Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Ancestor In The News

I was not hard pressed to find newspaper articles mentioning my ancestors but the difficulty was selecting a story that I wanted to post and share with readers.

Many of the articles are the standard obituary type although there were one or two which leaned more towards the sordid with gruesome details of my ancestor's death.

I've opted for one which caught me by surprise since no one had ever mentioned that my grandfather Abraham MacEntee had been an amateur boxer. In 1933, when my grandfather would have been 20 years old, he was part of the Civilian Conservation Corps or C.C.C. as it was known. The C.C.C. was a work relief program created earlier in that year by the Roosevelt administration to utilize the labors of unemployed men in locations that could benefit from basic civil engineering projects on a small scale. There were C.C.C. camps in each state and they were run by the Army.

Abraham MacEntee was dispatched to the 232nd C.C.C. camp in Bountiful, Utah along with many other young men from Kingston, New York. The article displayed here appeared in the August 18, 1933 issue of the Kingston Daily Freeman as a way of allowing the men to communicate as a group with their families back in Kingston. Articles in this same vein contained typical items as to events, weather, project, etc.

In the article, besides a description of the newly built mess hall and a visit from the Secretary of War on August 3rd, there is a mention of the "Friday night fights." It seems that my grandfather was matched against a G. VanFleet from Bountiful and after "three fast rounds" in the ring, my grandfather won the bout in a decision.

One bit of information which requires my follow-up is this quote: "This past Friday night a cameraman was here at our camp taking all kinds of pictures of our camp, among which was one of our entire company." Since I don't have any photos of my grandfather, I might be able to find one if I do some research.

Finally, over the summer Donna Pointkouski posted a great article at her site, What's Past Is Prologue, explaining how to use records of the C.C.C. in genealogy research.

Tombstone Tuesday

[Editor's note: I love Becky Wiseman's idea of placing a photo of a tombstone in a post with a little bio about the person or persons. See, now I don't have to come up with ideas for Tuesdays! Go visit Becky's great blog Kinexxions to see more!]



Headstone of Anna Gertrude Sawyer (1834 - 1878). Digital image taken by Thomas MacEntee on March 10, 2008 at Montrepose Cemetery, Kingston, New York. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, Illinois. 2008.

Anna Gertrude Sawyer was born on January 29, 1834 in New York City, the daughter of Rev. Thomas J. Sawyer and Caroline Fisher.[1] She married Jervis McEntee, the famous Hudson River School artist and my 1st cousin 4 times removed, in November 1854.[2] Gertrude Sawyer died on October 14, 1878 in Kingston, New York and was buried at Montrepose Cemetery on October 17, 1878.

Notes:

[1] Eddy, Richard, The Life of Thomas J. Sawyer . . . and Caroline M. Sawyer (Boston, MA: Universalist Publishing House, 1900).

[2] Id.

Monday, September 29, 2008

More Facebook Bizarre Ads

Worried that I might have more than just Khaki Diaper Butt (and for some reason, whenever I think of that I keep picturing the great advertisements of my ancestors, as The Virtual Dime Museum outlines from time to time), I clicked More Ads under one of the ads displayed over at Facebook today. Check it out:



Well now I know that the ads are generated off of info from my profile and current info out on the Interwebs. They picked up on the fact that I work for Heller Ehrman and that the 119 year old law firm is imploding. The Rolling Razor, the "iPod of razors" just scares me.



Okay, I understand the Cubs ad since I live in Chicago and the Cubs haven't won a World Series in 100 years. Oprah on a diet? I never would have believed it. Now are they trying to tell me I need to be on a diet or is Oprah there as part of the Chicago connection? Sidenote: I cannot tell you how many times I meet new people who, when learning that I live in Chicago, ask me either a) if I can get them tickets to Oprah's Favorite Things or b) if I ever run into Oprah.

French Canadian genealogy ad . . . hmmmm. They must be monitoring my friendship with my Canadian cousins Lorine and Kathryn. Finally, "Never Shave Again." Okay what will it be - shave all the time with the Rolling Razor or never again after some torture which is probably worse than a Belgian Wax. Sidenote: a Belgian Wax is one that hurts so much that you treat yourself to a Belgian waffle afterwards.



This batch of ads makes the most sense given my profile and my Facebook habits. Roots Magic software, learning law via distance learning, Netflix. The ruby red slippers are suspect though - urging me to rent the Wizard of Oz today! If they really knew me, they'd know I already own the DVD.



Finally, this batch makes no sense or does it? Army Wives? The dog ad probably shows up due to the photo gallery of my dogs. Free products for USA men - I guess that makes it exclusive since it is only USA men. And moving? I ain't going anywhere right now.

A Yearbook to Remember

Well, a hypothetical yearbook since if I had a yearbook picture from 1950 and was still in school with a yearbook picture in 1996, I'd be better off just quitting and getting my GED!

Thanks to Colleen at Orations of OMcHodoy for putting this yearbook of genea-bloggers together. Hopefully she won't start assigning "titles" such as "most likely to . . ."




Sordid Books Project

footnoteMaven, purveyor of fine knowledge, has posted a "distraction" (perhaps she has the correct term for what we've been calling a "meme") and challenged others to do the same. The idea came from the Sorted Books Project and the rules are to write your own story using the titles on books spines, and the books must be those that you own.

Since I am in the midst of "The Change" as I am delightfully calling it, I think these books best describe what is going on with me right now:

Khaki Diaper Butt?


