Monday, February 28, 2011

Exhibitor Spotlight


Association of Professional Genealogists – Booths 117, 216
Association of Professional Genealogists Prepares for 2011 National Genealogical Society Family History Conference

APG Members to Educate Conference Goers on How to Hire a Professional Genealogist and How to Become a Professional Genealogist

The Association of Professional Genealogists (http://www.apgen.org) will head to Charleston, South Carolina, this spring for the 2011 National Genealogical Society (NGS) Family History Conference. Conference attendees can visit the APGbooth (#117 and # 216) to learn more about hiring a professional genealogist, as well as how to become one.

In addition to exhibiting at the conference, APG will host several events, including:

  • The members-only APG Roundtable, to be held Tuesday, 10 May, 7–9 p.m. The panel discussion topic will be “Looking for Clients in all the Right Places.”
  • An APG-sponsored lecture by Maureen Taylor, “Hunting History: Searching for the Revolutionary War Generation” on Wednesday, 11 May at 2:30 p.m.
  • An APG Luncheon, to be held on Friday, 13 May, where Eileen O’Duill, CG, will present, “Mrs. Fancy Tart is Coming to Tea: Making Sense of Family Stories.”

Media Contacts:
Kathleen W. Hinckley, CG
Executive Director
Association of Professional Genealogists
P.O. Box 350998, Westminster, CO 80035-0998
Phone:+1 303-465-6980, fax: +1 303-456-8825, e-mail: admin@apgen.org

Corey Oiesen
Communications Officer
Association of Professional Genealogists
email: corey@genealogyheroes.com
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APG is a registered trademark of the Association of Professional Genealogists. All other trade and service marks are property of their respective owners.

New York Genealogical and Biographical Society – Booths 507 and 509
The New York Genealogical and Biographical Society has been the essential resource for material on families in New York City, State, and region for 140+ years.  Visit the NYG&B booth and use our computer to search Worden’s Index of over 1,000,000 names of persons mentioned in articles published in The NYG&B Record and a consolidated table of contents from 1870 to 2001.  Talk to our Director of Education and resident genealogist Lauren Maehrlein.  Take home a free copy of our quarterly magazine The New York Researcher.  Receive a $10 discount on the purchase of a new membership.

NYG&B members have online access to every issue of the NYG&B Record; hundreds of useful articles on New York genealogical research; bibliographies and research tips; searchable cemetery transcriptions, religious records, and member biographical sketches that are unique to the NYG&B Society; plus more exceptional material.  And if you want to advance your research skills, take a look at the rich schedule of NYG&B programs, workshops, and repository tours offered through the New York Family History School.  Learn more at:

www.newyorkfamilyhistory.org
New York Genealogical and Biographical Society
36 West 44th Street, 7th Floor
New York, NY 10036-8105
Tel (212) 755-8532



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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Librarians' Day


  



NGS’s special pre-conference program for librarians, sponsored by ProQuest, will be held Tuesday, 10 May, 8:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m., at the Charleston County Public Library, 68 Calhoun Street, Charleston, South Carolina. Librarians who work with family history patrons are encouraged to attend this outstanding program.

"How Did that Yankee Get in the Family?" —Michael Hall is a BYU graduate who has worked for Family Search for more than twenty years. He is currently strategic relations manager working with libraries and genealogical societies worldwide.

"Putting All Your Library Resources to Use"—George Morgan is president of Aha! Seminars, Inc., a training company providing continuing education for libraries and library consortia.

"Solving African American Brick Walls"—Toni Carrier is founding director of the University of South Florida Africana Heritage Project.

"Social Networking"—Drew Smith is an academic librarian with the University of South Florida, Tampa.

ProQuest will provide lunch for registered attendees and will be available to answer questions about their products. The program will conclude with a tour of the Charleston County Public Library.

The program is free for Librarians but you must pre-register to attend the event. Registration can be found at http://www.ngsgenealogy.org/cs/attendee_registration. Click on pre-conference events.

The National Genealogical Society 2011 Family History Conference begins 11 May 2011 at the Charleston Area Convention Center, 5001 Coliseum Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina. Plan to register and attend this outstanding four-day genealogy conference.

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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Speaker Spotlight: Pamela Boyer Sayre, CG, CGL

T209 8:00-9:00 a.m. Thursday ebooks for Genealogists
Learn about free and paid every-word searchable eBooks that can be used online or downloaded to a Kindle, smartphone, or iPad.

T248 2:30-3:30 p.m. Thursday Investigating Your Ancestors
Learn how genealogists can use criminal investigation techniques to identify ancestors, record evidence, analyze and draw accurate conclusions, and write comprehensive but concise reports.

