I'm looking for anyone who was able to trace family to there and what process they went through to get the info. from that agency. My Grandmother and 3 other siblings were in and out of the Asylum several times. This is new news to us as my Grandmother never told anyone about her family or past.
Added by Cheryl on April 14, 2010 at 8:10am —
3 Comments
Apparently, I was not specific enough in my last post about Apple
Genealogy. John
Newmark
in his
TransylvanianDutch
Genealogy & Family History blog had a lot of comments. All of
his comments, as usual, are very good and to the point. I do agree with
his…
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Added by James Tanner on April 13, 2010 at 9:14pm —
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Before you get upset, this post is not about politics and faith, but about genealogical clues to ancestors' lives. In my research, I have found the records kept by various church groups to be of immense help in learning about my ancestors' lives and travels. Such records combined with "state" documents, incl. census reports, official land deeds, wills, and court cases are often all we have to go on -- evidence-wise -- apart from word-of-mouth family stories (which may or may not be…
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Added by William S Dean on April 13, 2010 at 10:16am —
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It is well known that Nutfield was founded by a group of Ulster refugees, Scots Irish Presbyterians fleeing the violence of Northern Ireland for New England. They were not welcome to settle in Boston, so in 1719 a group came to settle in New Hampshire. They called their new home “Nutfield” after the abundance of nut bearing trees in the…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on April 13, 2010 at 9:27am —
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There is a commonly inaccurate perception that there are no programs for
doing genealogy on Apple Macintosh computers. As it turns out, the list
of available programs is very limited, and there are barely enough
offerings to make the Macintosh a viable platform for those doing their
family history. But there are at least two or three programs that
compete favorably with anything available on the Windows/PC type
computers.
The now old Personal Ancestral…
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Added by James Tanner on April 13, 2010 at 8:30am —
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My earliest attempts to use computers for genealogy began with an Apple
II with a primitive program that was entirely text based and used a dot
matrix printer with fan-fold paper. I remember that I ended up
re-entering my entire file a number of times either due to data crashes
or to incompatible upgrades. The amount of information about each
individual and family was minimal, but the promise of organization and
convenience was worth the effort to keep entering…
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Added by James Tanner on April 12, 2010 at 9:03am —
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Looking for info on John L. Powell. 1860 census shows Burlington City, Wife Sarah and son? Alfred. Alfred is G Grandfather. Any info on John would be appreciated.
Added by Robert G. Powell on April 11, 2010 at 6:05am —
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Time to review what I thought I knew about Robert Forscutt and his sister Elizabeth. The family wedding (from which I have a photo showing Robert) took place in the September quarter of 1902. My great aunt, from whom I obtained the photo, was not born until 1904, so she could not have been present at the wedding. On the other hand, she would have known many of the family members who were there. Eileen's mother did not die until 1953 and her sister was alive until 1973. Eileen could have been…
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Added by John Matthews on April 11, 2010 at 3:00am —
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I have added some more Hooper photos, if anyone would like to look at them. I am scanning and posting them on,so, I am getting them on slowly. Keep looking for new pictures.
Added by Tammy Mellard Wheeler on April 10, 2010 at 10:08am —
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Charles is the third child of Edwin Lee. As in the blog about Edwin he didn't show up in any Federal Census until the 1870s. He was married to Elizabeth Van Norwick and they lived in Binghamton NY. He was an Engineer but I'm not sure which railroad company he worked for while in New York.
He had two daughters born in New York - Alice and Sadie Feiam. Alice was born in January 1876 and Sadie in 1881.
My cousin and I surmised the reason he moved to Minnesota was…
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Added by PD Vasil` on April 9, 2010 at 10:02am —
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A few days ago, I had a patron at the Mesa Regional Family History
Center ask me about a problem she was having with New
FamilySearch.
She had a huge pile of printouts from her Personal Ancestral File
program and was methodically going through each one and comparing the
information to that found in New
FamilySearch. She was…
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Added by James Tanner on April 9, 2010 at 8:37am —
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Fast work and an immediate response from the staff at
GenealogyWise
seems to have stemmed the tide of spam for the time being. Thanks to
their rapid response, the issue was resolved by having the blog posts
reviewed before going online. I might suggest that given some time,
there could be a way to automate that procedure by having a holding file
where the titles and text could be reviewed more rapidly. It…
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Added by James Tanner on April 9, 2010 at 8:35am —
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GenealogyWise is a really
dynamic and useful social networking site for genealogists.
GenealogyWise is part of FamilyLink which if you keep tracing back
through links, is basically Paul Allen and his staff who also run
WorldVitalRecords and a lot more. Many of the members post all or part
of their own blogs on the GenealogyWise blog posts. Lately, the blog
posts coming through Google Reader have been hijacked by spam drug
sellers. My…
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Added by James Tanner on April 8, 2010 at 8:18am —
2 Comments
We've submitted bylaws for approval, and now the proposed chapter of the
Association of Professional Genealogists in Second Life (APG-SL) will be having our third meeting, tonight, Thursday, April 7, at 5:30 pm Second Life time (which is Pacific Time). In keeping with the goals of the organization, we will be having a presentation by a very well-known speaker, on Revolutionary War Research. Members and non-members are invited to attend this presentation.…
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Added by tami osmer glatz on April 8, 2010 at 7:04am —
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On Wednesday 28 October 2009, the New Hampshire Preservation Alliance announced the state’s annual “Seven to Save” campaign and the First Parish Church in East Derry earned a spot on the list. The First Parish congregation has been in Derry since the original Scots Irish settlers held a religious meeting of thanksgiving under a tree in…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on April 7, 2010 at 4:04pm —
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A recent blogger here mentioned something about research findings that make your hair stand on end. I'm wondering how many people have a particular affinity for something, especially historically-speaking, and then later discover in genealogical research that their ancestor was involved in what you show an affinity for. I don't mean talent, like in music or art or something.
Here's an example. Since I was kid, I always liked and felt strongly about the events in the book and movies…
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Added by William S Dean on April 7, 2010 at 10:21am —
1 Comment
I guess the first thing I have learned is that there are a lot more
blogs than I have time to read. I keep finding new ones all the time and
get more and more amazed at the tremendous variety of genealogical
experiences. I have learned that blogging is takes the place of the old
home town newspaper on an international scale. The posts give you
insight into people's lives all over the world. Today's report on Google
Analytics shows my posts being read in 39…
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Added by James Tanner on April 6, 2010 at 10:12pm —
1 Comment
It has now been a number of months since I junked my PC and went back to
working almost exclusively on an Apple Macintosh
iMac. I say
that my work is almost exclusive because I still own a PC Laptop from
HP. I use the laptop to run my scanning station. I mentioned from time
to time that I am running a program called
Parallels Desktop. I have worked on
literally…
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Added by James Tanner on April 5, 2010 at 9:02pm —
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Well, we all know co-incidences happen, but sheesh, just lately genealogically speaking they're jumping out at me. For instance.
Have connected with a Jewish Lady for my Isaacs research and somehow we get talking about "The Camps" and I say my dad (not Jewish) was in Somme Kasserne as a…
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Added by Jo Kotylak on April 5, 2010 at 12:08am —
1 Comment
I first met the Forscutt family more than forty years ago when I began my interest in family history. My grandmother knew that her mother's maiden name was Forscutt. She thought her grandmother was named Elizabeth, but couldn't remember her grandfather's name. She knew her mother's date of birth, so I obtained her birth certificate and discovered she was illegitimate. This was not something a teenage boy wished to discuss with his Victorian grandmother, so the certificate was quietly placed…
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Added by John Matthews on April 4, 2010 at 12:00pm —
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