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Friday, March 26, 2021

The Release of the 1950 U.S. Census is just a year away

The 1950 Census of the United States will be released for public inspection on Friday, April 1, 2022. Mark that date on your calendar.

A few facts about the 1950 census:

  • The 1950 U.S. census lists information about 151,325,798 residents (not always citizens) of the United States of America
  • The 1950 census collected the following information from all respondents:
    • address
    • whether house is on a farm
    • name
    • relationship to head of household
    • race
    • sex
    • age
    • marital status
    • birthplace
    • if foreign born, whether naturalized
    • employment status
    • hours worked in week
    • occupation, industry and class of worker
  • In addition, a sample of individuals were asked additional questions covering income, marital history, fertility, and other topics. Full documentation on the 1950 census, including census forms and a procedural history, is available from the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series.
  • The original forms on paper that were used to enumerates all U.S. residents no longer exist. Those paper forms were destroyed after the forms were microfilmed.

Thursday, March 25, 2021

The Spanish Flu Pandemic in New Mexico 1918-1920 (YouTube Presentation)

The end of World War I in 1918 coincided with the onset of the Spanish Influenza, which spread across the globe and devastated populations world-wide with estimates ranging from 50 to 100 million deaths. The pandemic reached New Mexico in fall of 1918; by the end of October as many as fifteen thousand New Mexicans had fallen ill and perhaps a thousand were dead, although the exact number will never be known. (To watch the presentation, hit here)

Spanish Flu has been described as an equal opportunity killer, but it preyed on people in the prime of life rather than the young and old, as is the case with a typical flu. Native Americans and Mexican Americans suffered higher mortality than other groups in New Mexico. In Mexico as many as 500,000 deaths have been attributed to Spanish Flu. Mexican laborers crossed into southern New Mexico where they lived in overcrowded conditions and were of prime age to fall victim to influenza.

In Albuquerque, with a population of around 15,000 there were 923 confirmed case of Spanish Flu and only 167 deaths. Such a low mortality was probably a result of measures the city government took. In the city all public gatherings were prohibited, and quarantined homes were identified by signage.

The state of public health in New Mexico contributed to the impact of Spanish Flu. The pandemic arrived only six years after statehood, and New Mexico was the only state without a department of health. Instead, each county had county health officers, which meant there was no statewide authority that could mandate disease prevention measures. County health officers’ limited powers included quarantine, investigation, and the ability to appointment health inspectors. The main strategy was two-pronged: try to convince local officials to follow practical measures such as banning public gatherings and complaining when they failed to follow recommendations. The problem of dealing with infectious disease was exacerbated by the fact that some New Mexico counties had no resident physician.

GSHA-SC honorarium member, Rick Hendricks, PhD, is the New Mexico state records administrator. He was state historian from 2010 until 2019. He received his BA from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1977 and his PhD from the University of New Mexico in 1985. He also studied history of Spain in the Americas at the Universidad de Sevilla.

Rick is a former editor of the Vargas Project at the University of New Mexico. After the conclusion of the Vargas Project, he worked at New Mexico State University, most notably on the Durango Microfilming Project, helping to produce and edit a 1,400-page guide to the collection. At NMSU Rick also taught courses in colonial Latin America and Mexican history.

Rick has written extensively on the history of the American Southwest and Mexico. He has written, cowritten, and coedited more than twenty books. His most recent publications include two chapters on Freemasonry in The Santa Fe Scottish Rite Temple: Freemasonry, Architecture, and Theatre, edited by Wendy Waszut-Barrett and Jo Whaley (Santa Fe: Museum of New Mexico Press, 2018), and a book entitled Pueblo Indian Sovereignty: Land and Water in New Mexico and Texas (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2019), coauthored with his long-time writing partner, Malcolm Ebright. Malcolm and Rick are finishing a book on Pablo Abeita of Isleta Pueblo, and Rick recently completed a manuscript on a nineteenth-century Spanish priest, Father Antonio Severo Borrajo.


Soldiers ill with Spanish influenza in 1918 at a hospital ward at Camp Funston, Kansas, site of the first recorded American cases of Spanish Influenza.



Friday, March 19, 2021

"'A Whole Way of Seeing:' Storytelling through Lee Marmon's Photographic Archive" Thursday, 25 February at 4:30PM PDT


We are publishing this zoom link, since it is another way to storytelling. As genealogist, we should pass on bits and pieces of storytelling of our ancestors and their way of life based upon memories or based upon facts that you can bring to life. Censuses tell us who, what and where lived at given location. Bringing story telling who was alive, who passed away or who was the neighbors to a family, your family, may bring to life facts. This storytelling is based upon photographs. How you can tell a story


Dear Friends of CSWR,

Here is the link to their February 2021 virtual People and Places lecture via ZOOM.

