Saturday, January 05, 2008

GenealogyBuff (great name - great site!)

GenealogyBuff provides dozens of unique quick finding aids for all types of genealogy searching. This website compiles data sites from all over the Internet and presents them in a nice easy to find and searchable format.

GenealogyBuff – Links to thousands of on-line sources for items like; Maps, Immigration, Obits, Marriages, Archives, Personal Announcements, Cemetery Inscriptions, School Yearbooks, Church Records, Census, Court, Land, Probate, Military, Newspapers, and let’s see did I miss anything? What else is there?

Oh, try the handy dandy surname search. Does this website miss some links? Sure, but what it does find is absolutely remarkable, and totally Free! (There’s my favorite word again.)

Check out the GenealogyBuff Library for New York State at http://www.genealogybuff.com/ny/

A quick search for New York State Newspapers is at http://www.genealogybuff.com/np/newyork_newspapers.htm.

Upstate New York Genealogy is adding this site to the My Favorites folder, and thought you might like to know about it too.

(unyg)

Notes:
Something new for 2008, if you enjoy the UNYG Blog, you might also like to visit our other Blog site that is meant for genealogists everywhere, at www.genemisc.blogspot.com. Still all free information! Our websites are now supported by advertising. Please leave comments on each of our Blogs by clicking on the word comment right underneath each Blog message. You may subscribe to all future posts of this Blog by scrolling all the way down to the bottom of this website and click on the subscribe tab. If you wish to be added to our email list for announcements and special offerings, just send us your email address to opt in.
Your feedback and comments spur us on!


Thursday, January 03, 2008

Footnote, "Not Your Father's Buick."

This is a Review, and an Advertisement.

About a year ago I heard of a new company that was offering digital images of genealogical and historical interest on-line. So my first thought was something like "Oh brother, not another one." Well after I looked into it and subscribed I started to get real excited! An old time car advertisement slogan came to mind, "This is NOT your Father's Buick!" This company, Footnote.com, was building a gigantic collection of digitized copies of original historical documents that were like none we had ever seen before. They became early partners with the National Archives (NARA) and commenced digitizing many of the millions of rolls of microfilm that are at NARA, and that even though they might have been available before on film, they were difficult to search for, due to NARA's extremely complicated cataloging system. Hey it's the government, what do you expect?

Well I knew that Footnote was going to be a first rate company when after their marketing people had decided to lower the subscription rate to just about half of what it was when I subscribed, and Footnote sent me and other early subscribers a message saying that they were going to extend our memberships to double the time that we had signed up for. I had not asked for it, but it was a pleasant surprise.

Well now Footnote is growing leaps and bounds. The collection is becoming enormous and there are fabulous discoveries being made every day in so many categories that it is hard to describe. Let me give you one personal observation regarding the "Revolutionary War Pension Records" collection at NARA. For many years now we have had access to a collection of microfilm of pension files that was named the “Select Series.” What that meant was that staff people at NARA some years ago went through the millions of documents in the pension files and grouped what that staff person arbitrarily determined to be the most important records in each veteran’s file. That series was microfilmed and made available to libraries and the public in general. Chances are if you have ever used these films, say at your reference library or on-line through HeritageQuest, they were of this Select Series and I’m guessing, that probably you were missing more than you were finding!

Footnote’s presentation of this collection of pensions from NARA is the COMPLETE file of each pensioner’s application. In one of my own Patriot Ancestors I discovered a little scrap of paper that had been missed in the Select Series, and it was an affidavit from the pensioner’s widow’s application that was signed by two of her married sisters, and it also named the father of the three girls! I would have never known any of that without checking every single scrap in the file.

One thing that is unique is that Footnote staff and volunteers have been going through the images one by one and inserting text boxes around the hand written names, and then typing up a text name. All you have to do is hover your mouse over a name and you see it in typewritten form. This also allows for a master name index. Fantastic!

Footnote has recently partnered with FamilySearch to commence a program of digitization that will be out of this world! They are not stopping there. They have also partnered with other organizations, and there is even a method that allows subscribing members to upload documents, photos, diaries, old letters, genealogies, and on and on.

