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  • 27 Jan 2022 10:14 AM | Anonymous

    The following is a news release from the Newfoundland and Labrador provincial government:

    Vital Statistics records for deaths registered in Newfoundland and Labrador from 1950 to 1968 are now available online via The Rooms website.

    In 2021, Digital Government and Service NL’s Vital Statistics Division provided an initial transfer of 59,698 death certificates, to allow public access for research purposes. This is the first time a collection of vital statistics records has been digitally transferred to The Rooms Provincial Archives. The records can be found on a searchable database here Vital Statistics (Deaths 1950-1968) digital collection.

    All original materials and digital copies are still maintained by the department. Marriage, birth and additional death records will be added to the Archives in the near future.

    The database can be keyword searched by: name; date of death; sex; marital status; place of death; or date of registration of death. Attached to each individual record is a digital reproduction of the individual’s registration of death.

    The Rooms Provincial Archives holds many useful genealogical research sources, in paper and microfilm format, including: Vital Statistics (pre-1892), Vital Statistics (1891-1949) collections, parish records, census records, the All Newfoundland Births, Family History Collection (MG 929), Gert Crosbie collection, Mildred Howard collection and select newspapers.

    Quotes
    “Enabling public access to historic documents online is an important public service that we are proud to facilitate. Thanks to the work of The Rooms, Vital Statistics and the Office of the Chief Information Officer, we are allowing people to research and easily find answers to questions about their history and ancestors.”
    Honourable Sarah Stoodley
    Minister of Digital Government and Service NL

    “Digitalizing these Vital Statistics records is bringing our history into the present in a modern, accessible way. In doing so, The Rooms is further cementing its own place as the province’s largest cultural facility – not only for the appreciation and exploration of art, heritage and culture, but for archival research, as well. I expect this new development to entice more Newfoundlanders and Labradorians to explore their ancestries and family trees.”
    Honourable Steve Crocker
    Minister of Tourism, Culture, Arts and Recreation

    “Digital transfer of vital statistics records is an exciting milestone for The Rooms. These records are essential for genealogical research, and making them publicly available is one of our core archival services. I am delighted that the public can conveniently access these records online, and I am grateful to staff at The Rooms, Vital Statistics and the Office of the Chief Information Officer for their involvement in this project.”
    Anne Chafe, CEO
    The Rooms Corporation of Newfoundland and Labrador

  • 27 Jan 2022 9:59 AM | Anonymous

    NOTE: This article is not one of the usual articles in this newsletter. It doesn't discuss genealogy, history, DNA, or legal events. However, it is about a topic that I believe is loosely related: a major museum has released a publicly-accessible catalog of its holdings.

    If you have ancestors from Oregon or any other interest in Oregon's history, you will probably find the Oregon Historical Society's new Museum Collection Portal to be of interest to you.

    The Oregon Historical Society has announced the launch of its Museum Collection Portal (museumcollection.ohs.org) — a public, online database highlighting the incredible objects in the museum’s care.

    OHS’s museum preserves over 75,000 objects that document the history of the region, which includes clothing and textiles, Native American belongings, artworks, vehicles, equipment, and everyday items. At launch, the Portal provides access to the records for over 10,000 of these objects, with new records being added regularly.

    Dinner Time on the Rifle Range

    Users can connect to these historical objects by searching by name, description, maker, or date(s). Pre-filtered searches are another great way to explore the Portal, and users can experience OHS’s collections through broad subjects such as the Oregon Trail, the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition, or quilts. Users can also browse recent acquisitions to the museum collection as well as learn more about the over 350 objects on view in OHS’s permanent exhibition, Experience Oregon. Each object record includes an image of the object along with its provenance — the history of the object’s ownership.

    You can learn a lot more about the Museum Collection Portal in an article in the KTVZ web site at: https://ktvz.com/community/2022/01/25/oregon-historical-society-launches-new-online-museum-collection-portal/.


  • 27 Jan 2022 3:55 AM | Anonymous

    Thomas Crapper was a plumber in the late 19th century who founded Thomas Crapper & Co. Ltd. in London. He is widely (but erroneously) credited with invention of the flush toilet.

    Thomas Crapper's date of birth is unknown but a record exists of his baptism in Thorne, Yorkshire, on September 28, 1836. He died January 27, 1910 so that date every year is dedicated to his memory because of all he did for England and the rest of the world.

