-----Weekly Newsletter-----                                         16 December, 2015 - Vol 16, Issue 50
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
Announcements
The Logan FamilySearch Library will be closed for the Christmas Recess beginning Monday, December 21 through Saturday, January 2.  Normal operations will resume January 4 at 9:30 am.

We are pleased to announce our new series of free instruction beginning January 4, 2016.  In addition to our classes we are offering Merit Badge Workshops for Boy Scouts and our Young Women's program.  New this term is a Computer Basics Workshop.  We can arrange a class for your group if you cannot meet at our scheduled time.  Visit our booking site for more information:  www.loganfsl.org

 Whats New in Family Search?
3 Tech Tools Every Genealogist Should Have
"There is always information available to you wherever you are," said 
Lisa Louise Cooke, founder of Genealogy Gems, at a 2015 BYU conference on family history and genealogy. "Genealogy is no longer a retirement sport. Everybody can do it."  While there are hundreds of technological tools to help you find your ancestors, here are three that can really boost your family history research-click here.

Give The Gift of Discovery with FamilySearch Indexing
FamilySearch is well-known for organizing thousands of volunteers who index records for the benefit of thousands of other volunteers. This crowd-sourcing project benefits all of us and certainly qualifies as a free "gift" to the genealogy community. Now FamilySearch is suggesting that a perfect Christmas "gift" is to help others find their ancestors.  The suggestion is to take a few minutes this holiday season to index so families worldwide can experience the thrill of discovery all year long. Read more-click here.

If You Don't Put It Online - Your Descendants Will Not Find It!
With January 1st approaching, how's this for a New Year's Resolution: preserve your family history records online so that future generations can find them. Take your records - prepare now to begin scanning them and putting them online.
Bottom line: "If You Don't Put It Online - Your Descendants Will Not Find It!"
Now is the time to thoroughly review your research conclusions. You want to review and evaluate each person in your family tree. Reconfirm the dates/places of their vital events and upload their photos, stories and documents. Make sure that each person's record is accurate and that all of your notes are attached.  Learn more-click this link.


 Help Desk
Family Booklet Challenges 
I'd like to create a 'family booklet' for someone else (show others how to do the same and print off some of the online version) 
My problem is that when I go to booklet it shows my own, if I go to the Help Others button, and the full name and (my?) helper number... I get error messages and cannot proceed. I'm not sure if: I need to enter the Given or married name of the person I'm trying to help; I can do a booklet for a deceased individual or only for the living: how else to proceed with the task. I feel that the booklet is a great way to convey and to review the information in FamilySearch as a means to get others involved. I like the format for encouraging input regarding what do I want to know about me, hobbies, etc.. 
I guess my suggestion would be an option on the "about me" page to enter the ID of the individual (other than myself) for whom I would like to produce a booklet. 
Thanks for your consideration I think this booklet and capture is a great feature.
Answer:  
You almost had it with the Help Others. The only difference is you need the helper number of the person you are trying to help, not yours. If they are LDS, the default helper number is the last 5 digits of their membership number.

Favorite Websites
What Ancestry's Retirement of Family Tree Maker Software Means for You
Ancestry has announced the "retirement" of one of the cornerstone products in genealogy, the Family Tree Maker desktop software.  What this Means for Genealogists:  Discontinuing Family Tree Maker is a strategic move. The goal is it to get everyone from family history "dabblers" to seasoned genealogists to enter their family tree data directly onto a family tree housed on the Ancestry website. This puts them in the drivers seat.  Find all the details-click here.

What Ancestry's "Retirement" of FTM Really Means 
Unless you're a genealogist that has your head in the sand the past few days, you would have heard the big news from Tuesday that Ancestry will be "retiring" its very popular Family Tree Maker desktop genealogy software.
Ancestry has always marketed their software as "the #1 selling family history software". I can easily believe that pronouncement to be true because, firstly, various incarnations of the software have been on the market for decades, and secondly, because it is one of the few genealogy programs you can find on the shelves of your big box stores in the form of an actual physical box.
Read the complete story here.

