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  • 27 Feb 2023 2:04 PM | Anonymous

    Here is a list of all of this week's articles, all of them available here at https://eogn.com:

    (+) Essential Things I Never Travel Without – Part

    Jerome E. Anderson, R.I.P.

    Family History Knowledge Helps American Adolescents Develop Healthy Sense of Identity

    Could There be a Royal Title in Your Family Tree?

    Limerick Historian 'Blown Away' by Discovery of Documents

    University of New Hampshire Library Digitizes Town Reports for Entire Granite State

    Webinar: The Seven Phases of African American Genealogy

    Genealogical Society of New Jersey (GSNJ) Spring Conference, 22 April 2023

    YIVO to Digitize Millions of Documents From Jewish Labor Bund

    UArizona Helps Launch Archive Sharing Stories of Detained Immigrants

    ‘Inaccessible’ RTÉ Archives in Ireland to be Made More Open to the Public Under Proposed Legislation

    San Francisco State Bay Area Television Archive Is a Treasure Trove of History on Film — and Streaming Online

    WWII Love Letters Hidden Behind Wall in New York Home Delivered to Family 80 Years Later

    Vatican Secretariat of State Publishes Full "Jews" Series of Historical Archive Online

    OGS Call for Lecture Proposals for 2024 Annual Conference

    More Than 355 Square Miles of Additional Lloyd George Domesday Records Released on TheGenealogist’s Map Explorer™

    Findmypast Adds More Than 200,000 Unique Records

    The Unusual Cause of Death of Allan Pinkerton

    Make Old Low-Resolution Images Look Great on Linux With Upscayl

    Storj Next Could Make Decentralized Storage More Appealing to Both Supply and Demand Sides

    4 Things Genetic Counselors Want You to Know About At-Home DNA Tests

  • 27 Feb 2023 8:50 AM | Anonymous

    For almost half a century, the pulse of much of the Jewish Diaspora was the Bund, a combination labor union, political party and social organization. 

    But for years the only way to see those signs of life — the summer camps, schools, music ensembles and the picket lines — was to visit the archives and know what you were looking for.

    Now, the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research will digitize the Jewish Labor Bund archive, some 3.5 million pages of documents, photos, flyers and correspondence from revolutionary leaders like Emma Goldman and David Dubinsky. The digitization will make these artifacts accessible to anyone with an internet connection.

    The Bund Archive was established in 1899 in Geneva, Switzerland, two years after the Bund was founded in 1897 in Vilna, Lithuania (now Vilnius). Rehoused in 1919 at the German Social-Democratic Party building, it came under threat with Hitler’s rise to power. The archive’s caretakers smuggled its contents into France in French Diplomatic pouches, nominally selling it to the French government.

    Remarkably, though the Nazis seized the archive in 1944, much of it survived the war. The Bund Archives have been at YIVO since 1992.

    You can read more in an article by PJ Grisar published in the Forward.com web site at: https://forward.com/culture/536338/yivo-yiddish-jewish-labor-bund-archive/.

  • 27 Feb 2023 7:37 AM | Anonymous

    Jerome E. Anderson of Easthampton, Massachusetts, formerly of Warren, MA, and Boston, died on February 13, 2023, at age 81. 

    Genealogist, book collector, and former chemist, Jerome was a longtime member and staff member of the New England Historic Genealogical Society in Boston, delivering lectures around the country, preparing exhibits, and carrying out valuable research for patrons and colleagues, for publications and his own projects. He was an editorial consultant for the NEHGS Register and contributing editor for The American Genealogist (TAG). 

    He was known as a specialist in early handwriting on Anderson family lines and the Scotch-Irish of early New England and Canada with a particular interest in Maine ancestry. 

    He was also an enthusiastic member of the Massachusetts Historical Society and the Colonial Society of Massachusetts. As a book collector, Jerome concentrated on American and New England history and science, and the history of books, bookbinding, and printing. With memberships such as in the Ticknor Society of Boston, the American Antiquarian Society, and the Friends of the Houghton Library, he contributed uniquely to research and collections in early New England book and printing history. 

