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- Emma S. Clark Memorial Library
- Spring 2005 Educational Program
- Wednesday, May 11 at 7:30 p.m.
- A Presentation by:
- Joseph A. Betz
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- Technology has transformed the way we do genealogy
- The amount of information has increased
- Speed of moving information has increased
- Search/mining capability of information has increased
- Result = overwhelming amounts of information
- Types of information need to be segregated for value
- Approach shifts to accommodate strengths in the technology
- Data management and dissemination increasingly important
- Genealogy increasingly becomes technologically contextual
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- This presentation is a conceptual model for today’s genealogical
research. It’s a highly personal
observation of how to, that will challenge both the novice and
experienced genealogist.
- Presentation outline
- Introduction Strategy
- IT Revolution & Change
Expectations
- Genealogy Standards Data
Management
- Types of Sources
Dissemination & Sharing
- Record Keeping & Citations
Conclusion
- Emma Clark Resources About
the presenter
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- Technological Change:
- Theories on technological interactionism or determinism that accounts
for changes in culture
- IT Revolution has changed genealogical research in less than decade
- Maturity of 3 unique technological components form this system
- New technological system components are:
- (1) Internet = delivery or
transportation system
- (2) Data mining / full text
indexing = search capability
- (3) High-speed OCR imaging =
translates images to searchable data
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- Result is a shift in value (v), methodology (m) and economy (e):
- (v) = Searches are conducted in a fraction of the time (time value)
- (v) = Information is inexpensive and accessible from almost anywhere
- (v) = Increase interest, participation and interaction on-line (social
value)
- (m) = Information is searched to find previously impossible matches
- (m) = Research is quickly managed and published for
dissemination/feedback
- (m) = New information is made available and the cycle repeats itself
- (e) = Industry of genealogical
book publishers in recession/transformation
- with books available on line
or CD having full text search capability
- (e) = Genealogical industry of
researchers and services centered around
- Salt Lake City is in
transformation with records available on
- line
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- Remembering always that they are engaged in a quest for truth, family
history researchers consistently -
- record the source for each item of information they collect.
- test every hypothesis or theory against credible evidence, and reject
those that are not supported by the evidence.
- seek original records, or reproduced images of them when there is
reasonable assurance they have not been altered, as the basis for their
research conclusions.
- use compilations, communications and published works, whether paper or
electronic, primarily for their value as guides to locating the original
records, or as contributions to the critical analysis of the evidence
discussed in them.
- state something as a fact only when it is supported by convincing
evidence, and identify the evidence when communicating the fact to
others.
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- Continued:
- limit with words like "probable" or "possible" any
statement that is based on less than convincing evidence, and state the
reasons for concluding that it is probable or possible.
- avoid misleading other researchers by either intentionally or carelessly
distributing or publishing inaccurate information.
- state carefully and honestly the results of their own research, and
acknowledge all use of other researchers’ work.
- recognize the collegial nature of genealogical research by making their
work available to others through publication, or by placing copies in
appropriate libraries or repositories, and by welcoming critical
comment.
- consider with open minds new evidence or the comments of others on their
work and the conclusions they have reached.
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- Types of Sources
- Primary and Secondary sources
- In Between and Suspect sources
- A contemporary, unbiased record of an event is ideal but keep in mind
that information given by an applicant or informant:
- 1. May be deliberately false or had a reason for not telling the truth
on a document, i.e., a vested interest
- 2. May have had a poor understanding or bad memory of the event
- 3. May have had a clerical error made recording the event
- 4. Always triangulate all information, records aren’t perfect
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- Primary sources include: land records (deeds), wills, court records
(probate, guardianship, divorce, civil suits), church records
(admission, baptism, marriage, death, burial), vital records (birth,
marriage and death certificates), military records and Social Security
applications.
- Secondary sources include: almost all published works, (town or county
histories, family genealogies, indexes, abstracts of original records,
newspapers), bible records, tombstone inscriptions and almost everything
on the Internet.
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- In between primary and secondary sources include: Census records
(accuracy of informant and enumerator), some information on death
certificates (accuracy of informant) and the Social Security Death Index
(SSDI).
- Suspect sources include: LDS FamilySearch Internet Genealogy Service
including Ancestral File, International Genealogical Index (IGI - the
best of the lot), Pedigree Resource File, RootsWeb’s WorldConnect Search and the
memory of very aged relatives.
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- Record Keeping (paper & electronic)
- Journal all interviews, file all notes and lists of things to do
- Keep a log of all record requests and correspondences
- Keep certified copies of records in plastic page loose-leaf binder
- Organize family photographs in scrapbooks and scan them electronically
- Electronic filing of all images from internet (i.e., census records,
maps)
- Citations
- The value of your genealogical work in measured by the citations!
- Each event should have one or more simple citations, even if it’s not
your work. Always be able to defend where your information came from.
