The 101 Best Websites for Genealogy

Hola amigos: The family Tree Magazine published it’s annual list of the 101 Best  GENEALOGY Websites, an essential list of the very best online resources for tracing your roots. The list is focused entirely on the best free online resources for: Family History Mega-Marts (points you to both paid and free “mega sites” that are popular with genealogists); State-of-the-Art Archives (leads you to some of the best websites for state research); Best Ethnic Interests Websites (guides you to time saving resources specific to the heritages you are researching). ES

101 Best Websites for Genealogy Image

 

By By David A. Fryxell

Family Tree Magazine

http://familytreemagazine.com/article/best-websites-for-family-tree-data-online-2012

Our annual list of the 101 Best Websites for genealogy has been a Family Tree Magazine staple for more than a decade, and for good reason.

Our experts painstakingly review hundreds of family history-related websites so you don’t have to. The result is an essential list of the very best online resources for tracing your roots.

Don’t get lost in the maze of family history websites! Check out the latest 101 Best Websites list today.

Ages Online $

“Made by genealogists for genealogists,” this site was launched in 2007 by researchers who were unhappy with existing software options and who also happened to have IT skills. Enhancements have included video tutorials, photo uploading, family stories, collaboration and personalized websites. Annual subscriptions cost $39.95 to $59.95, with a third tier coming soon.

Backupmytree

Windows users of most popular genealogy programs can now sleep at night. ThisMyHeritage.com service automatically finds and creates a remote, off-site copy of your family tree files, then monitors for changes and backs up the updated files. BackupMyTree even stores previous versions of your file in case yours gets corrupted or you hit Delete by mistake and wipe out a whole branch.

Facebook

It’s time to stop playing FarmVille and start taking Facebook seriously for genealogy. Not only is there a constant stream of apps for family historians, but research tools such as WorldCat now even have their own Facebook apps.

Family Pursuit

Family trees created on this collaborative site can now synchronize with trees onFamilySearch (at press time, still in limited beta testing). Contributing to the wiki-based Community Family Tree is free, or you can build your own unique tree for $59.95 a year. That upgrade also lets you upload 10 GB of photos and documents and manage privacy features. Your site gets its own web address, too, such as <smithfamilytree.familypursuit.com>.

Family Tree DNA

A leader in paid testing services (starting at $159), Family Tree DNA also boasts the largest DNA database, with 367,974 records at last count. You also can search its freeYsearch y-DNA or MitoSearch mitochondrial DNA test results databases.

Geni $

A leader in online family trees, Geni has recently branched out to make documents from subscription genealogy websites Archives.com and GenealogyBank available to members through profile-based alerts. A basic membership is free, or you can enjoy enhanced tools and keepsake products with a new $4.95-per-month Plus membership or $12.96 Pro package. Paying members can find matching trees and merge those into the single world family tree (“the Big Tree”), which currently contains nearly 63 million linked profiles.

MyHeritage $

Known for its online family trees and SmartMatching technology, MYHeritage has invested half a million dollars into hardware and a data center for its SuperSearch system for subscribing members. SuperSearch combines the site’s 1 billion profiles with a new emphasis on records collections (starting with the 1940 US census). It’s free to build a basic family tree on MyHeritage and use SmartMatching to find matches in other trees; trees larger than 250 people are by subscription.

SharedTree

This open-source family tree sharing website requires no software download, sets no limits on the size of your trees, and lets you “debate” your finds with fellow researchers. Plus, it’s all free.

Tribal Pages

This pioneering family tree hosting site has grown to more than 300,000 members with websites containing more than 80 million names and 2 million photos. You can join for free, or upgrade ($24 to $48 annually) for more storage space and advanced features.

WeRelate

The world’s largest genealogy wiki with pages for more than 2.2 million individuals, this free site is sponsored by the Foundation for On-Line Genealogy in partnership with the Allen County Public Library in Fort Wayne, Ind. Recent improvements include better handling of name variants and more powerful “watch” lists.

