Saturday, June 30, 2012
Addendum to Jamboree
For those of you who couldn't make Jamboree, you have the opportunity to hear most of the talks and even watch some on video. Visit Conference Resources to order a zip drive!!
Labels:
SCGS Jamboree
Thursday, June 28, 2012
June 7-10, 2012
Part Two
Part Two
By Dennis L. Maness, MLS
Friday Classes
A list can be found
here if it
hasn’t been taken down yet.
In the regular classes
Friday afternoon Robert Raymond talked about Evidence Evaluation; he stated
that “Not all information is created equal. We must take several factors into
account to judge its quality.” “Evidence is something that furnishes
proof,…information that is relevant to the problem and information that we
conclude—after careful evaluation—supports or contradicts the statement we
would like to make, or are about to make, about an ancestor.”
Steve Morse brought us up
to date on the latest thing in DNA—Autosomal testing. And speaking of Steve and
his One-Step page, I had lunch with Joel Weintraub, co-creator of the
Census part of Steve’s site. He talked about how he and Steve are already
working on tools for the 1950 census!
I visited both the Family Tree DNA table and the 23 and Me
table to find out more about their autosomal DNA tests but I think $300 is just
out of my league right now. Maybe when the cost goes down. I’m still in line
for the $99 Ancestry.com test.
In his talk on “Lost in the Unknown: The Delicacy of
Probing Family Secrets” Steve Luxenberg discussed problems when we’re doing
those all-important oral interviews. How do you navigate the emotional pitfalls
that surround the secrecy? How do you avoid alienating family members who might
rather leave well enough alone? Which
interviewing styles tend to work, and which tend to go awry?
Saturday Classes
A list can be found
here if it
hasn’t been taken down yet.
At a breakfast on Saturday morning, Curt Witcher talked
about “And the Rocket’s Red Glare: Online Resources for War of 1812 Research”.
Although I’ve always liked it, Wikipedia has been looked down upon by many
(most?) librarians but Curt actually recommended the Wikipedia War of 1812
article! It has more than 153 citations and many dozens of references at the
end—a treasure trove for genealogists looking into their ancestors lives and
service in this, the 200th Anniversary of the war.
Kory Meyerink held a class on “An Overview of Advanced
Research Methods”. (I do wish speakers could think of more exciting titles, but
I digress.) This was a fascinating look at how “advanced researchers use the
same sources as all genealogists, they just use them differently. They must
first change their thinking about how to approach research problems, learning
how to deal with sources in new and different ways.”
I wanted to hear F. Warren Bittner talk about “Beat the
Children With a Fresh Birch Stick So the Animals Don’t Get Worms: Reading for
Historical Context” but the room was full! (See my remark about talk titles
above.)
Instead of Bittner’s talk I got into D. Joshua Taylor’s
“A Broader Context; Using JSTOR for Family History.” I may write about JSTOR in
a future Digging For Roots Online
column.
I heard Geoff Rasmussen talk about an “Insider’s Guide to
Legacy Family Tree: Tips and Tricks.” And even though I’ve used Legacy for more
than 10 years I still learned more about what I can do with it!
That night we attended the banquet “How Psychic
Roots became an
"Unsolved Mystery?" with Hank Z Jones, FASG. Hank shared “his
adventures behind the NBC-TV dramatization of his ground-breaking bestseller
(now in its 6th printing) and related even more amazing serendipitous
experiences contributed by genealogists worldwide for his new sequel More
Psychic Roots.”
Sunday Classes
A list can be found
here if it
hasn’t been taken down yet.
On Sunday I started the day at a breakfast where Rhonda
McClure talked about “The Strange and Unexpected - Dealing with Research
Surprises", a “light-hearted look at some of the unexpected surprises that
fall out of the family tree when you least expect them.”
I then went to a
F. Warren Bittner talk (remember the “Beat the Children…” talk earlier?) with
the admittedly non-exciting title “Complex Evidence: What Is It? How Does It
Work? Why Does It Matter?” and found him to be a fascinating speaker who
discussed
Genealogical Proof Standard in a way which even I could understand
with excellent examples from his own research.
Lisa B. Lee gave an interesting talk on “Speling Dusn’t
Cownt and Why Wild Cards Are the Best Thing Since Sliced Bread”. But for once I
actually knew as much about the subject as the speaker did! And was even able
to disagree with her (silently, of course) about some of the things she said.
But still she was a good speaker.