    You can read his obituary at: https://tinyurl.com/4nrsynv7.


  • 24 Feb 2023 2:34 PM | Anonymous

    This online webinar by Tony Burroughs will provide an overview of the methods and sources in the seven distinct phases that are the building blocks of African American genealogy. It progresses from beginning to advanced research, highlighting some of the problems and complexities of African American genealogy along the way. It is valuable for beginners, intermediate, and advanced researchers.

    Tony Burroughs is an internationally known genealogist who researched Olympic Gold Medalist Michael Johnson's family history and consulted on genealogies for Oprah Winfrey, Smokey Robinson, Al Sharpton, and Billy Porter. He has appeared as a guest expert in African American Lives with Henry Louis Gates, Oprah's Roots, Who Do You Think You Are?, The Real Family of Jesus, the History Channel, CBS Sunday Morning, and the BBC. His book, Black Roots, was number one on Essence Magazine's Best Seller List.

    The Live online webinar will be held Tuesday, February 28, 2023, from 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm CST, (7-00 pm to 8:30 pm Eastern Standard Time). The fee is $30.00 USD.

    Register now at: https://bookme.name/tonyburroughs/the-seven-phases-of-african-american-genealogy-1

  • 24 Feb 2023 10:09 AM | Anonymous

    Teenagers struggling to develop a healthy sense of identity must walk a tightrope, balancing commitment to their family’s values with their own exploration of what matters, most psychologists agree.

    A new BYU study suggests that studying family history may help older adolescents find this sweet spot. From a survey of 239 18-to-20-year-old students at seven U.S. universities, researchers found that individuals who had the healthiest identity development — both a sense of connectedness to family and adherence to their own beliefs — also had high levels of family history knowledge.

    “Family history knowledge is particularly good at keeping us grounded,” said BYU experience design and management professor Brian Hill, an author of the paper that was published Wednesday in the journal Genealogy. “There are kids who go off and explore their own paths without settling into a value system that can guide them going forward. We need knowledge of where we come from along with individual differentiation from family to find a steady path.”

    The surveys in the study assessed whether students knew about the major events and important anecdotes from their parents’ and grandparents’ lives, as well as how developed the students’ identity was based on standard measures — whether they were close with family, how they had arrived at their political and religious views, how they had explored occupational options and how committed they were to their values.

    The results indicated that many adolescents have high levels of family history knowledge. About 77% of the participants knew the answers to three-quarters of the family history questions. The more they knew, the more likely they were to have developed a healthy sense of identity. 

    You can read more in an article by Christie Allen published in the BYU News at https://news.byu.edu/intellect/family-history-knowledge-helps-american-adolescents-develop-healthy-sense-of-identity.

    The full study can be found here: https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/7/1/13. 


  • 24 Feb 2023 9:54 AM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by the folks at TheGenealogist:

    TheGenealogist has once again expanded its Landowner and Occupier Collection with the release of over 134,000 new Lloyd George Domesday land tax records. This latest addition covers more than 355 square miles of Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire, including areas around Watford, St Albans, and Hemel Hempstead, and extending up to Luton, Dunstable, and Toddington. The records provide a fascinating insight into the lives of our ancestors, enabling researchers to uncover the owners and occupiers of properties between 1910 and 1915, as well as details about the size, state of repair, and value of their homes.

    The Corn Exchange, Luton

    The scanned field book pages (IR58) have been meticulously linked to large scale Ordnance Survey maps from the time and are fully searchable by a person's name, county, parish, and street. TheGenealogist's powerful Map Explorer™ tool provides an easy way to switch between georeferenced modern and historical maps, allowing researchers to explore the area and see how it has changed over time.

