Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Heritage Hunting Chat and Assignment for June 30, 2009

Hi to all of you Heritage Hunters!!

Tonight at our chat we will talking about Family Group Sheet and how to use them in you research. Chat is at 9:00 pm Eastern Time or 6:00 pm Pacific Time in the Heritage Scrap Chat Room. Come join in the fun!

Your assignment this week will be to complete a Family Group Sheet for at least one member of your Pedigree Chart. You may then scrap it (digitally or with paper) or otherwise decorate it, or you may photograph your completed chart, and upload it to the Heritage Hunting Gallery. Anyone using at least 50% of their materials from the Heritage Scrap Shoppe will be entered into the random drawing for a prize from our shoppe to be announced later in the week. You may upload as many FGS as you wish to share with us. Each eligible layout will be entered into the random drawing.

There are already a few examples in the gallery to get you started:

Family Group Pages










FGS-George Grover Family Pictures












FGS-George Grover Family Data












FGS-Will Egner Family





Photos and personal data omitted
because family members are still living.





FGS-Dick Reyome Family




Photos and personal data omitted
because family members are still living.






There are many excellent kits in the Heritage Scrap Shoppe to help you present your FGSs including:

Heritage Chest, Vol 4 - Family Ties by Jean Daugherty Designs



Schmitt Family Genealogy - Kit by Cari Lopez


Family Word Art by Victorian Rose Designs



Good luck with your research this week. Be sure to share any big breakthroughs with us in this thread and post links to all of your FGSs!

Family Group Sheets

Ok, now you have your pedigree chart started with yourself, your folks, maybe some grandparents or even great-grandparents. Sometimes you may want to know more about the families to which these ancestors belonged. Did they have siblings? Who were their children and spouses? It may even become a necessary part of your research to know this type of information. You might be able to find lots of info about 3 or 4 members of a family but not your exact ancestor. Finding more information on your ancestor’s childhood family or their own family may lead you indirectly to more info about your ancestor.

There are many, many forms used to track this information and many places on the internet to find printable copies of these forms for free. The following sites offer free forms:

Family Search dot org

Ancestry dot com

ABC Genealogy dot com

Notable Kin dot org

If you use some kind of genealogy software like Roots Magic, Family Tree Maker, or Legacy, etc., you can print Family Group Sheets (FGS) from your program. Either select a family to print with the details that you have already found and documented, or select to print a blank form to use with a new family group.

Use the Family Group Sheet to record details about each member of a family. Use one sheet per husband/wife pairing. If a person has remarried, use another sheet for their ‘second’ family. There is a place to record other spouses so that you have a built in cross-reference. Whenever using the FGS, be sure that you make note of the source of each and every detail that you have found so that you can find the source again in the future if you need to verify it or recheck other facts concerning your discovery.

Before starting your search on the internet, be sure that you have exhausted every source available to you within your own family. This is taken from a genealogy tutorial written by ForgetMeNots (Theresa) from Heritage Scrap dot com:

Before you spend hours on the Internet or pack a bag for Salt Lake City to spend time in the genealogy library, look around your home and ask family members. We all use vital records and other legal forms in our daily lives. Birth Certificates are necessary for everything from participating in Little League championships to getting driver’s licenses. Perhaps you have a box in the attic or a stash of papers in the bottom desk drawer. Look at the back of photographs to see what is written. Leaf through a family Bible to look for handwritten information as well as memorial cards, newspaper clippings, obituaries and notes. Perhaps there are military discharge papers, old tax records or if you are really blessed, family diaries and scrapbooks!
All of these items can give you clues to solve the mysteries in your family tree. While it might not tell you what village Grandpa came from in the old country, it might tell you that he lived in Chicago in 1925, so you will need to look for immigration prior to that time. I found a wonderful checklist provided by Brigham Young University here:
http://www.byub.org/ancestors/charts/oldpdf/checklist1.pdf


Many times you will need to go back to your family or a source document that you have already obtained to verify something else that you have found or to resolve conflicting information. Having your family group sheet as complete as possible before you begin searching on the internet, at a courthouse or library, or with another family member will make your search much easier and more organized. You will easily see what information you are missing and what areas of research you should concentrate your efforts.