WikiTree

Since its founding in 2008, this wiki-style tree-sharing collaborative has grown to 3.3 million profiles contributed by 47,500 “WikiTreers.” You can choose to join in and share your family finds or keep everybody less than 300 years old private. Membership is by invitation; you can request one through the site.
Check out the rest of our 101 Best Websites for genealogy in 2012! Click on a category below.
From the September 2012 Family Tree Magazine

Genealogy Tourism: The New Travel Trend

Hola amigos: The new travel  trend is genealogy tourism or the best of both worlds: travel and genealogy search (killing both birds with the same stone). Walking the walk of your elders, your ancestors from long lost lands!  What an adventure, turning tracing family trees into a reason to travel and travel far sometimes! Governments and countries hoping to participate on the trend are promoting “The Gatherings ” or ‘Route Back Home’ to welcome back their los daughters and sons tracing their roots back to them ( boosting tourism at the same time)! Good for their souls and their economies, a win- win solution, no doubt… ES

Travellers seeking to climb their family trees Image

 

by Travel Blackboard (Asia Edition)

http://www.etravelblackboardasia.com/article/86896/genealogy-tourism-the-new-travel-trend

 

Walking in the footsteps of your ancestors is fast becoming the latest travel trend as travellers turn tracing their family tree into a reason to travel; the Irish Times reported.

The Ballymoney Museum in the UK also recently hosted ‘Route Back Home’, an international family history conference that attracted delegates from USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand to attend lectures and partake in field trips to the Public Record Office.

According to the Ballymoney Times, delegates from this event were able to gather fresh information about their families while developing new skills to help with their future research.

One of the delegates described the experience as “A once in a lifetime opportunity to walk the streets where my ancestors trod”.

 

 

Genealogy Genograms and Symbols

Hola amigos: I discovered genograms when I was researching my last names. A genogram is a pictorial display of symbols representing a person’s  relationships: family,emotional,social, and medical history.

Genograms are created with simple symbols representing the gender (squares for men, circles for women), with various lines to  illustrate family relationships.I found this article that explains it completely, so enjoy it! ES

Genograms Symbols Image

 

By Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genograms

A genogram -also known as a McGoldrick-Gerson study or a Lapidus Schematic- is a pictorial display of a person’s family relationships and medical history. It goes beyond a traditional family tree by allowing the user to visualize hereditary patterns and psychological factors that punctuate relationships. It can be used to identify repetitive patterns of behavior and to recognize hereditary tendencies.

Genograms were first developed and popularized in clinical settings by Monica McGoldrick and Randy Gerson through the publication of a book titled Genograms: Assessment and Intervention in 1985.

Genograms are now used by various groups of people in a variety of fields such as medicine, psychiatry, psychology, social work, genetic research, education, and many more. Some practitioners in personal and family therapy use genograms for personal records and/ or to explain family dynamics to the client. Few if any genealogists use them.

Genograms and Symbols

A genogram is created with simple symbols representing the gender, with various lines to illustrate family relationships. Some genogram users also put circles around members who live in the same living spaces. Genograms can be prepared by using a complex word processor, or a computer drawing program. There are also computer programs that are custom designed for genograms. Genogram symbols will usually have the date of birth (and date of death if applicable) above, and the name of the individual underneath. The inside of the symbol will hold the person’s current age or various codes for genetic diseases or user-defined properties: abortions, still-births,SIDS, cohabitations, etc.

Genogram Content

A genogram can contain a wealth of information on the families represented. It will not only show you the names of people who belong to your family lineage, but how these relatives relate to each other. For example, a genogram will not only tell you that your uncle Paul and his wife Lily have three children, but that their eldest child was sent to boarding school, that their middle child is always in conflict with her mother, that their youngest has juvenile diabetes, that Uncle Paul suffered from depression, was an alcoholic, and a philosopher, while Aunt Lily has not spoken to her brother for years, has breast cancer and has a history of quitting her jobs.

 

Family Relationships

One of the advantages of a genogram is the ability to use colour-coded lines to define different types of relationships such as family relationships, emotional relationships and social relationships. Within family relationships, you can illustrate if a couple is married, divorced, common-law, engaged, etc.

