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Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Creating a Family History of Lasting Value Free zoom presentation Tuesday, February 7, 2023 6:00pm

 To registered for the event, hit here

Most genealogists want to prepare family histories that future generations will cherish. Not all succeed. We begin to create worthwhile and accurate family histories by collecting and sharing family stories and DNA test results—information that might soon disappear. Our research progresses from that starting point toward the goal of a printed, computerized, or online family history. If we pay attention to four factors—biography, accuracy, documentation, and explanation—our history will be irreplaceable.

The speaker, Thomas Jones, has been pursuing his ancestry since 1963. For the first twenty-five years he was clueless about what he was trying to accomplish and how to do it. When he started climbing the genealogy learning curve he repeatedly experienced the challenges, joys, and rewards of tracing ancestors reliably and of fully understanding their lives. Tom eventually became an award-winning writer, board-certified genealogist, editor of the National Genealogical Society Quarterly, recipient of honors from genealogical organizations, and author of the popular textbooks Mastering Genealogical Documentation and Mastering Genealogical Proof. Using his nearly lifelong education career as a springboard, he enjoys teaching at weeklong genealogy institutes, weekend seminars, and local, national, and international genealogy conferences.

Friday, January 27, 2023

RootsTech Keynote Speakers and Conference information • MARCH 2–4 2023 In Person and Online (free) COnference

For more information on the conference, please hit here




Rootstech is delighted to announce their Virtual Exclusive Keynote speakers that will be joining them in March!

Tuti Furlán is a psychologist, specializing in positive psychology and the science of happiness. She is a writer, international speaker, actress, and business owner. With her 20+ year career, she is considered to be one of the most influential and recognized public figures in Guatemala.

H. H. Sheikh Salem bin Sultan bin Saqr Al-Qasimi is from Ras al Khaimah.

H. H. has been a major contributor to achieving sustainability and food security in the UAE and was awarded the Medal of Excellence for being an important figure in sustainable investment. He received the Inspirational Leader Award of 2021, the Social Development Leadership Medal, and the Leadership/ Responsibility/ Innovation International Certificate as one of the best social leaders in the world. H. H. also has a great love for bees and the importance of beekeeping. He is a global ambassador in the project to save bees from extinction.

Intro to Genealogy Free Zoom presentation Thursday, February 2, 2023 4pm PST (7pm EST)

In the genealogy world online there are free presentation to enter and gather information. Our organization likes to helped our members with the promotion of these free webinars for the general public. Even though we are a Hispanic genealogy group, we promote the education and knowledge that one may obtain from these presentations. Who knows  what information you can glean from these presentation. Since they our free online via Zoom, we are letting our members know that these courses are available to you. 




 Brewer, Maine City Councilor Michele Daniels will showcase some Brewer Public Library resources and give participants an introduction to Genealogy.


Attend this program on Zoom by visiting https://networkmaine.zoom.us/j/86388696587 on February 2nd at 4:00 pm PST. (7pm EST)

Thursday, January 26, 2023

5 Strategies for Deciphering Old Handwriting on Documents

 To read the article in full, hit here Written by Danny Arsenault for Familytree Magazine

The state archives finally got back to you. At last, the copies are in your hands. Or maybe you were rifling around in the attic and uncovered a box of letters nobody knew about. It’s the document that could blast through that fortresslike brick wall you’ve been banging your head against. You’d feel like you just won the genealogical lottery, except for one minor detail: You can’t read a word of it.

Fortunately, it’s possible to decipher old, illegible and oddly spelled documents. By employing a few tools, a little knowledge and these five tricks, you can read almost any document.

1. Make a Photocopy

The first thing you’ll need to do is get cozy with modern technology. Don’t try to decipher the handwriting directly from the original document, especially if you’re looking at it in an archive or courthouse. You’ll need to take plenty of time to examine the writing, so make photocopies, take digital pictures or — best of all — scan the document. If you’re viewing a microfilmed record, make a printout.

