Saturday, July 20, 2013

PERSI to leave HeritageQuest and go to FIndMyPast but link to Articles

PERSI Finds New Home on FindMyPast.com



Listen with webReader
A few days ago I published an article speculating that PERSI would soon move to one of the FindMyPast sites. That has now been confirmed by the following announcement from Findmypast.com:
Partnership with the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center adds 2.5 million records dating back to 1800

Image002LOS ANGELES (July 19, 2013) – Findmypast.com, an international leader in online family history, today announced a partnership with the Allen County Public Library (ACPL) Genealogy Center to revolutionize the PERiodical Source Index (PERSI), the world’s largest and most widely used subject index for genealogy and local history literature. As part of the partnership, findmypast.com is enhancing PERSI, most notably by linking thousands of individual genealogical periodicals and resources to the index, allowing the original content to be accessed and connected digitally for the first time in the history of PERSI.
Image006During the past 30 years, the ACPL Genealogy Center has created more than 2.5 million searchable records in PERSI, indexing every article from more than 8,000 different periodicals, including magazines, newsletters and journals, according to location, topic, surname, ethnicity and methodology. In the coming months, findmypast.com will launch the most complete version of PERSI online. Once launched, findmypast.com will work in tandem with the Genealogy Center to provide frequent updates to the collection as new entries are added.

PERSI has become an essential tool in helping genealogists and family historians locate valuable information, and this new partnership with findmypast.com will transform PERSI into an even more powerful resource.  Findmypast.com subscribers will be able to search and view digitized images of the articles, allowing unprecedented access to the information contained in these periodicals.

“We are proud to partner with The Genealogy Center of the Allen County Public Library to continue indexing and offering PERSI – an essential tool for genealogical research,” said D. Joshua Taylor, lead genealogist for findmypast.com. “This is an ideal partnership given findmypast.com’s expertise in digitizing records and Allen County Public Library’s continual dedication to adding new records to the index. We look forward to working together to once again revolutionize the way genealogy and local history literature is accessed.”

“Partnering with findmypast.com represents an exciting opportunity to grow PERSI into an extremely relevant twenty-first century discovery tool for genealogists worldwide,” said Curt Witcher, ACPL Genealogy Center manager. “Having the ability to provide much more frequent updates and link index entries to serial issues is a real game-changer, not only for genealogists and local historians but also for the librarians and archivists who serve them.”

The future of online search through this partnership aligns with findmypast.com’s Society Data Initiative, a joint project between the Federation of Genealogical Societies and findmypast.com to preserve, digitize and provide access to the rich resources created by family history, genealogical and historical societies over many decades.

PERSI, and each periodical to be linked over time, will be available across all international findmypast sites, to personal subscribers and library users.

Findmypast.com’s expertise at digitizing historical records and uniting communities provides the tools to help people connect with their past.

To learn more about findmypast.com or to get started on your own family history:

About findmypast.com
Findmypast.com, owned by brightsolid, provides complete and relevant records for online family history and genealogy research. Findmypast members worldwide share our passion, and rely on our expertise to help them discover the roots to their family tree. Our accurate search tools and data featuring unique and core U.S., English, Welsh, Scottish, Irish, Australian and New Zealand records dating back as far as the 7th century, help both professional and budding genealogists find their past. Findmypast.com works closely with the genealogy community, including local libraries, archives, societies, and other organizations from around the world, to preserve, digitize and provide access to historical records and genealogical publications. To learn more, visit www.findmypast.com, the findmypast.com blog, Facebook or Twitter.

About The Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
The ACPL Genealogy Center is a unique and valuable family history resource in serving both the Northeast Indiana and global genealogical communities.  With one of the largest research collections available, the ACPL Genealogy Center incorporates records from around the world. The Genealogy Center is active in several initiatives to make significant public domain portions of its collection available online. Its professional staff provides a wide range of programs and individualized reference services.

About brightsolid
Findmypast.com is owned by brightsolid online publishing, a British-owned world leader in online genealogy, with over 45 years’ experience in family history and a record of online innovation in the field of family history nearly two decades long. With nearly 18 million registered users across its family of online genealogy brands, brightsolid hosts more than a billion genealogical records from across the globe.

