So much for resolutions!

Ok, no comments about not posting weekly like I said I would. Real life intervenes and now that mom is settled(?) in her new apartment, no more excuses.

What I will be working on this weekend is a way to put PDFs of pedigree charts on this blog. I've found a way, now I just need to do it.

Someone needs to hold me accountable!

2009 Goals

I'm keeping my goals modest this year, to leave room for "real" life.

1. Blog once a week.
2. Finish re-filing of Family History files; the Russell and Jones sides of the family tree are done, now to do Ferguson; then Mayfield and Hollowell.
3. Put all old family pictures in one place, scan each of them and file in a safe place.
4. Find John Jones' parents.
5. Discover where in Wales the Davis and Jones families came from and when.
6. Travel to Leavenworth and take photo of John Jones' grave.

2008

As the old year ends, I want to mention a few exciting family history related things that happened in 2008. The countdown...

3. The switch to Legacy software was a great decision. It works the way my brain works and adding sources is so easy there's no excuse not to. Love the help disks that came with it. And the people who created it all seem like a really nice bunch of people, too. A real bonus in this age of people who feel entitled to be grumpy all the time.

2. Adding the Davis branch to the family tree. I will post sometime in the future about how you should always listen to your mother, even when (or especially when) it comes to little tiny family history clues.

1. A tie. When you have an ancestor named John Jones, any information you can find out about him is wonderful. I've known he died at the old soldiers home in Leavenworth, Kansas, for many years. But this year I found the possible location of his grave on the Internet. I got on the phone and talked to a young man named Mike, probably a volunteer, and when he confirmed that this was indeed John's final resting place, I got goosebumps. Another story for another day. But probably the most wonderful thing was finding more information on his wife, Alvina Davis Jones. She died when she was about 51 years old, in 1896. I don't think her death was probably recorded in any official way. But thanks to old newspapers, I was able to find out when she died and why. Yet another story for another day.

I'm looking forward to many more family history adventures in 2009. I have a whole list of goals...maybe I'll post them tomorrow.

New software

I made the switch to Legacy Family Tree version 7 in May and I really like it. I got 4 or 5 cds with it explaining how to use it which has been really helpful. I've recently started climbing a new branch of the family tree on mom's side and I've entered all the info into Legacy. I especially like the SourceWriter feature which makes adding sources so much easier. There's no excuse NOT to include a source for every fact and event now. There are all kinds of reports you can print and also books, calendars, address labels (to make family reunion planning easier) and quite a few other things.

I haven't moved my entire family tree over to Legacy yet. I wanted to get acquainted with it first. Then we had the whole water-in-the-basement thing and I'm almost able to see the light at the end of the tunnel with that. So when that's finally done I'll be able to concentrate on getting the rest of the tree moved.

Hmmm. Why was it, when I was writing about getting the basement done and planning to work on family history, that the old quote strolled through my mind, "If you want to hear God laugh, tell him your plans!

Mulling it over

I haven't blogged for a bit here, but I have been doing some family history research. For about three weeks I was obsessed with climbing a little further out on the branches of my s-i-l's family tree...and was there some adventure there! My ancestors tend to be sedate farmers who live quiet lives in the country, attend church and occasionally send a daughter out on the mission field. His ancestors lived in the city and two met untimely deaths at the hands of another person. It was a lot of fun to research and I'm not done yet, just taking a break...because...yes, my name is Mary and I'm a geneaholic...a co-worker innocently mentioned something about not knowing much about her family history and I told her I'd see what I could find on the internet. Knowing that her mother passed away recently, I was able to get some info there and start climbing HER family tree! Does that make me a genealogy stalker? Should I seek help?

This has all been a good experience (although it sure looked a whole lot like I was an obsessive compulsive who gave up Frasier re-runs for a whole new obsession!). It was a good test to see just how far a person can go on the Internet. An enlightening one, too, when it comes to genealogy software. I used PAF in the old days on our first computer. I jumped on the Family Tree Maker bandwagon about version 2 or 3 and I've upgraded, sometimes grudgingly, ever since.

I bought the 2008 version last year and this was a good test of all it's bells and whistles. I found it fairly easy to navigate around, but when I got to the point of printing out my findings to give to my friend, I realized they had replaced the bells and whistles with noisemakers and kazoos. I wanted to print a book for my friend, but where's the book feature? Why is the ahnentafel chart dissed so badly, "This report is not used as frequently as the other Genealogy Reports for formal presentations of pedigree because it records two family lines in the same report." Well, I don't make formal presentations, but I DO want all of my ancestors in one report, beginning with me, just like a pedigree charts starts with me and fans out to my ancestors. Why is it considered an upgrade when they take away features like printing a book with an index and letting you choose where to insert notes on the Ahnentafel chart (ok, maybe it's there and I missed it, but I'm a pretty savvy software user and if it's there, it's well hidden.) I'm sure there are others who have put this more intelligently than I could, but let's just say that I think Family Tree Maker will eventually become Internet only software, available through ancestry.com (I am a subscriber), much like Photoshop Express is now internet based. However, since reading the fine print and realizing anything I upload to Photoshop Express can be used by them to make money for them, it's another "software" product I will not be using. I'll continue to subscribe to ancestry.com, but I think Family Tree Maker and I are at the end of our relationship. And therefore I am mulling over the switch to Legacy 7, when it become available.

And when I do, I have decided to start fresh with my own family history. I have notes and files and family group sheets, but I did not cite my sources at all well in the beginning...or, well, ever. So this will be a chance to go through all the files, like I've wanted to do, and to pitch anything not relevant. Everything else (originals of certificates, diaries, etc. as well as photocopies) will be filed as well as digitized, with sources noted on everything.

A big job. But there's nothing like new software to get the excitement level up there again.

PS. I totally can't wait until someone creates the software described here: http://www.thinkgenealogy.com/2008/04/06/10-things-genealogy-software-should-do/ That will be awesome. I hope someone is already at work on it! This is the way genealogy software should be in the 21st century.

Goals

The Big Dream Goal: For every identified ancestor, a complete timeline of his or her life, including the political and social climate they lived in, with complete and accurately recorded sources for each and every fact; copies of primary and secondary records scanned and backed up, with paper copies filed in an easy to understand system; a paper and digital copy of the story of their lives in a form that a descendant or cousin with only a slight interest in family history would find pleasurable to read.

The Realistic Goal: Just get the stuff into some semblance of order so it won't get pitched when my kids clear out the house some day! (Yes, kids, I hear the whispered "Thank yous"! )