Showing posts with label Program. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Program. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Monetizing your Genealogy Expertise with a Blog/Website

Friday Room F319 Club North 9:30am - 11am

Do you have a blog or website or want to create one?

Mark Olsen of FamilyLink.com will be teaching you how to make money using your specific Genealogy Expertise.

If you have unique knowledge pertaining to a particular topic/niche such as particualar area, record type,

Language, Church, History, Surname or your own family stories this class is for you.

If you have a blog or website you can make money either as your main income or on the side.  Have you heard of affiliate marketing but don't know where to start?In this question and answer session Mark will show you what he has learned as an affiliate, affiliate manager and professional online marketer.

From a few extra dollars a month to thousands of dollars each month you can monetize your expertise.

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Ancestry.com Feedback Sessions

Wed, May 11,  & Friday, May 13,  in meeting room; Ideation

Give Ancestry feedback on some new concepts during NGS.  If you are interested in sharing your discoveries with your family, simplifying how many passwords you have to remember, or helping others get started with genealogy, we would like your input.

Sign up here http://tinyurl.com/3ggmkjq

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Day 4: A Day in Pictures

Color Guard
Marguerite Bishop
Opening Session Entryway



Bagpipes


Buzzy Jackson - Opening Session


Volunteers. We love you!

Opening Session


Connie Trossbach - Day 1 Drawing Winner with Illyce Mac Donald, NGS Membership Director

Photos coutesy Trish Hackett Nicola, CG

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Archives.com Grant Program

In today’s opening session, NGS platinum sponsor Archives.com announced it will make a special $1,000 dollar grant award to one conference attendee! The Archives.com Grant Program funds important individual and communal initiatives that contribute to the promotion and advancement of family history research and historical preservation.  Archives makes a monthly award from their website, but has decided to go one step further and make a special grant award here in Charleston!
Are you working on or planning a family history project that needs an extra boost to get off the ground? If so, Archives encourages you to apply. Past winners have been both individuals and organizations who have taken on unique and challenging family history projects. Your project could be: restoring damaged photos, digitizing historical material, organizing a community event, or anything in between.
Here’s how it works. If you’re an NGS attendee, stop by Archives.com booths #229 and #231 to pick up an application. You can turn this hard-copy application back in to them during Exhibit Hall hours no later than 11am Saturday, May 14th.  The lucky winner will be announced Saturday afternoon.
The Archives.com  Grant recipient will receive a $1,000 dollar award to fund their project, and a feature on the Archives.com website.  
Thank you to Archives.com for this generous gift! Visit them at booths #229 and #231 to apply and learn more.  

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Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Day 3: Exhibits Set-up, Attendee Check-In and On-Site Registration Opens

5:00 a.m. wake up call dragged me out of bed and then I had a nice chat with my mom in Germany. My day was off to a wonderful start. I reviewed my schedule for the day over a cup of steaming hot coffee in my room and made a mental note.... need caffeine- a long and exciting day ahead!

7:00 a.m. Registration for the Research Trip to the South Carolina Archives begins in the lobby of the Embassy Suites. Delivered registration materials ... check!
7:45 a.m. Attendees depart for Librarians' Day.
8:00 a.m. Attendee Check-In begins for the BCG Education Fund Workshop in Meeting Room 10-13.
8:15 a.m. Check in with Valley Expo on Exhibit Hall setup. Boy..... they are super efficient and I have enjoyed working with them over the years. Thank you Cynthia Kutz!
10:00 a.m. Exhibitor Registration begins and the exhibit hall begins to take form.
11:00 a.m. Attendee check-in and on-site registration setup complete.
12:00 noon Attendee check-in and on-site registration begins. Registration was smooth. We had 27 on-site registrations today and our attendee check-in volunteers did a wonderful job ... An absolute success....
3:30 p.m. Lunch at the Embassy Suites .... Another meal recommendation Prime Rib Bites. An appetizer selection on the menu featuring prime rib, mashed potatoes, asparagus, and horse radish sauce.... I am sure I will repeat this order before the end of the week.
5:00 p.m. Exhibit setup is complete and we have a beautiful hall waiting for all of you attendees to visit tomorrow.
7:00 p.m. Registration closes and I stagger over to the Embassy Suites to enjoy the last half hour of the Manager's Reception.

An eventful day and I look forward to tomorrow.

Reminder: The opening session begins at 8:00 a.m. and is in the Performing Arts Center. Till tomorrow!

