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Genealogy


Our Hullinger / Harlan Genealogy on Line

We have posted our genealogy on the addresses below. Each platform has it strengths and weaknesses, and some require you to log in.  The genealogy was prepared by Clif Hullinger some years ago and and has not been recently updated. If you want to add names or make corrections please do so.

The first program is provided for free by the Church of the Latter Day Saints (Mormons).  You sign in with a free account. This is my account.  After you sign in you may have to add yourselves and your parents.  It will then give you a genealogy that has been prepared by literally hundreds of people and shows some of ancestral lines very far back in time, including some lines all the way back to royalty in Europe. You can update and correct it.




You can also view our genealogy online at the link below. This one just shows our genealogy without all the other lines that were submitted:


Here is another site where we uploaded our genealogy.




For any of you that wish to download the Gedcom for use with a genealogy program, here it is. The last time it was updated was in 2015 so some of it is out of date.  If anyone wants to pick up on Clif's work please add our new cousins.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B-keWl9gtw6Lbm9tVXpXdDhsX28/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-NyDiT77o-SmoHMCmERzreQ



Hallwyl Castle new the Villages our Ancestors lived in in Switzerland

Our Hullinger / Hollinger / Holliger / Holiger clan and the Harlan clan. As we find new information we will add it to the blog while keeping this summary updated.

Our oldest know paternal ancestor is Henri Holiger of Boniswyl, Aargau, Switzerland, born in 1425. We have visited this lovely area and found relatives. The community is very attractive with a small castle located at the foot of a lake. A fast flowing stream forms a moat around the castle.

Our paternal Swiss ancestors immigrated to the United States in 1736 and settled in Pennsylvania. Their descendants gradually moved west with the frontier. Our branch of the family homesteaded in Vivian, South Dakota in the early 1900's.

Our Paternal Line of Descent

Hullinger / Hollinger / Holliger / Holiger

Born Died First Last Name Spouse Birth Place / Comments

1425 1504 Henri Holiger Boniswyl, Aargu, SWZ

1446 Heini Holiger Boniswil (Holvil) Switzerland

1472 Hans Holiger 1504 Junghans Holiger m Margaretha Rebmeyer

1548 1600 Heini Holiger m Barbara Mayer Boniswyl,Aargu, SWZ Burial: Seengen

1591 1643 Heini Holiger m Anna Huber Aargu, Boniswyl, SWZ

1627 1689 Rudolph Holliger m Anna Hummel

1661 Jacob Holliger m Elisabeth Burger

1701 1779 Hans Jacob Hollinger m Anna Elisabetha Esterli
Immigrated to US 1736

1734 1802 Christian Hollinger m Eva Dorothea Feltz
Born Germany, Captain American Revolution

1757 1839 Daniel Hullinger m Ann Schockey
Lancaster Co, PA, 1st Lt American Revolution

1788 1856 Daniel Jnr Hullinger m Comfort Conway Staunton Trenton, OH

1833 1909 Daniel J Hullinger m Mary Kirk Ohio emigrated from Ohio to south central Iowa by wagon train in 1864

1870 1956 Eli Hullinger m Mary Elizabeth Siddons Leon IA

1893 1970 John Franklin Hullinger m Pearl Josephine Harlan
Leon, Iowa US Army, WW I

1920 Clifford Harlan Hullinger m Louise Liffengren
Vivian, SD 1st Lieutenant, US Army, WW II

1947 Craig Harlan Hullinger m Elizabeth S. Ruyle
Brookings, SD Colonel, US Marine Corps Reserve, Vietnam

There is a lot of additional information in this blog and on 

the blog below




























craighullinger.tribalpages.com
craighullinger.tribalpages.com/tribe/browse?userid=craighullinger&view=50&pid=3&ver=41
familysearch.org/tree/pedigree/landscape/LKQ5-K1N
myheritage.com/site-family-tree-235990581/hullinger
ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/82699357/family
borgvinn.net/tronrud/
familytreedna.com/my/family-tree/share?k=%2FzpFxgE9ygNva7zEvXIoUQ%3D%3D
wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=familyhart&id=I41295
familyharttng.com/search.php?mylastname=HOLLINGER&lnqualify=equals&mybool=AND
mid-atlanticroots.com/familyhart
harlanfamily.org
mid-atlanticroots.com/familyhart/holiger.html
mid-atlanticroots.com/padutch
Hollinger / Hullinger Projects - DNA
nortonfamily.net/hullinger.htm
familytreedna.com/public/Hollinger/default.aspx?section=yresults
wikitree.com/genealogy/HOLLINGER
wikitree.com/genealogy/HULLINGER
familytreedna.com/public/Hollinger/default.aspx?section=ysnp



Our Hullinger / Harlan Genealogy on Line

We have posted our genealogy on the addresses below. Each platform has it strengths and weaknesses, and some require you to log in.  The genealogy was prepared by Clif Hullinger some years ago and is out of date. If you want to add names or make corrections drop me an email.

