Showing posts with label Genealogy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genealogy. Show all posts

Sunday, January 5, 2014

"Down East" Stock Yields High Family Tree Dividend

So I took Randy Seaver's Saturday Night Genealogy Fun challenge last night. The whole idea is that, going back 10 generations, you have 1023 direct line ancestors. If you estimate that an average generation is 25 years, ancestors in your 10th generation were born roughly 300 years ago. That's pretty awesome!!  How did I do? Well, needless to say, it sure helps to have well-documented New England and Canadian roots. I scored a whopping 84%!!




Looks like I have plenty of blog fodder for the foreseeable future. Now, all I have to do is find the time. Come on RETIREMENT !!




Thursday, October 31, 2013

A Poem for Halloween ~ My Contribution for Bill West's 2013 "Great American Local Poem Genealogy Challenge"


I am more than pleased to participate for the first time in Bill West's Fifth Annual Great American Local Poem Genealogy Challenge. To find links to each of the blogs that are taking part in the challenge this year, tune in to Bill's blog, West In New England on Thanksgiving Day, November 27, 2013.


For Bill's challenge I chose a poem about Nova Scotia (my maternal ancestral home) and about death. This poem, by renowned American poet Elizabeth Bishop, elicits a variety of emotions for me, from the poignant subject (the death of a child) to the stark isolation of Nova Scotia itself.

As family historians, we are often drawn into the events surrounding death and dying. In so doing, we feel compelled to document "the where and the when," while the human need to understand "the why" is ever present in our subconscious.

Bishop was born more than 100 years ago in Massachusetts. However, it was not America that formed her. After the death of her father, the 3-year old Elizabeth was taken to Great Village, Nova Scotia, where she stayed with her grandmother. Nova Scotia is the setting of many of her best poems.

In "First Death in Nova Scotia," she remembers a cousin's body laid out in the parlor, his loss of color and detail dissolving him into the snow outside. 

From Elizabeth Bishop's Questions of Travel (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1956), here is:


First Death in Nova Scotia

In the cold, cold parlor 
my mother laid out Arthur 
beneath the chromographs: 
Edward, Prince of Wales, 
with Princess Alexandra, 
and King George with Queen Mary. 
Below them on the table 
stood a stuffed loon 
shot and stuffed by Uncle 
Arthur, Arthur's father. 

Since Uncle Arthur fired 
a bullet into him, 
he hadn't said a word. 
He kept his own counsel 
on his white, frozen lake, 
the marble-topped table. 
His breast was deep and white, 
cold and caressable; 
his eyes were red glass, 
much to be desired. 

"Come," said my mother, 
"Come and say good-bye 
to your little cousin Arthur." 
I was lifted up and given 
one lily of the valley 
to put in Arthur's hand. 
Arthur's coffin was 
a little frosted cake, 
and the red-eyed loon eyed it 
from his white, frozen lake. 

Arthur was very small. 
He was all white, like a doll 
that hadn't been painted yet. 
Jack Frost had started to paint him 
the way he always painted 
the Maple Leaf (Forever). 
He had just begun on his hair, 
a few red strokes, and then 
Jack Frost had dropped the brush 
and left him white, forever. 

The gracious royal couples 
were warm in red and ermine; 
their feet were well wrapped up 
in the ladies' ermine trains. 

They invited Arthur to be 
the smallest page at court. 
But how could Arthur go, 
clutching his tiny lily, 
with his eyes shut up so tight 
and the roads deep in snow? 


Where I discovered this poem:

Dedication

Little Peter's Grave, Pembroke Cemetery,
 Colchester Co., Nova Scotia


Peter Suther Hamilton

Born 4 February 1945
Upper Stewiacke, Colchester County, Nova Scotia

Died 6 September 1946
of Croup
19 months old

Sunday, July 28, 2013

A Blogoversary Road Trip



Today marks the 4th Blogoversary of Digging Down East. Thanks to all my faithful readers over the past four years for indulging my passion for documenting, recording, and writing about my family.

As you read this, I am on my way down east for my annual vacation/research trip. I'm looking forward to spending some much needed quality time with my wonderful mom (and research assistant extraordinaire).

I'll visit the usual spots where my Maine and New Hampshire ancestors lived, including Bridgton, Harrison, Portland, South Portland, Whitefield, Cape Elizabeth, Scarborough, and Gorham, as well as the Maine State Archives in Augusta.

I'm looking forward to meeting the great folks I've met online from the Greater Portland Chapter of the Maine Genealogical Society, and will join them for a wonderful House Island tour on Casco Bay.

The highlight of this past year of blogging was hearing from Gary and Deb LeMons, complete strangers, who had found a 1930 Portland High School ring belonging to my Great Aunt Flora Parsons. If you missed it, you can read it here.

As my fifth year of genea-blogging begins, another complete stranger, Arthur Brooks, Jr., has contacted me because my cousin Mary Arletta Curran was his dad's birth mother, at the tender age of 15!


