So Legacy Family Tree has just come out with a free-to-all version 10! I wanted to mention this especially to #genchat because one of the new features is a FAN report. I haven’t downloaded it yet, but will let you know when I do! #genealogy ~ Christine @genchat
#Ahnenforschung#Genealogy Frage: Hat jemand von Euch schon mal nach U-Boot Besatzungen geforscht? Und zwar nach niemandem im Offiziersrang sondern eben den Jungs im Bugraum, einfache Matrosen. Wie ist da die Erfassungslage? ich habe https://dubm.de/ angeschrieben aber keine Antwort erhalten bislang und im https://historisches-marinearchiv.de ist die Person noch nicht erfasst, hat jemand weitere Ideen oder Quellen? Mir ist nur Name und Geburtstag bekannt, nicht die Bootsnummer(n)
'We've released a searchable database of the men, women and children admitted to Carrolup Settlement between 1915 and 1922, and those who passed away and were buried at Carrolup or the nearby Katanning Cemetery up until 1949.'
#genchat#genealogy@genealogy Ah surely you jest? Messes? We are talking people & families, right? All a mess, always a mess. Just get one sorted and something else pops up. I say "Embrace the Mess" and do what speaks to you now. Currently working on a 4000 year old conundrum. It's funny too that people forget how messy humans are. We have a multiplicity of motivations. We move. We come back home. My great joy this week. A new YDNA match that appears to have moved less than 30 miles in 4000 years. https://wheatonwood.com/2024/05/22/the-journey-of-one-4000-year-old-celtic-y-snp-rfgc22501-ten-years-of-discovery/
Good morning/evening/afternoon, #genchat ! Today our Open Mic theme is Untangling from a #Genealogy Mess! What kinds of messes do you have? Big/small? Physical/electronic? How do you untangle them? Let's chat! @genchat
Hi everyone! I am currently writing a term paper, titled Examining Filipino family heritage expression in family tree mapping. This study is a term paper to be submitted in my PS 215: Special Course on Filipino Heritage course at the Asian Center.
My paper hopes to answer the question "How is family heritage expressed in the work of Filipinos who conduct family tree mapping?"
Newspapers has a free weekend. I still have more years to research my #Pleau line. Last time, I pulled over 400 articles (still extracting all that data).
'Today, Ancestry announced the free availability of the first comprehensive list of over 125,000 persons of Japanese descent who were unjustly imprisoned between December 1942 and January 1948.'
I'm working on a term paper about Filipino heritage expression and genealogy. One of the references I'm using, "Tracing Your Philippine Ancestors" by Lee W. Vance, was published in 1980. The only copy of it I can find is in the UP Diliman Main Library, and it's only for room use.
Does anyone here have any leads where I can find a copy that I can buy or browse for long periods of time?
#Bonjour! I need the help of someone who is located in #Paris, to go into the Cimetière Montmarte and take a couple of photos for me.
The De la Cruz family tombstone is in division 21, ligne 2/65, on the Avenue Cordier. I'm happy to offer 20 EUR to anyone who can get me some good snapshots of it.
For all of you not in Paris, please boost so that this request reaches #France!
Introduction update. I’m interested in social history, including the history of popular music and movies. I post a lot of polls. If you don’t like music, movies or polls, you won’t like my posts. However, if these subjects interest you, please feel free to connect.
Genealogical and genetic ancestors aren’t the same thing. A DNA match − or a lack of one − may not tell you what you imagine it does about your family tree.
"Chemistry professor Tson-Kong (T.K.) Sham and his colleagues recently confirmed a new synchrotron imaging technique they developed is just as effective for retrieving corroded daguerreotypes – the earliest form of photographs – as a strategy they first reported in 2018, and can also be used no matter how badly damaged the image surface is from natural corrosion or cleaning attempts."
Well last night Jan (as usual) gave us a ton of helpful Info :
Modern property tax records can tell you when a house might have been built or remodeled, and sometimes even give you a footprint of the building and its rooms.
If you find records that someone owned property over a certain value, if you're thinking about when they came of age, or if they have income over a certain value. It depends on whether you are "boots on the ground" or looking online.
I highly recommend Judy G. Russell's webinars on the law and how it applies to our research, especially "How Old Did He Have to Be?" Knowing the law tells you when someone is likely to be on a tax list.
Knowing the law is so helpful for all the records we use for #genealogy. I think it was Michael Hait who said in a webinar "Clerks don't keep records for fun."
Most records we use were kept because some law mandated them, or when people were keeping track of money.
Knowing each locality's laws are so important! You can search Judy G. Russell's blog, The Legal Genealogist, to get ideas for finding the laws for individual states, territories, or federal laws.
Good day, #genchat ! I've got my coffee ready & we'll be talking about Tax Records for #genealogy ! And although I've finished updating my computer last night, it is driving kind of slow, so please bear with my pace. @genchat
One of my late father's youngest cousins and her husband were in town for an event, so my wife and I met them for coffee and the handover of the contents of the fabled "Aunt Enid's Trunk" that was in her possession.
Happened upon a new-to-me source of records for assisting with one's #genealogy endeavors: The (US) National Archive's Access to Archival Databases (AAD).