Here are the March events for Puget Sound Genealogical Society:
Mar 26 (Wed), 1pm: Program- Homesteading: Land for All with Christine Cohen
Mar 29 (Sat), 10:30am: Class – Social History and Church Records with Janet Camarata.
Both will be hybrid. In person at the Sylvan Way Library, 1301 Sylvan Way, Bremerton and on Zoom. Zoom link will be posted on our website and our Facebook page the day before.
Tacoma FamilySearch Center is sponsoring the 4th Annual African American Family History Event, “Family Ties That Unite Us”, March 22, 2025 – 9am – 2pm at 1102 S Pearl St., Tacoma WA 98465. Family Ties That Unite Us is free and is open to the public of all levels of Family History ability and interest. The Event will have 200-300 in attendance. Two musical groups will perform, there will be an adult and youth keynote speakers and two Family History Speakers during the event. There are informational tables from local museums, historical societies and genealogical societies and one on one Family History assistance throughout the event.
The free luncheon includes Philly Cheese Steak and Chicken sandwiches, salads and more.
Keynote speakers will be Ethelda Burke, University Place School Board Member and past local principal, Lynese and Malando Redeemer, the current Tacoma NAACP President and Youth Pastor for Shilo Baptist Church. The Family History Speakers include Andre Escalante – a local father of 3 who will share his story about beginning Family History research, and Tamu Smith who will speak about Plantations and Reservations. Tamu is a nationally known speaker with Sistas in Zion and Time Out For Women. She will include groups and resources for researching those of Enslaved and Native American heritage.
The Tacoma FamilySearch Center will be open during the entire event with all services, including digitizing equipment – ready for tours and to sign up to use with help. The Center is located at 1102 S Pearl St, Tacoma WA 98465. On the South side (12th Street side) of the building. Watch for the green FamilySearch Center Sign. It is open 33 hours per week – Tues, Wed, & Thurs 10am – 8pm and Sat 10am – 1pm. The Center has 12 different Family History websites available for use free of charge and has 20% + more records in FamilySearch than you can access from home.
Tacoma FamilySearch Center has 47 volunteers, many who bring a tote of their own photos, slides and videos to digitize each shift they work – helping others while helping themselves. New volunteers of all levels are welcome. We are happy to train and put new people with experienced ones for a great start.
Saturday’s African American Event will be live and in person and also on zoom. The zoom link is https://zoom.us/j/96665929487 . Zoom 9:30am – 2pm
The speakers will be recorded and the recordings will be found on the Webpage
Since 2003, the Washington State Genealogical Society has recognized over 600 outstanding volunteers and teams, nominated by their local society or genealogical organization for their service and dedication. These volunteers are the backbone of their local society, giving their time and expertise, to the organization and the field of genealogy. In the coming months, you will be introduced to each of the 2024 award recipients and learn why they received they received a WSGS Outstanding Volunteer and Team Award.
Today we’re introducing David Cosman of Bainbridge Island, Washington who was selected by the Bainbridge Island Genealogical Society as its recipient of a WSGS Outstanding Volunteer Award.
Without the need of any particular title, David has become one of BIGS’s most important mentors. He simply makes himself available to anyone who is willing to ask for help. And David knows how to help, in terms of both his knowledge and his personality. He teaches others with dignity and grace.
David is an outstanding traditional genealogy researcher. Coupling those skills with his personal background as a native of Nottingham, England, has equipped him well to be co-leader of our Great Britain Special Interest Group. David’s career involved cloning genes that regulate the immune system and this technical knowledge allowed him to quickly become one of only a few of BIGS’s members with true expertise in employing DNA for genealogical purposes.
For more information on the WSGS Outstanding Volunteer Award program, visit the Recognition page of the WSGS website or contact Info@wasgs.org. Please type “Volunteer Award” in the subject line.
Ever need an image for a presentation and just can’t find the right one to set the scene? How about music to create a “mood” for your program or a quotation from a book or publication to add interest? This program will cover those questions and we will share where to find images, music, and publications and review the public domain structure. The facilitator is Georga Foster.
Needing a worthwhile way to spend time these housebound cold winter days?
How about a Cold Case Ancestor research project?!? The Washington State Genealogical Society still has a long list of individuals and families needing to be researched. These would be those who were known to be in Washington Territory BEFORE statehood (11 Nov 1889). There is an index of these pioneers and indigenous families on their website….. take your pick!
Resources you might use are Ancestry, FamilySearch, Washington Digital Archives, Find A Grave, USGenWeb, Linkpendium, WA Territorial censuses ……… any resource you’ve used in the past for your own research.
The really good news about this volunteer project is that since it’s not your family, just find what you can find, period. If you find lots, great. But only scarce documentation, that’s fine too.