Even if you’re the owner of the original record, it’s a good idea to work from a copy. First, you can avoid repeatedly handling and possibly damaging the document. Second, it’s a lot easier to read photocopies, since the black letters stand out better against a white background than against the tan shade of old paper. Plus, you can write on photocopies — as you’ll see, making notes on the document is an essential part of the decoding process.

Best of all, photocopying and scanning give you “zoomability,” an essential for some deciphering jobs. A copy enlarged to 1,000 percent lets you inspect pen strokes closely enough to see where they overlap and change directions, giving you a better idea of the letters the writer intended to form.

If you’re looking at a scan on your computer, you can get ridiculously close — enough to tell if the quill pen tip had a tiny split. Years ago, I made a full-page photocopy of a single word in a letter from famous ringmaster P.T. Barnum, who was infamous for his horrible penmanship. I hung the copy at my desk and stared at it every once in a while. Eventually, the word revealed itself: Jumbo, Barnum’s famous elephant.

Not only can you use a photocopier to enlarge a document, but you also can play with the density controls to enhance the contrast and make the writing stand out more.

Photocopy a document on several settings, since different ones might work best for different parts of the document. You can get even more sophisticated if you scan your document, take a digital photo of it or download it from the Internet: Use a photo-editing program, such as Photoshop Elements, to adjust the contrast, brightness and color levels (look under Enhance > Adjust Lighting in Photoshop Elements).

Experiment to see which adjustments help the most — just be sure to work on a copy of the image so you don’t have to scan it again if you mess up.

2. Study Spelling and Abbreviation

Your ancestors’ unusual ways with words easily can trip you up. Spelling wasn’t standardized until relatively recently, and people often wrote words the way they sounded. The further back you go, the more phonetic spelling you’ll find.

To make matters worse for genealogists, if s quite common to see different spellings of someone’s name. Regional accents, limited education and simple errors all can produce dramatic spelling variations. If your ancestor spoke his name to a town clerk who wrote it down, letters such as c and k may have sounded alike, or the clerk may have omitted silent letters such as the k in Knight, or the c in Schmidt.

Some people even spelled their own names differently from one day to the next. So make a list of the potential mutations you might encounter. In my own case, I’ve come across Arsenault, Areseneault, Arseneau, Arsenaux, Arseneaux, Arsenalt, Arsenaul, Arsenaulte, Arsenauld, Arsenaud, Arceneaux and, if you include junk mail addressed to me, Arsenabavlt, Arsenaut and Earsneal.

Our ancestors not only spelled names and words in various ways, but they abbreviated liberally. Sometimes you’ll see just the first letter or two of a name, with a small last letter tacked on at the end. Or maybe the writer used lines or dots instead of groups of letters. See this page for a list of common abbreviations and short forms of names. See also our guides to male and female nicknames.

Lots of other abbreviations crop up in genealogical documents, too. With each kind of document, each era, and each geographical area, you’ll have to become familiar with a new batch of abbreviations. In British documents, for example, Lo means Lord, M means Majesty, and so on. You’ll find more of these in The Record Interpreter: A Collection of Abbreviations, Latin Words and Names Used in Historical Manuscripts and Records by C. Trice Martin (Phillimore & Co.).

3. Familiarize Yourself with Letters

When you read an old document, you’ll find yourself wrestling with the unfamiliar ways people formed letters way back when. Even these variations have variations: Handwriting experts make the distinction between class characteristics and individual characteristics. Everyone who learned, say, the Palmer Method, a common writing style in the early 1900s or the Elizabethan Secretary Hand, used during the 1500s and 1600s, shows certain class characteristics in his or her letter formation. But within this pool of pen wielders, each person exhibits his own variations, called individual characteristics.

First, as you research back in time, you’ll need to become familiar with the class characteristics of each era you work in. See English Handwriting Online for information on when various styles were common. For example, in documents from the 1700s and 1800s, an s may resemble a lower case, cursive f (in a double s, the second s may be written normally — Jesse looks like Jefse). The lowercase as, os and us often appear similar; as do the uppercase S, L and T. In very old texts, you may see an e that looks backward or a thorn — a character resembling a y, it represents th. A ye means “the.”