CSWR Pict 2000-017 B-15-F12-5

Audrey Goodman, Georgia State University.  "'A Whole Way of Seeing:' Storytelling through Lee Marmon's Photographic Archive" Thursday, 25 February at 4:30pm (PST).  (Room will open at 4:15pm)

Join Zoom Meeting

https://unm.zoom.us/j/96686574489

Meeting ID: 966 8657 4489

One tap mobile

+12532158782,,96686574489# US (Tacoma)

+13462487799,,96686574489# US (Houston)

For instructions or questions regarding use of the ZOOM app, please e-mail me - tjaehn@unm.edu

Thank you.  Happy New Year.  Stay well and best wishes, Tomas

Thursday, March 18, 2021

Genealogy Garage at the Los Angeles Public Library via YouTube or Facebook Saturday, March 20, 2021 11AM PST

In the past, our organization has helped in the cost for speakers to do Genealogy Garage. Since they our going online via YouTube or Facebook, we are letting our members know that these courses are available to you if you sign in to YouTube or Facebook. Information to see the streaming live are below. 

Date(s): Saturday, March 20, 2021

Time: 11:00 am

Description: 32 million Americans descend from the Emerald Isle, but researching for Irish ancestors can be challenging. Past president of the Antelope Valley Genealogical Society and experienced researcher George Mouchet will show us how to find the town and county of our Irish family—and these strategies are good for non-Irish research, too.


Streaming live on YouTube and Facebook.




Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Mexico's Great Diversity in 2020: A Look at the Past and the Present by John Schmal March 20, 2021-1PM PDT

 Please join John Schmal using a powerpoint presentation, which he will show the results of the 2020 Mexican census with regards to its indigenous language and Afro-Mexicans. Using census charts, he will show the decline of Mexico's indigenous languages since 1895, and will highlight the indigenous languages that are considered to be at great risk of extinction.


Please click here to join. or go to zoom and join meeting. Meeting ID: 972 4285 2058 and Passcode: 668001





Tuesday, March 16, 2021

Short Short Line Railroads HSNM 2021

 If you are a Railroad enthusiast, here is a podcast for you. My wife's ancestor. Her grandfather worked on these railroads when living in El Paso. Railroad historian Fred Friedman talks about "Short Line Railroads in New Mexico". It is sponsored by the Historical Society of New Mexico on its YouTube channel. To watch this Youtube video, hit here 

Sunday, March 14, 2021

Blood in the Borderlands: Conflict, Kinship, and the Bent Family, 1821-1920 Mar 21, 2021 1PM PDT


 The Bents might be the most famous family in the history of the American West. From the 1820s to 1920 they participated in many of the major events that shaped the Rocky Mountains and Southern Plains. They trapped beaver, navigated the Santa Fe Trail, intermarried with powerful Indian tribes, governed territories, became Indian agents, fought against the U.S. government, acquired land grants, and created historical narratives.

The Bent family’s financial and political success through the mid-nineteenth century derived from the marriages of Bent men to women of influential borderland families—New Mexican and Southern Cheyenne. When mineral discoveries, the Civil War, and railroad construction led to territorial expansions that threatened to overwhelm the West’s oldest inhabitants and their relatives, the Bents took up education, diplomacy, violence, entrepreneurialism, and the writing of history to maintain their status and influence.

In Blood in the Borderlands David C. Beyreis provides an in-depth portrait of how the Bent family creatively adapted in the face of difficult circumstances. He incorporates new material about the women in the family and the “forgotten” Bents and shows how indigenous power shaped the family’s business and political strategies as the family adjusted to American expansion and settler colonist ideologies. The Bent family history is a remarkable story of intercultural cooperation, horrific violence, and pragmatic adaptability in the face of expanding American power.


To register for the event, hit here

Friday, March 12, 2021

The truth about at-home DNA testing kits

 (Consumer Reports) -- At-home DNA test kits like 23andMe have been around for years. In fact, according to a recent CR survey, about 20 percent of Americans have taken a genetic test, perhaps with the hope of finding answers about their family origins or potential health problems. But as Consumer Reports explains, although you might take the test for fun, the results can be serious. 

