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Latest Standard Edition Articles

  • 1 Feb 2021 12:07 PM | Anonymous

    To all subscribers:

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

    (+) Crowdsourcing: the Most Valuable Genealogy Tool of the 21st Century? (So Far)

    MyHeritage Announces the Release of the First Set of Improvements for Genetic Groups

    What Attracted Our Ancestors to the New World

    Randy Majors Announces a Video Walkthrough: Historical U.S. Counties Map Tool and Auto-Checker Extension

    Is 23andMe in Talks to Go Public?

    New Law Gives Pennsylvania Executors Power Over Decedents’ Social Media And Other Digital Content

    Online Immortality: Microsoft Patent Details Tech That Could Turn Dead People Into AI Chatbots

    Delaware Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs to Celebrate African American History Month

    The Family History Federation and Parish Chest Are Hosting Their Second FHF REALLY USEFUL Family History Show

    New Who’s Who Records Added to the Occupational Records on TheGenealogist

    Findmypast Adds Brand New Crime Records and More

    Ancestry® Announces the Appointment of Mark Thompson as Chairman of the Board of Directors

    Recently Added and Updated Collections on Ancestry.com

    Free Family History Classes and Webinars on FamilySearch for February 2021

    New Free Historical Records on FamilySearch: Week of 25 January 2021

    United States Citizenship and Immigration Services Posts Notice of Preliminary Injunction Regarding Final Rule

    It is the First Day of the Month: Back Up Your Genealogy Files

    The article with a plus sign (+) in the title is only visible to Plus Edition subscribers.

  • 1 Feb 2021 11:20 AM | Anonymous

    Prolific programmer Randy Majors has produced still another product that will be of interest to genealogists. This time he has created a couple of video walkthroughs of a couple of the the software tools he has created. Here is Randy's announcement:

    By popular request, I finally have gotten around to recording a couple of video walkthroughs of a couple of the tools. Certainly not polished and produced, but should give you a good understanding of these two tools:

    Walkthrough of the Historical U.S. Counties map tool:

    Walkthrough of the Historical U.S. Counties chrome extension:

    I recommend you view them in the above order, as understanding the Historical U.S. Counties map tool will help you have better success with using the Auto-Checker chrome extension.

    Be easy on me please, as its my first foray into doing a screencapture walkthrough for youtube :)

    I hope these are helpful!

  • 1 Feb 2021 1:50 AM | Anonymous

    BackUpYourGenealogyFilesToday is the first day of the month. That is still a good time to back up your genealogy files. Then test your backups!

    Your backups aren't worth much unless you make a quick test by restoring a small file or two after the backup is completed.

    Actually, you can make backups at any time. However, it is easier and safer if you have a specific schedule. The first day of the month is easy to remember, so I would suggest you back up your genealogy files at least on the first day of every month, if not more often. (My computers automatically make off-site backups of all new files every few minutes.)

    Given the events of the past few months with genealogy websites laying off employees and cutting back on services, you now need backup copies of everything more than ever. What happens if the company that holds your online data either goes off line or simply deletes the service where your data is held? If you have copies of everything stored either in your own computer, what happens if you have a hard drive crash or other disaster? If you have one or more recent backup copies, such a loss would be inconvenient but not a disaster.

    Of course, you might want to back up more than your genealogy files. Family photographs, your checkbook register, all sorts of word processing documents, email messages, and much more need to be backed up regularly. Why not do that on the first day of each month? or even more often?

  • 29 Jan 2021 12:55 PM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by Findmypast:

    Is a bad apple lurking in your family tree? Findmypast latest new records could help you find out.

    Crime records, life events and newspapers. Findmypast have a feast of family history treats for you this week. Here are the details on what's new.

    England & Wales, Crime, Prisons & Punishment, 1770-1935

    Findmypast have added over 92,000 additional court and prison indexes to this criminally-fascinating collection. This includes:

    • Herefordshire Prison Register Index 1849-1915 – over 17,000 new records
    • Court of Great Sessions in Wales 1730-1830 – over 20,000 new records
    • Bedfordshire Gaol Registers – over 51,000 new records
    • Kirkby Stephen Petty Sessions 1874-1901 – over 2,000 new records

    Derbyshire Life Events

    If you’ve got family roots in England’s East Midlands, Findmypast’s latest birth, baptism, marriage, death and burial records could help you trace them. New additions have been added to.

    See Findmypast’s Derbyshire parish list to see exactly what's new and the timeframes covered.

