There seems to be no end to the Websites claiming to have millions, if not billions of records online. In case you were wondering, here is another site with a huge collection of online records. The site is called Genealogyarchives.com . It is a company whose only location is shown in Nebraska. They have a newer Website with a significant number of records, as of 18 November 2009, they claim 1,035,043,627 records with the number changing as you watch. At the time of this writing they have 75…
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Added by James Tanner on December 18, 2009 at 12:16pm —
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Last year Peter Zheutlin, the author of the nonfiction book “Around the World on Two Wheels: Annie Londonderry’s Extraordinary Ride,” came to the Leach Library, here in Londonderry, New Hampshire,
to give an interesting lecture about his ancestor. Annie Kopchovsky, was “Annie Londonderry,” the first woman to go around the world on a bicycle. She was actually paid $100 by Londonderry Lithia Water, a very popular drink of the era, to carry their logo on…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on December 18, 2009 at 8:30am —
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We spend a lot of time looking for our ancestors. Wouldn't it be nice if they just showed up in our email's inbox? With the free tool, Google Alerts, this is possible.
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Added by Geoff Rasmussen on December 17, 2009 at 11:46am —
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The starting point for the use of place names in a family history or genealogical context is the rule that the place is the location at the time the event happened, especially if the place name was different at the time of the event. If there is a need for further explanation, the modern or current place name should be in a note. The reason for this rule is simple, any other notation obscures the historical reality and makes further investigation more difficult.
From the perspective…
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Added by James Tanner on December 17, 2009 at 8:58am —
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Genealogy software is a hot topic amongst family historians. Many have opinions and they are often based on personal experience. I am not going to pretend to know all the ins and outs of all the genealogy software on the market. However, if you are in the market for genealogy software and don’t know where to begin then may I suggest the website
Top Ten Reviews. If you have narrowed it down to a few then this website maybe able to help…
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Added by Lynn Palermo on December 17, 2009 at 8:16am —
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Just read an article on "Utilizing Genealogy Software"...I couldn't agree more. I often teach beginner genealogy classes and I do demonstrate how to use a pedigree chart and family group sheet but I always add the comment, "Using the computer to record your genealogy is the best way to go, it has a lot more memory and is much more organized!". Wouldn't you agree?…
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Added by Deanna Ramsey on December 17, 2009 at 8:15am —
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If you are ready to start writing your family history book but not sure how to turn your research into an interesting life story then I have some tips to get you started. How do you write a descriptive, creative, narrative story about your relatives when all you have is a list of dry facts and documents to draw on? How do you turn your facts into a story about an individual you never met?
Believe or not before you begin writing your family history, I am going to suggest more…
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Added by Lynn Palermo on December 16, 2009 at 8:54am —
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FamilySearch's Record Search has added another round of new records. December 14, 2009 shows records from Argentina, Guatemala, Georgia (USA) and Germany. Here are brief descriptions of the new records:
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Added by James Tanner on December 15, 2009 at 10:16pm —
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The first American in space was born in Derry, New Hampshire in 1923. Alan Bartlett Shepard grew up on the family farm, which is now just a house on East Derry Road. He ran errands at Grenier Field (now Manchester Airport) when he was still just a Pinkerton high school student. The Shepard family attended the First Parish church in East Derry, and his father was the organist. He graduated from the Naval Academy at Annapolis and served during the…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on December 15, 2009 at 6:30pm —
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The latest revisions to New FamilySearch contain some disturbing developments. In the release notes for the New FamilySearch Web Site of December 2009, it states: "In addition to the other information that is required for temple ordinances to be performed, an individual’s record must now have at least the country for birth, christening, marriage, death, or burial. The place-name must be standardized." There are actually two problems with this requirement; first, place names change over time and…
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Added by James Tanner on December 15, 2009 at 8:53am —
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January 22nd and 23rd will find me at the Family History Expo at the Mesa Convention Center. I mentioned previously that I have been asked to attend as a Blogger of Honor. I don't mind giving free publicity to the Family History Expo because I thought the one last year was very well done. I put the Blogger of Honor button and the Family History Expo button on my site and you can find them off to the right. Feel free to copy the Family History…
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Added by James Tanner on December 14, 2009 at 10:04pm —
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Lastnight while in a genie chat me and another chatter goto talking about our family and how the women affected them. This made me remember that my mother had told me about her grandmother Phylis Erke who just passed away in September at 101.
