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Ancestry Daily News
8/26/2003 - Archive
Ancestry Daily News, 26 August 2003
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In This Issue: August
26, 2003 |
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| New
Records for Ancestry.com Subscribers: |
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Michigan
State Census, 1894 (Update adding Ingham, Kalamazoo,
Keweenaw, and
Lapee Counties)
Ansonia,
Derby, Shelton, and Seymour Connecticut City Directory,
1922 (Images online)
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Historical
Newspapers Collection Update:
Weekly
News (Frederick, Md.), 188384
News
(Frederick, Md.), Various years ranging 17991978
Burlington
Daily Times (Burlington, N.C.), 1931
Daily
Times News (Burlington, N.C.), 193233
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Today's
Map: Mississippi River Sources, 1834 |
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"Back
to the 1891 Census Online"
by Sherry Irvine, CGRS, FSA Scot |
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Ancestry Quick Tip Jamboree |
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Fast Fact: Simplify Your Research
with the Ancestry Family Tree |
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Clipping of the Day |
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There
is a giant asleep within every man. When that giant awakes,
miracles happen.
Frederick Faust
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"Back to the
1891 Census Online"
by Sherry Irvine, CGRS, FSA
Scot
I
wrote about the 1891 census online late last year as the first
counties appeared within the Ancestry databases. (View
article online.) This summer the project is coming to
completion, and it is time to take a second look. The first
search I describe below is an example of what is now possible
using automated research tools such as this. The second highlights
a feature I particularly appreciate.
My
First Search
In the past couple of years I have done some searches on behalf
of a neighbor. His father was born in June 1889 and baptized
a month later in a Roman Catholic Church in Exeter. Numerous
possible entries in civil registration records have been checked,
without success. It may be that the birth was never registered
because the couple was not married.
Waiting
for the online version of the 1891 census seemed like a good
idea; the little boy was 22 months old at the time of the
census. Not long ago I carried out a search for a John Lawton
aged one, and repeated it setting the age at two. I searched
in England and Wales separately, so there were four searches
in all. This produced twenty-nine resultsfew enough
that I could look at them all. I cannot recognize my quarry
among these, which means that, a) they were out of England
on census night, b) handwriting is a problem, c) use of an
alias may be involved, or d) there are indexing errors. Although
this may be a negative result that requires other tactics;
but, it is important to recall that a search of all England,
or even two or three counties, was impossible a year ago.
My
Second Search
Carrying out this search, where I needed to specify full name,
country, and age, I discovered that the search goes more quickly
with one particular search box. You may have already noticed
that the fields of the search box vary depending on where
you are in the Ancestry site. Using the www.ancestry.co.uk
site, I selected the "Search Records" tab and U.K.
Census under "Browse Records" on the right. There
are plenty of fields here so you can construct the best search.
Below the box are links to the census for each of the geographic
regions: England, Wales, Isle of Man, and the Channel Islands.
I
used these links to go browsing, selecting England, then Sussex,
then finally the parish of Alfriston. This put me on page
1 of 21 pages of images, and I realized that with my DSL connection
it would not take long to read through them. My purpose was
to fill out the story of the village gleaned from reading
a short history (published in 1899) that I found at a garage
sale. I visited Alfriston about four years ago and had dinner
at the inn described in the book.
I
checked out the family of the author (Pagden by name) and
the residents of two properties mentioned in the book, Deans
Place and Frog Firle (what a wonderful name!). Deans Place
apparently had a ghost and after 1827 went through a number
of owners; the author does not imply these facts were linked.
The census told me that Daelman F. Gade (25, born in Dulwich),
his wife Florence (23, born in Brooklyn N.Y.) and a nephew
Alphonse Gade were living here in 1891. Daelman was living
on his own means. I wondered why the author omitted the lady
from Brooklyn, surely something unusual in a rural village
in 1891. The inhabitants of Frog Firle were Emily Holmes (of
independent means), four young nephews, a companion and a
servant. I found three members of the author's family as well.
Scanning families, occupations, and occasional notes by the
enumerator gives you a lot of information.
I
returned to the index and searched for the people noted. I
was very interested to see that a search failed to produce
any Pagdens in Alfriston. The reason is an indexing error.
The "How to Use the 1891 U.K. Census" advice at
the site warns you this is possible and advises trying other
searches. I tried looking for the first name, Emma, which
I noted when reading the pages. The error was explained: indexed
as Payden not Pagden.
Search
Summary
A few hours of experimentation reveal much about searching.
Added facts generally reduce the number of results (sometimes
you want this). Wild cards can be used for first names and
surnames, and Soundex is another surname option. You can search
for just a first name or without any name (another way to
get round an indexing error if you know the exact age and
location). The only rule is that searches must be for the
details provided in the list of matches: facts about census
location, birthplace location, names, gender, and age. Although
you cannot search for the name of a house or farm (i.e., an
address) and you cannot search for an occupation, remember
that you can browse. This is a big help in getting around
errors and in getting to know a parish.
All
in all, a useful morning was spent getting reacquainted with
the 1891 census index and images. I recommend that you take
time to experiment.
