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Showing posts from December, 2019

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks – Week 52: You (Actually Me)

This is my second year working on this year-long prompt, hosted by Amy Johnson Crow . I will write each week in one of my two blogs, either Mam-ma’s Southern Family or at My Trails Into the Past . I have enjoyed writing about my children’s ancestors in new and exciting ways. This is the last post for 2019 and it is supposed to be about ourselves. What would future generations would like to know about me. I have been the keeper of the family history.  I’m sure other members of my family know family stories, but I am the one who has been researching since the late 1980s. I find researching very interesting and it challenges me in ways that few other things do. When I was in college, I loved to do the research but didn’t like writing the paper. The act of finding the information was fun. Getting it down into logical and meaningful order was hard. I still find it hard to get what I have learned into a coherent story. I am a technical writer, one who can write the facts but have a

Goal Setting: What I Accomplished in 2019 and Hope to Accomplish in 2020

One of the main goals I had accomplished by the end of 2018 was submitting my portfolio to the Board for the Certification of Genealogists and becoming certified. It was a major accomplishment and I thought would lead to more opportunities in the new year. However, during 2019, I had no new major clients and research projects, but did have many clients who needed quick record retrievals. I also did not have many speaking engagements. By looking back on what I did accomplish, I was still very active with genealogy throughout the year. I would say, except for the days when I was traveling with family, I spent at least an hour on genealogy, either researching my own family, writing about the research, or learning from blog posts and webinars given by other genealogists. Client Work: 5 document retrieval clients, one very steady 1 record transcription client 1 deed research client 1 phone consultation client Education: Attended SLIG, taking “Advanced Southern R

Monday Genea-pourri, Weeks of Dec 9-22, 2019

Genealogists are great at documenting our ancestors’ lives but not so great documenting our own. I’ll write about what I’ve been doing the past week. This idea came from Randy Seaver of Genea-Musing, who started this meme. I was on vacation to New York City from Dec 8 through December 18, visiting with my youngest daughter, Margaret. Our oldest daughter, Elizabeth came to visit for part of the time. We visited the Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island, and the Botanical Garden in the Bronx, as well as saw three shows: Oklahoma, Tootsie, and Margaret’s play, A Christmas Carol, a Gay Fantasia. We visited several stores, such as Macy, Bergdorf Goodman, and Bloomingdales where we checked out the decorations and watched the light show on the outside of Saks 5th Avenue. We also ate at some great restaurants. I got in an average of 12,000 steps each day and also managed to catch a cold.  It was cold and wet most of the time but fun to be in the city! Genealogy Blog Writin

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks – Week 51: Future

This is my second year working on this year-long prompt, hosted by Amy Johnson Crow . I will write each week in one of my two blogs, either Mam-ma’s Southern Family or at My Trails Into the Past . I have enjoyed writing about my children’s ancestors in new and exciting ways. What does the future hold for us? Some day I will be gone, but I hope that before I die, I have finished several family history books to pass down to family. I certainly do not want all of my research work go to waste. I have no one at the moment who is interested in taking it on. I can hope my daughters find someone special in their lives and maybe have children. Maybe one of the grandchildren might become interested in preserving our family history. My husband’s aunt has begun the process of donating all of the Nilsen family material to the California State Archives and I have integrated my research within what she had. I already wrote a three-generation story about the forefathers who came t

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks – Week 50: Tradition

This is my second year working on this year-long prompt, hosted by Amy Johnson Crow . I will write each week in one of my two blogs, either Mam-ma’s Southern Family or at My Trails Into the Past . I have enjoyed writing about my children’s ancestors in new and exciting ways. This is a tough meme. I can’t think of any tradition that we have in our family. It seems that each generation tried to make holidays and other events “their own” and did not necessarily pass on old traditions. On my father’s side, his parents were Roman Catholic, and maybe that was a tradition passed down. When we were children, our father took us to church (our mother wasn’t Catholic), and later I took my younger siblings. But none of my siblings carried on being Catholic. I was the only one who married in the Church. On my mother’s side, I would say some food items we ate were passed down. We always had cornbread dressing in our turkey at Thanksgiving. But most of us kids resisted eating greens and

Monday Genea-pourri, Weeks of Dec 2-8, 2019

Genealogists are great at documenting our ancestors’ lives but not so great documenting our own. I’ll write about what I’ve been doing the past week. This idea came from Randy Seaver of Genea-Musing, who started this meme. Genealogy Blog Writing : 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: Week 49—Craft . I wrote about the crafty people in our family. For Saturday Night Genealogy Fun—Make a Surname Christmas Tree , I used the posting I had done in 2013. Webinars/Study Groups Attended:     I attended the Friday study groups this week, where we caught up from a few weeks absence.   I watched three videos on writing your family history by Lynn Palermo of Family History Writing Studio: 5 Keys to Success, Write Your Family History Stories 7 Myths About Writing Family History Stories-Debunked Your Blueprint to an Ancestor’s Story Client Work : No Work this week. Volunteer Work : I opened up at the History Center this week and Priscilla is back. I am still wo

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks – Week 49: Craft – The Crafty People in Our Family

This is my second year working on this year-long prompt, hosted by Amy Johnson Crow . I will write each week in one of my two blogs, either Mam-ma’s Southern Family or at My Trails Into the Past . I have enjoyed writing about my children’s ancestors in new and exciting ways. My mother was a very creative person. When I was young, she had a painting studio in the backyard of our home on East 9th Street in Pittsburg. Her favorite subjects were still lifes.  I wrote about my mother on the anniversary of her  85th birthday . She also loved to do crafts and make things out of discarded or used items. She made bowls from old 78 rpm records that she melted over coffee cans in the oven and then sprayed them with gold paint. She made Christmas trees from cardboard egg cartons, painting them gold, green, or silver, and gluing in small items such as bells, angels, etc.  Here is one: Every year, she decorated a large apple box for Valentine's Day that our classroom used as a

Monday Genea-pourri, Weeks of Nov 25-Dec 1, 2019

Genealogists are great at documenting our ancestors’ lives but not so great documenting our own. I’ll write about what I’ve been doing the past week. This idea came from Randy Seaver of Genea-Musing, who started this meme. Genealogy Blog Writing : 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: Week 48—Thief. I could not think of  post to write using this theme, so didn’t write one. This is the only one I have missed in two years. Webinars/Study Groups Attended:     I attended no webinars or study groups this week, due to the Thanksgiving holiday. Client Work : No Work this week. Volunteer Work : I did work at the History Center this week, still opening up the center and working on special collections that need to be processed or put away. I managed to file away some items into the subject/town files in the library. Own Work: I worked on the Gleeson family this past week, mostly working on land records from Carleton County, Ontario, Canada. My 3x-great grandfather, Marti