Frauds-and-Forgeries.pdf "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries"]. Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.
 
===Brian Leese (1931-1989)===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*Thompson, Neil D., Ph.D., C.G., FASG, "A Twentieth-Century Genealogical Charlatan," ''Genealogical Journal'' (Utah Genealogical Association), Special Issue, Genealogical Deception: Vol. 19, Nos. 1 & 2 (1991): 77-80.
 
===Orra Eugene Monnette (1873-1936)===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*McCracken, George E.,  "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," ''The American Genealogist'', Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts.  Article excerpt online at: [https://www.bartonsite.org/Resources/roger-barton-and-rufus-barton-were-not-brothers.pdf Bartonsite.org], p. 9. Complete article at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)].
*Oshle, Mahina. [http://www.gsswi.org/members/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Fakes-Frauds-and-Forgeries.pdf "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries"]. Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.
 
===Louis Raphael Nardini, Jr. (1938-2007) ===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*Mills, Elizabeth Shown, C.G., C.G.L., F.A.S.G., [https://www.historicpathways.com/download/delibphil.pdf "Deliberate Fraud and Mangled Evidence"]. ''The American Genealogist.'' Vol. 72, Nos. 3-4 (July/October 1997): 353. Downloadable. Also  online at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)].
 
===Frederick Clifton Pierce (1855-1904)===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Category:Frederick_Clifton_Pierce_Fraud Frederick Clifton Pierce Fraud] at Wikitree: "...[I]ncluded fraudulent genealogies in his Pierce genealogy books...information [which] was incorporated into subsequent books by other authors." This article notes several other family names for which Pierce wrote genealogies.
 
===Jesse Montgomery Seaver (1890-1975)===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*[https://ctstatelibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/May-2017-CONNector.pdf "The Strange Case of Jesse Montgomery Seaver, Rogue Genealogist"], ''The CONNector'', Connecticut State Library newsletter, Vol. 19, #2, May 2017.
*[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Category:J._Montgomery_Seaver_Fraud J. Montgomery Seaver Fraud] at Wikitree.


=== Gustav Anjou  ===
===Horatio Gates Somerby (1805-1872)===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*McCracken, George E.,  "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," ''The American Genealogist'', Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: [https://www.bartonsite.org/Resources/roger-barton-and-rufus-barton-were-not-brothers.pdf Bartonsite.org], p. 9. Complete article at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)].
*Reed, Paul C. "Two Somerby Frauds or 'Placing the Flesh on the Wrong Bones'", ''The American Genealogist'', Vol. 74, No. 1 (January 1999). Brief excerpt provided at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Category:Horatio_Gates_Somerby_Fraud Horatio Gates Somerby Fraud] at WikiTree. Complete article at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)].
*[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Category:Horatio_Gates_Somerby_Fraud Horatio Gates Somerby Fraud] at WikiTree.


Gustav Anjou is perhaps the most famous author of fraudulent genealogies. For more information about Anjou frauds, consult these sources:<br>
===Raymon Meyers Tingley===
*[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Category:Raymon_Meyers_Tingley_Fraud Raymon Meyers Tingley Fraud] at Wikitree.
*"Deception, Concoction - and Deliberate Fraud". Editorial, ''The American Genealogist'', Vol. 74, (April 1999): 74. Online at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)] by the New England Historic Genealogical Society.


*Gordon L. Remington, "Gustave We Hardly Knew Ye: A Portrait of Herr Anjou as a Jungberg," ''Genealogical Journal'' (Utah Genealogical Association) 19, nos. 1-2 (1991). Identifies Anjou's real identity.<br>
===Frederick Adams Virkus (1879-1955)===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*McCracken, George E., "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," ''The American Genealogist'', Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: [https://www.bartonsite.org/Resources/roger-barton-and-rufus-barton-were-not-brothers.pdf Bartonsite.org], p. 9. Complete article at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)].
*Oshle, Mahina. [http://www.gsswi.org/members/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Fakes-Frauds-and-Forgeries.pdf "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries"]. Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.


