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Latest Standard Edition Articles

  • 5 Jun 2023 12:52 PM | Anonymous

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

    (+) How to Make Money Selling Genealogy Information – Part IV

    MyHeritage Announces the Launch of Reimagine, a Groundbreaking New Mobile App for Family Photos

    The 1931 Canadian Census Is Now Online (But See the Next Article)

    The 1931 Canadian Census Will Be Right Back

    U.S. Census Bureau Delays Release of Some of Census’ Most Detailed Data Until 2024

    U.S. Census Bureau Adds 2022 Building Permit Data Available for Every U.S. County

    Census Bureau Releases New 2020 Census Data on Age, Sex, Race, Hispanic Origin, Households and Housing

    National Archives Undertakes Museum Renovation

    Fold3 Announces War of 1812 Pension Files Digitization Move Forward!

    Preserving Jewish Family History in Ukraine

    Genealogy: “Useful in the Toolkit of Genocide Education”

    Czech Republic: New Web Site and Online Exhibits of the Prague Jewish Museum’s “Secrets in the Attic” Geniza Project

    The National Genealogical Society Plans Apology for Past Racism

    National Genealogical Society to Acquire Genealogical Research Institute of Pittsburgh

    National Genealogical Society Presents Awards Honoring Excellence in Volunteerism and Service to NGS

    National Genealogical Society Presents Awards Honoring Excellence in Newsletter Editorship and Filby Award for Genealogical Librarianship

    National Genealogical Society and Vivid-Pix Announce Family Matters Community Outreach Toolkit Lending Service

    How Futuristic Technology Can Help Us Honor WWII’s Dead

    The Case for Leaving Strangers in Your Family Photos

    Genealogy For Justice: Mystery author Nathan Dylan Goodwin and Genealogy For Justice™ Announce Fundraising Contest to Benefit Cold Case Investigations

    Tony Burroughs to Host a Webinar Open to All on June 6

    Investigators Connect Cyber Attorney to 3 Rapes Through Genealogy Database

    If You’re Sleepless in the Summer — You Can Blame Your Cavemen Ancestors

    Findmypast Adds Records From Schools and Southwark

    Discovery of Carlos Alcaraz’s French Roots. Family History Uncovered by MyHeritage

    Augusta (Georgia) Genealogical Society 2023 Annual Symposium

    Augusta (Georgia) Genealogical Society Announces a Virtual Genealogical Program Featuring Trey Kennedy

    XanderGlasses

    The Best Ways to Scan a Document Using Your Phone or Tablet

    Are Your Old Floppy Disks Still Readable?

    How to Make Sure Your Laptop, Cell Phone, and Other Electronic Devices are Prepared for Power Outages

    Whew!  This is about the longest newsletter in the past year or so.

  • 5 Jun 2023 8:54 AM | Anonymous

    2023 Annual Symposium Genealogical Program

    GENE-Y'ALL-OGY

    Southeastern Genealogy Research

    Join us for a day-long in-person or virtual symposium to explore the

    resources and challenges for researching Southeastern heritage.

    Featured Speaker: Robert S. Davis, Jr.

    When:  Saturday, August 12, 2023

    Time:  9:00 am - 3:30 pm  EST

    Where:  First Baptist Church, 3500 Walton Way Extension

                 Augusta, GA 

    Cost:   In person, the symposium includes a hot Southern lunch and snacks

               AGS Members $47 and Non-Members $57 

    Cost:  Virtual 

    AGS Members $25 and Non-Members $35

    Registration: Online at http://www.augustagensociety.org or by mail by 4 August 2023.  

    Inline image

    Inline image 

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    Vendor tables will be available.

  • 5 Jun 2023 7:46 AM | Anonymous

    The U.S. Census Bureau reported that it would delay the release, and narrow the scope, of some of the most detailed data from the 2020 census — until next year.

    Detailed numbers dealing with household types — such as if the household is a family — broken down by race and ethnicity, and whether homes are owned or rented, won’t be released until September 2024, more than four years after the data’s collection in the once-a-decade head countof every U.S. resident, the Census Bureau said.

    Also being delayed until September 2024 is the release of numbers on household and family sizes. This data set will also be much more limited than anticipated. It will only be released for the entire United States and individual U.S. states because a controversial new privacy methodimplemented by the Census Bureau couldn’t guarantee individuals wouldn’t be identified at smaller geographies.

