You are here: Learn > The Library > Daily News Desk > Ancestry Daily News

Ancestry Daily News
12/16/2005 - Archive

•  Ancestry Daily News, 16 December 2005

Ancestry Daily News, 16 December 2005
Ancestry Daily News
Ancestry Daily News Ancestry.com
In This Issue 16 December 2005    
 
Ancestry Classic Database  
     
Today's Map  
     
 
Along Those Lines
Ancestry Quick Tip
Clipping of the Day
Fast Fact
Product Spotlight
Thought For Today
Ancestry.com Quick Search
Advanced Search
 
Search the Ancestry Daily News Archives
 
 
 
 

Along Those Lines...
A Family Gathering Gathering
by George G. Morgan

In the midst of the holiday season, my family history is never far from my thoughts. Perhaps it's the time spent planning family get-togethers as well as the remembrances of holidays in the past. Whatever the reason, my family and its history are an integral part of my holiday plans.

I spent this Thanksgiving in St. Marys, Georgia, with my brother and with first cousins from my mother's side of the family, spouses and significant others. Now that we are the "older generation," a somewhat scary notion for all of us, we all seem to recognize our own mortality and the need to record the important details about our families. Once again, I'm concerned about doing too much of the 'genealogy thing' and possibly turning off some of the relatives. However, this time I prepared in advance for the four days we all spent together and the payoff was enormous.

In "Along Those Lines . . ." this week, I'd like to share my pre-planning with you in the hope that you, too, may get some ideas to perhaps turn your own family gathering into a gathering of genealogical and historical information.

What Do I Take?
When I considered the possibilities of meeting all this family at the home of my first cousin, Penny, I had to make decisions about what to take and what methods I would use to gather information.

I e-mailed with Penny in advance to ask that she let me take a look through the family photographs in her possession. I told her I planned to bring my laptop computer and scanner to capture images. Sure enough, Penny had put a box of family photographs and letters on the cedar chest in our room. Wow! I could hardly wait!

My genealogy database is installed on my laptop computer and I had made time to make sure that I'd exported both a current GEDCOM file and all the digitized photos from my desktop computer to the laptop. Everything was current and in synch.

I broke my cardinal rule about never taking originals with me on a research trip. I took the binders with the documents and photos for the common surnames of HOLDER, WEATHERLY, BALL, and SWORDS, along with a few other collateral lines' information.

Needless to say, my digital camera and extra batteries came along and got a real workout. The digital voice recorder also got some use.

Setting the Scene
We arrived before some of the other folks and began scoping out a good place to set up everything I had brought. Cousin Penny's home is lovely and very spacious. Like most families, we spent lots of time around the kitchen table. However, the house has a huge 'great room' with sofas, easy chairs, and tables. I commandeered one of two card tables and used it to set up my laptop and scanner to one side of the room. I turned on the computer, opened the genealogy database, and it remained on for the rest of the weekend.

Each of the binders of the families' documentary materials and photographs are quite large. I set one on the coffee table, one on each end table by the sofas, and on other tables. The HOLDER binder was on the coffee table and this is the family that seems to be of most interest to all of us. I opened that binder to the materials about our great-grandfather, Greenberry HOLDER. This was to be a catalyst for discussion.

Gathering at the Family Gathering
As the cousins came into the great room, their attention was drawn to both the binders and to the computer. I believe everyone looked through each polypropylene sheet protector in each binder during the weekend. As a question came up about one relative or another, I looked up the information in the database. That brought more attention to the contents there, and my Cousin Marty actually sat down one evening to correct dates of his entries and to add information about his family. Boy, isn't that getting someone involved?

We spent several hours together going through the photographs that Penny had pulled for me. Almost every picture brought comments or explanations about the people, place, time, and circumstances. Fortunately for me/us, Penny had spent time with her mother reviewing and labeling the older pictures before her mother's death. Some of these identifications are invaluable because they now help me identify some people in heretofore unlabeled pictures! You can imagine how elated I was.