Hang On...It Promises To Be an Exciting Ride!






photo credit: x-ray delta one via photopin cc


Friday, April 5, 2013

13 Ways to Tell Your Ancestor Stories ~ A Review

Have you ever been within earshot of an elder member of your family who is regaling days gone by, or wistfully reminiscing about "the good 'ole days?" Were you one of those kids, like me, who liked to "draw the old folks out," perhaps testing their memories, and smiling as they enjoyed sharing their tales with you?

Perhaps you are the glad recipient of a precious family heirloom or two, or, like me, find yourselves digging through boxes of loose pictures and scrapbooks, knowing there is a story behind each one.

If you have enjoyed reading about my family history here, and have said to yourself, "Someday, I really need to find the time to ask Mom or Dad about our family," then I have the perfect resource for you!

After four years, Dr. Bill (William L.) Smith has updated his original how-to book, 13 Ways to Tell Your Ancestor Stories, and has released the second edition.

Do you have family history and ancestor stories collected and researched? Do you want to share them and tell your stories, but don't know how or what venue to use? This book has your answer.

Preservation and interpretation of your ancestor stories will occur most effectively if you use multiple approaches to telling your ancestor stories to your family and interested others. Showing you how to do this is the purpose of this book.

The content of you telling of ancestor stories includes your life as well as the lives of your two parents, four grandparents, eight great-grandparents, sixteen great-great grandparents, etc., and their siblings, aunts, uncles and cousins. Ancestor stories include the social context in which these folks lived, their clothes, their farms or ranches, their religion (or not), their occupations, their loves and antagonisms, their education (or not), their friends and neighbors, and the mundane details of their daily lives.

13 sections suggest a variety of ways to tell your ancestor stories; each section has a Planning Worksheet to assist you in doing it most effectively.

Dr. Bill describes in clear language the 13 most effective tools for telling your stories, some of which you may have some familiarity with, like a blog, website, or wiki, as well as others which may be new to you, like podcasts, videos, and oral performance.

While the currency of his tools is unquestionable, it is only matched by his imaginative suggestions on how to utilize these tools to the best advantage. In addition, he promotes "mixing it up", varying your presentation style/tool, as a way of aiming for different audiences.  At the same, he doesn't tell you how to accomplish your goal of preserving and interpreting your stories; he simply points you in a wide variety of directions, prompts you to think about each approach's strengths and weaknesses, and gives you plenty of space to clear the cobwebs, and create your own product.

13 Ways to Tell Your Ancestor Stories is available at both Amazon and Lulu.

13 Ways to Tell Your Ancestor Stories. By Dr. Bill (William L. Smith). Published by Lulu, 2013. ISBN 978-1-300-79789-0.  77 pp.  Appendix, worksheets. Paperback.

About Dr. Bill: Dr. Bill enjoys telling and sharing ancestor stories and related family history social context. He has published four family histories to date, with more in progress. For the latest on Dr. Bill, his writings and stories, see his blog
Dr. Bill Tells Ancestor Stories.

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Disclaimer: I was provided a complimentary PDF version of this book as part of my participation in his Book Blog Tour.

Saturday, July 28, 2012

A Blogoversary Thank You Card



Digging Down East began two years ago on this date, as a tribute to my father, who had just passed away in April. My first and early posts were an experiment in recalling stories he told, as we tramped through Bridgton cemeteries, and my own recollections from childhood, as I had sat spellbound at the foot of my elders. Call it eldest-child-syndrome, but I nonetheless loved every minute.

My first genealogy blog role models were Heather Wilkinson Rojo of Nutfield Genealogy fame, Bill West of West in New England, and Midge Frazel of Granite In My Blood.  It didn't hurt that they were all from New England either.

That first year was a meandering, floundering one, as I tried to grapple with the wealth of information on my mother's side of the family (all hardy Maritime Canadian stock, and wonderful picture-takers to boot), and the dearth of information of my father's side, coupled with family secrets and a stubborn unwillingness to talk about the past.  As I look back at some of those posts, I have to think they were weak efforts at best.

This second year, however, I felt energized and inspired, and it is with deep gratitude to the greater genealogy community in general and special individual genealogists and family historians, in particular, that I celebrate this second blogoversary.

A Special Thank You to Heather Rojo, Barbara Poole, Russ Worthington, Bill West, Elizabeth Pyle Handler, Shari Strahan, Diane Boumenot, Sara Campbell, Lucie LeBlanc Consentino, Midge Frazel, Liesa Healy-Miller, Marian Pierre-Louis, Michelle Robillard and all the other New England Geneabloggers.That inaugural Bash at Heather and Vincent's marked the beginning of my serious journey.

Doing New England genealogy from the shores of the Ohio presents its own special challenges. As a result, I am always following Facebook and Twitter friends to keep up with genealogy events and programs pertinent to my regional needs. Thank you to all those I have never met face to face but who inspire me with their organizational skills and their tech advice.

I was so excited when NGS came to Cincinnati this year. From the pre-Conference blogger dinner to the closing sessions, I met and got to know so many wonderful genealogy friends.  The knowledge gained and the friendships forged have become invaluable to me in my quest to document my family history. Thank you to all my followers in the genealogy Twitter-verse for your expertise and for your wonderful humor along the way.

