Tacoma Pierce County Genealogical Society Book Club SIG

Tacoma-Pierce County Genealogical Society Book Club

Saturday, May 18, 2024, starting at 4:00 pm via Zoom

Please join us as we discuss a fictional genealogical book, The Desk from Hoboken by ML Condike.

More information at: 

Amazon: The Desk from Hoboken

We will also choose future books. 

TPCGS Book Club Zoom Meeting

Every month on the Third Sat beginning at 4:00 PM Pacific Time

Please download and import the following iCalendar (.ics) files to your calendar system.

Monthly: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/tZUkfuCqrzgsG9RrrhNAdU65Lz86P0s92mu1/ics?icsToken=98tyKuGppzIjGNWWthiHRpwcHYr4XerzmHZdjfpvjg3tLQFXV1WjGvgaZIIvA4GC

Join Zoom Meeting:

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81999213610?pwd=Qkk2WFZTZ2Rzdzc1Z0szN1AzdEZCUT09

Meeting ID: 819 9921 3610

Passcode: 479394

One tap mobile:

+12532050468,,81999213610#,,,,*479394# US

+12532158782,,81999213610#,,,,*479394# US (Tacoma)

Dial by your location:

        +1 253 205 0468 US

        +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)

Meeting ID: 819 9921 3610

Passcode: 479394

Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/keibNHDdyf

Tacoma Pierce County Genealogical Society Monthly Meeting

Tacoma Pierce County Genealogical Society Monthly Educational Meeting

Tuesday, May 14, 2024, starting at 6:00 pm

Our speaker this month is Larae Liddle. Grave Concerns’ President Laurel Lemke says: Larae Liddle, our amazing volunteer genealogist, will present on behalf of Grave Concerns.  She will be able to describe our grave grooming process and bring a bucket with suggested tools. Also, she will let us know about an upcoming date when we will have the opportunity to help with grave grooming.

“Larae volunteers at the Family Search Center, has written a book documenting McNeil Island burials and she is writing a book about the patient cemetery burials. “

Our meetings are held monthly except for July and August starting at 6:00 PM, Zoom comes live about 6:15 PM.

Attend in person at:

Parkland/Spanaway Branch of Pierce County Library

13718 Pacific Ave S.

Tacoma, WA 98444

Attend virtually via Zoom:

Tacoma-Pierce County Genealogical Society is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Please download and import the following iCalendar (.ics) files to your calendar system.

Monthly: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/tZIqduGpqjgsHtBNs9zc8CGna6R-KHlcz5so/ics?icsToken=98tyKuGuqToiG9CWth2DRpwAB4j4WevwiHZdgrd_sgy8GSMLQST4N7Rwf5lXHNvK

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86718143644?pwd=S0FjYU5acVVKbDEyamdXWWZVekFjdz09

Meeting ID: 867 1814 3644

Passcode: 630507

One tap mobile

+12532050468,,86718143644#,,,,*630507# US

+12532158782,,86718143644#,,,,*630507# US (Tacoma)

Dial by your location

        +1 253 205 0468 US

        +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)

Meeting ID: 867 1814 3644

Passcode: 630507

Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kcFbCNTY39

Wenatchee Area Genealogical Society Tips for Finding Your Name-Changing Ancestor

Do you know the names of all 8 of your great-grandparents? WAGS is here to help!
The Wenatchee Area Genealogical Society (WAGS)
invites you to a hybrid meeting:
Not Who He Once Was:
Tips For Finding
Your Name-Changing Ancestor
by Mary Kircher Roddy
Do you have someone in your tree who just disappeared? Or one who
seems to have no background at all? Perhaps their story involved a
complete change of name. With case studies of identity shifts, Mary will
give us strategies to discover who they became in later life, or who they
were before you thought you knew them!
Monday afternoon, May 13, 2024
2:00-3:30 p.m.
Via Zoom and in person at the FamilySearch Center,
667 10th Street NE, East Wenatchee
Watch our website (www.wags-web.org ) and
click on “Latest News and Events” for Zoom address.
—For more information call 509-782-4046—

Wenatchee Area Genealogical Society’s library is located at 127 South Mission, Museum Annex Building.
The library is open Tuesdays and Saturdays, 1:00 to 4:00 p.m. Visit our website: www.wags-web.org
WAGS connects, collects and protects family historie

Let’s Talk About: Smart Searching from Cyndi


Last February the EWGS program featured Cyndi Ingle. Her (too-short) time with us was fact-and-tip filled and her 8-page handout was a thorough reminder of what she taught us that day.