Say you’re looking at a handwritten document, and you’ve uncovered all the class characteristics you can. Now you’ll ferret out the writer’s individual characteristics. Look for familiar words first — names of months and days, the and and,and archaic phrases such as “Know all men by these presents …” (“Let all know …”), which is used in early American legal documents. By carefully examining these, you can identify idiosyncratic formations of specific letters.

For example, most writers have a characteristic way of forming the th letter combination. Once you find it in a familiar word, such as the, you can skim the document and pencil in a th wherever it occurs in a word you don’t know. Then move on, looking for another letter or letter combination you can positively ID. As you work with your document this way and become more familiar with the particularities of the handwriting, you’ll find reading it gets easier. Try the example on the opposite page to see how this works.

4. Create an Alphabet Key

For an especially difficult document, you may need to bring in the big guns and make an alphabet. Forensic examiners frequently use this technique. Simply make a key like the one at right by cutting and pasting (digitally using photo-editing software, or on paper with a photocopier) examples of identified letters. Add examples of every letter you know with a reasonable degree of certainty.

When you’re faced with a difficult word, compare each letter to those on your key. Write down all of the possible letters of the word in a sort of matrix, such as the one below. According to this matrix, the first letter of this name could be an M or a U, we’re sure the next one’s an a, the two after that could be ts or ls, there’s definitely an h after that, and so on. Then you can scan the possibilities and make educated guesses of the right words. When you’re confident you know the word, write it on your photocopy of the document and type it in a separate transcription.

To read more of the article, hit here

Monday, January 23, 2023

Introduction to BYU Family History Library via YouTube

 To watch the YouTube video, hit here

The BYU Family History Library (FHL) is located on the campus of Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. It is one of the Family History Centers devoted to assisting library patrons in genealogical research. It began as a small section of the BYU library in 1962, and later expanded into a branch of the Family History Library, the genealogical library of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in 1964. It was formerly known as the Utah Valley Regional Family History Center. The BYU FHL houses a large collection of physical materials, such as microfilms, photographs, books, and other documents. It also offers access to digital materials, including genealogical databases and digitized newspapers. Scanners, computers, and printers are also available. The BYU FHL assists patrons online through its website, YouTube channel, and hosted webinars. It also offers classes in a variety of areas related to genealogy.

Saturday, January 21, 2023

GSHA-SC General Meeting Saturday, February 4, 2023 10am to 1pm PST


 Our Speaker: Estevan Rael-Gálvez, Ph.D. will present at 11:00am

 Program Title: Native Bound Unbound – Peopling the Archive of Indigenous Slavery

 Brief Description of Program:

Building upon decades of research by Dr. Rael-Gálvez on Native American slavery, thanks to the Mellon Foundation, he has been able to launch Native Bound Unbound – Archive of Indigenous Slavery, the objective of which is to create a centralized digital repository centered on the lives of the enslaved Indigenous people across the Americas. Dr. Rael-Gálvez will provide an overview of the initiative and engage the audience in a conversation about how to get involved.  

 Bio: Anthropologist, historian, and cultural consultant, Dr. Estevan Rael-Gálvez has served as the former Senior Vice President at the National Trust for Historic Preservation, executive director of the National Hispanic Cultural Center and as the state historian of New Mexico. He is currently the Executive Director of Native Bound Unbound. A native son of New Mexico, he received his BA in English Literature and Ethnic Studies from the University of California, Berkeley, and his MA and PhD. in American Cultures from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, where he completed his dissertation, “Identifying Captivity and Capturing Identity,” the basis of a book project.   

 Recording of presentation is allowed for limited replay.


Friday, January 20, 2023

10th Genetic Genealogy Conference March 31-April 2, 2023 Uncovering Your Genetic Inheritance

In the past, our organization has helped with the promotion of events that the SCGS' DNA Interest Group puts on for the general public. Even though we are a Hispanic genealogy group, we promote the education and knowledge that one may obtain from these presentations. DNA is new topic and with the advent of having genealogist use it to track down ancestral lines, we thought our members would benefit from it. Since this meeting is open to those interested and the cost is minimal for the education via GoToMeeting, we are letting our members know that these courses are available to you if you register and pay in advance.  



