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21 January 2011

Craig's Report From the Blogging Workshop

Craig Siulinski shared his blogging know-how in a recent Blogging class at the library.

January 15, 2011 marked an exciting day for a few folks eager to jump into the world of genealogy blogging. After a presentation of informational slides and a demonstration of how to write a blog post using Blogger, the participants proceeded to go live with their own blogs. Much thought and discussion was spent on the selection of blog titles and the creation of effective purpose statements. As the instructor of the workshop, I am proud of these new blogs since they will surely enrich the genealogy blogging community.
  Craig created Genealogy Jamming for demonstration purposes.
 


June Ralston Anderson's new blog is Stray Bones.



Lisa Gorrell created Mam-ma's Southern Family.



Janice Sellers started Ancestral Discoveries.


Peg Stewart is blog author of A Forest of Oakes.




Diana Wild's new blog is Kendricks of San Francisco.

As you can see, the workshop was a tremendous success. The participants expressed pride in their new creations and appreciation for Craig's help. One reviewer wrote that "the class was a wonderful mix of lecture, conversation and help from the instructor." Peg Stewart observed, "This workshop far exceeded my expectations. I thought I would take notes during class and think about my options later at home. Instead I came away with all my questions answered, my hesitations resolved, my blog created and my first post published."





    Craig will be offering a more advanced blogging workshop on April 16, 2011. He will cover more posting topics and further use of the blogger platform.

    Congratulations to our new bloggers! Links to all are in the right sidebar under "Member Blogs."


    Photographs courtesy of Tim Cox, 1/15/2011, Oakland, California.

    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    19 January 2011

    Announcing the 11th Annual Salt Lake City Research Tour May 15-22, 2011

    Are you ready to experience genealogy nirvana? Join CGS for a week of intensive research and lots of fun!

    Past-president Jane Lindsey is leading her eleventh California Genealogical Society Salt Lake City Tour to the Family History Library from Sunday to Sunday, May 15 - 22, 2011. Research Director Nancy Peterson returns to help lead this very popular trip.

    Accommodations will be at the Shilo Inn, located three blocks from the Family History Library. The Shilo provides free high-speed internet access in every room.

    The cost is $705 (airfare not included.) A deposit of $200 holds one space.

    The Tour Package includes:
    • Hotel room – 7 nights, double occupancy 
    • Shuttle service to and from airport 
    • Three group dinners (Sun., Wed., and Sat.)
    • Daily continental breakfast
    • Orientation and lectures
    • Computer assistance using the online catalog at FamilySearch.org and other websites
    • Optional consultation prior to the trip 
    Still need convincing? The top ten reasons to go with CGS to Salt Lake City are still exactly the same as when I first wrote them nearly three years ago.

    Download the tour flier for full information.

    Register online and reserve your space now!


    Photograph by Kathryn Doyle, 4/27/2010, Salt Lake City, Utah.

    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    17 January 2011

    This Blog is Ancestor Approved!

    Russ Worthington of A Worthington Weblog has honored the CGSL blog with the Ancestor Approved award. Thanks, Russ!

    Leslie Ann of the Ancestors Live Here blog created the Ancestor Approved award to let her fellow genealogy bloggers know how much she appreciates and enjoys their blogs. I think it's a great idea.

    I would like to pass the award and honor several genealogical societies that launched blogs in the past year and have kept them going. Blogs are easy to start but it takes commitment to persevere!

    The FGS Voice blog was started by the Federation of Genealogical Societies in March 2010.

    Joan Miller created the Alberta Family Histories Society Blog in March 2010.

    The Johnson County, Kansas GenWeb site started the KS GenWeb: Johnson County blog in March 2010.

    The African American Genealogical Society of Northern California started the AAGSNC blog in May 2010.

    Mr. Geneablogger, Thomas MacEntee, started the Illinois State Genealogical Society blog in May 2010.

    The Ontario Genealogical Society launched its blog in June 2010.

    GSNOCC Musings was created by the Genealogical Society of North Orange County California in July 2010.

    Nevada Roots - Nevada State Genealogical Society blog came online in July 2010.

    The Contra Costa County Genealogical Society blog debuted in August 2010.

    The Utah Genealogical Association started a blog in September 2010.

    A complete listing of all genealogical society blogs can be found at Geneabloggers. (Thanks, Thomas!)

    Blogs are a great way for organizations to communicate with their members and the outside world. I follow all genealogical society blogs so if I missed yours please let me know!



    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    14 January 2011

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy: Jeff's Report #6

    This is Jeff's last report from SLIG. Thanks, Jeff, for another great series!

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy
    Salt Lake City, Utah
    Friday, 14 Jan 2011

    The last morning opened again with homework debriefing. The problem was to solve the father’s name of a workbook exercise that we had been looking at off-and-on all week. There were several suggestions. Dr. Jones offered a little hint and a big hint via email for those interested. The little hint did not help me. What helped me, I would say, is a better understanding of analysis.

    Today we packed in six lectures starting with Special Problems III: Identifying Landless, Enslaved, Peasant and Other Impoverished Ancestors; Resolving Conflicting Evidence; Correlating Sources, Information and Evidence to Solve Genealogical Problems; Federal Land Records: Analysis, Interpretation and Correlation by Clair Bettag; Writing Genealogy and Continued Advancement.

    In Thursday’s report I said I would provide some problem solving examples from the course work. Dr. Jones gave permission to do so; however, in reviewing the examples they would be out of context. Instead, given the internet email discussions about starting a GenWrite class like the GenPro class, here are a few points from the lecture on Genealogy Writing.

