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

Ancestry Daily News
1/14/2005 - Archive

•  Ancestry Daily News, 14 January 2005

Ancestry Daily News, 14 January 2005
Untitled Document

In This Issue: January 14, 2005

New Records for Ancestry.com Subscribers

Immigration Collection Update
Galveston Passenger Lists, 1896-1948 (Images included) This update covers the remaining years of 1920-48

U.K. and Ireland Records Collection Update
1871 U.K. Census Update: England
Updates adding Norfolk and Westmorland, England

  Today's Map: View of Cheshire, Connecticut, 1882
 

Along Those Lines: "The 2005 ISFHWE Excellence-in-Writing Competition," by George G. Morgan

  Ancestry Quick Tip
  Fast Fact: Upcoming Online Genealogy Classes at MyFamily.com
  Clipping of the Day
 

Ancestry Product Specials
Writing the Family Narrative, by Lawrence P. Gouldrup, Ph.D.

Writing the Family Narrative Workbook

Read the Ancestry Daily News Online



Every day, the Ancestry Daily News is posted online at www.ancestry.com/ dailynews.

Thought for Today

"You are the only one who can use your ability. It is an awesome responsibility."

--Zig Ziglar

  Ancestry Quick Search:         Advanced Search
                                        First Name               Last Name

Along Those Lines...

The 2005 ISFHWE Excellence-in-Writing Competition
George G. Morgan

If you read my column on 17 December 2004 titled "Giving Back to Your Genealogical Society," you already know that I believe in donating my own time to a number of organizations. I donated two years of my volunteer life acting as Program Chair for the 2003 FGS Conference that was held in Orlando, Florida--a truly great experience!

Since that time, though, I've become involved in other activities. I am the current president of the International Society of Family History Writers and Editors (ISFHWE), a director of the Genealogical Speakers Guild (GSG), and a director of the Florida Genealogical Society (of Tampa, Florida). You can bet that these groups keep me hopping, but it really IS important to serve as a volunteer and to give back to the genealogical community.

In "Along Those Lines..." this week, acting in my capacity as president of ISFHWE, it is my great pleasure to announce our annual "Excellence-in-Writing Competition" for 2005.

What Is ISFHWE?
ISFHWE is an organization whose primary goal is to encourage the excellence in writing and editorial standards in the sphere of genealogical publishing. This includes all media, including newspaper and online columns, magazines, newsletters, professional journals, compiled family histories, websites, and the broadcast media of radio, television, and the Internet.

Our members assist and support one another by sharing their genealogical writing and editing experience and expertise. They provide guidance, share writing and marketing tips and techniques, and discuss issues related to genealogical writing and editing through meetings and networking at conferences, in our excellent quarterly newsletter, Columns, on the ISFHWE mailing list, and at the ISFHWE Members-Only website, which was generously donated by MyFamily.com. We're even beginning live online chats this month at the Members-Only website with presentations by experts in the writing and publishing fields, followed by Q&A sessions.

ISFHWE's membership dues are a small $15.00 per year, and you can join by visiting the organization's website at www.rootsweb.com/~cgc, clicking on the link labeled "Join ISFHWE," and downloading the PDF file with the application.

The 2005 Excellence-in-Writing Competition
The annual ISFHWE writing contest is held to recognize excellence in genealogical columns and articles. The contest is open to all members of ISFHWE, both published and unpublished authors.

Contest entrants must be members of ISFHWE. The contest is judged by professionals in the fields of genealogy and journalism. The contest has four categories:

- Category I: Newspaper Columns (published in 2004)
- Category II: Articles (published in 2004)
- Category III: Genealogy Research Story (an original, unpublished article)
- Category IV: Want-to-be Writer/Columnist (original, unpublished material)

Winners in each category will be awarded a cash prize and a certificate. Winners will be privately notified by 22 April 2005. The awards presentation will be presented at the Gala ISFHWE Awards Banquet, which takes place at the 2005 National Genealogical Society conference in Nashville, Tennessee, 1-4 June 2005. (Those unable to attend will receive their awards after the conference.)

The contest rules, detailed information, and the entry form are available at www.rootsweb.com/~cgc/2005rules.htm. (There is a limit of three entries per category and a $5.00 fee for each entry.)

Entries must be RECEIVED by the coordinator, Amy Johnson Crow, no earlier than 9 February 2005 and no later than 23 February 2005. Entries must be mailed in time to make this deadline. Send entries (along with your check for the appropriate entry fee(s) and membership dues) to:

ISFHWE 2005
6584 Red Fox Road
Reynoldsburg, OH 43068-1631

Great Exposure!
Regardless of your previous experience, published or unpublished, a winning entry in the ISFHWE "Excellence-in-Writing Competition" is a prestigious award. Winners are announced in press releases to genealogical publications and online columns that circulate around the globe. This great exposure can open doors for previously unpublished writers and enhance the reputation of published authors.

