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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

03 December 2010

Winter Intermediate Genealogy Series Starts January 18, 2011

For the third year in a row the California Genealogical Society (CGS) and the Oakland Regional Family History Center (ORFHC) are teaming up to present the 2011 Winter Intermediate Genealogy Series. Classes are designed for the researcher who wants to go beyond the basics.

Reserve your space now!

The course has been completely overhauled since last year's series and includes new material and more sessions. Ten classes will be held on Tuesday evenings from 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. at the Oakland Regional Family History Center, 4766 Lincoln Avenue, Oakland, California. Classes begin on January 18, 2011 and run through March 22, 2011. The series includes a Saturday field trip to the California Genealogical Society Library on February 26, 2011.

SCHEDULE:

  • 01/18  Probate and Guardianship Records 
  • 01/25  Cemetery Records
  • 02/01  Church Records
  • 02/08  Newspaper Research
  • 02/15  Military Records
  • 02/22  Finding Country Cousins in Land and Property Records
  • 02/26  Field Trip to the California Genealogical Society Library
  • 03/01  Seeking City Slickers in Lesser-Known Records
  • 03/08  Reading and Transcribing Old Handwriting
  • 03/15  Immigration and Naturalization
  • 03/22  Solving Your Toughest Genealogy Problems
PLEASE NOTE:

• Class size is limited. Walk-ins allowed if space available.

Nominal fee of $30 for the entire series and syllabus.
• Pre-registration is required. 
• $10.00 off a CGS membership upon completion of the series (expires 3/31/11).



Download the series flier for full class descriptions.

Register online.


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

01 December 2010

There's One in Every Family: The Wanderer


They call me the wanderer.
Yeah, the wanderer.
I roam around, around, around, around.

There's one in every family. You know the one I mean – the wanderer – the one who can't seem to put down roots and who will never settle down. From our earliest days, the California Genealogical Society has been a wanderer!

CGS has never owned a building so housing our books has been a challenge. An evening spent perusing decades of newsletters and journals revealed countless hours spent by society officers dealing with this issue, over and over again. Throughout its 112-year history, the California Genealogical Society has moved around – a lot!

Up From the Ashes

The society was founded February 12, 1898, in San Francisco, where it was headquartered for the first one hundred years. In the early days, the books collected by the society were kept in members' homes or offices – until disaster struck in 1906. At the time of the Great San Francisco Earthquake and Fire, the collection of over 300 volumes was housed with the society's librarian, Mrs. Walter Damon Mansfield, in her apartment at the California Hotel on Bush Street. The hotel was completely destroyed and the entire library went up in smoke.

Mrs. Mansfield escaped and she continued to be the guardian as the society rebuilt its collection. I've written before about how CGS solicited donations from across the country and received books from individuals and institutions, including the Newberry Library. By 1910, Mrs. Mansfield, and the books, moved to the Fairmont Hotel, where in 1912 a special "Library Room" was established for the CGS collection.

The Many Homes of CGS

After Mrs. Mansfield's death in 1916, the CGS Library shared space with a series of illustrious institutions and groups. In 1917, the State Library in San Francisco was established to house the private library of Mayor Adolph Sutro, who stipulated in his will that the collection remain in the City. CGS was allowed to shelve its books at the first Sutro location on the third floor of the Lane Medical Building at Sacramento and Webster Streets. In 1923, Sutro (and CGS) moved to the San Francisco Public Library in the Civic Center.

That arrangement ended with the Depression. In the early 1930s the society was forced to remove its books from the SFPL due to funding cuts. CGS shacked up with the Sons of the American Revolution when they moved into their quarters in Room 327 in the newly constructed War Memorial Building in the San Francisco Civic Center in 1933. Things were stable for more than a decade until the SAR and CGS were forced out in 1945. World War II was coming to an end and the federal government took over that building for the United Nations.

Most of the CGS books were put into storage for a couple of years while the society was homeless until CGS moved in with the SAR again in June 1946, this time in offices at the DeYoung Building at Market and Kearny Streets. Things were stable for many years.

Partnership with the California History Society

In 1962, the California Historical Society acquired title to the CGS collection and for the next twenty years the library was housed at the CHS building at Pacific and Laguna Streets. The relationship with the California Historical Society lasted until CGS leased a new headquarters in the Flood Building at 870 Market Street, Suite 1124, San Francisco, and moved in on November 1, 1983. After months of negotiations, the society reached agreement with the California Historical Society and reacquired 85% of the genealogical collection sold in 1962. More than 60% of the membership voted to approve the CHS/CGS agreement in December 1983.

In 1986, CGS moved again – to the fourth floor of 300 Brannan Street, San Francisco – where the library and headquarters remained for twelve years.

Across the Bay to Oakland

Facing skyrocketing rental rates in San Francisco, the society's leadership explored several options before making the move to the Latham Square Building, Suite 200, on Telegraph Avenue, Oakland, in 1998. After the initial five-year lease expired, the society signed on for three more years and moved down one floor to Suite 100.

In March 2007, CGS moved to its present site in the historic Breuner Building at 2201 Broadway, Suite LL2, Oakland, California. We're staying put – at least for now!


Written for the 100th edition of the Carnival of Genealogy,

Sources:

1.  Eric Maresca, "The Wanderer," Lyrics. Originally recorded by Dion, 1961. Lyrics Freak, accessed Dec. 1, 2010.

2.  Dorothy Fowler, "The California Genealogical Society's Library – A Century of Growth" (unpublished manuscript, California Genealogical Society, 1996).

3.  Dorothy Fowler, "Where the Books Were – CGS Library 1898 to 1998," The Nugget 9, no. 1,   (1998): 3.

4.  "Latham Square Building – the New Home of the California Genealogical Society," The Nugget 9, no. 2, (1998): 3.

5. "At the Society – Library Settled in New Location," CGS News 38, no. 2, (2007): 3.


COG poster courtesy of footnoteMaven.


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

Wordless Wednesday

First Saturday Free - Intro to Genealogy Class
November 6, 2010
Muriel Sonne



Photograph courtesy of Tim Cox, Oakland, California.


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

29 November 2010

Annual Meeting, Book Sale & Volunteer Appreciation Reception - January 8, 2011

The Annual Business Meeting of the California Genealogical Society will be held on Saturday, January 8, 2011, at 1:00 p.m., at the CGS Library, 2201 Broadway at 22nd, Suite LL2, Oakland. Please join President Stephen Harris who will be making his first report to the society.

The agenda includes brief committee reports, approval of the society budget, the annual election of new board members, a brief review of 2010 and some details of upcoming 2011 programs.

In addition to the meeting, the library will hold a used book sale from 12:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Library Committee volunteer Arlene Miles reports that there are some great bargains among the wide variety of used genealogy books and periodicals set aside for the sale. Donated books continue to be a welcome source of materials in the library and the society is selling those which are duplicates of items already on our shelves and some which do not meet the strict collection policy. Proceeds are used to purchase more books!

Last, but not least, refreshments will be served during a reception after the meeting. It is the annual "Volunteer Appreciation" get-together. Please come and thank our members who donate their time to do the work of the society.


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