    Dr. Jones spoke about his own experience. He had written articles in his professional field of special education for journals that were published. He submitted his first genealogy article to the NGS Quarterly when Elizabeth Shown Mills was the editor. As Dr. Jones told the story, he got his work back and looked at the first page, the second page, the third page and then on the fourth page finally found something he had written! He relates this story in great humor to fully illustrate that genealogical writing is a field unto itself.

    His definitions of genealogical writing are “essays that describe a genealogical problem, discuss the evidence pertaining to the problem; and—if applicable—present and explain a solution to the problem.” There are a variety of products of writing from articles to books and the use of writing can be to illustrate to oneself what further research needs to be done.

    The characteristics of writing are that it is readable, fully sourced, well grounded and structured, honest, precise, logical and comprehensive.

    It was one of many great presentations.

    I am going to conclude with the points made in Continued Advancement. This was my third SLIG course along with the IGHR in Birmingham along with the FGS and NGS conferences and one day workshops that constitute my continuing education. Dr. Jones’ list is similar – formal courses of study, major conferences, genealogical study groups, participating in support groups and seeking a credential. He went on to encourage reading journals, doing personal research, seeking expert vetting and regularly and routinely writing research with a view to publish.

    BOTTOM LINE: The five days were fantastic and intense. The bibliography with each presentation was enormous allowing for further study. I encourage each person reading this to pursue their own professional advancement.

    Next I am off to Charleston, South Carolina for the NGS Family History Conference, May 11-14, 2011. Will I see you there?

    Jeffrey Vaillant
    14 Jan 2011 

    Read the entire series:
    Report #1: 2011 SLIG
    Report #2: 2011 SLIG
    Report #3: 2011 SLIG
    Report #4: 2011 SLIG
    Report #5: 2011 SLIG
    Report #6: 2011 SLIG


    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    13 January 2011

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy 2011 - Jeff's Report #5

    Jeff's series continues from SLIG.

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy
    Salt Lake City, UT
    Thursday, 13 Jan 2011

    Another morning opened with the homework debriefing. Not a lot of hands went up with solutions. Some students took up to four hours to try to solve the problem. The outcome for all, I would say, is a better understanding of analysis.

    Today we packed in five lectures starting with Probate Strategies: Analysis, Interpretation and Correlation, Local Land Records: Analysis, Interpretations and Correlation, Bring Law to Bear on Complex Genealogical Problems, Special Problems I: Finding Immigrant and Migrant Origins and ending with Special Problems II: Identifying Female Ancestors.  Each of these presentations by Dr. Thomas Jones included little problems to solve at the end of each lecture. All of his material is copyrighted so I will obtain permission to publish a problem or two here tomorrow.

    Yes, there is another homework assignment tonight. One page – which means it will be difficult. So I better get to it.

    We are still behind schedule and tomorrow is Friday!

    Jeffrey Vaillant
    13 Jan 2011

    Read the entire series:
    Report #1: 2011 SLIG
    Report #2: 2011 SLIG
    Report #3: 2011 SLIG
    Report #4: 2011 SLIG
    Report #5: 2011 SLIG
    Report #6: 2011 SLIG

    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    12 January 2011

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy - Jeff's Report #4

    Jeff's series from SLIG continues:

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy
    Salt Lake City, UT
    Wednesday, 12 Jan 2011

    The morning began as a debriefing on the Tuesday evening homework with Claire Betteg. In general classmates were able to work through the challenging Library of Congress website. The point was made by someone that the Congress funds its own library well, unlike the National Archives and Records Administration. A user of both facilities in Washington, D.C. was of the opinion that the LOC has ten times the staffing of NARA!

    We found ourselves a mere 24 hours behind schedule. The mornings topics were Census, Census-Substitute and Name List Strategies: Analysis, Interpretations and Correlation and Tax Roll Strategies: Analysis, Interpretations and Correlation by Dr. Thomas Jones. Jones has a wealth of professional genealogical experience which is brought to each lecture with examples. Of course, this leads into the Wednesday homework.

    Richard Sayre, CG, was back in class talking about Rural and Urban Map Strategies: Analysis, Interpretations and Correlation. He pointed to the Library of Congress and its 5 million maps, 80,000 atlases and 6,000 reference works. He encouraged visiting it and the NARA location in College Park, Maryland, where there are another million+ maps. He spoke about the USGS topographical maps and showed how he was able to use them, along with other resources including Google Earth to pinpoint cemeteries. (Course 8 of the Samford Institute of Genealogical and Historical Research this June in Birmingham, Alabama will feature an entire week on maps!)


    Then it was time for homework. The homework was a nine page assignment to find the father of a person who lived in the late 1700s in Spotsylvania County, Virginia. I spent a couple of hours hacking away at the problem and I spent a couple of hours at the Family History Library hacking away at my own research. In neither case did I solve any problems – does that sound familiar?

    Jeffrey Vaillant
    12 Jan 2011

    Read the entire series:
    Report #1: 2011 SLIG
    Report #2: 2011 SLIG
    Report #3: 2011 SLIG
    Report #4: 2011 SLIG
    Report #5: 2011 SLIG
    Report #6: 2011 SLIG


    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    11 January 2011

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy 2011 - Jeff's Report #3

    Jeff continues with his reports from the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy.

