21 August 2008

DearMYRTLE's Study Group: Update 19 Aug 2008

DearREADERS,
Tuesday evening’s DearMYRTLE’s Study Group here in Salt Lake came off without a hitch. One gal even travelled 55 miles round trip to participate. Here are some of the highlights:

UPCOMING FIELD TRIP
The September field trip is to the Family History Library to attend the free Utah Genealogical Association Fall Conference 12-13 Sept 2008. Find out more at: www.infouga.org. Since Ol' Myrt will be speaking and must arrive early, the DearMYRTLE Study Group members are invited to take TRAX and attend on their own. Myrt's topics include:
  • 7 Habits of Highly Effective Genealogists - The class focuses on feedback from other genealogists who would do things differently if they were starting over from scratch. Handouts include research log, research checklist, a plan for filing paper documents, and information leading to proper source citation.
  • The Winter of Our Discontent: 3 Months to Better Organization - We’ve heard about marathon runners? How about a marathon to finally get organized? Myrt quickens the pace of her 12-month program, and asks you to devote a mere 12 weeks to the process. You can do this! Includes sorting, filing, data input, scanning photos, documenting artifacts, & creating family history experiences for the non-genealogists in the family.
  • Women Are From Venus: Finding Female Ancestors - Practical advice for locating elusive maiden names of our ancestors includes case studies and a checklist for likely source documents.
  • Union Civil War Pension and Widows’ Files - Accessing these oft-overlooked genealogy gems focuses on three Union Civil War Pension case studies, and one widow’s file that culminated in three approved Daughters of Union Veterans membership applications.
The 10:15am class on the 12th titled The Utah Pioneer Project - Finding All Utah Pioneers by Marilyn Markham should help DM Study Group researcher Nadine since it features info about both Mormon and non-Mormon Utah Pioneers.

BRITISH PARISH REGISTERS
Arlene is working hard on her line, and is down to land records, which are not likely to show the parents of her William STEERS, since they apparently didn’t following him from England to New York. William had been incorrectly tied, by a hired genealogist, to some Steers who lived in Virginia. The falsehood is quite evident when one notes the ancestors on both sides of that Virginia family hailed from Pennsylvania for several generations prior. Since mention of a parish in England has been made of William STEERS pre-1837 birth, Arlene will begin looking for his christening in the local church records. Hopefully they will be on microfilm at the Family History Library,

FINDING ONLINE DIGITAL VERSIONS OF BOOKS
Shannon reports “Oh, how I loved the meeting last night at Carrie's. I learn so much. I just can't thank you enough for spending your time with us. I am very grateful to you for sharing your knowledge. Today I worked on finding the Bishop book and I was able to find a digitized copy of it and printed most of it as it applied to my line. I am so excited about sitting down and reading the stories. My mother is listed in the descendant lines and her information is correct, so is my Aunt’s information, so I am going to sit down and enter the names into PAF -- YIKES!! I'll be busy for a while but loving every minute of it.”

If you are looking for online versions of books, try:
http://books.Google.com
The Family History Library Catalog (if it is digitized, there will be a clickable link.)

EARLY 1900s CANADIAN GERMAN IMMIGRANT
Susan wrote “I always leave your meetings so full of HOPE and more knowledge than I can process!” Indeed the group suggested Susan look at customs passenger list for the port of Galveston and New Orleans on microfilm at the Family History Library, since these were two rumored ports of entry for Traurtchen Schwendt who married John Kreiger. He died of TB. She married subsequently, and was the mother of 12. An alternative would be to look at Canadian marriage records for the widow’s second marriage. Fortunately, a review of the CanadaGenWeb site (during the end of our meeting) brought mention of the Saskatchewan marriage indexing project. The goal is to find her place of origin in Germany, and then locate info on her parents. Köln is much too general. The 1901 Canadian Census might also provide interesting info.

ROOTSWEB: FOR FINDING OTHER RESEARCHERS
Toward the end of the evening, after everyone had shared, we visited the new web address for RootsWeb, the oldest genealogy resource on the internet.

http://rootsweb.ancestry.com

We chose to ignore the search boxes at the top, and scrolled down to the MAILING LIST topic, clicking on the Index, and then chose the country of CHILE as our sample.