While you are researching from the internet or other repository with many sources available, it might be easier to ‘color code’ your research. No matter how hard you try, you will oftentimes stray from your original quest! You will find your way back eventually but remember to still document anything found during your wanderings. If you use a different colored pen or pencil per source, your FGS will remain much neater and more organized until you can enter the information into your official database or filing system. Use a key on the back of your sheet to show each and every source you have searched. Use the same color pen or pencil when writing facts onto your FGS from that source. Be sure to include all information necessary to completely describe your source. If it is a book or magazine, you may want to photocopy the title page or cover to get a full description.

Wherever or however you do your research, you will most likely have to revisit your sources several times. Invariably, the source that is most necessary will be the one you have slighted in its description! Again, let’s turn to Theresa’s wonderful tutorial to see what she has to say about what we’ve gone over so far:

* Document, Document, Document! Make sure you write down where you find every piece of information. Also remember to document where you have looked without success, so that you won’t have to look there again.
* Don’t wait to get a computer program for your genealogy. Using one from the start helps you stay organized.
* Get your family members talking. What they say may not fit in now, but it may provide a key for the future.
* Ask family members to tell you about the oldest person of the family they knew in their life time. (e.g. Did they know their great grandparent? If so what can they tell you about them. First hand knowledge is wonderful!)
* Keep some samples of personal handwriting. Even just a signature is a nice personal touch for our collections. It is wonderful to add to a scrapbook page.
* You can’t find everything about your family on the Internet. Get out there and talk to real live people and if you can travel to see gravesites and communities and look in books that have not been made electronically available.
* Keep a running record of your activities so that you don’t backtrack and waste time.
This tutorial is by no means meant to be an exhaustive list. Genealogy is a HUGE subject. The further you get in the more there is to know. But don’t worry, it’s not painful, but rather quite fun. I hope you have found this helpful. Enjoy climbing your family tree!

Thanks so much to ForgetMeNots (Theresa) of Heritage Scrap dot com for your valuable input through your tutorial!

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Fishing at Uncle Pat's Pond

Oh those were the days!! The kids were little and actually listened to us! Mike and I loved to have family days with them and they still enjoyed spending time with us! LOL A lot of times we would go to the zoo or a festival or somewhere, but a lot of times we just hung out together, maybe going to the park or yard-saling or taking a ride. One of our favorite things to do was to go to Uncle Pat's Pond.


Mike's brother, Pat, lived out in Danbury. A ways behind his house was this wonderful pond and we would go back there quite often to fish and have picnics. It didn't actually *belong* to Pat but we always called it Uncle Pat's Pond. That's where Phillip learned to fish from his dad. Lisa and I were little nature girls so we would hike around looking for things to put in Lisa's *nature museum* she had at home on the bookcase. We would take food and pop, and just have fun the whole day long! The boys always caught lots of fish - I don't know if someone stocked that pond or if they just always had good luck! Sometimes Grampa Jim would stop by while we were there or maybe one of the uncles - it was a popular place with the Ashton family!

Those were also the days that Lisa insisted on wearing dresses always! She just plain refused to wear shorts or jeans or pants! She would get all dressed up nice and girly in her dress with cute flowers or bows in her hair, maybe a touch of blush on her cheeks for her make-up, and happily skip off outside to find some bugs! She was such a tomboy. She just HAD to keep up with her big brother. If he played baseball, she wanted to play; if he rode his bike, she rode hers; if he looked for frogs, she wanted to go with him! She was his shadow. At least until her Daddy got home from work. Then she was all up in his face and following him around. He would go outside to sand something or stain or some other woodworking project, there she was too. The only thing she wouldn't do was to lay on the couch and watch TV like he would sometimes. Then it was back to following Phillip!

Of course, we had our *girl days* too - days that we would get Grama and go shopping or get our hair done or do some crafts. She liked to do all that too. She was just such a well-rounded little girl! She could do about anything and enjoy it, along with enjoying who she was with doing it!

