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Latest Standard Edition Articles

  • 28 Jun 2024 7:18 AM | Anonymous

    There is an interesting article article by Cassondra Feltus available on WatchMolo.com that will interest many genealogists. According to the article,  "Finding your next "Finding Your Roots" fix. Welcome to MsMojo, and today we're counting down our picks for TV series about the fascinating world of genealogical research and ancestral histories. Our countdown includes "Long Lost Family," "The Genetic Detective," "A New Leaf," and more!"

    Note by Dick Eastman: depending upon which country you are in, you may need to use a VPN to access some of these TV series that are normally not available in your country.

  • 27 Jun 2024 4:38 PM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release written by the folks at the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy: 

    Bonnie Wade Mucia is the owner of Keeper of the Past Genealogy, LLC, and a professional genealogist focusing on New England research, particularly during the colonial period. She serves as Director of the Mayflower Families Silver Books Project for the General Society of Mayflower Descendants, concentrating on Mayflower passengers' descendants. An experienced speaker and lecturer, Bonnie is a member of the Genealogical Speakers Guild. She has published articles in respected genealogical journals, including the New England Historic Genealogical Society's Mayflower Descendant,Rhode Island Roots Journal of the Rhode Island Genealogical Society, The Maine GenealogistThe Nova Scotia Genealogist and others. Besides attending several genealogy institutes such as SLIG, IGHR, GRIP, she is an alumna of the GenProof 91, ProGen 34, and a graduate of the Boston University Genealogical Certificate OL23 program. Bonnie is actively pursuing her Accreditation with the International Commission for the Accreditation of Professional Genealogists (ICAPGen), specializing in the New England Region. Originally from Rhode Island, Bonnie lives with her husband, Joseph, in South Carolina.

    About the Laura G. Prescott Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy Scholarship
    Laura G. Prescott’s bright smile, gracious friendship, and positive attitude, and many contributions as a teacher, writer, researcher, mentor, society leader, APG president, and director of Ancestry Academy made a significant mark on the genealogical community. In recognition of her friendship to all, her professional accomplishments, and her passion for genealogical education, the genealogical community established the Laura G. Prescott SLIG Scholarship.

    Thanks to the many people who donated to the fund, the scholarship awards full tuition for one candidate to attend the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy or one of its affiliated programs (SLIG Fall Virtual or SLIG Spring Virtual).




  • 27 Jun 2024 8:25 AM | Anonymous

    Here is an article that is not about any of the "normal" topics of this newsletter: genealogy, history, current affairs, DNA, and related topics. However, I suspect that many U.S. military veterans will be interested in this press release issued by U.S. Senator Peter Welch (D-Vt.):

    U.S. Senator Peter Welch (D-Vt.) this week introduced the bicameral Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry 2.0 Act and the bipartisan, bicameral Burn Pit Elimination Act, bills that would improve, expand, and enhance protections for veterans under the PACT Act in addition to eliminating burn pits to prevent future toxic exposure cases. Representatives Raul Ruiz (D-CA-25) and Gus Bilirakis (R-FL-12) introduced companion legislation for both bills in the House. 

    The Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry 2.0 Act would direct the U.S. Secretary of Veterans Affairs (VA) to report to Congress on the status and timeline of when the redesigned Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry 2.0 will be completed. The redesigned registry, which was planned to launch in October 2023, will enhance veterans’ experience with documenting their exposure to airborne hazards during military service and tracking the health effects of toxic exposure. This bill asks the VA to provide Congress with an update on their new registry, including expected completion date. 

    The Burn Pit Elimination Act is cosponsored by Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and would redirect funding from existing open-air burn pit contingency operations to additional U.S. Army Expeditionary Solid Waste Disposal Systems, currently under prototype as an alternative to burn pits. The bill builds off of Sen. Welch’s bipartisan Reducing Exposure to Burn Pits Actwhich directs DOD to issue a report on their efforts to develop alternatives to burn pits. The Reducing Exposure to Burn Pits Act was included in part in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) last year. 

    “Those who have served our country deserve our support and commitment when they return home. The PACT Act was a significant step toward ensuring that veterans exposed to burn pits are adequately protected.  However, we still have a long way to go to mitigate the risk of toxic exposure to servicemembers,” said Senator Welch. “These bills will improve protections for veterans exposed to toxic substances and invest in waste disposal alternatives that will eliminate burn pits.” 

