TIP OF WEEK – SWEDISH RECORDS
Member Jill Morelli has discovered some well done videos on reading Swedish Records presented by Geoff Morris on the home page of his web site “The Swedish Genealogy Guide” . Start at http://swedishgenealogyguide.com/ and then click on “Learning Center” for a list of the 9 videos currently available for you to watch.
Seattle Genealogical Society Upcoming Meetings
“LITTLE GEMS” IN THE SGS LIBRARY
Mr. James Lowe sailed from New York City, aboard the ship Ohio, on January 10,1852, with “1,000 passengers on board.” He was bound for California, no doubt certain he would make his fortune in the promised land. On his journey, he notes that he paid $10 to hire a mule to take him across the Isthmus of Panama and saw “Parrits Monkeys Alegators”. Sailing north, he was thirsty and hungry with “nothing for supper” and “three spoons of rice for breakfast.” He landed in San Francisco on May 15, 1852. Fortunately for historians and genealogists, Mr. Lowe kept a diary of his journey, which includes names of his fellow passengers sailing up the California coast aboard the Brig Margaret. Take a look at this remarkable document in the SGS library.
National Archives 2015 Virtual Genealogy Fair October 21 and 22
You might want to check out the National Archives Virtual Genealogy Fair. It will be a live broadcast via YouTube so you can ask the genealogy experts questions at the end of their talks. Speakers will include experts from National Archives locations across the nation.
Lectures will feature tips and techniques for using Federal records at the National Archives for genealogy research. These lectures are designed for experienced genealogists and novices. Recorded sessions will remain available online after the event. More info at : https://www.archives.gov/calendar/genealogy-fair/
MAC Computer Interest Group Announces Changes
Future Meetings of the MAC I.G. to be held Every Other Month
(December 9, February 10, April 13, & June 8) Continue reading
Serendipity Day
Mary Holcomb, soon to be vice-president of EWGS, shared a great blurb with me…….. if you click to www.sos.wa.gov/legacyproject/washington-remembers you will find the stories of Washington’s heroes … including Fred Skiosaki. His story is a terrific read, as are all the stories found on this website. “Washington Remembers….. WWII….Their Sacrifice, Our Freedom.”
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One pearl gleaned from Cyndi Ingle, our EWGS Fall Workshop speaker, was for a little program called Fences. “Are your desktop icons often scrambled from the positions you put them in?” asked Cyndi. “With this little program, you put “fences” (boxes) around groups of icons on your desktop and they stay put. I did it and so far I’m quite happy with the results……… go see for yourself. Google “stardock fences.” (Stardock is the company originating the program.)
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I’m a member of the St.Clair County (IL) Gen Society and so receive their Quarterly. In the latest edition they reported on a most-cool project. Under the direction of their teacher, local high school students in the German class are translating old German obituaries that were published in the German-speaking area newspaper in 1893. I think that is a terrific idea! Think of the various and many ethnic newspapers in our area…….
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Another Illinois research pearl I gleaned from the above Quarterly was that the Illinois Blue Books, 1900-2006, are digitized and now are available online. State Blue Books are “most than a directory of (state’s) legislative officials, their portraits and biographies, articles about (state’s) farms…………….. they contain departmetntal reports …… conservation, finance, insurance, labor, mines, public health, welfare, safety, education, maps, patriotic organizations and photographs……” These online Illinois Blue Books can be found on the Illinois Digital Archives website, www.idaillinois.org
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Do you know: How many national parks do we have in Washington?? How many have you visited? Well, there are three: Olympic, North Cascades and Mount Rainier National Parks. And there are many national monuments and state parks. (We are so lucky in that regard!!) Came upon a “List Challenge” with a list of all the national parks in the U.S. (and there are 59) and inviting us to see how many we have visited…. www.listchallenges.com/national-parks-of-the-usa My score was 30-some, how about you? (The above photo of mine is of Rialto Beach just west of Forks, WA.)
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Do any of your non-genealogy friends bring up to you the seemingly negative Bible verses against genealogy, like Titus 3:9 and 1 Timothy 1:4: “neither give heed to fables and endless genealogies..” I’ve done some studying and have come to understand that Jews of that day strove to prove their descent from Abraham thus claiming that they were automatically saved above the Gentiles and were better than the Gentiles. That’s what Paul was warning against; he stressed personal righteousness no matter what your ancestry. Whew!
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Shall end today with a great quote from Ellen Goodman, columnist for the Boston Globe: “This packrat has learned that what the next generation will value most is not what we owned, but the evidence of who we were and the talks of how we loved. In the end, it’s the family stories that are worth the storage.”