Perhaps one of the highlights of this conference was
sitting and chatting in the evening, outside the classes, with genealogy
superstars like Megan Smolenyak2, The Ancestry Insider, Ron Arons,
Lisa Louise Cooke, Elyse Doerflinger, Thomas MacEntee, Steve Morse, and Randy
Seaver (while my wife was in the hotel swimming pool with his wife Linda). They
treated me just like a real fellow genealogist!
This was just a small sample of the kinds of subjects
covered at a genealogy conference. If you’ve never been to a one I hope you
will get the pleasure of experiencing one yourself someday.
Labels:
Education,
Maness,
SCGS Jamboree
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Brief Review of the Southern California Genealogical Society Jamboree
June 7-10, 2012
Part One
Part One
By Dennis L. Maness,
MLS
It’s hard to break a 41
year habit of being a librarian so I attended the “librarian-track” in the
JamboFREE sessions held on Friday morning before the actual Jamboree classes
started. (Sorry, Cath Trindle—I didn’t get
to attend your “Projects!!” for genealogy societies.)
Curt Witcher talked about
“Engaging Beginning Genealogists in the 21st Century”. In the talk
he gave a profile of the 21st century “genie”:
·
Not a
genealogical society member (not good news for SMCGS!)
·
Typically uses
bricks-’n’-mortar repositories as a last resort
·
Consumer of the
latest technologies
·
Engages in social
media
·
Expects “real
time” answers/information
·
Expects rapid
technology changes—expects Moore’s Law (Originally about data density in
transistors, it has come to mean that computer power and capacity doubles
approximately every 18 months.)
·
Born with digital
data available
·
Huge numbers of
new genealogists only come through online activities—that is where they live.
·
And they don’t
consider themselves beginners!!
·
More individuals
(those who consider genealogy a hobby has gone from about 400,000 in 1977 when
Roots was on TV, to today’s 9 million.)
·
They have a wider
variety of life experiences
·
With an
increasing variety of technology backgrounds
·
They are using
more technologies which are increasingly sophisticated.
·
They want
enjoyment and even more, they expect success.
Curt summed it up by
saying “21st-ers don’t need us; however we (i.e. librarians) can
make their genealogical experiences so much better.” And I believe that holds for
non-librarian genealogical veterans too.
In The Exhibit Hall
At the
BillionGraves table in the Exhibit Hall I
learned that that organization has partnered with FamilySearch which most
genealogists use regularly (and you do too, don’t you?). In the near future
when someone conducts a name search on FamilySearch.org, they will get a hit
from BillionGraves if a tombstone with that name has been photographed and
entered into that system. That’s much like what Ancestry.com does now when a
search finds an entry on Find-A-Grave.
DIGRESSION: I found out something about the “Terms of use” at both
BillionGraves and Find-A-Grave in a blog called The Legal Genealogist—
Grave terms of use. If you contribute to either or both of these sites you
might want to read the blog column.
The Bureau of Land
Management—Eastern States, Dept. of the Interior table seemed not to attract as
many visitors as many of the other exhibitors. Which is a shame since Land
Records are being used more and more as important genealogical sources. Besides
they were handing out the most colorful pencils!
The people at
GenealogyBank talked me into renewing my subscription for two more years
instead of one. Pretty smooth talkers at that table.
At the Legacy Family Tree
table I got my copy of “Hey, America, Your Roots Are Showing” signed by Megan
Smolenyak2. (I just love the way she prints her double-last name
now!)
I brought an old Ambrotype
to show to Maureen Taylor, the “Photo Detective” but it was always too crowded
to get to her.
I resisted, again, joining
the Sons of the American Revolution at their table. I guess the work on getting
my wife into the DAR was too wearing on me.
And once again I didn’t
win the drawing at the Salt Lake Plaza Hotel table for a free week in Salt Lake
City. Sighhhhhhhhhhh.
Labels:
Education,
Maness,
SCGS Jamboree
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Digging For Roots Online
By Dennis L. Maness,
MLS
You’ve probably already visited
YouTube and you’ve been either amazed or bored by cats playing pianos, the latest viral video, your favorite music, or flashmobs. But I’ve found another use for YouTube—as a genealogy and family history tool!
The site says that, “48 hours of video are uploaded every
minute, resulting in nearly 8 years of content uploaded every day.” This means
that the chances of finding something on our favorite subject (and you know
what that is, don’t you!) are pretty good.
I started out by doing a search for “genealogy or geneology
or family history research”. And yes, I needed to include the spelling
“geneology” because it’s found much too frequently in our subject! Interestingly
enough one of the first things I found was a video on “
Geneology-Why Do We Tend to Spell It Wrong?”
