WSGS Honors Eastern Washington Gen Society Members

The Eastern Washington Genealogical Society boasts an awesome corps of folks who always and eagerly step up to do pretty much whatever needs to be done. EWGS is an awesome organization because of these good folks!

Three of these super volunteers are Mary Holcomb and Tony and Janette Birch. These EWGS members were honored at the September EWGS meeting when WSGS representative Charles Hanson presented them with certificates of appreciation…………… applause! applause!

WSGS extends this recognition honor opportunity to all genealogical societies within our area who wish to honor their volunteers with WSGS certificates of appreciation. Please visit our website (www.wasgs.org) for the application. Certificates will be presented at the WSGS annual meeting or if the honorees cannot attend, at their local society meeting.

(WSGS thanks member Roxanne Lowe for all her efforts with this project.)

 

Skagit Valley Genealogical Society September 19 Seminar

Just a reminder that next Saturday, September 19, 2015  will  be a seminar featuring Mary Kathryn Kozy and Jill Morelli being presented at the Mount Vernon Senior Center.  Jill will be presenting programs on “Ten Top Techs She Uses and You Can Too” and “Writing Your Family Histoy – Just Do It” and Mary Kathryn will be presenting Researching in Newspapers” and  “Google and its Genealogy Tools”
Walk ins are welcome. 
Feel free to join us.  We look forward to welcoming you. $50 admission.  Bring a grab bag luunch.  Cofee, Tea & water available.  Jim Johnson will be  bringing books and lots of very nice door prizes.
Hazel
Communications
Skagit Valley Genealogical Society

Serendipity Friday

James Tanner, GenealogyStar blog, back on 26 August, posed this question:  “Where are all the photos?”  He explains that “millions of digitized photos go online every day. How many of these photos are of your ancestors?” Or I might add, your family?  Tanner, in this blog post, goes on to trumpet the virtue of attaching photos to your Family Tree in FamilySearch:  “All the tagged and captioned photos on FamilySearch.org are searchable by Google.” What does that say to you? Tanner tells you:  “The best way to find these photos is to search by your ancestor’s name in the Google Images program.” Now you know. And, by the by, I do recommend that you sign up for Tanner’s blog at www.GenealogyStar.blogspot.com.

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Next trip to Bellevue you might want to stop for a visit to a brand new research facility. A recent announcement by FamilySearch explained that the new Seattle Family Discovery Center is open for business!! I’ll quote from the announcement:  “High-tech “Museum of You” concept for center guides visitors to discover, share and preserve their histories and memories…… visitors to the center are provided with a tablet computer as a personal guide to interface with large touch screens where they learn more about themselves, view family origins, and discover how ancestors may have lied and even dressed. Data used for the interactive experiences is drawn from online data at FamilySearch.org and select partners.” Check it out for yourself at www.FamilySearch.org/discoverycenter/seattle   And by the by, this is totally FREE and is located just behind the LDS temple, seen on the northside of I-90 approaching Bellevue.

DIS Cntr

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The Northeast Washington Genealogical Society (Colville) was treated to a great program recently by president, Karen Struve. Her topic was “Understanding & Using Pinterest.” Karen explained how to create an account, create your boards and pin items of interest to your boards. “Boards can be for recipes, craft ideas, gardening ideas, dogs, or genealogy! Think of Pinterest as another place to post, store and share the documents and/or photos of your ancestors.  I was lucky enough to be at that meeting and it was explained that the under-30 crowd is using Pinterest every day (most likely) and if you want to connect with your grandchildren, and no matter how old you are, you better learn how to use these social media…like Pinterest.

On a parallel note, an article in the Daughters of the American Revolution, Sep-Oct 2014, article by Maureen Taylor titled, “5 Ways to Use Pinterest for Genealogy” listed these reasons: (1) Follow your favorites…like Ancestry, FamilySearch, FamilyTree Magazine, etc.  (2) Keep track of sources for research; you can create and keep your To-Do list there with images of books and/or documents that are on your To-Do list;  (3) Create boards for ancestors; post biographies and images to grab your grandkids’ attention;  (4) Document local history..take and post pictures of cemeteries and places where your ancestors lived…this ultimately will reach dozens of cousins potentially;  (5) Compile a virtual family history cookbook. All good ideas.