    Newspapers

    This week, Findmypast have published six brand new titles along with updates to 15 others. Online for the first time are;

    While significant updates have been added to; 

    • Whitstable Times and Herne Bay Herald from 1976-1977, 1979-1983 and 1985
    • Faversham Times and Mercury and North-East Kent Journal from 1860-1861, 1863, 1865-1871, 1873-1887, 1889-1895, 1897-1905 and 1920
    • Middlesex Chronicle from 1986-1988
    • Cotton Factory Times from 1900
    • Atherstone, Nuneaton, and Warwickshire Times from 1880-1881, 1883-1884 and 1889
    • Bridgend Chronicle, Cowbridge, Llantrisant, and Maesteg Advertiser from 1893
    • Liverpool Weekly Courier from 1880, 1898, 1900-1901 and 1903
    • Kenilworth Advertiser from 1880
    • Bridlington and Quay Gazette from 1880
    • Brighouse & Rastrick Gazette from 1880
    • Blackpool Gazette & Herald from 1880
    • Birkenhead News from 1880
    • St. Helens Examiner from 1880
    • Northern Weekly Gazette from 1880
    • Dorset County Express and Agricultural Gazette from 1880

     

  • 29 Jan 2021 12:46 PM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by Ancestry.com:

    LEHI, Utah & SAN FRANCISCO--Ancestry®, the global leader in family history and consumer genomics, today announced the appointment of Mark Thompson as chairman of the board.

    “I'm honored to be named as Chairman of the Board for Ancestry and excited to support the next chapter in the company's success”

    Thompson formerly served as President & CEO at The New York Times Company, where he led the 170-year-old brand’s transformation into the world's fastest-growing and most successful news digital subscription business. During his tenure, digital subscriptions grew nine-fold to over five million and the company's market cap increased nearly five times.

    Thompson’s appointment at The New York Times Company followed an eight-year term as Director General (CEO and Editor-in-Chief) of the BBC. He is widely credited with expanding the BBC’s digital and global reach and overseeing development of the BBC iPlayer. He joined the BBC from Channel 4, where he was Chief Executive from 2002 to 2004.

    “I'm honored to be named as Chairman of the Board for Ancestry and excited to support the next chapter in the company's success,” said Thompson. “Ancestry is already the world leader in its category but I believe it has the potential to grow much further. I’m looking forward to working with the board and management team to build the business through innovation, product enhancements and investment in records, technology and data science so that many more people around the world can embark on their own journeys of personal and family discovery."

    David Kestnbaum, a Senior Managing Director at Blackstone, and Sachin Bavishi, a Managing Director at Blackstone, said, “Mark’s long history of leadership, coupled with his successful track record in leading subscription and content businesses makes him an ideal Chairman. He brings a great deal of skill and strategic expertise to Ancestry. The company and the board look forward to working closely with him to accelerate Ancestry’s next phase of growth.”

    Thompson was educated at Stonyhurst College and Merton College, Oxford.

    About Ancestry

    Ancestry®, the global leader in family history and consumer genomics, empowers journeys of personal discovery to enrich lives. With our unparalleled collection of more than 27 billion records and over 18 million people in our growing DNA network, customers can discover their family story and gain a new level of understanding about their lives. For over 30 years, we’ve built trusted relationships with millions of people who have chosen us as the platform for discovering, preserving and sharing the most important information about themselves and their families.

  • 29 Jan 2021 12:22 PM | Anonymous
  • 29 Jan 2021 11:30 AM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by TheGenealogist:

    TheGenealogist has released New Who’s Who records into its expanding Occupational Records adding nearly a hundred thousand additional individuals. This release includes records covering individuals from all over England, Scotland, Ireland, Canada, USA, New Zealand and further afield.

    The records can be used to discover more about an ancestor’s achievements and are fantastic for identifying where next to apply your research. Who’s Who records will confirm birth dates and sometimes the place of birth. Often they give a father’s name and occupation and a great deal more useful information that may help to build a better family history.

    Use these records to:

    Add details to the lives of your ancestors

    Discover their accomplishments

    Fill in gaps in the information that you already have on an ancestor

    Find other records and places to search for forebears.

    These records will often allow us to recount a much more rounded picture of the life of a person and so enrich the telling of their story.

    This latest release expands TheGenealogist’s extensive Occupational records collection that includes actors, apprentices, clergy, crew lists, directors, flight, freemen, law, railway, sports, teachers and biographies as well as a number of other Who’s Who books.

    You can read TheGenealogist’s article: Who, What, Where, When? - Discovering Who's Who at:

    https://www.thegenealogist.co.uk/featuredarticles/2021/who-what-where-when---discovering-whos-who-1371/

    The records included in this release are:

    • Who's Who in 1880
    • Who's Who 1899
    • Who's Who in Canada 1927
    • Cheshire Who's Who, 1910
    • Cox's County Who's Who Series. Norfolk, Suffolk, and Cambridgeshire, 1912
    • Cricket Who's Who, The Cricket Blue Book 1911
    • Who's Who in Hampshire 1935
    • Who's Who and Industrial Directory of the Irish Free State 1935
    • Who's Who in Kent, Surrey and Sussex 1911
    • Who's Who in Literature 1931
    • Masonic Who's Who 1926
    • The Methodist Who's Who 1913
    • Who's Who in New Zealand 1925
    • Who's Who and Record Quarterly 1934 July-September
    • Who's Who in Science 1914
    • Who was Who 1916-1928

    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 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!

