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On the record ... with Julie Dresser

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Julie Dresser is leading a six-week beginner's genealogy course through the Sycamore History Museum. (Doug Oleson - doleson@shawmedia.com)

SYCAMORE – Are you related to someone famous?

Julie Dresser, a Sycamore genealogist, is.

Born in Arizona, Dresser grew up in St. Charles, where she began studying genealogy at the age of 11 to find out if her family was actually related to President Andrew Jackson. Though she disproved that family myth, Dresser, who moved to Sycamore in 1987, discovered that she is descended from Abraham Lincoln, Nathan Hale and the real-life model for “The Scarlet Letter” character Hester Pine.

As she grew, so did Dresser’s passion for genealogy. Last year, she won a national essay contest sponsored  by the Society of American Archivists, earning her family a trip to San Diego. Her essay was about discovering 16 letters an ancestor who died in 1864 wrote to her sister.

Dresser will share some of her knowledge in a six-week genealogy class starting tonight through the Sycamore History Museum. Registration is required. Call 815-895-5762 to inquire about space.

Dresser spent a few minutes last week talking genealogy with MidWeek reporter Doug Oleson.


MidWeek: How did you get started in genealogy so young?

Julie Dresser: My grandmother’s family always said that we were descended from President Andrew Jackson. I see no one actually opened up a history book, because Andrew Jackson didn’t have any children. It’s just a family story. ...But sometimes, there’s the nugget of truth in a story. It turns out we’re probably descendants of Andrew Jackson’s grandfather, so there is a relationship, but the story kind of evolved until it became more than it really was.

MW: Did you get into genealogy because of that?

JD: Yes, it piqued my interest, and I’ve always been curious. I like puzzles.  I always considered genealogy to be this great big puzzle. You just don’t know what the picture is going to be like when you’re all done.

MW: When you started, were there as many sources as today?

JD: Actually, my grandparents lived across the street from the library in St. Charles. My grandmother’s family was in Kane County from the 1840s on. It was local. I could do it on my own. And then I had some aunts and cousins who kind of took me under their wing and helped me out. They were interested. They got me started and encouraged me. Then, when I got married, my mother-in-law was a huge help to me.

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