TIP OF THE WEEK
The HeritageQuest database, which is available remotely via The Seattle Public Library’s website, will see several upgrades in the first quarter 2015.
Following are a few important changes noted by ProQuest, the database vendor:
- Complete 1790-1940 U.S. Federal Census with images and every-name indexes for all years
- Additional census records such as Mortality and Non-Population Schedules, Indian Census Rolls, and more
- Expanded collection of genealogy and local history books and city directories with an all-new user interface, thumbnail images and hit highlighting
- Complete Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land record collection (NARA M804)
This database can be accessed by anyone with a Seattle Public Library card via the Internet, and does not require a trip to the library.
HELP WANTED – YOUR SOCIETY NEEDS YOU
Current SGS needs and openings:
Are you Irish (or do you wish you were), and can you walk a mile?
SGS’s official participation in Seattle’s Irish Week Festivities is one of our best community outreach activities and helps us obtain financial grants for our Society. SGS is participating in the annual St. Patrick’s Day parade on March 14, and we need a few people to march in the parade, carry the SGS banner alongside an antique car, and pass out membership brochures. The parade begins at 12 noon and starts at 4th and Jefferson and travels north on 4th. After passing the reviewing stand at Westlake – walkers can board the monorail (for free) to the Seattle Center for closing ceremonies at 2:00 pm.
SGS will also have a booth at the Seattle Center for the Irish Week festivities. We need volunteers to man our SGS Information booth for two-hour shifts on Saturday March 14 from 12 Noon to 6 PM and Sunday March 15 10 AM – 6 PM. This is a lot of fun.
If you can help – please contact Jean A. Roth at (206) 782-2629 or jeanaroth@juno.com
BELOW ARE SEVERAL NEEDS RELATED TO THE SGS SPRING 2015 SEMINAR:
WANTED: Volunteers willing to give SGS two hours to help with registration of attendees at 2015 spring seminar, Saturday, 9 May. Will check attendees’ names against registration/paid list and hand out already-prepared information packets. Will register walk-up attendees and take and record their registration fees. Seminar at Greenwood Senior Center. Work begins at 8:30 a.m. on day of seminar. Email Betty Ravenholt,ravenholt@aol.com
WANTED: Volunteers willing to give SGS approximately two hours to put out snacks/water and hand out lunches at SGS spring seminar on 9 May. Preparatory work of organizing snacks and lunch boxes will take about one hour and begins at 8:30. Handing out lunches will take about one hour and begins about 12:00. Seminar at Greenwood Senior Center. Email Betty Ravenholt, ravenholt@aol.com
SGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Saturday, January 31, 10:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m., Wedgewood Presbyterian Church
DNA INTEREST GROUP, Cary Bright and Herb McDaniel, leaders.
Come learn about DNA testing and how you can tear down some of your brick walls with the right DNA test. We will have a quick overview at 9:30 a.m. to review DNA for beginners. Our usual meeting (10:00 a.m.) will review all new discoveries and include two presentations by group members about their own DNA testing results.
Saturday, January 31, 1:30 – 4:00 p.m., SGS Library
Program: Using Postcard Images: An Unusual Picture Source For Family Histories.
Old postcards are a valuable but often little-used resource for images to add to your genealogies. They include early photographs and art work of places and people important to your narrative.
Leader: Jean A. Roth
Sunday, February 1 – SGS Library will be CLOSED today, because of the Super Bowl.
The program originally scheduled for this date has been moved to Feb. 8 – see below.
Saturday, February 7 10:15 a.m. -12:15 p.m., Canadian Interest Group; David Robert, leader.
Bring your Canadian brick walls for some expert help.
Sunday, February 8, 1:30 p.m.,
NEW DATE! “House Histories–Wherever You Live” will be presented on Sunday, 8 February at 1:30 pm at the SGS Library. Jill Morelli, licensed architect and genealogist will present an approach to doing your house history, wherever you live. While each county’s land records are filed differently, Jill will outline a procedure which works in most urban jurisdictions. Document retrieval, online and on site, and the architecture and neighborhood assessment will be covered.
Tuesday, February 10, 10 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
Program: Finding and Interpreting Family Bible Records, Ida Skarson McCormick, leader.
Is something puzzling you about the content of a family Bible record? Please send image before class to idamc@seanet.net
Saturday, February 14.
CANCELLATION NOTICE: Computer Interest Group, Ida Skarson McCormick, leader, originally scheduled for this day has been cancelled.
Saturday, February 14, 1:00 – 4:00 p.m. SGS OPEN HOUSE
It’s Valentine’s Day! We’d “love” to have you join us for sweet treats. Researchers will be available to help you with your family history.
