I found an interesting biographical sketch of Moses Qualls in the Rootsweb Qualls-Quarles mailing list…
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Added by Tonia Kendrick on March 4, 2010 at 5:23pm —
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MyHeritage.com, the company that connects families to their past and to one another, today announced a significant expansion of its global family network through the acquisition of the Hamburg-based OSN Group, which operates a network of 10 market-leading family sites, including Verwandt.de (Germany), Moikrewni.pl (Poland) and Dynastree.com (USA).
MyHeritage.com now holds a formidable international registered member base of 47 million, and offers its services in 35 languages. The…
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Added by William Douglas on March 3, 2010 at 12:22pm —
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i am from the same family although we ended up in australia about 4 generations ago
Added by Darren Rowtcliff on March 3, 2010 at 8:53am —
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Several years ago, it was a weekend,…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on March 3, 2010 at 8:11am —
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FamilySearch
Record Search has added over 500,000 records from the Cook County,
Illinois Birth Certificate records. The collection includes the City of
Chicago and covers the time period from 1878 to 1922 containing over 1.5
million names. New records were also added to the Netherlands,
Gelderland
Province Civil Registration. The collection…
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Added by James Tanner on March 2, 2010 at 6:18pm —
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Introducing
GenealogySupermarket the place to buy, sell or swap your genealogy items free with our free ads!
We have just started this new website
www.genealogysupermarket.com for people who have found items that would interest others, perhaps something they have been searching for, a family bible found in a jumble sale, a post card from an ancestor, a rare or hard to find book. The list…
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Added by Cemetery Scribes Project on March 2, 2010 at 2:09am —
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Hi all I would like to know if anyone know of my Saviel Family in Burma from 1861 . they are my great grand father George Thomas Saviel and he was married in Burma in 1873 to Rose Hnin Si .
If you have any information on them let me know.
Yours
George T Saviel
gtsaviel@gmail.com
02
Added by George Thomas Saviel on March 1, 2010 at 8:55pm —
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A few weeks ago, I
posted about
Find a Grave.
One of the features they offers is a “Request a Photo” program. Users
of the website can volunteer to take headstone photographs and Find a
Grave keeps track of their locations. When another user requests a
photo from a particular cemetery, the website…
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Added by Tonia Kendrick on March 1, 2010 at 6:24pm —
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From: Patricia Max <pam@lampinc.com>
>> Subject: [IAJASPER] FYI
>> To: iajasper@rootsweb.com
>> Date: Monday, March 1, 2010, 4:41 AM
>> The archivist, David S. Ferriero, can
>> be reached by email at
>> research@nara.gov.
>> The website listed below has addresses for others
>> that you may contact.
>>
>> Patricia Max
>>
>>
>>> The…
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Added by Susi (Susan C Jones) Pentico on February 28, 2010 at 10:49pm —
1 Comment
WorldCat.org is a major international connection to over 10,000
libraries worldwide and catalogs over 1.5 billion items. Google Books
contains over 10,000,000 digitized books and magazines.
WorldCat.org
and Google Books are now interlinked. If you search for a book on
Google Books and find the item, one of the options is to find the item
in a library. Clicking on this option gives you a link to…
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Added by James Tanner on February 28, 2010 at 4:42pm —
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Edwin Lee was born January 14,1814 in Green, New York, Broome County. He married Harriett French in New York February 15, 1840. They had 4 children - Alamanson, Polly Jane, Charles and Morris. Morris is my great grandfather.
Trying to locate Edwin and his family in census has not been alot of fun. They just simply cannot be found. Edwin was a barge canal captain on the Chenango Canal so I'm wondering when the census was taken they were on the barges.…
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Added by PD Vasil` on February 28, 2010 at 3:37pm —
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Hey there!
This will only take a few seconds. They reset the Worldwide Top Sites for Genealogy again. If you click on the following link, Worldwide Top Sites, you can vote for ShoeStringGenealogy.com, my free genealogy website. Just click on the underlined link on the window that appears.
I'd greatly appreciate it, and it will help put ShoeString in the top ten, thus enabling more people to visit and…
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Added by Dae Powell on February 26, 2010 at 12:23pm —
2 Comments
An
article in Mormon Times, opens the door for almost the first time,
to a main stream airing of some of the most glaring problems with New
FamilySearch.
Although the article is low key, it points out some of more difficult
issues with the program. If you have been following the development of
the program at all, you will…
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Added by James Tanner on February 26, 2010 at 8:22am —
2 Comments
I am the great-great-grandaughter of James Golding and Maria Humphris. They married in 1849. He was a house painter. They had I think 8 surviving children - Maria, Elizabeth, James (my grandfather) Jane, William, Emily, Sarah and Anne. James employed his 3 sons, James, William and Edwin as housepainters, until James immigrated to Australia in 1883. They lived variously in Charlton Kings, Guiting Power, and Bouron-on-the-water. In the 1870s they settled more permanently in Regent St Cheltenham.…
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Added by Anne Golding-Ross on February 25, 2010 at 7:46pm —
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Today we were able to watch a segment on Faces of America. The hope to encourage people to learn more about whom they are and whom in their back ground helped to make them whom they are.
It was great with the diversity of the people interviewed and researched, to learn that there was even an interconnect between two of them. No I will not tell the whom's.
Then in the blog GenealogyBank.com by Thomas Kemp there was a great start of how to start your Genealogy. It was labeled…
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Added by Susi (Susan C Jones) Pentico on February 24, 2010 at 11:20pm —
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The Underground Railroad was neither Underground, nor was it a Railroad. It was in essence a series of conductors, safe houses, trails along rivers, secret routes, sometimes walking, and other times hiding in wagons. Before Europeans arrived, North and South America was comprised of thousands of Native American Tribes. Native Cultures date back at least ten thousand years, having traveled over the Bering Strait into North…
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Added by Anita Wills on February 23, 2010 at 8:00pm —
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The Library of Congress, now over 200
years old, is recognized as the largest library in the United States and
has claims to being the largest library in the world. Its collections
are described as follows:
In 1992, the Library
acquired its 100 millionth item. The collections now include
approximately fifteen million books, thirty-nine million manuscripts,
thirteen million photographs, four million maps, more…
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Added by James Tanner on February 23, 2010 at 6:50pm —
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Udo Thoerner’s History of Emigration…
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Added by Carolyn Bening on February 23, 2010 at 3:28pm —
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I have been working on preparing a presentation I am giving on March 2 at the Abundant Living Conference at Camp Allen. The conference spans 3 days and is billed as “Explore aging as a spiritual journey-grow mentally, socially and creatively. Come, relax, enjoy… celebrate the years!” The setting is a beautiful one, deep in the Piney Woods. I have never been to Camp Allen. In fact, it’s been many years since I’ve been to any ‘camp’ at all so I’m looking…
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Added by Stefani Twyford on February 22, 2010 at 6:02pm —
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Added by Gwynn Socolich on February 22, 2010 at 3:30pm —
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