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“Have you bookmarked JSTOR Daily yet?” So began a post from Judy Russell on her blog, The Legal Genealogist, on July 17, 2015. Judy explained that since she discovered this resource she has found it “irresistible” and “packed with great information.” So what is JSTOR Daily? She explains:  “JSTOR is a not-for-profit organization, founded to help academic libraries and publishers; is a shared digital library created in 1995 to help university and college libraries free up space on their shelves, save costs, and provide greater levels of access to more content than eve before…………. JSTOR currently includes more than 2000 academic journals, 50 million digitized pages and continue adding at the rate of three million pages annually.

“JSTOR is cool but it can be overwhelming,” Judy advises. That’s where the JSTOR Daily comes in. Anybody can sign up for this free newsletter/guide to the JSTOR collection at www.daily.jstor.org.  Both Judy Russell and I recommend this to you!

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Your Genealogy Today is the new incarnation of the Family Chronicle Magazine, published out of Toronto but applicable to all genealogist’s needs. The July-Aug 2015 issue featured these articles:  (1) Panama Canal employee records;  (2) Beginning World War II Research;  (3) DNA & Genealogy;  (4) “What the Widow Got,” an article looking at how your female ancestor may have been affected by property laws.

You can subscribe to this dandy publication in a paper/print form or a digital form by either calling 1-888-326-2476 or clicking to their website, www.internet-genealogy.comCost is $19.95 for the digital edition.

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I’ll sign off today with a quote found in a 1935 newsletter about the building of Grand Coulee Dam encouraging worker safety:  “A ladder is no stronger than any one rung.”  In our genealogy arena, we could say, “A genealogy society is no stronger than any one member.”

Northeast Washington Gen Society News Flash

Northeast Washington Genealogical Society

presents our 2015 Fall Seminar

Military Mysteries:  Meet McConnell
Saturday – October 10, 2015

To be held at the Ambulance Shack
at the north end of Colville (just east of the Roundabout)

Registration 8:30
Classes 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
lunch is included

Presented by Don McConnell, retired Army officer and senior
intelligence analyst, authority on soldiers serving before and during the
Civil War, and Civil War living history enthusiast
Topics include searching on Ancestry.com and Fold3,

And military records for the
soldier serving before and during the Civil War

Members $20 ~ ~~ Non Members $22 ~~~ At the Door $25
[Deadline for Members & Non Members special pricing is October 1st ]

Make Checks Payable to: NeWGS
Mail to: NeWGS – 195 South Oak, Colville, WA 99114
NAME______________________________________________________________________
ADDRESS___________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
PHONE___________________________E-MAIL___________________________________

Seattle Gen Society News Flash

Seattle Genealogical Society

FALL SEMINAR 2015

“The Family History Detective: Finding Solutions to Your Toughest Research Problems”
Speaker: Dr. Thomas W. Jones, CG, CGL, FASG

Saturday, 17 October 2015
9:00am – 4:00pm
Nordic Heritage Museum
Registration: $50 SGS Members / $60 Non-members

Seminar Topics:

  • Can a Complex Research Problem be Solves Solely Online?
    Step by step, attendees will suggest online sources and research strategies for tracing an ancestor who seems to disappear and reappear. The interactive case study will show both how such cases can be solved online and the limits of material online today.
  • Five Ways to Prove Who Your Ancestor Was (Some Reliable and Others Not Reliable)
    Case studies will illustrate five ways – some reliable and others not – that genealogists “prove” an ancestor’s identity: using information provided by others; using a single source; following a chain of evidence; correlating evidence from multiple sources; and weighing conflicting evidence. Attendees will learn how to use the Genealogical Proof Standard (GPS) to identify their ancestors accurately.
  • Inferential Genealogy: Deducing Ancestors’ Identities Correctly
    Participants will learn how to accurately deduce ancestors’ identities and many aspects of their lives by digging below “surface information” in genealogical records and by combining information from several sources.
  • Solving the Mystery of the Disappearing Ancestor
    Genealogists may be frustrated by not finding ancestors in the records and places where they logically expect them to be. This presentation will explain seven reasons why such ancestors seem to have disappeared, provide examples of each from actual case studies, and suggest strategies to help attendees find their elusive ancestors.