Tuesday, February 17, 1:00 – 3:00 p.m., Brick Wall Solving Session.
Join SGS members for a problem-solving session. This is an open forum format. Jean A. Roth, leader.
Saturday, February 21, All day Irish Genealogy Workshop 9 AM – 5 PM in Greenwood sponsored by the Irish Heritage Club and the SGS Irish Interest Group.
Contact Jean A. Roth for details: jeanaroth@juno.com
Sunday, February 22, 11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m., Irish Interest Group, Jean A. Roth, leader.
Open session on Irish research. Come and share your successes and brick walls.
Sunday, February 22, 1:30 – 3:30 p.m., German Interest Group, Jean A. Roth, leader.
Open session on German research. Come and share your successes and brick walls.
The next two programs begin our 2015 series of lectures on the Ethnic Heritage in the Northwest:
Saturday, February 28, 10:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. Program: Embracing Your Ethnic Heritage, Jean A. Roth, leader. Our ancestors had a rich ethnic heritage – a story that needs to be told.
Saturday, February 28, 1:00 – 3:00 p.m. Program: Coming to America – Castle Gardens and Ellis Island, Jean A. Roth, leader.
Many of our ancestors came through the Port of New York and entered through Castle Gardens or Ellis Island. This program will describe entering the U.S. in the 19th and 20thcenturies.




Sunday, January 18, 3:00 PM – LECTURE: “Present But Not Accounted For: Women at the 1777-1778 Valley Forge Campaign,” Nancy K. Loane, Ph. D. — Did you know that more the 400 women were encamped at Valley Forge during the winter of 1777-1778? Much has been written about the Valley Forge winter and Washington’s fortitude there, of the remarkable remodeling of the Constitutional Army and the suffering endured by the soldiers. But what about those women? Who were they? What did they do at Valley Forge? Nancy K. Loane is author of Following the Drum: Women at the Valley Forge Encampment. This program is a co-presentation of DLAR and the Lower Makefield Historical Society. (Snow date: January 25)
Wednesday, February 25, 7:30 PM – LECTURE: “Rethinking Slavery’s Slow Death in New Jersey, 1775-1865,” James Gigantino II, Ph. D. — Contrary to popular perception, slavery persisted in the North well into the nineteenth century. This was especially the case in New Jersey, which did not pass an abolition statute until 1804. New Jersey’s “gradual” abolition law freed children born to enslaved mothers only after they had served their mother’s master for at least two decades. Therefore, slavery continued in New Jersey through the Civil War. This realization shatters the perceived easy dichotomies between free states and slave states at the onset of the Civil War, as well as challenges our understanding of the impact of the American Revolution on the North. James Gigantino is an Assistant Professor of History and an affiliated faculty member in African & African American Studies at the University of Arkansas. He is the author of The Ragged Road to Abolition: Slavery and Freedom in New Jersey, 1775-1865.
Tuesday, March 10, 7:30 PM – PERFORMANCE: “Oh, Those Good Old Canal Songs,” the Long Hill String Band — American music in the 1800’s was melodic, energetic, and bound to start toes a’tappin’. Settlers carried tunes from their homelands and created new music that embodied their hardships, joys, and stories from the Revolutionary War to the Civil War and beyond. The Long Hill String Band has performed at the National Civil War Museum, the Millbrook Village Days and the Delaware Water Gap Recreation Area. With fiddle, banjo, mountain dulcimer, mandolin, bass, and guitar, and voice, they evoke the times when America was growing by leaps and bounds. This program of American Heritage music will include canal tunes, reels, jigs, waltzes, square dance tunes, and “familiars” like “Oh Susannah!” and “Buffalo Gals.” Singing, humming, toe tapping and clapping by the audience are part of the fun. Karl Varnai and his fellow band members will also share some of the history of the times and the tunes that they will be playing. This program is a co-presentation of DLAR and the Friends of the Delaware Canal.
Tuesday, March 24, 7:30 PM – LECTURE: “A Tale of Two Plantations,” Richard S. Dunn, Ph. D. – Since the 1970s, Richard S. Dunn has been tracking the 1,103 slaves who lived at Mesopotamia plantation in Jamaica between 1762 and 1833, and the 973 slaves who lived at Mount Airy plantation in Virginia between 1808 and 1865, reconstructing the lineages of slave families from both plantations through four or five generations. In Jamaica, many more slaves died than were born, and the planters imported huge numbers of new slaves from Africa to replace the dead workers. In Virginia, the slave population doubled every twenty-five years, and the planters sold huge numbers of “surplus” slaves, or moved them to distant work sites. The people at Mesopotamia and Mount Airy suffered a terrible predicament, trapped into forced labor, with meager possibilities for personal achievement. Bare traces of their existence have been handed down to us by their captors, and represent mostly what slaveholders chose to inscribe. But by interpreting such records against the grain, these simple family diagrams and biographical sketches highlight personhood, connection, and belonging rather than proprietary accounting. Consequently, they open many fruitful lines of investigation. Dr. Dunn taught at Princeton, the University of Michigan, the University of Oxford, and for 39 years at the University of Pennsylvania. At Penn, he founded the Philadelphia Center for Early American Studies (renamed the McNeil Center in 1998), and directed the Center from 1978 to 2000. He and his wife Mary Maples Dunn are former Co-Executive Officers of the American Philosophical Society. His latest book, A Tale of Two Plantations: Slave Life and Labor in Jamaica and Virginia, was just published at the end of 2014.