Footnote also has many historical documents and series of National importance that are presented to everyone totally free all the time. Just go to the website and check these free documents out, and while you are there take a look at their three minute video of just what Footnote is about.
Here are some of the collection titles taken off the website recently:
Admiralty Records,
American Colonization Society
American Milestone Documents FREE
Amistad - Federal court records
Amistad - Supreme Court records
Brady Civil War Photos
City Directories
Civil War Pensions Index
Confederate Amnesty Papers
Confederate Papers
Confederate Soldiers - AL
Confederate Soldiers - GA
Confederate Soldiers - NC
Confederate Soldiers - TX
Confederate Soldiers - VA
Constitutional Convention Records FREE
Continental Congress - Papers, FREE
Continental Congress - Misc FREE
Custer's Court Martial
Domestic Letters of the Department of State
FBI Case Files
Foreign Letters of the Continental Congress
George Washington Correspondence FREE
Gorrell's History - AEF Air Service
Hesse Crown Jewels Court-Martial
Japanese Air Target Analyses
Lincoln Assassination Papers FREE
London Times 1785-1820
Missing Air Crew Reports, WWII
Mormon Battalion Pension Files
Naturalizations - CA Southern
Naturalizations - LA Eastern
Naturalizations - MA
Naturalizations - MD
Naturalizations - PA Eastern
Naturalizations - PA Middle
Naturalizations - PA Western
Naturalization Index - CA San Diego
Naturalization Index - MA
Naturalization Index - MD
Naturalization Index - NY Eastern Jul 1865-Sep...
Naturalization Index - NY Eastern Oct 1906-Nov...
Naturalization Index - NY Eastern Nov 1925-Dec...
Naturalization Index - NY Southern Intentions
Naturalization Index - NY Southern Petitions
Naturalization Index - NY Western
Naturalization Index - NYC Courts
Naturalization Index - WWI Soldiers
Naval Press Clippings
News - Gazette Virginian
News - Halifax Gazette
Pennsylvania Archives FREE
Photos - Coolidge
Photos - Eisenhower
Photos - Fine Arts Commission, Series G
Photos - Roosevelt
Photos - Truman
Photos - WW II Japanese
Project Blue Book - UFO Investigations FREE
Ratified Amendments to the US Constitution
Ratified Indian Treaties
Revolutionary War Pensions
Revolutionary War Prize Cases - Captured Vessels
Revolutionary War Rolls
Revolutionary War Service Records
South Boston, VA - City Council Minutes
Southern Claims Commission
State Dept Records - France
State Dept Records - Russia
Supreme War Council, American records - WWI
Texas Birth Certificates
Texas Death Certificates
Town Records - Goffstown NH - FREE
Town Records - Hancock NH - FREE
US Expeditionary Force, North Russia
Utah Territorial Case Files
War of 1812 Prize Cases, Southern Dist Court, NY
WWI Military Cablegrams - AEF and War Dept
WWII Allied Military Conferences
WWII JAG Case Files, Pacific - Army
WWII JAG Case Files, Pacific - Navy
WWII Submarine Patrol Reports
WWII US Air Force Photos
Note: some of the above collections marked "FREE" might be for a limited period of time and some of them are permanently so, you will have to check to be sure.)


You will do yourself a favor, and this website too, if you take advantage of their excellent services and become a subscriber.
It is indeed a BARGAIN considering the fabulous finds you will make!

Try their “Get Acquainted Special Offer to UNYG readers,” by subscribing to the FREE TRIAL for full access, for three days!

I LOVE this company, and am proud to have them as an advertiser on Upstate New York Genealogy!

(unyg)

Notes:
Something new for 2008, if you enjoy the UNYG Blog, you might also like to visit our other Blog site that is meant for genealogists everywhere, at www.genemisc.blogspot.com. Still all free information!
Please leave comments on each of our Blogs by clicking on the word "comment" right underneath this blog message. You may subscribe to all future posts of this Blog by scrolling all the way down to the bottom of this website and click on the "subscribe tab." If you wish to be added to our email list for announcements and special offerings, just send us your email address to opt in.
Your feedback and comments spur us on!

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Hunting Treasures at Cortland County Historical Society

Please consider using the excellent research facility of the Cortland County Historical Society.

Cortland is within "The Military Tract," the large chunk of land that the state purchased from the Indians in order to award soldiers that had served in the American Revolution, from New York Regiments.