 

Emotional Relationships

Genograms may also include emotional relationships. These provide an in-depth analysis of how individuals relate to one another. Colour-coded lines represent various emotional relationships that bond individuals together.

 

Social Relationships

Another component of genograms is social relationships. These allow users to link individuals who are not related to one another, but who have a connection in society-at-large, such as neighbor, co-worker, boss-employee, pastor-church member, teacher-student, etc. Social relationships can also illustrate an individual’s relation to a social entity. The use of social relationships links allows the genogram to be used in a business environment to create organizational charts or floor plan layouts of the employees. A genogram looks like a family tree, but with all the different types of relationships, it contains a significantly more detailed and complete picture of the family or group it illustrates.

Purpose of the Genogram:

Genealogy

In genealogy, genograms are used to record family history through the lives of each of its members. Genograms allow the genealogist to graphically portray complex family trees that show marriages and divorces, reconstituted families, adoptions, strained relationships, family cohesion, etc. Genealogists can use genograms to discover and analyze interesting facts about their family history, such as a naming pattern, sibling rivalry, or significant events like immigration.

Medicine

In medicine, medical genograms provide a quick and useful context in which to evaluate an individual’s health risks. Knowledge of diseases and conditions that occur within a family can give a health care team invaluable information that may aid in a swift, accurate diagnosis and treatment of health problems. And, a knowledge of diseases and illnesses that “run” in families can give individuals an important head start in pursuing effective preventive measures. A medical genogram is helpful in determining patterns of disease or illness within a family. Medical genograms can include many generations, however four generations may prove to be enough detail.

Sociology

In Sociology, genograms are used by Sociologists to gather objective and consistent information from the clients and their family, helping them to view the client’s issues in the larger context of their marital relationship, family relationships and culture of origin and underlining key issues to discuss in client counseling. Genograms portray emotional relationships, which allow Sociologists to see and evaluate possible conflicts within the family. Psychological patterns may be detected in the genogram which provide the basis for precautionary and preventive measures that otherwise might not be warranted.

Social work

In social work, genograms are used to display emotional bonds between individuals composing a family or social unit. A genogram will help social workers to make an assessment of the level of cohesiveness within a family or a group and to evaluate if proper care is available within that unit. Genograms also allow displaying social relationships that illustrate the places people attend such as schools, churches, youth facilities, associations or retirement homes.

Family Therapy

In family therapy, genograms are used to study and record relationship patterns between family members and the individual characteristics that make up these patterns that occur. A genogram will help family therapists to make an appropriate assessment of the relationship patterns and where intervention may be needed to assist the family reduce their dysfunction and/or problematic situation that brought them into therapy.

Research

In research, genograms allow researchers to understand multi generational processes within various plant and animal species, such as the development of mutations. Genograms can also illustrate rates of renewal, mechanisms of survival, or processes involved in the regulation of tolerance, among other things.

Education

In education, genograms can be used by teachers and students for illustrating book reviews, or family trees of a famous politician, philosopher, scientist, musician, etc. They allow them to focus their attention on specific details and also see the big picture of the books and individuals they are studying. Creating Genograms Genograms can be useful in almost any profession that deals with social interaction. Genograms can help to visualize complex interactions between individuals and to study patterns of behaviors or diseases. Genograms are best created with genealogy software, as advanced software allows the user to include tremendous amounts of data. Genealogy software also allows the user to create detailed reports containing analysis of the information stored in each person’s individual properties. Genograms are often drawn by hand, sketched working right with the client. It is also possible to create a Genogram using MS Word.

JRR Tolkien’s Middle-Earth Gets a Complete Genealogy

Hola amigos: The Family Tree Project website has the Tolkien’s densely populated fictional world of Lord of the Rings, as one  of their projects. The people in charge are obviously, Tolkien’s fans, like me. The first time I saw the movie with the Hobbits and the Shire, the elves and their magical city and all the middle – earth family was a beautiful, wonderful experience… Now, thanks to the devotion of Emil Johansson, a photographer and chemical engineer student from Sweden, the  Middle- Earth Family has their genealogy history research done. Fans of Tolkien, enjoy! ES