  • 5 Jun 2023 7:32 AM | Anonymous

    The following was written by Library and Archives Canada:

    After a tremendous take off for the launch of the 1931 Census on June 1, traffic increased rapidly. Our system started showing signs of slowing down, followed by difficulties with loading images. Unfortunately, this affected our users’ online experience, and we apologize for the inconvenience. We are as disappointed as our users, given the tireless work that went into preparing for the 1931 Census release and the anticipation around that release.

    We are actively working on finding technical solutions and testing is ongoing.

    While we do not have a timeline to offer at the moment, giving our users a great online experience with the 1931 Census data is our top priority.

    Thank you for your patience.

  • 5 Jun 2023 7:30 AM | Anonymous

    The Jewish Museum in Prague has launched an informative web site with online exhibits about the eclectic material discovered in genizas in a dozen synagogue buildings that have been researched in the country since the 1990s.

    Looking up in the restored synagogue in Březnice, where a geniza was found

    The web site, in Czech and English, grows out of its “Secrets in the Attic” project, which — as we posted last year — has displayed geniza material in two thematic exhibitions mounted in regions where the findings come from.

     The current exhibition, at the West Bohemian Museum in Plzen, is up until June 25.

    Genizas are depositories of worn out or disused ritual and other objects which for religious reasons cannot simply be thrown away. Sometimes they are buried in Jewish cemeteries; often they are hidden away in the attics or walls of synagogues.

    Synagogue in Úsov, Czech Republic, where one of the genizas was found

    Since the 1990s, researchers from the JMP surveyed 13 sites in Bohemia and Moravia and obtained more than 3,000 finds, the oldest from the 16th century and the most recent from the 19th century.

    You can read more in an article in the jewish-heritage-europe.eu web site at: https://jewish-heritage-europe.eu/2023/06/01/czech-republic-geniza/. 

  • 2 Jun 2023 9:23 AM | Anonymous

    From an article by Ashley Zlatopolsky published in the thejewishnews.com web site:

    In Judaism, we often hear the expression “may his or her memory be a blessing” when someone passes away.

    I don’t recall where I first heard it, but someone once told me that as long as we continue to remember those who have since passed on, they remain alive. It’s only when we forget, that people — and eventually memories — begin to slip away.

    It’s a guiding principle, along with the Jewish belief to honor the deceased, regardless of whether that person lived 20 or 200 years ago, that fuels my passion for genealogy and family history. By learning about our past — and the names and stories behind it — we continue to keep these precious memories alive for many generations to come.

    JewishGen is the world’s leading organization in preserving this history. As the largest digital repository for Jewish family history information in the world, this free and searchable website houses millions of Jewish records from countries around the world, some of which are hundreds of years old. On JewishGen, people can search their family history to find ancestors, make genealogical trees and even discover living relatives.

    Now, JewishGen Ukraine Research Division — which focuses solely on Ukraine records — is on a mission to preserve and digitize 1 million records in Ukraine by summer 2023.

    These records, which are some of the last remaining documentation of hundreds of thousands of Jews who lived in the former Russian Empire (which included Ukraine), are at risk of disappearing forever.

    You can read the full article at: https://thejewishnews.com/2023/05/04/jewishgen-preserving-jewish-history-in-ukraine/.
  • 2 Jun 2023 8:54 AM | Anonymous

    No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz has taken the tennis world by storm. The reigning US Open champion, who is attempting to win his first French Open title in Paris, actually has French family roots.

    MyHeritage.com has traced and can confirm that Carlos Alcaraz’s maternal grandmother’s line goes back to his 3rd great-grandparents, Jean-Nicolas Egler and Marie Eugénie Jeannenot, who married in 1858 in Baume-les-Dames, in Doubs, in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in Eastern France. Marie Eugenie was born in the same area, in Besancon, in 1840 while Jean Nicolas was born in Gondrexange, in Moselle in 1835.

    Carlos Alcaraz Family Tree

    Jean-Nicolas Egler was a railway labourer, and his parents were weavers. After France lost the war against Prussia, people born in the territories annexed by the German Empire had the option of choosing to retain French nationality. In August 1872, Jean-Nicolas Egler chose to keep his French citizenship, while he was already living in Malaga, Andalusia, Spain. His son, Carlos Egler Yeanot (Yeanot a Hispanization of his mother’s French family names, Jeannenot), who lived and died in Sevilla, Andalusia, Spain, was Carlos Alcaraz’s great-great-grandfather.

    With his French roots in tact, Alcaraz continues to be a fan-favourite not only in Paris, but around the world as well.

