Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Tour to Scotland??

I received a letter from Christine Woodcock, tour facilitator for Genealogy Tours of Scotland, who lives in Canada. Her letter directs us to their website (www.genealogytoursofscotland.ca). Her letter explains requests I let EWGS know about her tours and when an EWGS member signs up for one of her tours, she'll give EWGS a $100 donation. Such a deal. So if you're considering a research trip to Scotland, you might want to consider Genealogy Tours of Scotland.  You can email her directly at genealogytoursofscotland@gmail.com

Monday, March 12, 2012

Irish Seminar a Success!

EWGS members and friends had a wonderful learning day on Saturday, March 10th, at our Irish Seminar. Fintan Mullin (above) and Dr. Brian Trainor came all the way from Ireland and the Ulster Heritage Foundation to spend the day with us. And there were about 120 of us! Each presenter gave two thorough talks and a Q&A session was the finale.



 Our hospitality angels, Mary, Mary and Georgia, did a fantastic job with the cookies and drinks! Thank you!!

 Sales of the Ulster Heritage Foundation's books was brisk. They had shipped 9 cartons of books to Donna and taped up to take away only two.

Richard Harshberger was there representing the Spokane West Family Search Center telling one and all about their upcoming FREE all day seminar on Saturday, April 28th. For information, click to www.RememberingGenerations.ISOD.com  

It was a great day for both the green and the orange and too bad if you missed it.  Donna

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

March 10: EWGS Super Seminar

It is NOT too late to attend the EWGS Spring Seminar on Saturday, March 10th, at the downtown Spokane Public Library!!  It's our super seminar on all-things-Irish research presented by Fintan Mullin and Dr. Brian Trainor who are coming from Ireland to be with us on that day.  (And they've shipped 9 boxes of their books for us to purchase.) Bring your $25 and your own sack lunch and be to the library by 8:30 ...... there will be a syllabus/handout but bring something to take notes too. (P.S. If you park down/west on Main Street, there are 25-cents-per-hour meters and a much cheaper lot than under the library.)

Here's another little bit of Irish humor:  "A toast to your coffin. May it be made of 100 year old oak. And may we plant the tree together, tomorrow."  (Old Irish saying.)

See you Saturday!

Monday, February 20, 2012

Irish humor....setting the mood for our Irish seminar.

Did you know:

"Geographically, Ireland is a medium-sized rural island that is slowy but steadily being consumed by sheep."  And who said this?  Humor writer Dave Barry.

Ages ago when I was lucky enough to tour Ireland and as we rode around in a huge bus, I saw LOTS of sheep. LOTS of big, dirty sheep. I mean LOTS of DIRTY sheep. And we on the bus all agreed that the kindest thing you could do to a little lamb was to eat it before it turned into a big dirty sheep. For we were served lamb at nearly every dinner.

Have you any Irish anecdotes to share to help get us in the mood for our Irish Seminar on March 10?? If not, see you then and there!

Monday, February 13, 2012

Three BIGGEE events coming up..... are they on YOUR calendar?


What's in your genealogical tool chest this spring? Needing some new ideas, thoughts or knowledge to give your genealogy a jump start? If you are serious about finding ancestors, please make time to attend all these upcoming events:

Saturday, March 10:  This is the date for our EWGS meeting (NOT March 3, please remember) and it will be an all day, all things Irish and Scots-Irish, seminar presented by two fellows coming from Ireland to spend the day with us. Cost is $20 for EWGS members; $25 for non-members; please bring a bag lunch. For complete information, register and access the poster via our blog our our website (www.EWGSI.org).

Saturday, April 7:   This is our EWGS meeting date and will be a Welcome 1940 Census Birthday Party! Complete with balloons and cake, trained volunteers will be there to attempt to find your family on the newly-released 1940 census. I say "attempt," for that census will not be indexed by that date and you'll need to have a pretty good idea where your people lived to be able to find them and we'll be there to help you!    (As the year progresses, this census will be indexed by Ancestry and FamilySearch, but not by April 7th.) This is a free event.

Saturday, April 28: On this date the First Annual Family Search Symposium will be held at the West Spokane Stake & Family Search Center. This will be an all-day of learning and all FREE. There will be a Pulled Pork BBQ lunch, choice of 16 classes, one-on-one access to a Geek Team to better learn how to use the two major finding databases these days (Ancestry and Family Search) and opportunity to take a Test Drive Demo of six other helpful database/websites. You don't want to miss this! (This LDS meetinghouse is out on West Plains; take I-90 exit 272. Check their website:  www.rememberinggenerations.isod.com )

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

EWGS & NeWGS represented at RootsTech

I'm homewardbounding today from attending RootsTech and it was fun to share learning with friends from home. I shared time with Cecily Kelly, Margie Beldin, Janis Littlefield (TriCities GenSoc) and Karen and Gordy Struve. Other than Gordy's mishap pinching a finger in a folding chair, we had a fab time. The thing I learned that was most impressive to me was this: We can imagine gathering most all of the world's family history information into one place. (FamilySearch and Ancestry are trying to do just that.) What we don't understand is HOW those wonderful young teckie-geeks DO IT.......how they take those million bits of information and turned them into a bezillion bytes that we can access. That was the "Tech" part of RootsTech. And it's complicated beyond my understanding for sure although I did listen and try to "see."

What I do know is this, and our mutual friends agree:  The future of genealogy lies with the Internet. I did not say "on" the Internet, I said "with." The time is coming when you can sit in your 'jammies and either access the data directly or search card catalogs and contact repositories directly for more information or search genealogical society websites and then contact them directly for more information. I know it blows my mind to hear explained all the many, many ways to find answers via the Internet. (Again, I did not say ON the Internet.) I thank all those teckie-geeks for helping this to become a reality for us and I'm eager to learn how to fully appreciate and use all that is becoming available to me. I hope you are too.