She still is the same sweet girl! But now she does wear jeans, ALL the time now, rarely wearing a dress or even dress pants. She still likes to ride bikes and do things outside but she has stopped catching bugs pretty much. Although, she did catch a turtle for Jake a few weeks ago. The girly-ness is still there too. She is forever doing something with her hair - I'm surprised its not fried and looking like straw, but its not. She has it blonde with a few patches of light pink now. It looks nice. I think I liked it best when she had it dark blonde/light brown with a little bit of the burgandy on the underside. She had a few blonder streaks in it then too and it was quite long.

Well, anyway, I really started to make this layout to use Victorian Rose's wonderful fishing kit again but it just got me into a *remembering* mood and y'all are the ones who have to hear about it now! LOL Hope you enjoy it!

Friday, June 26, 2009

Another Internet Research Tip

I forgot to mention a really handy internet tool - the list of links GROUPS!

I am in a few groups and on mailing lists that do nothing but collect hot, new links in the fields of history, genealogy, and heritage! These come right to my inbox each day. Maybe a lot of people don't like them because they contain a lot of stuff not pertinent to everyone, but every once in a while you find something ginormous!!

That's how I found out about the new pilot site at LDS where you can get FREE Ohio death certificate images. That was a HUGE one for me! Also found this today - I don't have any West Virginia Civil War ancestors that I know about right now - but this could be a gold mine for some people:

Today at FreeSurnameSearch.com

* Featured Database :

- Unclaimed Civil War Medals.
In 1866, the state of West Virginia authorized the
minting of over 26,000 medals to honor its Union Civil
War soldiers. Today, over 4,000 medals remain unclaimed.
In order to claim an ancestor's medal, a claimant must
submit his or her line of descent from the veteran along
with documentation to support this line of descent.

Go to:
FreeSurnameSearch
or
West Virginia Civil War Medals

Some of the groups/mailing lists I'm on - although there are tons more! - are:
Candyman Genealogy List
Surname Search Daily

There are plenty of others too! Just go to your favorite *group* site, Yahoo, Google, MSN, etc., and search for genealogy, history, ancestors, or some such term. Most are free and fun!

This Day in History, June 26

Just some fun little tidbits!!

On June 26th, 1819, the bicycle was patented.

In 1900, Dr. Walter Reed and his medical team began a successful campaign to wipe out yellow fever in the Panama Canal Zone.

In 1939, film censors approved "Gone With The Wind" but fined Producer David O. Selznick $5,000 for objectionable language in Rhett Butler's famous closing line to Scarlett O'Hara: "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn."

In 1945, the U.N. Charter was signed by representatives of 50 nations.

Also in 1945, the FCC began development of commercial television by allocating airwaves for 13 TV stations.

In 1959, U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower and Britain's Queen Elizabeth II formally opened the St. Lawrence Seaway in Canada.

In 1974, the bar code, allowing for the electronic scanning of prices, was used for the first time on a pack of gum at a supermarket in Troy, Ohio.

In 2000, two rival groups of scientists announced they had deciphered the genetic code, the human genome.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Designer Call at Heritage Scrap


For more information, please click the ad above
to go to the Designer Guidelines at Heritage Scrap.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

The History of a Decoy Fish

From Forest & Stream, March 24, 1892:

Did you ever fish through the ice with a decoy Fish? I do not mean as the Indians do, down on your knees on the edge of a hold in the ice with your nose within a few inches of the water and three or four thicknesses of an old mackinaw blanket over you to shut out the light, and then in that position play the fish with one hand and hold the gaff in the other until you get so stiff and cold that when you want to gaff a fish you can hardly use a muscle; but rather with a well constructed fish box and a spring spear such as were often used thirty or forty year ago before their use was generally prohibited? If not, you have missed an experience not only charming in itself, but intensely instructive as to the habits of fish. Let me give you a little experience of my own in the days "long gone by."

