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