When researching ancestors in Canada, you may find records that state they lived in Upper Canada or in Lower Canada. Where are those places? The Atlas of Canada can tell you. The same online atlas can also show you the locations of millions of other places in Canada.
Continue reading "Canada's Online Atlas" »
Dan Lawyer has written an article that will be of interest to many genealogists. In fact, I would suggest that it be required reading for programmers who write genealogy software.
Dan states that, when entering data in most genealogy programs, "the user experience and complexity is on par with filing your taxes." He then goes on to list his "Top 10 Innovations Needed in (Genealogy) Record Managers."
Continue reading "Raising the Bar for Record Managers" »
This has nothing to do with genealogy, but it affects millions of computer users, including the majority of subscribers to this newsletter.
I have written before about the multitude of security problems in Microsoft's Internet Explorer. Now eWeek, one of the most widely read and respected computer publications in the world, has published an article by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols on the same topic.
Continue reading "Why Is Anyone Still Using Internet Explorer?" »
Newsletter reader Brenda Roberts wrote this week to describe a fascinating resource for genealogists: eBay. Brenda wrote:
Dear Dick,
I have enjoyed your newsletters for four years. I have learned a lot through your editorials.
Thus, I want to give back something interesting, in which I found by browsing through eBay.
Continue reading "Family Bibles Sold on eBay" »
Clooz 2.0 is now in final beta testing. If you'd like to try the new version, visit www.clooz.com.
Continue reading "Clooz 2.0 Final Beta" »
I recently received an e-mail from someone who has the same last name as my own. She had searched the web and found that I often write about genealogy and occasionally about coats of arms and crests. She sent me an e-mail that said (in part), "I am looking for a copy of the Eastman family crest because my son would like to have one."
Continue reading "A Tattoo of Your Family Coat of Arms" »
Ancestry.com has joined the list of genealogy bloggers. The company's new 24/7 Family History Circle appeared online on Monday and appears to be off to a good start with a number of articles already online.
The new e-publication replaces the previous Ancestry Daily News that was sent by e-mail and also available on the web site. The good news is that the editor hasn't changed: Juliana Smith remains in charge. She promises to include articles from family history columnists George G. Morgan, Michael Neill, Megan Smolenyak, Maureen Taylor, Paula Warren, and Sherry Irvine, as well as the occasional guest columnist.
Continue reading "New Ancestry.com Blog" »
As your genealogy expertise increases, you may find yourself in demand as a speaker at genealogy meetings and conferences. If you become knowledgeable about researching a particular ethnic group or the records of a particular area or a genealogy program, others will seek your advice. In fact, being asked to speak on a topic is flattering to the speaker and can also provide a service to those in the audience. The words you speak may help others accomplish tasks they otherwise might never attempt.
Of course, public speaking brings with it many challenges. By far, the biggest obstacle is the butterflies in the stomach. Next, learning how to make public presentations can be a challenge. Finally, in most cases, you need to have "presenters' tools." Nowadays, that means a laptop computer, presentation software, a projector, a laser pointer, and more.
Continue reading "(+) Tools for Presenters" »
Personal Ancestry Writer is a free genealogy program for the Macintosh that has been around for years. I first wrote about it nine years ago in the February 10, 1997, edition of this newsletter. (You can read that article at http://eogn.com/archives/news9706.txt). Now author Howard Metcalfe has released version 50. Yes, that's fifty releases.
Continue reading "Personal Ancestry Writer II version 50" »
Writing in the Colorado Genealogy Blog, Julie Miller warns:
On Wednesday, 22 March 2006, the Colorado Senate Judiciary Committee passed HB 1357 and sent it to the Senate for vote. This bill will close access to the marriage applications in Colorado. We do not know when the HB 1357 will come up for a vote but think that it may happen very soon.
The Colorado genealogical community needs to act NOW! I encourage everyone to take the following steps:
Continue reading "HB 1357 Will Close Marriage Applications in Colorado" »
Virginia Lee Hutcheson Davis has recently published a new book with the full title of Jamestowne Ancestors 1607-1699 - Commemoration of the 400th Anniversary of the Landing at James Towne 1607-2007. This week I had a chance to examine the new book and found it to be an excellent genealogical reference work.
Continue reading "Jamestowne Ancestors 1607-1699" »
In 1629 colonists landed in what is now Salem, Massachusetts. They took possession of the land because they had been granted a Royal Charter of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay. The Charter granted permission ''for the planting, ruling, ordering, and governing of Newe England in America." The document was in the possession of John Endicott, the original chief executive of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, when he arrived in 1629.
That Royal Charter became a foundational document in U.S. history. Now the Charter could be up for sale to the highest bidder.
Continue reading "A Piece of American History May Go Up for Sale" »
Genealogists spend lots of time in cemeteries, so perhaps we are all a bit more familiar with the dead than the average citizen. However, I don't know how to handle cryogenically frozen bodies in my genealogy database. How do I record a death event of "temporarily dead?" That's what the proponents of cryogenics would have you consider.
Well, it didn't work out for cryogenics pioneer Doctor Raymond Martinot.
Continue reading "Frozen French Couple Go Up In Smoke" »
MyFamily.com is based in Provo, Utah, about 45 miles south of Salt Lake City. The company also has an office in Hammersmith, London, England. Now the company is opening a new sales and marketing, design and engineering office in Bellevue, Washington.
Continue reading "MyFamily.com opens Bellevue, Washington Office" »
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