We discussed that one may subscribe to RootsWeb Mailing Lists for free, in either
list mode (1 posting = 1 email)
digest mode (multiple postings = 1 email)

We also discussed the advisability of using the BROWSE ARCHIVES & SEARCH ARCHIVES options for the mailing lists of interest, to avoid making a duplicate inquiry.

ELLIS ISLAND RECOMMENDS STEVE MORSE ONE-STEP
www.SteveMorse.org

NEW FAMILYSEARCH ACCESS
Though the LDS Church members in the Salt Lake area do not yet have full access to new.FamilySearch.org, Cathy explained she had been combining duplicates in New Family Search when visiting the Family History Library in downtown Salt Lake City. I mentioned that once all LDS have access, and most kinks are worked out of the site, the new FamilySearch will be made available to anyone. From our work, we can see that at least the following databases are combined, requiring combining duplicates:
  • IGI International Genealogical Index
  • LDS Membership Records (can only view deceased individuals' info)
  • Ancestral File
  • Pedigree Resource File

In Ol’ Myrt’s case, her uncle Jack was listed as a deceased female by another researcher. I was able to successfully dispute this information on my father’s brother, and add information on my father’s sister. My father is the only one of the three siblings to have passed away.

PAF REQUIRES BRIDGING PROGRAM
Ol’ Myrt here explained that PAF Personal Ancestral File, the free genealogy management program provided at FamilySearch.org will require a bridging program to share information back and forth with newFamilySearch. The following programs were discussed:

  • Family Insight – a bridging program for PAF, currently called PAF Insight
  • Ancestral Quest – a full-fledged genealogy management program that reads PAF files
  • Legacy Family Tree – a full-fledged genealogy management program that reads PAF files
  • RootsMagic – a full-fledged genealogy management program that reads PAF files

PS to DearMYRTLE's Study Group participant, Nadine: The book I'm reading is titled Mormon Resistance: A Documentary Account of the Utah Expedition 1857-1858 edited by LeRoy R. Hafen and Ann W. Hafen. I am up to page 193 and find this contains transcripts of selected US Army & Governor Brigham Young communications as "Johnston's Army" came to quash the rebellious Mormons.

Happy family tree climbing!
Myrt :)
DearMYRTLE,
Your friend in genealogy.
Myrt@DearMYRTLE.com

http://blog.DearMYRTLE.com
http://blog.TeachGenealogy.com
http://podcasts.DearMYRTLE.com

DearMYRTLE's Facebook® Group Message Board
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© 2008 Pat Richley All Rights Reserved.

This and previous blog entries are fully searchable by going to
http://blog.DearMYRTLE.com. Myrt welcomes queries and research challenges, but regrets she is unable to answer each personally.

06 August 2008

Soup to Nuts

DearREADERS,
Last night’s JUST GENEALOGY voice chat in Second Life revolved around the theme “Family Traditions” and it covered everything from soup to nuts.

Many family traditions are stories handed down through the generations, shared particularly at family reunions, wedding receptions and funerals. Other traditions revolve around the celebration of national holidays or days of religious observation.

FOOD TRADITIONS

When asked to share family traditions, initial responses from participants included family recipes for making potato salad (is it dill or sweet pickle relish?) and the advisability of using mustard or ketchup in homemade mac and cheese. (Perhaps some 21st century households are devising a tradition that mac & cheese comes in a blue box with the letters “K-R-A-F-T” on the label? )

FAMILY SAYINGS
Krag Mariner reported on the wearing of olive green undershirts after WWII, and how his grandmother began asking for passwords at the door before letting people in for the planned get together. Krag’s grandmother passed away last year, and so the tradition of using those words at family gathering is now tender and bitter sweet.

TRADITION OF 1812 SERVICE
Austin Shepherd discussed an ancestor’s receipt of a pension and concerns over final papers being filed at the National Archives in a file different from the pension. Advice from Krag Mariner includes reading “Genealogical Records of the War of 1812” by Stuart L. Butler, in the National Archives publication Prologue Magazine, Winter 1991, Vol. 23, No. 4.

TRADITION OF RELIGIOUS PREJUDICE
Clarise Beaumont reported on her maternal grandmother’s intimation of long-standing religious intolerance in her family against Mormons who lived in Missouri in the early 1840s. Initial study of federal census record show Myrt’s paternal LDS ancestors are indeed in the same county as her maternal non-LDS ancestors. Additional land, newspaper and court record research is incomplete but will be to prove or disprove this family tradition.