    Actually, Crapper did not invent the flushing toilet. It was invented by John Harington in 1596 but it never achieved much success commercially. Most people had never seen a flush toilet until after the 1880s. Crapper improved the design and used his skills as a shrewd businessman and salesperson to make it extremely popular. His company, Thomas Crapper & Co, owned the world's first bath, toilet and sink showroom, in King's Road, London, England.

    The manhole covers in Westminster Abbey still have the Crapper Company name on them. They are a common tourist attraction in England.

    Thomas Crapper

    The slang term for human bodily waste, crap, would appear to be derived from Thomas Crapper's name but such an assumption would be in error. The word appears to be much older and appeared in other languages long before Thomas Crapper was born. In English, its first application to bodily waste, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, appeared in 1846 under a reference to a crapping ken, or a privy, where ken means a house.

    Contrary to popular myth, Thomas Crapper was never knighted, and thus was not entitled to use the term “Sir” before his name. There is no record of his ever using the title. The first references to SIR Thomas Crapper appeared long after his death.

    While Crapper may not be the inventor of the product he is most often associated with, his contribution to England’s plumbing history is significant. Let's celebrate Thomas Crapper Day today and take a moment to appreciate all that he did for the promotion of sanitary plumbing. The world would be very different without his salesmanship and the promotion of his products.



  • 26 Jan 2022 10:06 AM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release issued by FamilySearch:

    We Are One People” Says 3-Time World Champion Boxer Samuel Azumah Nelson

    Ghanaian Hall of Famer’s RootsTech 2022 Story Packs a Punch

    26 January 2022, Accra, Ghana—Boxing is a sport that demands grit and determination, but those characteristics don’t appear from nowhere. Just ask Africa’s greatest boxing legend, Samuel Azumah Nelson and a RootsTech 2022 keynote speaker (3–5 March 2022). He credits his ancestors for endowing him with the qualities that carried him to 3 featherweight world championships and a place in the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

    “I need to show you where my courage and determination to succeed came from” he declared. “I am a proud Ghanaian with a Tabon DNA, power, and spirit. You must be interested in your family history and to live the values it represents.”

    There’s a lot behind the Tabon affiliation that is a major part of Azumah’s story for attendees of RootsTech 2022 (March 3–5, 2022). The Tabon people were former slaves in Brazil. With the abolishment of slavery in the late 1800s, 7 families banded together and made their way back to the homelands from which their ancestors had been taken. The Asuman family, who later changed their name to Nelson, were among the leaders of the group. 

    Register for free at RootsTech.org to watch Samuel Azumah Nelson on the main stage 3–5 March 2022

    Rather than being ostracized as outsiders, the group was welcomed and sheltered by the ruling tribes, and they soon set about establishing new lives as tailors, architects, and farmers. But earning a living was difficult, and poverty remains a familiar companion in much of Ghana to this day. 

    “Zoom Zoom,” as Azumah is affectionately nicknamed, was pressed into labor at an early age, forgoing formal education to help provide for his family, including his parents and 5 siblings. On the main stage at RootsTech 2022, a free online event, he will tell the fascinating tale about how he rose from those humble beginnings in total obscurity to the pinnacle of his chosen sport, including the story of a fateful encounter he had as a young boy with a man who was holding a pair of boxing shoes.

    Despite his global fame, Azumah still clings to his family roots. “Even with our different genealogy, we are part of the global family,” he said. “If only we can remind ourselves that regardless of political affiliation, race, tribe, gender, country, and faith, we all belong to ONE BIG FAMILY OF GOD, I believe the world will be a beautiful place to live in.”

    To enjoy more of Azumah’s powerful story, register today for free at RootsTech.org, and join the virtual event March 3–5, 2022! 

    Find and share this announcement in the FamilySearch Newsroom.

    ###

    About RootsTech Connect 2022

    RootsTech welcomes millions of people worldwide to celebrate family at the world’s largest family history conference and year-long learning platform. With hundreds of classes, inspiring speakers, meaningful activities, and joyful connections, RootsTech brings the human family together like no other event. The conference is 100% virtual and 100% free. Learn more at www.rootstech.org.

    About FamilySearch.org

    FamilySearch International is the largest genealogy organization in the world. FamilySearch is a nonprofit, volunteer-driven organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Millions of people use FamilySearch records, resources, and services each month to learn more about their family history. To help in this great pursuit, FamilySearch and its predecessors have been actively gathering, preserving, and sharing genealogical records worldwide for over 100 years. Patrons may access FamilySearch services and resources free online at FamilySearch.org or through over 5,000 family history centers in 129 countries, including the main Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.

