Showing posts with label FamilySearch Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FamilySearch Center. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

FamilySearch Center Portal

 


Perhaps you're missing out on a research bet? And if something is free, why not consider using it? Well!

The FamilySearch Center Portal is exactly what those words signify. At any designated FamilySearch Center, any researcher can access FOR FREE, a long list of websites that otherwise would be accessibly by personal subscription only.   Did you catch that: FREE?

Think your research might be helped by looking into one of these:

  • 19th Century British Library Newspapers
  • Alexander Street Press (indexed information of Civil War history: soldiers, battles, photos and maps)
  • American Ancestors (formerly New England Historic Genealogical Society)
  • Ancestry (Institution version..... databases but not Trees)
  • ArkivDigital (Swedish Church Records0
  • British Newspaper Archive
  • FamNet (New Zealand records)
  • Findmypast (UK ancestry)
  • Fold3 (U.S. military records)
  • GoldieMay (suite of software power tools for genealogists)
  • Irish Ancestors
  • MyHeritage (library edition.... no trees)
  • Paper Trail (records of the Oregon Trail and other westward migration trails)
All of these wonderful opportunities but don't overlook checking out the nearly 2,000,000,000 names in the FamilySearch trees!! This database is compiled by folks like you and me and while it may contain errors and inconsistencies, it also can provide great clues. 

Click to www.EWGSI.org for a list of the area's FamilySearch Centers. Find one near you and GO!

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Time for Trivia!

 


Endogamy:  Know what that means? According to the website of the International Society for Genetic Genealogy, endogamy "is the practice of marrying within the same ethnic, cultural, social, religious or tribal group."  Examples of endogamous groups include Jews, Polynesians, Mennonites, Amish, Acadians, French Canadians and folks from many Arab countries.

FamilySearchCenter: Do you have all the funds to allow subscriptions to the many paid genealogy websites that you'd like to use? Ha, not me either. Did you know that there are about 30 subscription websites that you can use FOR FREE at any FamilySearch Center! Go and you can pick up a 2-page, small-print, handout listing all these sites. Don't know where a FamilySearchCenter is? They're all listed on our EWGSI.org website.


Commonwealth: What is a "commonwealth?" At the time of the founding of the United States, the designation "Commonwealth" carried with it the implication of a greater degree of self-government that did the word "state." Four states officially label themselves as "Commonwealths," rather than "States." They are Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Kentucky. It is also the designation of Puerto Rico.

Worth of old county histories: Knowing my ancestor, Caleb Carr, was a Baptist minister, 1810ish, who lived in Erie County, New York, I happily hefted the 500-page Centennial History of Erie County from the shelf and flipped it to the back......... alas, no index. Of course, published in 1876, these older books don't have indexes. (Unless more recently done and then usually in a stand-alone volume.) BUT the hour I spent browsing through the pages was not a waste of time. I didn't find any mention of Rev. Carr but I did learn about the early history of the county. Tidbits such as this:  "The structures under which the early families sheltered themselves and their families hardly rose even to the dignity of log houses. They were frequently mere cabins of small logs, (there not being help enough to handle large ones) covered with bark. Sometimes there was a floor of split logs, or "puncheons," sometimes none. A log house 16-feet square, with a shingle roof, a board floor and a window containing six lights of glass, was a decidedly stylish residence and its owner was in some danger of being disliked as a bloated aristocrat." 

Quote from Thomas Jefferson: "How sublime to look down into the workhouse of nature, to see her clouds, hail, snow, rain, thunder..... all fabricated at our feet! And the fgorious sun gilding the tops of the mountains and giving life to all nature."

Quotes from Garrison Keillor: "Some people get what they want. Some people get what they got."  ......  "After all is said and one, more is said than is done." 

Quote from Ethel Mertz, "I Love Lucy,"  "Just because we're married to men doesn't mean we've got anything in common with them."

Quote from AAA about travel: "Thou shalt, when in Rome, do somewhat as the Romans do, and if in difficulty, thou shalt use thy common sense and much friendliness.'