We finally have our last installment of our 2020 Annual Favorites!! And these charts are all celebrating their genealogical heritage while also celebrating their ethnicity! These were such a joy to create! As always, we get permission from our customers to share these, and we change the information on the charts to protect their privacy. Take a look! They are simply beautiful!
Tuesday, March 9, 2021
Annual Favorites 2020: Celebrating Ethnic Heritage
Thursday, February 25, 2021
Annual Favorites 2020: New Things to Do with Your Family TREES
We have so many creative customers who are inspired to display their genealogy. Last year we had so many ideas that included trees, that we had to make them a separate category for our Annual Favorites. Show off your family TREE!
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
Annual Favorites 2020: Understand and Display Your Tree Better With Color Coding
More beautiful charts! This time we focused on some of the beautiful color coded charts we helped create last year. Color coding can really help organize your information and show how family lines are arranged. Take a look at these!
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
Annual Favorites 2020: Direct Line and Relationship Charts
Installment Number 2 of our Annual Favorites from last year include Direct Line and Relationship Charts! These were such a pleasure to create, and wonderful representations of family lines. As always, we asked permission to share these charts, and changed names for privacy. Here we go!
Monday, February 22, 2021
Annual Favorites 2020: Big, Beautiful Pictures
It's that time again!! Time to show you all the amazing charts we designed for people in the past year. At the end of each year, we get together and pick our favorite charts (there are a lot this year!). Then we ask permission from our customers to share them, and change the names on their design (for privacy). And here they are!
Our first group of favorites all include big, beautiful pictures! It's always so fun to have charts with pictures. It's so nice to put faces with names!
Wednesday, November 11, 2020
Connecting Over the Distance this Holiday Season
Kim and I were going through some boxes last weekend and found some treasures. We found some old cassette tapes we had made when we were in college to send home to the family. He has sent tapes home from Pennsylvania to Wisconsin and I had sent tapes home from study abroad in the Middle East to Utah. We didn't know each other then so it was fun to listen to our younger selves. They were treasures that our families kept with our letters and then returned to us when we got home. We knew they were there but I'd forgotten about them. What fun to discover them now. We need to bring them into the digital age and store them with our other family history items.
Monday, September 21, 2020
Holiday 2020 Deadlines
Due to Covid 19, shipping has changed drastically (for everyone). There aren't as many planes flying, and that backs things up. Shipping companies are doing their best to get mail and packages out, but it is taking longer to get our packages to you. We cannot guarantee shipping times like we used to. Last minute gifts will be hard this year.
Tuesday, September 15, 2020
It's Holiday Time! (Or rather, time for a SALE!)
It's time for the Holidays (in September)! I think most of us would agree that 2020 has been a doozy! So we, here at Family ChartMasters, have decided to try to bring some happiness to you in the form of our biggest sale of the year!
Wednesday, May 13, 2020
Resilience in Economic Reversals #ResilientRoots
When Gaskell Romney was married in 1895, he and his wife Anna Amelia Pratt lived in Northern Mexico, descendants of pioneers who had survived many challenges to eek out a living in the desert. After they were married, they built a beautiful farm and became very prosperous with good livestock and a thriving door factory and lumber yard. They had a two story brick home with lovely landscaping, bountiful fruit trees and Gaskell was a leader in the community. All this came to an end when the family had to flee with little more than the clothes on their backs from the Mexican revolution led by Pancho Villa.
Gaskell took his building skills to Los Angeles for a while, but after two years of work with little to show for it, he longed to raise his family in a more rural setting. So he and his brother moved their families to Idaho and bought a small potato farm in 1913. The families worked hard to maintain the farm but with the economic effects of WWI, they were unable to make a go of it. After two years of hard work, they decided to move their family south to Salt Lake City.
Arriving in Salt Lake bankrupt and in debt, Gaskell again started over building houses. He worked hard and it took him twelve years to pay off all of the Idaho debts. They returned to Rexburg, Idaho for a few years and prospered building homes until everything changed again in 1921 when the price of farm goods collapsed and the housing market followed. Gaskell found himself bankrupt for the fourth time. The summer of 1921 saw the family move back to Salt Lake City. Once again Gaskell put his architectural and building skills to work with the help of his sons. Within 7 years he would lose Anna and two of his sons to tragic, unexpected deaths.
Gaskell's son George Romney wrote: Even though Father was driven out of Mexico penniless, with a large family to support, went broke in Oakley, Idaho, and later Rexburg, Idaho, and then again in Salt Lake during the great Depression he never became bitter. Furthermore, he didn't make me feel poor. He never took out bankruptcy, which he could have done several times. He and his son, Maurice, eventually paid off all his creditors.