*Kathi Reid, "[http://www.genhelp.org/?p=4 Caveat Emptor! Family Tree Forgeries]," ''Genealogy Help, ''genealogy blog ([http://www.genhelp.org www.genhelp.org]&nbsp;: accessed 22 October 2009); documents the discovery of a Gustav Anjou genealogy in her own family.
===John S. Wurts (1876-1958)===
Articles discussing fraudulent works:<br>
*McCracken, George E., "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," ''The American Genealogist'', Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: [https://www.bartonsite.org/Resources/roger-barton-and-rufus-barton-were-not-brothers.pdf Bartonsite.org], p. 9. Complete article at [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/283/american-genealogist-the American Ancestors ($)].
*Oshle, Mahina. [http://www.gsswi.org/members/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Fakes-Frauds-and-Forgeries.pdf "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries"]. Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.


*Robert Charles Anderson, CG, FASG, "We Wuz Robbed! The Modus Operandi of Gustave Anjou," ''Genealogical Journal'' (Utah Genealogical Association) 19, nos. 1-2 (1991). Describes the manner in which Anjou fabricated genealogies.<br>
=== Additional Articles about Fraudulent Genealogies  ===
*[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Category:Frauds_and_Fabrications Frauds and Fabrications] at Wikitree. Links to Wikitree pages discussing various family history and genealogical works, proven or suspected as fraudulent.


*Wikipedia contributors, "Gustave Anjou," ''Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia'' ([http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gustave_Anjou&oldid=572101969 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gustave_Anjou&amp;oldid=572101969]&nbsp;: accessed 15 October 2013).<br>
*Finley, Carmen J., Ph.D., CG. "Checking the Authenticity of Cited Documents: A Finley-Hess Hoodwink in Colonial Pennsylvania." ''National Genealogical Society Quarterly''. Vol. 87 (1999): 295.


=== Other frauds ===
*Goodwin, Aaron. [https://ngsmonthly.ngsgenealogy.org/genealogical-fraud/ "Genealogical Fraud"]. ''NGS Monthly: Methodology, News, and Views'', digital newsletter. Fraudulent claim regarding Tobias Bickel parentage. Only NGS members have access to full article.


*Myra Vanderpool Gormley, CG, "[http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~jcat2/myraarticle.html Grafting Family Trees]," ''Pierce Mothershead Family Ties, ''Jo Ann Miller ([http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jcat2 http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jcat2]&nbsp;: accessed 22 October 2009); citing ''RootsWeb Review: RootsWeb's Genealogy News'' 3, no. 17 (26 April 2000); archived online (www.rootsweb.com).<br>
*Gormley, Myra Vanderpool, CG. [https://web.archive.org/web/20000829143928/http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/review/20000426.txt "Grafting Family Trees"]. ''RootsWeb Review: RootsWeb's Genealogy News.'' Vol. 3, No. 17 (26 April 2000). Archived on ''Internet Archive.''


*Oliver, "[http://personal.linkline.com/xymox/fraud/fraud.htm Genealogy Frauds]," ''America's First Families''; several more articles in addition to "Fraudulent Lineages."<br>
*Oshle, Mahina. [http://www.gsswi.org/members/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Fakes-Frauds-and-Forgeries.pdf "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries"]. Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.
*James Pylant, "[http://www.genealogymagazine.com/watoutforfak.html Watch Out for Fake Family Trees],"''GenealogyMagazine.com'' ([http://www.genealogymagazine.com www.genealogymagazine.com]&nbsp;: accessed 26 October 2009); Reverend W. Twyman Williams exposes fraudulent French ancestry of Chrétien DuBois, Gary B. and Elizabeth Shown Mills discover fraud, and George L. Nichols concludes Leon Nelson Nichols work is fictional.


*Ron Wild, "[http://www.familychronicle.com/Fraudulent.html Beware of Fraudulent Genealogies]," ''Family Chronicle ''([http://www.familychronicle.com www.familychronicle.com]&nbsp;: accessed 26 October 2009); citing print edition, January/February 2001; lists multiple fraudulent genealogists.
*Pylant, James. [https://www.genealogymagazine.com/fake-family-trees/ "Watch Out for Fake Family Trees"], ''GenealogyMagazine.com.''


*Carmen J. Finley, Ph.D., CG. "Checking the Authenticity of Cited Documents: A Finley-Hess Hoodwink in Colonial Pennsylvania." ''National Genealogical Society Quarterly'' 87 (1999): 295.
*Wild, Ron. [https://web.archive.org/web/20121120042936/http://www.familychronicle.com:80/Fraudulent.html "Beware of Fraudulent Genealogies"]. ''Family Chronicle.'' Archived on ''Internet Archive.'' Citing print edition, January/February 2001. Lists multiple fraudulent genealogists, including Anjou works.