Though some of these tests can help determine if you’re likely to develop diseases such as breast cancer or Alzheimer’s, they could also give you a false sense of relief—or fear. While a positive result from these tests can mean you do have a higher risk of a certain disease, a negative result doesn’t necessarily mean you’re out of the woods, because there could be other variants that can cause that disease not detected by the test. 23andMe says it clearly explains test limitations to users.

While DIY DNA tests can be helpful, some may find the results confusing, misleading, or upsetting. In the CR survey, about 10 percent of people who used these tests said their reports contained unsettling information, such as the news that someone thought to be a biological relative wasn’t actually related to them at all. If you think these kits are going to give you a complete picture of your ancestry and your health, you’re going to be disappointed. And there is also the possibility that it could reveal information you may not even want to know about your family.

Bottom line: A DIY DNA test kit might be right for you as long as you understand what your results may or may not signify. Consumer Reports would also like to remind you that there are very few laws that regulate what a company can do with your genetic data once they receive it, so it could be sold to a third party without you ever knowing about it.

To read the article, hit here

Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Hispanic Research with John Schmal on March 17, 2021 at 6:30PM PST


 Please RSVP to get the zoom link and passcode.

Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Women of the Santa Fe Trail, an online Zoom event with Irene Blea, Ph.D. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 2021 AT 4 PM PDT

 


Women of the Santa Fe Trail, an online Zoom event with Irene Blea, Ph.D.

March 17th, 2021 at 5 p.m. MST
Register to attend at: https://tinyurl.com/IreneBlea
Dr. Irene Blea reflects upon her own work to discuss the cultural diversity of 1800’s women on the Santa Fe Trail in New Mexico. Attention is given to indigenous, Spanish, Mexican, and American women interactions and attitudes towards one another. Emphasis is placed upon intermarriage, social relations, and how the influx of Americans impacted the cultural dynamic until this day.
Irene I. Blea, Professor Emeritus, Sociology & Chicana y Chicano Studies
Biography
Dr. Irene Blea is a New Mexico native with a Ph. D. in Sociology from the University of Colorado-Boulder. She is the author of 7 Chicano Studies textbooks also used in Sociology of race relations classes, over 30 articles, 4 poetry chapbooks, and 4 novels. Her most recent novel, Beneath the Super Moon has been received with great success and is the 3rd in her Suzanna trilogy. The first two books are titled Suzanna and Poor People’s Flowers. Daughters of the West Mesa based on the discovery of 11 women and an unborn fetus found buried west of Albuquerque was selected Best of Albuquerque in 2015 (ABQ the Magazine) and has been instrumental in keeping the unsolved serial killing in the public eye. Sales of the book continue to increase because of the nature of its subject, world interest in preventing sexual trafficking, and Blea’s ability to tell a story. She writes daily, maintains a strong online presence via a blog, Facebook, and is a featured speaker at conferences, universities, and annual meetings. Her work in progress is her autobiography, Erené with Wolf Medicine, in which she traces her family’s migration from the northern mountains of New Mexico to Colorado in the 1950s and results in her building a career in the study of race, class, and gender.
Dr. Blea is a New Mexico Humanities Council Scholar. She retired as a Tenured, Full Professor and Chairperson of Mexican American Studies at California State University-Los Angeles but also taught at the University of New Mexico- Albuquerque and Metropolitan State College-Denver. Her academic career has several notable accomplishments. One of which is that two of her textbooks, Toward a Chicano Social Science and La Chicana are “Classics” in her field (Prager & Greenwood Press). Blea was the first female Chairperson of the National Association of Chicano Studies, a Regional Representative to that organization from the states of Colorado and New Mexico, and is referred to as “the Xicana novelist of these times” (Beva Sanchez-Padilla, Southwest Organizing Project, and World March of Women Organizer).
You can visit Dr. Irene Blea and learn more about her on Facebook. 
https://www.facebook.com/irene.blea
PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES IN NEED OF ACCOMMODATIONS, CONTACT THE LIBRARY AT 505-955-6788, FIVE (5) WORKING DAYS PRIOR TO MEETING DATE.
NEA Big Read is a program of the National Endowment for the Arts in partnership with Arts Midwest.
Sponsored by the Friends of the Santa Fe Public Library and the Santa Fe New Mexican. 
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Sunday, March 7, 2021

GSHA presents Y-DNA Test, by Lee Martinez March 13, 2021 10AM PDT


If you missed the talk by Lee Martinez about the Big Y DNA here is the link to the video by hitting here:

You are invited to a FREE Zoom meeting (100 person limit).