 Registration will open Monday, January 23 at www.genealogyjamboree.com

Fee: $95 for members; $105 for non-members for March 31 and April 1


Thursday, January 19, 2023

How many pictures do you need to pass to the next generation?

 To read this article from Genealogy Tip of the Day answered this question. I know myself, I inherited my families photos and I know that I don't have the space or time to scan each photo or photo albums in the computer. Reading this article may give you insight on what to do. To read it, hit here

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Lunch & Learn Saturday, May 13, 2023 at 1:00pm PDT

In the past, our organization has helped with the promotion of webinars that the SCGS' Genealogy Lunch and Learn puts on for the general public. Even though we are a Hispanic genealogy group, we promote the education and knowledge that one may obtain from these presentations. Who knows if your ancestors may have some connection to these areas. Since they are free online via GoToMeeting, we are letting our members know that these courses are available to you if you register in advance. 


PLEASE NOTE INFORMATION BELOW:

Please register at least one-hour ahead for the FREE SCGS Lunch and Learn Education program - on May 13, 2023 at 1:00 PM PDT

Join this webinar from your computer, tablet or smartphone. Please register at:

https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/8817691156668112984

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

 

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

Exhibit of GSHA-FACC--Hispanic Migration to the Southwest and Pueblo

Ron Sandoval from FACC created a phone video clip of the exhibit that opened January 14 at the Pueblo Heritage Museum. This was put together by the by the members of The Fray Angelico Chavez Chapter of The Genealogical Society of Hispanic America in Pueblo Colorado, they did an outstanding job. The title of the exhibit is Hispanic Migration to the Southwest and Pueblo. The museum is located at 201 W B street Pueblo Colorado 81003. To watch the video, hit here



Monday, January 16, 2023

5GB FREE Photo Storage at Amazon Photos!

5GB FREE Photo Storage at Amazon Photos!



5GB FREE Photo Storage at Amazon Photos! Did you know that you can store up to 5GB of your scanned family photos as well as videos at Amazon Photo for FREE? And that Amazon Prime… To ACCESS it, hit here

The post 5GB FREE Photo Storage at Amazon Photos! appeared first on Genealogy Bargains  


 

Friday, January 13, 2023

DNA Interest Group and Presentation, Saturday, January 29, 2023 10:00am to 2:00pm "DNA Testing Companies, What They Have to Offer Us Now"

In the past, our organization has helped with the promotion of webinars that the SCGS' DNA Interest Group puts on for the general public. Even though we are a Hispanic genealogy group, we promote the education and knowledge that one may obtain from these presentations. DNA is new topic and with the advent of having genealogist use it to track down ancestral lines, we thought our members would benefit from it. Since this meeting is open to those interested and the cost is minimal for the education via GoToMeeting, we are letting our members know that these courses are available to you if you register and pay in advance.  




Southern California Genealogy Society building Location: 417 Irving Drive, Burbank, CA 91504

For those wanting to attend in person, come to the SCGS Library. $5.00 donation is suggested for attendance in person.

For those wanting to attend remotely, you must register for the meeting. To register for this SPECIAL webinar meeting and pay the $5.50 fee, go to: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/805999624521509134

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

In the last two to three years DNA testing companies have begun to see the value in offering features/analytic tools on their sites. Some of these tools are collaborations with third-party genetic genealogy sites. Do we still need third-party site applications? We will review the latest features at Ancestry, 23and Me, FamilyTreeDNA and My Heritage.

Presenter: Adrian Foushee is a resident of Pasadena, CA and has been doing genealogy for ten years, researching and documenting family members back to the mid-19th century. Genetic Genealogy (DNA Testing) has connected him to new cousins on both his maternal and paternal lines. DNA results supported his suppositions regarding his great, great-grandparents. In 2017 Adrian began the Foushee Ancestry Project, an autosomal and Y-DNA study and hopes to extend the Foushee branch into the early 18th century. Adrian is an active participant in the SGCS and CAAGS DNA Interest Groups.