F301 8:00-9:00 a.m. Friday Reporting the Facts: Record as You Go
Learn to record your research as you work to ensure accuracy, best analysis and use of facts, and adequate time to write the results well.

F329 11:00-12:00 noon Friday Digitizing Your Way to Organization
See how a scanner with an automatic document feeder and Adobe Acrobat software can organize those mountains of paper on your kitchen table.

I’m speaking on several of my favorite topics at the upcoming NGS conference in Charleston, South Carolina. My Scots-Irish genes often win out over my obsessive German genes to the extent that I’m always looking for an easier or faster way to do something. But then the German genes kick in and demand that my schemes have order and clear processes. It’s really a pretty balanced match, but I wouldn’t have wanted to be the first Scots-Irish person who married the German in my family, or vice versa. What a match! At any rate, my ancestral combos lead me to think in ordered ways about how to do something faster and better, and that’s how I came up with all four of the sessions I’m presenting in Charleston. I hope that some of you will attend and learn from my mistakes, since I always tell my audiences that I have learned things the hard way so they don’t have to.

In my previous other life years ago as a commissioned police officer and detective, I attended the police academy and advanced courses to learn about criminal investigative techniques. One day I came up with the idea of a genealogy lecture while pondering how many of the skills I had learned as a police investigator apply equally to researching family history: identifying the right individual by his or her modus operandi (MO)—characteristics, habits, and associates; carefully analyzing clues and drawing accurate conclusions; writing the results of our work in clear, concise reports; and putting together a case that a jury of our peers (other genealogists) would find reasonable and correct. Investigating Your Ancestors demonstrates the similarities in criminal investigation techniques and good genealogical research methodologies. My law enforcement experience also helped me understand the criminal court records where I find most of my ancestors, but that’s a different class.

In eBooks for Genealogists I’ll be discussing and demonstrating myriad sources of electronic books—both old and new—available online for free or inexpensive download to your home computer, iPad, Kindle, Smartphone, or similar device. You’ll also see how to download, store, organize, and use these books. While you might not find it comfortable to read an entire 500-page county history on a small cell phone screen, you should be thrilled to have such reference books in versions that are every-word searchable at your disposal wherever you travel. You may find yourself sitting back in the woods at an old cemetery wishing you could remember the name of that one ancestor that you found in the history of the adjoining church. With the eBook version stored on your phone or portable device, you could simply whip that device out, search for what you do remember, and have the information at hand in seconds—while you’re still onsite at the cemetery where you need it.

We genealogists are enthusiastic about the hunt; we think nothing of going on as many research trips as we can afford in a single month. However, we’re often not as eager to carefully sift through, analyze, and write up the results of that research. Isn’t it easier to just make photocopies of everything and pile it on the dining room table to deal with later? In Reporting the Facts: Record As You Go, I’ll be providing an alternative by suggesting that we learn to write our research reports as we actually do the work. For our personal research, this means we always have a current report that acts as a road map to inform us where we last stopped and what we still need to do when we pick up a project again. In our work for others, it ensures that we don’t use all the allotted time researching and then lack adequate time to write a comprehensive and clear report. This BCG-sponsored lecture just might help you begin to think about your gathering and stashing habits in a different way.

And speaking of all those piles of paper on the dining room table or spare bed in the guest room, Digitizing Your Way to Organization offers a solution to overwhelming stacks and the inability to find what you need without an hours-long physical search. See how a scanner or digital camera can help you skip the paper and create most of your research files electronically or process the piles of paper you already have into electronic files. Then, using free or inexpensive software, you’ll be able to organize and label the electronic files so that you can search for and find a particular item in seconds rather than having to dig through five boxes of paper. If you stay on top of the paper you bring home (or brought home long ago), and digitize whenever possible, you should begin to see a real difference in your ability to find what you need—from relevant articles in magazines to actual images of ancestral documents.

I’m looking forward to seeing Charleston’s colorful houses and historic areas, even though I had no ancestors that I know of in that area. I have learned to say that I know of because as sure as anything, the week after I’ve traveled to a wonderful conference where I’ve learned all kinds of new things but didn’t do local research because I didn’t have any ancestors there, the very next week I’ll find a document that reveals a new ancestor who lived just across the river from the conference site. And even if I don’t, going to any conference is worthwhile because everything we learn helps us in our own research. I can go to a New England conference where they talk about Pilgrims and witches, and I stubbornly say to myself, “Harumph! What do they know about hill people in East Tennessee or the Ozarks?” But I learn methods and techniques from every single lecture at any conference, and that knowledge applies equally to my ancestors.

I hope to see y’all at the NGS conference in Charleston, South Carolina.
Pamela Boyer Sayre, CG, CGL

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