Is it just me, or do the advertisements over at Facebook get kind of bizarre after a while? Take the one pictured above for example. I am wondering what in the love of Marcia Brady triggered this:

- I did order some khakis from Amazon last week

- I am having another birthday in less than three months but not one that warrants shopping for adult diapers. Not yet.

- I do have a smart-alecky response to the question, "Boxers or brief?" I usually say, "Depends."

Anyone else been hit up with Khaki Diaper Butt? Is there a cure?

On a positive note, you can use the thumbs up or down icon to vote on the ad.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Latest Edition of Carnival of Irish Heritage & Culture Posted



Lisa over at Small-leaved Shamrock has just posted the latest edition of the Carnival of Irish Heritage & Culture. The theme is Back to School. Unfortunately, I was unable to participate this go-around due to my current work situation and trying to get my own ventures up and running. But Lisa knows I love her blogs and her carnival and try to give her all the support I can.

The next edition is "Luck of the Irish": Superstitions and the Irish people, which will be hosted by Bill West at West in New England.

Halloween (or Samhain as it was known among the ancient Celts) is approaching and what better time to tell us about your family’s Irish superstitions? Perhaps you have stories about strange coincidences and events that might have been passed down by your Irish relatives, or even know of some favorite legend or haunted place in Ireland. Share them with us in the next edition of the Carnival of Irish Heritage & Culture.

Deadline for submissions for the Irish Superstitions edition of the Carnival of Irish Heritage & Culture is October 25th. The carnival will be published at West in New England on October 31. See you there!

Friday, September 26, 2008

Scanfest Speaks - Scanfest and Skype

Are you planning to attend the next Scanfest on Sunday, September 28th hosted by Miriam Midkiff Robbins over at AnceStories: The Stories of My Ancestors?

If you are, and whether it is your first time or you are a "charter attendee," you will need the following information to participate in a new feature: Scanfest with voice capabilities.

1. Download and Install Skype

This is a free program which allows you to speak with other Skype users anywere for free. Use the instructions in this posting at Bootcamp for Genea-Bloggers to assist you in the installation.

2. Setup Thomas MacEntee as a Contact

Set me up as a contact using my email address tmacentee@gmail.com.

3. Conduct a Test Call

Call me using the new contact. If I am unavailable please leave a voicemail.

4. Confirm Your Skype Participation in Scanfest

If you feel comfortable participating in Scanfest using Skype so you can speak with others while scanning, send me an email at tmacentee@gmail.com.

Note: Skype only allows me to connect up to 24 others in a conference call. We will be doing this on a first come first serve basis.

5. Non-Skype Participation

If you don't have Skype or cannot/do not want to install it, email me at tmacentee@gmail.com and send me your name and phone number. I will patch you in to the call at 11:00 am PDT.

If you have any questions please contact me prior to Sunday at 11:00 am PDT.

The Week in Facebook: 9/26/2008



This is a weekly feature which will document some of the genea-blogger happenings as they relate to Facebook®.

- Since last Friday, the Genea-Bloggers group has increased its membership by 14 more members for a total of 207. We've crossed the 200 member threshold!

If you know anyone who manages a genealogy or family history related blog, please encourage them to join the Genea-Bloggers group at Facebook. Remind them that ours is a welcoming, supportive community of like-minded people who not only blog, but encourage each other in terms of their writing and their use of current technology.

- New events which have been added include:

Cabinet of Curiosities 10th Edition
Carnival of Irish Heritage and Culture 9th Edition
Canadian Genealogy Carnival 2nd Edition

And don't forget there is another Scanfest coming up on this Sunday, September 28th. Miriam at AnceStories: The Stories of My Ancestors has agreed to let me organize a Skype-based "voice session" that can accommodate up to 24 callers. This would mean a conference call and I'm not sure we can handle the pandemonium of 24 crazy caffeine-addled scanners talking over each other. We have trouble behaving in a simple instant messenger program! Stay tuned. Look for an Introduction to Skype post over on Facebook Bootcamp for Genea-Bloggers soon as well as a more in-depth post as to Skype and Scanfest here on DAF.

Again, if anyone has a question as to how to use Facebook®, I'd be happy to help. You can always email me directly but if you post your question as a Discussion Topic at the Genea-Bloggers group, you might find that other members also have the same questions.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Geni Person Pages

A few weeks ago, I posted about the fact that Geni was in fact more like Facebook than Footnote. This came about when Footnote debuted its new People Pages feature.

I've finally had some time to take some Geni features for a test drive and I have to say that as a product it is much more in the Genealogy 2.0 vein that I am looking for. Footnote's advantage is that pages are already established if a person has a record in the Social Security Death Index. However, Footnote - as of yet - does not allow you to import a GEDCOM file which means details must be added manually.

Once you've uploaded a GEDCOM file to Geni however, you can start customizing the Person Pages for your ancestors and really expand the functionality of linked events and people - to me, a true indicator of Web 2.0 / Genealogy 2.0 power.

1.  At the Home page, locate the person whose page is in need of updating. I usually click on Ancestors in the lower left corner.



2.  The Ancestors page appears. Located the person and click on the name.



3.  The Geni Person Page appears.



4.  Click Add Photo.   You can choose the Simple Photo Uploader or the Advanced Photo Uploader.  For now, click the Simple Photo Uploader then click Choose File.