==================================
All of the major players in the family history field are represented with “channels” that you can subscribe to. They have videos that show not only what they can offer but also videos on research techniques that can be used by researchers on both their site and in non-computer related settings. Let’s look at a few of the “channels”:
Here you will find such topics as Creative Ways To Honor Your Ancestors, video presentations from
RootsTech 2012, an excellent series to introduce non-genealogists to our
favorite subject--Genealogy in 5 Minutes,
Using Name Variations To Find A Record,
and Societies and Archives. And
that’s just the start of 60 videos!
“Uniqueness in the
Ordinary”, My Jewish
("Polish") and Hispanic ("Dark Irish") Story, Using Search To Successfully Tell Your
Ancestor's Story, Star of Your Family
Story Contest: Free Blacks in the South, and many more.
George Washington
and the Paparazzi, Pearl Harbor: In
Their Own Words, Passport
Applications, 1795-1925, Immigration Records
at the National Archives, Military
Research at the National Archives, etc.
City Directories on
Internet Archive, How to Use Digital
Magazines, Organize Your Hard Drive,
Hairstyles in the Family, Spitting Images: My First DNA Test, Making a Protective Book Box, Using Google Books Search.
Lisa Louise
Cooke’s
GenealogyGems:
Military Records,
Newspaper Research, Obituaries: Clues to Look For, Interviews with Genealogy Experts.
NGS has a series of what I consider inspirational videos
that encourage me and make me want to go on when I hit those brick walls. Here
are some examples: Helen F.M. Leary:
Stories from My Research, My Life in
Genealogy with David Rencher, Paths
to Your Past with Elizabeth Shown Mills, Thomas W. Jones, David Rencher,
and other experts, and Genealogy for
Teens by Thomas Adams, recipient of the NGS Rubincam Youth Award
You may notice that I use both “genealogy” and “family
history” in my posts. I think of them as different but complementary ways of
looking at our heritage.
This video, while biased towards the “family history” side and with a British
slant, discusses the differences:
If you were fortunate enough to be with me at the National
Genealogical Society annual conference for 2010 in Salt Lake City, you’ll
remember the fantastic program presented by FamilySearch/LDS. The wonderful and
inspiring videos shown there are also here on the FamilySearch channel:
Woven Generations,
Letters from Estonia ,
Searching for Emma,
Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory, (I think the entire audience was crying at the
end of this one when the Mormon Tabernacle Choir started to sing it!) and my
favorite,
Clan McCloud.
(Full disclosure: being of Scots descent I’m biased towards bagpipes.)
For additional inspiration, you can watch many of the
episodes of the British version of
Who Do You Think You Are?
My favorite is the JK Rowling episode but they are all good
even though I don’t recognize many of the people who are featured.
===================================
And finally, there are various videos that you won’t find
with the “genealogy or geneology or family history research” search but just
may be what you need to put “flesh on the bones” of your ancestors.
Look for what they may have done for work (Coal Mining in Early America),
or their health (Healthy Living Conditions in the 19th Century). How did your great-great grandmother dress (19th Century Women's
Clothing ) or what kind of music did great-great granddad listen to (Brass Band Music of the
mid-19th Century and the American Civil War- North & south)? What were
our ancestors’ lives like in Colonial America
17th
century Colonial America)? Did they participate in one of our wars (War
of 1812
Katzhütte, Großbreitenbach,
Böhlen) or live in early 1900s Ireland (Ulster Folk and Transport
Museum)? Did they survive the plague in medieval Europe (The Plague) or the1918
Flu epidemic (The
Influenza Pandemic of 1918)? Since we’re thinking much about 1940 these
days (remember the census?), what were schools like in Appalachia in the 1940s
(The Children Must Learn:
Education in Appalachia)?
I believe that if you dig into YouTube you will find that
there is more than just “
Double
Rainbows”.
=========================
Remember, as Legacy
Family Tree’s Geoff Rasmussen says,
“Life is short; do genealogy first!”
“Life is short; do genealogy first!”
Sunday, June 3, 2012
San Francisco Colma Cemetery Index
Exciting news for all San Francisco Bay Area Researchers
3 June 2012
NEW MAJOR ONLINE DATABASE AT SFGENEALOGY
SFgenealogy is excited to announce a new major database available online:
San Francisco Colma Cemetery Index
The database currently includes over 305,000 burial records for the Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma (1887-2001). In the future, other historic and current cemetery databases will be added to this resource.
This database is the newest addition to SFgenealogy's collection of other major databases available on the internet for free: San Francisco Mortuary Records database and the California Birth and Death Indexes.
Ron Filion and Pamela Storm, Founders
SFgenealogy.com.org.net.info
Follow us on Facebook
Labels:
Cemetery records,
sfgenealogy
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)