-----Weekly Newsletter-----                                           20 May, 2015 - Vol 16, Issue 20
In This Issue
Announcements
Youth and Family History
Questions/Answers
Favorite Websites
Family History Consultants
Bulletin Thought
Remember...
Upcoming Classes
Join Our Mailing List!
Quick Links
 
Please help make this newsletter a success by submitting your Family History questions, tips, favorite websites, surname queries, quotes and stories to share with others.  Submit.

 

Announcements
The Logan FamilySearch Library will be closed on Monday, 25 May to observe Memorial Day.  We will open at 9:30 am on Tuesday 26 May for normal operation.

Logan FamilySearch Library Hours
Monday                  9:30 am - 5:00 pm
Tue - Thur              9:30 am - 9:00 pm
 Fri - Sat                 9:30 am - 5:00 pm









 




 Whats New in Family Search?

Discover Ancestors in Obituaries 

Unlock the story of your ancestors' lives through their own obituaries and mentions of them in the obituaries of others. FamilySearch has published 23 obituary collections.  The indexing project is adding to "United States, GenealogyBank Obituaries, 1980-2014," which now has over 10 million obituaries.  With a three year delay the government has built into the SSDI, it helps to have these obituaries covering recent deaths.  To encourage use of its obituary collections, FamilySearch is sending select uses an email inviting them to check out an obituary of an ancestor.  They are sending the emails in stages to keep from overwhelming the site.  The campaign utilizes these record collections:

     United States, Obituaries, American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, 1899 - 2012

     Idaho, Southeastern Counties Obituaries, 1864 - 2007

     Idaho, Southern Counties Obituaries, 1943 - 2013

     ObitsUtah Obituary Index

     Utah, Obituaries from Utah Newspapers, 1850 - 2005

Sign-in to FamilySearch and under the navigation carousel you may have an invitation to Discover your Ancestors Obituaries.  

Help Desk

Accessing Indexed Obituaries  

Question:  I know FS is indexing a lot of obituaries. How do we access them? Will they become a folder in "Memories"? I can't find a good link to them unless I type it out in the URL address.

Answer:  Adding an obituary as a source to an individual or individuals, is a great idea. You can search obituary several different ways. First by clicking on search then click on records. In the search box type Obituaries or use this link; 

 you will find 15 collections in this list or in an individuals page under "research help" click on search records. If you family member does not come up in your search, give it a while, there are many obituaries yet to be indexed.  You may also find access to the wonderful new campaign in: FamilySearch! https://familysearch.org/campaign/myancestorsobituaries?cid=hp-2850

 

Favorite Websites

Skillbuilding: Little on Lesser-Known Documents

 We create a lot of our own brick walls by making assumptions. We consult the usual sources, such as censuses, vital records, and wills. Each supplies information that may apply to what we are researching.  What if we have looked everywhere and evidence either does not exist or does not answer what we want to know? We can find alternate sources by following an event, document, or person.  Learn more click here.

 

10 Types of Apps Every Genealogist Should Have

When I first got my Android tablet, I thought I'd be able to use it like a computer, and I was disappointed when I couldn't. Although my tablet is a lot easier to carry around than my bulky laptop, it spent a few genealogy conferences at home. 
I just didn't know what a handy genealogy assistant a tablet (or iPad) could be.  Powerful apps optimized for mobile devices are a big part of what can make your tablet or iPad an essential genealogy tool.  To learn more click this link.


 
Maintaining Integrity

Thinking about the people with whom I've corresponded, visited, or met in the course of family life, but more particularly in my genealogical life. I've made a commitment to myself to note who the people are that I met and with whom I had some sort of direct contact.
I hope that such a listing might help me evaluate information I have received from them. What I know of those people I met, or with whom I corresponded, can help clarify the level of hearsay I have in my own research materials.  Read about being aware of eyewitnesses and hearsay accounts helps me maintain integrity in my stories and data.  Click here.


13 Lessons to Make You A Better Historical Newspaper Researcher

o research historical newspapers and be successful, it helps to be educated about the characteristics of these important genealogy resources; where to find them, and how to best search for the articles that you are seeking.  Online newspaper research is not just a matter of entering a surname in a search box.  By understanding and applying these lessons, one can achieve a much better chance of finding the extremely helpful and interesting articles that exist about our ancestors.  Click here to study the lessons.

http://www.theancestorhunt.com/blog/13-lessons-to-make-you-a-better-historical-newspaper-researcher#.VVs7iblVhBd


Criminal Ancestors Records in the UK

Find your criminal ancestors with these, mostly free, criminal records online. Was one or more of your ancestors a criminal?  Click here for a list of online sources.


 
German/Prussian Mega Search Engine, from Many-Roads.com

This search engine accesses 108 German & Prussian Genealogy sites at once (almost all results in German).  Thankfully, I've got a cousin who is fluent in German who loves to translate old records; for those who don't, Google Translate can be helpful. 

 

BYU Family History Library Video Training

The Brigham Young University Family History Library regularly produces video training classes that are freely available online on YouTube.com.  Here is a list of the most currently posted videos on the BYU Family History Library YouTube.com channel:

     Cyndi's List

     Mapping Your Ancestors by James Tanner

     Family History Five Minutes at a Time

     A Closer Look at FamilySearch Partner Sites by James Tanner

Family History Consultants
Family History Consultants: Keys to Success and Working with Leaders
Family history consultants can be a resource to members in achieving this remarkable spiritual experience by helping them take a family name to the temple. Temple and family History work can be a support and resource to the bishop and ward council in the work of salvation.  Call up this link to learn: Turning Hearts: Different View of Consultants and Family History,  The Family History Center: A Vital and Relevant Resource, and Priesthood Leaders: Utilizing Family History in the Work of Salvation.
Suggestion for Weekly Bulletin Thought

Don't underestimate the influence of the deceased in assisting your efforts and the joy of ultimately meeting those you serve.  The eternally significant blessing of uniting our own families is almost beyond comprehension.