There were even photographs of relatives whose images I'd never seen before but whose names and stories I knew. For example, in my column of 18 November, "Tracing Great-Uncle 'Dutch,' I mentioned his wife, the former Essie Eunice Buffington. Among the photos was a cabinet card portrait of her and, in addition, pictures of both of their children. As I shared the story of my investigation of Great-uncle 'Dutch' and Great-aunt Essie to California, we all looked at the photos and could relate to these people as having been real relatives.

That spurred my cousins to start asking about other of our great-aunts and - uncles they knew little about and to share personal remembrances about those they had known well. Being the youngest of this older generation, I listened carefully to every story and ran the little tape recorder to capture as many as possible. These are the details that bring these people back to life. They also provide the hearsay clues that, in some cases, will point me to other documentary evidence research.

Making New Memories
This Thanksgiving provided those of us who were there -- five of the seven cousins -- to become closer, share memories of the past, and to make some great new memories for ourselves. We shared recipes, stories, photographs, took new pictures, dined on the waterfront in St. Marys, did a little walking, and a couple of us even squeezed in a visit to a very historic cemetery there dating back to the late 1600s.

We've already agreed that we will meet as a group at least twice a year at someone's home or in some family place. Since we have ancestral ties to Rome, Georgia, I am sure that it will be one of our sites. However, we're already planning a springtime reunion in Atlanta that will include one of our first cousins once removed, an eighty-year-old man who has been doing research on our maternal grandfather's line for many years.

Get Ready
The remaining holidays of the season are still ahead of us. With some advance preparation and some strategic planning, you also can do some information gathering at your family gatherings. Even the non-talkative family members may well add a little of their own information when the conversations get going.

All in all, I had a wonderful chance to spend time with my brother and my cousins. We all learned a lot more about our ancestral families and this helped solidify the bonds between us. I wouldn't have traded this opportunity for anything.

By the way, my Cousin Penny gave me all of the older family photographs to add to our family archive. She's also on a quest in her house for a doll that belonged to one of our great-aunts. I feel the "genealogy happy dance" coming on again!

Happy Gathering!
George


Join George and eleven other genealogical speakers on Genealogy Cruise 2006, hosted by Fly Away Travel. The seven-night Caribbean cruise departs on 29 October 2006 on Royal Caribbean Line's luxurious new Mariner of the Seas from Port Canaveral, Florida, for stops in the Bahamas, St. Thomas, and St. Maarten. The at-sea days will be filled with more than 70 genealogy presentations. For more details on this great cruise, please visit www.genealogycruise2006.com.

Copyright 2005, MyFamily.com. All rights reserved.

Access a printer-friendly version of this article, e-mail it to a friend, or submit your feedback.

 
     
  Top  
     
 
 

Ancestry Quick Tip
Canadian Plat Maps
Tom Aman

Today's article in the Ancestry Daily News talked about PLAT maps in the U.S. Similar maps are available in Canada as County Atlases. Of particular interest is the Canadian County Atlas Digital Project, digital versions of atlases that were originally printed between 1874 and 1881, including a searchable database of names. In some cases the property reference may contain a link to a portrait (drawing) of the owner and/or the property. If you can find an ancestor or relative on one of these, it often gives a starting point for further research, such as into land records that may establish other details such as when the individual bought and/or sold the property (thereby narrowing further searches).


Thanks to Tom for today's Quick Tip! If you have a tip you would like to share with researchers, you can send it to: ADNeditor@ancestry.com

Quick Tips may be reprinted, with credit to the submitter, in other Ancestry publications, so if you do not want your tip included in a publication other than the Ancestry Daily News and Ancestry Weekly Digest, please state so clearly in your message.

Access a printer-friendly version of this article, e-mail it to a friend, or submit your feedback.

 
     
  Top  
     
 
 

Clipping of the Day
The Frost King
New York Herald (New York, New York), 16 December 1871, page 10:

Opening of the Skating Carnival

The Central Park Ponds Alive with Fun and Frolic--Good Skating--Youthful Jokers . . .