Special Events: 

  • Famous SGS book sale to benefit the SGS Library Fund

Don’t miss the additional Special Classes on Sunday, October 18th! Registration is limited!

Serendipity Friday

Thank you Jeanne Coe!  Jeanne, a past president of the Eastern Washington Genealogical Society handed me a copy at a recent meeting that came from the website www.alphadictionary.com. She had printed out the bit about Washington got its name. “On August 29, 1851, 27 male settlers met at Cowlitz Landing (south of present-day Olympia) to petition Congress for a Columbia Territory separate from Oregon covering the area between the Columbia River and the 49th parallel. The petition was reaffirmed by 44 delegates who met in Monticello on November 25, 1852. Congress approved the new territory on February 10, 1853 but changed its name to Washington in honor of the first president of the U.S. It was President Millard Fillmore who signed the papers creating Washington State on November 11, 1889.

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Does your genealogical society’s seeming lack of enthusiasm to participate get you down? Perhaps this will help. This is a blurb from the September 1975 issue of the EWSG newsletter and was titled: “There’s a Hitch to It.”  (No author given.)

With his thumb up, a hitchhiker says, “You furnish the gas, car, attend to the repairs and upkeep, supply the insurance and I’ll ride with you. But if you have an accident, I’ll sue you for damages.”

This sounds pretty one-sided but one wonders how many hitchhikers there are in many organizations and even churches. Many members seem to say, “You go to the meetings, serve on boards and committees, do the paper work, contact the legislators and take care of things that need doing and I’ll just do along for the ride. And if things don’t suit my6 fancy, I will complain, criticize and probably get out and hitchhike to another group.”

Hitchhiker or driver, which one are you???

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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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We all know the nursery rhyme, Yankee Doodle. Did you ever wonder what this part really meant:  Stuck a feather in his hat and called it macaroni. Well I just found out!  Reading Edward Rutherfurd’s  New York (2010), on page 197, and the year is 1765:  “Some months ago, word had arrived of a new group of dandies in London. Macaronis, they called themselves. They had taken to parading round London’s West End and their extravagant plumed hats and jeweled swords had caused quite a scandal……”  A character in the book fears that the custom will seep into New York “by the next boat,” he felt that such a public extravagance could only be an offense to most people in hard-pressed New York. “Don’t let any of your family dress up like a Macaroni,” he urged.  Now you know.

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“Jon” is a regular patron using the Genealogy Section of the downtown Spokane Public Library. He is not a member of EWGS nor is he interested in our meetings or classes. But he is a dedicated researcher. I recently found him studying books from our set of The Domesday Books (“a manuscript record of the ‘Great Survey” of much of England and parts of Wales completed in1086 by King William the Conqueror; it contains the records of 13,418 settlements in the English countryside). And my point is this: A genealogy library serves all wonderful sorts of patrons and we librarians must never think that “Oh, nobody uses THOSE books so let’s put them into storage,” or worse yet, donates them to the next book sale.

Do you have a set of The Domesday Books in your collection? Do your library patrons use those books? If not, the probable reason why not is that they don’t know about them and how to benefit from studying them. Spokane Jon could teach them!

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Judy Russell, The Legal Genealogist, was one of the speakers at the recent NWGC (Northwest Genealogical Conference). As you would guess, and knowing she is/was a lawyer, she speaks on exacting and precise topics. Her blog post of 14 August 2015 was a tribute to the many and good records in our Evergreen State.

“Eighteenth in size among the states, 13th in population, known for its timber and aircraft industry, home of the Kennewick Man and the Space Needle, Washington State is also home to some truly amazing genealogical resources.”

Then Judy took an entire page worth to list and describe some of our resources, and ended with “This is truly a comprehensive and amazing resource for anyone with Washington State research to be done. So check it out….. the Evergreen State has a lot to offer.”

We thank you, Judy, for your sure and kind words about our Pacific Northwest home.