Some quick-and-always-good-to-review points to keep in mind:

  • Records were and are created by humans.
  • Humans make mistakes.
  • Humans misspell things.
  • Humans are inconsistent.
  • Humans miscommunicate things.
  • Just because many more things are digitized now doesn’t mean that searching is really any easier than it was before. 
  • We MUST think about ow and why humans created any set of records and the circumstances of their times and methods in doing so.
  • We must consider how archivists and librarians catalogued their records’ collections. 
  • We must consider HOW those records made their way into the digitized world. 

Cyndi also explained that mysterious word database. What is a database? A database is a container filled with records. Think of a phonebook; it’s a database filled with records, no? So Ancestry is a database of records, right? Then to be worthwhile, a database must be indexed for the words, fields and records to be searchable. 

With a big smile Cyndi said that “every database is unique depending on the data it contains and depending on the software used to create it. Everybody did it their own way!”

Then search engines. These are tools we use to search databases. And as with databases, every search engine is unique depending on the software and hardware used to make it.

Bainbridge Island Genealogical Society Y-Chromosome Insights & Strategies

Bainbridge Island Genealogical Society

Y-Chromosome Insights & Strategies

Richard Hill

Friday, May 17, 2024 at 10:00am – Zoom Only

Learn how Y-DNA testing of suitable males can trace and
confirm paternal lines in your family tree. See how to
choose the right test and how to work with your genetic
matches. Examples cover STRs, SNPs, genetic distance,
match thresholds, Tip reports, the Y-DNA tree,
haplogroups, group projects, account settings, and more.

Richard Hill, the first adoptee to identify his birth family through
DNA testing and genetic genealogy, created the DNA Testing
Adviser website in 2008. Over the next 13 years, he educated
thousands of readers and answered a regular flood of individual
questions. Selling that website in 2021, he launched his “DNA
Favorites” website, self-published “Finding Family: My Search for
Roots” and the “Secrets in My DNA” and became an in-demand
genealogical speaker on all topics DNA.

Let’s Talk About:Plants of the Oregon Trail,Part 3


This is Part 3; parts 1 and 2 were in the immediately-previous posts. 

The travelers remarked on the lovely larkspur flowers but quickly learned that wild larkspur was very bad for horses but okay for oxen and that chockcherry was bad for oxen. Animals, being animals, too often just munched away but were too important and valuable not to be watchful of.

The Oregon Trail travelers eventually learned about other plants:

  • Western Buttercup – Indians used it to poison arrows
  • Snakeweed – toxic to kidneys and liver
  • Death Camas – white ones WERE deadly but BLUE ones were okay; only way to tell was when they flowered in spring, a luxury the immigrants did not have.
  • Selenium – an element in the soil taken up into the plume grasses which cause digestive problems for the animals.
  • Greaseweed – they started seeing these plants about Chimney Rock and quickly learned that it was good/safe for animals to eat in early spring but poisonous in summer.
  • Horsebrush – this was toxic in many ways to animals
  • Locoweed – there were many kinds of “loco weed”
  • Texas Blue Bonnets – very toxic, producing birth defects in both men and animals
  • Water Hemlock – growing vigorously along rivers but toxic
  • Wild Parsnips – ditto
  • Wild Milkweed – ditto

By the time they reached Owyhee County, Idaho, “there was scarcely a train without sick oxen on it” due to the many bad plants in the alkali areas which they couldn’t keep the animals from eating. In the Blue Mountains of Oregon, the journal entries were pretty routine by this point. Little mention is made of plants except poison ivy. “They must have encountered this all along the way but only here is it often mentioned,” Ms. Packard said.  
Following Grandma’s advice that “if you don’t know it don’t eat it,” was sound advice but to hungry people, they had to learn on their own. Children helped show the way!