10:00-10:10 Announcements & Introductions

10:10-11:45 Presentation and Q & A.

11:45-12:45 Lunch

12:45-2:00 Individualized help. Please bring your DNA results and password if needed.

Individualized help will be available after the formal presentation for those who want to order DNA tests or who have received DNA results and need help managing their personal page or interpreting their results. Brown bag or join us for pizza for an additional $5.00.

DNA Administrators Meeting 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. Roundtable discussions include how to work with group projects, planning for the DNA interest group, and news within the field of genetic genealogy.

For more info, contact Bonny Cook, Alice Fairhurst, Megan Lee and Kathy Johnston at dna@scgsgenealogy.com

Future Meetings in 2023:

To be held quarterly on the 5th Saturday of the month

April 23, 2023; July 29, 2023; September 30, 2023.

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

I’m Warning You! The Poor and Impoverished in New England Colonial Times by Peggy Lauritzen, AG®, FOGS Wednesday, January 18 6pm PST

 In the past, our organization has helped with the promotion of webinars that the SCGS' Genealogy Group puts on for the general public. Even though we are a Hispanic genealogy group, we promote the education and knowledge that one may obtain from these presentations. Who knows if your ancestors may have some connection to these areas. Since they are free online via their GoToMeeting, we are letting our members know that these courses are available to you if you sign in and register in advance by hitting here.

Webinars offer Jamboree-style seminars for up to 500 attendees per session, at no charge.  While the original webcasts are available to all genealogists, SCGS members will be able to review archived sessions at any time by accessing the SCGS members-only section of this website. Archived sessions will be available approximately three days following the webinar. To view the webinar, you will need a computer with audio speakers or a headset. Those persons with a fast Internet connection (either broadband or DSL) will have the most satisfactory experience. 


Tuesday, January 10, 2023

How to find new records on the Big $ Genealogy Companies

 Genealogy companies are update their record collections frequently. Learn how to find and keep up with newly added genealogy records at the large genealogy databases.

How To Find NEW Records on the BIG Four (4) Genealogy Databases, please hit here


Monday, January 9, 2023

Sunday, January 8, 2023

Genealogy 101 for 2022-2023 free online course thru zoom January 14, 2023 9am PST

This is a one-time basic course for the beginner, repeated each month. However, feel free to come for a refresher as desired. Attendees will be introduced to thinking genealogically through the exploration of the following:

* Introduction to the census using Ancestry.com

* Pedigree Charts and Family Group Sheets

* Other Major Record Groups

Now is a great time to start a genealogy journey. There are many online options for researching your family history. Ancestry.com/Library Edition is available for FREE onsite at any metro branch library. FamilySearch.org offers free access to records from your home computer. FindaGrave is always free to search for cemetery burials. Join Professional Genealogist Carol Cooke Darrow as she guides you to search techniques that will allow you to discover your roots.

To register, please hit here

Friday, January 6, 2023

Foundational Concepts & Reference Tools for Mexican Genealogy Friday, January 20, 2023 11:00am PST




 Genealogist pour a lot of time, money, and soul into their family history research. So, they want to make sure that they are tracing the right people and families in the right place at any given time, and that they glean all possible information and clues from the records. This presentation reviews social and cultural customs, and tools for learning about jurisdictions and key terminology. It is suitable for those still new to Mexican genealogy as well as more experienced researchers. To register for this event, hit here

Thursday, January 5, 2023

Lunch & Learn Saturday, Jan 14, 2023 1:00pm PST

   In the past, our organization has helped with the promotion of webinars that the SCGS' Genealogy Lunch and Learn puts on for the general public. Even though we are a Hispanic genealogy group, we promote the education and knowledge that one may obtain from these presentations. Who knows if your ancestors may have some connection to these areas. Since they are free online via GoToMeeting, we are letting our members know that these courses are available to you if you register in advance. 