    • Individual property details can be found in these IR58 1910 Valuation Office records

    • Fully searchable records by a person’s name, county, parish and street

    • Survey books are linked to large scale maps used in 1910-1915 and viewable on the powerful Map Explorer™ 

    • The historic OS maps locate individual plots georeferenced to a modern street map or satellite map underlay

    Area covered by this release of Lloyd George Domesday Records

    Included in this release are the IR58 property records for the following areas:

    Abbots Langley, Aldbury, Aldenham, Barton, Berkhamsted Rural, Berkhamsted Urban, Billington, Bovingdon, Bushey and Oxhey, Caddington, Chalgrave, Dunstable, Eaton Bray, Eggington, Flamstead, Flaunden, Great Gaddesden, Harpenden, Heath and Reach, Hemel Hempstead, Houghton Regis, Hyde, Kensworth, Kings Langley, Leighton Buzzard, Linslade and Soulbury, Little Gaddesden, Luton, Markyate, Nettleden, Northchurch, Puttenham (Tring Rural), Puttenham (Tring Urban), Redbourn, Rickmansworth and Chorleywood, Ridge, Sarratt, St. Albans, St. Michael, Stanbridge, Streatley, Studham, Sundon, Tilsworth, Toddington, Totternhoe, Tring Urban, Tring Urban (Tring Rural), Watford and Wigginton.

    Read TheGenealogist’s article: The “seeds” of the Ryder Cup in Land records for Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire

    https://www.thegenealogist.co.uk/featuredarticles/2023/the-seeds-of-the-ryder-cup-in-land-tax-records-for-hertfordshire-1668/

    About TheGenealogist

    TheGenealogist is an award-winning online family history website, who put a wealth of information at the fingertips of family historians. Their approach is to bring hard to use physical records to life online with easy to use interfaces such as their Tithe and newly released Lloyd George Domesday collections. 

    TheGenealogist’s innovative SmartSearch technology links records together to help you find your ancestors more easily. TheGenealogist is one of the leading providers of online family history records. Along with the standard Birth, Marriage, Death and Census records, they also have significant collections of Parish and Nonconformist records, PCC Will Records, Irish Records, Military records, Occupations, Newspaper record collections amongst many others.

    TheGenealogist uses the latest technology to help you bring your family history to life. Use TheGenealogist to find your ancestors today!

  • 24 Feb 2023 9:27 AM | Anonymous

    NOTE: This article is not about any of the "normal" topics of this newsletter: genealogy, history, current affairs, DNA, and related topics. However, it is about some new technology that may revolutionize computer technology. I will suggest that all computer users should learn about this technology, whether you plan to use it or not.

    The following is a press release written by the folks at Storj:

    Storj, the leader in enterprise-grade, globally distributed cloud object storage, that’s globally faster and less expensive than industry giants AWS, Microsoft and Google, today unveiled the next evolution of its network. The number one service on the Web3 Index is also debuting the next phase of its economic model that provides for wider participation in the Storj ecosystem, with sustainable economic incentives for both storage node operators and independent satellite operators. Storj Next’s new features will enable both Web2 and Web3 businesses to reduce cloud costs, without sacrificing reliability or performance.

    What’s New on Storj Next

    The latest version of Storj adds to its already superior speed and savings, Web3 community earning opportunities, with upgrades and new features including:

    • Expanded economic model: Storj plans to introduce an expanded deposit structure, enabling a new earning opportunity for satellite operators and accelerating earning opportunities for nodes, to promote network growth. 
    • Community Satellites: For serious operators who wish to move beyond operating nodes to operating a storage network, Storj is adding capabilities with code, test data, and more to operate globally distributed storage networks without capital and energy intensive datacenters.

    • Chainsnap.io Marketplace with Ankr: Accelerates blockchain node startup by 10x enabling faster and efficient node launching.

    • Perpetual storage: Dedicated wallet addresses for Storj accounts unlock perpetual storage via Ethereum smart contract payments with STORJ.


    “We made the switch to Storj from AWS and not only cut costs, but noticed an improved performance by at least 10x,” said Pocket Networks CEO Michael O’Rourke. “Plus, web2 hyperscalers can have outages in a way that sophisticated decentralized systems do not. With Storj, we not only get faster downloads, we get resilience and security, all for less.”