5.  Locate the folder containing the photo you want to upload.  Highlight the photo and then click Open.



6.  The file name will appear in the First Photo field.  Continue adding photos or click Upload Photos.  (Note: if you want to upload photos to a specific album, enter an album name in the Upload to a new album field or select from an existing album using the drop-down list)


7.  If you selected Advanced Photo Uploader, you do not need to locate individual files by pressing Choose File for each photo.  You can navigate to the folder with the photo to be uploaded, and then place a checkmark next to the photo before clicking Upload Photo.


Note: the Advanced Photo Uploader requires the latest version of the Java application and you may be prompted to download this before having full access to the feature.  In addition, I find that the Advanced Photo Uploader is much slower than using the Simple Photo Uploader.  This may be due to the number of photos in my photo folder.

8.  Next, you will be prompted tag the photo you just added.  You can enter the name of the person in the photo and you can add a caption.  Click Save Your Changes when finished.




9.  The photo will appear in the page for your ancestor.



10.  Other details to be added are events.  In the Timeline section, locate events that are incomplete.  In the example below click ???? Burial of John.



11.  The details page for the event appears.  Complete as many details as possible.  One nice feature is the ability to add yourself as an attendee to an event.  Click I was there in the Attendee section.


Note:  There is also a Fan section where you can basically say "I wasn't there, but I'm a fan."  I think Geni needs to rethink this feature - it looks kind of tacky when used for the Death and Burial events, as much as it may be true for certain people in your family.  What I am sure Geni is trying to do is allow a tracking mechanism to be used so the event can appear in a person's Timeline.  The wording just isn't there yet.

12.  Once you have added yourself or others as attendees, you can display that fact in your own timeline.  On your page, in the Timeline section, click the drop-down button for the Filter function and select Attendee.



13.  The fact that you attended this event is now displayed in your timeline.




I will continue my work with Geni and probably send them my suggestions. I suggest you check out Geni if you haven't done so already and either post about your experience and/or send your feedback to Geni. The people behind Geni seem genuinely intent on taking feedback to heart and making improvements to its product.

Canadian Genealogy Carnival Posted!

I want to give a shout out to my cousin (8th cousin I believe) Kathryn over at LOOKING4ANCESTORS and the great job she's done with her new endeavor!

The 1st Edition of the Canadian Genealogy Carnival was posted yesterday and there are some great stories of Canadian ancestors, be they recent or ancient!

I was unable to participate this time - I do love being a charter member of carnivals - since I was on vacation and dealing with my job situation. But I have it on my calendar to work on a post for the next edition which is due December 7th. So there is plenty of time and no excuse!

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Alltop 2.0


In case you missed it, Guy Kawasaki has announced a new version, Version 2.0 of Alltop.

As he states since the number of topics increased from 20 to 215, there had to be a better way to organize the aggregation of blogs.

Notice that Genealogy is listed under the Interests topics.

Family Tree Maker Updates

As my readers may know, I recently made the transition from Family Tree Maker 16 to FTM 2008. And then with various blogs posting about the upgrade to FTM 2009, I was all hyped about getting a preview as early as possible.

A few fellow genea-bloggers sent me the 800 number to call to get my code since "the email process has been backed up." Well it turns out that the information was not entirely correct.

I did call Ancestry using the special 800 number I was given. Turns out that emails will still be sent out to FTM 2008 owners in the order in which they purchased and registered the product. This is the important part. Since I didn't purchase and register my FTM 2008 but two weeks ago, I will probably be one of the last one's receiving the upgrade email.

Despite that bit of bad news, I was happy to see that there is a new FTM-related blog as Randy Seaver at Genea-Musings has pointed out.

Please take time to go visit Family Tree Maker User and see all the great posts. It is sort of like a "boot camp" for FTM 2008 and 2009 users.

Wordless Wednesday



Loretta McGinnis (1897 - 1971), Confirmation, abt. 1909. Digital image. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, Illinois. 2008.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

My "On This Date" Dilemma

For several reasons I've temporarily suspended the daily posting of my "On This Date" series of posts. Besides being inundated with job search stuff, etc., I found that my current genealogy database program (FTM 2008) did not let me easily create a custom report with this information.

So here is what I've been doing:

1. I created a Custom Report in FTM 2008 containing the ancestor's name, and then all relevant dates (birth, baptism, marriage, etc.).

2. I exported this report to RTF format.

3. I opened the RTF in Word 2007, and then cut and pasted the data into an Excel 2007 file.

4. In Excel, I was able to utilize the Filter function for each column with data and entered a text filter such as Contains = September 18. This would display the results that matched my data query. Then I had to sort the data in date order.

5. Next copy and paste the names and year into the Blogger post in draft mode.

6. Go back to FTM 2008 to determine my relationship to that person.

7. Enter the relationship info into the post in draft, format and then post.

Too much work. I'd love it if there were an add-on or widget to FTM 2008 that allowed you to create queries - any type of query such as "What happened on this date . . ."

I spoke to my cousin Midge Frazel (8 times removed) of Granite in My Blood on Skype the other day and we discussed my problems with generating a report with the data I needed. She mentioned that several years ago Wholly Genes had a program available for the Palm OS that allowed you to do these reports. And sure enough I found it: GedStar PRO.

Does anyone know of similar apps or add-ons or widgets that would work with FTM 2008? I'd even accept a third-party application which meant I had to import data I had exported out of FTM 2008.

Otherwise I'll need to do some programming and create an automated report from a GEDCOM (ugh) or from a Word RTF file. This is why I am such an open source application enthusiast: I'm pretty sure someone would have used the code from the original genealogy database application and created a widget for use free of charge.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Off On A Mini Vacation

I will be at my usual haunt this weekend and will return on Tuesday evening. I have some pre-posting done but I've been putting in 16 hour days what with the job search, etc. It will be nice to get away, have a glass of wine or two, and relax. And sleep.

