Sunday, June 28, 2026

Josephine

 

New Orleans Times-Picayune. 29 Apr 1917.

Picking up from my previous post, a death notice in the New Orleans Times-Picayune announced the funeral of Josephine Carrera Debucceres at St. Roch Cemetery. Working backward, Josephine appears in the 1900 US Census, running an oyster and fruit store on Royal Street, living with her children and brother Vincent.

Ancestry. 1900 US Census. New Orleans, LA.

By 1910, Josephine was listed in the census under the name of her late husband "Nicolas Debucceres" at Elysian Fields Avenue, although Nicolas had died in 1895. On the next page, Josephine's brother Vincent is still living in the household and working as a fisherman. Josephine appears in various city directories, including in 1901 and 1911, running an oyster shop.

Going back further, in April 1879, a French language newspaper announced the marriage of Nicolo DeBuchery and Guiseppa Guereria. Their marriage record is found in the New Orleans marriages on FamilySearch, from 10 April 1879, with a slightly different spelling of her last name, Guereira.

L'abeille de La Nouvelle-Orléans. 13 Apr 1879.
FamilySearch. New Orleans marriages, 10 Apr 1879.
FamilySearch. New Orleans, 1879.

Maybe the marriage records for the children of Josephine and Nicolo will point to the connection between the Ciofalo/Huber family. The city directory entries haven't uncovered a link. 

Saturday, June 27, 2026

A mystery in St Roch's

 

Ancestry. St. Rochs Cemetery, New Orleans.

A researcher reached out over Ancestry's Messages, asking about how her 2x-great-grandmother was listed in the tomb of Filippo Ciofalo, Magdalene Huber and Charles Huber in St. Roch's Cemetery of New Orleans. In 2021, I wrote about Magdalene, a daughter of Antoinette Halter, younger sister of my wife's 4th-great-grandfather Francois Halter.

This query prompted some digging through the records, on Ancestry, FamilySearch and Newspapers.com. I wonder if the connection is through Magdalene's Sicilian first husband, Filippo Ciofalo. He was born on Sicily's northern coast, 21 February 1834, at Termini Imerese, part of the metropolitan city of Palermo. It is unclear to me when he immigrated to New Orleans, but may have served in the Civil War as part of a European Brigade in the city.

Ciofalo married Magdalene Vollrath on 18 November 1874. He died without children in 1888, and left his estate to Magdalene.

FamilySearch. New Orleans marriages, 1874.
FamilySearch. New Orleans marriages, 1874.

Ancestry. Louisiana Wills.


Josephine

Giuseppa (Josephine) Carrera (or Curreri) Germana DeBucceres was born in Sicily in 1852. She died in New Orleans in April 1917, and is supposed to be buried in the Ciofalo/Huber crypt at St. Roch's Cemetery. I don't yet understand the connection between Josephine and this family. Was she a cousin of Filippo Ciofalo? Certainly she was a fellow Sicilian immigrant to New Orleans. Was she a friend of Magdalene or did they attend the same church? Was her connection through Charles Huber, Magdalene's second husband?

I'll follow the trail of records on Josephine in the next post.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

23&Me Updates Ancestry Composition

 

23&Me Ancestry Composition. 25 June 2026.

23&Me is rolling out updated Country Match information in its Ancestry Composition report (for comparison, here's the earlier version) *Note - this version may not be new, but it's new to me as my results were initially published with their v6 composition. There are some fascinating additions in the country reports, showing specific regions in England and Ireland where my matches report ancestors. Greater London isn't a surprise, but it's cool to see how this granularity compares with the AncestryDNA regions update from last October. It's also cool to see 23&Me focusing on Longford & Roscommon in North Central Ireland.

England regions for my matches.
Region concentration in Ireland.

It's very interesting to see 23&Me focus in on Abruzzo and Calabria for my 3.1% Southern Italian.


As with Ancestry's reports, Nigeria still shows up for me at .8%. My Mexican ancestry shows a regional concentration for Sonoran Desert, which again is as expected.

Clicking into the migrations tab shows more suggestions on historical migrations in my ancestry. This is very similar to AncestryDNA's Ancestral Journeys.

The suggestion for Venango County Early British/Irish Americans is worth exploring further, although the report says the connection is distant.

DNA in the news: Revolutionary War soldier identified

A story on NPR about DNA links identifying a previously unknown Revolutionary War soldier (23 June 2026)