"GP&A does so much more than you'd EVER expect!" Neil Fauerbach, after research completed for Fauerbach Brewery, Madison, WI
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"I gave all our names, dates and old pictures to Glynn Patrick & Associates and asked them to write a family
history. Bound copies of Our Family Story turned out to be the best Christmas present we've ever given."
--Deanna P., Prairie City, IL
Glynn Patrick & Associates: We Capture "Forever"
"I wanted a little coaching on how to research my family history myself. Glynn Patrick & Associates helped
me get started on the project. I got results right away. Now I'm the "genealogist" in our family, and I have a
fascinating new hobby." --Mark B., Chicago, IL
We rely on experts like Jonathan Wuepper
Cass District Library (Cassopolis, MI) local history branch manager Jonathan pitched in to help us find pioneer witch (and recluse) Job Wright's grave!
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Jonathan helped locate a rare document from the 1840s that gave the burial site, and then joined the
grave-by-grave search. The end result? GP& A found the stone for Wright family descendants.
How can GP&A (and friends like these!) help you?
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Tell us how we might help you! Click butterfly to email Glynn Patrick & Assoc.
Our helpmate: Mary Buhr Iroquois Co., Illinois Genealogical Research Chair
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Mary spent hours copying obituaries and helping with a microfilm hunt for clues to help us
recreate three family histories from the Kankakee, Illinois area when we visited the Iroquois County
Genealogical Society.
She gave us open access to all the files and records. One of the documents she found led us
toward an entirely different direction (and state).

We were asked to photograph a grave in a Cottage Grove cemetery in Dane County, Wisconsin. We
couldn't find the markers! So we asked memorial specialist Maximus P. Nuon to check the
official cemetery records. He confirmed that the plots were vacant; however, he offered adjacent site
(once we cleared the topsoil off partially hidden markers!)
Our subject, Harold, had bought four sites, rather than just the two listed in the cemetery files, and the
family had buried the couple in the "other" unrecorded plots! We never would have found it, had we
relied on a phone call.
Hint: If you can't find a grave, ask staff to show you where it should be. Sometimes it is nearby.
Records sometimes are wrong.