    Defying the downturn and scaling what works 

    While businesses around the world look to cut costs, including IT budget reductions, they are flocking to more cost effective cloud solutions. This has led to a 40x rise in Storj network use, with remarkable growth from both Web2 and Web3 customers. In the last year, Storj has scaled from 13,000 to 20,000 nodes as both the supply and demand sides realize the economic benefits. Storj has also outperformed Web2 cloud storage providers, driving Web2 adoption with SLA’s comparable to AWS, Google, and Azure. Early proven use cases include video and media distribution, fast sync for blockchain, IT backup and disaster recovery, and sharing large data sets for machine learning. The latest enhancements have gained even more speed, with 280% improvements in file downloads and uploads.

    “Storj gets faster as we add more nodes due to parallelism for downloads. We eliminate dependency on a single data hub, instead using a distributed network of under utilized storage capacity on existing hardware, which allows for less latency and reduced data transfer times,” said Storj CEO Ben Golub. ”We have kept our heads down building a product that works and seen significant growth as a result: Storj is up to 90 percent less expensive and faster on a global basis than AWS and other hyperscalers, making it an attractive option for businesses looking to reduce costs – and emissions – while still benefiting from enterprise-grade durability, reliability, and security"

    To learn more about Storj and save costs on your cloud storage bill, visit www.storj.io. To learn about the Fast Sync Marketplace with Ankr, visit https://www.chainsnap.io/. To learn about performance over AWS, download this on demand webinar at https://www.storj.io/resource/how-storj-is-consistently-faster-than-aws.

    About Storj 

    Storj is a leader in decentralized cloud object storage. Built for developers, architects, and IT ops professionals, Storj delivers blazingly fast, CDN-like performance at cold storage prices, enterprise-grade durability, and better security with no vendor lock-in and no single points of failure. Storj meets the leading-edge privacy and sustainability demands for traditional use cases, Web3, and dApps. Easily integrated into any existing stack with S3 compatibility, Storj is architected as a trustless globally distributed network that utilizes existing excess storage capacity making performance, privacy, and resiliency available to any size organization, at 1/5 to 1/20 the price of hyperscalers. Storj stores multiple petabytes and has petabyte-scale enterprise and Web3 customers and partners like Pocket Network, Atempo, iXsystems, Gabb Wireless at https://gabb.com/gabb-phone-3-pro/, and the University of Edinburgh. STORJ is an ERC-20 token used across the Storj network.

  • 24 Feb 2023 9:08 AM | Anonymous

    It is said that true love stands the test of time.

    For Carol Bohlin of Tinmouth, Vermont, it’s her parents' World War II-era love letters that proved indelible when they were gifted to her by a complete stranger who found them nearly 80 years after they were written. 

    "I was really so surprised they found these," Bohlin, 76, told Fox News Digital. 

    "I never expected this."

    Bohlin, the daughter of Claude Marsten Smythe and Marie Borgal Smythe of Staten Island, New York, said she had no idea her parents had saved and hidden away their only means of communication while her father was serving in the U.S. Navy during World War II.

    You could tell she opened them with care and cherished them," Kearney said. "Everything was still intact. Nothing was smudged, nothing was discolored. They were pretty amazing."

    Kearney said she desperately wanted to return the letters to the family, but did not know how to track down the descendants of the couple.

    "I couldn't find any contact information, where I could send them or who they belonged to," Kearney said. 

    Twenty-eight years later, Kearney saw New York-based heirloom hunter Chelsey Brown, 30, on "The Kelly Clarkson Show." 

    She realized she might have found someone who could help her locate the rightful owner of the World War II love letters. 

    Brown, a New York-based interior decorator, has a passion for reuniting historical artifactswith long-lost family members.

    Brown used her resources, including the MyHeritage.com database, to connect Kearney with one of Bohlin’s sons — and eventually with Bohlin herself.

    "In the end, why did Carol’s parents hide those letters?" Brown said. 