. . . . The vendors of skates drove a rushing trade during the day, and when the welcome news spread through the city that the ice on the ponds of the Central Park was strong enough to sustain human nature young ladies suddenly rushed home from shopping excursions, quite the everlasting pursuit and preparations of dress and ornament, flung the last sensation novel contemptuously away, and rushed off, skates in hand, to the Central Park; young gentlemen in their offices and stores down town were seized with the most extraordinary "sick headaches" and sought cures for them on "the big pond" and the boys and girls of a similar growth threw down their horrid school books and tore along to the elysium with joyous shouts that conjured up memories of youthful delight in many a bald and slivered head.

Any visitor to the Central Park yesterday would have guessed before entering the gates that there was "Something Up," and from the otherwise uninviting appearance of everything out of doors he must have concluded that that "something" was skates, and could be nothing else. The shouts and heart-born, ringing laughter, borne away to the uplands on the frost-laden breeze from the ponds in the glen below, told, thousand-tongued, of the joy on the lakes, where "the fun grew fast and furious." The scenes on the ice were delightful and heart-stirring beyond description. The "little pond" at the termini of Fifth and Sixth avenues was literally crowded during the entire afternoon, and so far from being an inconvenience to the skaters, as might be expected, this circumstance was productive of the most uproarious fun. The feat of gliding through the moving crowd around the Lake without a collision was as difficult as it was tempting, particularly when the greater number were determined that nobody should perform it successfully. When a collision did occur, the result was ludicrous in the extreme, and afforded as much amusement to the good-humored victims as to the grinning spectators. Here a group of laughing boys and girls at one end of the Lake, spread out in a line, the little unwashed street Arab side by side with the dainty child of wealth and luxury, all on a level here for jollity's sake. The young jokers join hands and set off rapidly, forty abreast, over the ice. The middle of the line is stopped by a group of grown-up skaters. The ends of the line wheel round gracefully, take in everything that comes in their way, and in a moment quite a large number of unsuspecting victims find themselves colliding, jostling, tumbling and sprawling in the middle of the magic ring formed by the little jokers. The big ones come down with a heavy thud and cut undignified figures on the ice. The little ones are prepared for the collision and let themselves down easily, and when all are "laid out" are there not fun and laughing and cheering to the heart's content?


Subscribers with access to the Historical Newspapers Collection can view this clipping.

Subscribe to the Historical Newspapers Collection at Ancestry.com.

 
     
  Top  
     
 
 

Fast Fact
Fast Fact: Upcoming Online Genealogy Classes at MyFamily.com

  • Four weeks of lessons and interaction with a genealogy expert.
  • 30-day free access to applicable Ancestry.com collections. (For details on which collections will be available, see the individual class descriptions.)
  • Tips and advice on how to find ancestors online.
  • Lessons through site interaction and worksheets.
  • Ability to create your family tree using Online Family Tree software and downloadable genealogy forms.
  • Collaboration with other site members to grow your family tree over the course of a year.

To learn more about these classes, see George G. Morgan's article from the 11 July 2003 Ancestry Daily News.

Upcoming Classes

More Classes:

  • Lost Loves, Family, Friends, Military, 26 January 2006 ($199.95)
  • Native American Research, 26 January 2006
  • Intermediate German Research, 26 January 2006
  • Basic Jewish Research, 02 February 2006
  • English Research, 02 February 2006

Click here for the complete list of genealogy classes, or here for investigative courses.

 
     
  Top  
     
 
 

Product Spotlights

  How To Do Everything With Your Genealogy
by George G. Morgan
Normally this book retails for $24.99, but today you can buy it in the Shops @ Ancestry.com for $23.99.
 
     
 
 

Italian Genealogical Records
by Trafford Cole
Normally this book retails for $34.95, but today you can buy it in the Shops @ Ancestry.com for $27.95.


Top
 
     

 Similar Articles:
Canadian Plat Maps
A Family Gathering Gathering


  Printer Friendly
 
E-mail to a friend

Search The Library



Weekly Journal

Sign up for the Ancestry Weekly Discovery and get free family history tips, news and updates in your inbox.