I will be checking in on comments and email but not very often. See you next week!

Friday, September 19, 2008

Meeting Steve Danko



Steve was in the Chicago area starting today for the Polish Genealogical Society of America's 30th Annual Conference. The conference is being held this weekend at the Meadows Club in Rolling Meadows, Illinois just to the northwest of Chicago.

We agreed to meet at a hot new restaurant at the end of my street - Tapas Las Ramblas and the food was great. We had this photo taken, clearly after yours truly had partaken in two glasses of Sancerre, an empty example of which sits in front of me.

I look like I am about to sneeze or sing or both.

We had a great time especially since I used to live in the Bay Area of San Francisco and Steve is there now. We almost called up Kathryn Doyle to say hello but figured this photo was proof enough of our having met.

When you get a chance ask Steve about the table of women at the restaurant who asked him to help take a group photo and then insisted he spend the rest of the time at their table . . .

The Week In Faceook: 9/19/2008



This is a weekly feature which will document some of the genea-blogger happenings as they relate to Facebook®.

- Since last Friday, the Genea-Bloggers group has increased its membership by 18 more members for a total of 193. We are fast approaching our 200th member!

If you know anyone who manages a genealogy or family history related blog, please encourage them to join the Genea-Bloggers group at Facebook. Remind them that ours is a welcoming, supportive community of like-minded people who not only blog, but encourage each other in terms of their writing and their use of current technology.

- New events have been added including a Genea-Blogger Yearbook challenge by Colleen at Orations of McOhodoy. This one sounds fun since you use a free online-program called YearbookYourself to upload your photo and create "looks" including the 1960s beehive hair for women and the mullett or camaro cut for me. Good times.

And don't forget there is another Scanfest coming up on Sunday, September 28th. Miriam at AnceStories: The Stories of My Ancestors has agreed to let me organize a Skype-based "voice session" that can accommodate up to 24 callers. This would mean a conference call and I'm not sure we can handle the pandemonium of 24 crazy caffeine-addled scanners talking over each other. We have trouble behaving in a simple instant messenger program! Stay tuned.

Again, if anyone has a question as to how to use Facebook®, I'd be happy to help. You can always email me directly but if you post your question as a Discussion Topic at the Genea-Bloggers group, you might find that other members also have the same questions.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Not So Wordless Wednesday

On Wednesday I posted a photo of our friend Greg Anstett who was killed by a hit-and-run drunk driver last December right around the holidays. I posted the photo, not because it was his birthday but because the young woman who killed Greg on December 23, 2007 accepted a plea bargain and reduced sentence yesterday in San Francisco Superior Court this week.

I’ve held off on posting about Greg and his death not because I wanted to let the shock and pain of someone being killed at the young age of 51 and in such a hideous manner mellow into just a haunting memory. I did so since I did not want to unduly influence any court proceedings and jeopardize justice.

Samantha Osborne, 25, pleaded guilty in exchange for an expected sentence on October 22 of five years probation. The charges to which she entered the plea are a felony charge of hit-and-run resulting in death and a charge of vehicular manslaughter that was changed to a misdemeanor. This was Ms. Osborne’s third set of charges in a hit-and-run, DUI suspected case – she has had two other incidents with surpisingly similar circumstances.

In addition to the probation, Ms. Osborne will need to serve a 180 day sentence of home arrest, 90 days at a “work alternative program” and 720 hours of community service. If the terms of her probation or sentencing are violated, the result will be a state prison sentence without trial.

I don’t know how to feel right now at what should be closure on the loss of a friend. I think back to those days around December 23rd when no one could locate Greg who, although not always punctual, would never, never stand someone up or disappear without calling.

I received a call from a good friend who was supposed to meet Greg for dinner and he was a no show. After many calls and a few hours of waiting, the friend – who is 91 and lives a few blocks from Greg’s apartment – took it upon himself to see if something had happened. When he arrived at the apartment, he could see that Greg had not returned home from being out the night before. And so the process of calling hospitals and local police agencies was taken up by several friends.

On Christmas Eve, I got a call from another friend who sounded frustrated and exasperated: he had just returned from the Hall of Justice in San Francisco where the police department is based. He attempted to get some information but since he was not a family member, all he was told was “there was a violent incident involving Mr. Anstett” and no information as to whether Greg was dead or alive, or in a hospital.

So, Christmas Eve afternoon yours truly was in front of a computer at home scouring online lists, crime data and news articles. Finally, I spotted an item which made my heart sink:

License Plate Leads To Fatal Hit-And-Run Suspect

SAN FRANCISCO -- A 23-year-old woman who fled a fatal crash in San Francisco over the weekend was found by police a short time later because she left her front license plate at the scene of the crash, a San Francisco Police Department spokesman said.

The crash took place at about midnight Saturday night at the intersection of Van Ness Avenue and Post Street, when a green Jeep Cherokee driving southbound on Van Ness Avenue struck a man as he was walking in the crosswalk, according to Sgt. Neville Gittens.

Greg Anstett, 51, of San Francisco, was pronounced dead at 12:10 a.m., according to the medical examiner's office.

It was not known whether Anstett had a green light to cross the road at the time of the crash, according to Gittens.

There were no witnesses to the crash and the driver continued on, but police found the Cherokee's front license plate at the intersection, Gittens said.