Subject: Y-DNA Test, Lee Martinez
When: Mar 13, 2021 11:00 AM Mountain Time (US and Canada)
Register in advance for this meeting, by hitting here
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting


Lee Martinez will discuss the Y-DNA test, the most useful and powerful of the DNA tests for purposes of genealogy. : Growing up in a Mormon family in the Española Valley of Northern New Mexico, Lee was immersed in genealogy from a young age, scouring small, remote cemeteries throughout the mountain villages in the area with his parents from the age of 10. Lee’s parents served for a time as the local LDS Family History Librarians, based in the valley, back in the day when micro-fiche was a primary research resource. Now with over 40 years of genealogical research under his belt, Dr. Martinez directly manages 24 Y-DNA accounts, representing 13 surnames, and consults with the NMGS-DNA team on Y-DNA projects.

DNA can be a powerful tool in the genealogist's tool box, but it is important to know that there are different kinds of DNA tests, each designed to answer a different kind of investigatory question.

Report: China is Stealing DNA of U.S. Citizens

 The Chinese Communist Party is stealing U.S. citizens' DNA and health care data, according to a new Director of National Intelligence report. The report, which comes from the director's counterintelligence and security center, says China illegally exploits data from American medical records to obtain DNA identification patterns, also known as PII, for "much of the U.S. population." China can use this information to target Americans, according to the report.

"The combination of stolen PII, personal health information, and large genomic data sets collected from abroad affords the PRC vast opportunities to precisely target individuals in foreign governments, private industries, or other sectors for potential surveillance, manipulation, or extortion," the report reads. "Such data sets could help the PRC not only recruit individuals abroad but also act against foreign dissidents."

Beijing has extracted the personal data of American citizens in several ways, including cyberattacks on the federal government. In 2014, China conducted a large-scale hack of the White House's Office of Personnel Management, obtaining the personal information of some 21 million Americans. Some of the stolen data included information on security clearances for U.S. government personnel.

The U.S. government has worked with genetic testing companies tied to China in its pandemic response, potentially disclosing large quantities of American health care data to the Communist nation, the Washington Free Beacon reported in December.

To read the article, hit here

Friday, March 5, 2021

A Settler Colonial State March 11, 2021 5PM PST


 A Settler Colonial State / Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz

The project of British and United States settler-colonialism in North America sought to eliminate Indigenous communities and polities in order to appropriate their land for European settlement and for slave-based commercial agriculture. It is not a moment in time, rather a process that continued from first settlement in 1607 and is not yet complete. This process defines the construction of socio-political-economic institutions in the United States. With the Anglo settler use of violent genocidal policies, every inch of present US territory was contested by Indigenous resistance, resulting in a martial society with uncommon private ownership of firearms as well as aggressive militarism.

Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz is Professor Emerita of Ethnic Studies at California State University, Hayward and the author of An Indigenous People's History of the United States. 


To watch the podcast, you will need to register in advance. To do so, please hit here


Thursday, March 4, 2021

Monday, March 1, 2021

DNA testing uncovers ancestry for Black Americans like never before

 For many Black Americans, knowing their heritage has been difficult because of the slave trade. Over the years, many have gathered stories from family members, but the availability of kits that sequence DNA has led to knowledge Black Americans never previously had. For years, Melvin Collier has been researching where he comes from using census records, other documents and oral histories with older family members. When DNA testing became more widely available, he took advantage of it.

"I've tested my mother, my father, my aunts, uncles and other relatives," Collier said. "(The results give) you things like, 'Hey, you're 30% Nigerian. Or, you're 25% Ghana, from that region.' It brings about a sense of belonging." Nick Sheedy, the lead genealogist for the PBS show "Finding Your Roots with Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr.," said the accessibility of records and affordability of DNA testing has been huge in helping Black people uncover their stories.

"You get names, you get particulars and I think that that helps foster a better understanding," Sheedy said. "For African Americans, especially, these tools allow you to connect dots that we may never have been able to connect otherwise, especially the DNA." He said it's very emotional for many of the people they research. "Most of these people were probably held in slavery, so you always have that in the background, but to be able to document those ancestors, to put names to the relationships and to find them in slave records, especially, really helps to put those people into context," Sheedy said. Through his research and DNA testing, Collier has really added to his family tree, and the reunions are getting bigger and bigger. "It gives you a great sense of identity, you identify more with your African roots," Collier said.

To read the article hit here