<br>
== References ==


<references /><br><br>  
<references /><br><br>  


[[Category:Fraud]]
[[Category:Fraudulent_Genealogy]][[Category:Compiled Genealogies]]

Latest revision as of 09:38, 9 July 2025

Accuracy of Genealogies[edit | edit source]

Genealogy is affected by forgeries, fakes, and frauds. Numerous fraudulent genealogies are known to exist and can be found in any major genealogical library, online or off.

"Armchair historians, family-tree climbers, and professionals are all among the guilty. Many are well-meaning folk who "just got carried away" by imagination, enthusiasm, or inexperience. Others are, yes, quite calculating in their deceit."[1]

As a result genealogy researcher, Carmen J. Finley, warned that it is important to track down the original records cited in compiled genealogies. Carmen said,[2]

"Serious genealogists know not to believe everything in print. Honest mistakes happen. The accuracy of published record abstracts depends on many factors... Even more difficult to detect can be the misguided alterations and deliberate deceptions by seemingly sincere authors who tamper with evidence or manufacture it outright. No researcher really wants to consider such a likelihood."

Fraudulent Genealogies[edit | edit source]

The Horn Papers[edit | edit source]

The Horn Papers were records of western Pennsylvania, southeastern Ohio, western Maryland, and northern West Virginia from 1765 to 1795. For more information, see:

  • Arthur P. Middleton and Douglass Adair, "The Mystery of the Horn Papers," William and Mary Quarterly, 3d ser., 4 (October 1947): 409-45; report proving the Horn Papers were a hoax.[1]
  • W. F. Horn, The Horn Papers: Early Westward Movement on the Monongahela and Upper Ohio, 1765-1795 (Scottsdale, Penn.: Herald Press for the Green County Historical Society, 1945); published copy of the Horn Papers.
  • Jane A. Leavell, "The Horn Papers"; includes a bibliography.

Known Fraudulent Genealogists[edit | edit source]

Gustav Anjou (1863-1942)[edit | edit source]

Gustav Anjou is perhaps the most famous author of fraudulent genealogies. Many of his works are available online and at reputable libraries like the FamilySearch Library.

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

  • Anderson, Robert Charles, CG, FASG, "We Wuz Robbed! The Modus Operandi of Gustave Anjou," Genealogical Journal (Utah Genealogical Association), Special Issue, Genealogical Deception: Vol. 19, Nos. 1 & 2 (1991):47-70. Describes the manner in which Anjou fabricated genealogies. Extracts of this article online at Fraudulent Lineages forum at Genealogy.com.
  • McCracken, George E., "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," The American Genealogist, Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: Bartonsite.org, p. 9. Complete article at American Ancestors ($).
  • Oliver, Harold, Director, America's First Families. "More Fraudulent Lineages". Contains a list of 305 Anjou genealogies. Online at: Archive.org, Genealogy.com ("More Fraudulent Lineages" extract is a section of this article).
  • Remington, Gordon L., "Gustave We Hardly Knew Ye: A Portrait of Herr Anjou as a Jungberg," Genealogical Journal (Utah Genealogical Association), Special Issue, Genealogical Deception: Vol. 19, Nos. 1 & 2 (1991).
  • Remington, Gordon L., "Gustave Anjou - Forger of American Genealogies," Swedish American Genealogist, Vol. 12, No. 4, Article 2 (1992). Online at: Digital Commons. Downloadable.
  • Gustave Anjou at Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia.
  • Gustave Anjou Fraud at WikiTree

Charles Henry Browning (1846-1926)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

  • Charles Henry Browning Fraud at WikiTree
  • McCracken, George E., "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," The American Genealogist, Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: Bartonsite.org, p. 9. Complete article at American Ancestors ($).
  • Oshle, Mahina. "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries". Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.

Harriet (Bainbridge) De Salis (1829-1908)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

  • Moriarty, George Andrews. "The Woodman Family." The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. 97 (1943): 281-7. Online at: American Ancestors ($).
  • Reed, Paul C. "Whitney Origins Revisited ..." The American Genealogist. Vol. 69 (1994): 9-14. Online at American Ancestors ($); Whitney Research Group, article used with permission.