About 20 minutes later, officers stopped the Cherokee a short time later at Eighth Avenue and Geary Boulevard, according to Gittens.

The driver, a Novato woman, was detained and released pending further investigation, Gittens said.

Officials have not released her name or whether drugs or alcohol were involved in the crash, Gittens said.

The woman, who was the only occupant of the Cherokee, has not yet been charged, he added.
[2]

While I was still digesting and processing news that was difficult for me to understand let along relate to another friend, I picked up the phone. I struggled to break the news to my friends, especially my elderly friend for whom Greg had been the sole caretaker for several years. When one of our friends Larry answered the phone, I told him that Greg had been in an accident and was hit by a car on Saturday evening. Larry kept asking where Greg was, which hospital since they had already called all the possible places in the city. I kept repeating that Greg had passed away but it wasn’t sinking in on the other end. Finally Larry said, “So where is Greg,” and I had to say, “At the morgue, Larry.”

Knowing our friend Greg, and how he and his energy were the focus of any event he attended, we made the decision to stick with our Christmas Eve events at the homes of friends and families that night although the mood was understandably subdued.

While some of the facts of what this woman did, or better yet did not do, don’t merit mention due to their lack of humanity, I think it is important to question how such a terrible accident and the subsequent attempts at cover-up could take place:

- Sarah Osborne who hit and killed Greg Anstett was spotted as a solo driver at the time of the accident but 20 minutes later she was pulled over by police with two passengers in tow;

- Sarah Osborne was not given the standard sobriety tests which would normally be mandated in such an event;

- Sarah Osborne’s father, is a retired instructor for the San Francisco Police Academy and such a relationship seems to have warranted “special handling” of the case;

- Sarah Osborne was allowed the luxury of spending the holidays with her family before being charged with the accident while Greg Anstett had the luxury of spending them on a cold steel table while his friends and family tried to find him.

Greg’s death and the frustrating process of trying to locate him, not knowing he was dead, spurred me to become involved with Unclaimed Persons on Facebook. Created by Megan Smolenyak Smolenyak, Unclaimed Persons works with volunteer researchers, many of whom have genealogy backgrounds, and assists coroners’ officers across the country in locating the next of kin for decedents who have identification on them when found, but no obvious family to claim their remains.

I’ve become a Case Administrator which means I post case details and help shepherd the case through the process of research, analyzing facts, establishing connections with living relatives, and making a strong case to have the coroner’s office contact these relatives. Some cases are solved in a matter of hours, others weeks or months. Unclaimed Persons assists county and local agencies who either don’t have the resources due to budget cuts, or the expertise in on-line people research.

So this week, when I found out that we had solved not one but two cases, I do what I always do when I get the news: I take a moment to be thankful that our work helped someone to finally “make it home,” I think about how sad it must have been for someone to receive that call, and I cry just a little – admittedly sometimes a more than a little – at the fact that someone had to make the passage from light to darkness without the comforting hand of a friend or family member. And I always think of Greg.

Notes

[1] “Guilty Plea in Hit and Run,” accessed on September 18, 2008 at (http://www.ebar.com/news/article.php?sec=news&article=3325).

[2] “License Plate Leads To Fatal Hit-And-Run Suspect,” accessed on September 18, 2008 at (http://www.ktvu.com/news/14920011/detail.html).

The Unemployment Line



Little did I know that earlier in the week, when I visited Colleen Fitzpatrick's great site called Forensic Genealogy, and took her weekly quiz to identify the photographer and the name of the bread line, would I see myself in such a place by the end of the week.

I've been following the decline of my current law firm, Heller Ehrman LLP which is over 119 years old and was founded by part of the Levi Strauss family in San Francisco. But having worked for "Big Law" as it is called for close to 20 years, I've weather similar storms.

This time, given the economic climate I just don't think that Heller will come through. There is lots of press in the legal industry about this and some of my colleagues have even started a support blog which lists resources and ideas as to how to handle the news and end of your job.

To be honest, I've been considering a career change over the past year, perhaps due to some mid-life crisis thing having turned 45 in December. So, in the tradition of my ancestors who often not only took lemons and made lemonade, but would also sell said lemonade for a profit, I am starting some new ventures. I guess the over-arching project is what I call Thomas 2.0.

If you go and visit one of my two new web domains (http://www.thomas20.com or http://www.thomasmacentee.com), you'll see what I've been up to over the past few days. I've taught myself CSS for designing web site style sheets, worked on data entry and formatting, etc. It has been a fun project and one that has kept my mind off of work.

Plus it is a way for me to hang out my shingle. So if you know of anyone who needs a "project manager, web 2.0 enthusiast, knowledge manager, technology educator, blogger, history geek, cyber-sleuth, virtual assistant" please let me know. I'm going into business for myself and I know I will enjoy it. The same quality work I love doing for my genealogy colleagues here, at Unclaimed Persons and over at Bootcamp for Genea-Bloggers is what I'd love to do for a living. Thomas 2.0 work is geared more towards legal technology but not limited strictly to that field.

I hope that I can keep up with the same quality posts my readers expect here at DAF. One feature I am suspending temporarily since it is so difficult to prepare is the One This Date post. I will be posting over the weekend on different ways of automating the report preparation but right now all the work is manual and very time consuming.

At the end of the day though, I know it could be worse. I am lucky to have low expenses and some money socked away for rainy days. And it is pouring right now. I was always taught growing up that someone always had it worse than I did and complaining and crying didn't really solve the problem. As you can see I was raised in a "no excuses" household and it is during times like these that I truly am thankful for the great job that Mom did with me.

