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 free access. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free access. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 28, 2021
Conference Keeper
Who has heard about Conference Keeper? For those who haven’t, it is time you got over to this website: https://conferencekeeper.org
It is the place to be! Having said that, I admit that I go there about once a week. Sometime after I get an email from them, I click on the conference link. I find it easier to go directly to the site, rather than reading the updates in the email. However, for some, they go to the site, subscribe to the weekly email then just read that rather than going back.
They state that it is their mission is to help individuals to increase their knowledge, skills, and enjoyment of genealogy. According to their own claims, and I’d easily believe it, they are the most complete calendar of genealogy events- anywhere.
Subscribe? Do I have to subscribe to something? Do I need to pay for this? No and no. It is a free website and the subscription is also free and optional. I find it helps as a reminder in my busy weeks that the site exists.
So, what is this site all about? It’s in the name. They “keep conferences.” That is they keep track of conferences going on in the genealogy world. There is a listing of conferences from all over that are coming up. Many of them are US-based, but there are ones in different countries around the world as well.
Each listing will tell you if the conference is virtual or in-person or both. Also, if there is a fee, a $ sign will appear. There is a title of the conference and a brief blurb telling you a little about that particular conference. Click on the title of the conference and you will be taken to a web page by the organization with even more information and a chance to register for that event (if you need to, of course).
There are links to look at conferences in different ways. You can see just Virtual conferences, for example, or by area.
There is so much more available as well!
Are you a speaker looking for new conferences? They have a call for papers section as well. For those unfamiliar with this phrase, many conferences send out a call for papers when they are planning a conference. Potential speakers then submit their proposal for a talk and a committee selects the ones they feel are the best fit and contribute good variety for their conference. Often the proposal is an outline of the talk with a blurb about it and sometimes as far as the handouts that participants see in the syllabus. Although almost always the syllabus pages are done long after the speaker has been accepted and closer to the time of the event.
Looking for educational opportunities? There is a page where I counted 18 different institutes and other long-term educational opportunities. These are the ones that go more in-depth than a speaker at a conference can do. Of course, they cost money. Want to take advantage of these programs, but can’t afford to? There’s also a page of grants and scholarships that might be able to help you out. Both years that I attended IGHR, I had a scholarship that helped me with the expenses. I forget how much the first one was, the second covered my tuition and allowed me to register ahead of time, thus securing the class I wanted. Classes at institutes fill up fast and it is sometimes hard to get into the one you really want to take.
There are Volunteer opportunities if you have some extra time on your hands. Also, podcasts that you can listen to whenever you have a few minutes. Good at genealogy but need a job? Conference Keeper even has a page of job opportunities in genealogy available.
Yearn to travel with genealogy? There’s a category of Travel, Tours, and Cruises. Although I think I’d hold off on that aspect until COVID is over, it never hurts to dream!
As you can see, there is much to Conference Keeper and a website that you really need to check out. I just skimmed over the various offerings and I’m sure I missed something. In fact, before writing this column, I didn’t realize some of the pages that are available myself!
Tuesday, November 16, 2021
Geneanet
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Actually from the Family History Center in Salt Lake |
Geneanet, a company founded in France in 1996, was recently acquired by Ancestry. The agreement was announced in a press release of August 31, 2021. Originally Geneanet was called LPF, an acronym (in French) for list of surnames for France. It will remain an independent company within Ancestry’s portfolio of companies that it owns. We all know about Ancestry with over 30 billion in over 80 countries, but who or what is Geneanet? To quote Ancestry:
“With a large and growing European community of more than 4 million members, Geneanet is available in ten languages and more than 25 countries. Combining Geneanet's free family tree platform and engaged community with Ancestry’s global subscriber base and unparalleled historical records will enable family history discoveries and connections for even more people around the world.”
To quote from Geneanet themselves:
“Geneanet is the largest community of genealogists involved in mutual aid and sharing in Continental Europe. It’s a website with almost 7 billion of data provided by members, collaborative projects, and partners.
The contributive side is about family trees and attached documents (family pictures, archival records, etc.). These are 1.3 million family trees and almost 1.4 billion individuals.
The collaborative side is about projects supported by Geneanet like pictures of graves and cemeteries all around the world (“Save our Graves”), indexes, and registers (parish, notarial, military, and other archives).”
