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  • 22 Aug 2023 8:09 AM | Anonymous

    The following was first published in the blog of the Digital Library Of Georgia:

    The Digital Library of Georgia (DLG) announced today the 7 recipients of its latest set of digitization service awards. These awards expand the scope of the Georgia communities documented in the Digital Library of Georgia. Among the awardees are 5 new partners. Awardee projects include documentation of the Leo Frank trial and folk pottery of Northeast Georgia.

    The GALILEO-funded program increases the diversity of contributors to the DLG and its content. The Breman Museum, the DeKalb History Center, the Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia, Island Ford Baptist Church, and the Suwanee First United Methodist Church are all new partners. These awards enhance the DLG’s coverage of the growth of Gwinnett and DeKalb counties and of elementary education in Clarke County. Materials covering the Leo Frank trial and its aftermath will supplement those currently available. Documentation of Georgia folk life and pottery traditions rounds out the awards.

    The recipients and their projects include:

    Athens-Clarke County Library

    Chase Street PTO Scrapbooks

    Digitization of 17 scrapbooks and one photo album of the Athens-based Chase Street Elementary School’s Parent Teacher Organization from 1926 to the early 2000s. 

    Atlanta History Center

    John Burrison Folklore Archives Collection

    Digitization of oral history interviews created between Fall 1973 and Fall 1977 by Georgia State University folklore students. The interviews discuss Southern crafts, storytelling, and traditions.

    The William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum

    Leo M. Frank Collection

    Digitization and description of the materials highlighting the repercussions experienced by those who stood up for Leo Frank’s innocence.

    DeKalb History Center

    Digitizing DeKalb County plat map books

    Digitization of DeKalb County plat map books that detail the subdivisions, streets, and property owners throughout the county from 1912 to 1936.

    Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia

    Folk Pottery Project

    Digitization and description of the Folk Pottery Museum Collection, composed of more than 300 ceramic objects created by Georgia folk potters from the mid-19th century onwards.

    Island Ford Baptist Church

    Suwanee Creek Chapter, NSDAR Historic Preservation Project

    Digitization and description of the records of Sugar Hill’s earliest church, Island Ford Baptist Church, dating from 1833 to 1917. The records document enslaved individuals and the early settlers of Gwinnett County.

    Suwanee First United Methodist Church

    Suwanee First United Methodist Church Historical Documents

    Digitization and description of the records of the first church established in Suwanee, Georgia, that document the church’s marriages, baptisms, and deaths from the 1880s through the 1950s.


  • 22 Aug 2023 7:13 AM | Anonymous

    Notice that this presentation will be available in-person and also on Zoom. That means you can attend online from anyplace in the world (but pay attention to timezone differences!)

    Location:

    Irish Family History Forum

    Bethpage Public Library 47 Powell Ave 
    Bethpage, NY, NY 
    (Map)

    Contact Name: C. White 
    Visit Website: Website.

    Date & Time

    10:00 AM - 12:00 PM

    Sat, Sep 16, 2023

    Cost: Free Event

    The Irish Family History Forum 

     Presents 

    Getting Started in Irish Genealogy 

    Genealogist Melanie McComb 

    ➢ New to Irish genealogy? 

    ➢ Need to improve your research skills? Saturday, September 16, 2023 at 10 a.m. 

    This meeting is free and open to ALL! 

    Attend in-person, or virtually on Zoom! 

    10 – 10:45 a.m. - Meet & Greet, Refreshments, Ask the Experts 11:00 a.m. - Presentation 

    In-Person: Bethpage Public Library, 47 Powell Ave. Bethpage, N.Y. 

    Virtual on Zoom: Pre-registration required for Zoom. Website: www.ifhf.org for Directions and Zoom registration 

    For more information email: press@ifhf.org Become a Member (Discount for Students with ID

  • 21 Aug 2023 2:00 PM | Anonymous

    I haven't figured out WHY this exists but it does. There's a full-scale styrofoam replica of Stonehenge located in Virginia called, appropriately enough, Foamhenge. You can find a Foamhenge web site at https://coxfarms.com/about/foamhenge/ although a more detailed description can be found on Wikipedia at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foamhenge

  • 21 Aug 2023 11:49 AM | Anonymous

    The new National Archives leader whose nomination was swept into the partisan furor over the criminal documents-hoarding case against ex-President Donald Trump says she is now preparing the agency that’s responsible for preserving historical records for an expected flood of digital documents.