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy
    Salt Lake City, Utah
    Tuesday, 11 Jan 2011

    As reported yesterday we have fallen behind in class. Today we explored the topics of Developing Research Questions and Hypotheses; Planning an Exhaustive Search along with Transcribing, Abstracting, Extracting, Quoting and Documenting Sources in the morning – which were supposed to be Monday mornings topics!

    Richard Sayre, CG, presented an informational loaded Military and Pension Records Strategies: Analysis, Interpretation and Correlation. This presentation barely scratched the surface of the subject and offered numerous opportunities for further research. He and I had exchanged emails prior to the Institute so I was able to follow up with a conversation on the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR). Richard showed me a presentation he made on the GAR in St. Louis a few years ago. There is a concerted effort by the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War to identify all GAR records and their locations. Another part of his presentation that was useful to me was the section on the War of 1812. While this year we recognize the 150th anniversary of the beginning of the Civil War, the bicentennial of the War of 1812 is next year. A great deal of planning is taking place in the Midwest.

    Claire Bettag blitzed us with her presentation Federal Research: Government Documents. She talks fast and must have said “gov docs” three zillion times!! And she gave us our first homework assignment which was to work with the Library of Congress site and its Century of Lawmaking to determine the outcomes of several citizen requests for government payment due to contracts disputes with the federal government. She allowed as an alternative to pick a private law of our own. I chose to explore the pension request the daughter of Major Charles Fuller, US Army, 4th Regiment, War of 1812 made in 1889. I found it and there is still more work to be done – does that sound familiar?

    Jeffrey Vaillant
    11 Jan 2011

    Read the entire series:
    Report #1: 2011 SLIG
    Report #2: 2011 SLIG
    Report #3: 2011 SLIG
    Report #4: 2011 SLIG
    Report #5: 2011 SLIG
    Report #6: 2011 SLIG


    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    10 January 2011

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy 2011 - Jeff's Report #2

    Jeff reports from his first full day at SLIG:

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy
    Salt Lake City, UT
    Monday, 10 Jan 2011

    “Fasten your seat belts, put your trays in an upright position” will be the mantra for the week as we take off with Thomas Jones, PhD, CG, CGL, FASG, FUGA, FNGS in his Advanced Genealogical Methodology class. After a full day we are still on the first presentation: Developing an Evidence Orientation. We have been discussing a great deal of terminology around Sources, Information and Evidence as well as the processes of Analysis, Correlation, Weighing, Hypothesis, Case Building and Conclusion leading to a proof argument. Dr. Jones assures us that we will catch up as the week progresses. We did use the two case studies sent ahead of the class to illustrate some of the points in this first presentation.

    Also we had a comprehensive presentation by Claire Bettag, CG, CGL on Archival Research at the National Archives and Other Repositories. This was particularly useful as the NARA is undergoing significant changes in its web presence. She emphasized using the finding aids, the descriptive pamphlets and the NARA tutorials that are available at the National Archives website.  She spoke about the Library of Congress Manuscript Division and its registers that describe its principal collections.  120+ registers are published, some of which are online at the Manuscript Reading Room.

    This evening I attended Dr. Jones’ lecture Strategies for Finding "Unfindable" Ancestors. The bottom line: finding those ancestors is hard work taking a great deal of time and the cost to travel to the location(s) of original documents.

    Jeffrey Vaillant
    10 Jan 2011

    Read the entire series:
    Report #1: 2011 SLIG
    Report #2: 2011 SLIG
    Report #3: 2011 SLIG
    Report #4: 2011 SLIG
    Report #5: 2011 SLIG
    Report #6: 2011 SLIG


    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    09 January 2011

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy 2011 - Jeff's Report #1

    CGS Director Jeffrey Vaillant is continuing his pursuit of professional genealogical certification and is attending the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy, January 10-14, 2011. As he did last year, Jeff is sending reports. Here's his first installment:

    Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy
    Salt Lake City, Utah
    Pre-course Work

    As Dick Eastman puts it in his newsletter, I’m “on the road again” to the Salt Lake City Institute of Genealogy. This year’s trip started with pre-class work:
    Course 9 Advanced Genealogical Methods Course Coordinator: Thomas W. Jones, Ph.D., CG, CGL, FASG, FUGA.

 Participants will develop advanced genealogical research, analysis, correlation, and compilation skills. Hands-on activities drawn from original sources will enhance this learning. Examples will be drawn from American states and colonies and European countries. Before the course begins, participants will complete two pre-course reading assignments. Three in-course homework assignments will be optional.
    Yes, I have done the pre-course work by reading the case studies several times. I am not too sure about the homework as it is described as one additional hour of class plus up to three hours of in-library research!

    There are numerous evening lectures to attend. The Family History Library is open until 9 p.m. This is my third SLIG and I learned from the first time it is important to pace oneself.

    A number (28) of this year's attendees have completed or are part of the ProGen Study Group. I was fortunate to be in the first group (April 2008–December 2009).
    ProGen Study Groups are organized to encourage professional and aspiring genealogists to put into practice the principles found in Professional Genealogy: A Manual for Researchers, Writers, Editors, Lecturers and Librarians, edited by Elizabeth Shown Mills. This program employs an innovative method of collaborative learning focused on developing genealogical research skills and business practices. 

Each month group members study one or two chapters of Professional Genealogy and complete a practical assignment relating to the material. They meet online to discuss the topic in small group discussions. Members review each other's assignments and offer constructive feedback. The study program covers all of the chapters in the book, including research procedures and business practices. This program requires time and commitment, but provides a unique opportunity for constructive feedback from colleagues. 

