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.
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Central NY Genealogical Society Spring Meetings
We
are pleased to announce our upcoming two-part program meeting
on Saturday, March
18, 2017 from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. The start times are
approximate.
1:15 – 3:15 p.m. “The Military Tract – Revolutionary War
Bounty Land in Central
New
York”
- Skip Duett
New York
State awarded New
York Revolutionary War soldiers bounty land in the Military
Tract in Central
New York. Comprising 1,680,000 acres, it covered all of the
present day
counties of Onondaga, Cortland, Cayuga, and Seneca, as well as
parts of Oswego,
Tompkins, Schuyler, and Wayne counties. This military bounty
land opened up
Central New York to white settlement and left an enduring
system of land
designation that survives today. Your New York Revolutionary
War soldier may be
identified in Military Tract documents. Understanding New York
State bounty
lands can help you make sense of land transactions in the
region, regardless of
when your ancestors lived there.
3:15
– 4:00 p.m. A
Brick Wall Roundtable
Discussion
A brick wall roundtable discussion
with Skip Duett,
Janeen Bjork and CNYGS members will follow Mr. Duett’s
presentation. “Breaking
through Brick Walls, One Brick at a Time.” will be presented
by Janeen Bjork.
Janeen will give a quick lesson on OCR (optical character
recognition), the
technology that allows scanned newspapers to be indexed and
searched online.
You will learn how to get around the limitations of OCR to
unearth hard-to-find
items. Janeen will share the methods she used to break through
the brick walls
for her toughest genealogy commission - multiple generations
of O'Briens,
starting out in County Cork, Ireland and continuing to Monroe,
Orleans and
Onondaga counties.
Mark your
calendars for our Full-Day
Conference on April 22, 2017. Pamela Vittorio, APG, will
present a variety
of topics.
9:00 -
10:30 a.m. - Bust
Walls or Break Ground: Tips & Techniques for Solving
Genealogical Problems
in the mid-1800s
10:30 a.m.
- 12:00 p.m. - Early
Irish Immigrants to Canada & the U.S.: The Peter
Robinson Settlers (1823
& 1825)
12:00 -
1:15 p.m. - Lunch:
bring your own, or visit a local restaurant.
1:15 - 2:45
p.m. - The
U.S. Sanitary Records: Tracing Women's Roles During the
Civil War
2:45 - 4:00
p.m. - Was
Your (Great) Grandma a Suffragette? Records for the Women's
Rights Movement:
1848-1920
For
the latest news on our 2017 programs, including any venue and
parking changes,
please check our website:
You
can also find CNYGS updates on Facebook:
Note: Members attend for free; guests pay $5 (half day) on March 18th; guests pay $15 (full day) on April 22nd; If interested the best option is to apply for annual membership
Monday, March 13, 2017
Saturday Challenge: Your Middle Name
From GeneaMusings: Here is your assignment if you
choose to play along (cue the Mission Impossible music):
Mission Impossible? This one is super easy!
1) What is your middle name? Do you know why your parents gave it to you?
1) What is your middle name? Do you know why your parents gave it to you?
Alice
Why? Maybe because…:
![]() |
Mom- Alice Adelle (Wooster) Ward 1924-2016 |
![]() |
Grandma- Alice Valentine (Jennings) Wooster 1893-1970 |
Maybe there's a reason in there. Their middle names are slightly less obvious. Mom was given the name of her father's favorite aunt. Grandma didn't have a middle name, but as an adult assumed one as a tribute to her birthdate of February 14th.
2) Do you have
ancestors with your middle name as part of their name?
There
are many assorted relatives with this name. It was a fairly common girls name
with English speakers for many, many decades. Although there are no other close relatives with this name, I find them scattered throughout the family trees so it is definitely not an unusual name.
Friday, March 10, 2017
Find My Past free Offer!
The luck of the Irish! Find My Past has databases available for free this coming week. Here is the information in the announcement I copied from their website: https://blog.findmypast.com/free-irish-records-2308952595.html
A-Z of Irish records on Findmypast
From there you can browse through all of the record collections that
are free and click into any you'd like to search. Highlights of our
Irish collection include:
Complete your details and register for free
Select 'Search all records' at the top of the drop-down menu
This will bring you to the general search page. In order to search the
free Irish records, your search location must be focused on Ireland
only. Make sure the country on the drop down menu on the top or left
hand side of the screen is set to Ireland.
The Ireland records search screen
Fill in the search form with any details you know about your Irish
ancestors and click the blue 'Search Ireland records' button.
Find the Irish ancestors who make you, you
From March 13-17 2017, you can access the largest collection of Irish records online for FREE. Unique records from World War 1 and the Easter Rising, extensive travel and migration collections, as well as detailed Irish court and prison registers are all available to help you add colour to your discoveries. Sign up today, and start your search straightaway.All of Findmypast's Irish records are FREE to access from 13-17 March 2017.
To celebrate St. Patrick's Day, and the fact that we are unrivalled when it comes to Irish family history resources, we're making all of our Irish records FREE from Monday 13 - Friday 17 March 2017.Free access will begin at 9am (GMT) on 13 March and end at 11.59pm (GMT) on 17 MarchDuring this time you can enjoy all 116 million of Findmypast's Irish records (the largest collection anywhere online) completely free.