The county was formed in 1808 from Onondaga County, comprising the original Townships of Virgil, Cincinnatus, Homer, Solon, and the south halves of the Townships of Tully and Fabius. (For your information the term "Township" is no longer correct in modern day terms. Once areas became populated and a local government was organized the correct word became "Town.")

When you go there to do research a staff person will work right with you and once it is determined just what you are attempting to achieve, they will go right to the files and book cases and start bringing you more items than you can possible imagine. They really know their collection!

Your unyg editor was fortunate to be able to locate some very nice finds for a project that concerned some families of close sounding names and the research assistant located some of the earliest manuscript road books and tax record books, that were most helpful in determining just which branch of which family that the person being researched belonged in.

Here are some of the details on who, what, how, when, etc.:
Cortland County Historical Society (CCHS)
Museum and Research Center
25 Homer Ave.
Cortland, NY 13045

phone: 607-756-6071
website: www.rootsweb.com/~nycortla/chsfe.htm
email: (available on the website.)

Located in the lovely old Suggett House.
Open for research Tuesdays through Saturdays,
1 pm to 5 pm. (Best to call to be sure before making a trip.)

Memberships are extremely reasonable at;
$15 - Senior Citizen.
$20 - Individual
$30 - family
(Better confirm, these numbers do not seem high enough.) Other levels of contributing memberships are explained on the website.

The museum store has some books and other items that they sell to help bring some extra funds in, and to satisfy the patron's desires.
Some of the items offered for sale:
A Regiment Remembered, 157th NY Volunteers
Cooking Then and Now (local recipes)
Rails Through Cortland - Palmer
Historical Markers in Cortland County
[Harold] Burgess Remembers Cortland
Growing Up in Cortland
Paris Lived in Homer
James Suggett and his Lovely Dwelling Place (the museum's home)
Cortland Co. Sesquicentennial (1808-1958.)

You will be treated to an extremely well organized collection and the staff people know just where everything is. If you are a non-member there is a charge for the staff person's assistance (mandatory, see the website.)

If you are a CCHS member, then there is no charge for the research assistance. Telephone research is offered at $15 per hour.

Here is a short list of just some of the items that you will be delighted to locate: Maps, Census, City & County Directories, Genealogies, Histories, Vital Records from Miscellaneous Sources, surname files, military records, photograph files, scrapbooks, newspapers, (and I am sure that there is a whole LOT more!)

You are sure to find some gems in all of the treasures. Tell them unyg sent you.




Notes:
Please leave comments on each of our Blogs by clicking on the word "comment" right underneath this blog message. You may subscribe to all future posts of this Blog by scrolling all the way down to the bottom of this website and click on the "subscribe tab." If you wish to be added to our email list for announcements and special offerings, just send us your email address to opt in.
Your feedback and comments spur us on!

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Just Can't Say THANKS Enough!

Brrr... It's cold, snowy, freezing rain, and windy here in Upstate New York. My how we Love it so!

Looking ahead and making plans for our website and Blog for 2008, it comes to mind that we have many others to thank for our burgeoning success. (Our readership has multiplied many hundreds of times since a year ago!)

If you have enjoyed some of our tales and exciting finds, then you will no doubt appreciate reading what our friends and other genealogy authors have to say as well.

Here are a few of our "Must Reads," (and now some podcasts too,) that we visit often and appreciate so much. (In no particular order.)

Dick "Eastman's On-line Genealogy Newsletter" and Blog at www.eogn.com. Dick has his finger on the button when it comes to the latest and greatest in Genealogy.

Leland Meitzler is the editor of the Blog for the "Everton Publishing Company," at www.GenealogyBlog.com. Leland's experience and knowledge is so very valuable.

George Morgan and Drew Smith are "The Genealogy Guys." At www.genealogyguys.com. A weekly podcast that rates right up there with peanut butter and sliced bread.

Michael John Neill of "RootDig," at www.rootdig.com. Will keep you up to date with what is new at "Ancestry," and much more.

Joe B. publishes an excellent list of data sites titled "Genealogy Roots Newsletter," at http://GenealogyRoots.googlepages.com/.