    “As the co-founder and co-chair of the Congressional Burn Pits Caucus, I am honored to champion the Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry (AHOBPR) 2.0 Act and Burn Pit Elimination Act alongside my colleague, Senator Peter Welch,” said Rep. Dr. Raul Ruiz. “These bills are the next step to ensure that the VA will complete the new burn pit registry and work on eliminating the remaining burn pits, ensuring our servicemembers are no longer exposed to harmful airborne hazards. It is crucial that we continue to advocate that our nation’s veterans receive the care they need, have earned and deserve.”

    “While we’ve made significant strides with the PACT Act, we still have a long way to go when it comes to understanding the full impact of burn pit toxic exposure, ensuring all Veterans exposed received the support they deserve, and preventing future exposure to these toxins,” said Rep. Gus Bilirakis.  “These bills are an important step in the right direction as we work toward those goals.” 

    Senator Welch has championed efforts to limit toxic substance exposure among veterans in the Senate, including supporting legislation to educate servicemembers on the impact of burn pits and other airborne hazards and improve data collection on veterans affected by toxic exposure. This Congress, Senator Welch led the Vermont and New Hampshire congressional delegations in sending a letter to Secretary of Veterans Affairs Denis R. McDonough urging the VA to use authority granted under the bipartisan Honoring Our PACT Act of 2022, to make it easier for veterans stationed in Kosovo from 1999 onwards to access health care and disability benefits for conditions related to toxic substance exposure during their service.  

    Last year, a bipartisan amendment led by Sens. Welch, Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), and Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) requiring the VA to conduct a review on mortality and toxic exposure data for veterans who served in Kosovo passed with bipartisan support in the Senate. Senator Welch is a cosponsor of the Burn Pit Registry Enhancement ActReducing Exposure to Burn Pits Actand Toxic Exposure Education for Servicemembers Act, bills that build on the PACT Act to provide increased support for veterans exposed to burn pits, improve data collection on burn pit and toxic substance exposure, and help mitigate future toxic substance exposure for servicemembers. 

    Read the full text of the Burn Pit Elimination Act. 

    Read the full text of the Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry 2.0 Act.

  • 26 Jun 2024 5:45 PM | Anonymous

    One warning that has been circulation for a number of years: “Don’t open the closet because it might contain a skeleton” appears to be true in a recent case. If you are thinking about having your DNA analyzed, you might pause to consider a recent case in England:

    A woman has been left heartbroken after a DNA test revealed a harsh truth about her family - shattering her bond with them forever.

    Speaking on her behalf, her auntie explained how she ordered a 23andMe test because she was curious about her genealogy and family heritage.

    But when the results came in, her entire world started crashing down around her as she came to realise her 'life was a lie'. She said on Reddit: "I know that everyone is curious about their genealogy and it seems a harmless (and could be useful in the case of genetic health issues) test – but it's also important to remember that DNA testing can unearth family secrets that it serves no one to unearth.

    "I saw this in my family when a niece did a 23andMe and found out her father was not her bio-father. The mom was shocked although she had been having an affair, she had made a conscious decision to end it because she wanted a stable family for her child. She had no idea that she was pregnant with the other person's child. She was deeply in love with the man but refused to break up the marriage over it."

    Yes, it could happen to you.

     

  • 26 Jun 2024 5:29 PM | Anonymous

    The moment the Church of Scotland defied King Charles I is among a vast number of historical documents now available to view on the ScotlandsPeople website.

    As part of a wider release of almost 4,000 volumes of church court records, National Records of Scotland has added papers from the church’s governing court, the General Assembly, for the first time.

    This includes the minutes of the meeting held in Glasgow in November 1638 when delegates representing Scotland rejected the monarch’s rules for worship.

    NRS archivist Jessica Evershed said: 

    “The 1638 meeting of the General Assembly is a turning point in Scottish history. 

    It sees the ministers disobey the King to remove the bishops and the new common prayer book he had introduced.

    As part of the wider Covenanters’ movement, this led to 50 years of war and upheaval. 

    This is just one item among the church court records available on ScotlandsPeople. The latest release includes approximately 300,000 digitised images of mostly handwritten historical records dating from the 1500s to 1900.

    These records are a treasure trove for professional historians and amateurs working on their family tree. The records of local church courts contain details of parish work such as grants for the poor, mediating family disputes, payments for services and issuing punishments for minor offences.” 

    Reverend Fiona Smith, Principal Clerk of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, said: 

    “I am delighted that National Records of Scotland are making further Church of Scotland records available in a digitised format, providing a unique window into the history of Scotland itself, as well as aspects of daily life in our parishes, unfolding over the course of hundreds of years.

    We hope it will allow many more people to access these meticulously written documents, which tell the stories of local communities from across Scotland.”

