Friday, June 6, 2014

Organizing Genealogy Files

Years ago, I used to walk cemeteries and take pictures, of over a dozen cemeteries.  I had over 5,000 photographs saved on my computer.  What made matters worse is when I researched at the local museum they had anywhere from 2-12 obits copied on each page.  Got this is there were indexes of their twenty something books (A book per letter or more of the alphabet)  So when I copied a page I cropped them and saved them all on my computer over 3,500  knowing someday they would enter the 20th century and put them on their hard drive.

So in those days I would save them in the following format:
Lastname.Firstname.Middlename

I used the periods to let the computer keep the alphabetized.  That was fine for a folder on Obits and Tombstones.

Oh let me regress back to the museum.  Only paper I keep in my genealogy is family sheets and my family tree.  You ask why?  The answer is one day someone donated their grandmother’s genealogy work to the museum’s library.  They brought in 11 large boxes.  Another volunteer and I sorted and sorted and found dozens of the same sheets, by the time we were finished it we got I down to one box out of eleven. 
That was it for me no more paper.  My trees live safely on ancestry and my website.  My main tree is large.  It contains my family, my late husbands, one of his sister in laws, a few cousins I work with on my father’s line, a few more cousins lines of my late husband who are working with me on his maternal grandmother’s line. I add in-law and their parents and have my late husband’s step-dad line also for his half-brothers back to Scotland.

When you start doing genealogy there are so many pictures, documents and files you can end up with up to a hundred items per person.  I found the need for more creative filing, all those years majoring in business and work taught me a few things (or I want to think so)

Beginning you can start saving files on your computer, but it will start to slow you down, so at some point think of storing on ‘the cloud’ there are some free ones out there.  Personal hard drives are nice but my 30+ geek daughter fried hers then mine with 20 years of our family photos I had fixed and saved.  Nothing is fail safe!
I tend to store all my files online on my family website and Ancestry.com.  I also save mine to the ‘Cloud’. 

Now how I do my files:
  •        Ancestry
    •                Artwork
      •     (For non-family photos I use a lot of generational types to tell me at a glance in a tree online which line they are.  One color my line direct, one for my husband, etc. (I actually share lines with my husband and cousins, so you can get confused)
    •       Family
      •           Hicks 
        •      (Now here is my big trick for multiple direct lines with the same last name, using the numbers sorts your tree automatically)
        •           01-My Dad Name
          •          Children
          •         Children with Wife A, etc... 
          •     In-laws (If not enough in-laws for a major file put them here.)
        •          02-His Father
          •           Children
          •     Children with Wife A, etc…
          •     In-laws (If not enough in-laws for a major file put them here)
        •          03-His Grandfather

        •    Mullins
      •    I have several Miscellaneous Files
  •    My Name (Personal Files)


With a little effort your files will be organized. 

Remember:
  1.  Direct line stays out of their parents file.
  2.  I put wives in their husbands file, Always, keep her name as HER MAIDEN NAME, REGARDLESS!
  3.   Children that have been adopted . If don’t know the name use: (Adopted Father’s Last Name). Works well with the wife you don’t know also (Husband’s Last Name).  In all my older LDS families the husband gave his new wives children his name.  Try straightening out over 100 children knowing that fact, marriage dates will help usually in that case.


Hope this helps, if you get confused, leave a message.  We all get confused, I got lost today tracking 15 generations of connected Mayflower Families today.


Happy searches and many discoveries!

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Location, Location, Location

What is a location in regards to Genealogy research?

Honestly, about thirteens years ago I learned the answer to this question when I moved to a small town in Iowa.

I started volunteering at the Nodaway Historical Society Museum which had gotten it's start with a group of ladies trying preserve the past in Page County Iowa.  These ladies would clip obituaries for people who lived in the surrounding communities and counties.  They then found the funding to open a great museum and great genealogy resource.

While volunteering there I had the opportunity to learn lots of things about genealogy and geography.  
Most of us only think of location in the USA as:  City, County, State when in actuality most states use a form or another of Townships; which makes City, Township, County, State, USA.  So if we go to the back to the Nodaway Historical Society Museum is in Clarinda, Page County, Iowa, USA but its full location is:  Clarinda, Nodaway Township, Page County, Iowa, USA or Clarinda, Nodaway Township, Page, Iowa.  If there is no city the location is always simply:  Nodaway Township, Page County, Iowa, USA

A common mistake when people document location is believing that a Township is a town or vice versa.  When I come across a town I do not know even after decades of doing genealogy, I always do search of the location.  I am never positive what I will find, but usually there is not a town or ghost town by that name it is a township or even things as a mill. Yes, there are towns named after a mill or the owner of the Mill these will show up as a city if they are.  So when in doubt, always search for the location if it's someplace you have never heard of.  I use Google and/or Wikipedia when I check location.

Let's all help each other to try and keep he facts correct as possible.

Happy digging up your ancestors!

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Why you ask Back Door Ancestry?

After decades of researching genealogies for family, friends, and myself, I have discovered that the direct method does't always work.  

Ever get stuck with a mountain or brick wall in front of you to large to get around or over?  That person you are looking for is just invisible?  Well sometimes the best method is the 'Back Door', try tracking down everything you can on the children and the siblings (I mean everything)  You never know where you will find them living or buried.  

Example:
I had been looking for my Great Grandfather William Mathias Fredrick Holt's 2nd wife Nevada 'Vada' Johnson and her children with her first husband WMF to finish his family. 

I had Vada's parents and children's names nut nothing much on them.  Great Grandfather 'WMF' & 'Vada' seemed to have a strained marriage he divorced her 2 times but they remained together remarrying.  I seriously wondered if he disposed of 'Vada' under the new dam, lake or river in Stone County Missouri, she just vanished.  Even though I never gave up looking.

I stumbled upon a tree for my Grandmother's half brother William Bert 'Boy' Holt found a great picture of him and a prayer card for Vada Stroud.  They didn't know much about her just the Holt children and the name Stroud.  

No husbands first name but 2 censuses in Arkansas: 1st with Vada Dwight and 2nd Vada Stroud a widow and Bert's sister Pansy Marie Holt Fair living with her, gave me a time frame to narrow down the search.   

Next came a marriage of Vada Dwight to I L Stroud in Arkansas. Then to confirm the information on the 2  as being the correct person, I looked for a Holt marriage to Dwight. I found her marriage to Ward Dwight.  

Now one child to find and all children are complete except: Evaline Holt b 1903 Stone County Missouri.

Moral:  Never give up looking, just be sure to open the 'Back Door' you never know what will come out; and think creatively!