California Genealogical Society: Blog

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05 February 2019

2019 DNA class offerings


Get your DNA on with CGS in 2019!
CGS is sponsoring a plethora of classes and activities focused on ancestral DNA this year. It all kicks off March 7 with a NEW 6-week DNA series being taught by Mark McLaren at the Oakland FamilySearch Library. This is intended for people either new to DNA or looking to improve their ability to use it in their research. Class textbook is The Family Tree Guide to DNA Testing and Genetic Genealogy by Blaine Bettinger.

Then we offer 3 one-day seminars on interpreting your DNA test results:


Those who've completed one of the above classes may be interested in the First Saturday Monthly DNA Study Group, starting up again on May 4. Information is given during the preliminary classes.

And there's more ...

Stay tuned for details on the following:

Summer Evening Drop-in DNA Q&A Sessions
(Time/date TBA)
Therese Hart-Pignotti will help with your DNA questions, particularly as they relate to adoptions.

Fall Classes on Advanced DNA Topics 
(Time/date TBA)
Jim Russell will cover citing DNA sources in your genealogy writing, using the emerging DNA matching tools, and more, as well as a lecture on Y-DNA. 

Subscribe to our blog or follow us on Facebook to get the latest news!


Copyright © 2019 by California Genealogical Society


04 February 2019

Speakers' Bureau Revived

CGS member Ron Madson is knowledgeable about
computers, organization, and other topics
Rumor has it that CGS used to have a Speakers’ Bureau. Well, that tradition has been revived by members of the Development & Member Services and Events committees. This recently reconstituted committee brings together several functions of the society including development, membership (data entry), volunteers and outreach. As part of our Outreach responsibilities we felt it would be helpful to have a database of speakers and topics. We created a spreadsheet that lists seventy-five different topics that are offered by fifty-two different speakers. Most speakers are members of the society who give these talks at no charge. A few are professionals and typically ask for a modest honorarium.

The spreadsheet is organized by topic. We have speakers available to discuss Chinese, Norwegian, Japanese, Portuguese, and Jewish genealogy, among many others. Multiple speakers are qualified to discuss adoption and DNA, and how to use various tech tools.

If you hear about an organization that is looking for speakers on genealogy, please know that that is part of our Outreach program and that we have people available who enjoy giving talks on a broad range of topics. You can request a speaker from the Development & Members Services Committee at development@californiaancestors.org

If you have a topic that you feel qualified to speak on and would like to have your name added to the spreadsheet you should contact the Development & Members Services Committee. Tell us your name, the topics you feel qualified to speak on, availability limitations, and a little information about your public speaking experience.

Copyright © 2019 by California Genealogical Society

30 January 2019

Join the Genealogy Saturdays Team!



We have heard you! For so many of our members, “the spirit is willing,” but the logistics are complicated when it comes to volunteering at CGS during the week.

If you fit in that category, CGS has a great opportunity for members who are only available to volunteer on occasional Saturdays – become an Event Assistant!

This is the perfect opportunity for someone who loves attending our Saturday genealogy classes. Let us remind you of the perks – Not only will you get “points in Heaven” (as your mother used to say), but also free Saturday parking (or, an uncrowded BART ride!), cookies, an opportunity to use one of the genealogy subscription programs (free!) on the CGS Library computers, cookies, a chance to meet and chat with other volunteers…and cookies!

What does the job involve?

Arrive an hour before the class/event
·       Assist with classroom setup
·       Distribute handouts
·       Sign in participants
·       Introduce speaker
·       Make announcements
·       Assist with clean up

Top notch training is provided for all Events Assistants jobs!

(We are also looking for a generous volunteer who would prefer to volunteer/work from home, overseeing the online class registration program.)

Contact Kathleen Beitiks or Jane Lindsey for details or questions.


Copyright © 2019 by California Genealogical Society

CGS Library Collections: Maryland

One in a series by CGS member Chris Pattillo, highlighting some of our holdings at the Library in Oakland. For a fuller listing of our books, journals, and more, consult the CGS Library catalog. Our catalog is also included in WorldCat.

"George Washington Resigning His Commission"
from Tidewater Maryland
The CGS Library has ten and a half shelves of material on the State of Maryland plus a few books devoted to the District of Columbia. This section starts with four sets of journals including:

·         Maryland Historical Magazine 1973 – 1989
·         Maryland Genealogical Society Bulletin 1969 – 2008
·         Maryland Genealogical Journal 2008 – present, and
·         Maryland & Delaware Genealogist 1959 – 1990.

The first set of books I looked at was the Maryland Account Book series, a vast collection of probate records compiled by Annie Walker Burns and indexed by Margaret Griffith. We hold volumes 1-3 and 15-27. What impressed me about these books is that each appears to have been typed by Annie. Our set looks like a carbon copy (some of our younger members may need to look that up to understand the significance. When I learned to type I used carbon paper on occasion).