Click to Washington State Genealogical Society and then Pioneer Pursuit and look at the Sample, Hints & Helps, Frequently Asked Questions and Instructions.
Why not get busy helping to document these wonderful Washington pioneers………. and before you know it, spring will be here!
Southside Community Center – 3151 E 27th Ave, Spokane, WA 99223
Celebrating our 90th Anniversary
Presentation by Dolly Webb Little known fun facts, stories and surprise guests
Thomas MacEntee:
“Creating An Ancestor Sketch”
Class Description: Face it: most genealogists never get around to publishing that family history book based on their genealogy research. How about a different approach: producing short 3-5 page “sketches” about an ancestor? You’ll learn how to include a cover, photos, facts, family stories, source citations and more! And guess what, once you get a few of these ancestor sketches done, you can compile them together for one big book!
James M Beidler: President of PA Society
“Digging Pennsylvania Roots From Your Desktop”
It’s estimated that one in four Americans has Keystone State roots. Much of Pennsylvania research – from church records to land documents – to courthouse filings, can be done remotely.”
Registration is required for this seminar.
You wil receive a handout via email 2-3 days PRIOR for this seminar.
You MUST be registered to receive the handouts & the zoom link.
DEADLINE IS MARCH 31ST
$40 for EWGS members,
$50 for non-members,
$20 for zoomers
IF you pay by check we ask you to include your email address so we can send your handouts.
Today let’s talk about the oldest tree in the world and the loneliest tree in the world. And we think our “tree” is old!Trees are older by far than our ancestors are.
“Scientists have examined an ancient tree still growing in a remote part of central Chile’s Alerce Costero National Park, claiming it could be the oldest tree in the world. They believe it has survived for more than 5,000 years making it older that California’s 4,850-year-old Methuselah, the bristlecone pine. Known as “Gran Abuelo,” or great-grandfather, the Patagonian cypress can be accessed only by an hour-long hike and is patrolled by a number of park rangers to make sure it is not harmed. The tree is 189-feet tall and is 13-feet in diameter.” (Bit in Spokesman Review.)
Nestled in a windswept cove on far south end of New Zealand’s Campbell Island, is a lone tree that should not be there. A 30-foot tall Sitka spruce has grown into a cauliflower shape rather than the cone-shape typical of the species. How in the world did a Sitka spruce, native to the North American western coast, end up here? Well, according to Google, the lonely tree was planted about 1900 by New Zealand’s then-governor, Lord Ranfurly. More than 100 years later, the introduced spruce is considered the most isolated tree in the world.
The conifer endures not only isolation but also the wild weather of the “Furious Fifties” latitudes. Campbell Island has 325 days of rain per year and gale-force winds for 100 days per year. Surprisingly, the spruce seems to be thriving in these conditions and still growing.
In many Native American cultures, trees are considered to be ancestors, meaning they are viewed as part of the family lineage and are deeply respected as living beings with a spirit, sharing a connection to the past generations and the natural world at large; this belief stems from the understanding that humans and trees are interconnected and part of the same life force. (AI generated response in Google.)
The Pioneer Pursuit program continues to grow, albeit slowly, so we celebrate every submittal, large or small. Just this week, we approved George and Elizabeth (Wheeler) Morrow and their descendants. The submittal was made by 93-year-old Margaret Morrow Lubbers. She is a member of the State Association of the Daughters of the Pioneers of Washington (DPW), #19 Ft. Vancouver Chapter. Margaret also submitted her Curtin and Burke pioneer families — a total of 48 names.
Margaret Morrow Lubbers
According to Margaret (& verified sources) George Morrow (1824 – bef 1870) and his wife Elizabeth Wheeler (1821 – 1873) owned 640 acres of land in Clark County, Washington Territory in 1860. How or when George first arrived in the area is unknown but it is believed that he and Elizabeth came on the steamship Massachusetts in 1848 with the first NY Artillery Battalion sent to Ft. Vancouver to protect the area after the Whitman massacre. George and Elizabeth had nine children: all pioneers born before Washington Territory became a state on November 11, 1889.
George disappears from all records after 1868. It is possible that as a member of the Mounted Rifles he may have been killed at any one of the skirmishes with the Native Indians or sent into the Idaho/Montana area where he was killed. Elizabeth died in 1873 and is buried in the Old Vancouver City Cemetery. Her children stayed together after her death with the younger children living with their older siblings.
There are countless pioneer stories like the Morrow family in the Pioneer Pursuit — just click on a link here. Or better yet: find someone who was in Washington Territory on or before statehood and research them. You DO NOT need to be related to the pioneer.
Check out our Pioneer Pursuit page for hints, resources, submittal form and a sample submittal. We need your help to document every man, woman and child that lived in Washington Territory before statehood! If you have questions, email Info@wasgs.org and put Pioneer Pursuit in the subject line.
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