Find A Grave Volunteer Saturday October 17
Find A Grave is having a volunteer Saturday where they are hoping to get 1 million new graves photographed, for more information go here
(http://www.ancestry.com/cs/find-a-grave-community-day?o_xid=57458&o_lid=57458&o_sch=Social)
Northeast Washington Gen Society News Flash
The October meeting for NeWGS is coming up fast …. this Wednesday, October 14th, 2015. The morning Computer Interest Group (CIG) will meet in the basement meeting room of the LDS Church on Juniper Street in Colville at 10:30 AM. Sue Richart, a long-time member of NeWGS, will give us a “tour” of the newly updated New England Historic Genealogical Society website. If you think they only have New England records you will be pleasantly surprised at the diversity and range of records now available. Be sure to download the handout posted in our Members section under Secure Downloads, Computer Meeting Handouts, titled “NEHGS American Ancestors Website” (look for the “New” files at the bottom of the list).Heritage Quest Research Library’s AutumnQuest A Success!
Jim Johnson, Director of the Heritage Quest Research Library, and his wonderful crew (including wife, Patty) pulled off another fantastically successful AutumnQuest last Saturday, October 10th. Here is Jim teaching us all about using the Flip-Pal product………
Three WSGS Board members attended: Patty Olsen, Roger Newman and Donna Potter Phillips. The rest of you missed a grand day.
Speakers for the day were (L to R) Janice Lovelace, Janet O’Conor Camarata, Donna, and Jill Morelli. (We’re wearing the pin-in flowers from our speakers’ thank you gifts.) The theme for the day was Finding Women’s Records and each speaker addressed a different aspect of that topic…. much of which was new to the audience.
Years ago, WSGS coined the phrase, “You won’t know if you don’t go.” The nearly 100 folks in attendance last Saturday know for sure a day-full of genealogical information that they didn’t know before. Hope next time the audience includes you.
Serendipty “Friday” (today is Thursday)
Reason? I’ll be the least among four speakers at Heritage Quest Research Library’s OctoberFest on Saturday, October 10th. As it’s a 6-hour drive from Spokane, I’ll be heading over on Friday.
If you live near Sumner, and are not signed up for this exciting day, I don’t think it’s too late. Click to www.hqrl.com for information.
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Hubby and I attended a wonderful presentation last evening from the Spokane Chapter of the American Archaeology Association. Dr. Robert Neyland told us all about the H.L. Hunley, the Confederate submarine that sank the U.S.S. Housatonic and then sank herself.
Dr. Neyland related how Hunley had been found and recovered (in 2000) and was now undergoing restoration (which will take another 8 years!). Read all about it at www.hunley.org. The most fascinating part was when he explained the recovery of the eight crew members…their bones and artifacts. At the above website they have posted photos of the cranial-face-feature reconstructions of all eight men. After all the forensic work was done, these veterans were buried under the Confederate flag in a Charleston, SC, cemetery and several descendants attended the event.
If you think you, or somebody you know, might be a descendant of a sailor aboard the H.S. Hunley, do some Googling and you’ll find plenty of exciting information on this particular brave ancestor.
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Did you know: The membership of every organization is made up of four types of bones:
1. Wish Bones — These “bones” sit around and wish every one else would do the work.
2. Jaw Bones — These “bones” do all the tal king but little of the work.
3. Knuckle Bones — These “bones” knock everything that everybody else tries to do.
4. Back Bones — These “bones” are the ones who get under the load and do all the work.
Which kind of “bone” are you????
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Above the entrance to the University of Colorado Library is this carved phrase: “He who knows only his own genealogy remains always a child.” Isn’t that an interesting homile to be carved over the door of a university library?
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Just discovered a new-to-me website that will help in the finding of local or still-alive people. Give it a try at www.blackbookonline.com. The home page describes this as “the free public records search site.”
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Another way-cool website that my brother shared with me is this….. Google this phrase: “22 Maps and Charts that will surprise you.” Posted by Ezra Klein on 11 Mar 2015, he explains: “A good visualization helps you see what the data is telling you. The best visualizations help you see things you never thought the data would tell you. These 22 charts and maps were, at least for me, in that category: all of them told me something I found surprising. Some of them genuinely changed the way I think about the world.” Really, now, try it you’ll like it.
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Have you heard of Thomas MacEntee’s The Genealogy Fairy? Thomas explains: “Back in March 2015, I announced a new concept as part of my genealogy business: The Genealogy Fairy. I have seen a huge increase in business revenue related to affiliate marketing and I wanted a way to say thankyou to those who continue to support my business and believe in what I do to improve the way we search for our family history.