  • 29 Jan 2021 11:21 AM | Anonymous

    The following is an email message posted to the International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies (IAJGS) Public Records Access Monitoring Committee mailing list and republished here with permission:

    The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), part of the US Department of Homeland Security, posted in the January 29, 2021 Federal Register a notice about the preliminary injunction to its previously posted final rule and court orders effective September 29, 2020 and October 8, 2020. These injunctions were previously reported by the IAJGS Records Access Alert. While the predominant part of the original final rule was to increase fees for the immigration an citizenship benefits, genealogists were most interested as the fees for an index search and search request were being increased from $65.00 each for Form G-1041, Genealogy Index Search Request, when filed online as $160 and $170 when filed on paper and a fee for Form G-1041A, Genealogy Records Request, when filed online as $255 and $265 when filed by paper.

    The notice which may be read at:

    https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2021-01-29/pdf/2021-02044.pdf  states the Department is complying with the terms of the two US District Court orders and is not enforcing the regulatory changes set out in the final rule. The USCIS will continue to accept the fees that were in place prior to October 2, 2020 and follow the guidance in place prior to October 2, 2020 to adjudicate fee waiver requests as provided in the Adjudicator’s Field Manual.  Any further guidance and updates regarding the litigation will be posted on the USCIS website:

    https://www.uscis.gov/news/news-releases/uscis-response-to-preliminary-injunction-of-fee-rule  on an ongoing basis.

    To see previous postings about the USCIS and the fee increases,  go to the archives of the IAJGS Records Access Alert at:  http://lists.iajgs.org/mailman/private/records-access-alerts/. You must be registered to access the archives.  To register go to: http://lists.iajgs.org/mailman/listinfo/records-access-alerts  and follow the instructions to enter your email address, full name and which genealogical  organization with whom you are affiliated   You will receive an email response that you have to reply to or the subscription will not be finalized.

    Jan Meisels Allen
    Chairperson, IAJGS Public Records Access Monitoring Committee

  • 28 Jan 2021 4:24 PM | Anonymous

    From an article in Bloomberg News:

    "Consumer DNA-testing company 23andMe Inc. is in talks to go public through a roughly $4 billion deal with VG Acquisition Corp., a special purpose acquisition company founded by billionaire Richard Branson, according to people familiar with the matter.

    "A deal could be announced in the coming weeks if talks are successful, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the information was private. Discussions could still fall apart, the people said.

    "In funding rounds in both 2018 and 2020, 23andMe had a $2.5 billion valuation, separate people familiar with the matter said. A merger with a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, would allow 23andMe to go public without the risk or uncertainty of holding an initial public offering."

    There is more information in the full article in the Yahoo web site at: http://yhoo.it/2MdLxTh.


  • 28 Jan 2021 4:15 PM | Anonymous

    If you are using DNA to help identify your ancestry, you will be interested in the latest announcement from MyHeritage. According to the announcement in the company's blog at https://blog.myheritage.com/2021/01/genetic-groups-new-user-interface-improvements/

    Last month, we announced the release of Genetic Groups: a long-awaited enhancement of MyHeritage DNA ethnicity results which accurately identifies ancestral origins with an incredibly high resolution of 2,114 geographic regions. This new feature gives users the chance to take a deep dive into their ancestral origins and discover the paths their ancestors traveled. Our users across the globe have been raving about Genetic Groups.

    We promised further updates to this feature very soon, and we’re pleased to announce that the first set of updates has arrived. This update includes the addition of a Timeline Widget that allows you to follow the migration pattern of a Genetic Group over time — and a more detailed, better organized Top Places section, where you can see where members of a Genetic Group have lived during a given time period.

    Timeline Widget

    Since the launch, each Genetic Group has had a drill-down page with specific genealogical insights, including a description of the group, a heatmap showing the top places where the group’s members lived during different time periods, common ancestral surnames and given names in the group, the most prevalent ethnicities among the group’s members, and other Genetic Groups that have close affinity to the group.

    Now, there is also a Timeline Widget (with a black background color) that allows you to switch easily between the different 50-year time periods when looking at migration patterns. This replaces a basic drop-down element that we had previously. The Timeline includes at its top right, the new option to play an animation that automatically cycles through all the periods and updates the heatmap automatically. In other words, the Timeline allows you to observe your Genetic Groups’ migration patterns more easily, either manually or with animation.

    Timeline animation for the Genetic Group “Mormons in USA (Utah and Idaho) and in Canada”
    Timeline animation for the Genetic Group “Mormons in USA (Utah and Idaho) and in Canada”

    The announcement goes on with a rather detailed explanation and includes numerous screen capture images. You can read the full announcement at: https://blog.myheritage.com/2021/01/genetic-groups-new-user-interface-improvements/.


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