We often do large photo archiving projects for families that involve scanning and creating digital records of photos albums, boxes of loose photos, newspaper articles, certificates and other family mementos that a family wants preserved. Families want this service because it provides a backup should anything happen to the original as well as a architected filing storage system that makes it simple to find any photo within minutes. If you have a large family, there is no need to argue over who…
Continue
Added by Stefani Twyford on September 26, 2009 at 2:56pm —
No Comments
Many members are not aware of the chat room here on GenealogyWise, or if they are aware of the scheduled chats they don't realize that the chat room is open all day every day. There are a group of people who are in there and are willing to help you with a genealogy problem, do lookups or just general chat. If you do not know how the chatroom works you can leave a message for me on my homepage and I will walk you through it. We would love to have you join us. Drop in and introduce yourself.
Added by Dawn Evans Stringer on September 25, 2009 at 1:49pm —
1 Comment
One measure of the effectiveness of a genealogy Website is the number of visitors. Although still not a major player in the online world of genealogy, the FamilySearch Wiki is steadily growing in its resources and usability. As of September 25, 2009, the homepage had been accessed 371,941 times. Since this is the number of times some pages are accessed in one day, the number itself is not impressive. What is impressive is to view the list of new pages added by logged-in users. There were nearly…
Continue
Added by James Tanner on September 25, 2009 at 8:33am —
No Comments
John D. Reid in his blog “Anglo-Celtic Connections” (Sept.24, 2009) outlined a two new essay competitions by the Ontario Genealogical Society aimed at young people.
The Dr. Don Brearley Genealogical Essay Prize is open to secondary school students in grades 11 and 12. For this, the first year, it is open to Toronto District School Board students only. In future years it will be available to students in other Ontario school boards. Submission deadline is February 26, 2010.
The…
Continue
Added by William Bruce Hillman on September 25, 2009 at 7:03am —
No Comments
Buried at a Mall?
Robert Wilson, 3rd died in 1797 in what was then part of Danvers, Massachusetts, at a farm which no longer exists, and the family plot is now located in Peabody, behind the Kappy’s Liquor Store. The Wilson family wouldn’t recognize this land. Where the farm stood is now the cloverleaf intersection of routes 114 and 128, and the North Shore Mall.
Robert Wilson served in the Revolutionary War as…
Continue
Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on September 23, 2009 at 6:07pm —
No Comments
By September 28, 2009, the Provo Temple District, which includes all of the Student Wards and Stakes at Brigham Young University, will have full access to New FamilySearch. In addition, the Ogden Temple District is scheduled for its first Stake access on September 28th also. With these two Stakes going online, that leaves only the Mount Timpanogos Temple District in Utah Valley and the remaining Temple Districts in the Salt Lake Valley itself to get access.…
Continue
Added by James Tanner on September 23, 2009 at 5:20pm —
No Comments
Preserving memories "Green" - a look at Tree Ring, creators of yearbooks for the internet generation.
Little green Blog - TreeRing Preserving memories of childhood and our future earth
Added by Stefani Twyford on September 23, 2009 at 10:30am —
No Comments
More records have been added to the FamilySearch Record Search Website. These include the following: (All descriptions from the Website with the spelling corrected).
Read more...
Added by James Tanner on September 23, 2009 at 8:57am —
No Comments
Like Wyoming, Alaska is large with a small population. It is the least densely populated state of the U.S. See Wikipedia. I have only known a few people over the years who actually were born and raised in Alaska. As shown below, some of the online resources are actually in other state repositories.
Read more...
Added by James Tanner on September 23, 2009 at 8:52am —
No Comments
When I first visited the
Ballard Nature Center in 2002, I found a flyer that aptly read, “Where nature and people meet.” The BNC can rightfully make that claim. Some 3,000 visitors from 29 states and four countries visited the BNC during its first year, and the nature enthusiasts just keep coming and coming back.
A $300,000 visitor’s center serves as a meeting place for clubs and a living classroom for educators and schoolchildren.…
Continue
Added by Judy Rosella Edwards on September 22, 2009 at 7:00pm —
No Comments
We are excited to participate in the following upcoming genealogy seminars and workshops. If you are in the area, please stop by our booth to say hello. You can ask the Legacy Family Tree experts questions and take advantage of special seminar discounts.