Each ProGen group has a BCG Certified Genealogist or ICAPGen Accredited Genealogist mentoring the group. These volunteer mentors participate in the monthly discussions to answer questions and offer guidance.
    I would encourage anyone interested in broadening their genealogy foundation to consider ProGen as a means to accomplish such a goal.

    I close with the following which outlines the learning for the next five days:
    • Developing an Evidence Orientation
    • Developing Research Questions and Hypotheses; Planning an Exhaustive Search
    • Transcribing, Abstracting, Extracting, Quoting, and Documenting Sources
    • Archival Research
    • Census, Census-Substitute, and Name-List Strategies: Analysis, Interpretation, and Correlation
    • Military and Pension Records Strategies: Analysis, Interpretation, and Correlation
    • Tax Roll Strategies: Analysis, Interpretation, and Correlation
    • Federal research: Government Documents
    • Rural and Urban Map Strategies: Analysis, Interpretation, and Correlation
    • Local Land Records: Analysis, Interpretation, and Correlation
    • Probate Strategies: Analysis, Interpretation, and Correlation
    • Bringing Law to Bear on Complex Genealogical Problems
    • Special Problems I: Finding Immigrant and Migrant Origins
    • Special Problems II: Identifying Female Ancestors
    • Special Problems III: Identifying Landless, Enslaved, Peasant, and Other Impoverished Ancestors
    • Resolving Conflicting Evidence
    • Correlating Sources, Information, and Evidence to Solve Genealogical Problems
    • Federal Land Records: Analysis, Interpretation, and Correlation
    • Writing Genealogy
    • Continued Advancement
    Off to registration...
    Jeffrey Vaillant
    9 Jan 2011

    Read the entire series:
    Report #1: 2011 SLIG
    Report #2: 2011 SLIG
    Report #3: 2011 SLIG
    Report #4: 2011 SLIG
    Report #5: 2011 SLIG
    Report #6: 2011 SLIG

    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    07 January 2011

    The Antique Sewing Box Mystery - Part 2

    John and Rusty Keilch had the winning bid and were the new owners of the Victorian-era sewing box made of ebony inlaid with mother-of-pearl and the mysterious newspaper clipping tucked inside. Like any good genealogist, John got to work right away on trying to solve the mystery. John's report:


    English records show some Creightons in London censuses and two Richard Creightons who died in London in the early 1900s. However, when I looked on Google Maps to see where their deaths had been registered, the locations were in central London. This was inconsistent with the address at Ferme Park Road in London North reported in the death notice, which was located quite some distance away, about 10 miles. To find other possibilities, I tried variant surname spellings in census and death records, and found three more Richards in London – a Crayden, a Cretten, and a Critton – but again they had lived quite distant from Ferme Park Road. The margins of the news clipping show a glimpse of the death notices that had been printed above and below, so I tried to search those fragments. The preceding notice ended with the words "...rick Cornish, of the Lewisham, High-road, S.E." and the next notice began "GERRANS – At..." I tried searching for Cornish and Gerrans deaths, but again, no luck.
    I then tried using Google to find out something about Ferme Park Road, hoping to find some clue. The street is still there, located in Stroud Green, a residential district near Hornsey and Crouch End. The street-level view available on Google Maps shows Ferme Park Road to be a quiet street lined with townhouses.
    Google did not produce any hits for a Creighton family on this street. However, in the process of looking, I found an interesting historical tidbit about another resident of Ferme Park Road. He was Nguyen Tat Thanh, a young schoolteacher from Indochina, who in 1912 left home, earning his way abroad by working as a galley cook on a French freighter. He worked for a time in New York City and Boston, but then decided to settle in London to continue his studies. He found a place to live – on Ferme Park Road – and while in London he worked as a hotel dishwasher and waiter, enrolled in Regent Street Polytechnic, and found a position as an electrical apprentice. After a few years, he moved to France, and eventually he returned to Indochina, where he adopted the name by which he would be known: Ho Chi Minh.
    In browsing through Wikipedia to find out about Ferme Park Road, the Stroud Green neighborhood, and the Hornsey district, I learned an important fact. It turns out that Hornsey used to be part of Middlesex County, even though the area long ago had become part of the expanding London metropolis. Until 1965, London County encompassed only the central city. To anybody familiar with London, the "London, North" reference in Richard Creighton's death notice would have been a tip-off, but I had not recognized its significance.

    Once I stopped looking for Richard Creightons in London County, the search became more successful.

    The 1901 census index shows a Richard Creighton in Hornsey, Middlesex. When I looked up the census image I found a page labeled Stroud Green. The second family on the page consisted of Richard and Emma J. Creighton, three adult children, and Richard's sister – they were living at 28 Ferme Park Road. Richard was 58 years old and worked in a lace warehouse. He had been born about 1843 in Carlisle, Cumberland. Emma was the same age, but she had been born in London City. They must have been in the vicinity for quite some time, because their children, all three in their twenties, had been born in the Hornsey district.

    According to the death notice, Richard died in his 67th year. Since he was 58 in 1901, his death would have occurred sometime around 1909. Indeed, in the 1911 census there is a record in Edmonton, Middlesex, for Emma Jemima Creighton, born 1843, but Richard was no longer in the household. A look in the English Death Index reveals a death recorded in the Apr-May-Jun 1909 book for Richard Creighton, Edmonton, age 66, born about 1843. This corresponds to the death notice.