In other words, Geneanet is a database search site similar to FamilySearch, Ancestry, MyHeritage, Fold3, and all the others. Only, their information concentrates on France and much of the rest of Europe. It could be a valuable resource for anybody doing research on their ancestors in Europe, not only France where it started.
Of course, for many of us, cost is a definite factor. We only have so many dollars to spend on resources at a time. The beauty of this site is that basic access costs nothing more than registering with the site. In other words, free! A premium access package is available for $12.50 for 3 months. From what I’ve heard that would be of value for people with ancestors in France, itself, rather than other countries. This also gives you added features such as customization, alert tools, and printing from the website.
Besides searching the family trees available on the site, you can also enter information on your own trees or upload GEDcoms of those trees. This might be handy for people looking to store and make available their research on European families. A French researcher can be hired under “Ask An Expert” for $45 per request.
It has been noted by some that a lot of their free content is available also at FamilySearch and Internet Archives.
So how do you get to it? Their site is located at: geneanet.org, or of course, you can just google it.
There seems to be some advantages to this site although, it is a lot of family trees and information that can be found elsewhere. Of course, it is helpful to have stuff on one area or country all gathered together in one place to look through. I’m sure the value of the site will vary from person to person.
I have not tried it out myself as I don’t have many French ancestors. I have a few Huguenots, and one who reportedly changed his name somewhere between France and here at about the time of The French Revolution. I should find the time at some point, to check them out on this site and see what more information I can find. I hope others who have more French ancestors and who are researching them more than I am mine, will check this site out and let us know a little more about it, especially now that Ancestry has acquired it as I’m sure it will start growing under they patronage.
Thursday, June 4, 2020
Thursday, June 13, 2019
New Free Historical Records on FamilySearch: Week of 10 June 2019
SALT LAKE CITY, UT—FamilySearch added new, free, historical recordsSearch these new records and images by clicking on the collection links below, or go to FamilySearch to search over 8 billion free names and record images.
FamilySearch is the largest genealogy organization in the world. FamilySearch is a nonprofit, volunteer-driven organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Millions of people use FamilySearch records, resources, and services to learn more about their family history. To help in this great pursuit, FamilySearch and its predecessors have been actively gathering, preserving, and sharing genealogical records worldwide for over 100 years. Patrons may access FamilySearch services and resources for free at FamilySearch.org or through more than 5,000 family history centers in 129 countries, including the main Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Thursday, May 23, 2019
FamilySearch Celebrates 20 Years
FamilySearch Celebrates 20 Years Online
On May 24, 1999, FamilySearch.org took the online genealogy world by storm, offering free access to hundreds of millions of historical records online—a treasure for those seeking to make family history connections. For perspective, online broadcast news, e-trading, and downloadable music services were the rage at the time. Google, ranked 93rd of top websites, was still an up-and-coming service that was attempting to redefine the role of a search engine by indexing the web to make results junk free and more consumer relevant.
At FamilySearch.org, searching historical records for new discoveries continues to be a big interest for site visitors. Millions of new customers grace its portal each year, looking for new family connections. And for good reason. The site now boasts over 7 billion searchable names and over 3 billion searchable images of historical records. And it adds more than 300 million new historical records and images yearly from archives worldwide.
The website has expanded its free offerings since its grand opening two decades ago. Patrons have added 1.4 billion ancestors to the site's robust, collaborative family tree. And the tree is integrated with two powerful mobile apps. You can preserve family photos and create audio files that help tell your family’s stories. The website also features an impressive inventory of very useful help services, like how to make sense of DNA test results, and it’s all still free.
Randy Bryson, now retired, was a FamilySearch IT director when the site was launched in 1999. He fondly recalls the big day. He said that the site was so wildly successful that it constituted 10 percent of all internet traffic at the time and was a top 10 website based on the amount of data it was hosting (20 terabytes). “Traffic on the site was so extreme at the time of the launch that we had to limit user access to 30 minutes at a time,” said Bryson. “The amazing thing was that people didn’t go away. When they were timed out, they would just log right back in to finish their search.”
Today the site is nimble and quick. Bryson said he was moved by the amazing gratitude of the site’s users. “It was very overwhelming, emotional, and gratifying” to see people able to easily access records of their ancestors conveniently online from their homes.
Steve Rockwood, FamilySearch CEO, is not surprised by the continued popularity of the website. He said, “When individuals discover more about their family history or make new family connections, it changes them. They see and treat each other differently.” Rockwood said that future services under development on the website will create more of these fun discovery experiences worldwide for site visitors.