To register for January 14, click on link below: 

https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/4544500787967680095


After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.



Wednesday, January 4, 2023

I used DNA analysis to find my birth family and it sent me across three continents by Tim Curran, CNN

 To read this article in full, hit here

When I sent DNA samples to genetic testing services last year searching for my birth family, I had no idea it would launch me on an adventure across three continents.

In 1961, I was adopted at birth in California. Over the years, I've searched for my birth family on and off, but have always been stymied by sealed records and tight-lipped officials. In the last decade, however, home DNA testing and easy online access to official records have changed the game.

I spit into plastic tubes (one for each of the two big players in this industry in the United States: 23andMe and Ancestry.com), dropped them in the mail, and waited, anxiously, for the results. When the email arrived, I was stunned.

After a lifetime believing I was a basic White American, I learned that was only half true. My birth mother was born in Iowa. But it turned out my father was North African.

I reached out to anonymous DNA matches through 23andMe and Ancestry's messaging systems, but no one replied. Then came weeks of research using Ancestry.com and various public records databases until I was able to identify both my parents and find contact information for a handful of their close relatives.

I discovered my birth father had been born in the mid-1930s in Casablanca. Romantic visions of Bogart and Bergman (fictionally) escaping the Nazis swam in my head.

Records showed he had emigrated to the US in 1959 and ended up in San Francisco. My mother had been raised in San Diego, and also moved to San Francisco right after high school. But why had he left Morocco? What brought her to San Francisco? I had to know more.

After days of imagining the best and worst, I drafted scripts for what to say to genetically close family members who most likely had no idea I even existed. Then I apprehensively reached out.

To my great relief, my mother's and father's families both welcomed me with open arms -- despite their shock at discovering I existed.

I learned quickly that both my biological parents had died, and was deeply disappointed I had forever missed my chance to meet them. Would things have been different if I'd searched harder earlier?

But I was thrilled that all their siblings were still alive.

From my new family, I pieced together a rough sketch of my parents' stories: On opposite sides of the world, they had both butted heads with difficult parents and left home at the first opportunity. They both wound up in one of the most free-thinking places on Earth: San Francisco.

He worked as floor installer in the city's North Beach neighborhood -- where she was a cocktail waitress and dancer. I pictured them meeting while he installed floors in a nightclub where she was working.

By all accounts, it must have been a very brief affair. My father was living with a girlfriend, and my mother's sister says she never once heard my mother discuss my father in any way. Other than the sister and her mother, no one else in her family was told she was pregnant. My father's family says they are 100% certain he was never told, either.

There were other big surprises: I was told my mother never had another child -- or even a serious boyfriend -- for the rest of her life. On my father's side, I was shocked to learn I had a half-brother and -sister and dozens of cousins in France and Morocco.

They invited me to visit. I booked a trip to meet my father's huge, welcoming family.

Tuesday, January 3, 2023

The use of DNA and genetic genealogy have become widely used strategies for solving challenging genealogy research projects since DNA testing became available to the public in the early 2000s. 

In case you missed them, click below for the top five DNA and genetic genealogy blog posts in 2022 that can help you better understand genetic genealogy and possibly overcome brick wall challenges that could hinder your research progress. 

To read Legacy Tree Genealogist Top 5 DNA and Genetic Genealogy Blog post, hit here





Monday, January 2, 2023

Free organizing class offered online

A genealogy society out of New York is offering free online courses to help the genealogist to organize your data.

Here’s the lineup of events for the week:

Four Essential Building Blocks to Organizing Your Genealogy from Julie Miller at 7 pm eastern on Monday, January 9 (online only)

Onsite Research in New York, presented by Susan Miller at 5 pm eastern on Tuesday, January 10 (online and in-person)

Live Q&A with D. Joshua Taylor and Susan Miller at 4 pm eastern on Wednesday, January 11 (online only)

Preserving Your Digital Family History Materials presented by NYG&B President, D. Joshua Taylor at 6 pm eastern on Thursday, January 12 (online only)

To register for this free event, hit here