Recent Posts
04 May 2012
Heading South for Jamboree 2012
Members of the California Genealogical Society are making plans for this year's Southern California Genealogical Society Jamboree, Friday-Sunday, June 8-10, 2012, at the Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport. The theme for the 43rd annual event is Lights, Camera, Ancestors! Spotlight on Family History.
As they did last year, co-chairs Paula Hinkel and Leo Myers offered a FREE one-day exhibit table to genealogical societies, historical societies, and other nonprofit organizations. We had one of the hall tables last year and it worked well for us. We're thrilled to have snagged a table for this year on Saturday, June 9, 2012.
We will be selling our newest publications, Raking the Ashes and the Insider's Guide to California Genealogy and we could use some help! If you can give us a couple of hours of your time, please email me.
And thank you to the Southern California Genealogical Society for giving us the opportunity to exhibit at your wonderful event. We believe in collaboration, and we are glad you do, too!
Copyright © 2012 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library
02 May 2012
Wordless Wednesday
Salt Lake City Research Tour
Photographs courtesy of Jim Sorenson, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Copyright © 2012 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library
01 May 2012
eNews May 2012, volume 6, number 5
The May 2012 eNews,
volume 6, number 5, 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.
Member and Volunteer Coordinator, Linda Okazaki, contributed this month's photograph of her husband Ted's Japanese immigrant ancestors, as we celebrate Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month.
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Ichimaru Okazaki & Hamako Maibara marriage photo, 1921 |
Past issues of the eNews are available at the eNews archive.
The June 2012 issue will be emailed on May 31, 2012. To receive a copy, please join our mailing list.
Photograph courtesy of Linda Okazaki.
Copyright © 2012 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library
30 April 2012
1940 Census Indexing – April 2012 Update
The California Genealogical Society is part of the 1940 U.S. Census Community Project to create a free, online
searchable name index of the 1940 U.S. Federal Census.
Fifty-eight indexers have signed on to participate under the CGS umbrella. For the month of April, our group has indexed 29,829 names and arbitrated 2000!
President Jeffrey Vaillant is our acting project coordinator and he is posting periodic "cheerleading" messages to our group participants. We are seeing new members sign on every week.
Overall, the project is exceeding expectations. As of April 20, 2012, FamilySearch Indexing reported the following statistics:
- So far, 14.2% of the entire project has been completely indexed.
- We have 75,820 indexers and arbitrators working to index and arbitrate the census records.
- Colorado and Kansas have been completely indexed and are being processed in preparation for posting on FamilySearch.org.
- Delaware is posted online at FamilySearch.org.
- Nine states (Alaska, Idaho, Indiana, Nevada, New Hampshire, Oregon, Utah, Virginia and Wyoming) are 80% or more indexed and will soon be complete. To see the status of each state, visit FamilySearch.org/1940census.
- A total of 19,242,589 records have been indexed and arbitrated by volunteers.
Thanks to all of our hard-working indexers!
If you haven't signed on yet, don't delay! Join us and the 1940 U.S. Census Community Project.
Copyright © 2012 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library
27 April 2012
Historical Portuguese Newspapers of California Digitized
Dr. Henry Snyder sent this press release:
April 25, 2012, Dartmouth, MA – The Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives at the Claire T. Carney Library and the Center for Portuguese Studies and Culture of the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth announce the addition of 14 Portuguese-language newspapers published in California between 1885 and 1940 to its Portuguese-American Digital Newspaper Collections. The project was done in collaboration with the J.A. Freitas Library, a special collections library privately owned and operated by the Supreme Council of P.F.S.A. in San Leandro, CA, which provided the original newspapers.
This unique collection, which includes some of the earliest known Portuguese-language newspapers in the U.S., such as O Progresso Californiense, first published in July of 1885, may be accessed through the Internet for free and without a password. Each issue of the newspapers in the collection may be browsed in its entirety or searched by keyword. The site also offers the possibility of searching across all issues of the same paper or across all newspapers in the collection.
A formal presentation of the online site that houses the collection will take place Saturday, May 28 at 6:00 PM in the J.A. Freitas Library, 1120-24 E. 14th Street, San Leandro, CA. Archivist Sonia Pacheco of the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives, who supervised the digitization, will provide an overview of the project and demonstrate the use of the site. Similar presentations will also be held at the Portuguese Historical Museum of San Jose on April 29th at 2:00 PM (History Park - San Jose, Phelan Ave. Entrance); the University of California, Berkeley on May 2nd; and San Jose State University on May 3rd (for time and place please contact Prof. Deolinda Adão at 408-924-4022 or deolinda.adao@sjsu.edu). All presentations are free and open to the public.
The papers were digitized onsite at the J.A. Freitas Library by ArcaSearch of Minneapolis, MN. This process safeguarded the integrity of the fragile historical originals and created high quality scans, using a patented process that optimizes the text and illustrations. ArcaSearch also provided preservation quality microfilm, which will serve as a backup for long-term preservation of the contents of the papers.
Information which in the past required researchers to travel to various archives and spend extensive hours of searching paper sources or reel after reel of microfilm is now available from the comfort of one’s home at the click of a computer mouse. “This collection of historical newspaper is an invaluable resource for the study of the Portuguese-American experience in California and beyond,” said Dr. Frank Sousa, Director of the Center for Portuguese Studies and Culture at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, who initiated the Portuguese-American Newspaper Digitization Project.
“Given the major role played by the Portuguese in California agriculture, especially the dairy industry, this collection is of paramount value to the understanding of the state’s history and economy,” stated Dr. Gloria de Sá, Faculty Director of the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives, the major repository of historical materials about the Portuguese in the U.S. “Much of the information contained in these newspapers cannot be found elsewhere. Sociologists, historians, anthropologists, political scientists and other academics researching issues associated with immigration and ethnicity will also find it a valuable tool, as will those interested in local and family history. It’s the most comprehensive and accessible database available to students and academic researchers interested in Portuguese-related issues, as well as individuals tracing their family genealogy,” added Dr. de Sá.
Besides keeping Portuguese Americans informed about local, national, Portuguese and world news, these newspapers also played a major role in documenting social events and life. Religious festivals, club activities, charity appeals, and visits of prominent individuals were regularly announced; weddings, births and deaths reported; and news of the arrival and departure of vessels bringing new immigrants or taking them for a visit back to their homeland were featured along with the respective passenger lists. Photographs, drawings, advertisements and editorials give us a window into period fashions, patterns of consumption, the cost of goods, types of businesses owned by the Portuguese and the perspectives of this ethnic group on the political and social issues of the times.
The digitization of the historical Portuguese newspapers of California is the second venture undertaken by the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives under its Portuguese-American Newspaper Digitization Project. The first was the Diário de Notícias, a daily newspaper published in New Bedford, Massachusetts between 1919 and 1973. The initiative was made possible by grants from the Government of the Autonomous Region of the Azores (Carlos César, President); Elisia and Mark Saab of Advanced Polymers, Inc., in Salem, NH; and Luis Pedroso, of Accutronics, Inc., in Lowell, MA. The goal of the project is to digitize major historical Portuguese newspapers published in the United States. Individuals or organizations possessing copies of such newspapers or other historical documents associated with the Portuguese in the U.S. are encouraged to contact Sonia Pacheco at 508 999-8695 or spacheco@umassd.edu.
Copyright © 2012 by Kathryn M. Doyle, California Genealogical Society and Library