Sunday, March 29, 3:00 PM – BOOK LAUNCH: “The Revolution’s Last Men: the Soldiers Behind the Photographs” by Don N. Hagist – In 1864, as the Civil War threatened to tear apart the United States, a book called The Last Men of the Revolution was published. It featured photographs and interviews of six old men who were believed to be the only veterans of the American Revolution still living at that time. The book captivated the public’s imagination at the time of its original publication, but, through a combination of the subjects’ fading memories and the interviewer’s patriotic agenda, the profiles accompanying the photographs distort history. In his new version of this landmark work, independent researcher and author Don N. Hagist has updated the profiles of each of these veterans using service records, pension files and other materials now available. Hagist’s book, The Revolution’s Last Men, includes accurate biographies of each of the six men, several additional newly-discovered photographs, drawings of how the men might have looked when they were soldiers in the American Revolution, and many unexpected discoveries uncovered in the recent research. This event will include a talk by the author about his process, as well as a book sale reception to celebrate the publication of this exciting new work.
Wednesday, April 8, 7:30 PM – LECTURE: “Kidnapping the Enemy: The Special Operations to Capture Generals Charles Lee & Richard Prescott,” Christian M. McBurney — On December 13, 1776, a party of British dragoons surprised and captured Major General Charles Lee, second-in-command of the Continental Army. In order to have a British captive of the same rank, Rhode Island’s William Barton planned and executed the capture of Major General Richard Prescott. Barton’s raid was the outstanding special operation of the Revolutionary War and still ranks as one of the greatest in American History. But did the pride Barton earned from the mission ruin his life? McBurney is the author of three books on the American Revolution, including his newest, Kidnapping the Enemy, about the missions to capture Charles Lee and Richard Prescott.
Wednesday, April 22, 7:30 PM – LECTURE (Presented at Bucks County Community College): “The Founding Fathers of 1787: Lessons In Political Leadership,” Richard K. Beeman, Ph. D. –Americans today, though they continue to show great reverence for the U.S. Constitution, are often thoroughly disenchanted with the way in which our political system is functioning. Indeed, that disenchantment borders on disgust when the subject is the hyper-partisan and vituperative manner in which our United States Congress functions (or, in many cases, fails to function). In this era of political dysfunction, it might be useful to look back in time, to the summer of 1787, when 55 delegates, representing widely diverse constituencies across the breadth of America, were able in just under four months to craft a constitution that has not only brought stability and justice to the United States, but has also served as a model for other constitutions around the world. In this lecture, Professor Beeman will examine both the eighteenth century context in which the delegates to the Constitutional Convention carried out their deliberations and the varieties of individual and collective leadership represented among that group of extraordinary men. Professor Beeman is the John Welsh Centennial Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania. The author of many books, he won the George Washington Book Prize for Plain, Honest Men: The Making of the American Constitution. His latest book is Our Lives, Our Fortunes, Our Sacred Honor: Americans Choose Independence. This lecture, presented in partnership with Bucks County Community College, will take place in Gateway Auditorium on the Bucks County Community College campus.
Tuesday, June 2, 7:30 PM – LECTURE – “’The Pursuit of Happiness’: On John Adams and Egalitarianism in the Declaration of Independence,” Danielle S. Allen, Ph. D. – Professor Allen is an American classicist and political scientist. She is the UPS Foundation Professor at the Institute for Advanced Studies’ School of Social Science. Her latest book, Our Declaration: A Reading of the Declaration of Independence in Defense of Equality, has been called “a tour de force of close textual analysis” by Gordon Wood and “a wise and rich book,” by Cornel West. In her talk at the David Library, Professor Allen will consider John Adams, who she believes played a much more significant role in the development of the Declaration of Independence than is conventionally recognized. “Among his central contributions was to provide the definitive grounding for the Declaration’s egalitarianism in the concept of ‘happiness,’” she notes, adding, “This was a move away from the slave-holding sections’ preferred commitment to ‘property.’”