Over the past year, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has made some grand changes to the classic FamilySearch site located at the following website, www.familysearch.org.
The website has many many courses to teach you how to do research on your own ancestors from the comfort of your own home. When you are on the home page of FamilySearch, click on the LEARN tab at the top. You have three different areas of learning that you can spend hours on; Research Wiki, Resource Courses and Get Started.
If you click on Resources Course, you will be able to view over 140 online videos that have been divided by categories. Whether you are a beginner in family history research or a long time researcher, you will find valuable information. Some of the classes include everything from Beginning Genealogy: 5 Minutes Genealogy, to Russian History, Geography, Records, and Resources and everything in between. There are even several lessons in Spanish. I would take the time to see what is available and to check back often as additional resources are being added all the time. Keep an eye on the category list on the right side of the page so you can jump to a category for quick navigation. This page will also tell you how long each video is so you can plan you time around your busy schedule. The best part of the video series is that once you start viewing the video of the presenter, you will also view the slide show pesentation which is similar to a PowerPoint Presentation to the right. Such a huge amount of information and all of this is provided free of charge and not just to LDS Church members, but to the community as well.
FamilySearch is on Facebook and YouTube. Both can be found at www.facebook.com/familysearch and www.youtube.com/familysearch. Both sites will give you additional nuggets of information to keep you research techniques fresh and up to date.
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Friday, November 18, 2011
Birth Announcements in Newspapers
The following article was written by Stacie Duce for the Deseret News and appeared on Thursday, November 17, 2011.
I've been working on a research project that's led me to wander through newspaper archives from the 1920s. The front page articles and writing styles have distracted more than I care to admit and I've found a few things our modern newspapers are tragically missing-birth announcements.
As important as our current obituaries, in the past, birth announcements received just as much ink. The birth of babies of prominent and regular families alike were celebrated with hundreds of words, or sometimes, just a few endearing ones.
Today, we are hard pressed to find birth announcements at all. Parents at our local hospital can chose whether or not to have their baby's birth announcement in the paper and many are declining for the sake of privacy, I assume. One OB nurse I interviewed estimated that only one in five new mothers are choosing to have the vitals of their baby submitted to our hometown paper. Even then, if printed, the information is not archived online.
So for the sake of our posterity and those invested in family history, genealogy or any research project, let's up the importance of publishing and digitally archiving birth announcements along with obituaries and everthing else on the front page on a newspaper.
Another revelation I've had while researching this year is the importance of safe, yet accessible space for historical documents and especially personal histories that memorialize history like no other.
Last summer, I visited several small town libraries in Utah and was impressed to find a treasure trove of personal histories written by hand, photocopied in rudimentary books or professionally bound like novels that were all protected with white gloves and glass walls. Most volumes seemed to be a retirement project or holiday gift to extended family with an extra copy donated to the local library. Even as an outsider, history came alive in colorful fashion when written by the hand of one who lived it.
Recently, a friend let me borrow an original typewritten family history where one of seven sisters with writing talents wrote 200 pages on her family's adventures. Each long chapter was from the perspective of each sibling.
Her writing was vivid enough that I could imagine the details of baby births, house burnings, road building, weekend dances and marriage ceremonies from the early 1900s. Her tales were more telling than any textbook and helped me appreciate the past and present. I wish the stories were available to others, especially school age children. But sady, the solitary version of the book with duct tape as binding sits gathering dust on my friend's shelf.
So, here are a few suggestions for those needing a project while the snow flies:
Record your family's history or create an electronic copy of one previously written.
Put the text on a family website or blog so that the stories will be digitally accessible. (Your middle school aged granddaughter can help you with that, if you have one.)Submit a copy of your work to your local library, the LDS Church's Family History Library, museum or to the Daughter's of Utah Pioneers or Sons of Utah Pioneers.
Do the same with photographs. Buy a scanner for Christmas and have techno-savvy relatives help you scan family photos and publish them online. Or if you don't know what to do with family photographs of local importance, label each one the best you can and donate them to a local organization with safe storage.
I've been working on a research project that's led me to wander through newspaper archives from the 1920s. The front page articles and writing styles have distracted more than I care to admit and I've found a few things our modern newspapers are tragically missing-birth announcements.
As important as our current obituaries, in the past, birth announcements received just as much ink. The birth of babies of prominent and regular families alike were celebrated with hundreds of words, or sometimes, just a few endearing ones.
Today, we are hard pressed to find birth announcements at all. Parents at our local hospital can chose whether or not to have their baby's birth announcement in the paper and many are declining for the sake of privacy, I assume. One OB nurse I interviewed estimated that only one in five new mothers are choosing to have the vitals of their baby submitted to our hometown paper. Even then, if printed, the information is not archived online.
So for the sake of our posterity and those invested in family history, genealogy or any research project, let's up the importance of publishing and digitally archiving birth announcements along with obituaries and everthing else on the front page on a newspaper.
Another revelation I've had while researching this year is the importance of safe, yet accessible space for historical documents and especially personal histories that memorialize history like no other.
Last summer, I visited several small town libraries in Utah and was impressed to find a treasure trove of personal histories written by hand, photocopied in rudimentary books or professionally bound like novels that were all protected with white gloves and glass walls. Most volumes seemed to be a retirement project or holiday gift to extended family with an extra copy donated to the local library. Even as an outsider, history came alive in colorful fashion when written by the hand of one who lived it.