Lord of the Rings Genealogy Image

More of the Ring: detail from the Family Tree Project website

by www.guardian.co.uk

Tolkien’s densely populated fictional world is now the subject of a minutely-detailed ‘family tree project’

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2012/jan/26/rings-genealogy-jrr-tolkien-middle-earth?newsfeed=true

I am a Tolkien fan. I reread Lord of the Rings every now and then; seeing the trailer for The Hobbit sent shivers down my spine; my daughter is called Merry, for goodness sake. But my devotion to Middle-earth pales before that of Emil Johansson, a photographer and chemical engineering student from Sweden, who has read “every book there is to read about “Middle-earth” and who has spent years compiling a family tree of every character – every character! – in Tolkien’s world.

Take a look: supreme god  Eru Iluvatar sits at the top, but dig a little further and you’ll find out how, exactly, the Sackville-Bagginses are linked to the Bagginses, that Sam Gamgee and Rosie Cotton had 12 little hobbit children, and oh so very much more.

The project started when Johansson was 14 years old, on paper. “If I remember correctly I had just finished reading Tolkien’s Unfinished Tales and I wanted to immerse myself even more in the world of Middle-earth. Doing a family tree became a natural step of trying to understand the world better,” he says, admitting that “looking back, I probably had too much time on my hands”.

It quickly developed from including just a few elves and men into a project with over 600 characters. Johansson put it online last week, and is now up to 703 characters, but believes there’s still at least 100 to go. “I have most trouble adding the remaining hobbits. Tolkien really put a lot of effort into their genealogy,” he says.

He’s received a “massive flood” of feedback from Tolkien fans around the world since he launched The Lord of the Rings Family Tree Project – from encouragement to suggestions and corrections. “I depend on people doing this since my knowledge of Tolkien’s world is fairly limited. If I had studied programming and not chemical engineering I might have programmed it to be a collaborative website instead,” says Johansson, revealing that Aragorn  is the Tolkien character to fascinate him the most. “Not so much Aragorn the king but his life as a ranger. I guess I feel that way because I always wanted to try living like that.”

 

Hispanic American Heritage Month

NHHM – Embracing the fierce urgency of now!

 Hola amigos: Hispanic Heritage Month is observed Sept. 15-Oct. 15, 2012. The national theme for 2012 is ”Diversity United, Building America’s Future Today” . The observance celebrates the histories, cultures and contributions of  Hispanic or Latin Americans- Americans who trace their roots to Spain, Mexico, the Caribbean and Central and South America. The celebration will be commemorating the Hispanic American Heritage Month through programs, exhibits, publications, and participation in community events.

The Library of Congress, National Archives and Records Administration, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Gallery of Art, National Park Service, Smithsonian Institution and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum are paying tribute to generations of Hispanic Americans who have  influenced and enriched our nation.

For more information, visit the National Hispanic Heritage Month website. ES

Many Backgrounds, Many Stories…One American Spirit.

Hispanic Heritage Month

Diversity United,Building America’s Future Today

Coursera – Free Online Top University Courses For All

Coursera Image

Hola amigos: Today I bring you Coursera  https://www.coursera.org/. I  heard about it and looked it up immediately! They are a service of free university online courses for all. They have 33 universities that have partnered with them, some even “Ivy League”, and a lot of  courses to choose from: history, nutrition, music,  art, math, business, language,you name it!

Google Image for Coursera

 

I checked it out and enrolled in one of the courses related to Genealogy:

A History of the World since 1300

The course  is for 12 weeks and the Professor on Spanish Civilization and Culture is Jeremy Adelman, from Princeton University.

 

Coursera Course Image

Coursera is a social entrepreneurship company that partners with the top universities in the world to offer free courses online for anyone to take.  Their technology enables the best professors to teach tens or hundreds of thousands of students, giving professors and universities, leverage, and students, a great education with the best professors and the best universities, even “Ivy League” like Princeton, for free.

Through this, they hope to give everyone access to the world-class education that has so far been available only to a few. They want to empower people with good education that will improve their lives, the lives of their families, and the communities they live in and so do I, so I am sharing it with you.