And because I can never resist turning a post into a prompt, and I know times are tough all over - anyone want to relate a family story or two about unemployment, or perhaps winning the lottery, or even having built a successful business?

Photo courtesy of Forensic Genealogy - I don't want to reveal the photographer or name of the photo since it would undermine Colleen's quiz feature for the week!

56th Carnival of Genealogy Is Posted!

Lori Thornton over at Smoky Mountain Family History has been the latest guest host of the Carnival of Genealogy and she has the 56th Edition posted across two volumes! Having two volumes is appropriate given that the theme was genealogy books!

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Pop or Soda?


I stumbled upon an entry at one of my fave sites, Strange Maps, which graphically depicts which term Americans use when asking for a soft drink.

Check it out.  You can see where I grew up in upstate New York, we call it Soda.  But from about Syracuse westward it is Pop.  Here in Chicago where I now live it is Pop.

I know that some of my New England friends still use the word Tonic.  And some of my Southern friends use the word Coke to generically describe soft drinks.  As in a recent exchange on the show Sordid Lives:

Would you like a Coke?
Sure!
What kind?
Dr. Pepper.

Wordless Wednesday




Greg Anstett (1956 - 2007), November, 2001. Digital image. Taken and privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, Illinois. 2008.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

On This Date: September 16

Births

Roosa, Arien Geurtse (my 2nd cousin 10 times removed) - 1642, Herwinjen, The Netherlands

Groot, Elisabeth (my 1st cousin 10 times removed) - 1715, Schenectady, New York

Beekman, Anna (my 4th cousin 7 times removed) - 1769

Austin, Isaac A. (3rd cousin 5 times removed) - 1850, Fowler, New York

Baptisms

Roosa, Hillegond (my 2nd cousin 8 times removed) - 1711, Kingston, New York

De Wandelaer, Herman (my 5th great-grandfather) - 1781, Schaghticoke, New York

Marriages

Van Kuykendall, Jacob Luurszen and Douwes, Styntje (my 10th great-grandparents) - 1638, Amsterdam, Noord-Holland

Sanders, Thomas and Van Gorcum, Sara Cornelise (my 10th great-grandparents) - 1640, New Amsterdam, New York

Macker, James and Everett, Mary (my 8th great grand aunt) - 1662, Dedham, Massachusetts

Deaths

Demece, Wolfred (my 3rd cousin 5 times removed) - 1850, Sanblatt, New York

Monday, September 15, 2008

The China Syndrome: Queen Elizabeth II Tea Pot



[This post was composed for the 8th Edition of the Cabinet of Curiosities hosted at Walking The Berkshires]

Some of you may know that I have an obsession with certain pieces of china, an obsession border on being a fetish. As moths are to a flame, women to a pair of great shoes, so I am to an unusual piece of china. What I give you in this chapter of The China Syndrome is my much prized, much scoffed at, but very valuable Queen Elizabeth II (Large) Tea Pot designed by Paul Cardew.

I purchased this on Ebay, the source of almost all my china purchases, in 2004 after I moved to Chicago. The teapot comes in two versions, small and large, and was made in 2002 as part of the Queen's Golden Jubilee in 2002.

Currently, this teapot is very rare and difficult to find - when they appear on Ebay, the bidding gets a bit crazy. When I bought mine only four years ago, I believe I paid the opening bid price which was ridiculously low.

Why do I like this unusual porcelain item? Well, what's not to like? When sitting on a table in an entry way, many visitors either ask right away, "Is that what I think it is?" or they'll just walk by and make a mental note and mention the item later.



I also like the fact that while it seems quite refined to us as Americans, I think our Canadian and United Kingdom readers might consider it a bit of tacky. To me it would be better if the tea came out of the old gal's nose but that is a bit over the top.
And when I use it, the pot matches the gold band china I use for my candlelight suppers - you know, the kind Hyacinth Bouquet is also inviting people to.

My Ten Essential Genealogy-Related Books

This post was written for the 56th Edition of the Carnival of Genealogy hosted by Lori at Smoky Mountain Family Historian.

I know that this might seem sacrilege, especially given that many genea-bloggers are also librarians or in the library sciences profession, but I am not a book person.

Now, don't get me wrong here - I love books, but over the past five years I have become so paperless that it is rare for me to purchase an actual book, rather than an e-book.

So, given that bit of Thomas info, here is my list and how to find these tomes, both hard cover and virtual:

1. Putman, George W., Genealogy of David Putman and His Descendants, Amsterdam, New York: George W. Putman, 1916.

This is the book that my mother handed to me over 15 years ago which traced my roots back to 1661 in Schenectady, New York.  There were only 100 copies since it was privately published but it can be accessed in PDF form using the link above.

2. Putnam, Eben, A History of the Putnam Family in England and America, Salem, Massachusetts: Salem Press Pub. and Print. Co., 1891-1908.

Since the surname Putman is often mis-transcribed as Putnam, this book which focuses on both surnames, is vital to any Putman research.

3. Moore, Edith Austin, A Genealogy of the Descendants of Robert Austin of Kingstown, R.I., St. Petersburg, Florida: 1951.

I and the Austin Family Association of America consider this the bible for Austin research along this family line.  The Austins are on my mother's side of the tree and go back to the early 1640s in Rhode Island.