Recently, a friend let me borrow an original typewritten family history where one of seven sisters with writing talents wrote 200 pages on her family's adventures. Each long chapter was from the perspective of each sibling.
Her writing was vivid enough that I could imagine the details of baby births, house burnings, road building, weekend dances and marriage ceremonies from the early 1900s. Her tales were more telling than any textbook and helped me appreciate the past and present. I wish the stories were available to others, especially school age children. But sady, the solitary version of the book with duct tape as binding sits gathering dust on my friend's shelf.
So, here are a few suggestions for those needing a project while the snow flies:
Record your family's history or create an electronic copy of one previously written.
Put the text on a family website or blog so that the stories will be digitally accessible. (Your middle school aged granddaughter can help you with that, if you have one.)Submit a copy of your work to your local library, the LDS Church's Family History Library, museum or to the Daughter's of Utah Pioneers or Sons of Utah Pioneers.
Do the same with photographs. Buy a scanner for Christmas and have techno-savvy relatives help you scan family photos and publish them online. Or if you don't know what to do with family photographs of local importance, label each one the best you can and donate them to a local organization with safe storage.
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Family History Seminar Nov 19th in Riverton
Thousands of local moviegoers have been moved to tears while watching the popular movie 17 Miracles. At this month's Saturday Seminar series at the Riverton FamilySearch Library, keynote speaker and filmmaker T.C. Christensen will share his unique prospectives gleaned from writing, directing, and filming the movie. In his presentation, "17 Miracles in Retrospect," T. C. will share the story of the Willie and Martin handcart companies, their struggles, and the miracles they witnessed as they crossed the plains.
T.C. Christensen has also made several films about the Prophet Joseph Smith. Among these are Joseph Smith: Prophet at the Restoration and Emma Smith: My Story. He also made A Giant Among Men on the life of President Gordon B Hinckley. Other LDS films include Testaments and The Work and the Glory.
T. C has also been involved in many feature films including Rigoletto and Forever Strong as well as IMAX films including Lewis and Clark for National Geographic and Roving Mars for Disney. His short films include The Touch of the Master's Hand, The Pump, Only a Stonecutter, and The John Tanner Story.
Following the 9:00 a.m. keynote presentation, there will be two blocks of four classes that will cover topics of interest to both beginning and advanced family history enthusiasts.
Classes to be held from 10:00 a.m. are:
Searching for Ancestors Step by Step: FamilySearch Wiki Goldmine"-Sheri Lynn Lemon
"Sharing Time: Increasing Productivity on the New FamilySearch Website"-Andrea Schnakenburg
"Archives.com: A Simple Tool for Online Genealogy Rewsearch"Craig Bullough
"Families and the War between the States: Getting to Know Your Civil War Era Ancestors"-Yvonne Curry
The classes available from 11:00 a.m. to noon are:
"Certified Genealogy Software that Makes New Familysearch Easier"-Janet Hovorka
"Hansel and Gretel: Finding and Following Our German Ancestors' Trail Home"-Tammy Stansfield
"The Tired, the Poor, the Huddled Masses, and the Wretched Refuse: U.S. Immigration from 1820 to 1854"-Beth Taylor
"Introduction to legacy 7.5 Tree maker and Legacy Family Search, Part 2"-Carl Holland
Registration is not required for this free seminar. The Riverton FamilySearch Library is located in the LDS Riverton Office Building at 3740 Market Center Drive. The facility is near the intersection of Bangerter Highway and 13400 South, just east of The Home Depot.
T.C. Christensen has also made several films about the Prophet Joseph Smith. Among these are Joseph Smith: Prophet at the Restoration and Emma Smith: My Story. He also made A Giant Among Men on the life of President Gordon B Hinckley. Other LDS films include Testaments and The Work and the Glory.
T. C has also been involved in many feature films including Rigoletto and Forever Strong as well as IMAX films including Lewis and Clark for National Geographic and Roving Mars for Disney. His short films include The Touch of the Master's Hand, The Pump, Only a Stonecutter, and The John Tanner Story.
Following the 9:00 a.m. keynote presentation, there will be two blocks of four classes that will cover topics of interest to both beginning and advanced family history enthusiasts.
Classes to be held from 10:00 a.m. are:
Searching for Ancestors Step by Step: FamilySearch Wiki Goldmine"-Sheri Lynn Lemon
"Sharing Time: Increasing Productivity on the New FamilySearch Website"-Andrea Schnakenburg
"Archives.com: A Simple Tool for Online Genealogy Rewsearch"Craig Bullough
"Families and the War between the States: Getting to Know Your Civil War Era Ancestors"-Yvonne Curry
The classes available from 11:00 a.m. to noon are:
"Certified Genealogy Software that Makes New Familysearch Easier"-Janet Hovorka
"Hansel and Gretel: Finding and Following Our German Ancestors' Trail Home"-Tammy Stansfield
"The Tired, the Poor, the Huddled Masses, and the Wretched Refuse: U.S. Immigration from 1820 to 1854"-Beth Taylor
"Introduction to legacy 7.5 Tree maker and Legacy Family Search, Part 2"-Carl Holland
Registration is not required for this free seminar. The Riverton FamilySearch Library is located in the LDS Riverton Office Building at 3740 Market Center Drive. The facility is near the intersection of Bangerter Highway and 13400 South, just east of The Home Depot.
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