Sherry
Irvine, CGRS, FSA (Scot) is an author, teacher, and lecturer
specializing in English and Scottish family history. She is
the author of Your English Ancestry (2nd ed, 1998)
and Your Scottish Ancestry (1997) and she is a regular
contributor to several journals including Genealogical
Computing. Since 1996, she has been a study tour leader,
course coordinator, and instructor for the Institute of Genealogy
and Historical Research at Samford University. She teaches
online for the family history program of Vermont College and
has lectured at conferences in Canada, the United States,
and Australia. She is the president of the Association of
Professional Genealogists.
ACCESS
A PRINTERFRIENDLY VERSION OF THIS ARTICLE, email
it to a friend, or submit your feedback on it.
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Ancestry Quick Tip Jamboree
It's time for this week's Ancestry Quick Tip Jamboree!
Thanks to everyone who has sent in a Quick Tip. Please keep
them coming so that we can keep this tradition going. You
can send your tips 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.
Have
a great day!
Juliana
Don't Rely Solely on Indexes
When looking at online or even microfiche birth death and
marriage indexes be aware that just because your info isn't
listed there doesn't mean the information isn't there. I
have looked at indexes for several ancestors and not found
them but when I contacted the county records keeper, there
were certificates on file; they just weren't listed in the
index.
Nancy
McCoy
Storing Photo Information in Word
One way I like to keep track of who is who in my old photos
is to import the photo into a blank Word document and add
all of the names, where I got the photo from, and the "original"
file name of the photo. I then save the Word document with
a name very similar to the file name of the original photo.
A printout of the photo in Word goes into my working file.
It is also an easy way to send the photo to someone else
with all of the backup information intact. I find that most
people can open a Word file, regardless of whether they
operate on a Mac platform or PC.
Bill Clayton
Surrey, B.C.
Family Tree Cookbook
I'm trying something new and thought I would share it. I'm
working on a Family Tree Cookbook. I'm asking all of my
family members for new and old recipes, especially recipes
that their grandparents and parents might have used. I will
use these recipes to compile a cookbook for the grandchildren
and great-grandchildren down the line.
Thank
you,
Pat
Laptop Backpacks
You mentioned lugging your laptop through three airports.
My son is leaving for college and is taking a laptop, as
it is required for his engineering program. I found a Computer
Backpack by Samsonite. It is called Ballistic Tech. It has
a padded compartment for the laptop, a main compartment
with file divider for books and papers, and a third zippered
section for organizational things, such as small notepads,
pens, calculators, etc. The shoulder straps are padded for
comfort as well, and it also has a handle for carrying alongside.
Their website is http://www.samsonite.com
.
I
thought fellow genealogists might like to put something
like this on their Christmas list. I am!
Barbara
Murray
ACCESS
A PRINTERFRIENDLY VERSION OF THIS QUICK TIP, email
it to a friend, or submit your feedback on it.
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Fast Fact:
Simplify
Your Research with the Ancestry Family Tree
With
Ancestry Family Tree You Can:
Organize
all your family history information in one convenient gathering
place.
---
Take advantage of the software's powerful search tool. Zero
in on your ancestors in the valuable databases of Ancestry.com
as they are entered (or downloaded) into the family tree
software.
---
Ancestry World Tree files are also automatically searched.
Once you locate and verify new information, whole branches
of your family tree can be automatically imported into your
tree.
---
Attach important files, documents, and photos to your online
tree, making a comprehensive history your family will cherish.
---
Easily share your family tree with other family members
around the world via the Internet. The software is easy
to use.
Create
a new tree, or import your existing files on the Ancestry
Family Tree. Get
your copy today.
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Clipping of the Day
From the
Ohio Repository
(Canton, Ohio),
23 August 1833:
Page
2:
Ice and chloride of soda are found to be specifics in putrid
sore throats. The ice is (if possible) to be held in the
mouth, and the solution swallowed.
Page 3:
A HINT TO HOUSEWIVES.
As far as it is possible, have bits of bread eaten up before
they become hard. Spread those that are not eaten, and let
them dry, to be pounded for puddings, or soaked for brewis.
Brewis is made of crusts and dry pieces of bread, soaked
a good while in hot milk, mashed up, and salted, and buttered
like toast. Above all, do not let crusts accumulate in such
quantities that they cannot be used. With proper care, there
is no need of losing a particle of bread, even in the hot[t]est
weather.
Frugal Housewife.
Subscribers
with access to the Historical Newspapers Collection can
view
this clipping.
Subscribe
to the Historical Newspapers Collection
at Ancestry.com.
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Ancestry Product Specials
Your
English Ancestry:
A Guide for
North Americans,
by Sherry Irvine, CGRS, FSA (Scot)

Normally
Your English Ancestry retails for $19.95, but today
you can buy it in The Shops@ Ancestry.com for $15.95.
English
Parish Records: Yorkshire (West Riding), Nottinghamshire,
CD

Normally English Parish Records: Yorkshire CDs retail for
$39.95 each, but today you can buy it in The Shops@Ancestry.com
for $29.95.
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