Next to pique my interest was Old Maryland Families, a 5-by-7-inch book in landscape mode, which is unusual but made sense for this text because it consists of family trees. Described as “A Collection of Charts Compiled from Public Records, Wills, Family Bibles, Tomb Inscriptions, and Other Original Sources,” it was written by Henrietta E. Bromwell and published in 1916. What is exceptional about these family trees is that they capture not just important dates but present a succinct narrative for each person on the tree.
The family trees in Old Maryland Families include short narratives on each entry
White Maryland Runaways is a book you may not wish to find your ancestor in. Author Joseph Lee Boyle has compiled a vast collection of news clippings and historical information about white Europeans who came to the United States in colonial times as indentured servants, political exiles, or convicts. We have two volumes of White Maryland Runaways: "When Drunk is Very Bold" (published 2011) spans the period 1763-1769, and "Drinks Hard, and Swears Much" (published 2010) covers the years 1770-1774.

The leather cover on The Founders of
Maryland feels good
There are sixteen volumes of Maryland Calendar of Wills. Volume One covers the period 1635 to 1685 and was published in 1904.  Anyone who has struggled through attempting to transcribe an old will would appreciate this volume. It presents the salient information from each original document in a clear and succinct narrative and uses bold and large point sizes to help the reader quickly glean the essence of each will.

The oldest Maryland book I found was The Founders of Maryland by Rev. Edward Neill, published in 1876. This book is bound in real leather and its feel reminded me of my confirmation prayer book. The preface explains that “the object of this little book, is to state facts, which had become obscured or forgotten, concerning the first European settlers on the shores of the Potomac River, and Chesapeake Bay.” I would like to find an ancestor mentioned in this book but that's unlikely in my case.

One last book for Maryland is Tidewater Maryland by Paul Wilstach, first published in 1931. What is unique about this book is that every right-hand page has a different headline. Each topic is provocative. For example, page 113 is headed “Head of Elk”;  p. 123,  “A Bully and A Terror”; p. 127, “A Fairy Queen”; p. 133, “Cradle of the Episcopal Church.” I’ve never seen this in any other book.

The pleasure of seeing, feeling, and smelling these old treasures is a joy. I dread the day when all of this will be digitized and obscured by a slick computer monitor. You should plan a trip to our library and savor the experience.

Copyright © 2019 by California Genealogical Society

23 January 2019

CGS Collections: Maine

Detail from the cover of Gazetteer of the State of Maine
One in a series by CGS member Chris Pattillo, highlighting some of our holdings at the Library in Oakland. For a fuller listing of our books, journals, and more, consult the CGS Library catalog. Our catalog is also included in WorldCat.

Our material on the State of Maine occupies shelves F16 – F30 and includes six boxes of Maine Genealogical covering the years 1995 to the current issue. We have an 1881 Gazetteer of the State of Maine With Numerous Illustrations by George J. Varney. It professes to mention “every town, plantation, mountain, lake and bay … of the several counties, cities, towns and villages of the State.”

Another book we have from the same era is History of Cumberland Co., Maine: with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches of Its Prominent Men and Pioneers by W. W. Clayton, published in 1880. One of the things that distinguishes this book is that it includes several images of women – not just men. I particularly like how the author grouped portraits of a couple with a rendering of their home and property.
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Brown, from
History of Cumberland County

Maine is also noteworthy for having a county named after a woman – Jenny Wiley County. We have two thick volumes about that county on our shelves. (The “D” on the binding reminds us that these were from the Dorman Collection.)
Many Maine books have a conifer on
the binding
I noticed that more than one book in our Maine collection depicts a coniferous tree on the bound edge. I wondered about this until I came to Maine: The Pine Tree State from Prehistory to the Present. This 1995 text was edited by Richard W. Judd, Edwin A. Churchill, and Joel W. Eastman.

If you happen to be researching York County, Maine, you are in luck! The CGS library has 19 volumes of deeds. Anyone who has done research with deeds, you will recall how not infrequently handwritten notes are written at ninety degrees to the body of the text. In this transcription, such notes have been dutifully transcribed in the same manner.

Finally, I looked at Pioneers on Maine Rivers with Lists to 1651, compiled from the original sources by Wilbur D. Spencer and published in 1930.  This hardback lists each of Maine's rivers and the communities that developed along its banks. For example, the Piscataqua River has twelve subheadings. The introduction includes the following anonymous poem, which sets the stage for the book.


THE FOUNDERS
Bold pioneers of bygone days,
Who left the homes they loved the best
And sailed athwart the trackless maze
To found an empire in the West.

Tried men and safe were those who steered
The sea-worn craft among the riffs;
Brave men and true were those who reared
Rough cabins on the northern cliffs.

Whatever dangers might assail,
On hopes like theirs the world might wait;
With zeal like theirs no plan could fail,
In faith like theirs was born a State.

Great motherland of stalwart men,
Who greet incoming tides and times,
Who seek the mysteries again
Of modern days and distant climes!

The restless sea rovers in their blood,
The living north wind stirs their breath,
Their souls reflect that motherhood
That forms a part of them till death.

There is much more to find on the State of Maine
Copyright © 2019 by California Genealogical Society