    Actually, Richard Creighton was born in 1842, as he was christened December 11, 1842, at Saint Mary, Carlisle, Cumberland, according to the FamilySearch International Genealogical Index. The FamilySearch site also shows an 1881 census transcript for Richard Creighton; he was already a lace warehouseman, living with Emma and four children in Hornsey at 63 Woodstock Road.



    John Keilch suspects that the death notice about Richard Creighton was cut from the newspaper, perhaps with sewing scissors, and tucked into the sewing box for safe-keeping in 1909 by his wife Emma or another family member. It seems likely that the clipping stayed there forgotten and unnoticed for 101 years until Nancy Servin discovered it.

    John sent along these ideas for further research:

    1.  Family tree – A Donahue family tree at Ancestry.com includes this Richard Creighton b. 1843 with some additional information about his birth family. It lists Richard's parents as Thomas Creighton and Mary Hetherington, married in 1836 in Carlisle, Cumberland.

    2.  Marriage record – It is likely that a record of Richard and Emma's marriage can be found that would provide Emma's surname and thereby a link to her family background. Update: Richard Creighton married Emma Jemima Adams in 1872 in the Kensington district of London.

    3.  Earlier censuses – A look at the 1841, 1851 and 1861 censuses would give snapshots of Richard Creighton's birth family. It would be interesting to look at subsequent censuses to trace the history of Richard and Emma's family and their occupations. Emma's birth family probably can be found in the censuses also. Update: Richard Creighton was a draper in 1871 at the age of 18. After his marriage, Richard Creighton was a lace warehouseman in 1881, 1891 and 1901.

    4.  Descendants – Since Creighton is a relatively rare name, it may be possible to trace some of Richard and Emma Creighton's descendants, and perhaps even identify descendants who are living now, using birth, marriage and death records which are available online all the way up to 2005.

    5.  Neighborhood history – There is some historical information about the Stroud Green district and vicinity online. See British History Online or the website of the Hornsey Historical Society.

    6.  Work history – It might be possible to learn something about the warehouse where Richard Creighton worked. There may be clues in histories of lace manufactures that are available online.

    7.  Origin of the sewing box – The sewing box is most likely older than the newspaper clipping that it concealed.

    The Antique Sewing Box Mystery - Part 1


    Photograph and scanned images courtesy of John Keilch, 11/25/2010.

    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    05 January 2011

    The Antique Sewing Box Mystery - Part 1

    One of the decidedly non-genealogical routines associated with the California Genealogical Society is a fund-raising device that's become a standard part of our full day seminars – the silent auction. Members donate things that appeal to others who bid on them. The auctions serve as a place to browse between lectures and they are 100% profit for the society.

    Our last silent auction was held on October 30, 2010, at Google All the Way with Lisa Louise Cooke. That auction was pretty much like all the others until it turned into The Sewing Box Mystery.

    One of the donated items was an antique black-lacquer sewing box with mother-of-pearl inlay. Member Diana Wild bought it at a small antique shop in London in 1996 or 1997.  She never used it for its intended purpose but kept it as an ornament in her guest room.




    It was Nancy Servin who set the whole thing in motion when she took a close look at the sewing box.
    I was looking at it, and I opened the inside top of the box. It had a mirror in it with a mother-of-pearl clasp. It unfolded open to a shallow pocket, and in the bottom of the pocket was a slip of newspaper that was the size that you find in a fortune-cookie. It was so shallow in there and the pocket was fragile. I had no tweezers with me, but had a cat comb in my purse (don't ask) which was narrow enough to get into the bottom of the pocket and bring up the piece of newspaper.
    It was an obituary (!) cut out of a London paper. (I think Diana said she got the box in London). No date, no paper named, but the name, age, and month and day of death were in the obit.

    CREIGHTON. – 24th June, at 28, Ferme Park-rd,
    London, N., Richard Creighton, in his 67th year.
    No flowers.
    New member Rusty Keilch had the winning bid and is now the proud owner of both the sewing box and the obituary.

    What are the chances that a sewing box would travel from London to California with a hidden obituary in it, and ended up at a genealogical society silent auction?

    As you can imagine the research got started within twenty-four hours. Stay tuned for The Antique Sewing Box Mystery Part 2.
     
    Photograph and scan courtesy of John Keilch.

    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    02 January 2011

    eNews January 2011, volume 5, number 1

    The January 2011 issue of the eNews, volume 5, number 1,  has been published and emailed to members and friends. As always, the eNews features timely information about the California Genealogical Society and our upcoming events. Each edition also includes Suggested Links From the Blogosphere and a photo feature: California Ancestors.

    In this month's edition we pay tribute to Flossie Smith Pugh (1891-1979), grandmother of Shirley Thomson.

    Flossie Smith Pugh

    Past issues of the eNews are available at the eNewsARCHIVE.

    The February 2011 issue will be emailed on January 31, 2011. To receive a copy, please join our mailing list.


    Copyright © 2011 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    29 December 2010

    Workshop: Comparing Genealogy Software - Saturday, February 19, 2011






    Saturday, February 19, 2011
    1:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.

    California Genealogical Society Library
    2201 Broadway, Suite LL2
    Oakland, California 94612

    Join Glenn Koch, Lisa Gorrell, Gary Darnsteadt and Kathy Watson for a preliminary discussion about genealogy software. Our panelists will present a brief, live demonstration of four popular programs: Family Tree Maker, Legacy Family Tree, RootsMagic and The Master Genealogist.