Genealogy is a passion for most of us that consumes a significant part of our life. Not only do we become more accomplished researchers and family archivists, we have learned to hone our writing skills in order to more clearly tell the wonderful stories of our ancestors, their families, and their experiences. I sincerely hope that you will consider sharing those stories with others through the ISFHWE "Excellence-in-Writing Competition" this year. Don't procrastinate; get your entries ready now to submit, so that they arrive no earlier than 9 February 2005 and no later than 23 February 2005. I want to award your certificate and cash prize to you in person at our Gala Awards Banquet in Nashville this June!

Happy Writing!
George


Visit George's website at http://ahaseminars.com/atl for information about speaking engagements.

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

Searching on Middle Names
I am fortunate to have many ancestors in Britain where the civil records of births, marriages and deaths are continuous since 1837 and are, to a large extent, indexed and available for free at FreeBMD (http://freebmd.rootsweb.com/). Yesterday, I was searching for the birth of a distant relative named Henry Mannington Sayers.

Searching for Henry Sayers at FreeBMD gave many hits, so I tried "Henry Mannington" in the First Name(s) box and Sayers in the Surname box and out he popped. Mannnington, my grandmother's surname, is an unusual name, and I have found that I can connect many, if not most, Manningtons to my family.

I then tried searching on middle names to perhaps find some of his siblings. First I tried putting just "Mannington" into the First Name box but got no hits. So then I tried "* Mannington" and left the surname blank. To my surprise and delight, out popped about 50 people with Mannington as their middle name. I knew of about half of these families as descendants of Mannington women. Others were completely new to me, and I am eager to explore who these families.

Lesson learned--if you have an unusual surname in your family, try using it as a middle name in searches for relatives. You may be surprised who turns up.

Jocelyn Keene
Pasadena, CA


Thanks to Jocelyn 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 tip, e-mail it to a friend, or submit your feedback.

Top

Fast Fact

Upcoming Online Genealogy Classes at MyFamily.com

For $29.95 (unless otherwise marked), each class includes:
- 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
English Records
27 January 2005 with Sherry Irvine

Genealogical Research on the Internet
27 January 2005 with George G. Morgan

Irish Research
27 January 2005 with Sherry Irvine

World Census Records
02 February 2005 with Cindy Rowzee

Jewish Basic Research
03 February 2005 with Micha Reisel and Schelly Talalay Dardashti

Scandinavian Research
04 February 2005 with Jennifer Hansen

Coming Soon in 2005
- Slovak Intermediate Research, 10 February
- German Basic Genealogy Research, 10 February
- German Intermediate Research, 15 February
- Eastern Europe Intermediate Research,
17 February
- Immigration and Naturalization, 03 March

Click here for the complete list with links.

Top

Search ADN Archives




Top

Ancestry
Product Specials

Writing the Family Narrative, by Lawrence P. Gouldrup, Ph.D.

Normally this book retails for $12.95, but today you can buy it in the Shops@Ancestry.com for only $8.95.

 

Writing the Family Narrative Workbook

Normally this workbook retails for $16.95, but today you can buy it in the Shops@Ancestry.com for only $12.95.

Top

Clipping of the Day

From the New York Herald (New York, New York), 14 January 1871, page 5:

A GERMAN GIRL RATHER ROUGHLY TREATED.--A Wisconsin paper chronicles a series of heartless impositions upon a German girl who came to this country in search of a sister. On her arrival in New York she was besieged by runners and taken to a hotel, her baggage being left at Castle Garden. A man pretending to be the landlord of the hotel volunteered to take her check and procure her baggage, dissuading her from accompanying him by telling her that it was not considered right for a man and woman to be seen walking together here. She saw nothing more of the man, but a person who represented himself as a detective told her that her trunk had undoubtedly been carried off by some other person, and that it would be of no use for her to try and get it. Having purchased a ticket for Dunleith the girl safely arrived there, and making known her destination to the keeper of the hotel where she ate her breakfast, he recommended a man who spoke German, but said he was born in Ireland, to show her the way. The guide took her across the country and robbed her of her shawl, hood and nearly $300 in money, after which he threw her into a miserable hole. She finally escaped from the hole and after wandering through the fields found refuge in the house of a farmer, where she will be provided for until her friends are found.


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

Subscribe to the Historical Newspapers Collection at Ancestry.com.

 Top

Top

 


  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.