  • 26 Jan 2022 9:34 AM | Anonymous

    “Ich bin ein Berliner: (Re)uniting 5 Half-siblings from 4 Different Mothers” will be the topic of a virtual presentation by genealogist Michael Tobias for the Sunday, March 27, 2022, meeting of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Illinois at 2 p.m. CST. Register/RSVP at https://jgsi.org/event-4559075.

    He will describe the genealogy research process that began in July 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom when a woman asked for help in identifying her newly-discovered (via DNA) Jewish birth father. She could not imagine the story about to unfold.

  • 26 Jan 2022 9:27 AM | Anonymous

    The 19th North Carolina Afro-American Historical & Genealogical Societies, Inc.(AAHGS) Black History Month Genealogy Conference will be held Saturday, February 5, 2022. The theme is “Genealogy and History: The Ties that Bind Our Family, Community, Nation and World.”

    Workshops are designed for beginners and intermediates; include topics related to Genealogy Research and History. Presenters are National and Local Genealogist: Renate Yarborough Sanders and Jeffrey Houser-Pres. Mecklenburg Genealogical Society. You don't want to miss this opportunity. Register today!

    For more information, visit the website at www.aahgscharlotte.org.


  • 25 Jan 2022 4:53 PM | Anonymous

    Do you call family, friends, or business colleagues via video conferencing? Thinking of changing to a better service?

    Check out The Best Free Apps for Video Calling at https://www.theverge.com/21286781/best-video-call-apps-free.


  • 25 Jan 2022 4:39 PM | Anonymous

    Want to see if your notable ancestor raveled across the Atlantic? “Volunteers have digitalized some 150,000 handwritten passenger lists naming people who travelled on the Holland Amerika Line (HAL) between Rotterdam and the United States. The digital archive, which is kept at the Rotterdam city archive and accessible to the public, covers the period between 1900 and 1969 when millions of people made the journey and took three years to complete.”

    You can see the passenger lists at: https://www.dutchnews.nl/news/2022/01/digitalised-holland-amerika-line-passenger-lists-reveal-famous-names/.

  • 25 Jan 2022 11:56 AM | Anonymous

    Copying Articles from Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter

    or

    Steal These Articles!

    I think my copyright statement is a bit different from most others. Here is the brief version:

    Take it. You are free to copy my words from any Standard Edition article to any non-commercial web site or message board or printed publication you wish. Don’t bother to ask permission, just do it.

    There are a few caveats, however:

    I do ask that you credit this newsletter as the source of the words. I think it would be nice if you mentioned both my name and the newsletter’s web site: http://www.eogn.com. Copying articles from any web site or printed publication without crediting the original author(s) might be illegal and always is in poor taste. Don’t do it.

    Articles marked with a Plus Sign (+) in the title are not to be redistributed. Those articles are solely for the use of this newsletter’s Plus Edition subscribers.

    You may not republish any articles containing words attributed to another person or organization until you obtain permission from that person or organization. While you do have permission to republish words written by Richard W. Eastman, you do not have automatic authority to republish words written by others, even if their words appear in this newsletter.

    You may republish OCCASIONAL articles. Republishing two or three articles per month is acceptable. Wholesale copying and republishing of dozens of articles per month is never allowed for any purpose without advance permission.

    If you want to use my articles on a commercial web site, including any web site that contains advertising, please ask in advance. I usually say “yes” but I do want to know where and how each article will be used on a commercial web site.

    Anyone complying with the above does not need to ask permission in advance for non-commercial uses. Just do it.

    Thank you for your cooperation.

     - Dick Eastman

  • 24 Jan 2022 1:13 PM | Anonymous

    The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center has long focused on honoring the memory of people murdered during the Holocaust and preserving the stories of those who survived.

    Now a new pair of short virtual reality films will enable visitors to hear those stories while experiencing immersive visuals that help explain the survivors’ experiences. One film, entitled A Promise Kept

    , tells the story of the late Frieda “Fritzie” Fritzshall, who was imprisoned and enslaved at Auschwitz as a teenager, and went on to serve as president of the museum until her death last year at age 91. Other imprisoned women would give Fritzshall, the youngest of a group of 600, crumbs of food. The title comes from Fritzshall’s promise to them that if she survived, she would tell their stories. Her grandson Scott Fritzshall says that she was able to wrap up filming for the project before she died.

    The other film, Don’t Forget Me, commemorates the experience of survivor George Brent at the Auschwitz, Mauthausen, and Ebensee concentration camps. It takes its title from Brent’s father’s words to him at Auschwitz, before they were separated. Brent was later sent on to do brutal forced labor at the other two camps.


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