October 2009
USA | Arizona | Youngtown - October 7/14/21/28, 2009. This four week Beginning Legacy course is offered by the West Valley Genealogical Society and taught by Legacy's Geoff Rasmussen. Class size…
Continue
Added by Geoff Rasmussen on September 22, 2009 at 3:24pm —
No Comments
I have been working with others in an attempt to unravel some of the missing bits in the links between the Douglas and Willan families.
There are two major links:
Colonel Frank Willan married Louisa Marguerita Douglas, daughter of Captain Charles Robert George Douglas, late 32nd Bengal Light Infantry (Killed Dehli, 1847) and Louisa nee Robinson, both grandchildren of Major General Robert Douglas.
Thomas Willan, a stagecoach proprietor, left Twyford Abbey and estate to his…
Continue
Added by William Douglas on September 22, 2009 at 3:30am —
No Comments
I'm a novice and one reluctant to immerse too quickly without checking out
total costs. I understand the local library could be a good source, especially if they have a Library Subscription to those online sites I might use at home, but at my costs. Well, I just learned my local public library closes at 5:00 p.m. on a regular basis, so it is hardly worth my closer examination of its inner workings. How about online subscriptions that I must pay for?
Is Ancestry.com worth my purchase… Continue
Added by BJohnston on September 21, 2009 at 4:04pm —
7 Comments
Our 6th annual Legacy Genealogy cruise has concluded. What a great time we had. Now it's back to real life where we have to make our own food, clean up after ourselves, and come up with our own entertainment. Returning to normal life isn't as easy as it might seem....
Click here to read the complete article.
Added by Geoff Rasmussen on September 21, 2009 at 12:55pm —
No Comments
Sweden is not known for having free online records. You may have heard of Genline, a commercial Swedish Website with 17,453,462 online images comprising approximately 34,600,000 pages of images. This is a subscription site charging up to $285 US for a year subscription. However, you can also pay by the day, $11 US, or 20 days, a month, a quarter or three years. It is a fabulous Website for Swedish research. But they have the same records that were microfilmed by The Church of Jesus Christ of…
Continue
Added by James Tanner on September 20, 2009 at 10:02pm —
1 Comment
Although Wyoming is the least populous state in the U.S., it is the tenth largest by size. Its online resources are not as extensive as other more populous states but still significant. A Google search for Wyoming digital resources will show a lot of links from other state collections which include historical material from Wyoming. One example is the Western States Marriages Record Index which includes some marriages from Wyoming.…
Continue
Added by James Tanner on September 20, 2009 at 5:19pm —
No Comments
Family Tree Connection has added the following genealogy items to its database:
Moline Woman's Club 1929-1930 Year Book - Woman's Club of Moline, Moline, Illinois, Year Book, Twenty-sixth Annual Announcement, 1929-1930. Founded May twenty-third, nineteen hundred three by Mrs. Frank Gates Allen.
Mt. Moriah Evangelical Lutheran…
Continue
Added by Illya Daddezio on September 20, 2009 at 1:11pm —
No Comments
Source: Nebraska City News-Press, Nebraska City, Otoe Co., Nebraska, Tuesday, July 29, 2003
Joshua Goebel assembled volunteers from Boys Scouts Troop 246 Thursday to clear Otoe County’s pauper cemetery.
"Located on high ground at the edge of what once was the Otoe County Poor Farm, Goebel said a 1927 report indicated there were 30 graves there."
Amongst them were the graves of James and Mary (Molly) Douglas.
"After removing enough dead-wood to fill…
Continue
Added by William Douglas on September 20, 2009 at 11:00am —
No Comments
From Randy Seaver’s “Genea-Musings” is Saturday Night Genealogical Fun. Divide your father’s age by four and round off the number. Find the ancestor in your pedigree chart that has been assigned that number.
Father is 89 and still alive. Divide his age by 4 = 22.
22 on pedigree chart(Legacy 7.0) is Hugh Hillman (born sometime in 1844 in Upper Canada to John Hillman and Isabella May. Died 6 Mar. 1894 Rodney, Ontario). He was my grandfather’s uncle. Married Sarah Campbell(9…
Continue
Added by William Bruce Hillman on September 20, 2009 at 9:42am —
No Comments
In a comment to my September 13, 2009 post about collecting names vs. family history, one of the comments named me a "pretentious genealogist" apparently because I "vehemently abhor 'name collectors'." I guess I was also surprised to find out that I was a "self-proclaimed expert" so I went back and re-read my own article. After a review, I did find a few more things to say about name collectors, even the variety claimed by the commentator.…
Continue
Added by James Tanner on September 19, 2009 at 5:58pm —
No Comments