Seattle Genealogical Society Tip of the Week Diagram your Tree in Different Ways

TIP OF THE WEEK –
DIAGRAM YOUR TREE IN DIFFERENT WAYS
 GAR fillable formTry visualizing your tree in new ways. Diagram what state or country each person was born in, or what church or religious community they joined. You may find trends. Did one line of your families move more often than others? Did one line of your family have more people die young? Did your ancestors in one line gravitate to similar jobs? What does that tell you about your family today? Get as broad or as granular as needed. For example, this circle tree chart shows the birth state of each ancestor, not just the country. May 1, 2024

SGS eNews! comes out the first of every month. contact eNews!
Copyright © 2024 Seattle Genealogical Society, All rights reserved.
All SGS members have been automatically signed up for this e-letter.
Our mailing address is:
Seattle Genealogical Society
4649 Sunnyside Ave N, Suite 302
Seattle, WA 98103-6955

Seattle Genealogical Society May 2024

stock cemetery photo Scott Dressel / Unsplash; all others Library of Congress


 PRIVATE TOUR OF HISTORIC CEMETERIES TO BE LED BY FOUNDER OF CIVIL WAR SEATTLE

This walking tour of two of Seattle’s most historic cemeteries will explore the diverse and extensive historical connections between Seattle and the American Civil War. Thousands of veterans of the conflict migrated to Washington State in the decades following the war. They became a vital part of Seattle’s formative era. Join Civil War Seattle’s Richard Heisler as he shares their stories from the battlefields of the Civil War to the shores of Puget Sound. Important historical connections abound between local history and some of the nation’s most pivotal events. Gain historic context and “meet” some of Seattle’s Civil War veterans!

This 2-hour outdoor walking tour will be Saturday, June 1 at 2:30 p.m. Cost is $25 for SGS members and $30 for non-members. It is limited to 20 people so RSVP today.

Sign up

GOT A UNION CIVIL WAR VET IN YOUR FAMILY?

Commemorate their service with this GAR fillable form. This is one of many free resources the Library of Congress provides.

LEND A HAND: HELP PLAN FUTURE FIELD TRIPS

Would you like to join other SGS members to create a field trip schedule for the next year? Can you help “host” the resulting field trips? Members have asked for more local field trips to archives, libraries, museums and cemeteries. Help others understand unique locations for genealogical research and gain historical context. Reply to vicepresident@seagensoc.org if interested.RELATIVES OF 1924 AIR CORP FLIERS FOUND,
THANKS TO SGS VOLUNTEERS

In 1924, eight Army Air Corps fliers lifted off from Sand Point Airfield to embark on a 175-day journey to circumnavigate the world. As part of their planned celebration in recognition of this amazing feat, the Friends of Magnuson Park wanted to invite living relatives of the eight fliers and needed help. Would SGS be able to assist? Of course! Four intrepid SGS members, Carol Jenner, Karen Knudson, Shirley Mouer, and Karen Portzer rose to the challenge and SGS successfully delivered contact information for numerous living relatives of all eight fliers. Beginning September 26, 2024, Magnuson Park will be the site of a multi-day centennial celebration. To learn more about the 1924 flight and planned events, visit the Friends of Magnuson Park website and click on the First World Flight Centennial. 

On behalf of SGS and the Friends of Magnuson Park, a big thank you to the four SGS members for volunteering their time and research expertise with this 1924 Fliers project. JUNE eNEWS WILL COME OUT JUNE 4

Look for eNews a couple days later than usual next month. Submit material for the June eNews no later than Sunday night, June 2.