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Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Family History Skills

If you have always wanted to research your family but don't know where to begin, the conference will feature a Family History Skills track for people new to genealogy or others who desire to broaden their research skills. This special twelve-lecture track will instruct you on how to research vital records, census, cemeteries, obituaries, city directories, printed genealogies, and county histories as well as how to organize your research and prepare a timeline.

Full conference registration is available onsite with a discount for National Genealogical Society members.  Single day registrations are also available. Program and registration details can be found at http://www.ngsgenealogy.org/cs/conference_info.

If you don't have time to attend the full conference, a one-day session, "Genealogy 101," will be offered on Saturday, 14 May 2011, from 9:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. This hands-on workshop will review both printed and electronic sources for family history research and will cover essential record groups, how to determine an immigrant ancestor's origins, and how to uncover the facts behind those family stories. You can register onsite but space is limited so arrive early to secure a spot.
An exhibit area with more than one hundred exhibitors will be open and free to the public Wednesday through Saturday, 11–14 May, and will include the latest in genealogical software, online research providers, and DNA testing services.

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Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Ancestry.com Feedback Sessions

Wed, May 11,  & Friday, May 13,  in meeting room; Ashley

Give Ancestry feedback on some new concepts during NGS.  If you are interested in sharing your discoveries with your family, simplifying how many passwords you have to remember, or helping others get started with genealogy, we would like your input.

Sign up here http://tinyurl.com/3ggmkjq

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Friday, April 29, 2011

Stay Connected

Stay connected before, during and after the NGS 2011 Family History Conference with Social Media tools dedicated to sharing information and connecting individuals around the conference.

Tools to follow at the NGS 2011 Family History Conference:


facebook icon NGS Facebook
Connect with members and attendees at the NGS 2011 Family History Conference
blogspot iconNGS Conference Blog 
Keep the conversation going, check out the NGS Conference blog
Twitter
NGS 2011 Conference (#ngs2011)
NGS YouTube 


Social Media Policy

NGS does not permit the recording of presentations at the NGS Family History Conference under any circumstances or in any form or media, including but not limited to audio recordings, video recordings, or literal transcripts, except by specific written permission. JAMB, Inc. contracts with NGS to audio record the lectures of speakers who provide their written consent to be recorded. CD's may be purchased at the conference or ordered after the conference for $12 per CD.

NGS does permit and encourage the use of social media, such as Facebook, Twitter and blogging at the conference as a way to summarize, highlight, excerpt, review, critique, and/or promote the presented materials, syllabus materials, or the conference in general, provided that (1) the material is not shared in full and (2) the author/speaker is referenced and cited appropriately in each case. Please keep in mind that our presenters have invested many hours into the development of this material and copyright laws apply.

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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Plan Ahead

Before you leave home, decide which lectures you would like to attend. Click here, to download the daily schedule for the conference, which includes information on whether the session is being taped or not, room location etc.

To view and download syllabus pages for those lectures from the NGS website, http://www.ngsgenealogy.org/cs/2011syllabus. Many speakers will refer to these pages in their lectures. 

Note: Due to the large size of the file, please follow the instructions on the page to download and view the file successfully.

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Monday, April 25, 2011

26 April 2011 - Pre-Registration Deadline

Countdown to the NGS 2011 Family History Conference - only 15 more days!

There are over 186 lecture sessions at the NGS conference ranging in topic from technology skills; to military records; to ethnic research; to methodology and skillbuilding! Read more.

There will be nearly 90 different exhibitors in this year's exhibit hall -- just about anything you want or need to help you with your genealogical research. Read more.

Location

Charleston, South Carolina has a very interesting history. Did you know that Charleston's cobble stone streets were built built from the ballast (stone weights) of ships? Did you know that the Western Hemisphere's longest cable-stayed bridge, the Arthur J. Ravenel Jr bridge, spans the Charleston Harbor? The bridge connects Charleston and Mount Pleasant. Visit Charleston in May and share your love of family history with over 2,000 other family historians.

Registration


Pre-registration for the NGS 2011 Family History Conference ends 26 April 2011. So be sure you register today! You can also register on-site at the North Charleston Convention Center beginning 10 May 2011. Location details and hours are listed below.

Attendee Check-In and On-Site Registration Hours

The NGS 2011 Family History Conference will be located at the North Charleston Area Convention Center, 5001 Coliseum Dr., North Charleston, South Carolina. Even though you have registered for the conference, you are expected to check-in and pick up your conference bag, program and syllabus on CD (Printed syllabus, if pre-ordered before early bird deadline). Please bring you ID to check-in.

Tuesday, 10 May 2011
12:00 p.m.–7:00 p.m.

