This statement sounds SO self-evident, like.... the sun comes up in the morning, in the east.
However,... part of the issue is the genealogical definition of "known." For this genealogist, "known" equals solid evidence of the particulars of a person, from careful examination of documents and analysis and ...
My father knew that his gggreat, Patrick Ross, was killed during the Civil War (Union), and he wanted to find the parents of Patrick. Off to the National Archives in DC (close by since he lived in northern Virginia) to have a look at Patrick's compiled service record, and, as it happened, his wife's widow's pension.
By that time, I had attended a number of genealogy seminars, and had a basic working knowledge of how this world worked, and we made a day of it.
Dad, a lovely and intelligent man, who spent his working life analyzing complex cross-cultural questions, was totally disappointed in the information offered by the thick pension file. As he read each page, he would shake his head saying, "It doesn't say who his parents are." I heard this at the end of almost every page, and when it wasn't said, the head would shake, saying the same thing without words. I however, was totally delighted with the pension record. As said, it was huge, with pages and pages of depositions by everyone in the area. I "met" the people in the neighborhood (think FAN club), and got the married names of the daughters, and one deposition was even given by James Shirley, who said he was married to one of the daughters. Pay dirt on any number of points -- at least as I was concerned.
Fast forward about 30 years, add unnumbered hours of research, and I have a working hypothesis about Patrick Ross' father. Is it proved? Not yet.
But the joy is in the search.... right??
and stay tuned... Patrick et familie may make an appearance from time to time (GRIN)
basically genealogy - growing family trees -- finding ancestors & relatives - living & dead. history & stories & tall tales - travels, and learning & names - ross, rentchler, lucas, graeber, dasing, rex.
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
Saturday, May 20, 2017
... So you want to "do Genealogy"...
Genealogists – or “so you want to “do Genealogy”
What would you need to pack for your first few road trips into the
world of Genealogy?
What would you need
for this journey into this new place?
Part One:
A Working Car. You will be traveling - locally, and more. Libraries, meetings, archives, etc., etc.. Nuff said.
>> Computer skills. Yes,
lots is off-line and will forever be off-line, but computer is the gateway to
information about societies (most now publish their newsletter electronically),
about conferences, and the starting place for most inquiries, the databases
held by Ancestry and FamilySearch.
>> Organization skills.
Information will be coming into your net through many portals,
electronic, paper, lecture notes, webinars, books (!), electronic books, web
pages, etc., etc. You must have a way of remembering what you have seen,
learned, done, or I promise you, you will re-do it, possibly more than once
(been there done that, hope to do it less and less.)
>> Good family social skills.
It doesn’t matter if Aunt Gladys hasn’t talked to anyone in the family
for years. If Aunt Gladys is holding the letters written during WW1 by great
uncle Simon to Glady’s mother, you want to see them, read them, and take
photographs of them.
>> Good advertising skills. Everyone, and I do mean everyone, in the extended family should know that you are “doing genealogy” and that the very best present they could give you is copies of all the family documents that they hold, and, if they feel flush, a DNA test. Ditto for family photos. My grandmother died young, had the bottom desk drawer full of photos, and the cousin who cleared the house (rapidly) tossed everything. The result? I do a huge happy dance when I find a photo in a school yearbook or newspaper. “don’t let this be you”
>> Good archival skills.
You will spend hundreds of hours (or more), and hundreds of dollars (or
more) amassing information about your family.
Even as you begin, it is not too early to look for someone within the
family, or your community, who will inherit your work. Even if they are not “doing genealogy” they
are willing and able to be custodian of this opus, and will safeguard it, and
as the family grows, look for another who is doing genealogy on this family.
AND... you will make it much easier for someone to enjoy keeping your work when it is arranged and accessible, rather than 17 boxes of mixed paper and documents and photos. (..yes??...)
Thursday, May 18, 2017
A.B.C. darium --- E is for the easy button? No deal...
E is for the easy button. We have come to an ‘easy button’ orientation. All those services where you summon a genie to do your bidding with a phone call or a click: peapod, bed-in-a-box, personal shopper, kindle books, grub hub (and similar), and the ENTIRE internet shopping gig, and now even removal companies “point at it and it’s gone.”
By comparison, genealogy is in the dark ages. To be sure, Ancestry and Family Search have digitized not only the information, but the images of many of the ‘usual suspects’ (ie. first places to look), starting with the Federal census and WW1 & 2 draft registration cards. These databases add more records weekly, if not daily. One can sit in one’s jammies, or deal with insomnia, by surfing for hours on internet, genealogy and other sites, and come up with some interesting stuff for one’s tree, but….
You will end up going off-line, off-computer, and unless your family has lived since their arrival in the US in the same city in which you reside, you will end up taking road trips to see cemeteries, churches (those things that don’t move), and to do research in those libraries (local treasures) and courthouses (or spend lots for photocopies, and perhaps not “get it all.”)
I remember one speaker who said, “If genealogy were easy, there would be no genealogists, and everyone would have their trees back to Adam.” (glad to credit you, but I truly don’t remember where or when.
Genealogy is invigorating, exciting, rewarding, fulfilling, useful, wonderful, but it is rarely easy. More often it is challenging, frustrating, annoying as the pieces that you have about a family don’t mesh into a full picture or a road to take you forward.
There is no EASY button, but there is lots of hope.
Monday, January 30, 2017
New Year's Challenge #5
Challenge #5
>> find 3 historical books (ie pre 1910) about your geographic area of interest: online, Newberry, inter-library loan (your back closet?)
check out Google books - free historical...