When her husband would take the boys out hunting for deer she'd wait for them to leave and then put some feed out on the porch and then watch from inside the living room and when they'd come up for feed she'd shoot them. Great gramps and the…
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Added by Leeann Boone on December 14, 2009 at 5:55pm —
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It is commonly reported that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) has more than 3,500 Family History Centers around the world. What does this actually mean to those interested in genealogical research? First of all, the main repository for genealogical information collected by the Church is located at the Family History Library and other storage facilities in and around Salt Lake City, Utah. The local Family History Centers are branch facilities of the Family History Library.…
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Added by James Tanner on December 14, 2009 at 7:54am —
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Genealogist's Dilemma
While looking up my family tree
A horrid sight there I did see
This horse thief stared right down at me
I turned around and tried to flee
Please stop he called I'm Great Gramp Bob
And horses just my side line job
Don't be too quick to be a snob
With the elite I did hob nob
Please do not hide this sad research
I was a pillar of the church
Until I did our name besmirch
And toppled from my lofty…
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Added by Leeann Boone on December 13, 2009 at 11:26pm —
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1930 WI state census for Sina: 1930 wife of head of household lived in Milwaukee,Milwaukee,WI wife of Henry S. Heldahl mother Einar who was 6 in 1930. Approximate DOB 1899. She was the first mother in law of my great aunt Helen.
Added by Leeann Boone on December 13, 2009 at 7:28pm —
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My GG Grandfather was William Fletcher wife Alsemena Waffle married in New York 1850 moved to Northfield in 1855. Had 5 children one was my G Grandfather Wilard Jay Fletcher b:1861 Northfield m: Calista Sommers had 2 boys Clifford and Russel Jay b:1898 Northfield my Grandfather. Looking to find any of his cousins and fill in a lot of the blank spaces and brick walls. Look forward to any replys and hope I can be of some help to others as well.
Valerie ;-)
Added by Valerie Schweers on December 13, 2009 at 5:48pm —
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After two consecutive Beta test runs, FamilySearch has introduced some more major changes to the New FamilySearch program. Anyone, even if you cannot register yet for New FamilySearch, can see the changes. Just click on the News and Updates link from the home screen.
Chief among the many changes is the introduction of the Family Tree interface, long available on the Labs.FamilySearch.org Website. By clicking a Change View button from the familiar Family Pedigree (3 generation) view…
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Added by James Tanner on December 13, 2009 at 4:45pm —
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My daughter lives in Back Bay, Boston. It’s a lovely neighborhood for walking, and my favorite section has always been the Commonwealth Mall. It’s a green oasis in the city, a long avenue divided by a green park dotted with statuary of famous Bostonians. I had never examined these statues up close until recently, when I noticed that all the statues seemed to be literary figures. One of my favorite statues is that of Samuel Eliot Morison.
Morison…
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Added by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on December 12, 2009 at 6:15pm —
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What is her Soule lineage? She was born after the book "Lee Family of Virginia" by Edm. Jennings Lee, Esq., was published listing her older siblings; Charles Carter Lee, of Rocky Mount, N.C., LtCol Robert Henry "Marse" Lee b1890, West Point classs of 1912; and Mrs. Lillian Virgina Woollen Lee. Their youngest sister, Mrs. Lillim Elizabeth "Muttie" Woollen Lee, reared her twenty years younger sister, Ruby Valerie "Tee" Woollen (Miller), b1885, my grandmotherr. Lillian's Husband was book salesman…
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Added by James Alfred Locke Miller Jr. on December 12, 2009 at 1:38am —
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Interesting details discovered during the process of indexing the British 1881 Census. (Found in the Ensign magazine of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, March 1996, p. 58.)
* The wife, mother, and daughter of James Christmas were all named Mary Christmas
* Frank Guest was listed as a visitor
* Harriet Goodhand was listed as a domestic servant
* The families of William Lovegrove, Henry Dearlove, and William Darling all lived on the same…
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Added by Leeann Boone on December 11, 2009 at 7:45pm —
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