4. Heidgerd, Ruth P., The Freer Family: The Descendants of Hugo Freer, Patentee of New Paltz, New Paltz, New York: Huguenot Historical Society, 1968.

Finding my Freer ancestors was and still is a big deal for me - it has anchored my already strong roots in the Hudson Valley region of New York. I have since become a member of the Huguenot Historical Society and make a visit to New Paltz whenever I make a trip home to see my mother.

5. Poucher, J. W., Byron J. Terwilliger, and Ruth P. Heidgerd, eds. Old Gravestones of Ulster County. Boston: Higginson Book Company, 1998.

This book contains over 22,000 inscriptions gathered from many cemetery surveys of Ulster County. A real gem!

6. National Society, Daughters of the American Revolution, Lineage Books of the Charter Members of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Vol. I-CLII (152), Washington, D.C., 1899-1938.

I know I don't have room for all 152 volumes so thankfully this entire series can be accessed via Ancestry.com

7. Reynolds, Cuyler, Hudson and Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs, New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1911.

Along with any book by Jonathan Pearson, Cuyler Reynolds' works remain some of the most authoratative materials for research in upstate New York.

8. Pearson, Jonathan, Contributions for the Genealogies of the Descendants of the First Settlers of the Patent and City of Schenectady, from 1662 to 1800, Albany, New York: J. Munsell, 1873.

Jonathan Pearson spent years researching the Dutch family lines that settled Albany and Schenectady. If you have New York Dutch roots, you must know Mr. Pearson.

9. Hoes, Roswell R. Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York, 1660-1809. Boston: Clearfield Company, 1997.

Another great contributor to New York Dutch research!

10.  Mills, Elizabeth S., Evidence Explained: Citing History Sources from Artifacts to Cyberspace. Boston: Genealogical Company, Incorporated, 2007.

I have followed the recommendations of several esteemed genea-bloggers and bought this book on Amazon a few weeks ago.  It has been invaluable!  I just wish this came in either a website format (how neat would it be to be able to enter your source title, select the type of evidence and have it spit out a pre-formatted citation? Note to E.S. Mills: build it and they will come - and pay for the privilege!)

So there you have it - a mix of everything!  Also, I want to give props out to a new website/tool I discovered that creates a bibliography for you.  It is called EasyBib: The Free Automatic Bibliography Composer - MLA and APA formatting.  I was able to enter in the ISBN number on a variety of books, press a button and there appeared an instantly formatted citation - proper and everything.  Check it out!

Geni - Facebook for Ancestors?



With all the news about Footnote's Footnote Pages™ last week, many of us went to find the ready-to-customize pages and try out the new feature.  I was one of them and gave a preliminary report - I will have a more in-depth posting later this week.

One reader commented that Footnote Pages™ seemed like Facebook® for Ancestors.  I thought a bit about that and came to the conclusion that Geni, which bills itself as "a collaborative environment where multiple family members can work together to build, share, and preserve a rich family history," is more akin to Facebook® than Footnote's new feature.  Here's why:

- just one look at Geni and it is obvious that the interface mimics Facebook® and other social networking applications with all the bells and whistles.  "The Wall" is known as "Family News" on Geni.  You can send emails, post messages, post videos and photos, etc.




- the same details you enter when setting up an account (profile picture, interests, schools, etc.) can be entered for your ancestors

- Geni shows the relationships between your ancestor and others in your family tree - sort of like the Friends feature in Facebook®




And with all this Geni make it relatively easy to import a GEDCOM file with all your family tree info so that all that is necessary is further customization of pages.

If you haven't had a chance to check out Geni yet, take time to wander around and upload a GEDCOM file. I am hoping to spend more time on my Geni trees this week and then see if I can convince some of my living relatives to set up their own accounts and contribute information.


On This Date: September 15

Births

Winnie, Eunice (my 7th cousin 5 times removed)
- 1822

Marriages

Kenyon, Peter (my 8th great grand uncle) and Naomi Wells
- 1726

5th Edition of Smile for the Camera Posted!


Footnote Maven has created a massively sweeping up-do with the latest version of Smile for the Camera posted over at Shades Of The Departed.  Entitled Crowning Glory, this 5th edition of one of my favorite carnivals has every type of hairdo and hairdon't possible.  Stop on by!

Sunday, September 14, 2008

On This Date: September 14

Births

Everett, Hannah (my 7th great grand aunt)
- 1670, Dedham, Massachusetts

Fonda, Rachel (my 4th cousin 8 times removed)
- 1748

Smith, Jane (my 5th cousin 5 times removed)
- 1801, Marbletown, New York

McEntee, Charles (my 3rd great grand uncle)
- 1806, Western, New York

Matteson, Estella M. (my 8th cousin 4 times removed0
- 1869, DeKalb, New York

Marriages

Dodds, John and Cathalyntje Schermerhorn
 (my 3rd cousin 9 times removed) - 1745

Putman, Abraham and Elizabeth Campbell
 (my 5th cousing 7 times removed) - 1807, Caughnawaga, New York




Do You Think An Article Entitled "Geneablog" Belongs On Wikipedia?

Some of you may not know, but as an evangelist for the geneablogger community, I look into different ways to make sure that those in the blogosphere and beyond understand what genea-blogging is and why we as a community think it is so important to genealogy.

One recent effort, akin to Sysiphus and the Rock, has been an attempt to have an article entitled "Geneablog" included in Wikipedia.  In addition, I have tried to add a link to the article under the main Blog article but it has been repeatedly removed.  In addition, I have tried to add the same link to the Genealogy article to no avail.