- Standard for lineage societies (DAR, SAR, Mayflower Society, etc.)
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- Ancestry Plus
- Census Records 1790-1930 Birth, Marriage, & Death (abstracts)
- Military Records Family & Local Histories
- Immigration Records Court, Land & Probate Records
- Heritage Quest
- Census Records 1790-1930 Family & Local Histories
- PERiodical Source Index Revolutionary War Records
- Newspapers
- New York Times Historical 1851-2001 (obituaries)
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- LDS FamilySearch (www.familysearch.org)
- Ancestral File International Genealogical Index (IGI)
- Pedigree Resource File Census 1880 US, 1881 B&C
- Vital Records Index (foreign) Social Security Death Index
- Family History Library Catalog
- RootsWeb (www.rootsweb.com)
- WorldConnect Project Social Security Death Index
- Various Links Death Index (CA, KY, ME, TX)
- Genealogical Societies (search/image fee)
- NEHGS (oldest & best) NYGBS NGS
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- Cyndi’s List (www.cyndislist.com)
- 240,000 categorized & cross-referenced genealogy links
- Ellis Island Index (www.ellisislandrecords.org)
- Passenger Arrival Records 1892-1924
- German Genealogy Group (www.germangenealogygroup.com)
- NYC Grooms Index 1895-1936 NYC Death Index 1891-1936
- Miscellaneous
- USGenWeb Project GenealogyBlog.com
- WorldGenWeb Project BirthDatabase.com
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- Initial Process to 1850
- Always work back, don’t try to link to a family
- Interview family members, keep a journal and record everything
- Find information on entire families and note naming patterns
- Social Security Death Index for exact birth and death dates
- Census records from 1930 to 1850 (mapping out phase)
- 1900 has each individuals birth month & year
- 1880 has every person indexed and it’s free
- Look for parents or relatives living in the household for surnames
- Write for civil birth, marriage and death records (vital records)
- Check newspapers for obituaries
- Check ship arrival records for immigrants
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- Secondary Process and before 1850
- Check LDS FamilySearch and RootsWeb WorldConnect for clues, especially
prior to 1850
- Check published town histories, records, genealogies, and compilations
- Map civil (town/county) and religious (parish) geographic divisions
- Investigate availability and types of records for expectations
- Understand migration patterns, social and religious context
- Check for church and cemetery records
- Check for wills, court records and land deeds
- Check for military records and pensions
- Check scholarly journals (The Register, TAG, NGS Quarterly, NYBG Record)
- Locate historical societies or topical on-line genealogical support
groups
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- High expectations
- Social status linked to family pedigree
- Wealth, privilege and land ownership
- Religious importance of record keeping
- Civil registration requirements, starts to be universal in the 19th
century
- Stable social and economic structure
- Low expectations
- Oppressed social class or ethnic group
- Frontier environments, war, famine or poverty
- Translation of original records difficult due to alphabet or language
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- The only way to realistically organize, compile, publish and disseminate
genealogical information is through the use of genealogical
software. Data can be exported
using a GEDCOM file (GEnealogical Data COMmunication)
- Genealogical Software - Most Popular
- Personal Ancestral File 5.2 (PAF) - free from LDS
- Family Tree Maker 2005 (FTM)
- The Master Genealogist 5.15 (TMG)
- Legacy 5.0 Deluxe Edition
- Family Origins
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- Sharing information or data with others is important but keep in mind -
- Respect the restrictions on sharing information that arise from the
rights of another as an author, originator or compiler; as a living
private person; or as a party to a mutual agreement [avoid publishing
information on living persons].
- Observe meticulously the legal rights of copyright owners, copying or
distributing any part of their works only with their permission, or to
the limited extent specifically allowed under the law's "fair
use" exceptions.
- Identify the sources for all ideas, information and data from others,
and the form in which they were received, recognizing that the
unattributed use of another's intellectual work is plagiarism [especially
for notes and biographies].
- Be sensitive to the hurt that revelations of criminal, immoral, bizarre
or irresponsible behavior may bring to family members.
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- Everyone should be able to trace parts of their family history back to
1850 without too much effort.
- Quality over quantity. In depth
sketches of your ancestors’ lives and families are more interesting than
just noting a birth, marriage and death date.
- Future
- Additional images of original records will be available over time
- The search capabilities will become more refined
- The entire process may become more seamless and semi-automated with the
use of genealogical software searching for matches (starting to happen)
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- About the presenter
- Joseph Betz is Associate Professor of Architecture at the State
University of New York at Farmingdale.
He has been actively pursuing genealogy since 1997 and is a
member of the New England Historic Genealogical Society (NEHGS), the General
Society of Mayflower Descendants, the Sons of the American Revolution
(SAR), and is Registrar of the Huntington Chapter of the SAR. His e-mail address is:
joseph.betz@farmingdale.edu
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