    Colleen Shogan, a political scientist with deep Washington ties, says the spotlight on the Archives during the past year shows that Americans are invested in preserving historical materials. After events in Kansas on Wednesday, she reiterated that she had no role in decisions made when the Trump investigation began and said the Archives depends upon the White House to deliver documents when a president leaves office.

    “It provides an opportunity for us to discuss, quite frankly, why records are important,” Shogan said. “What we’re seeing is that Americans care about records. They want to have access to the records.”

    You can read more in an article by John Hanna published in the Associated Press web site at: https://apnews.com/article/national-archives-trump-classified-documents-aba70ea2bb1c7b8ae2f24a6d7d5631c0. 

  • 21 Aug 2023 11:36 AM | Anonymous

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

    (+) Turn Your Phone or Tablet into a Scanner for Many Purposes

    How to Become a Family History Detective

    Announcing a Better Way to Find Your Civil War Ancestor!

    Introducing PhotoDater™ from MyHeritage, an Exclusive, Free New Feature to Estimate When Old Photos Were Taken

    Thanks to Reclaim the Records: Introducing ConnecticutGenealogy.org! It's a FREE searchable database of 576,638 births, 2,180,700 marriages, 2,086 civil unions, and 2,772,116 deaths from the state of Connecticut

    17th-Century Records of Those Who Settled in Ulster Now Available Online

    Enterprise Genealogy: Using Google Books

    Yad Vashem Using AI to Restore Memory of Holocaust

    Police are Getting DNA Data from People Who Think They Opted Out

    Webtember 2023: Free Online Genealogy Conference All September Long

    The Census Tree

    30 Million People Today Are Descendants of Passengers on the Mayflower

    World War Two Aerial Photos of England Opened to Public for First Time

    New Local History and Genealogy Research Center Planned for Brown County, Wisconsin Central Library

    Findmypast Adds 500 Years of Herefordshire History

    Adopted Siblings Find Out They Are Related

    Eight Things To Consider When It Comes To The Privacy Of Messenging Applications

  • 18 Aug 2023 3:29 PM | Anonymous

    The following is a Plus Edition article written by and copyright by Dick Eastman. 

    If you have a "smartphone" or a tablet computer with a camera, you already have a book and document scanner that is more than "good enough" for many purposes. All you need to do is to add some free software. The result is a device that can "scan" documents at the library or archives, can digitally save business cards, save receipts for income tax time, digitize all sorts of documents, and is useful for any other time you need to scan and save a copy for later without any fuss. In essence, your smartphone or tablet becomes a scanner that you can have with you all the time.

    One app that may best be defined as a document management solution for mobile devices, starting from capturing information precisely to storing, sharing, annotating and managing documents for different purposes.  It not only creates images of the item you scan, but it also lets you enhance the scan result and auto-crop scanned photos. Unlike taking a simple picture of a document, one app will eliminate the unwanted "border" around a picture or document that typically shows in any image taken with a camera. You end up with just the desired document or picture, nothing more. 

    The same app lets you save document scans in PDF or JPG formats. You can edit and manage documents anywhere an Internet connection is available, using a handheld device or a Windows, Macintosh, or Linux computer. Notes can be added to a document, and OCR scanning is also available free of charge. Documents saved in the cloud can be quickly searched, even if thousands of items are stored there.

    The remainder of this article is reserved for Plus Edition subscribers only. If you have a Plus Edition subscription, you may read the full article at: https://eogn.com/(*)-Plus-Edition-News-Articles/13242830.

    If you are not yet a Plus Edition subscriber, you can learn more about such subscriptions and even upgrade to a Plus Edition subscription immediately at https://eogn.com/page-18077


  • 18 Aug 2023 2:41 PM | Anonymous

    Forensic genetic genealogists skirted GEDmatch privacy rules by searching users who explicitly opted out of sharing DNA with law enforcement.

    Form an article by Jordan Smith published in theintercept.com:

    Cece Moore, an actress and director-turned-genetic genealogist, stood behind a lectern at New Jersey’s Ramapo College in late July. Propelled onto the national stage by the popular PBS show “Finding Your Roots,” Moore was delivering the keynote address for the inaugural conference of forensic genetic genealogists at Ramapo, one of only two institutions of higher education in the U.S. that offer instruction in the field. It was a new era, Moore told the audience, a turning point for solving crime, and they were in on the ground floor. “We’ve created this tool that can accomplish so much,” she said.