Why?? Don't remember where, but do remember reading the comment (which I have found true) that the past is a different country, and by reading books written in that different country, not just about that different country, one can start to catch the ethos of that time, and also that place.
Consider:
the wonder of the speed of train travel after horses
the ease of housekeeping when water was piped inside, or oil replaced candles, or gas replaced oil light
the difference when schooling became the responsibility of the local government
and on, and on, and on.
My grandfather was born into a world of horse power supplied by horses, 2x daily mail delivery, telegrams & milk brought to the door, refrigeration in true ice boxes. By the end of his life there were computers, cars, cell phones and a man had walked on the moon. Amazing --
And, someone looking at our lives in 100 years may say the same of us.
Cheers
Liz
ps - you are now at the end of January !! -- February is the month of many celebrations... stay tuned
Monday, January 23, 2017
New Year's Challenge #4
Challenge #4
>> index (& put into sleeves) all ‘original’ & valuable documents. *** if the document cost time and money, and would be difficult to replace, it is valuable.
(Extra credit: transcribe/abstract each document and put that info into an excel spread sheet.)
Monday, January 16, 2017
New Year's Challenge #3
Challenge #3
remember that transcribing means all the info that's on the census... age... occupation... etc.
(and what is really interesting is comparing the information from census to census!!)
"extra credit"
take the parent of the ancestor you chose, and take that person back to 1850...
>> find one ancestor on every census s/he was alive for. (remember no 1890 census), and transcribe everyone in the family on each census.
(bonus points for filling in the 10 years inbetween: ie. city directories, birth of kids, draft reg)
Monday, January 9, 2017
New Year's Challenge #2
Challenge #2
PERSI is the indexing tool for genealogical periodicals. The genius people at Allen County Library, Fort Wayne, Ind thought this up, and maintain the list, which is available online through Heritage Quest (limited), or Find My Past (total), a finding aide which is available through many libraries.
(yes, gen club folk... Forest Park Library has some of PERSI through Heritage Quest, which you can see at home!!)
What this resource offers is access to the items written, over many years by many people (and yes, of differing abilities) on so many many subjects for the periodicals, monthly newsletters, quarterlies, yearly journals.
So..should you be researching blacksmiths in Pennsylvania in the 1850's, you can see if anyone wrote an article about this.
NOTE: PERSI doesn't carry the article, but Allen County Library has the periodical! Road trip for many; for few, talk to your friendly local library's reference librarian.
Grow, learn, be brilliant !!
look at one new data base (online) that is not Ancestry: newspapers, PERSI, Fold 3 (military & city directories a specialty)
Chicago folk have access to Chicago Trib Historical through their Chg public library card. Suburban libraries that co-operate/courtesy card to Chg Public give many more access -- and that's from home!
Chicago folk have access to Chicago Trib Historical through their Chg public library card. Suburban libraries that co-operate/courtesy card to Chg Public give many more access -- and that's from home!
PERSI is the indexing tool for genealogical periodicals. The genius people at Allen County Library, Fort Wayne, Ind thought this up, and maintain the list, which is available online through Heritage Quest (limited), or Find My Past (total), a finding aide which is available through many libraries.
(yes, gen club folk... Forest Park Library has some of PERSI through Heritage Quest, which you can see at home!!)
What this resource offers is access to the items written, over many years by many people (and yes, of differing abilities) on so many many subjects for the periodicals, monthly newsletters, quarterlies, yearly journals.
So..should you be researching blacksmiths in Pennsylvania in the 1850's, you can see if anyone wrote an article about this.
NOTE: PERSI doesn't carry the article, but Allen County Library has the periodical! Road trip for many; for few, talk to your friendly local library's reference librarian.
Grow, learn, be brilliant !!
Sunday, January 1, 2017
New Year 2017 -- Intro to the year & challenge #1
UPDATE: It's the first of January -- and unusually warm for Chicago. Got to see the Apple drop in New York, and the Star go up in Chicago, and fireworks both places.
The new years challenge is posted, I hope. Still working on some of the technical issues.
Challenge still holds --
ORIGINAL: It's mid-December, and the weather is absurd. Time to find a warm spot, cocoa or coffee, put on the fuzzy slippers, and hit the New Year's resolutions a bit early to learn a bit more about our favorite passion, genealogy.
The new years challenge is posted, I hope. Still working on some of the technical issues.
Challenge still holds --
ORIGINAL: It's mid-December, and the weather is absurd. Time to find a warm spot, cocoa or coffee, put on the fuzzy slippers, and hit the New Year's resolutions a bit early to learn a bit more about our favorite passion, genealogy.
For those of this mind, here is a New Year's Challenge!
There are 5 challenges (so far); one will be posted (planned) each week on Monday. Each project may be fast or slow, and with the extra credit should well occupy the remaining weeks till the first genealogy Saturday.
If you are local to Chicago area, join in the fun during the 2nd Saturday Genealogy meeting at the Forest Park Library. The administration has changed, and what months will have meetings is still under discussion. (Library is at Jackson & DesPlaines, Forest Park, IL)
CHALLENGE #1:
** do 2 “learning” things: read a book, view a webinar, attend a conference, go to a gen club lecture
there is a world of info to be had, and much of it free or for small cost. I know genealogists are frugal; use that to your advantage and do a little searching on line.
- google "genealogy webinars free" and see what pops
- google "genealogy conference or seminar [your city]" and see what pops
- google "genealogy groups [your city]" and see what pops
Have fun and grow during !!
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