BRITISH WILLS
After the regular discussion, Aurora Galthie signed on from New Zealand and provided this follow-up link to the website where she found some scanned images of British ancestral wills: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline

HARD NUT TO CRACK
Family traditions that her grandmother died in June 1968 in Brooklyn, New York have stumped a researcher, who has happy to obtain the death certificate, but her grandmother’s parents were not listed. Meeting participants searched the New York Times obituary index, but discovered that pre-2002 entries are available through Ancestry.com. A subsequent search of that site proved fruitless.

Myrt suggests this researcher familiarize herself with NYC record groups by studying Genealogical Resources in the New York Metropolitan Area by Estelle M. Guzik, Jewish Genealogical Society (New York, N.Y.) Published by Compiled and published by the Jewish Genealogical Society, 1989. ISBN 0962186309, 9780962186301. 404 pages.

Happy family tree climbing!
Myrt :)
DearMYRTLE,
Your friend in genealogy.
Myrt@DearMYRTLE.com
http://blog.dearmyrtle.com/
http://blog.TeachGenealogy.com

http://podcasts.dearmyrtle.com/

DearMYRTLE's Facebook® Group Message Board
http://www.new.facebook.com/board.php?uid=2960625373
© 2008 Pat Richley All Rights Reserved.

This and previous blog entries are fully searchable by going to
http://blog.DearMYRTLE.com. Myrt welcomes queries and research challenges, but regrets she is unable to answer each personally.

03 August 2008

Second Life: Family History Centre mtg 2 Aug 2008

Tonight's Family History Centre meeting in Second Life brought members with diverse interests.

TOPICS OF DISCUSSION

  • Marvela McBride uses www.GoToOffice.com for collaborating with her daughter. (Research coordination is a must!)
  • Austin Shepherd told a story about following an internet lead that lead to the wrong family being picked. (Can't believe everything in print or on the web. It is all a matter of using all available surviving records to make lineage assumptions.
  • We discussed RL (reallife) genealogy societies. (It sure is easier to just turn on your computer, sign in to Second Life and visit one of the Union of Genealogy Group's genealogy chats. See the Calendar.
  • Marvela McBride reported that her daughter Rachelle had someone answer a posting she made many years ago, on RootsWeb.com, for her dad's family. (The internet is a great way to connect with here-to-fore unknown distant cousins.)
  • The "West of Ireland" group is having a successful series of story telling. (Studying the traditions and legends of the places where one's ancestors lived helpf us get out of our 21st century mindset.
  • Binbag Slonimsk suggested we contact innovative podcasters to promote the genealogy events in Second Life. The Genealogy Guys, Genealogy Gems, Irish Roots Cafe and DearMYRTLE come to mind.)
  • Kilandra Yeuxdoux reports that the Genealogy Group on Info Island consists mainly of librarians. They see about 30-40 attendees at their monthly genealogy lectures featuring RL Craig Scott. (The participants are limited by Second Life constraints.)
  • Kilandra Yeuxdoux bemoaned the fact that the "Search Lists are disappearing" in Family Tree Maker.
  • Francescha Skytower reports using Legacy and loving it.
  • Marvela McBride asked if any were familiar with Family Insight? (It is the newest version of PAF Insight produced by Ohana Software.)

UPCOMING CHATS SCHEDULED THIS WEEK
Sign on to www.SecondLife.com and proceed to the location indicated.

  • Family Traditions - 7pm SL time, Tuesday 5th Aug 2008, in Just Genealogy around the fire pit.
  • UK- Ireland: Assisted Passage & other Emigration records - 11am SL time, Thursday7th Aug 2008 in Just Genealogy around the fire pit.
  • Aussie Roots (new!) - 10pm SL time, Saturday 9th Aug 2008 in Just Genealogy around the fire pit.
  • Family History Centre "How to participate in a genealogy voice chat (using your computer's headset or speakers and microphone)" at 5:15pm SL time, Sunday 10th Aug 2008, in Adam ondi Ahman.

INTERESTING LINKS mentioned in tonight's voice chat

Happy family tree climbing!
Myrt :)
DearMYRTLE,
Your friend in genealogy.
Myrt@DearMYRTLE.com
http://blog.dearmyrtle.com
http://blog.teachgenealogy.com
http://podcasts.dearmyrtle.com

DearMYRTLE's Facebook® Group Message Board
http://www.new.facebook.com/board.php?uid=2960625373
© 2008 Pat Richley All Rights Reserved.

