-----Weekly Newsletter-----                                           5 August, 2015 - Vol 16, Issue 31
In This Issue
Announcements
Youth and Family History
Questions/Answers
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
12 Sep 2015
09:30 AM - 01:00 PM
245 Apple Drive Hyrum, Utah

29 Aug 2015
10:00 AM - 02:00 PM
600 South 200 East,  Hyrum, Utah 

Legacy User Group
Thursday, August 6,  1pm - 2pm
Instructor: Irene Burton

Monthly Staff Training Meeting
Wednesday, August 12, 9am - 10am in the Tabernacle Chapel.  This month will feature training by Michael Booth of RootsMagic.  Ward Family History Consultants are invited to attend.









 Whats New in Family Search?

Use the Family History Guide to Learn Family History Techniques 

This is oriented toward beginning family historians.  The Family History Guide (http://www.thefhguide.com/) was announced several weeks ago. There are two links on the Home Page - one for "Get Started" and one for "Projects."  The "Get Started" page provides information about the Family History Guide.  The "Computer Basics" page provides lessons on using your computer.  The "Family History Basics" page provides information about Family History terms and concepts, FamilySearch, and FamilySearch partners (Ancestry, Findmypast, MyHeritage and American Ancestors).  The "Projects" link on the home page, or the "About the Projects" link on the menu bar, provides information about 7 Projects.  The Goals are listed, and there are links to a page for each goal.   There is a lot to review on this website, please take the time to read the pages, watch the linked videos, try to work through a project or two.  

 

Help Desk
Will my photos outlive me? 
While I post pictures in a number of places online for the benefit of others, I am aware that they are tied to me and also subject to the lifespan of the site where I put them. If the company goes out of business or I don't pay the associated costs then access is gone. The same applies when I die - those pictures will cease to be available to others. 
Will the photos I upload to FamilySearch be available to others even when I'm no longer on the scene? That is my hope.
Yes, your photos will outlive you. The photos are public and hosted on FamilySearch storage.  FamilySearch Family tree currently allows each account to upload 5,000 items.  


Favorite Websites

Lost Genealogy: Don't be a Victim of the Digital Dark Ages 

Download your FREE copy of my Backing Up Your Genealogy Data syllabus.  Then read below about how you can avoid being caught up in the Digital Dark Ages. Click here for tips and techniques.

http://www.geneabloggers.com/lost-genealogy-victim-digital-dark-ages/ 

 

8 Quick Genealogy Website Search Strategies 

It was exciting to have the researchers behind TLC's "Who Do You Think You Are?"(whose summer 2015 season debuted on Sunday!) share tips for uncovering dramatic, meaningful, TV-worthy family stories in Family Tree Magazine's special Discover Your Roots issue.  The Summer 2015 Discover Your Roots issue, now available on newsstands and at ShopFamilyTree.com, is a helpful guide for beginning genealogists and anyone who wants a refresher on family history research basics.   Read the search strategies here.

http://blog.familytreemagazine.com/insider/2015/07/28/8QuickGenealogyWebsiteSearchStrategies.aspx
 

Getting that SSN 

"I am having trouble understanding my Grandmother's Social Security number on her death certificate," she writes. "I would like to know the best way to get a copy of her Social Security number so I can read it better."   There's a new resource available that might help.  Learn more-click here.

http://www.legalgenealogist.com/blog/2015/07/28/getting-that-ssn/ 

 

6 Steps to Choreograph Your Research Across the Internet 

A common complaint about FamilySearch Family Tree is "Why do people come in and mess up my tree, change the information, set aside what I have done, leave me out of the family tree, and stop me from changing what I know to be correct?" Frustrations abound in these public family trees.   Many people contribute to these online trees, giving hints, sharing sources, showing pictures, and telling stories. But there are problems using these trees if you don't know how to interpret these databases. Find the steps-click here.

 

How to Find Genealogy Information When a Record Doesn't Exist 

The other day, I was helping someone with his genealogy research in Indiana. He had what seemed to be a simple question. He was trying to find a birth record of his ancestor who was born there around 1840. Just one problem: Indiana didn't keep civil birth records back in 1840. So how do you find genealogy information when the record doesn't even exist?  Find out what to do-click here.

http://www.amyjohnsoncrow.com/2015/07/23/how-to-find-genealogy-information-when-a-record-doesnt-exist/ 

 

Interpreting Old Documents: 10 Strategies for Reading Historical Handwriting 

Genealogical research is simple when everything is transcribed and indexed online but older handwritten records often remain in their less-accessible state. There is something satisfying about being the first person to transcribe and analyze an archival document. Read strategies for working through a particularly hard-to-read handwritten document: Click here.

