Central New York Research. The eclectic ramblings of doing genealogy and growing up in that part of Upstate New York that is the central and Finger Lakes regions. With ancestors all over the northeast and beyond, there will be forays outside the area with trips and news on family history as well as local history.
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
Wednesday, December 8, 2021
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
Wednesday, December 25, 2019
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
Thursday, November 21, 2019
Jefferson County Holiday Party
SUNDAY, 8 DECEMBER 2019
@ 2:00 – 4:00 PM
JCNYGS HOLIDAY PARTY
JCNYGS will have its annual holiday party at Greg and Tammy Plantz home at 21787 Reed Road, Watertown. Meat will be provided—guests are asked to bring a dish to pass.
Guests are also encouraged, although not required, to bring an unwrapped toy for the Toys for Tots Program.
Society members and their family and friends are invited and welcomed to attend—the more the merrier. Just let Kevin know the expected number of attendees.
RSVP kleesonmedia17@gmail.com or call Kevin at 315-286-3930 or private message Kevin Leeson of Redwood on Facebook before December 6th.
Thank you—we’ll see you there for a great time!!
Wednesday, December 26, 2018
Wednesday, December 19, 2018
Tuesday, November 20, 2018
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Wednesday, December 13, 2017
Monday, January 2, 2017
Saturday Challenge- Genealogy Presents
The Saturday Fun Challenge from Randy Seaver's GeneaMusings:
1) What gift
that you received for Christmas is your favorite for genealogy purposes? Book,
magazine, hardware, software, website subscription, research time, DNA test -
what was it, and how will it affect your genealogy research?
Well, I didn’t really receive anything for Christmas that
pertains to genealogy. In part, that is because I don’t really exchange
presents with anyone except my husband and we do just a few little things.
However I did receive a few things through the Christmas season that are wonderful
genealogical items!
First, my husband and I figured out what dates we will be
taking a trip in the spring. This trip is to NERGC (New England Regional
Genealogical Conference) in Springfield, Massachusetts. Our registrations are
in for the conference and we have our hotel room booked. I think that might
count as a present? I’m excited to see everybody in New England that week and
to learn a few new things as well. I have many ancestors in New England and
enjoy researching that area, so there will be various classes related to
specific places that I will be aiming to get to. Additionally, there is a
Writing Track at the conference that I expect to take full advantage of.
There are a couple books that I got on Christmas Eve that
might be considered genealogy as well. Both of them weren’t actual presents,
but items that were in my late mother’s house.
The first is something that she has kept careful care of
since 1970 when her mother died. It is a Bible that my Grandma owned and that
was presented to her in her Sunday School class in the Church of Ireland. This
Bible, originally received by Alice V. Jennings Wooster in 1905 won’t help my
genealogy. I have already looked through it carefully to extract any data it
might contain of a genealogical nature years ago. However, it is a tangible
item of the only grandmother I was lucky enough to know.
The second book is a cookbook from 1950. The Levanna
Community Church in southern Cayuga County, New York compiled it. This is a
typical church or community cookbook that was compiled by the members of that
group and sold presumably as a fundraiser. I noted that it was produced by a
mimeograph machine in the Sherwood High School, which has long since been
condensed into the bigger, consolidated school district of Southern Cayuga
Central Schools. Flipping through the pages, many of the names are familiar to
me. A few of them belong to people that are various degrees of cousins of mine. Again, this book
will do nothing to expand my genealogy research. However, the recipes are
representative of that area in that time period. An area very near (a few miles
of) where my direct ancestors lived; written by contemporaries of them, that
were relatives, friends, neighbors or all of the above. Are these not the
recipes my grandmother and mother would have been cooking with or very close to
them? I do already have many of my mother’s recipes, but they are mostly of a
later time period. These are, of course, from before there were so many
convenience foods available. They are what those recipes of hers evolved from.
It is nice to look through and maybe, make a few of the ones that most appeal
to us.
Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

















