During the fall of 1856 and early winter following, I happened to be in Fon-du-Lac, Wis., and at that time there were many Indians still living in the neighborhood. The lakes and ponds abounded in pike and perch, and during every winter the Indians were constantly fishing through the ice with their decoy fishes and gaffs in the manner described above. These decoys were whittled out of a pine stick, so as to resemble in shape a fish about six or seven inches in length; the wood was then stained a dark color, a few places were then scraped or chipped so as to give the fish a mottled appearance, a couple of pieces of tin stuck in each side answered for fins, and a grove was made in the fore part of the belly and filled with lead, which was kept bright. With a string in the head the fish could be jerked to the surface of the water and the lead would carry it down head first when the string was slackened, and so a very natural motion could be given to it. What was most remarkable was the fact that the less the decoy fish resembled a real one within reasonable bounds of course, the more successful it seemed to be.

Some two or three years previously an old Indian had whittled out a fish which soon had the reputation of being the most killing and successful decoy ever made in that vicinity, so successful, in fact, that for a long time he refused to sell it on any terms, but at last a friends of mine through the offer of a considerable sum, tempted its owner to part with it and became its possessor. When the Legislature of Wisconsin soon after prohibited the use of such fish, it was sent to me as a souvenir of my trip. The record of one day’s sport will show the killing qualities of this fish. On one morning in December 1856, I visited with a companion, Lake Horicon, a lake some fifteen miles long situated a few miles distant, for a day’s sport at catching pike. We cut a hole in the ice nearly four feet in diameter, and over it placed our fishing box with the open side downs. This box was 4 ft. square, lined with heavy paper to exclude the light; we entered through a door in the side which was fastened with an inside button and sat opposite each other, each resting his feet on the ends of the narrow boat occupied by the other; our spring spear had a handle some 15 ft, in length which passed through a hold in the center of the top of the box. The decoy fish was played with the left hand and the spear held in the right. The water was about 10 ft. deep, and the light shone so clearly through the ice that everything in the water, even to the smallest fish, could be seen with perfect distinctness.

In four hours we took twenty-one pike, which weighed a little over 70 lbs., and we took every pike that came within sight except one small one. As I sat looking under the ice I saw a large pike chasing a small one, which darted across the hold, but as soon as his pursuer saw the decoy fish it ceased the chase and turned around and seized it with such force that he came partly out of the water right between our feet, and I speared him in the head above the water with the decoy fish in his mouth. His weight was over 5 lbs.

During all this time two Indians were fishing for pike only a few feet distant and on equally good grounds, and together they took just two fish, their decoys failing to attract the fish.

The box, which to the fish appeared like a dark spot on the ice, afforded an elegant opportunity to observe the habits of the pike in taking its food. Once on this day a large pike missed the decoy and he came with such force that he went perhaps 20 ft. beyond us, but he turned and came back slowly near the bottom and stopped right under the decoy fish and then began to rise very slowly toward it, but he was speared in deep water before he had a chance to make a second rush. Usually, however, the fish would approach cautiously until near the decoy and then make a sudden dash for it.

On Lake Winnebago, where we usually had good success, my companion and I both took yellow perch quite freely and they manifested none of the caution of the pike, but the black bass which abounded in that lake never came near enough to be taken; curiosity sometimes led very large ones to approach within sight, but they always kept close to the bottom and soon slowly swam away.

I have never been able to reconcile the results of my fishing with this decoy fish with the theory of may anglers for trout, that the more closely we can imitate the flies which then abound upon a stream or lake, the more sure we will be of sport, as in my experience the reverse is very often the case.

I have often observed that when I have been using a certain fly with success, the same fly has suddenly made its appearance in large numbers on the water, and that immediately my sport almost wholly cased for the simple reason that my fly then constituted but one of say 10,000 of the same kind; and I, therefore, had but one chance in 10,000 that mine would be taken, which was, of course, relatively diminished by the artificial character of the fly. May it not be so with a decoy fish or artificial minnow? The closer the imitation the more we put it in competition with the natural fish, which if we use one which will attract although it is different from the fish inhabiting the same waters, may it not prove to be very successful?

With this article I send to you for your inspection this old relic of past sport, although I fear it will sorely test your faith in the veracity of your correspondent.