Charles Arthur Hoppin (1866-?)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

  • McCracken, George E., "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," The American Genealogist, Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: Bartonsite.org, p. 9. Complete article at American Ancestors ($).
  • Oshle, Mahina. "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries". Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.

Brian Leese (1931-1989)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

  • Thompson, Neil D., Ph.D., C.G., FASG, "A Twentieth-Century Genealogical Charlatan," Genealogical Journal (Utah Genealogical Association), Special Issue, Genealogical Deception: Vol. 19, Nos. 1 & 2 (1991): 77-80.

Orra Eugene Monnette (1873-1936)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

  • McCracken, George E., "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," The American Genealogist, Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: Bartonsite.org, p. 9. Complete article at American Ancestors ($).
  • Oshle, Mahina. "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries". Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.

Louis Raphael Nardini, Jr. (1938-2007)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

Frederick Clifton Pierce (1855-1904)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

  • Frederick Clifton Pierce Fraud at Wikitree: "...[I]ncluded fraudulent genealogies in his Pierce genealogy books...information [which] was incorporated into subsequent books by other authors." This article notes several other family names for which Pierce wrote genealogies.

Jesse Montgomery Seaver (1890-1975)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

Horatio Gates Somerby (1805-1872)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

  • McCracken, George E., "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," The American Genealogist, Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: Bartonsite.org, p. 9. Complete article at American Ancestors ($).
  • Reed, Paul C. "Two Somerby Frauds or 'Placing the Flesh on the Wrong Bones'", The American Genealogist, Vol. 74, No. 1 (January 1999). Brief excerpt provided at Horatio Gates Somerby Fraud at WikiTree. Complete article at American Ancestors ($).
  • Horatio Gates Somerby Fraud at WikiTree.

Raymon Meyers Tingley[edit | edit source]

Frederick Adams Virkus (1879-1955)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

  • McCracken, George E., "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," The American Genealogist, Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: Bartonsite.org, p. 9. Complete article at American Ancestors ($).
  • Oshle, Mahina. "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries". Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.

John S. Wurts (1876-1958)[edit | edit source]

Articles discussing fraudulent works:

  • McCracken, George E., "Towards an Index Expurgatorius," The American Genealogist, Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1976): 182. Article identifies genealogical fraudsters: Gustav Anjou, Horatio Gates Somerby, Charles H. Browning, C.A. Hoppin, Orra Eugene Monnette, Frederick A. Virkus and John S. Wurts. Article excerpt online at: Bartonsite.org, p. 9. Complete article at American Ancestors ($).
  • Oshle, Mahina. "Fakes, Frauds and Forgeries". Seattle Public Library. Downloadable. Lists some known fraudulent publications by author.

Additional Articles about Fraudulent Genealogies[edit | edit source]

  • Frauds and Fabrications at Wikitree. Links to Wikitree pages discussing various family history and genealogical works, proven or suspected as fraudulent.
  • Finley, Carmen J., Ph.D., CG. "Checking the Authenticity of Cited Documents: A Finley-Hess Hoodwink in Colonial Pennsylvania." National Genealogical Society Quarterly. Vol. 87 (1999): 295.
  • Goodwin, Aaron. "Genealogical Fraud". NGS Monthly: Methodology, News, and Views, digital newsletter. Fraudulent claim regarding Tobias Bickel parentage. Only NGS members have access to full article.
  • Gormley, Myra Vanderpool, CG. "Grafting Family Trees". RootsWeb Review: RootsWeb's Genealogy News. Vol. 3, No. 17 (26 April 2000). Archived on Internet Archive.
  • Wild, Ron. "Beware of Fraudulent Genealogies". Family Chronicle. Archived on Internet Archive. Citing print edition, January/February 2001. Lists multiple fraudulent genealogists, including Anjou works.

References[edit | edit source]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Gary B. Mills and Elizabeth Shown Mills, "Hoodwinks, Tomfoolery, and Fakelore," National Genealogical Society Quarterly 87 (1999): 259.
  2. >Carmen J. Finley, Ph.D., CG, "Checking the Authenticity of Cited Documents: A Finley-Hess Hoodwink in Colonial Pennsylvania," National Genealogical Society Quarterly 87 (1999): 295.