Manchu Eight Banners:
The Hu family belongs to the Buddha Manchuria, and all the flags are there. When the yamen of General Ningguta moved to Jilin in Kangxi 15, Jia Muhu's family was transferred from Ning 'an, Heilongjiang Province to Jilin with the first Jilin General Bahai, and was stationed in Yongji County in the first year of Qianlong.
The ancestral home is the Hushhari family east of Wusuli River. In the ninth year of Kangxi, he joined the Eight Banners and belonged to Chemanchu Zhengbai Banner. One of them was also transferred from Yilan, Heilongjiang Province to Yongji County, Jilin Province in Kangxi 15.
Hu Jiashi:
Their ancestors were Mongolians in Hu Ba, whose ancestral home was in the Banon River east of Daxing 'anling today, and returned to Nurhachi in the early years of the latter Jin Dynasty. In Kangxi 17, he was transferred from Shengjing to Jilin, where he was stationed as a border guard in Jilin General Yamen. It is not clear which flags future generations belong to.
Eight Banners of Han Army:
Hu's two ancestors came from Liaodong and Hubei respectively. Hu, a native of Liaodong, also known as Chen Zhihu, defected with him in the early years of the late Jin Dynasty. During the Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty, he was transferred to offer sacrifices to Wula Yamen and served as a sacrifice to Uladin. But this family is mostly decorated with yellow flags.
Hu's ancestral home was in Hubei, and he was originally a subordinate of Wu Sangui. He defected during the San Francisco Rebellion. The Qing government reorganized the family at the end of Kangxi and moved it to Jilin.
If you really want to know about it, I suggest you go back to Xigangtun, Wulihe River and ask the same old people face to face, or go to the Jilin Provincial Library to consult the records of Yongji County in Qing Dynasty. There used to be a Mr. Song Zhanrong in Yongji County Literature and History Museum in Jilin Province, but he seems to have retired this year. You can go to his unit to inquire.