V. C. – Poughkeepsie, N. Y., March 9, 1892.

*******************************************

If you have stories like the above fishing story in your family's history, then Victorian Rose Designs has just the thing for you!! And!! It's on sale for $2.98 exclusively at Heritage Scrap!! Now, no pushing and shoving in the store, ladies - please!! There is plenty for everyone!! ;)

Gone Fishing Mini Kit by Victorian Rose Designs

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Heritage Hunting Chat at Heritage Scrap Tonight!!

Hello fellow scrappers and family historians!!

Please come to the Heritage Hunting Chat tonight at Heritage Scrap at 9:00 pm Eastern time and 6:00 pm Pacific time! We will be discussing Internet Research Tips and Tricks and announcing the winner from last week's challenge! Everyone is welcome! Anyone can join in at any time!

The challenge for the upcoming week is to document through a scrapbook page (digital or paper) or another form of craft project, a special 'internet cousin' or other contact that you've made through the internet, or to use something you have found through an internet contact. Please post your digital layout or photo of your project in the Heritage Hunting Project gallery at Heritage Scrap before the chat next Tuesday, June 30. If at least 50% of your project uses products from the Heritage Scrap Shoppe, you will be entered into the drawing for a special prize to be announced later in the week.


Internet Research Tips and Tricks

Last week we discussed some of the pitfalls of using the internet in our family history research. This week will look at some of the more helpful ways to use online resources.

Beginning Genealogy Sites

Even though you may be long past the ‘beginning’ stages of your research, the beginner’s sites are constantly updated with new techniques, helps, and hints. Professional genealogists and historians usually provide these sites so every piece of information available is valuable at any stage of your search. Rechecking sites like these will sometimes get you off of a ‘plateau’ or give you help overcoming a ‘brick wall’. Some examples of these sites are:


Dear Myrtle


Allen County Public Library
About.com: Genealogy
RootsWeb Guide to Tracing Family Trees

Lists of Links

Some sites don’t give you any actual ‘data’ to add to your tree but instead focus on giving you resources in which to find data. Sometimes browsing through these sites may give you a clue as to where to look for something that you can’t quite pinpoint through regular search engines. These types of sites will send you in new directions in finding basic information about your ancestors but also help you find information to enhance the basic data with additional historical, local, or general background stories. Some examples of these sites are:

Cyndi’s List
Free Genealogy Links
A Barrel of Genealogy Links
The Olden Times Genealogy & Local History

Mailing Lists and Message Boards

The basic difference between these two tools is the way you query and receive messages. When you join a mailing list, you will receive a copy of every email sent to the list thus seeing each query and response. You can also send email through the list to ask your questions or offer your input. A message board is a site on the net where you can post your query and browse through other queries and responses. Many times the two are connected so that you will receive an email each time something is posted to the corresponding message board.

Mailing lists and message boards are not only good for finding specific information about specific ancestors, but also for making valuable contact with other researchers. By posting a query about a particular family line or a certain person in your tree, you may get responses from one or more other researchers who are involved with the same person or family. Many, many ‘internet cousins’, family groups and even friendships develop from these online meetings. Information, family legends and stories, and even photos that are not available anywhere else in the world to you may become available through such contacts.

RootsWeb.com is by far the most extensive and widely used site for mailing lists and message boards. They are available per surname, per location (from international country down to the county or village level), and per specialty (religious denomination, wars, type of data, etc.). Each board and list is moderated and will not allow any attachments so they are usually very safe and secure. Most lists and corresponding boards are linked so that you can get info from both right to your email account. And, RootsWeb provides safe ways of contacting other posters ‘off-list’ for the exchange of private information.

Other sites with mailing lists and/or message boards include:

My Heritage
Genealogy.com
Ancestry.com
Genealogy Place


Next week and in the weeks to follow, we will be looking at specific types of information and sources such as birth records, census records, and death records. We will also explore new and creative ways to display such info in our scrapbooks and craft projects.

(PS - Dear Myrtle, Cyndi's List and RootsWeb logos are copyright images used here only for reference to their respective sites.)