Kimberly Powell of "GenealogyAbout," brings new and exciting finds to your screen constantly! http://genealogy.about.com.

"Dear Myrtle" was an early adopter in this Newsletter and Blogging business from the get go. http://blog.dearmyrtle.com.

"CousinConnect" publishes "Genealogy and How" at www.genealogyandhow.com. You want names? You want Links? You can't handle them all!

Renee Zamora enlightens us constantly with excellent research news. http://rzamor1.blogspot.com.

Lisa L. Cooke of "GenealogyGems." Lisa has a Blog, a newsletter, a book, a podcast, and now a vidcast too. She just is not busy enough. You can find all of her links and interesting finds at www.genealogygemspodcast.com.

Oh, yes and my favorite of all: www.unyg.com. (Sound familiar yet?)

I'm sure that I have many more that I visit often, and will be telling you about all of them in another Blog.



Dick Hillenbrand - Upstate New York Genealogy - www.unyg.com

Notes:
Please leave comments on each of our Blogs by clicking on the word "comment" right underneath this blog message. You may subscribe to all future posts of this Blog by scrolling all the way down to the bottom of this website and click on the "subscribe tab." If you wish to be added to our email list for announcements and special offerings, just send us your email address to opt in. Your feedback and comments spur us on!




Sunday, December 30, 2007

2007 Review and “What’s up for 2008?"






(OK, so we are one number off, the meaning is the same.)

Image courtesy of New York Public Library website (http://digitalgallery.nypl.org/)


Question #1, “What did you learn last year in Genealogy Daddy?”

To be followed by Question #2, “What do you expect to learn in 2008?”

Well in 2007 on the “Upstate New York Genealogy” website and Blog you have learned the following.

From the Blog in January you were informed of an excellent website for Maps of all kinds at www.historicmapworks.com, and had an explanation of the free access to wondrous materials in the “Making of America” series through Cornell University.

In February you were taught how to use www.books.google.com for free downloads of millions of books of all types. You were told about the best historical and genealogical reference book for New York State researchers, “French’s Gazetteer of 1860,” and told how to get a free copy of it in digital format. You learned a new word, “Genealogaholic,” (there is a twelve step cure, but no one has ever taken it yet.) You were told where to look for a capsule genealogy of the “CHASE Family,” founders of the NECCO Candy Company. You were told about a very nice free on-line newspaper collection at www.paperofrecord.com. You learned just about all you needed to know about the New York State Censuses that were taken in-between the years of the Federal Census, and how to access them. You learned about a great new company that has many unique databases named genealogybank, and you also were shocked at how all of our readers and others scrambled to take advantage of a free test ride, and clogged the gen bank servers to full overload and shut down. Eventually everything settled down and systems got back to normal, but we will no longer be telling you how to rush into anything like that melee again. GenealogyBank is one of our often recommended research subscription sites.

In March, you learned more about Google Books and how to download them for free, and also about “Librivox” a very nice site for downloading audio books that are in the public domain.

In May a good description of Worldcat.org was presented. Worldcat is an on-line master catalog to just about any book of importance, (as well as other media also.)

In July, (Where did April and June go?) the Yates County Historian’s website was emphasized for its importance and the amount of on-line data available. You learned more about the Rochester NY Public Library “City Directories” and “Newspaper Index” project. You were reminded about the Central New York Genealogical Society and their publication “Tree Talks,” and how to obtain batches of all of the articles for individual counties by ordering “County Packets.” You then were saddened to hear about the firing of all of the membership of the NYG&B Society, and had to endure my rants against the action.

August brought some old time images of Baldwinsville, NY, from our friend Dave Rowell, and learned about a fabulous collection of many old Baldwinsville High School Year Books (1870-1926,) that were donated to the Onondaga County Public Library (OCPL,) again by Dave Rowell. There was also a bit more on historicmapworks and an update on CNYGS “Tree Talks” County Packets.

September you read about the NYG&B book collection that will be leaving. And you heard that the excellent Genealogy Speaker, Dick Hillenbrand, would be entertaining at the Capital District Genealogical Society in the Albany area.