    Genealogists like Moore hunt for relatives and build family trees just as traditional genealogists do, but with a twist: They work with law enforcement agencies and use commercial DNA databases to search for people who can help them identify unknown human remains or perpetrators who left DNA at a crime scene.

    The field exploded in 2018 after the arrest of Joseph James DeAngelo as the notorious Golden State Killer, responsible for more than a dozen murders across California. DNA evidence collected from a 1980 double murder was analyzed and uploaded to a commercial database; a hit to a distant relative helped a genetic genealogist build an elaborate family tree that ultimately coalesced on DeAngelo. Since then, hundreds of cold cases have been solved using the technique. Moore, among the field’s biggest evangelists, boasts of having personally helped close more than 200 cases.

    The practice is not without controversy. It involves combing through the genetic information of hundreds of thousands of innocent people in search of a perpetrator. And its practitioners operate without meaningful guardrails, save for “interim” guidance published by the Department of Justice in 2019.

    The last five years have been like the “Wild West,” Moore acknowledged, but she was proud to be among the founding members of the Investigative Genetic Genealogy Accreditation Board, which is developing professional standards for practitioners. “With this incredibly powerful tool comes immense responsibility,” she solemnly told the audience. The practice relies on public trust to convince people not only to upload their private genetic information to commercial databases, but also to allow police to rifle through that information. If you’re doing something you wouldn’t want blasted on the front page of the New York Times, Moore said, you should probably rethink what you’re doing. “If we lose public trust, we will lose this tool.” 

    You can read the full story at: https://theintercept.com/2023/08/18/gedmatch-dna-police-forensic-genetic-genealogy/. 

  • 18 Aug 2023 7:26 AM | Anonymous

    If you are new to genealogy, you should read this article published in the midfloridanewspapers.com web site:

    Have you ever wondered where you came from? Who were your ancestors and what brought them to America?

    If you’ve ever thought about your origins, then you’re going to want to enroll in a series of new beginner genealogy classes starting-up in South Lake this Fall (but available online to students anywhere  in the world).

    The classes will be held virtually on three Wednesdays in the months of September and October by Pastfinders of South Lake County Genealogical Society.

    There are different sessions you can enroll in and each one requires a separate registration. You are welcome to take as many of the courses as you want, free of charge. The sessions are:

    Session 1: Introducing Immigration Facts, Review the Genealogy Research Plan, Exploring Features of Genealogy Search Engines. This presentation introduces immigration facts and how they in turn can spur research efforts.  A basic step-by-step genealogy research plan is shown. The features of several genealogy research engines are pointed out and one software genealogy program is presented. Participants see the purpose and benefits of various types of Family Group pedigree charts. September 6th from 1 pm to 3 pm.

    You can read more at: https://tinyurl.com/ysvtz9pa.
  • 18 Aug 2023 7:18 AM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by the folks at Findmypast:

    • Over 650,000 new parish records for the county of Herefordshire released 
    • Findmypast’s newspaper archive hits 70 million pages 
    • Three new Welsh language titles now available to explore  

    Herefordshire Baptisms  

    With 231,270 new baptism transcripts added to this existing collection, it’s never been easier to research Herefordshire roots. Spanning from 1433 to 1950, the new additions may reveal an ancestor’s name, date and place of baptism, and names of parents.  

    Herefordshire Marriages 

    86,782 new marriages have been added to this collection, covering 1433 to 1949. The details can vary, but you’ll typically find the names of both parties alongside the place and date of the marriage. In some cases, you may spot ages and names of their fathers.  

    Herefordshire Burials 

    Wrapping up the new Herefordshire records are an impressive 300,517 new burial records, spanning 1459 to 1959. You can normally glean facts such a name, date and place of burial. Some will also include your ancestor’s age too.   

    Newspapers 

    Three new Welsh language papers, updates to a further six, and over 75,244 new pages make up this week’s newspaper release. This also takes the newspaper archive’s total pages to over 70 million. 