Classes offered on Coursera are designed to help you master the material, you will watch lectures taught by world-class professors, learn at your own pace, test your knowledge, and reinforce concepts through interactive exercises.

When you join, you are also  joining  a global community of thousands of students learning alongside you. Their courses are designed to help you master new concepts quickly and effectively, demonstrate your new knowledge providing frequent feedback, so that you can monitor your own progress.

They offer courses  spanning the Humanities, Medicine, Biology, Social Sciences, Mathematics, Business, Computer Science, and many others.

Maybe you are just looking to improve your resume, advance your career, or just learn more and expand your knowledge, there you will find multiple interesting courses to choose from.

Please visit their page to learn more and enroll in one of their wonderful and for free courses.  Enjoy them! ES

https://www.coursera.org/

 

 

Extracting Value with Global Trace and Genealogy

Hola amigos: Genealogy is not only for families, products are traceable too. Global trace and genealogy is the ability to trace the complete history of a product – of every part, assembly and process throughout the supply chain and out to the customer. Global companies are investing in manufacturing intelligence, product genealogy solutions and product trace-ability resources to help them be prepared to make the sudden adjustments needed for the flow of parts and supplies. Being able to produce accurate global T&G data, tracking everything that could possibly matter, saves time and money in the long run by extracting value - having the best infrastructure for higher quality, lower costs and a superior brand. ES

Bar Code Image

 

by John Fishell

 

A new cost of doing business is coming due for global manufacturers, and it’s coming faster than many enterprises are ready to deal with.

It’s the cost of global trace and genealogy (T&G), which means the ability to trace the complete history of every part, assembly and process throughout the supply chain and out the door to the customer. I’m hearing this subject brought up more and more frequently from our customers, across every industry.

In automotive, Tier 1 and Tier 2 suppliers want global product trace-ability so they can better see into their supply chains. When the tsunami struck Japan in 2011, and the Taiwan floods struck a couple of months later, the industry was caught unprepared to make the sudden adjustments needed to the flow of parts and supplies. Now, many leading auto companies are investing in product genealogy solutions, both organizational and technological. In addition OEM’s are starting to make this a mandatory requirement of their suppliers

The pet food industry has had several contamination recalls in recent years. In some cases, manufacturers had to take a much bigger hit than would have been necessary if they been able to produce accurate global T&G data.

Of course industries like pharma and medical devices have long been focused on trace and genealogy for regulatory compliance reasons, as well as for safety. But the challenges keep growing as the interconnected web of suppliers and sub-suppliers keeps growing. Companies that thought they had mastered product genealogy, suddenly found themselves racing just to keep pace with the growing complexities of global manufacturing.

We shouldn’t be surprised by all of this. When we talk about global trace and genealogy, what we’re really talking about is tracking everything – every last production detail that could possibly matter. And not just in one plant, but in and across every plant, and every suppliers’ plants, and even to their suppliers.

What’s more, this complexity is growing exponentially, with each new plant that opens. This is increasingly a concern as companies increase their investment in BRIC countries (a grouping acronym that refers to the countries of Brazil, Russia, India and China) and off shoring.

Meanwhile, the impact that a product failure can have – on the enterprise and on the world – is also growing exponentially. One mistake can reverberate around the globe, while failure to contain that mistake could do irreparable damage to a brand. That should put global trace and genealogy near the top of any corporate to-do list.

Interestingly, the recent turn of events is actually good news for manufacturers. Implementing a robust global T&G solution can help you to unlock greater value from your operations while enabling greater results from continuous process improvement. If you can track all production and supply chain operations, you’re well on your way to having the best infrastructure for higher quality, lower costs and a superior brand. So, perhaps we should be talking about global trace and genealogy as an investment, not a cost.

In any case, we can safely say this: Offshore manufacturing has many inherent business advantages, but reliable product genealogy is probably not one of them. Companies opening plants around the world to reduce operating costs need to make sure they have trace and genealogy under control, or they may end up paying a very high price later on.

In my next post, I’ll take a look at a few misconceptions about what manufacturers actually need from their global trace and genealogy solution.

