Friday, November 11, 2005

Logo, Seth CHASE, Book Reviews, Free Lookups

Have been working quite a lot with Steve Gorney on the new website design and we now have a LOGO! It is way cool and says it all. I can’t wait to share it with you all.

JOOMLA! Is very intuitive to enter data in and this is going to be a first rate website.

Stay tuned…

More family connections keep coming in and it is sort of hard to keep up, not complaining, just busy. So if I owe you an answer on something please bear with me, or send me a reminder.

There is new information to add to my Descendants of Seth CHASE file from a lady that sent me a nice connection to the BULL / DORR / SILL / HYDE families. This will be all new stuff to me and I will be accumulating and documenting it all as best I can in my genealogy program. I will publish an update later.

I’m going to start a new section on the website for book reviews. These will be from books that I own, or that have been sent to me by publishers to write a review for.

Received a very nice offer from Dave Rowell, (djrpublic 'at' cfl.rr 'dot' com) [note that I put his email address in a text format to reduce spam, just insert the proper characters,] who has several good Onondaga County and Baldwinsville, Lysander, Van Buren area books that he is willing to do look ups for people. If you do contact him please be patient and polite, he will be doing you a service for free and will continue as long as it does not get overwhelming.

Here is a copy of his message to me:

“I own and would be willing to perform look-ups from these Upstate NY
related books:

"History of Baldwinsville", Edith Hall, 1936 (unindexed) reprinted July
1982; November 1990 by McHarrie's Legacy

"Early History of the Town of Van Buren, Onondaga County, New York",
Louis Dow Scisco, W. F. Morris Publishing Co, Baldwinsville, N. Y. 1895
reprinted 1995 by Beauchamp Historical Club with index additions

"The Lesley E. Voorhees Records Volume 1 - Van Buren - Baldwinsville -
Lysander Area Cemetery Inscriptions and Burial Records" Copied and
compiled by Lesley E. Voorhees Edited by Alice Laughlin Arneson
published by History's People, Inc, 216 Hampton Road, Syracuse, New York

"Atlas of Onondaga County N.Y.", 1874, Walker Bros. & Co., 36 Vesley
Street, New York subtitled " From Recent and Actual Surveys and Records
Under the Superintendence of Homer D. L. Sweet, Syracuse, N. Y." (has
names of residents on many of the individual buildings).”

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Website Server Move, How to Find Old Books

Boy did I make a mistake! Steve Gorney’s website is www.s-go.net (that’s "NET" not com). If anyone needs any web design, computer consulting, business consulting, etc., just send him a note from his contact button.

Steve and I will be starting work on the transition of my website to a different server soon. The address will still be www.ny-genes.com .

Finding books: rare books, originals, reprints, print to order, new and used book vendors, digitized on-line, etc., etc.

I just helped a man locate a reprint of a rare book that he had previously looked at in Salt Lake City on microfilm. He wanted to purchase a copy on film from LDS and they gave the usual answer, no. I suspect there are exceptions to the rule but it has to do with the copy and the source of the original that was filmed, owner’s rights and copyright.

Don’t give up. If the book was ever published, even if it is considered rare, there is still a possibility that you can find a working copy for a non-exorbitant price, or maybe even free or for a nominal subscription price on-line.

If I wanted to purchase my own copy to use at will then the first place I would look is the major on-line vendors such as:

www.abebooks.com (17,000 booksellers, with 7 million books for sale)

www.amazon.com (millions of new and used books for sale, ‘and everything else too’)

www.bookfinder.com (“Over 100 million new, used, rare, and out of print books at your fingertips.”)

www.barnesandnoble.com (millions of new, used & rare books available.)

Note that several of the vendors will cross post the same book in more than one search site, but then again many are unique to just one search site.

www.ebay.com , good books may be found at both the auction site and the eBay on-line stores at fixed prices.

www.samwellers.com/ . Sam Weller’s Zion Bookshop in Salt Lake City is ALWAYS on my must visit list when ever I get out that way. Their inventory of family and local histories is enormous and changing all the time. They purchase many researchers’ libraries and you are apt to find dozens of real good books you can’t live without. You can safely deal with them through the mail also. I have made purchases through the mail from all of the sites above and never had a problem with any item or vendor.

www.genealogical.com – Genealogical Publishing Company. Huge assortment of NYS material.

www.kinshipny.com – Very NYS specific.

www.higginsonbooks.com – This Company has many NYS titles available and they are a major publisher of books on demand. They will print your book upon receipt of order.

www.hopefarm.com is a bookshop that will most likely have what you need, especially if you are doing research in the Eastern parts of NY. They advertise that they have 300+ genealogical titles in stock.

http://www.nyhistory.com/links/books.htm - is a site that will help locate books on New York State History.

There are more search sites. Use you imagination and search through any of the normal search engines for author and title, etc., and you might just find one lonely old copy sitting on the shelf of a lone antiques dealer or used bookshop that never lists with any major book vendor. See my website www.ny-genes.com also for various search engine recommendations.

There are also booksellers that specialize in certain categories and they might not be listed in the major vendor search engines above. You will have to go hunting a little on the web to locate them. In the case above the man was looking for a Civil War Regimental History, so I looked under that category of vendors and found one that had the right book, a reprint at about 50 bucks. Not a bad deal.