October you saw a transcription of an 1870 publication that named the Deaths of many early Onondaga Pioneers that had died in the previous 1869 and 1870. There was a bit about Ellis Island and more about GenealogyBank. There also was a lesson in how to keep your genealogical research log on the Internet. You read about the new digital library catalog at OCPL. Dear Myrtle explained some happenings at NARA. You learned about the special discount rate that you could get from Ancestry.com if you were a member of the New England Genealogical and Historical Society (NEHGS.) (Note: we received many comments about this rather unadvertised fact.) There was a review about Dick Eastman presenting a day long seminar in Syracuse for the CNYGS. There was a call for the use of GPS devices in recording the co-ordinates of all cemeteries. You were told about the New York State Library Newspaper Project. You found a place to locate and record unusual terms often found in genealogical research at Eastman’s “Encyclopedia of Genealogy.” You also read about a request by NARA to receive and consider your input to help them formulate their ongoing digitization project.

November was one of our most popular Blogs, regarding the seldom used collection of original Western New York church record books on microfilm at Cornell University. These books are not in the LDS FHL collection. We announced the excellent collection of research links that Kip Sperry of Utah is providing free of charge to researchers.

Finally, December. We bragged about the Seneca County Historians fabulous website.
You found a newspaper article about some scammers selling certified deed copies for outrageous prices.
You learned about some of the earliest Madison County manuscript records that were located after having thought to have been burned by the Loomis Gang.
Another very popular Blog was the explanation of Bien’s 1895 New York State Atlas, and how to access it for free.
A short explanation about the facts of life, we installed some product announcements to our website and Blog. Website building, maintenance and bandwidth had become too costly to bear alone. We told you about some new features at footnote.com.
Our webhosts, s-go.net, were featured and we hope you will look at what they have to offer if you ever have a need for any website building ideas.
We told you about a very nice 150 year retrospective of the “Albany Times Union.”
You received a tremendous amount of information on some of the 595 Revolutionary War Soldiers that were buried in Onondaga County. A great many of you interacted with this one and we appreciate it greatly! Feedback is the fuel that makes Bloggers energized!
Then you read the 411 about our website. The information on what you will find and how to access it was helpful to many of you.
We told you about DIGG, a way that you can say you “Digg it,” and a way to help us gain new readers. Please continue to DIGG us if you see something you like.
Coming towards the end of the year we gave a good description of what you might find that is new on Ancestry, and what is coming in the New Year.
Recently a description of what Ephemera is and why you might want to use it for family history research and where you might find it.
Then the most recent posting was in regard to using DNA, either Y-DNA or mtDNA, to possibly consider using it in addition to your genealogical research.
Lastly, this review, and our heartfelt THANK YOU! We love Blogging and putting ideas out that just might help you in your Family History Research. Mostly we love hearing from YOU! Did you know that having children has been discovered to be hereditary?

Well that was then., and now we might hear “So what are you going to do for us next unyg.com?”

Here is a partial list:
We will be reviewing more Upstate New York County resources.
You will learn about some excellent collections at a local level.
We will be rooting out some obscure items for you to research that do not often get used.
There will be announcements about upcoming events, meetings, lectures, and happenings.
We will be reviewing new research books, as well as some old standbys that need to be emphasized.
We will be telling you about some of the things you might expect if you were to add genetic DNA testing into your genealogy research.
We will be describing in great detail many of the on-line genealogical data providers, both of the subscription and the free type.
We will have more photographs, more discussions of maps, land records, estate records, and court house research.
There will be much more on Revolutionary War Veterans in “Upstate New York.”
We will most likely learn where the books and manuscripts collection of the NYG&B Society shall be dispersed to. Stay tuned to find out if this treasure trove will be sold, given away, or inserted into a collection where the public, or former members, will not be able to wander the stacks and covet them.
There will always be something about Old Stuff that is New! All of the data that you will obtain on unyg.com or the UNYG Blog, is certainly worth the price and has a double your money back guarantee!

To all our friends, the “Happiest of New Year’s Greetings!”
May you all prosper greatly in 2008 and tear down at least one brick wall!



Dick Hillenbrand – Upstate New York Genealogy – www.unyg.com


Note: Add your comments directly under this posting, You may subscribe to all future posts at the bottom of this website, but mostly we want to remind you to Bookmark www.unyg.com and come back often. If you wish to be added to our email list for announcements and special offerings, please send us your email address to opt in.