    This is a great opportunity to compare software and ask questions of our team of power users.

    This workshop is limited to forty participants and is offered free to members. Non-members fee is $20.00 (non-refundable) and can be applied towards a CGS membership the day of the workshop.

    Register online.

    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    27 December 2010

    More New York City Research with Steve Harris - Saturday, February 12, 2011

    Saturday, Feb 12, 2011
    1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.

    California Genealogical Society and Library
    2201 Broadway, Suite LL2
    Oakland, California 94612

    New York City Research Part II - Naturalizations, Probate Files, and Directories

    If you are like the majority of Americans, at least one of your ancestors spent time in New York City.

    Just over a year ago Steve Harris presented his first NYC workshop to rave reviews. Now he's back with a second installment – this time on using naturalization records, probate records, and city directories to research your New York City ancestors in the 19th and 20th centuries.

    Attendees will also have access to Steve's large personal library of New York City telephone and city directories after the workshop.

    The workshop is FREE for CGS members but is limited to twenty people. There is a sign-up fee of $20 for non-members. (This fee is non-refundable and can be applied toward membership on the day of the workshop.)

    Register online.

    Dr. Stephen Harris is a consulting genealogist with extensive experience assisting clients with their family histories. Born in Brooklyn, he has deep roots in New York City, but the siren call of California was too strong to resist. Steve is president of the California Genealogical Society and Library. His office and 6,000-volume research library are in Oakland, just down the hall from CGS.


    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    25 December 2010

    Mary Mettler's Best Christmas Gift Ever

    Mary Mettler shared this story of her best Christmas gift ever. Thanks, Mary, for a great story and another idea for where to look for information about ancestors.

    Two years ago, I was puttering on my computer, when I received an email from my grandniece, Anna Lindemann, then a senior at Yale. “Aunt Mary, go to this website and find seventy-nine pictures I took for you. You have two weeks to download them. Merry Christmas!” I have no idea how long it took her to locate and take pictures of 79 documents in the Yale University Archives, all of my father who is also her great-grandfather and a 1915 graduate of Yale. These were a treasure trove of information!  I never would have thought to look for anything other than the University yearbooks; however, Yale, and probably other universities, kept a close watch on their graduates and have rich archives of information.




    There were birth and marriage announcements for him and his children, newspaper clippings, pictures, a history of the class of 1915 reunions, a questionnaire given to the graduating seniors, and questionnaires for most years from his graduation to his death in 1955. The senior questionnaire was really fun! I learned that he coveted a “Y” in track more than a Phi Beta Kappa key, had the Scott-Hurtt scholarship, loved to watch football and to participate in track, had been to twenty states and was nicknamed “Monty.” (He was born and raised in Kalispell, Montana.) His favorite prose writer was Rudyard Kipling; his favorite poet, Alfred, Lord Tennyson; and his favorite historical character, Julius Caesar. It also included where and with whom he lived each of the four years, what classes he had taken and much more. The annual questionnaires showed every address change, each job and job title he had, the dates he served on various boards, what his sons did in World War II, what charitable work he had done and even the charities to which he donated. 

    I doubt that I will ever receive a more memorable Christmas present! My father died, when I was seventeen; but I learned so much about him from these documents. Even if you don’t have relatives attending colleges of your ancestors, please do add college archives to your list of valuable genealogical sources. Thank you, Anna, for the best Christmas present I ever received!


    Image from Yale University Archives courtesy of Mary Mettler.  


    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    24 December 2010

    San Francisco Bay Area Genealogy Calendar: January 2011 Published

    January 2011 events have been published on the San Francisco Bay Area Genealogy Calendar – a collection of local genealogical society classes, workshops and meetings within a 75 mile radius of San Francisco.

    The January calendar includes forty-none events at various venues around the Bay Area, sponsored by twenty different societies and genealogy libraries. The Commodore Sloat Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, are holding their 30th Annual Ancestor Roundup – an all-day genealogy conference – on Saturday, January 22, 2011, at the Monterey Family History Center in Seaside.

    If you would like to add your group's events to the calendar, please email the information by the 20th of each month for publication on the 25th. (Please put "SFBA Calendar" in the subject line.)


    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    17 December 2010

    The California Nugget, Volume II, Issue 2, Fall 2010

    The Fall 2010 edition of The California Nugget has been sent to the printer and should be arriving in members' mailboxes next week. It's another information-filled issue by Editor Jane Hufft and Production Editor Lois Elling.


    Jane's letter from the editor is a great synopsis of the contents:

    Dear CGS Members:
    True to the title of our publication, we have a goldmine of articles for you in this issue. In our “Twenty-First Century Genealogy” section, Dr. Henry Snyder, Professor Emeritus of U.C. Riverside, writes about the current state of California newspaper digitization, a topic of enormous importance to anyone conducting research in the golden state. An expert in the subject, he is the former director of the Center for Bibliographical Studies and Research at U.C. Riverside.
    Thomas MacEntee, a professional genealogist specializing in the use of technology and social media to improve genealogical research, makes the case for careful and thorough citing of sources, a must for twenty-first century genealogical research. Twenty-first century genealogy also requires that the society embrace the electronic world. As society member Cathy H. Paris explains in her article “Lulu Comes to California Anccestors.org,” we are doing exactly that by using print-on-demand services for our newer books to expedite publishing.
    Our “California Ancestors” section features an engaging account from CGS member Janet Brewer Forsburg, whose immigrant ancestor’s successful company was widely known in the Bay Area. CGS manuscript specialists Virginia Turner and Georgia Lipinsky assisted with the preparation of this remarkable story. Kathleen C. Beals, author of many genealogical and history titles, including Early Families of Unity, New Hampshire and San Francisco Marriage Returns, 1850 – 1858, describes how a second look at previously completed research on Simeon Leach unearthed fresh and surprising mate- rial. The 1883 List of Pensioners appears here alphabetically by pensioner which makes this compilation unique.
    With winter coming, curl up with one of the new titles reviewed by Marston Watson, a professional genealogist specializing in New England genealogies, and author of three volumes on Royal Families: Americans of Royal and Noble Ancestry.
    We have a splendid list of new books, the names of many new members, and a brochure for you to use for ordering any of the society’s publications.
    Please note that Part III of “Finding the Laughran Sisters” will appear in the Spring 2011 issue.
    Jane Hufft, Editor