    ScotlandsPeople is run by National Records of Scotland. It offers access to a wide range of official records including births, deaths, marriages and census records from the 16th century to modern times. Modern records are restricted but older records can be searched free of charge and viewed online on payment of a fee. Church court records are among those available to search and view free of charge.

  • 26 Jun 2024 5:14 PM | Anonymous

    DigitalNC has added a trove of company newspapers from the Ecusta Paper Mill operated in Brevard, North Carolina from 1939 to 2002, specializing in cigarette paper and cellophane. The paper mill was a major economic force in the region, employing thousands of Transylvania County residents. From 1949 to 1987, the plant was owned and operated by Olin Industries. During this period, the plant published a newspaper covering events, programs, and people at the Ecusta Paper Mill. 

    The newspapers have now been digitized and made available online, exactly 99 issues of the newspaper, known as both The Olin News and The Olin Profile, dating from 1967 to 1985. The Olin News covers 1967-1979, while The Olin Profile covers 1980-1985. Visitors to the site will find this newspaper to be a rich resource for researching the history of the Ecusta Paper Mill and the people who worked there.

    The Transylvania County Library has contributed over one thousand yearbooks, city directories, photographs, and more, as well as seven newspaper titles.

    You can read more about this trove of historical documents at: https://www.digitalnc.org/blog/see-the-history-of-a-town-through-brevards-olin-news/.

  • 26 Jun 2024 12:59 PM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by the (U.S.) National Genealogical Society :

    FALLS CHURCH, VA, 26 JUNE 2024—The National Genealogical Society (NGS) has recruited Tom and Karen Jones to serve as honorary co-chairs of the NGS annual giving campaign for 2024. Last year's campaign raised over $125,000, which helped to preserve access to records, support local societies, and fund new educational programs, books, and family history resources.



    "We're so proud to support NGS, which has helped us and so many others to advance their knowledge of genealogical research. We have been members for a combined total of seventy-eight years. One or both of us have served the organization as co-editor of the NGS Quarterly (NGSQ) and member of its editorial board since that time. We have also authored articles and have been field reiewers of NGSQ submissions, presenters at many NGS conferences, and judges of the Family History Writing Contest. We give to NGS to support its conferences, education programs, and publications and are thrilled to see NGS doing so much for genealogists." Tom and Karen Jones

    Thomas W. Jones, PhD, CG, CGG, FASG, FNGS, FUGA, served as co-editor of NGSQ(2003–2018) and is a past board member of the Association of Professional Genealogists (APG). A former trustee and president of the Board for Certification of Genealogists (BCG), he has coordinated and served as an instructor at GRIP Genealogy Institute, the Institute of Genealogy and Historical Research (IGHR), and Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy (SLIG). He has presented at national and international conferences as well as seminars and workshops. He is the author of two textbooks that have become standards of best practices for family history, Mastering Genealogical Proof and Mastering Genealogical Documentation. He also authored chapters in Professional Genealogy and Advanced Genetic Genealogy.

    Karen Mauer Jones, CG, FGBS, FUGA, is a fellow of the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society (NYG&B) and former editor of The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record (2011-2017). She has served on the NYG&B Family History Advisory Committee (formerly the Education Committee) since 2011. A fellow of the Utah Genealogical Association, she has coordinated institute courses at SLIG, GRIP, and IGHR. She also has lectured at national, state, regional, and local conferences. Previously, Jones served as regional vice president and director on the board of the APG and served in many capacities on the board of the Federation of Genealogical Societies, which merged with NGS in 2020. An author and professional genealogist, she holds an MA from the Cooperstown Graduate Program in History Museum Studies (State University of New York, Oneonta).

    "We are thrilled to welcome Tom and Karen as honorary co-chairs of our annual giving campaign," said NGS President Kathryn Doyle. "They truly are mega stars in the family history universe. Together, they represent the finest in scholarly genealogical research and education. Not only have they mentored generations of genealogists, they also have been generous donors to NGS and many other family history organizations and institutes. We are deeply grateful for their continuing leadership and support."


  • 26 Jun 2024 10:07 AM | Anonymous

    In the late 1800s and early 1900s, the Fort Worth area sometimes known as the Historic Southside was a hive of black life activity and business in the city.

    The development of I-35 split the neighborhood in half and brought about a downturn in the 60s. But shortly the National Juneteenth Museum will be housed on the Historic Southside. The group striving to realize the museum will be here feels it is appropriate for this location. 

    Jarred Howard, the CEO and main developer of the National Juneteenth Museum, said, "This is going to be a catalytic project that allows us to reinvigorate what once was and see the glory of the Historic Southside again." 

    The National Juneteenth Museum held an event for their Uniting Voices speaker's series earlier this month with award-winning historian Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr. 