 

“Isle of Hope, Isle of Tears”

Hola amigos: Today I want to share a beautiful Irish song I heard on public television: “Isle of Hope, Isle of Tears” by Brendan Graham, and performed by Celtic Thunder who continues to explore their Irish and Celtic roots in  Voyage. It tells the story of an Irish immigrant, Annie Moore, the first to pass through the Ellis Island facility in New York Harbor.

Celtic Thunder Image by Google

If you want to listen to them and watch the video go to:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0WtTVtILUAU&playnext=1&list=PL26E17B2706853996&feature=results_main

Anna “Annie” Moore arrived from County Cork, Ireland aboard the steamship Nevada on January 1, 1892. At the time it was reported that her arrival was on her 15th birthday.

She is honored by Ellis Island Immigration Museum and in Cobh, the Irish seaport from where she sailed to the United States of America. Her story is told in the song  ”Isle of Hope, Isle of Tears” written by Brendan Graham and Ronan Tynan, who was a member of The Irish Tenors.  ES

“Isle of Hope, Isle of Tears”

by Brendan Graham and Ronan Tynan

On the first day of January,
Eighteen ninety-two,
They opened Ellis Island and they let
The people through.
And first to cross the threshold
Of that isle of hope and tears,
Was Annie Moore from Ireland
Who was all of fifteen years.

Isle of hope, isle of tears,
Isle of freedom, isle of fears,
But it’s not the isle you left behind.
That isle of hunger, isle of pain,
Isle you’ll never see again
But the isle of home is always on your mind.

In a little bag she carried
All her past and history,
And her dreams for the future
In the land of liberty.
And courage is the passport
When your old world disappears
But there’s no future in the past
When you’re fifteen years

Isle of hope, isle of tears,
Isle of freedom, isle of fears,
But it’s not the isle you left behind.
That isle of hunger, isle of pain,
Isle you’ll never see again
But the isle of home is always on your mind.

When they closed down Ellis Island
In nineteen forty-three,
Seventeen million people
Had come there for sanctuary.
And in springtime when I came here
And I stepped onto it’s piers,
I thought of how it must have been
When you’re fifteen years.

Isle of hope, isle of tears,
Isle of freedom, isle of fears,
But it’s not the isle you left behind.
That isle of hunger, isle of pain,
Isle you’ll never see again
But the isle of home is always on your mind.
The isle of home is always on your mind.

Celtic Thunder Heritage

Ireland Landscape and Castle

 

Ireland Landscapes

National Archives Genealogy Online Workshop Videos

Hola amigos: The National Archives has launched online videos of its most popular genealogy workshops. The videos cover topics such as census, immigration and military records. These popular workshops led by National Archives experts are available on their YouTube channel. ES

The NARA YouTube Image

 

by David McMillen
The National Archives

http://blog.dearmyrtle.com/2012/01/nara-genealogy-workshop-videos-now.html

National Archives Puts Popular Records Workshops Online for First Time!

“Know Your Records” videos now available on National Archives YouTube Channel http://www.youtube.com/user/usnationalarchives.

 

The National Archives-produced Know Your Records video shorts cover the creation, scope, content, and use of National Archives records for genealogical research. “The National Archives is proud to make our most popular genealogy lectures available online and ready for viewing by anyone, anywhere, at any time,” said Diane Dimkoff, Director of Customer Services.

 

Genealogy Introduction: Military Research at the National Archives: Volunteer Service (8:22) www.youtube.com/watch?v=2zgKBrsVpxY  Archives specialist John Deeben discusses compiled military service records at the National Archives.

 

Genealogy Introduction—Military Research at the National Archives: Regular Service (6:11) www.youtube.com/watch?v=1OMO-PbmMEw  Archives Specialist John Deeben explains how to use Army and Navy registers of enlistment and rendezvous reports for research.

 

Genealogy Introduction—Military Research at the National Archives: Pension Records (9:04)

www.youtube.com/watch?v=oT-AgYFhX1k  Archives Specialist John Deeben discusses how to research military service using pension records dating from 1775 to 1916.  Deeben shows samples of both Revolutionary War and Civil War pensions.