Wednesday, 11 May 2011
7:00 a.m.–3:30 p.m.

Thursday, 12 May 2011
7:00 a.m.–3:30 p.m.

Friday, 13 May 2011
7:00 a.m.–3:30 p.m.

Saturday, 14 May 2011
7:00 a.m.–12 p.m.

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Announcement: National Genealogical Society Banquet Speaker will be Patrick McCawley

We regret to inform you that Stephen B. Bacon, Maj. USAF (Ret), will be unable to deliver the National Genealogical Society Banquet talk Friday, 13 May 2011, due to circumstances beyond his control.  We have been fortunate on such short notice to find Patrick McCawley, who is also an expert on many aspects of the Civil War in South Carolina.

Patrick McCawley, Archival Processing Supervisor at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History, will talk about “The Destruction of Records in South Carolina during the Civil War.” His talk will provide an overview of recordkeeping in South Carolina on the eve of the war, a review of military operations during the war, and the effect those operations had on the survival of local and state records. In particular he will discuss the march of General Sherman’s army through the state and the courthouses and records destroyed as a result.

McCawley began his career with the South Carolina Department of Archives and History in 1986 as Reference Archivist. His interest in military history led him to become familiar with the department’s military records and, in his twenty-five years with the Archives, has become an expert on its Civil War holdings. His current duties include assessing and accessioning all incoming records from the state or local governments, preparing the records for research use, and maintaining the electronic guide to the archival collection, all within a restricted budget in a recessionary environment. 


McCawley’s interest in history began at an early age, fostered by the Time-Life books his father collected and family trips to Manassas and Antietam battlefields. He graduated from the University of Maryland, where he received a BA in American History in 1984. His focus during his college years was World War II military history with an emphasis on the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.  McCawley also attended the Applied History graduate program at the University of South Carolina. More recently he has attended the annual Southeastern Archives and Records Conference and has participated in panels for the National Association of Government Archives and Records Administrators.

In 1991, McCawley wrote a small pamphlet on Confederate records which led to a more complete Guide to Civil War Records: A Guide to Records at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History published in 1994.  In 1997, the department published the Selected Civil War Bibliography, a 44-page list of South Carolina related Civil War books and articles.  In 1999, McCawley co-edited, with Alexia J. Helsley, The Many Faces of Slavery, a reader of selected slave related documents from the department’s collection geared towards use in the classroom. McCawley has also written several  articles for historical journals and several Civil War related entries for the Encyclopedia of South Carolina.  He has also had two “guest appearances” on PBS’s The History Detectives.

Patrick McCawley resides with his family in Chapin, South Carolina.

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Monday, April 11, 2011

Speaker Spotlight: Patricia Walls Stamm, CG, CGL

An article in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat reported on a fire at the Military Personal Records Center in July 1973. On prophetic line said that the fire “created an administrative nightmare which may torment the U.S. Military establishment for years to come.”

Beginning in 2005, the Archival Division of the Military Personal Records Center, St. Louis began opening the military files to the public. Now they receive approximately 5,000 requests per day.

For years, rumors were circulated about the fire, records found, and files destroyed. What records are in St. Louis? Ever wondered what records were burned? How they preserve the remaining files? What you might find in a file? What determines if the file was archival or a regular restricted file?  

On Saturday at 4:00 p.m., the genealogical community will hear about the fire, the resulting aftermath, and the records one can obtain in a lecture by Patricia Walls Stamm, CG, CGL, a local St. Louis researcher, who uses the St. Louis NARA Military Personal Records Center.


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Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Speaker Spotlight: Don Rightmyer

Don Rightmyer, editor, Kentucky Ancestors (quarterly genealogical publication of the Kentucky Historical Society, Frankfort, Kentucky), writer, and lecturer.  Following a 24-year U.S. Air Force career, Don worked as a reference librarian for eight years before taking over Kentucky Ancestors.  He has spoken on a variety of genealogical, Civil War, and Kentucky historical topics at national, regional, and local levels.    

Migration Routes into Kentucky

Traveling to the trans-Appalachian region of colonial Virginia in the late 1700s?  Over 200,000 people made that trip in the last quarter of the eighteenth century.  The two primary routes were down the Ohio River or through the Cumberland Gap by way of the Wilderness Trail.  Don Rightmyer will describe what the experience was like for ancestors who made that trip and began a new life “on the western waters.” 