This and previous blog entries are fully searchable by going to http://blog.dearmyrtle.com/. Myrt welcomes queries and research challenges, but regrets she is unable to answer each personally.


02 August 2008

Ideas for upcoming discussions

DearREADERS,

Perhaps these topics will help your study group or roundtable's upcoming discussions:

Anything to get people talking about their ancestors will likely result in doing some additional research sooner rather than later. (Not sure if that is proper English, but I think you get my drift.)


Click to visit FamilySearch.org


FamilySearch.org's main page has a new look. It is streamlined and includes a link to FamilySearch Indexing. www.FamilySearch.org. Among other things, FamilySearch has announced the cooperation of other genealogy management software companies.


Click to view the RootsMagic Blog



The RootsMagic Insider has been slowly unveiling new or revised options in the (hopefully) soon to be released RootsMagic Version 4.0. See this new blog at http://blog.rootsmagic.com/ . I've seen RM programmer Bruce Buzbee demonstrate the new version at the June and July 08 Utah Valley PAF Users Group meetings, but I've been sworn to secrecy. You'll enjoy these recent posts:


Click to view Genea-Musings Blog.


Randy Seaver has created a series of postings about the use of Family Tree Maker Version 2008 and posted them at this Genea-Musings blog site. Of special note, see:



Click to view DearMYRTLE's Blog.


A recent DearMYRTLE blog entries include:

Click to view the Chart Chick Blog



The Chart Chick, Janet Hovorka has posted a series of blogs centering on the topic Will your work survive the digital age? with subtopics about replication, refreshing & backing up, migration, The Digital Dark Age and such. Her thoughts will convince you she is certainly no dumb cluck.

Happy family tree climbing!
Myrt :)
DearMYRTLE,
Your friend in genealogy.
Myrt@DearMYRTLE.com

http://blog.dearmyrtle.com
http://blog.teachgenealogy.com
http://podcasts.dearmyrtle.com

DearMYRTLE's Facebook® Group Message Board
http://www.new.facebook.com/board.php?uid=2960625373

© 2008 Pat Richley All Rights Reserved.
This and previous blog entries are fully searchable by going to http://blog.dearmyrtle.com/. Myrt welcomes queries and research challenges, but regrets she is unable to answer each personally.


Bountiful: Family History Roundtable

One inspiring story from another group that is helping researchers make progress climbing family trees.

FAMILY HISTORY ROUNDTABLE
Bountiful, Utah


Rachel Howe writes “Thought you might want to check out the website for the "FAMILY HISTORY ROUNDTABLE" who had their first meeting in July! Our meeting followed the format posted on your teach genealogy blog (only without your expert knowledge) and worked very successfully! Thanks for inspiring us.”

Their first meeting agenda is found at Family History Roundtable Jul 10 Agenda.doc. [The latter is a Word document. If you don’t have Word, your word processor should be able to import it. If not, use Open Office.]

I particularly like that Rachel’s roundtable posts the specific research goal each participant has in mind to accomplish before the next meeting. This is a great idea I'd like to incorporate into DearMYRTLE's Salt Lake Study Group. It is hard to believe this group met for the first time 10 July 2008 and has already accomplished most of their initial research goals.

Way to GO, Rachel, Natalie, Talia and Julie!

Be sure to see July Roundtable Notes and Places To Try in addition to links and checklists the roundtable participants used as alternate topics for discussion during their first meeting.

As Rachel will tell you, it is a lot of FUN to get together and actually TALK about each person’s family history challenges. So I don’t think it will be hard to establish this sort of genealogy classes in your area of the globe.

Happy family tree climbing!
Myrt :)
DearMYRTLE,
Your friend in genealogy.
Myrt@DearMYRTLE.com
http://blog.dearmyrtle.com/
http://blog.teachgenealogy.com/
http://podcasts.dearmyrtle.com/

DearMYRTLE's Facebook® Group Message Board
http://www.new.facebook.com/board.php?uid=2960625373
© 2008 Pat Richley All Rights Reserved.

This and previous blog entries are fully searchable by going to
http://blog.DearMYRTLE.com. Myrt welcomes queries and research challenges, but regrets she is unable to answer each personally.