What is RSS?
With billions of web pages online today, keeping up-to-date with the information you want can be a drag. Wouldn't it be easier to have the latest news and features delivered directly to you, rather than you clicking from site to site?
Continue reading "What Can RSS Do For You?" »
In his lifetime, Benjamin Franklin lived in a number of places. It seems ironic that the only home that still survives is the one in London, just a few steps from famed Trafalgar Square. Franklin lived here from 1757 to 1775.
Continue reading "Benjamin Franklin Home in London to Open to the Public" »
Adam Benson writes in the Logan, Utah Herald Journal that one of the largest privately held genealogical collections in the country remains locked up and inaccessible to the public. The reason stated is that Logan Library Director Ronald Jenkins has been unable to find a full-time librarian to catalogue and oversee the daily operations of the $1.7 million collection.
Continue reading "Everton Collection Collecting Dust" »
The Federation of Genealogical Societies has now opened registration for exhibitors for its 2006 conference to be held August 30 through September 2 in Boston. If you or your employer would like to exhibit at this conference, go to http://www.fgs.org/2006conf/conf-exhibitor-information.htm.
Continue reading "Info for FGS 2006 Conference Exhibitors" »
As reported yesterday in various genealogy newsgroups and blogs, the Godfrey Memorial Library in Middletown, Connecticut, is in the process of dropping HeritageQuest Online from its portfolio of offerings. The information floating around online is confusing, and some comments that I read contradicted other online comments. I was bewildered. Today I talked with Godfrey Library Director Richard E. Black and received the "inside story."
Continue reading "Godfrey Library to Drop HeritageQuest Online" »
Recolored is a Windows application that helps you with the otherwise difficult and time-consuming task of colorizing black and white photos. Based on the latest developments in computer assisted image colorization, Recolored makes it possible for anyone to achieve professional looking results. This should be an excellent tool for anyone who wishes to restore old family photographs. 
(You can click on these images to see larger photos.)
To add color to a photo, all you have to do is add markings to the different regions of the image, indicating how it should be colorized. Then click the Colorize button, and let the software do the rest.
Continue reading "Convert Black & White Photos to Color" »
The following is an excerpt from an announcement to all Family History Center Directors from the Family History Support department of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
The microfilm circulation loan fees will be changed effective 15 January 2006.
Continue reading "Family History Center Microfilm Rental Fees Increase" »
Warning: This article contains personal opinions.
I often hear reports that genealogy societies are shrinking. The numbers of members reportedly are falling annually; and therefore, budgets also are constantly shrinking. Attendance at some of the long-established national conferences also is declining. The reasons given vary although "competition from the Internet" seems to be the most common explanation offered.
It was with pleasant surprise that I read this week that heritage societies are doing the opposite: they are growing comfortably.
Continue reading "Heritage Societies Reported to be Growing" »
Many people think that identity theft is a crime committed by professional thieves who operate large scams. These same people think the only way to stop identity theft is to pass laws. (As if we didn't have enough laws already that are not being enforced today.) You can find hundreds of ridiculous newspaper and magazine articles about the need to lock up vital records of 100 years ago or even older in the name of "preventing identity theft."
Continue reading "The Real Causes of Identity Theft" »
The 2006 Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy will be held Jan. 9-13 in Salt Lake City. This year's event will offer courses on Scottish and Eastern European research, as well as U.S. research.
Continue reading "2006 Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy" »
The Bureau of Land Management has announced that the General Land Office (GLO) Records Web site is now back on line. The site was offline for sometime due to a court order.
One problem: As I sit here writing these words, the site seems to be down. Perhaps it is a temporary outage.
Continue reading "General Land Office (GLO) Records Web site is now back on line" »
Anna Walker Fitzgerald was an invaluable resource for those researching their ancestors in Boone County, Kentucky. She spent decades gathering information on families and ensuring it was preserved.
Continue reading "In Memoriam: Anna Walker Fitzgerald" »
I have recently published a number of technical articles that have nothing to do with genealogy. Since they are not genealogy-related, I will not publish them in this newsletter. However, if you have an interest in any of the topics below, you may be interested in reading these articles at the addresses listed:
Continue reading "My Recent Non-Genealogy Articles" »
This week I looked at several old books online, including DAR lineage books, old genealogy books published by the New England Historic Genealogical Society, and one particular book that I was looking for: The Seventh Regiment Rhode Island Volunteers in the Civil War, 1862-1865 by William Palmer Hopkins. I found these and thousands more such genealogy and history books available online at no charge.
Continue reading "(+) Genealogies, DAR Lineage Books, Histories, and More Now Available Online" »
The Veterans Affairs Department has significantly increased its online list of burial locations and information inscribed on the markers to more than 5 million grave sites for veterans for whom VA has provided grave markers.
Continue reading "VA Expands Online Grave Site Locator" »
As this newsletter has expanded in the past few years, it has been split into three separate sections:
- The main newsletter
- Other Genealogy News from around the World Wide Web
- Genealogy Announcements from companies and societies
A couple of newsletter readers recently suggested, "Gee, it would be nice if I could read all three sections on one page." Now you can.
Continue reading "Three Newsletter Sections in One" »
Free to one lucky American named Slade, a 16-room English mansion surrounded by 1,300 acres of prime land in southwestern England. But be prepared to work for it.
Baronet Sir Benjamin Slade, 59, has no heir, but is desperate to pass his ancestral home, Maunsel Home - now a busy entertainment venue - to someone in the family. So he has given a DNA sample to a team of genealogists, who will search for the closest match among Americans called Slade; some 5,000 are estimated to live in North Carolina alone.
Continue reading "Is Your Last Name Slade? You May Inherit a Mansion" »
Recent Comments