Saturday, April 25, 2020

Ten Things Genealogy


We had a great Zoom meeting on Monday.  It is so good to see your faces…and your smiles as, one by one, you saw all of us together on the screen.

Zoom is becoming so common and I am happy to be on the bandwagon.  I want to applaud the many local organizations that are providing opportunities by Zoom, especially the Bellingham BSAC, the YMCA, many spiritual centers, and genealogy groups all over the country.  If you need help with Zoom, contact us.  It will enrich your “stay at home”.

#1.  I especially honor the Skagit Valley Genealogy Society’s early adoption of Zoom.  I attended their Zoom learning session and two meetings in April.  On their May schedule is a brick wall meet-up on May 2 and their monthly speaker on evidence and citations on May 16.  Membership is required for Zoom meetings.  It is $15 per calendar year and can be paid online. See the Board Message on their home page at https://skagitvalleygenealogy.org/ plus the Meeting and Membership pages.

#2.  Our public libraries are open online digital media and even live programming.  For the live programming schedule in Whatcom County, go to their home page at https://www.wcls.org/. Click on the tiles “We’re Open Online” then “WCLS @ Home”.  Also the Ancestry.com library edition, usually only at the library, is now available at home.  Librarians are answering questions in chat and email.

#3.  MyHeritage: FREE ACCESS to over 250,000 US Yearbooks IN COLOR (link)! MyHeritage has colorized its entire U.S. Yearbook collection, and to celebrate this they are opening up FREE access to U.S. Yearbooks through May 23rd, 2020!  Ancestry.com also has free access to yearbooks through this Sunday, April 26 (tomorrow).

#4.  Family History Library has free webinars going on and FamilySearch.org has meet-ups on Facebook and Instagram every week.

#5.  US Census:  50% of people in the US have responded along with 56% of Washingtonians.  If you have not filed, don’t delay.  https://my2020census.gov/

#6.  April 25th is National DNA Day and the DNA Sales have started.  If you have already tested, consider testing strategic relatives who have not.  Thomas MacEntee has the best consolidated websites.  At dnabargains.com he has all the DNA companies with sales together.  At abundantgenealogy.com you can subscribe to a daily email in which he tries to balance free items and bargains.  He announces all the free webinars from familytreewebinars.com.  He keeps you informed about what you can do and what day it is (an important public service, if you ask me).

#7.  Have you heard the word “nibling”?  It’s a gender-neutral, quick way to say “nieces and nephews”.  Now we have siblings and niblings.  Niblings is not in the dictionary yet but definitely in common use.

#8.  Book:  The Lost Family; How DNA Testing Is Upending Who We Are is a new book and its author Libby Copeland is being interviewed on multiple podcasts, including Lisa Louise Cook’s Genealogy Gems, Extreme Genes, and my favorite, Research Like a Pro.  Libby wrote an in-depth article for the Washington Post a few years ago about an astonishing DNA surprise.  Quickly she received over 400 letters from people wanting to tell her their stories.  This was a book that needed to be written.  She weaves these stories throughout the chapters as she delves into the emotion, culture, history and business of DNA.  She aimed for it to be accessible by everyone, without DNA knowledge, and intentionally did not reveal the story in her interviews.

#9.  TV show:  Roots Less Traveled is half-hour show currently airing on NBC on Sundays at 4:00 PM.  The host travels with two family members to a location where they have family history.  The first show featured DNA half siblings in Mexico City, second show was a grandfather-grandson who went to Montana, and third is a mother-son who went to Tennessee.  The last pair learned about a slave ancestor who was set free and awarded land in his slaveholder’s will around 1840.  The former slave was sued by the children and it became an important case in the Tennessee Supreme Court.  The show is kind of fun and illustrates the stories regular people can find about their ancestors.

#10.  TV Show:  The Genetic Detective will be coming May 19 on ABC at 10 PM ET.  It follows CeCe Moore on genetic crime cases.  When CeCe did TV work in the past, she complained that most of her scenes were left on the cutting room floor.  It left me feeling unsatisfied about how they did the DNA research.  Now CeCe is the producer and the star and we are set to see more about the DNA in this show.
 

Some Non-Genealogy News
An orangutan named Sandra at the Florida’s Center for Great Apes observed her handlers and started washing her hands.  Ha, ha.

You have to read to the end.  You never know what you will find. 

Best wishes until we meet again.  Judith

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