  • 2 Jun 2023 8:47 AM | Anonymous

    The following is from an article by George Aghjayan and published in The Armenian Weekly:

    The impact of genocide lingers long after the initiation of the crime. Genocide scholarship today delves into the more nuanced ways in which victims are subjected to genocidal acts in addition to murder. Sexual violence against women and de-ethnicization of children are just two examples. Entire societies are destroyed through genocide and the surviving remnants separated and scattered, resulting in the magnitude of the crime being difficult to quantify.

    While research into a person’s ancestry was traditionally reserved for nobility, and in the United States there were societies devoted to descendants of specific groups, for example Daughters of the American Revolution or Mayflower Descendants, since the 1970s there has been an explosion of genealogical research into all ethnic groups regardless of societal class. The publication of Roots: The Saga of an American Family and the television mini-series based on the book brought forth tremendous interest in genealogy, the family history of African Americans, specifically, and all ethnic groups universally. 

    In addition, there was controversary over the accuracy of the oral history included in Roots and the ability to document through source records the family history of victims of slavery that is equally relevant for all victims of genocide. 

    Initially, my involvement in genocide education focused on demographics and the ways in which a numbers game is utilized in genocide denial. A primary recurring theme in the denial of genocide and ethnic cleansing is to minimize the victim population. Presumably, if less Armenians were alive and living in the Ottoman Empire in 1914, that would mean that less were subjected to murder, rape, slavery, etc.

    My research has focused on three aspects. First, I work on documenting the location and previous Armenian population of the villages of Western Armenia, given the destruction of many of these locations and the Turkish government’s changes in names and locations. Second, there is a common misconception that the various source documents are in conflict over the pre-genocide number of Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire. Instead of viewing them in conflict, my research has attempted to show under what assumptions the sources can be brought into agreement. Lastly, I have used micro-studies to better evaluate the quality of the various sources. 

    You can read the full story at: https://armenianweekly.com/2023/05/24/genealogy-useful-in-the-toolkit-of-genocide-education/.
  • 2 Jun 2023 8:40 AM | Anonymous

    This story is documented in a YouTube video at: https://youtu.be/RF4iW7L5-n4.

  • 2 Jun 2023 8:32 AM | Anonymous

    Genealogy mystery writer Nathan Dylan Goodwin is teaming up with FHD Forensics and its sister organization Genealogy For Justice™ to raise funding for genetic genealogy investigations.

    Goodwin is inviting his fans to support his campaign to underwrite cold cases and have fun doing it. Among the prizes are signed books and naming the villain in the next Venator series novel.

    "Nathan has generously joined our online fundraising team in order to help underwrite cases for the Dean and Tina Linn Clouse Memorial Fund," said Board of Advisors Chairman, Allison Peacock, President of FHD Forensics.

    Winners will be chosen based on either their own single donation, or by funds raised as a team member with a personalized page on the Genealogy For Justice team on the crowdfunding website GiveButter.

    Already known for the exploits of his well-loved character, British genealogist Morton Farrier, Goodwin recently launched the Venator Cold Case series set in the U.S. These stories feature a female investigator based in Utah that uses genetic genealogy to solve murder cases around the U.S.

    "I have been a great supporter of investigative genetic genealogy ever since first hearing of its incredible power to bring closure to the families of murder victims and to restore the names to unidentified human remains," explained the author.

    "Despite my being a writer of fiction, the real people involved in these tragic cases that are unearthed during the process of IGG are of great importance to me. This Genealogy For Justice campaign will help fulfill my firm hope that many more cases will be solved using this unique and powerful forensic approach," Nathan continued.

    About Genealogy For Justice

    Genealogy For Justice began as a simple online fundraiser in late 2021 called "The Hope For Holly DNA Project." It was circulated as a way to help the families of newly identified 1980 murder victims Dean and Tina Linn Clouse to search for their lost daughter, last seen with them as an infant in 1980.

    After daughter Holly Marie was found alive and well in June 2022, the fund was renamed and repurposed as a memorial to Dean and Tina. The 501c3 sister organization was officially launched in October of 2022 with a goal to help other families of the unidentified become reunited with missing loved ones through closure of their cold cases.

    The organization recently announced its first case closure in the case of Virginia Higgins Ray, a North Carolina native who died in a Columbia, South Carolina hospital in 1982.

    About Nathan Dylan Goodwin

    Genealogical crime mystery author Nathan Dylan Goodwin has been doing genealogy research since he was a boy. So it comes as no surprise that when he combined this with his love of writing, an acclaimed genre-bestselling Forensic Genealogist series was born.

    In addition to his well-loved Farrier books, Nathan recently launched the Venator Cold Case series set in the U.S. Two free downloads of Nathan Dylan Goodwin's work can be found on his website.


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