--excerpted from Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter 

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

80,000 DIGITIZED FAMILY HISTORY BOOKS ONLINE FREE

From Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter June 20, 2013

More than 80,000 Digitized Genealogy and Family History Publications are Now Available Online -- FREE


Listen with webReader
One of the greatest genealogy resources available today is the huge collection of digitized genealogy and family history publications from the archives of some of the most important family history libraries in the world. When I travel to various genealogy conferences and societies, I am often amazed at how many genealogists are unaware of these free resources. Not only are the books and other publications available free of charge, you don't even have to pay for gas to visit these libraries!

These digital books are available at:
Google Books
Archive.org
Allen County Public Library
Brigham Young University Harold B. Lee Library
Brigham Young University Hawaii Joseph F. Smith Library
LDS Church History Library
Family History Library
Houston Public Library - Clayton Library Center for Genealogical Research
Mid-Continent Public Library - Midwest Genealogy Center

[MOST OF THE COLLECTION can be searched by clicking here]

 
The menus and the search methods will obviously vary from one site to another. However, a few minutes spent exploring each site's holdings could pay big dividends.

I will say that most newcomers search only for names. In fact, I'll admit that I do the same on my first search on a new web site and I suspect a lot of other experienced genealogists do the same. However, after exhausting the search for names, most experienced genealogists start looking for other search terms. I always look for locations. Many times, I have been successful at finding some tidbit about an ancestor by searching for the county or the town in which he or she lived, even after a search for the person's name produced no results at all.

One of my more successful searches came from searching for the name of the small town in which my great-great-grandparents lived. I knew he was a farmer so I searched for his name plus the name of the small town in which they lived. I was rewarded with a scanned digital booklet of only 42 pages, printed in 1842, that listed all the farmers in the county, along with a detailed description of the farm and even the assessed value of the property. It listed the total acreage of their property, the number of acres under cultivation, the number of acres of woodlands, the number of barns and outbuildings, how many head of cattle, sheep, and swine that they owned, and even the number of chickens. It also listed the crops they sold. I learned a lot more about my great-great-grandparents in that small booklet than I ever found in census records!

When searching old books and other printed information, you have to be creative. You should search not only for locations, but also for fraternal organizations, religious affiliations, veterans' organizations, labor unions, and anything else you can think of.


Monday, May 20, 2013

770 Connecticut Cemeteries Online at Godfrey Memorial Library (one of the free Scholar websites at your nearest FHC)

May 19, 2013

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Mocavo's GENEALOGY KARMA -- modeled after RAOGK



Mocavo Announces Genealogy Karma

Back in 1999, a fantastic resource was established to bring together members of the genealogy community all around the world. The brainchild of Bridgett and Doc Schneider, Random Acts of Genealogical Kindness (RAOGK) was created to help genealogists collaborate with the genealogy community to document their research, while also offering genealogists a way to give back to a community that had helped them in the past. RAOGK quickly turned into a global organization. The group’s volunteers were able to help thousands of genealogists make progress in their family history research.

Bridgett Schneider courtesy of RAOGK Wiki

The ROAGK website went offline in 2011 because of a computer disaster. Sadly, Bridgett Schneider passed away later that year, and the website was never able to come back online. In tribute to Bridgett and Doc Schneider and all of the participants in RAOGK, many volunteers have created programs similar to ROAGK to help bring together the expertise of the genealogy community. Doc and Bridgett’s legacy and the efforts of thousands of volunteers inspired us to create a place for researchers to come together and collaborate to help other members of the genealogical community.   



Today, at Mocavo, we are excited to announce the launch of Genealogy Karma. Modeled after Random Acts of Genealogical Kindness, we hope to empower the Mocavo community and connect researchers all around the country. If you’re looking for documents, records, or photos from an ancestor who lived far away, we will connect you with family history volunteers who can do this research for you in other cities. Likewise, if you’d like to give back to the Mocavo community and have a little time to donate, you can sign up as a volunteer.


To begin visit www.mocavo.com/karma

Friday, May 3, 2013

SOUTH DAKOTA IMMIGRATION RECORDS Online at FamilySearch

SOUTH DAKOTA IMMIGRATION RECORDS 

Now ONLINE at FamilySearch.  


Description

County Circuit and District court naturalization records from county courthouses in South Dakota. Coverage dates vary by county. The records were acquired from the South Dakota State Historical Society.