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Wonderful Genealogical/Historical Connection Found on the Internet

As we've been studying internet genealogy research this week, we've been sharing some wonderful discoveries we've found because of our research on the net. The internet is such a wonderful tool for family historians, especially in helping us research ancestors from other states, provinces, or countries as well as those closer to home. It also helps tremendously in our quest to tie our ancestors into the historical aspect of our heritage as shown in this layout by Laura Lou:


Internet Discovery

The journaling reads: "Through an ancestry site I located my grandfather’s draft registration from 1917. His employer was listed as “Detroit Cornice and Slate”. He was a roofer. A check on the Internet turned up a website for that company...still in business. I lifted a couple of photos from their history page and sent an inquiry to the address listed on another page. Several months later I received an email from the present owner, a grandson of the original for whom my grandfather worked. The present owner is “into” genealogy and offered to scan some of the pages from the old ledgers in my grandfather’s own handwriting. Grandfather had hired in as a comptroller and soon was a partner.
Wednesday, October 12, 1916, Grandfather had worked 9 hours a day for 7 days that week and took home the TOP amount of money, $58.33 and paid $2.00 for insurance."

Names, dates, and places alone don't let us *know* our ancestors. Great finds like this bring them to life for us! Laura Lou can see her grandfather's precise handwriting, know where he spent countless hours of his life, and begin to get a better idea of the kind of man he was through this discovery. She can imagine him coming home after a long day and imagine what he may have been thinking or feeling. She can even take it further and look at some of the newspapers of the times to see what he would come home to read in the evenings - the challenges facing our nation and our ordinary families in those days. She can look at the advertising in those newspapers to see what his $58 per week would buy him and his family, how they may have lived, and what hurdles they needed to overcome.

Even if you cannot find a single clue to a name or date for your ancestral tree, the internet offers plenty in showing you the historical setting in which your ancestors lived. It can even offer photos, sketches or drawings to use in your telling of the stories of your earlier family members. Stretch out through the world wide web and really get to know those whose blood flows in your own veins!

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Heritage Hunting Assignment and Posting Prize Announcement

This week your assignment, (if you choose to participate!), is to create a layout or craft project using some sort of information that you found on the internet regarding one of your ancestors. This is a very broad field so the projects should be nice and varied! Post your layout or a picture of your craft project in the Heritage Hunting Gallery by midnight (any of the time zones will work!) next Monday, the 22nd and a link to the posting in the Heritage Hunting - Week 3 forum thread. If you have used 50% or more Heritage Scrap Shoppe products, you will be in the random drawing on Tuesday, June 23 shortly before the next chat for the beautiful

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Issues of Internet Genealogical Research

I'm a little last minute on this! Sorry! Darn real life always has its own mind! Anyway, we will be talking about internet genealogy tonight at the Heritage Hunting chat at Heritage Scrap.

Now that you have your pedigree chart started and have talked to granny and other members of your family, you are ready to start *looking* for more info. In steps the internet!!

The internet is a remarkable tool that most people feel they cannot live without anymore - I tend to agree! But it is not the only tool that genealogists have to use. In fact, you probably cannot find everything you want to know about your ancestors solely on the internet. However, you can learn a great deal.

Nowadays, you can get many *source* documents directly on the net. Many times you don't need to write to courthouses and certain offices and departments to obtain these documents - and then wait forever. You can view scans of these documents online in many cases. Some are even high enough resolution that you can save and print the documents for your files. Source documents are usually more reliable than secondary documents like census records, newspaper articles, etc. because they are *more official* and were recorded closer to the time the event actually happened. Many people were and still are much more truthful with official documents than say a census taker - a few years can be shaved from a person's age when its not quite so easy or necessary to verify.

Even when you obtain these *source* documents, you must use them as guides. They do not contain incorruptible, totally accurate information in some cases. Mistakes are made everyday by everyone. Sometimes informants are mistaken, forgetful, or even outright deceitful with the information given. Sometimes information is *lost in the translation* - especially immigration information. The recorder may not understand the immigrant, may not know how to spell the names or places, or may change things on purpose to make things easier for Americans to say and spell. Many immigrants have had their names changed at Ellis Island! Don't restrict your searches to spellings you are already familiar with in your family. This is where the soundex system comes in handy! Even among siblings, surnames were changed slightly. I have six Myerholtz siblings with six versions of spelling - some quite a bit different; Myerholtz, Mireholts, Meyerholts, and so forth, one even shortened to Meyers.