http://www.parkerarchivalservices.com/blog/2015/7/interpreting-old-documents-10-strategies-for-reading-historical-handwriting 

 

Family History Research Help
New Online Database of Albany, Rensselaer, Saratoga and Schenectady County, New York, Residents who Died during World War I
Learn more-click here.
http://blog.eogn.com/2015/07/28/new-online-database-of-albany-rensselaer-saratoga-and-schenectady-county-new-york-residents-who-died-during-world-war-i/
Suggestion for Weekly Bulletin Thought
    "The Lord expects you and me to perform our family history            work well.
     I think the first thing we must do if we are to perform our work well is to have      the  spirit of our Heavenly Father with us.  When we live as righteously as we          know how to live, He will open the way for the fulfillment of the blessings that      so earnestly and diligently we seek."
    Thomas S. Monsen
Remember...

Marble Trader
 

During the waning years of the Depression in a small southeastern Idaho community, I used to stop by Mr. Miller's roadside stand for farm-fresh produce as the season made it available. Food and money were still extremely scarce and bartering was used, extensively. One particular day, Mr. Miller was bagging some early potatoes for me. I noticed a small boy, delicate of bone and feature, ragged but clean, hungrily appraising a basket of freshly picked green peas.

I paid for my potatoes but was also drawn to the display of fresh green peas. I am a pushover for creamed peas and new potatoes. Pondering the peas, I couldn't help overhearing the conversation between Mr. Miller and the ragged boy next to me. "Hello Barry, how are you today?"


"H'lo, Mr. Miller. Fine, thank ya. Jus' admirin' them peas......sure look good." "They are good, Barry. How's your Ma?"

"Fine. Gittin' stronger alla'time."

"Good. Anything I can help you with "

"No, Sir. Jus' admirin' them peas."

"Would you like to take some home?"

"No, Sir. Got nuthin' to pay for 'em with."

"Well, what have you to trade me for some of those peas?"

"All I got's my prize aggie, best taw around here."

"Is that right? Let me see it."

"Here 'tis. She's a dandy."

"I can see that. Hmmmm, only thing is this one is blue and I sort of go for red. Do you have a red one like this at home?"

"Not 'zackley .....but, almost."

"Tell you what. Take this sack of peas home with you and next trip this way let me look at that red taw."

"Sure will. Thanks, Mr. Miller."

Mrs. Miller, who had been standing nearby, came over to help me. With a smile she said, "There are two other boys like him in our community. All three are in very poor circumstances. Jim just loves to bargain with them for peas, apples, tomatoes or whatever. When they come back with their red marbles, and they always do, he decides he doesn't like red after all and he sends them home with a bag of produce for a green marble, or an orange one, perhaps."

I left the stand, smiling to myself, impressed with this man. A short time later I moved to Utah, but I never forgot the story of this man, the boys and their bartering.

Several years went by, each more rapid than the previous one. Just recently I had occasion to visit some old friends in that Idaho community, and while I was there, I learned that Mr. Miller had just died. They were having his viewing that evening and knowing my friends wanted to go, I agreed to accompany them.

Upon our arrival at the mortuary, we got into line to meet the relatives of the deceased and to offer whatever words of comfort we could. Ahead of us in line were three young men. One was in an Army uniform and the other two had short haircuts, wore dark suits and white shirts, looking like potential or returned missionaries.

They approached Mrs. Miller, standing smiling and looking composed, by her husband's casket. Each of the young men hugged her, kissed her on the cheek, spoke briefly with her and moved on to the casket. Her misty light blue eyes followed them as, one by one, each young man stopped briefly and placed his own warm hand over the cold pale hand in the casket. Each left the mortuary, awkwardly, and wiping his eyes.

Our turn came to meet Mrs. Miller. I told her who I was and mentioned the story she had told me about the marbles. Eyes glistening, she took my hand and led me to the casket. "This is an amazing coincidence," she said. "Those three young men that just left, were the boys I told you about. They just told me how they appreciated the things Jim "traded" them. Now, at last, when Jim could not change his mind about color or size...they came to pay their debt. We've never had a great deal of the wealth of this world," she confided, "but, right now, Jim would have considered himself the richest man in Idaho." With loving gentleness she lifted the lifeless fingers of her deceased husband. Resting underneath were three magnificently shiny, red marbles.


W. E. Petersen


 

Upcoming Classes

Classes are closed for the summer during July and August.

 If you have a group and would like to arrange instruction on a specific subject, please call the Library at (435) 755-5594.   We will schedule a time and arrange for our staff to be available to instruct you.

Watch for our new class schedule-it will be published in early August.

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