What Thomas has done is to set aside 5% of affiliate income for some type of grant program. These Genealogy Fairy grants are open to all genealogical and historical organizations, especially non-profits, and to individual genealogists who seek to fund specific projects related to genealogy and family history.
If this offer intrigues you, click to www.genealogybloggers.com/update-genealogy-fairy.com. Or just Google “the genealogy fairy.” What a good guy to make such a great offer.
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Been wanting to make a family book? An ONLINE family book? Like with Shutterfly? I was just introduced to the Olive Tree blog: Olive Tree Genealogy, created by Lorine in February 1996 was started to bring genealogists FREE genealogy records. Olive Tree Genealogy has more than 1,900 pages of free genealogy records to help you find your brick-wall ancestors and build your family tree. In a post of 1 Sep 2015, Lorine pointed to three YouTube tutorials on how to do a family book using Shutterfly. Why not take a peek?
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Unserious Thought for Today: Broken pencils are pointless.
NARA List of Items to be Digitized
A few weeks ago NARA asked people what items they held would you like to see digitized? Many genealogists sent their wishes to NARA, and so today NARA posted the results of the wishes of the people. Go here to see the article and the list:
Cyndi Ingle Visits Eastern Washington
Cyndi Ingle, of www.CyndisList.com fame, was the presenter at annual Fall Workshop of the Eastern Washington Genealogical Society. And she was, of course, wonderful.
As she arrived into Spokane on Friday, and had never been to the Eastern Washington Branch of “our” Washington State Archives, I arranged tours for her. Here is Cyndi with Lee Pierce (red shirt), archivist for the “downstairs” or paper archives part of the facility out on the EWU campus in Cheney, and with Harold Stoehr (green shirt) who manages and maintains the “upstairs” or digital archives part of the building. They were both so very gracious and informative and both Cyndi and I thanked them profusely for their time.
Cyndi was especially impressed with these two wrapped sets of disks………. Harold took us into the very innermost vault and let Cyndi hold the external backup to the entire contents of the state’s digital archives. (Don’t panic; there are multiple backups.) Cyndi was big-eyed-impressed with being able to hold such a treasure in her hands.
Cyndi hails from Puyallup and we here in Washington are very proud of our own home-grown bigwig celebrity in the world of genealogy. I was happy to show her some “eastern Washington” resources in person, especially our one-of-a-kind Washington State Digital Archives.
Serendipity Friday — 2 October 2015
Did your ancestors settle in western states and were first landowners? If so, you can find the information about their land at www.historygeo.com. Arizona, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington, and Wyoming land records were recently added to the database. I don’t have ancestors in those states but I did find great-great-grandfather in Kansas. Doing a search on some surnames of those I know settled in these areas produced a lot of results. Check this database for your ancestors. Read the article about these 3.3 million original landowners added to historygeo.com.
Blog.historygeo.com/2015/06/08/western-states-added-to-first-landowners-project/ –
(Jeanine Barndt is the Head Librarian for the Heritage Quest Research Library in beautiful downtown Sumner, Washington; this bit is from the HQRL Newsletter for Fall 2015.)
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I learn history best from historical fiction. And to my ken, some authors of this sort are better than others. Edward Rutherfurd is one of the best, in my opinion. The following blurb from his book New York gives a brand new insight into those old Civil War soldier photos that we prize so highly…. The year is 1863 (page 413) and then 1871 (page 488):
“His photographic studio was well equipped….. like the other photographers on the Bowery, his bread-and-butter business in recent years had been taking quick portraits of young men standing proudly, or sheepishly, in their unaccustomed uniforms, before they went off to fight again the South. Quicker than the old daguerreotype to take, easy to reproduce on paper, he’d get thirty a day sometimes. It paid the rent. At first, these small “carte-de-visite”-size portraits had seemed jolly enough, like taking someone’s picture at the seaside. Gradually, however, as the terribly casualties of the Civil War had mounted, he had realized that the dull little portraits he was taking were more like tombstones, last mementoes, before some poor fellow vanished from his family forever. And if he tried to make each humble one as splendid as he could, he did not tell his customers the reason.”
The character was explaining why he didn’t get a photo of Lincoln speaking the Gettysburg Address…… Lincoln was so brief and: “It had been no easy business getting a picture in the Civil War. The photographs were always taken in 3-D, which meant that two plates had to be inserted simultaneously into a double camera, one to the left, one to the right. The glass plates had to be quickly cleaned, coated with collodion, then, while still wet, dipped in silver nitrate before being put into the camera. The exposure time might only be a few seconds, but then on had to rush the plates, still wet, into the mobile darkroom. Quite apart from the difficulties of having people in motion during the seconds of exposure, the whole process was so cumbersome that taking pictures of battlefield action was almost impossible. “
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