If you know the publisher of a specific book you want then I would go directly to their own website and see if it is still in print or reprinted or whatever.

There are now beginning to be many sources on the Internet that you might find a copy published in the digitized text format, or perhaps just scanned photo images. The most recent exciting news to me was in my blog ( http://ny-genes.blogspot.com/ ) of a couple of days ago regarding the fact that LDS in conjunction with BYU have about 6,000 or so Family Histories / Genealogies on the BYU Library servers that are fully all word searchable.

If you have a subscription to Heritage Quest directly or through another portal such as: www.godfrey.org – The Godfrey Library, or www.newyorkfamilyhistory.org/ - The New York Genealogical and Biographical Society (NYG&B), or www.newenglandancestors.org/ -

The New England Historic Genealogical Society (NEHGS) (or otherwise affectionately known as the “histgen” by the regulars,) or even your local library, perhaps accessible at no charge though just the use of your library card, then you will see that HeritageQuest / ProQuest have about 25,000 family and local histories digitized and ready for your use at any time day or night.

www.hti.umich.edu/m/micounty/ - Michigan County Histories are in my “Favorite Links” on my website. Many “Yorkers” went to Michigan.

http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/ - Cornell University Digital Library. There are many different categories of digitized books available but a couple of very important collections of benefit to us may be found in their “Making of America” series, with over 100,000 journal articles with 19th century imprints, and their “New York State Historical” series with 691 monographs and pamphlets. Their on-line collection is enormous as well in many other categories also.

These are certainly not all of the on-line sources to check. If you have specific location, or certain ethnic quests, then include your subject in your search engine request.

I LOVE to get feedback, so if you want to add to this list or make any corrections, please contact me through email and I will give an update.

Monday, November 07, 2005

me brudder

Just re-read my last post and realized I forgot to tell you that my brother rode across the U.S. on a BICYCLE at age 62!

Evil Bandwidth problem, www.s-go.com "guru", Princeton University Census Info, LDS Digitizing Project Response, Mom always liked my Brother Best

Well we have been running into the evil bandwidth problem. Now that my website is being seen by more people (good), it is creating a situation where I will have to cough up some more bucks per month if I stay with the present web host (bad).

My computer guru, Steve Gorney at www.s-go.com is a genius entrepreneur who has done many high tech projects and started a multi million dollar company from scratch and is now doing computer consulting and business consulting at his site above. Well anyway, we think we might have a way around this bandwidth problem. He is going to teach me JOOMLA! (Good luck), and then we will transport the data over from the company that wants to extort more money out of me to a much larger and friendlier server at s-go.

I have no idea how long this is going to take, but I will keep readers advised. Hopefully it will all be seamless and the website address will NOT change, but it will have a new look and hopefully a streamlined presentation. In the mean time the current website is still up but occasionally you might experience a little slow down in the response until we soup it all up on the new servers.

Stay tuned.

Princeton University has a very interesting site that describes the Federal Census. It is quite detailed, for instance if you want to know what questions are asked on each census it has a hot link to the answer. Should be quite handy for anyone scheming a census pursuit.

We were away all day on a little non-genealogy trip and when I got home I was shocked by the responses my announcement of the LDS digitizing book project on-line at BYU created. All of them were favorable and with thanks other than someone who said, not news to them. Well it was news to me and apparently to many of you as well!

This is truly a major Big DEAL! We all have heard rumblings about it and also about the fabulous microfilm indexing project, which is another story, but this is here and now and we can all benefit. Thank you LDS!!!

Some of you have made me sort of not blush but feel REAL GOOD about my lost hunter story. Thanks to all of you who were so concerned. You people always reinforce my love for this hobby/passion/madness. \g/

It sort of reminds me about my “much older brother” who rode across the United States from the Pacific Ocean in the State of Washington to central New York near Syracuse one summer (at age 62) when he makes the statement that “There are a LOT more good people in the United States than bad ones.”

Mom always liked him best incidentally.

Sunday, November 06, 2005

LDS Digitizing Books, on-line NOW at BYU !!!

Oh BOY, here we go!

A dream coming true. The Family History Library is starting to digitize their book holdings, mostly family histories to date, and they are putting them on-line, fully searchable by any word or advanced search combinations.

Five thousand plus of these books are on the Brigham Young University Library servers and readily accessible, NOW!

Here is a partial clip of an announcement I just received and I have only made a quick check of how to find them and how to search, but it is very exciting

“…the LDS Family History Library has announced that it has begun the process of digitizing and making available on the Internet all of the Family History books in their collection. These are primarily books in the "929.273Series" that are currently housed on the first floor of the Family History Library (previously housed on the fourth floor of the Joseph Smith Memorial Building). At the present time (September 2005), about 5000 books have been digitized and are available, and they have announced that they are adding about 100 titles a week to the on-line collection. Copyright issues are playing a role in determining the order in which they progress through this task; books out of copyright are being done first.”

Go to the web site of the Harold B. Lee Library at BYU at http://www.lib.byu.edu/ , then on the home page, follow the links: Find Other Materials; Electronic; On Line Collections at BYU; Text Collections tab; Family History Archive from the list of collections that are displayed. The search box on the left seems to be he one to find your books at and the search box on the right is for searching within the pages on screen.

I have not used it enough yet to be proficient, but you bet I’ll be checking this little treasure out, a lot!