Genealogy News Wrap-up - December 2022

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 31

  • @yvonnefochesato4652
    @yvonnefochesato4652 Před rokem +1

    Yes...i started using books in family search. I had really good luck.

  • @SaraHarmon-os2we
    @SaraHarmon-os2we Před rokem +1

    2022 began with exciting Ancestry DNA news and a Story Scout hint that I was a descendant of the Mayflower passenger Edward Fuller. After spending 3 months proving 6 generations I became a member of the General Society of Mayflower Descendants in October. Then, after posting this discovery to a Rankin DNA site I belong to a remote cousin got in touch and helped solve a decades long brick wall on my Rankin maternal line. So, 2022 was an amazing year for family genealogy for me!

  • @belleeanes51
    @belleeanes51 Před rokem +1

    I read and watch everything you do! Many thanks. My best PERSI find was an entry in an East Texas journal from a woman who owned a used bookstore. She submitted the births, deaths and marriages from a Bible that turned out to belong to my Mississipi gggrandfather, including the names of my gggrandmother who had only initials on the marriage record and tombstone.

    • @AmyJohnsonCrow
      @AmyJohnsonCrow  Před rokem

      What a cool find! (And don’t you just hate it when records have only the initials instead of their full names?!)

  • @nancyruthless
    @nancyruthless Před rokem +2

    I really like these longer news style videos because you add a lot of background information about the things you are giving news updates about. I didn’t know about the 1940 vs 1950 census as it relates to college students, for instance!

  • @bluekimchiandrea
    @bluekimchiandrea Před rokem +2

    The 1950 census helped me find that my dad and his parents were living in Maine while my grandfather was going to seminary, switching out of being a lumberjack. My dad's mom was a Manager in a department store and headed to work on her nursing degree

  • @duroc82
    @duroc82 Před rokem +2

    Quite a bit of endogamy within the Amish community. And their repetition of names is legendary. Thanks for the year end wrap up!

  • @elained1946
    @elained1946 Před rokem +3

    Thank you for all you do for us genealogists 😊

  • @bluekimchiandrea
    @bluekimchiandrea Před rokem +2

    Amy, I hope you are okay. It seemed like you might not have been feeling top notch tonight ♥ thank you for this recap, very helpful! I haven't found the best Geneology site yet then. NONE have the answers I need/am looking for

  • @myrnacoubrough4713
    @myrnacoubrough4713 Před rokem +2

    Thanks for all the great information. Wish you a great year ahead.

  • @bluekimchiandrea
    @bluekimchiandrea Před rokem +1

    I wish I could have caught this live. Watching the recap from VT

  • @bluekimchiandrea
    @bluekimchiandrea Před rokem +2

    Sorry to be commenting so much. It was surprising to me, how similar my own parents DNA was to each other. Then how much my own DNA of what I got from each, was also so similar. My mom was adopted and I haven't dared to try and figure out her family. I THINK I found her birth family and also think something is up with my dad's side for why I can't find this one ancestor. I am very French Canadian. Ancestry has put me in Native American communities in Canada on both sides

    • @AmyJohnsonCrow
      @AmyJohnsonCrow  Před rokem +2

      Comment away! :-) The thing about Ancestry's genetic communities is that they start by looking at the genetic matches, then they compare the trees attached to those matches. As Blaine Bettinger once explained to me, we might not have the exact right person in our tree, but we usually have the locations correct. (Meaning, even if you say that William B was the father of your ancestor, but it was actually his cousin William C who was the father, you probably have the location right.) Then those communities can help you hone in on where to look more closely.

  • @Bigfoots777
    @Bigfoots777 Před rokem +1

    I always make a point , hey I'm kin to such & such person & you can tell people hate it until I say yeah I'm kin to you also 😂

  • @nathanjames5937
    @nathanjames5937 Před rokem +2

    hoping coca cola comes through on the sponsorship, Amy!

  • @bluekimchiandrea
    @bluekimchiandrea Před rokem +1

    I wish I would have something happen to find my one ancestor, for where he was born. I think it was when the Canadian border was moved because I have found him living at various times right around Sherbrooke Canada, border between Maine or Vermont as an adult with my great grandmother being his daughter. I know I will be emotional

  • @faganquin6483
    @faganquin6483 Před rokem +1

    thanks for a year of great information. happy new year!

  • @Vector_Ze
    @Vector_Ze Před rokem +1

    People who don't label photographs have no excuse! Well, except for the fact that in the past couple decades people mostly don't have prints made to label. In 50-60 years, people are going to look back at this period and wonder at all the 9:16 aspect ratio video and lack of preserved stills from important family events (lost in phone upgrades or whatnot), and they're going to curse this generation. And, PLEASE don't stick that tiny screen in front of me and expect me to enjoy viewing your wonder photographs on a dang smartphone! Email them to me, so I can view them on my big monitor.
    I actually use still cameras and camcorders, don't even own a smartphone.
    Footnote for anyone bored enough to be reading this, a tip. Your smartphone is perfectly capable of recording video in landscape mode, so that when the video is played on a normal monitor, 2/3rds of the screen isn't blank.

    • @AmyJohnsonCrow
      @AmyJohnsonCrow  Před rokem

      Digital media definitely gives us challenges with preservation. On the other hand, physical media has its challenges, too -- those awful "magnetic" albums of the 1970s and 80s, highly acidic scrapbook pages, Polaroid and other "instant develop" prints, etc. As far as the 9:16 aspect ratio, trends come and go in photography. (Seen anyone take a Polaroid photo lately? ;-) )

  • @bluekimchiandrea
    @bluekimchiandrea Před rokem

    Isn't that the goal of Family Search because of being from the Mormon religion? It IS their goal to have only ONE big tree.

    • @AmyJohnsonCrow
      @AmyJohnsonCrow  Před rokem +1

      I don't know exactly why FamilySearch opted for a "one tree" approach, rather than individual trees, but the genealogy is definitely important to their religious beliefs.

    • @bluekimchiandrea
      @bluekimchiandrea Před rokem +1

      @@AmyJohnsonCrow yes and someone else entered a tree for my family and it is wrong both the wrong Henry (he married someone else according to State of VT archives AND he stayed put as a farmer) OUR Henry did NOT stay put and battled alcoholism and was abusive (nothing I'm proud of, but documentation proves it to have been the case). Anyway, Family Search won't remove it or block this person from adding to it. She also listed me as both living AND deceased 😠 so long story short, I'm not the biggest fan of Family Search right now

    • @AmyJohnsonCrow
      @AmyJohnsonCrow  Před rokem +1

      The FamilySearch tree definitely has some issues. But there is so much else you can use on FamilySearch that has nothing to do with the tree, like the 16B records and images that are available.

    • @patriciajrs46
      @patriciajrs46 Před rokem

      @@bluekimchiandrea I am soory that I suggested Family Search. I did so before I reas this post. Again I am sorry for suggesting them.

    • @bluekimchiandrea
      @bluekimchiandrea Před rokem

      @@patriciajrs46 oh my gosh, no need to apologize. I thought I would like using them before this happened and Amy is correct, there are other uses for Family Search besides the Tree 😃