    TABLE of CONTENTS
    Twenty-First Century Genealogy
    The California Newspaper: What Survives and How to Find It by Henry Snyder
    Family History or Mythology? Why Source Citations Matter by Thomas MacEntee

    California Ancestors
    Herman Fischbeck and His Queen Lily Soap by Janet Brewer Forsburg 
    Taking a Second Look at Simeon Leach by Kathleen C. Beals  
    List of Pensioners 1883 compiled by Jane Hufft

    For Our Readers
    Lulu Comes to CaliforniaAncestors.org by Cathy H. Paris
    Recent Acquisitions in the Library
    New Members 
    Book Brochure
    Index


    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    16 December 2010

    Christine In Search of Her Roots

    Imagine an intensive internship for young genealogists to learn how to research their family history in America, culminating in a pilgrimage to their far-off ancestral villages.

    Fantasy? No!

    In Search of Roots is an annual San Francisco program created in 1990 for Chinese Americans aged 17 to 26 with families from the Pearl River Delta region in the Guangdong province of China. More than one hundred interns have visited over 150 ancestral villages, including our own Christine DeVillier.

    I recently ran into Christine and saw the gorgeous photo book she created to document her experience. The book had just arrived in the mail and Christine was eager to share it with some genealogy-mad friends. Where better to find some than at the CGS Library?




    Ancestral Homes of the Lim - Wong Family documents Christine's amazing trip to Hoisan, Guandong, China in July of this year when she visited the ancestral villages of her maternal grandparents. Christine used MyPublisher's bookmaking software and her photographs to chronicle once-in-a-lifetime moments, like when she met her grandfather's younger sister, Lim Cahn Woon, who had met her brother only once when he returned to China to marry.




    Christine called her newly found great-aunt "Goo Paw." Goo Paw helped to fill in missing parts of the family tree and led Christine to her grandmother's village and family home using only her memories of the wedding that took place more than sixty years ago.




    Christine has been researching her family for almost ten years. She was one of the speakers at the recent Chinese American Family History Conference at the Oakland Asian Cultural Center and she was one of the four creators of the two-part Chinese Ancestry Workshop organized by the California Genealogical Society in the spring.



    Thanks, Christine, for sharing!


    Photographs from Ancestral Homes of the Lim - Wong Family courtesy of Christine DeVillier.
    Photograph of Christine courtesy of Jane Knowles Lindsey, 10/6/2010, Oakland, California.


    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    15 December 2010

    Wordless Wednesday

    Board of Directors Facilitated Meeting
    Saturday, November 6, 2010








    Photographs courtesy of Jane Lindsey and Kathryn Doyle, Oakland, California.



    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    14 December 2010

    Honored to Be Nominated by Family Tree Magazine



    The California Genealogical Society and Library blog is honored to be included in the Local/ Regional category of Family Tree Magazine's 40 Best Genealogy Blogs nominees. The magazine will name the Family Tree 40 in the July 2011 issue and they are asking for your help!

    The nominated blogs are divided into eight categories:
    • Everything
    • Cemetery
    • Technology
    • Heritage
    • Research Advice/ How To
    • Local/ Regional
    • New 
    • My Family History
    Voting is open until 11:59 p.m. Monday, Dec. 20, 2010. Choose five blogs in each category.


    Among the nominees are several other CGS member blogs:

    Elyse's Genealogy Blog by Elyse Doerflinger

    Little Bytes of Life by Elizabeth O'Neal

    The Educated Genealogist by Sheri Fenley

    The Internet Genealogist by Leah Allen

    We Tree by Amy Cofin


    One of the five genealogy blogger panelists who lent their expertise in formulating the blog categories and qualifications (and whose blogs have been excluded from consideration) is "far-flung" (as he calls himself) member Thomas MacEntee, author of Destination: Austin Family and GeneaBloggers. The other Family Tree 40 panelists are Lisa Louise Cooke, DearMYRTLE and Randy Seaver.

    Now, please go vote for your favorite blogs!


    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    13 December 2010

    Workshop: Getting Started in German Genealogy with Shirley Riemer


    Saturday, January 29, 2011
    1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.

    California Genealogical Society and Library
    2201 Broadway, Suite LL2
    Oakland, California 94612

    Join Shirley Riemer for this informative workshop to get you started with your German research!

    This session will focus on the first steps the German family historian must take to gain an understanding of the cultural, historical and genealogical facts essential to German ancestral research. The basics of the Second German Empire as they are relative to German research will be laid out so as to create an understanding of  the basic organization of German and German-American records. A brief overview of German church and civil records, some peculiarities of such records, and several other basic research tools will be discussed.