Dropbox Shutdown Foreshadows Cloud Storage Issues
Dropbox, the file hosting and cloud storage company with 400 million users, has been struggling to hold up its $10 billion valuation in the face of scrutiny from investors and observers, and now it looks like the other shoe is dropping as the company streamlines its business. The company is shutting down Mailbox and Carousel, its email and photo apps. Sources tell us the plan will be to focus on its core product and developing other new productivity tools, such as its still-private collaboration app, Paper.  Learn more-click this link.

Heritage Stocking Stuffer: Make Sweet Memories by Wrapping Them Around Chocolate
I firmly believe that family history should not sit on a shelf, but should be seen, touched, felt and even tasted! That's why I love these Sweet Memories candy bars I designed a few years ago. They're basically your favorite chocolate bar wrapped in a custom label with your own sweet family history memory on it. These make a great heritage stocking stuffer.  Learn more-click here.

4 Types of Holiday Genealogy Records
Use this holiday season to track down your ancestors!  The holidays are upon us. Despite all the rushing of the season, this is a fantastic time of year to research your genealogy and family history.
Surprised?  Sources and records were generated based on the holidays your ancestors celebrated.
Gaining an understanding of their religious and secular celebrations of holidays is important in understanding where to find holiday themed records.  Click here.
Family History Research Help
Old Scottish Genealogy and Family History adds records online
Penny Lewis and Fergus Smith from Old Scottish Genealogy and Family History have added 150,000 transcribed records to their website at www.oldscottish.com/records.html, free of charge. The duo have stated that they hope to produce the following online:  
We are adding hundreds of thousands of extracted historical records to our website - including rolls of male heads of families, baptismal and marriage registers, Kirk Session records and Poor Law records. To see the records currently available for each parish, follow the links below. We don't yet have records for every parish, but remember to keep coming back, as we are adding new records every day.  Read more, click here.

Suggestion for Weekly Bulletin Thought
A Deep Sense of Gratitude
"We stand today as the recipients of [our ancestors] great effort... I hope we carry in our hearts a deep sense of gratitude for all that they have done for us... Our forebears laid a solid and marvelous foundation. Now ours is the great opportunity to build a superstructure, all fitly framed together... We honor best those who have gone before when we serve well in the cause of truth." 
 Gordon B. Hinckley
Remember...
A Shoe Seller Walks in the Shoes of Kindness 
Today, I felt terrible. My head was full of problems and confusion.  I decided to take a walk even though I didn't know where I would go. The most extraordinary thing happened when I was out on this walk. I saw an old man sitting on a chair. He was a seller of second-hand shoes. I thought he looked at least 70 years old. He seemed so tired and nobody was buying his shoes. I wanted to give him something but I had not brought anything with me. Then, a little girl came toward him. I heard the child say, "Grandfather, may I polish your shoes?" That old man took pity on her, smiled and he gave her a  shoe to polish. The girl said, "I polish the shoe because I need money to buy my brother a new school uniform."  
I heard this and tears came to my eyes. The old man answered, "Oh, little girl. Just stop doing this. Come with me and I will buy you a uniform." Then they walked to a market (I followed behind) and he bought her a uniform..
The girl was so happy.  She said, "Thank you so much for doing this. May God bless you." Then she left, leaving the old man smiling. He walked away from the market, but I stopped him. I whispered in his ear, "You are a hero! Thank you for your kindness!"  As I walked away, I glanced back and I could see him still smiling. I was blown away by the kindness I had just seen.  Someone who had so little themselves, was able to show such incredible generosity! Amazing! My own sadness had completely disappeared, chased way by the light of this kind act. I began realizing that I have a lot to be thankful for. I hope, some day, I can show my appreciation of what I have by following the example of the old man who only had a little, but shared it so beautifully with someone who had nothing..

mUpcoming Classes
The new series of free classes available at the Logan FamilySearch Library are now available on our class booking site.  In addition to our scheduled classes there are many workshops and we can arrange a class for your group if you cannot meet at our scheduled time.  Watch your ward bulletins for additional information.  Schedules will also be available at the Library when we reopen in January.
              To book a class now visit our website 
                                                      
                        You may call the library (435) 755-5594 for assistance
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