Quentin L. Cook

 
Remember...

Stand Tall Like The Sunflower
 
I find it humorous sometimes that even the most mundane occurrences can have an impact on our awareness.

My wife, daughter, and I moved into our home nine years ago and we spent a lot of time and energy in the yard to get it looking like it does today. We live on a corner, higher than street level, and the entire side of the yard is encased by a professionally built rock wall. The front of the house though is another story because instead of a wall along the sidewalk the rocks appear to be just thrown up onto the dirt as if someone were in a hurry to finish.  

We did the best we could with what we had to work with and called this area our 'rock garden'. Whenever we had left over flowers or plants, Denise or I would stick them out front, just to bring some color to the area.

I still do all of my own yard work, even the dreaded weed-pulling. After putting on my knee pads I assume the position to clear the yard of weeds, even in the rock garden.

Last summer I had reached the end of the rock garden and found a tiny little plant that I could not immediately identify. I knew I didn't plant it and Denise claimed that she didn't either. We decided to let it continue growing until we could figure out what it was.

Weeks passed and as I made my way back to the mystery plant, it appeared to be a Sunflower. It was spindly looking with a tall skinny stalk and only one head on it. I decided to baby it along and weed around it. As I pulled rocks from the area to get to the weeds, I noticed something unusual. The Sunflower had not started where I saw the stalk begin. It actually had begun under a big rock and grown under and around it to reach the sun.  That's when I realized that if a tiny little Sunflower didn't let a big rock stand in its way of developing, we too have the capability of doing the same thing. Once our environment begins to see that we believe in ourselves like that little Sunflower, we can attain the same nourishment and nurturing as well.  

First, we need to believe in ourselves knowing we have the capabilities in achieving our desires. Like the Sunflower, it knew it had the capability to overcome its obstacle because it trusted in the Universal Truth and had faith it would succeed.

Stand tall like the Sunflower and be proud of who and what you are and the environment will begin to support you. You will find a way to go under or around your big obstacle in order to reach your desires.

Tony Masiello


 

Upcoming Classes

Logan FamilySearch Library Class Schedule

Register online at loganfsl.org or call (435) 755-5594 

 

Wed, May 20A Closer Look At Swedish RecordsIrene Burton1 wk1 pm
Wed, May 20Family Tree (Taught in Spanish)Joe/Martha Thurston1 wk7:00 PM
Thu, May 21Mobile Apps--FS Tree, FS MemoriesStacie Gomm1 wk7 pm
Wed, May 27Photo EnhancementBurnis Skinner2 wks10 am
Wed, May 27Danish Research (May 27, June 3, 10, 24)Ida Niederhauser4 wks1:00 PM
Wed, May 27Ancestral QuestArlene Miller3 wks7 pm
Thu, May 28Family History Consultants Workshop (No Reg Needed)Wade Nicholas1 wk6-9 pm
Sat, May 30Probate and Family HistoryGail Bartholomew2 wks10 am
Mon, Jun 1Roots Magic Users Group (No Registration Needed)Yvonne Curry1 wk1 pm
Mon, Jun 1FamilySearchRobert Curry2 wks3 pm
Tue, Jun 2Ancestral Quest Users Group (No Registration Needed)Robert Gerber1 wk1 pm
Thu, Jun 4Legacy Users Group (No Registration Needed)Irene Burton1 wk1 pm
Thu, Jun 4Research MethodsMartin Peterson1 wk5 pm
Fri, Jun 5Family History Consultants Workshop (No Reg Needed)Wade Nicholas1 wk1-4 pm
Sat, Jun 6FamilySearch: Introduction and Overview--BeginnerJohn Burton1 wk1:00 PM
Mon, Jun 8My HeritageYvonne Curry1 wk10 am
Mon, Jun 8Indexing I--Beginning IndexingVon Taylor1 wk1 pm
Tue, Jun 9How to Separate Records in FT with the Same PIDRobert Gerber2 wks10 am
Tue, Jun 9How to Write Your Personal HistoryJohn Clark1 wk5 pm
Thu, Jun 11Computer BasicsStacie Gomm1 wk5 pm
Thu, Jun 11Find My PastRobert Curry1 wk7 pm
Sat, Jun 13Family Tree SourcesWade Nicholas1 wk1 pm
Mon, Jun 15Indexing II--Beyond the BasicsVon Taylor1 wk1 pm
Tue, Jun 16Roots MagicDave Winkler3 wks5 pm
Tue, Jun 16Young Women Family History WorkshopLinda Clark1 wk7 pm
Mon, Jun 22Indexing ObituariesVon Taylor1 wk1 pm
Tue, Jun 23Learn How to Merge Records in Family TreeWade Nicholas1 wk7 pm
Wed, Jun 24Making a Family History Page in FacebookDave Winkler1 wk10 am
Wed, Jun 24You Can Find Cousins Using PuzzillaDedee Dalebout1 wk5 pm
Thu, Jun 25Family History Consultants Workshop (No Reg Needed)Wade Nicholas1 wk6-9 pm
Sat, Jun 27How to Merge Records in Family TreeGail Bartholomew1 wk10 am
 

 

 

 

Sincerely,

 

Billy K. Jones
Director of Training
Logan Utah FamilySearch Library

Phone: (435) 755-5594

 


Logan Utah FamilySearch Library | 50 North Main (lower level) | PO Box 3397 | Logan | UT | 84321