    "They wanted them to be found one day. Those letters were meant for Dottie [Kearney] to find."

    You can read more in an article by Gretchen Eichenberg published at: https://tinyurl.com/yj5abvvj.

  • 24 Feb 2023 8:45 AM | Anonymous

    Students can license historical footage for their own work for free, while most filmmakers must pay to do so 

    When filmmakers want access to historical footage of the Bay Area’s past, they turn to San Francisco State University, home to a massive and unique archive of local television news-film and documentaries from the 20th century. While Academy Award-winning films such as “Judas and the Black Messiah,” “Milk” and “O.J.: Made in America” paid market rate to license the footage, San Francisco State students may do so for their own work at no cost.  

    Based in the J. Paul Leonard Library on campus, the Bay Area Television Archive features more than 135,000 videos from Bay Area television stations. A visit to the new Bay Area Television Archive website is a YouTube-like rabbit hole of a time machine dedicated to the issues and events that gripped the region decades ago.  

    The original daily news coverage allows one to learn how major events unfolded and how communities responded when the word was spread. Curated collections feature the civil rights movement (including the Third World Liberation Front student strike at SF State), the Zodiac Killer, 1970s adult entertainment, old-school hip hop and much more. One can watch speeches by Martin Luther King and Maya Angelou’s entire KQED-TV series “Blacks, Blues, Black” from 1968 — rediscovered and restored by Alex Cherian, the Bay Area television archivist on staff, after not having been seen for decades. 

    Footage from the archive has been used in more than 1,000 documentary, television and community projects in the last 15 years, with dozens more coming out every year.

    Film scanning equipment, funded by a donation from the Friends of the J. Paul Leonard Library, digitizes footage into 4K resolution.    

    To inquire about licensing footage from the Bay Area Television Archive, visit the Using the Collections page or contact archivist Alex Cherian.  

    You can read more in an article by Matt Itelson published in the San Francisco State University web site at: https://news.sfsu.edu/news/sf-state-bay-area-television-archive-treasure-trove-history-film-and-streaming-online .

  • 24 Feb 2023 8:37 AM | Anonymous

    Lincolnshire Baptisms 

    We’ve added 216,638 new records to this existing collection, covering 1754-1812 and 269 churches and chapels across the county. Typically, you can find key biographical information for your ancestor, and often their parents’ names and the date of the baptism. 

    Suffolk Marriage Index 

    A further 52,387 records have been added to this set, covering 1813-1837 and over 500 churches. You’ll normally find your ancestor’s name, marital status and parish, plus that of their spouse, and the date and place of the marriage. 

    National School Admissions Register 

    5,709 records for Halifax, Yorkshire have been added this week, helping you uncover more about your ancestor’s early years. With these, you might find your ancestor’s address, father’s name and occupation, and even notes on their school days, such as exam results and reasons for absence.  

    Newspapers 

    Another 139,000 new pages, including new title the Special Financial, have been added to the newspaper archive this Friday.  

    New titles: 

    ·         Special Financial, 1899 

    Updated titles: 

    ·         Bristol Evening Post, 1976-1977, 1982-1983, 1985 

    ·         Dumfries and Galloway Standard, 1877-1878, 1881, 1909 

    ·         Eastern Mercury, 1903 

    ·         Finsbury Weekly News and Chronicle, 1910 

    ·         Glamorgan Gazette, 1991 

    ·         Hamilton Advertiser, 1921, 1930 

    ·         Holborn and Finsbury Guardian, 1909, 1916 

    ·         Irish Independent, 1940 

    ·         Kensington News and West London Times, 1889, 1909 

    ·         Richmond Informer, 1988 

    ·         St. Pancras Chronicle, People’s Advertiser, Sale and Exchange Gazette, 1900, 1905-1906, 1914 

    ·         Thomson’s Weekly News, 1902, 1908, 1910, 1917, 1921 

    ·         Wandsworth Borough News, 1908-1909 

    ·         Willesden Chronicle, 1923, 1942 

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