Click here to visit and browse these digitized film records--they are NOT Indexed, so you would need to browse by country and then chronilogically.

OR

CLICK on a County below to browse the images. 

County

Thursday, February 14, 2013

2013 Brookings Family History Workshop


Welcome to the 

Roots n Branches: Growing Your Family Tree

Brookings Family History Workshop

held April 27, 2013 -- 61 attending


Digging Your Roots....or Transplanting them--The Journey Begins Here


























  Topics Descriptions

  • Growing Your Tree: What Websites are Free at your nearest FHC? 

    Would you believe:
    •  Ancestry.com
    • Find My Past UK 
    • The Genealogist
    • Fold3 Military
    • Alexander Street Press Civil War
    • World Vital Records
    • Godfrey Memorial Library
    • NewspaperArchive.com and Other Unique Databases! 
    • Legacy Stories -- NEW!
    • Personal Historian Software -- NEW!

  • Grafting in New Buds: Genealogy on the IPAD

    IPAD Apps such as 
    •  Family Tree
    • Ancestry App
    • MyHeritage App
    • Families (Legacy-based)
    • RootsMagic
    • BillionGraves

  • Cultivating Your Roots: Three Major Software Comparisons

 
Comparing key features of PC programs (each of which have a free version to download.)

            • RootsMagic
            • Legacy
            • Ancestral Quest





     

     

  • Putting Leaves on Your Tree:  Online Genealogy Research-the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly


Jodi Sides, veteran genealogist will present an overview of researching your family history on the internet. The class will cover websites that contain useful information for genealogists at all levels of experience. We will look at connecting with other researchers through family tree websites, locating documents you can print right from your computer, how to properly network with other researchers, and what websites are worth your time and money.


  •   Discover Your Family Tree:   Intro to Family Tree


  • What is Family Tree, where is it, how can you access it--what can you find?
  • How can you use it to preserve and share your own Family Tree research--with attached photos, sources, stories?
  • How can you search millions of trees? 
  • How can you correct junk genealogy that you find there? 
  • Why should you correct it? 
  •  Growing Your Roots:  5 Minute Genealogy 


How and where can you find a record of your ancestors within the first 5 minutes of searching?

  • Digging Your Roots: Do You Know Where Your Pioneer Ancestors are Buried


    DASH does. DASH stands for Dacota Ancestral Stone Histories. 


    Larry Cool's projects combine the digital mapping of cemeteries, with the databasing of records on findagrave, with the overlaying of the maps on Google earth, with the completion of family records on PAF. This all started as a tribute to his grandmother who started his interest when a young boy by helping her map and record the cemeteries in Charles Mix County. 


  • Due to unforeseen health issue, the speaker just notified us on Thursday that he cannot present this program--we apologize for this change in the program and ask that those of you registered for this program choose another or view the substitute program to be announced.  

    Substitute Program: Google Earth Your Genealogy by Lisa Cook

    Cultivating Your Heritage: Who is Granny Weston

    An 1896 painting of the Native American woman in the Moody County Public Library has puzzled patrons for years as to who she was and why the painting was done. Dianne Ammann had placed an ad in the Brookings Town n Country Shopper looking for information on 3 different Granny Westons, any of which she could be. She was planning on presenting this data at a Genealogy Conference but she died suddenly last fall. Dale Johnson, Director of the Moody County Museum, will trace the story of the Flandreau Santee Sioux from the 1862 Minnesota Uprising until their settlement in Moody County area. Using resources of the Museum and Moody County Genealogy Society, the origin of the painting may have been discovered and the identity of the subject possibly found.


    • Cracking the Nuts on the Tree: Q & A Help Sessions 


      A panel of experienced researchers, including some of the class presenters will be available at one or both sessions to answer questions on various subjects, including internet, computer technology as applied to genealogy, research brick walls, etc






    • Exploring the Old Trunk:  Beginner Help Sessions

      Liz Gorham , president of  Brookings Area Genealogical Society (BAGS) will help show those interested in starting their research or are in the first few generations, how to find, organize, research, document and share family data.


      • Displays, Demos


          Boy Scout Genealogy Merit Badges 
          Chart Your Tree
          Indexing
           DAR (Daughters of American Revolution)



        Sponsored by

        Brookings SD Family History Center

        and

        Brookings Area Genealogical Society