I've just returned from my annual Maine vacation/genealogy research trip. With my trustworthy Research Assistant (my 80-year old Mom) to accompany me, I was able to solve another batch of family mysteries and puzzles.  Look for more hopefully illuminating and entertaining posts gleaned from my favorite lifetime endeavor,"digging down east."


Monday, May 21, 2012

Genealogy On My Doorstep – NGS2012 in Cincinnati –Motivation Monday

I’ve been to quite a few conferences in my day, from one coast to the other, primarily for my professional development as a law librarian. This time I was scraping my pennies together for a conference on my passion – family history – because it was coming to my locale of 27 years – Cincinnati, Ohio. And I really didn’t know what to expect.


Once I made arrangements to be away from the office, just two blocks from the Duke Energy Center downtown, I started to get excited. Who knew I would be setting my alarm clock just as early for the next four days (including a Saturday!) as if I were catching the Metro bus?!


Driving downtown from Warren County in rush hour traffic is a pain and a half (I usually sleep on the bus, or at least nod off). If I didn’t bring coffee in the car, I’d better allow myself time to buy some soon after I got there (at Conference Center prices, no less!).


Surprisingly, the enormous herd of amateur family historians (of which I count myself) and professional genealogists awaiting the opening of the Exhibit Hall promised Genealogy Fun Aplenty awaiting us all.


Swinging flimsy bright green totes, and donning lanyards of various and curious lengths, over 2000 attendees began migrating from session to session, occasionally dropping off to cruise the exhibits for genealogy loot, and I was in the mix !!


My adventure had actually begun on Tuesday evening, at the annual Media/Blogger Dinner sponsored by FamilySearch. While the “local cuisine buffet” left a lot to the imagination, the presentation was informative. Far more valuable from my perspective was seeing, in the flesh, such blogger heavy-hitters as Dick Eastman, Lisa Alzo, and Pat Richley-Erickson, putting faces with names from the genealogy Twitter-verse like Tina Lyons, Jennifer Holik, Shelley Bishop, Susan Clark, Linda McCauley, Jennifer Alford, and meeting new friends like Amanda Perrine and Ruth Blair.


After Wednesday’s wonderful Opening Session on the Cincinnati Panorama of 1848, it was off to hear Lisa Louise Cooke (I love her and what she does with Google tools!) for Genealogy-on-the-Go with the iPad, then Using Excel to Create Timelines, and finally Snagit for Genealogists.  I came home completely exhausted, but exhilarated, and looking ahead to 3 more (count ‘em 3!) full days.


Thursday began at 8 am with Storing Your Tree in the Cloud, followed closely by Geneablogger Guru Thomas MacEntee’s Utilizing Social Networks for Genealogy Research (I never fail to learn something new from Thomas!).


The next session on Spring Grove Cemetery was a real disappointment. I did not need to see slides of the pyramids and hear about the history of burial and mourning, plus the speaker was not even a local historian!  I was headed to the Exhibit Hall and looking forward to an evening at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center followed by dinner and drinks at the Christian Moerlein Lager House at the Banks.


Somehow (I honestly don’t know when) I had met a group of local folks from the Hamilton County Chapter of the OGS, including Kathy Reed, Gail Burkholz, and Liz Stratton. We shared a lot of laughs both inside and outside the Duke Center, and plan to get together again. Even though I don’t have any local family ties, I plan to take advantage of joining up.


Friday included a lecture on Historic Newspapers, my first exposure to the huge draw of a speaker like Tom Jones on Documentation (we were packed in like sardines), Topographic Maps for Genealogy (who knew the US Geological Survey was such a wealth of information?!), and ended with a very funny talk called How to Be a Bad Genealogist. It was a great way to end Day 3.


I woke up with coffee-in-hand to hear Josh Taylor’s remix of his RootsTech talk Do I Trust the Cloud?, took in superstar Elizabeth Shown Mills’ Information Overload? (a worthy diagnosis indeed!), and ended the whole conference with Jean Hibben talking about The Two Sides of Interviewing. I still have my 80 year old mother and my 92 year old great aunt to quiz, so this was very valuable to me.


So, my first genealogy conference had come to a exhausting, illuminating, and fulfilling conclusion.  So many of us felt like our brains could not hold any more knowledge, and that is how I felt and continue to feel.


On the other hand, I have a renewed enthusiasm for working on my family tree (seriously, I’ve lost sleep!) and a deep appreciation for the significant contributions of so many toward the passion we all share for genealogy.


ExhibitHall_NGS2012

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Friday, August 27, 2010

14 Children, 5 Child Graves

Recently, while working on sourcing my ancestor Jonathan Seavey, of Bridgton, Maine, I became increasingly fascinated with the many children he had, with two wives, and how many died as children. As I came to grasp how sorrowful this must have been, I wondered if it might help me to put his family life on a timeline.


Searching online for something quick and easy, I came across this free Excel timeline template and this (click on chart for better view) is the very cool result!