SAVE THE DATEOlympia Genealogical Society Celebrates 50th Year
Saturday May 18, 2024, 1:00-3:30 p.m.


The kick-off party for OGS’s year-long celebration will be held at the Capital Vision Christian Church, 1775 Yew Avenue NE, Olympia, on Saturday, May 18, 2024, from 1:00 to 3:30 p.m. There will be a short presentation about OGS’s origins followed by an open Q&A period. Scrapbooks documenting the OGS history will be available for review, and a video diary of OGS pictures and documents will be shown before and after the oral presentation. The event is free and open to the public; refreshments will be served.


Spring Virtual Classes
Fiske Genealogical Library
Wednesdays 10:00 a.m.-noon


Join the Fiske’s free virtual classes.

  • May 1: “Bagging a Live One: Reverse Genealogy in Action” with Mary Roddy 
  • May 8: “Becoming the Ancestor” with Beth Swartz
  • May 15: “Across the Pond to Scotland” with Winona Laird
  • May 22: “Disaster Proofing Your Research” with Sara Cochran
  • May 29: “Pruning Your Family Tree” with Jenny Hansen

For further information see the Fiske website.SGS CALENDAR OF EVENTSGood Shepherd Center, Suite 302
4649 Sunnyside Ave N
Seattle, WA 98103
206 522-8658
Hours :  Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday   
** 10:00 a.m .- 3:00 p.m. **
 Always check the SGS Website Calendar of Events for the meeting links, registration, or for last minute updates or changes to the schedule. Be advised you may need to register in advance to join a meeting.   All times listed are Pacific Time unless otherwise notedWednesday, May 1, 2024, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.,  Pacific Northwest Interest Group (Virtual)  (Special Interest Groups), Topics this month: 1. Short history of Oregon Territory, 2. Oregon and Washington State Archives, 3. Oregon and Washington State Libraries. 

Register on the SGS website.

Sunday, May 5, 2024, 1:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m., DNA Workshop SIG, Message SGSDNASIG@gmail.com to join.Monday, May 6, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists.

Wednesday, May 8, 2024, 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m., MAC Computer SIG,  Jointly sponsored by SGS and Fiske. Meetings address topics and resources for Macintosh (Apple) computers and the Reunion genealogy software program. A link to login will be sent to the MAC SIG email list. If you would like to join, send an email to macusersig@seagensoc.org to be added to the email list. 

Monday, May 13, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m.,  Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists.

Tuesday, May 14, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m., Tech Tuesday (Virtual), informal consultation time on DNA, genealogy software, or genealogy-related technical issues. All are welcome. No appointment necessary. Bring us your problem; we’ll try to help.

Monday, May 20, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists.

Monday, May 27, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists.

Tuesday, May 28, 2024, 10:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m., Tech Tuesday (Virtual), informal consultation time on DNA, genealogy software, or genealogy-related technical issues. All are welcome. No appointment necessary. Bring us your problem; we’ll try to help.

Saturday, June 1, 2024, 1:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m., General Membership Meeting  (Virtual or at the SGS library), Update on SGS election and summary of results of the recent survey. To view in person at the library, register here. To view from home online register here.

Sunday, June 2, 2024, 1:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m., DNA Workshop, with Cary Bright, Craig Gowens and Michelle Carroll. Contact Cary Bright at SGSDNASIG@gmail.com to join.

Wednesday, June 5, 2024, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.,  Pacific Northwest Interest Group (Virtual)  (Special Interest Groups), Share information and discuss Pacific Northwest genealogical research.  This new SGS-sponsored special interest group meets monthly on the first Wednesday of the month. 

Register in advance.

SGS eNews! comes out the first of every month. contact eNews!

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Copyright © 2024 Seattle Genealogical Society, All rights reserved.
All SGS members have been automatically signed up for this e-letter.
Our mailing address is:
Seattle Genealogical Society
4649 Sunnyside Ave N, Suite 302
Seattle, WA 98103-6955