 

Genealogy Introduction—Immigration Records at the National Archives (11:57)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OCZTSrSvxyc Archives Specialists Katherine Vollen and Rebecca Crawford provide an overview of immigration records from 1800 to 1957, including Customs Service and Immigration and Naturalization records, as well as records of ports and border crossings.

 

Genealogy Introduction: Census Records at the National Archives (11:57)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yl54NX_H1ko

Genealogy expert Constance Potter shares tips and strategies for researching U.S. Federal Census Records 1790 to 1930, and explains how they can be used for genealogical research.

Background on “Know Your Records” programs

The National Archives holds the permanently valuable records of the Federal government. These include records of interest to genealogists, such as pension files, ship passenger lists, census and Freedmen’s Bureau materials. The Know Your Records Program offers opportunities for staff, volunteers, and researchers to learn about these records through lectures, ongoing genealogy programs, workshops, symposia, the annual genealogy fair, an onlinegenealogy tutorialreference reports for genealogical research, and editions of Researcher News  for Washington DC area researchers.

 

Genealogy Tool Kit Published by Foundation for the National Archives

Genealogy Tool Kit Book

 

Hola amigos: The Foundation for the National Archives published the Genealogy Tool Kit: Getting Started on Your Family History at the National Archives. This  step-by-step guide was published to help family researchers explore how their ancestors interacted with the Federal Government over the course of their lives. ES

Genealogy Tool Kit Image

by PRNewswire

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/genealogy-tool-kit-published-by-foundation-for-the-national-archives-147915985.html

Step-by-Step Guide to Family Research at the National Archives 

The Foundation for the National Archives announces the publication of the Genealogy Tool Kit: Getting Started on Your Family History at the National Archives, written by National Archives genealogy archives specialist John P. Deeben.

This 160-page step-by-step guide was published by the Foundation and launched in April 2012 to coincide with the celebration of the National Archives’ release of the 1940 U.S. Census. The Foundation has long supported research at the National Archives, including its annual support of the Archives’ Genealogy Fair, and the development of genealogy products such as thisTool Kit and other archival and research-oriented items.

The Genealogy Tool Kit will help family researchers of all levels of experience to explore how their ancestors interacted with the Federal Government over the course of their lives. Did they enter the United States from a foreign country? Apply to become an American citizen? Enlist in a regiment during a particular war? File for a patent, homestead, or pension?

Through such questions, and many more, the Genealogy Tool Kit helps genealogists to navigate the records at the National Archives, from census and naturalization records to military and federal land grant records. With checklists to track the readers’ progress, family trees to fill in as ancestors are discovered, and room for taking notes, the Tool Kit will also serve as researchers’ own record of their family history research  project.

The Genealogy Tool Kit also includes the personal discovery stories of Archivist of the United States David S. Ferriero, documentary filmmaker Ken Burns, and author and journalist A’Lelia Bundles, as well as inspirational accounts from several other family historians.

The Tool Kit is available for purchase in the Archives Shop in Washington, DC, over the phone at 202-357-5271, or via email atnationalarchivesstore@nara.gov


About the National Archives
The National Archives and Records Administration  is an independent Federal agency that preserves and shares with thepublic records that trace the story of our nation, government, and the American people. From the Declaration of Independence to accounts of ordinary Americans, the holdings of the National Archives directly touch the lives of millions of people. TheNational Archives is a public trust upon which our democracy depends, ensuring access to essential evidence that protects the rights of American citizens, documents the actions of the government, and reveals the evolving national experience

About the Foundation for the National Archives
The Foundation for the National Archives is an independent nonprofit that serves as the National Archives’ private-sector partner in the creation of and ongoing support of the National Archives Experience, which includes permanent exhibits, educational programs, traveling exhibits, special events and film screenings, and historical/records-related products, publications, and media. The Foundation helps the public understand the importance of the holdings of the National Archivesby presenting the depth and diversity of the records through award-winning, interactive educational exhibits and programs. It generates financial and creative support for the National Archives Experience from individuals, foundations, and corporations who share a belief in the importance of innovative civics education.

SOURCE Foundation for the National Archives