 

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Monday, April 4, 2011

Ancestry Day

Are you getting the most out of your Ancestry.com subscription? Need ideas to help you grow and organize your family tree? If so, don’t miss Ancestry Day on Saturday, 14 May 2011 from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in Exhibit Hall C of the North Charleston Convention Center.

Register Today

Schedule

The following is the schedule of this fun and exciting day:

8:00 a.m. Ancestry Day check-in opens
9:00 a.m. NGS Exhibit Hall Opens
9:30 – 10:30 a.m. Getting the most of Ancestry.com search             
11:00 a.m. –  noon Overlooked Secrets in Census Records
Noon – 2:30 p.m.  Lunch
2:30 – 3:30 p.m. Searching Your African-American Roots on Ancestry.com
4:00 – 5:00 p.m. – Getting the Most from Family Tree Maker

How to Register

Click here to register today.


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Friday, April 1, 2011

Speaker Spotlight - Claire Bettag, CG, CGL

Claire Bettag, CG, CGL, lecturer, writer, and editor, has served as trustee for BCG, APG, and NGS; director of NIGR; and co-editor of the NGSQ.
BOUNTY-LAND RECORDS AT NARA
Looking for an ancestor who might have had bounty land? You might learn something in this presentation, as bounty-land research can be puzzling, sometimes involving multiple search paths to various records. Researchers working in the bounty-land records of the National Archives (NARA)—whether on site or online—frequently fail to consult all available records. At least two NARA record groups are involved: Record Group 15 for the bounty-land applications, and Record Group 49 for the surrendered bounty-land warrants. In general, the applications are more valuable for genealogical purposes, but researchers should always consult both, as some surrendered warrant files can provide a great deal of information. Various indexes to both applications and surrendered warrants are available. Some indexes, however, are incomplete. Especially for applications, unproductive index searches must be complemented by searches in unindexed record series at the National Archives. This discussion will guide researchers to all available records, and will look at many examples along the way.

RESEARCH REPORTS
If you’re like most researchers, you love the excitement of the chase, the search, the quest. You are not so excited by the prospect of writing a report about that quest. While this discussion can promise no “easy way out” and no way to avoid writing reports, it will present the essential elements for written reports—whether written for clients, for friends and relatives, or for your own files. There may be no way to make writing a research report fun for everyone, but perhaps developing a template and reporting habits can make the task less onerous.


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Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Speaker Spotlight: Julie Miller, CG

Julie is a Kentucky native and has lived in Mississippi, South Dakota, Indiana, Arizona, Texas and has resided in Colorado for the past 19 years. She has been involved in genealogy since she started researching her own family in 1976.

Julie has been active in genealogy society management for over 11 years in various local and national societies. She is NGS Vice President, NGS 2010 and 2012 conference chair, and has been a volunteer at the National Archives, Rocky Mountain Region for 15 years.

Lectures that Julie will be presenting:

W146, Wednesday, 2:30–3:30 p.m.
"Search for Ancestors in Passenger Arrival Records"
This lecture starts with a short review of the passenger arrival records that are available and what information is found in those records. The majority of the lecture covers difficult problems that may be encountered when reaching passenger lists and the importance of dissecting the records and analyzing the information in order to reveal all of their potential worth. This session is for you if you have some experience in passenger arrival list research.
 
T223, Thursday, 11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
"When Grandpa Comes Marching Home Again"
Civil War pension files are filled with genealogical information but are often large and intimidating. This lecture begins with a review of the documents usually included in a Civil War pension file. It then discusses how to make sense of the file by organizing, extracting and analyzing the documents and information. This lecture is for you if you have acquired a pension file (or any large file of documents) and want some ideas about how to find the hidden treasures contained within these files.

F326, Friday, 11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
"Catholic Church Research in the Southeast"
Catholic Church records can provide information about our ancestors for periods when civil vital records do not exist. These records are well-known for their reliability and value to genealogical researchers. This lecture discusses the different types of Catholic Church records available, what you can expect to find in the records, and how to locate the records with a special emphasis on the locating records in the Southeast United States. No prior knowledge of Catholic Church records is needed to attend this session.

S404. Saturday, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Kids' Kamp
This program is for children between the ages of eight and sixteen. The Kamp features a variety of age-appropriate activities that help children gain an appreciation of and a connection to their ancestry. Included in the Kamp are activities focusing on the requirements for the Boy Scout Genealogy Merit Badge and the Girl Scout My Heritage Badge. This  is a fun and unique opportunity to get your children, grandchildren, nieces, nephews, and scout troops interested in their family history.