 

 

 

Genealogical Forum of Oregon, Events, Seminars and Classes

THE GENEALOGICAL FORUM OF OREGON Events, Seminars & Classes Monthly e-news, Updates September 2015 This e-newsletter brings you useful and timely

GenForum

THE GENEALOGICAL FORUM OF OREGON Events, Seminars & Classes Monthly e-news, Updates September 2015

This e-newsletter brings you useful and timely information regarding Genealogical Forum of Oregon (GFO) Seminars, Classes, Interest Groups and Events.

Questions and more information: visit www.gfo.org, contact us at info@gfo.org, or call our library at 503-963-1932.

For a complete GFO CALENDAR of Events, Classes, Meetings, Special Interest Groups, Work Sessions and more go to www.gfo.org/calendar.htm._

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CATCH THE ORANGE – SEPTEMBER 12TH
Trimet

Saturday, September 12th, 11 am to 6 pm
SE CLINTON & 12TH STREET STATION

Come and join the GFO at the grand opening of TriMet’s Orange Line that runs south to Milwaukie. This is the first day of operation, so TriMet is throwing a party at every new station with food, music, and MUCH, MUCH MORE.

GFO’s booth at the station will have a prize wheel—spin to win chances to enter the raffle and other prizes.

RAFFLE PRIZES INCLUDE: Genealogy Research Packages (2-10 hours each) • DNA test kits from Family Tree DNA and Ancestry DNA • Genetic Genealogy (book) • Eastman Plus Edition subscription • FindMyPast World subscription •Mocavo Gold subscription • Legacy Family Tree software •1 year GFO e-memberships •Registration at the GFO Fall Seminar • Internet Genealogy subscription • Your Genealogy Today subscription •HistoryGeo subscription • GenealogyBank subscription • and more!

• PARKING IN THE AREA WILL BE DIFFICULT, BUT ALL TRIMET TRANSPORTATION IS FREE on the 12th! •

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A List of Don’ts Revealed from the TriCity Genealogical Society Archived Document Contest

For the August Archived Document Contest, John Covey shared much more than an amazing document that he acquired off-line. He showed that it is possible to find clues that may take his research back to the 1500s. By reviewing his entry we can determine some “Don’ts” regarding family history research.JCovey

John Covey has arranged the annual fieldtrip for members of the TriCity Genealogical Society to research in Salt Lake’s Family History Library for many years. He knows that the vast amount of holdings have information important to his research. Even though John has made this trip several times, he continues to take the trip each year.

In June 2015 John discovered the baptismal record of his 8th great grandfather which was created in 1664. John did not arrive at the Family History Library expecting to locate this record, but rather found information leading to this record when he visited the basement of the library and researched German records. In this section of records he found a book that not only listed his 8th great grandfather’s information, but information continuing back for about another hundred years. Being a seasoned genealogist, John admits that the clues were a great find but that they were not documented. This gives him ideas, but in and of itself it is not a solid record.

John shared the 1664 baptismal record and his explanation in this entry to the Archived Document Contest.

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Autumn Quest at the HQRL on October 10

Autumn Quest

the annual education day given us by the

Heritage Quest Research Library in Sumner, Washington

will be held on Saturday, October 10th, 2015, 8:15-3:30

Topic:  “Finding Women from your Past”

 

Please join our four speakers for an inspiring day of learning; and get fascinating tips and techniques for locating the elusive women in your family tree.

Here is the registration information:

Registration form for Autumn Quest 2015

Seminar only $50 Lunch (includes gratuity) $10 salad, sandwiches, dessert

Total enclosed $______ Name: Address: Phone: E-mail Method of Payment check Credit card (MasterCard/Visa) Credit Card Expire Date Signature Make checks payable to: Heritage Quest Research Library If mailing registration form please send to: Heritage Quest Research Library

Attn: AQ registration 1007 Main Street, Sumner WA 98390-1412 Phone 253-863-1806 October 10, 2015 Finding Women from your Past 8:15am – 3:30pm lunch available at Faith Covenant Church 1915 Washington St. Sumner WA 98390

Continue reading for information on the speakers and their topics:

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