The same goes for the census records; in fact, census records are notorious for containing misinformation. You can have 5 census records for the same person, each 10 years apart, and perhaps have 5 different sets of the same information. Ages may change by more or less than the 10 years between census records. Places of birth often change. Even children's names change as they grow up, going from a pet name or middle name to a more adult version.

One really big pitfall with internet genealogy is the fraudulent or copied family genealogies. I've found different databases on places like Rootsweb's World Connect that contain nearly a half million records! These types of databases are often the product of the owner canvasing for *connecting* databases and adding another person's whole database based on one marriage or connection with their own. Doing this several times over soon results in these huge databases of families that may not all be related as portrayed. You can sometimes get a lot of information from these types of databases as long as you use them as CLUES and not info written in stone. You would still want to verify this info with other sources. There are even sites that charge you to tie your ancestors into European royalty and such. Don't fall for it!

Another huge mistake made my newbies and experienced researchers alike is the lack of complete source documentation. You need to be able to go back to the exact place where you obtained some piece of information. As you get more and more information, you may want to go back and refresh some piece of info or find related info after something else has been found. With the internet being so ever-changing, you might want to note as many web addresses and other information as you can to be able to get back to your source. Record all known sources if the web site has gotten the information from somewhere else. Many sites close, are withdrawn, or otherwise disappear from the net and you have no idea where or how to confirm your information.

These are just a few of the issues dealing with internet research. I'm sure we will discover many more in our chat tonight. Just always keep in mind that even though the internet is an extremely valuable source of much information, that information comes from people with their own issues.

I'll be back tomorrow with a chat summary and some links to help you with your internet research. In the meantime, come to the Heritage Scrap chat room this evening at 9:00 p.m. Eastern Time for some fun and discussion of this topic!

Friday, June 12, 2009

*Signing* Your Layouts

I posted this in the Oral History thread at Heritage Scrap but thought it was worth repeating here also:

One thing that we should have talked about but I forgot this week, is *signing* your layouts or journaling. I remembered when I saw Jan's lovely series of three ancestors. She put her name and date at the end of the journaling. We all know right now who made the layouts, why, what they mean, and so forth. But it won't be long until that info is not known any longer.

Also, when doing a layout for a scrapping site, I find myself addressing my journaling to the scrapping community. I'll say something like *My daughter playing with her high school band*. How will that sound in the future to people who don't know me? They won't know who the person is that is referred to by "My" and they won't know who "My daughter" is either. And what high school is it?? We need to remember that our layouts will not always be in the place that we think they will reside forever. They may get separated from an album or even get away from the family of the subject of the layout. We need to keep that all in mind while doing the layout. I often sign my journaling with my name and date.

I realize that we don't often do that when posting to a public internet site because of security reasons. However, when we finish a layout for ourselves or private viewing only, or when we get ready to print the layout, we should make sure that more specific identifying information is included.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Oral History Links

The subject of oral history is so broad and there is so much information available online that you will never lack for resources and help with your own oral history project. These few articles here will probably give you more information than you’ll ever need on the subject! I chose these links also because the sites themselves are excellent resources of much more than just the oral history aspect of our research. You’ll visit them many times throughout your quest.

Oral History Tutorial
Really fantastic online text tutorial. (1) How to Conduct an Oral History (2) The Post Interview Process (3) Accuracy & Reliability Issues, including goals, prep, equipment & more.

Step by Step Guide to Oral History
Full text of guide (c) Judith Moyer 1993 & updated 1999. Four full chapters plus bibliography & oral history links. Broken down very nicely - literally a "step by step" how to guide hosted by the "DoHistory" site (A site that shows you how to piece together the past from the fragments that have survived.)