What is Included in the FREE Access?
The easiest way to see what is included in this special free access is to visit our A-Z of records and make sure Ireland is selected from the countries listed under 'Showing records from'.What is Not Included?
Our Irish Newspapers Collection is exempt from the free access. To explore the newspapers you'll need a suitable subscription. Find out more details on our payment page.How Do I Access the FREE Records?
From 13-17 March, you can take advantage of our free access to Irish records in 3 simple steps.1. Register or Sign-in
If you are not already registered with Findmypast, you'll need to do so in order to view the free records. Registering is free and only takes a few moments. Simply visit our registration page and complete your details to set up your Findmypast account. If you are already registered with Findmypast you can sign-in on that same page using your email address and password.2. Search Irish Records
To start searching our free Irish records, click 'Search' on the blue menu at the top of the site and select 'Search all records' from the drop-down list.3. View the Records
Once you've clicked search, you'll be taken to the search results page where records matching your criteria will be listed. You can edit your search or order the results from this screen. If you would like to view any of the free records click the small blue transcript or image icons beside it. The transcript is a typed version of the record, containing the most important information, while the image will show you exactly what the original record looked like and often contains extra details that the transcript doesn't.Wednesday, March 8, 2017
Almost Wordless Wednesday- Burnet Park Zoo
Tuesday, March 7, 2017
Saturday Challenge- Fearless Females Lunch Meeting
This weeks challenge from GeneaMusings:
1) This is March, the month for Fearless Females posts, started by Lisa Alzo of The Accidental Genealogist blog - see her Fearless Females blogging prompts for 2017 at http://www.theaccidentalgenealogist.com/2017/02/fearless-females-blogging-prompts.html.
1) This is March, the month for Fearless Females posts, started by Lisa Alzo of The Accidental Genealogist blog - see her Fearless Females blogging prompts for 2017 at http://www.theaccidentalgenealogist.com/2017/02/fearless-females-blogging-prompts.html.
2) Answer this question for March 16 (I've changed it a bit): If you could have lunch with any female family member (living or dead), or any famous female, who would it be and why? Where would you go? What would you talk about?
I can think of many different relatives I would like to have
lunch with. So many of these women led fascinating lives, but we don’t hear
much about them. Men were featured in the histories of our country, like those
of most other places. Meanwhile, the wives, mothers, sisters and daughters were hovering
in the background. They were overhearing snippets of conversation at those
political meetings. They were at the sidelines of battles, bandaging and caring
for the wounded or preparing food for the battle weary relatives. Or perhaps,
they were far away back home keeping “the home fires burning.” They were busy
with their day-to-day household tasks and taking care of the animals and fields
that the men away at war usually did.
Or perhaps not.
Perhaps they were quietly doing their own thing and leading
their own lives parallel, but separate from those of their husbands, fathers,
sons and brothers. That is part of the fascination of this topic and the
difficulty in choosing one woman that you would like to have lunch with. We
don’t know the details about many women’s lives and those details could be
quite fascinating. What to them was the dull boring daily work, is something
unique and special to us. Seeing how housework was done in “olden times” or
different skills such as blacksmithing, carpentry, barrel making and on and on
are the things that make up living history museums.
I tend to gravitate towards the “women’s work” type of
displays there. Although, some of them are things we think of as such, were
actually commonly done by men in certain time periods. Teachers, weavers and
tailors were often men. However, those skills were the same or similar to those
done by women in the home at that time as well. I enjoy seeing the kitchens in
such villages and how they went about preparing meals as well.
However, today, I am choosing a woman closer to our own time
period to sit down to a virtual lunch with. Today, I think I would like to sit
down with my Grandmother Ward. Frances Ellen Ingalls Ward (1889-1962) led a
life that probably wasn’t all that different from what we might lead today. I
“know her” and know about her from stories that my parents, brothers, aunts and
uncles have told me over the years. I never, though, got to meet her in person,
not even as a toddler. I think it would be fascinating to chat with her and get
to know her a little bit better in person.
I would like to hear about what it was like for her growing
up. She must have some interesting stories to tell. A few facts from those
years make me think there must be some. She lost her mother at a young age, her
baby sister died, her father remarried, and then a few years later they moved
from Jefferson to Cayuga counties in New York, what today is about a two hour
drive and would have definitely been longer then. These would have been
considered rather ordinary to her—she was certainly not alone in having these
events occur during her childhood. However, to me, I would like to hear what
happened in her words and how she felt. I can read facts and imagine what it
would have been like, but to hear her talk about these things and other events
that were important to her would be wonderful!
Where would we go? Wherever she wanted to. We might drive
around Cayuga County and see places she knew in her lifetime as they are now or
perhaps, visit Antwerp, the village near where she grew up. I’m sure Grandma
might want to see the house where she lived in North Wilna, but the site is now
part of a target range on Fort Drum and just cellar holes. For lunch, we would
stop somewhere at a family type restaurant or diner that she would like or
perhaps for some fast food. That would have been very much a novelty still for
her in her late years so perhaps she would enjoy doing that.
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
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