Before you read the offending article below, and my Discussion and attempts to make a strong argument for keeping the article, please go over to Wikipedia and weigh in on the discussion page.  You will need to create a login account if you don't already have one.  It bothers me that any group, period, should have to fight for recognition.  For a long time I truly felt that Wikipedia was more than some experiment in collaboration - that it was means of building a truly democratic encyclopedia and reference source.

For now, I have my doubts as to whether or not I want to keep using Wikipedia as a link within my posts when trying to define terms and concepts.  And whether I feel they are worthy of such traffic being sent their way.

Article

Geneablog

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

geneablog is a blog written by someone with an interest in genealogy and family history. Geneablog authors are often researching their own family history and blog about their research projects, aspects of their family history, requests for assistance in resolving elusive ancestors and other challenges. Some genealog authors are professional genealogists documenting their services but also their research projects, both personal and professional.

Many geneablogs are specifically focused on certain areas of genealogy such as specific ethnicities (Jewish genealogy, Polish genealogy, Canadian genealogy), time periods (Colonial America), or topics (technology, photography, oral history).



Discussion

Talk:Geneablog

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I guess I will need to make an extensive argument for non-deletion of this page entitled geneablog.

First, I am not sure what you mean by this:

"A page you created, geneablog, has been marked for discussion at Articles for Deletion, because it is a neologism with little notability."

Frankly I think that I and the rest of the genea-blogger community know what this means but I'd prefer that you say it in plain english and in a way that demonstrates that Wikipedia truly is "The Free Encyclopedia" and not some secret society of critics and elitists who feel that certain concepts or trends are not important, notable, or worthy of mention.

The argument:

- Wikipedia already has set precedent in the inclusion of the page edublog as a standalone page and as a See Also section under blog. Quite frankly, I never heard of an edublog until I read the section underblog.

- In addition, Wikipedia also has a section entitled house blog in the same blog page. It strikes me that the lead-in statement "A house blog is a Blog created with the sole intent of using it to share and chronicle a home improvement or renovation process" could serve as a model statement for geneablogwhich is already in place on the page you feel the need to delete: "A geneablog is a blog written by someone with an interest in genealogy and family history. Geneablog authors are often researching their own family history and blog about their research projects, aspects of their family history, requests for assistance in resolving elusive ancestors and other challenges. Some genealog authors are professional genealogists documenting their services but also their research projects, both personal and professional."

- Geneablogging is the same type of chronicling yet it has many more features and capabilities than anedublog and definitely more than a house blog. As a geneablog author I chronicle not only my research along my family lines, which are quite extensive and go back 10+ generations, but the mere placement of those surnames and given names in a blog enable others in the blogosphere and on search engines to connect with their own pasts. I know who these ancestors are and granted it may be quite a bit of work for me to enter their information in the form of ancestor biographies, family history stories, and other formats, but I do so not to show off my own feathers, but so that I may connect with family members and far-flung cousins. And I do so in order to encourage others to take a look at their own family history, their roots and ponder the question, "where did I come from."

- I also don't understand why the link to geneablog in the See Also section for blog was eliminated unless it was a further means of isolating the geneablog page, orphaning it into a stub, and seeking its early demise through eventual deletion.

- Enough with the questionable practices of Wikipedia monitors who seem hell bent on crafting a certain vision of topics with a criteria known only to them, and perhaps the others that might live in their mother's basement. Let's move on to the real evidence of a genea-blogger community in the blogosphere:

- those who manage, author and host geneablogs, known as geneabloggers, constitute a growing community in several social networking environments, the largest being Facebook. Seehttp://groups.to/genea-bloggers/.

- there are currently over 200 geneablogs out in the blogosphere and perhaps more. I did have several of them listed as links on a page that was quickly deleted (and why a page of links to edublogs was not deleted? hmmmmm) here on Wikipedia and I am not going to waste my time entering all the names and links again. You'll just need to find the links yourself. Suffice it to say, some of the more "notable" geneablogs are:

Creative Gene
Moultrie Creek
Footnote Maven
Geneamusings
Hill Country of Monroe County, Misissippi
AnceStories: The Stories of My Ancestors
The California Genealogical Society blog

- the site Alltop which lists some of the top blogs in the blogosphere has included a genealogy category with over 90 geneablogs related to family history and genealogy (http://genealogy.alltop.com)

- Blog Action Day 08 (http://www.blogactionday.org/) coming up on October 15, 2008 so far has 4,035 blogs registered to participate. I was able to convince Collis Ta’eed, the event organizer to include a genealogy category to parse out the geneablogs from the history section.

- Google currently carries 565,000 results for the search "genealogy blog" and 24,700 results for "geneablog."

- I would wager to say that geneablogs have been around since the start of blogging since blogging is the perfect vehicle for sharing one's research with other like minded genealogists and family historians.

I'll get off my soap box and end my Julia Sugarbaker moment now and I apologize if I seem overly passionate or antagonistic. This has been a very rewarding week for geneabloggers despite their treatment by Wikipedia: we've seen great growth in our numbers, increased social networking and collaboration among our members, and we have a greater sense of purpose than ever. Geneabloggers have often been seen as the ugly red-headed step-children of the genealogy community, with several so-called experts even going so far as to toss the term "pajama genealogists" our way. While we continue to deal with that sort of treatment from our own community, I'm not sure taking on Wikipedia is worth the effort, quite frankly. We'll just come back in a year and perhaps the term "geneablog" will be more acceptable and pleasing in someone's sight.