The Smithsonian Folklife and Oral History Interviewing Guide
Excellent guide complete with glossary and sample questions. Entire text viewable on site. Intro - Interview - Questions - Presenting Findings - Glossary - Bibliography - Resources - Forms - Credits. Can also download PDF file of entire Guide.

Organizing Oral History Information
Free article at Genealogy.com site. Assumes interview has been done and speaks to the "now what" afterwards. Some nice tips and things to think about.

Oral Histories and Family Legends

Everyone has them. Every family from Adam’s family right down through history to your own family, we all have those peculiar little stories that Granny tells or those fancy yarns full of boasting that you can pry out of Grandpa with a few “Pretty pleases”. Some are very close to the truth and some have been handed down and embellished through the repeated tellings. We always called them “stories” or “yarns” but lately, with the surge in genealogy and family history, more and more people are calling them “Oral Histories”.

The art of obtaining an oral history has really changed over the years also. Most family historians are well past the age of hopping on a beloved grandparent’s lap and asking for a story. So now we get our fancy recorders and video recorders, make lists of questions, take all kinds of photos and other memory prompts, and “interview” an older person.

I guess we get the same results but it was so much more fun the old way! But a lot of us are to the point where we wish and wish that we would ever had paid attention to all those old stories. Most of us would give anything just to spend one day with Granny or hear one more story from Gramps. Oh, dear, if only ……

Well, enough of that! We can’t go back but we can plan ahead now. There are things we will probably never get to know now that this one or that one has passed on. The thing we need to do is stop this from happening again and again in the future. Get those stories now and get as many as you can and get them down in writing SOMEWHERE!! Put them in your blog, in your journals, in your family history books; put them down in writing, in slideshows, in video format, any way available to you but get them down SOMEWHERE! Put them in several, separate places also – give them to your siblings, your cousins, your local historical museum or family history center, or your local genealogical society. These things are important and really are much more than just some old stories.

There are hundreds and thousands of articles, commentaries, websites, and so forth dedicated to the whole concept of Oral Histories. There are almost as many ways to obtain the information and preserve it as well as present it to your family and the world. Informal interviews with living family members are oral histories in themselves. When you are just beginning your quest in finding your ancestors, you need to start with your current family and work backwards. You don’t start with Adam and work this way!!! Soon your pedigree chart will be growing and growing, and your genealogy files will be multiplying like no other project you’ve attempted in the past! You will get into the habit of grabbing all sorts of notepads, old envelopes and even napkins to write down some gem from the past that someone throws your way! Your filing system will completely collapse. Your family will start to run the other way when they see you coming. And your brain will start shutting down whenever you get that gleam in your eye!!

In the Heritage Scrap chat on Tuesday, June 09, 2009, we will start discussing how to add to our beginning pedigree charts and family histories by using the techniques of interviewing and obtaining oral histories – both formal and informal. After the chat, I will be posting some links – some general and some more specific – about the art of oral histories. We will also be discussing “Family Legends – Fact or Fiction??” and ways that we can substantiate or dispel the old stories.

We will be interviewing or even just talking to someone on our pedigree chart or to someone about a person on our chart. Then we will journal that story and present it as a scrapbook page or as a written document. Anyone placing their work into the Heritage Scrap Gallery and using more than 50% Heritage Scrap products will be eligible for a prize drawn randomly from all entrants.

In the weeks to follow, we will be honing our interviewing skills along with exploring other ways to get the information we long so to obtain about our elusive but very intriguing ancestors!

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Heritage Scrap Gazette



Hi everyone! Another beautiful, warm, sunny day here in Vacationland! Might be a few light showers later but hey, even God has to do a little cleaning up every now and then! Get all the dust off the trees, wash all the bird do-do off the sidewalks, clean the streets and all the other things to make our earthly home bright and sparkling clean!

So, while God is cleaning away, or whenever you take a break or two, check out the newest edition of the Heritage Scrap Gazette! It is packed full of wonderful sales and beautiful digiscrap kits to make all of your digiscrap or hybrid projects into magnificent masterpieces!!

And thanks to you, Kate, for all your hard work in making the Gazette for us! You're the best!