His daughter Meryl likewise said she “never felt we were hard up. Our breakfast table in the tiny kitchen was a card table. Our two other homes had had attractive breakfast rooms. Mealtime was always a happy time for there was given love and spiritual uplift for meeting the day's encounters. We never felt poor or deprived. Daddy's great love, humor and concern were in abundance."
According to all accounts, he maintained a calm and gentle personality throughout his life. He lived with a great inner peace that he attributed to his daily conversations with God. His great courage, common sense and integrity are a great lesson of resilience in the face of economic reversals.
Post written by Janet Hovorka, Owner, Family Chartmasters LLC
Monday, May 11, 2020
Viola Schwendiman Romney Talbot Thomas #ResilientRoots
I've been reading the history my mother wrote about Nama again with adult eyes. Eyes who have been through alot more of life's messiness than the last time I approached her story. I remember my mother interviewing Nama for this history on her porch when I was probably about 8 years old. I was mesmerized with Nama's story telling and the amazing life she had. But I never saw the depth of what she went through until recently.
Last week, my mother and I took a little trip to see the houses where this part of my family history played out. This house in particular was so moving to me.
I don't know who lives there now, so I'm not going to record the address here, but it is in our family records. It was here that Nama lived with two young children, Eila and baby Doug, when her husband Douglas left for a business trip to Colorado. On that business trip, Douglas died of a burst appendix. Nama was able to get to him in Colorado and say goodbye, but when she returned to this house, she was a widow at the young age of 26. That event forever changed the course of our family. Douglas was the great love of Nama's life, a faithful father and industrious community member. He had saved $10,000 in a little canister in this house, and left Nama all of the information on his insurance and accounts when he died in the spring of 1928. They had paid off the house and a car. One would think this young widow was set, but Nama didn't know how to make it through the pain.
![]() |
| Whittier Church, site of one of Douglas' funerals |
![]() |
| Yale Church, site of one of Douglas' funerals |
When Gifford Talbot, her second husband came along, it seemed that he could help her get out of all the problems she was dealing with. Beyond all the other issues she faced, she also had the husband of one of her friends trying to marry her. She said in her history that "I would have never married him in this world or the next, I don't think." But she married him after only knowing him for three weeks. Her step mother-in-law fainted when she told her, and she only told her parents afterward. He was good to her and her children and my grandmother adored her step-father.
![]() |
| Apartment building where Nama again heard the devastating news that her second husband had unexpectedly died. |
My mother said that she remembers Nama always saying that she "needed a Miltown." Nama was always anxious that something else hard was coming her way and I really understand why. When you go through something so shattering, out of your control and unexpected at a young age, it gives you an unsettling fear about what is coming around the corner. I have a similar fear from similar circumstances but I'm working to deal with that in more constructive ways. I also am thankful for more of a support system than Nama had. She went on to have a happy life and worked through everything to be wildly successful in business. I'm working on creating that strength too.
Wednesday, May 6, 2020
Adapting in Trying TImes
This is my paternal great - grandfather and great - grandmother. Their names are Benjamin Butler Wallace and Rosa Olive Owen. They met and married in 1916. They had seven children, six boys and one girl. They had a family farm, and a daily milk route. They did not have much by worldly standards as they raised their kids. Despite not having much, Benjamin always thought with his heart and made sure to do everything in his power to make sure that his children were given everything they needed and that his wife was treated like a queen. These two individuals showed their children that with hard work, love and faith you can not only survive, but you can be the difference in other people’s lives. 
Saturday, April 11, 2020
Resilience During War
Post written by Stacy Wightman, Designer, Family Chartmasters LLC
Tuesday, April 7, 2020
Hard work through challenges: Anders Ferdinand Gregersen #ResilientRoots
Wednesday, April 1, 2020
George Welton Ward and the Ward Family Legacy

George Welton Ward has the distinction of establishing the Ward family legacy in America. Throughout his life, his name was synonymous with a positive example and industrious work ethic – honorable characteristics that would shape the family’s solid reputation for generations.
Here is a journal entry from George's treacherous voyage across the plains:
"While traveling one Sunday afternoon, a violent hailstorm came up, and before we could all get our teams unhitched, the storm was on us in such fury that many of the teams ran away and jumped into the Platte river. Hailstones as large as hen’s eggs fell, and people were obliged to cover up their heads with quilts and blankets for protection against the frightful pelting. Some took refuge under the wagons until the storm passed. Some of the wagons were overturned and many persons were hurt. The singular part of it was that half a mile up the road there was not enough rain to lay the dust. The storm was local, and did not extend more than half or three-quarters of a mile in every direction. In more recent years these local storms have been known as ‘cloud-bursts.’