The first program is provided for free by the Church of the Latter Day Saints (Mormons).  You sign in with a free account.

https://www.familysearch.org/tree/pedigree/landscape/LKQ5-K1N


Other Programs

craighullinger.tribalpages.com
craighullinger.tribalpages.com/tribe/browse?userid=craighullinger&view=50&pid=3&ver=41
familysearch.org/tree/pedigree/landscape/LKQ5-K1N
myheritage.com/site-family-tree-235990581/hullinger
ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/82699357/family
borgvinn.net/tronrud/
familytreedna.com/my/family-tree/share?k=%2FzpFxgE9ygNva7zEvXIoUQ%3D%3D
wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=familyhart&id=I41295
familyharttng.com/search.php?mylastname=HOLLINGER&lnqualify=equals&mybool=AND
mid-atlanticroots.com/familyhart
harlanfamily.org
mid-atlanticroots.com/familyhart/holiger.html
mid-atlanticroots.com/padutch

Hollinger / Hullinger Projects - DNA
nortonfamily.net/hullinger.htm
familytreedna.com/public/Hollinger/default.aspx?section=yresults
wikitree.com/genealogy/HOLLINGER
wikitree.com/genealogy/HULLINGER
familytreedna.com/public/Hollinger/default.aspx?section=ysnp

And if we have a genealogist among our cousins who would like to take this over I would be glad to provide you the information.











If you want to see your ancestors way back log into the Church of the 
Latter Day Saints program.


It is free and pretty easy.

After you log in start your tree.  You can just link to your parents and grandparents

and your entire genealogy should be seen.  Some of the lines go way back to big mucky mucks, which makes sense since they were rich and had many descendants, who also left many descendants. 

Have fun


We are descended from the King of England and the King of France.


  • Edward I of England (1239-1307), popularly known as Longshanks, reigned from 1272 until his death
  • Edward II of England (1284-1327), reigned from 1307 until he was deposed in January 1327, and was murdered in September
  • Edward III of England (1312-1377), crowned at the age of 14, and one of the more successful English monarchs of the Middle Ages

Edward I
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_I_of_England

Phillip IV of France
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_IV_of_France
























One of our many GGGGGGGGrandparents was Captain Thomas Graves, one of the founders of Jamestown, Virginia.  He was a member of the First Legislative Assembly in America

Captain Thomas Graves

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Thomas Graves (c. 1580-1635) was one of the original Adventurers (stockholders) of the Virginia Company of London, and one of the very early Planters (settlers) who founded Jamestown, Virginia, the first permanent English settlement in North America. He was also the first known person named Graves in North America. Captain Thomas Graves is listed as one of the original Adventurers as "Thomas Grave" on page 364, Records of the Virginia Company of London, vol. IV.
Graves arrived in Virginia in October 1608 on the ship Mary and Margaret with Captain Christopher Newport's second supply. He paid 25 pounds for two shares in the London Company and thereby was entitled to 200 acres (0.81 km2).
Captain Thomas Graves settled at Smythe's Hundred, situated on the north shore of the James River ten miles from Jamestown. Governor George Yeardley placed Graves in charge of Smythe's Hundred on May 30, 1618, after one man killed another in a fight.[1]
Capt. Thomas Graves was a member of the First Legislative Assembly in America, and, with Mr. Walter Shelley, sat for Smythe's Hundred when they met at Jamestown, Virginia on July 30, 1619.[2] His name appears on a monument to the first House of Burgesses which stands at Jamestown today.
Smythe's Hundred was abandoned after the Indian uprising of 1622. The next record of Captain Graves showed him living on the Eastern Shore of Virginia by February 16, 1624.[1]
On February 8, 1627, Captain Francis West, Governor of Virginia, ordered that Thomas Graves have a commission to command the Plantation at Accomac. Graves was the second Commander. As an "Ancient Planter" he received one of the first patents there on March 14, 1628, consisting of 200 acres (0.81 km2). He lived on Old Plantation Creek, now in Northampton County, Virginia, and served as Commissioner for Accomac Shire in 1629.
Captain Graves and three others represented the Eastern Shore in the Assembly of 1629‑30. He served again as a burgess in 1632. Because he was designated as "Esquire" on January 6, 1635, he may have been a member of the Council.
Captain Thomas Graves, Esquire, was recorded as being a Justice at a court held for Accomac on April 13, 1635.
He died between November 1635, when he witnessed a deed, and January 5, 1635/6, when suit was entered for Mrs. Graves concerning theft by a servant. He was survived by his wife, Katherine, and six children: John, Thomas, Ann, Verlinda, Katherine and Francis.[3]
His daughter, Verlinda, eventually married governor of Maryland, William Stone.





Charlemagne  2 April 742 – 28 January 814
Charlemagne was a very impressive King.  Note the family resemblance.

Kings and Queens were wealthy and produced numerous offspring.  Most people alive today are descended from these people. And now we have proof that we are descended from big mucky mucks.

I uploaded our genealogy to the Church of the Latter-Day Saints Familysearch.org program.  The program combines our genealogy into their very large data base and provides numerous connections back to ancient times. The link is 
familysearch.org/tree/pedigree/landscape/LKQ5-K1N  You have to sign in to familysearch.org to use the system - it is free.

I took some screen shots below which shows our path back to Charlemagne.  And that and a buck+ will get you a cup of coffee. Still, it is fun.










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Our Harlan Name Line

James #1, George#3, Aaron#8, George#37, George#180, Moses#676, Lewis#2291, Marion, Pearl J, Clifford Harlan Hullinger, Craig Harlan Hullinge...