    New titles: 

    • ·         Llais Y Wlad, 1874, 1876, 1878-1884 
    • ·         Y Dydd, 1877-1883, 1886-1891 
    • ·         Y Gwladgarwr, 1858-1860, 1866, 1875, 1877-1878, 1880-1882 

    Updated titles: 

    • ·         Holborn and Finsbury Guardian, 1875 
    • ·         Islington News and Hornsey Gazette, 1898, 1909 
    • ·         Nelson Leader, 1918 
    • ·         North Middlesex Chronicle, 1898 
    • ·         St. Pancras Guardian and Camden and Kentish Towns Reporter, 1875, 1888 
    • ·         Thomson’s Weekly News, 1925, 1931 
  • 17 Aug 2023 4:59 PM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by  Gopher Records:

    A new free web site, BetterSoldiersAndSailors.com, provides a dramatic improvement over the popular “Soldiers and Sailors” site offered by the National Park Service (NPS).  The old NPS system has a weak search engine and it fails to address many limitations of the data itself.  The resulting failed searches and unorganized search results lead researchers to many false conclusions.

    The new site uses the same databases as the NPS system (soldiers, sailors, regiments, and prisoners) but overcomes those limitations, searches additional databases at the same time, and actually helps you to get copies of the soldiers’ military records.

    The Problem:

    The limitations of the NPS system are numerous but largely stem from the fact that you have to match the spelling of the name precisely.  Any discrepancy in the spelling, punctuation, or spacing within the name will cause the search to fail.  So, for instance…

    • A search for “Denison Butler Baldwin” won’t find that soldier because his first and middle names happen to be abbreviated to just one letter in the database. Nearly HALF of the soldiers have their given or middle name abbreviated in this way. (In fact, in this case, a search for “D. B. Baldwin” or “Baldwin, D. B.” won’t find him either because his name happens to be saved in the database as “D.B. Baldwin” with no space after the first period!)
    • Conversely, a search for “Jose A. Sanches” won’t find the soldier by that name because his middle name of Antonio is spelled out in the database;
    • A search for “George Washington” won’t find a soldier whose name happens to be recorded as “Geo. Washington” ” like the one who served in the 64th NY Infantry. There are nearly 100,000 records with abbreviated names like Geo., Wm., Robt., Jno., Benj., Sam’l, etc.
    • A search for “John Smith” won’t find “John Smyth” or “John Smythe” unless those spelling variations have been explicitly saved as alternate names in the record;
    • A search for “McDonald” won’t find “MacDonald”; “Van Able” won’t find “Vanable”, “de la Croix” won’t find “Delacroix”, and “Saint John” won’t find “St. John”, among many other examples.
    • And perhaps worst of all … a search for a name like “Robert J. York” won’t find him unless you think to scroll past dozens of soldiers like Robert J. Shamburg who happened to serve in a New YORK regiment.

    As you can imagine, the requirement that you guess the exact way that a soldier’s name is spelled and/or abbreviated in the database may produce thousands of false negatives. You’ll never know what you didn’t find. At the same time, the peculiarities of the NPS search engine could cause your soldier to be lost in a sea of false positives.

    The Solution:

    BetterSoldiersAndSailors.com resolves those problems and adds many additional features that greatly improve and prioritize your search results, including:

    • Phonetic Searches so “Canon” finds Caenan, Keynon, Canon, Cannon, etc.;
    • Wildcard Searches so “M?N*HAN” finds Mennehan, Managhan, Monaghan, Mynihan, etc.;
    • Automatic matches on abbreviations – when the first and/or middle name is recorded by only the first letter;
    • Automatic recognition of common abbreviations like Geo., Wm., Robt., Jno., Benj., Sam’l, etc.;
    • Search results are sorted according to how closely they match the search terms.

    And while the new search site includes the same databases of Soldiers, African-American Sailors, Prisoners, and Regimental Histories, you can also search some databases that are not included in the NPS system:

    • more than 200,000 Court Martial records;
    • more than 700,000 burial records in more than 16,000 cemeteries around the country;
    • more than 1,000 ships of the Union Navy with their histories.

    Other handy features allow you to:

    • Simultaneous searches of the databases instead of requiring separate searches of soldiers, sailors, prisoners, etc.
    • Export up to 300 search results to a database or spreadsheet for further analysis;
    • Get a list of all known soldiers in a specific regiment sorted by name or by company;
    • Filter regiments for those that participated in a specific engagement (e.g., Gettysburg);
    • Get advice on where to find a specific soldier’s records online, when appropriate, including links to the National Archives website (free), FamilySearch.org (free), Ancestry.com ($), and Fold3.com ($);
    • Optionally link directly to GopherRecords.com to order copies of a soldier’s records that will arrive much faster and at a much lower price than when ordering directly from the National Archives.

    BetterSoldiersAndSailors.com will revolutionize the way that you search for Civil War soldiers.

    You can read still more at: https://gopherrecords.com/bss_announcement/.

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