When we arrived at the Black Hills we were all worn out. Our cattle were footsore, and the horses having no grain, were weak and tired. Our provisions began to run low, and things looked decidedly squally. It was getting late in the season, and father was fearful we might get caught in a snowstorm in the mountains, when allmight perish with cold and hunger."
Despite all the adversity he was faced with, George left a legacy of hard work. George Welton prided himself in doing his farm work carefully and systematically. He trained his family of boys to be thorough in their work, as well. Because of his training, the work of George Welton Ward’s family drew attention among their neighbors. Edwin Cordon remarked, “There wasn’t a man that could stack grain to shed water like George Welton Ward."
I'm grateful to George Welton Ward for establishing the legacy of my family in the United States. #ResilientRoots
Post written by Katherine Ward, Marketing Director, Family Chartmasters LLC
Tuesday, March 31, 2020
Hortense Carpenter: Stepping up to a challenge #ResilientRoots
Rosina ran a dress shop in their town and Hortense was always impeccably dressed. She learned to sew, play the piano and the clarinet, traveled and served a mission for her church. After graduating from school and returning from the mission, one morning her mother came downstairs and said, ""Hortense, I've not slept all night. I have
been worried about you. I don't think you should go to San Diego. You have said
several times you might like to go to BYU. Get yourself ready and go on to
college. I don't think you will find San Diego the same place now that your
mission is over. I would like to keep you here to run the dress shop for me. I
have considered selling you the business. I know you could manage the shop and
do a good job, but I won't make an old maid, out of you." So Hortense packed up and left for college the next morning. Hortense was nervous about going to school but she enjoyed her home economics classes and decided to major in that. She was president of her sorority and had lots of friends and boyfriends. When she was about to graduate in the sprint of 1934 her mother took ill and died in April. Rosina insisted that she graduate and not come home to care for her or she might not graduate. Hortense did graduate with her teaching credentials and accepted a job at a high school for a year before returning to take care of her father and the dress shop.

That fall, one of her teachers came to the shop to visit and encouraged her to go on with more school about consumer education and bookeeping to be better at managing the shop. So Hortense left again after Christmas to continue her education. There she met my Grandfather G. Alvin Carpenter. After two years of writing letters, they married June 10th, 1938. Hortense worked for the State Extension Staff as a clothing specialist until they married and moved to Reno Nevada.
After stints with Alvin's job in Reno and Berkeley, CA, and getting his PhD at Cornell in New York, they settled in Logan, Utah and began to raise a family. Hortense put her homemaking skills into her three children, Paul, Don and Colleen. She was a wonderful mother and taught the children to be hard workers with a couple of acres of fruit trees, gardens. chickens and a horse. Hortense canned and froze all of the vegetables and fruit that they raised. She made sure the children all had piano, speech and art lessons. During this time she finished her work on her MS degree except for the thesis. She also renewed her teaching certificate. Little did she know how valuable that would be soon in her life.
After 16 years in Logan, Alvin moved the family to work for the University of California at Berkeley in 1956. Shortly after, Alvin was diagnosed with diabetes and Hortense became worried. To quote her son Don, "She wanted to make sure she could support the family if necessary. So she began as a substitute teacher and then accepted a full time position teaching home economics at Alhambra High School in Martinez California. This proved to be a great blessing in her life. Not only did the extra income help during the children's expensive college years, but it gave Hortense the added peace and assurance, increased self-confidence and new opportunities to serve others in ways that were rewarding and satisfying. Having raised her own children, she felt more competent, and qualified to teach foods and nutrition, clothing, family finance, and family life than she ever felt as a young college graduate teaching home economics."
After 12 years of teaching, Hortense retired at the same time Alvin retired from UC Berkeley. They moved to Provo, Utah to be closer to their grandchildren and Alvin worked for 10 more years as a part time faculty at BYU. It was then that I got to spend most of my time with Grandma. Each grandchild got to visit by themselves for a week and Grandma taught us how to sew, needlepoint, cook and we went for long walks in the mountains where she taught me the names of all the wildflowers. She organized summer sewing and home economics classes for the children in the neighborhood with her many sewing machines and the room she kept full of fabric. She made her granddaughters beautiful clothes and we had huge family dinners on Sundays and holidays. She loved to hear the piano recitals her grandchildren would perform and she used her many sets of china and dishes for entertaining. She taught me that I was going to college, it was just a matter of which school I picked. She knew that it was best for a woman to be prepared to have a career, even at a time when many women didn't. I'm thankful for a grandmother who taught me so much about kindness, faith, and courage. When she passed, 6 years after Alvin did on July 6, 1991, she left a great legacy of determination and drive that I draw on today.
Post written by Janet Hovorka, Owner, Family Chartmasters LLC










