    "I actually know the day I started to get fascinated in genealogy," remarked Dr. Gates.

    Sales of tickets for the sold-out event will assist finance the building of the National Juneteenth Museum.

    Howard added, "We hope to have the new museum up and running in 2026 it's a really ambitious goal."

    $35 million is the sole obstacle in front of that objective. Building will cost seventy million dollars. They have therefore so far raised half that figure.

    Howard remarked, "We want the museum to be solvent so we can be sustainable we won't put a shovel in the ground until we have the money to pay for it."

    The museum will, according to the developers, open doors to our past and bring employment and tourists to the neighborhood.

  • 26 Jun 2024 9:34 AM | Anonymous

    On Saturday, June 22, the Western Pennsylvania Genealogical Society (WPGS) announced that they have digitized 28,500 Allegheny County death records from 1893 to 2005. Before the records were digitized, those who wished to see a death record would have to put in a request and wait for the WPGS to make them a copy. Now, records are available online and free for the public to view.

    Pamela Israel, the current president and archives chair for the WPGS spoke on the hard work that went into digitizing these records. “A team volunteered many hours for over a year scanning and checking these records in partnership with Allegheny County. We are delighted to offer this resource to the general public and to do so as WPGS celebrates its 50th year,” said Israel.

    She also stated why access to these records is so important. “Genealogists know that finding an official death record often leads to priceless facts or at least clues in understanding an ancestor’s past. Sometimes a death record is that breakthrough record that helps people step back another generation in their research,” Israel added.

    Those interested in looking at the digitized records can do so on the WPGS’s website at https://wpgs.org/research/death-burial-records/.

  • 26 Jun 2024 8:29 AM | Anonymous

    Celebrating two-hundred years since the founding of the first Ordnance Survey of Ireland, the "OS200—Digitally Re-Mapping Ireland's Ordnance Survey Heritage" project compiled historic Ordnance Survey (OS) maps and texts from many archives to create a freely available, digital resource for researchers and public users.

    At a six-inch to a mile scale, the OS finished the first ever comprehensive survey of a whole nation in Ireland between 1824 and 1842. Celebrated for their precision, these maps are considered by cartographers as among the best ever printed.

    Apart from maps, the personnel of the Ordnance Survey—military as well as civilian—recorded other information including topographical characteristics, local customs, antiquities, and archeological and toponymical material. But throughout time, these items have been unevenly kept in different archives, museums, and institutions all around Britain and Ireland.

    Working with Queens University Belfast, Digital Repositories of Ireland, and other important collaborators, UL developed the digital archive in the Irish Research Council and Arts and Humanities Research Council co-funded project. Launched in Dublin's Royal Irish Academy was the initiative.

    Leading the UL team was Dr Catherine Porter of the School of History and Geography.

    “The key challenge in analysing and researching early accounts of the OS in Ireland, is the sheer volume of information, and the varied state of the materials,” Dr Porter explained.

    “Many of the OS records were not easily accessible or searchable and are housed in different locations, so it was difficult to build a complete picture of what happened during the first survey in the early nineteenth century. This project has provided us the opportunity to collate the materials together and develop a new OS archive for the island.”

    The project intends to open the histories to wider audiences, so enabling a richer and deeper interaction with and understanding of the OS operations in Ireland two centuries ago by connecting digitally, the OS maps, memoirs, correspondence, drawings and books of placenames into a new online resource.

    It will also allow a fresh investigation of how the intricate legacy of the OS in Ireland may be utilized as a beneficial vehicle for discovery and interaction with the past across many Irish communities today.

    Combining old OS maps and materials kept in several archives, the resultant project creates a single publicly available online resource for public and scholarly usage.

    It has also enabled a team of scholars from all throughout Ireland to investigate the complicated history connected with the survey and its legacies and repercussions still seen in the environment today as well as to find otherwise hidden and forgotten elements of the life and work of individuals employed by the OS.

    The new digital archive is not simply cartography focused but also includes the associated written and pictorial accounts of the OS, helping us to engage with the complex colonial histories of the island," Dr Porter said. The public as well as researchers examining the time will have easy access to the new repository, therefore promoting further knowledge of pre-famine Irish history.

    The knowledge gained from the OS200 project can also be a template for innovation in the Digital Humanities and provide best practice in how different approaches and sources from many disciplines and national bodies can and should be gathered together and made available for research and public involvement.

    The Digital Archive of Ireland's Ordnance Survey is now live and more details are accessible on the Ireland Mapped website and the Digital Archive of Ireland’s Ordnance Survey is now online.

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