    The workshop is FREE for CGS members but is limited to twenty people. Non-members fee is $20.00 (non-refundable) and can be applied towards membership on the day of the workshop. Preregistration is required. Walk-ins will not be admitted.


    A graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, Shirley Riemer earned her Masters Degree in English from Carnegie-Mellon University. She taught high school English for ten years, then worked in communications for 22 years in Pennsylvania. Following her retirement, her book, The German Research Companion, was published in 1997, followed by a second edition in 2000, now sold out. For the third edition, which appeared in April 2010, she added two additional authors for their expertise: Dr. Roger P. Minert and Jennifer A. Anderson.  In 2001 she co-authored with Dr. Roger P. Minert the book Researching in Germany: A Handbook for Your Visit to the Homeland of Your Ancestors.

    For the last 18 years, she has published Der Blumenbaum, the award-winning quarterly journal of the Sacramento German Genealogy Society. For the last nine years she has also published the quarterly newsletter, Mitteilungen, for the Sacramento Turn Verein German-American Cultural Center – Library.

    In response to her never-ending awe of the history and culture of our ancestors, Shirley will make her 42nd visit to Germany later in 2011. As the editor of German-interest publications, she has worked extensively with German family history researchers known nationally for their expertise in the field, in order to disseminate information helpful to descendants of German immigrants who are actively pursuing their German family history.


    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    09 December 2010

    Three Ways to Give Back

    Carly Perez-Banuet, Operations Manager of Cushman & Wakefield of California, Inc., the management company of 2201 Broadway, sent this announcement about the annual Breuner Building holiday drives:

    This holiday season we are supporting three wonderful ways to give back in our community.

    The cold weather is here! Please consider donating a warm winter coat to our coat drive. Coats and jackets should be clean and gently used. The goal of One Warm Coat is to provide any person in need with a warm coat, free of charge. Carly has a collection box in her office, or feel free to leave them with security. Coats will be collected until February 1, 2011.



     

    The Alameda County food donation barrel is in the main lobby. Last year the Breuner Building  collected about 350 lbs. –  about 270 meals for local folks. Let’s top last year!

    This is a list of most needed non-perishable foods:
    • Canned Fruit & Vegetables
    • Canned Meats and Fish
    • Peanut Butter
    • Pasta
    • Beans
    • Rice
    • Canned Soup
    • Dry Cereal and Oatmeal
    • Tomato Sauce
    • Powdered Milk
    The food bin will be located in the main lobby through the first week of January.





    Our neighbors at the Insight Center for Community Economic Development, Suite 815, are hosting a Toasty Toes sock drive to benefit a woman's shelter – A Friendly Manor. Please deliver new adult and youth sock donations directly to Suite 815; they have a box in their front lobby and will collect socks up until December 17, 2011.


    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    08 December 2010

    Wordless Wednesday

    Jane Lindsey and Laura Lee Karp





    Photograph by Kathryn Doyle, Oakland, California, 3/16/2010.

     Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    06 December 2010

    eNews December 2010, volume 4, number 12

    The December 2010 issue of the eNews, volume 4, number 12,  has been published and emailed to members and friends. As always, the eNews features timely information about the California Genealogical Society and our upcoming events. Each edition also includes Suggested Links From the Blogosphere and a photo feature: California Ancestors.

    This month's photo, submitted by member Maureen Hanlon, is of her grandfather, Daniel Martin Hanlon (1868 - 1938), the fifth of six children born to Daniel HANLON and Emilie FRANCK in San Francisco.






    Learn more about Daniel and exactly what he thought about this photograph of himself!


    Past issues of the eNews are available at the eNewsARCHIVE.

    The January 2011 issue will be emailed on December 31, 2010. To receive a copy, please join our mailing list.


    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library

    05 December 2010

    Workshop: The A-B-Cs of Blogging - January 15, 2011


    Saturday, January 15, 2011
    11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.

    California Genealogical Society and Library
    2201 Broadway, Suite LL2
    Oakland, California 94612

    Let Craig Siulinski show you how to build your own genealogy blog.

    This workshop is designed for beginners who are interested in learning the fundamentals of blogging.

    You'll learn how to get started by:
    • Determining the purpose of your blog
    • Choosing a name
    • Identifying your audience
    • Creating your first blog post
    • Adding text and images
    • How commenting works


    Participants are encouraged to bring their laptop computers and use the library's free Wi-Fi to build a blog during the workshop. To save time, please identify and have easy access to at least two images ready to attach to your blog. We will be using Blogger.com which is a Google product and requires a GMail address. Workshop attendees are encouraged to sign up for a free Google account if they don't already have one.

    (Workshop participants without laptops will be able to follow along and will be able to build their blog at home).

    The workshop is FREE for CGS members but is limited to ten participants. Non-members fee is $20.00 (non-refundable) and can be applied towards membership on the day of the workshop. Preregistration is required. Walk-ins will not be admitted.

    Registration confirmations will be emailed to the first 10 participants who register. Additional names will be collected and placed on a waiting list in case of cancellations.

    Register online.


    Craig Siulinski
    Craig Siulinski has been an Oakland resident for ten years. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Education, and has been a mathematics educator for many years. He has been involved in the study of genealogy and oral histories since 2007 when he decided to search for his paternal great-grandparents. Craig is the author of two blogs: August Legacy documents his family history and genealogy research; Jack and Pauline is devoted to oral history.


    Copyright © 2010 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library