FamilySearch.org continues to enjoy impressive growth today, adding over 50,000 new subscribers weekly and hundreds of millions of new family photos, documents, stories, and historical records yearly from contributors and archives around the world.
See what has changed and make new family connections in your family tree for free at FamilySearch.org.
RELATED
FamilySearch.org Facts
What’s Coming from FamilySearch in 2019
FamilySearch 2018 in Review
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Thursday, May 16, 2019
FamilySearch Records
New Free Historical Records on FamilySearch: Week of May 13, 2019
Search these new records and images by clicking on the collection links below, or go to FamilySearch to search over 8 billion free names and record images.
FamilySearch is the largest genealogy organization in the world. FamilySearch is a nonprofit, volunteer-driven organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Millions of people use FamilySearch records, resources, and services to learn more about their family history. To help in this great pursuit, FamilySearch and its predecessors have been actively gathering, preserving, and sharing genealogical records worldwide for over 100 years. Patrons may access FamilySearch services and resources for free at FamilySearch.org or through more than 5,000 family history centers in 129 countries, including the main Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Tuesday, May 7, 2019
FamilySearch New Records
New Free Historical Records on FamilySearch: Week of May 6, 2019
SALT LAKE CITY, UT (7 May 2019)—FamilySearch added new, free, historical recordsSearch these new records and images by clicking on the collection links below, or go to FamilySearch to search over 8 billion free names and record images.
Country
|
Collection
|
Indexed Records
|
Digital Images
|
Comments
|
Brazil
|
Brazil, São Paulo, Civil Registration, 1925-1995 |
1,848,685
|
0
|
New indexed records collection
|
Canada
|
Canada, Nova Scotia, Records of Aliens pre-examined at Halifax, 1923-1933 |
16,175
|
0
|
New indexed records collection
|
England
|
England, Northamptonshire, Non-conformist Records, 1840-1894 |
3,020
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
Peru
|
Peru, Lima, Civil Registration, 1874-1996 |
123,377
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
Poland
|
Poland, Radom Roman Catholic Church Books, 1587-1966 |
13,835
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
Scotland
|
Scotland Census, 1901 |
4,437,987
|
0
|
New indexed records collection
|
South Africa
|
South Africa, Pietermaritzburg Estate Files 1846-1950 |
1,547
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
United States
|
Alabama, Southern Claims Commission Approved Claims, 1871-1880 |
5,248
|
0
|
New indexed records collection
|
United States
|
Alabama, World War I Service Cards, 1917-1919 |
1,058
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
United States
|
Alaska, Pioneer Home discharge index, 1913-1958 |
3,973
|
0
|
New indexed records collection
|
United States
|
Alaska, Vital Records, 1816-1959 |
0
|
92
|
Added images to an existing collection
|
United States
|
California, Pioneer Migration Index, Compiled 1906-1935 |
241
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
United States
|
Delaware, World War I Servicemen Records, 1917-1919 |
5
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
United States
|
Mississippi, World War I Service Cards, 1917-1919 |
528
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
United States
|
Ohio, World War I, Enrollment Cards, 1914-1918 |
230,784
|
0
|
New indexed records collection
|
United States
|
Texas, El Paso Alien Arrivals, 1909-1924 |
6,722
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
United States
|
United States Confederate Officers Card Index, 1861-1865 |
104,563
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
United States
|
United States, Florida, Index to Alien Arrivals by Airplane at Miami, 1930-1942 |
183
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
United States
|
United States, Native American, Eastern Cherokee Indian Reservation Rolls, 1848-1970 |
9
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
United States
|
Utah, World War II Index to Army Veterans of Utah, 1939-1945 |
42,317
|
0
|
New indexed records collection
|
United States
|
Washington, Pierce County Marriage Returns, 1891-1938 |
378
|
0
|
Added indexed records to an existing collection
|
Other
|
BillionGraves Index |
338,467
|
338,467
|
Added indexed records and images to an existing collection
|
FamilySearch is the largest genealogy organization in the world. FamilySearch is a nonprofit, volunteer-driven organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Millions of people use FamilySearch records, resources, and services to learn more about their family history. To help in this great pursuit, FamilySearch and its predecessors have been actively gathering, preserving, and sharing genealogical records worldwide for over 100 years. Patrons may access FamilySearch services and resources for free at FamilySearch.org or through more than 5,000 family history centers in 129 countries, including the main Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.
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