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Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Tips for First Time Conference Attendees

Program highlights

  • The conference has a number of tracks or lecture themes. When you register, we ask you to indicate the lectures you plan to attend so we can anticipate the audience size for each lecture, but you can change your selection and attend any lecture in any track.
  • If you are new to genealogy, we recommend the Family History Skills Track, which covers the basic records you need to research your family. Experienced speakers will tell you how to analyze each type of record while providing many examples from their research.
  • If you have been researching for a while, you might enjoy the methodology lectures in which you will learn how to hone your research skills to help break through your brick walls.
  • If you have been researching for some time and want to improve your genealogical skills, then the Board for Certification of Genealogists (BCG) Skillbuilding Track may be your preference.
  • You are free to move from track to track throughout the day and conference.  However, as a courtesy to the speaker, please do not leave a lecture once it has begun.
  • Some lectures will be well attended. The largest lecture rooms will hold 500 people. Some of the specialty lectures will be in smaller rooms with limited space. If there is a lecture you really want to hear, we recommend you find your seat twenty minutes before the lecture begins.
  • Many of the lectures will be recorded and available for purchase for $12 each at the conference and after the conference through a link on the NGS website.  If there are two or more lectures you want to hear at the same time, check the program. Lectures not being recorded will have a pen in the lecture square indicating you need to take notes.
  • Each lecture has a number assigned: Wednesday lectures begin with a W, Thursday with a T, Friday with a F, and Saturday with an S. The lectures on Wednesday begin with 101, on Thursday with 201, on Friday with 301, and on Saturday with 401. Understanding the numbering system will help you find lectures in the Syllabus and order recorded lectures on CD ROM.

Exhibit hall

  • As you enter the exhibit hall you will see the National Genealogical Society booth. Stop by and see our publications, including the Research in the States series, and talk to our staff about education courses. Many conference attendees collect conference pins. The Charleston pin includes a picture by local artist Madeline Carol.
  • There will be over one hundred vendors in the exhibit hall. Ancestry.com and FamilySearch will have large booths with computers available to search for your ancestors. There will also be several booksellers and a number of vendors selling family history software. If you have not yet purchased family history software, the exhibit hall offers a great opportunity to compare the features and benefits of each alternative.
  • The largest genealogy societies and professional organizations will also have booths.  You will have an opportunity to visit with the officers and staff, view their publications, and ask questions.
  • If you make too many purchases to fit everything in your suitcase, UPS will be available in the exhibit hall on Saturday to handle any shipments home.
  • Bring return address labels to use when signing up for drawings in the Exhibit Hall. Social events.
  • There will be three luncheons each day sponsored by a major genealogical society or organization. Each luncheon includes a speaker. The speaker, title of the talk, and menu are listed in the registration brochure, which is available as a PDF online at http://tinyurl.com/yjhnx89.
  • Luncheons provide networking opportunities for you to meet other genealogists. If you prefer to browse the exhibit hall instead, a food concession will be open each day through the lunch hour. The Embassy Suites will also have a daily luncheon buffet for $13.25 plus tax.
  • The South Carolina Genealogical Society is our local host. On Wednesday night they will host a wine and cheese reception at the Charleston Visitor’s Center followed by a tour of the Charleston Museum. Details can be found in the registration brochure at http://tinyurl.com/yjhnx89. Register soon because only a few tickets are still available.
  • Also on Wednesday night the South Carolina Genealogical Society will host a dinner cruise aboard the Spirit of Carolina. This is your chance to see the beautiful Charleston skyline from the water and enjoy the scenic views along the Ashley River. The cost is $70, which includes bus transportation.
  • On Thursday night the South Carolina Genealogical Society will host a southern barbeque at the Charleston Rifle Club. Entertainment will include Irish Dancers. The cost is $35, which includes bus transportation.
  • Check the registration brochure for more details and departure times and locations. You may register for these events through 26 April 2011 or until they are sold out.

Conference syllabus

We ask each speaker to submit a four-page summary of the highlights of their lecture. We print these summaries in a syllabus. The syllabus is available to all paid conference registrants on CD. About two weeks before the conference, we will make the syllabus available for your review on the conference website. You will be sent an e-mail letting you know when it is available. This early release provides you with an opportunity to print the summaries for the lectures you plan to attend. We will also have syllabus print stations at the conference, but you will be limited to printing 20 pages at a time. When you check in you will receive the CD, and the printed syllabus if you ordered one for $20 before the early bird cut-off, 11 March 2011. 

Networking at the Conference

  • Be sure to take business cards or a small pad of paper so you can exchange contact information with people you meet at the conference.
  • You may also want to bring your family history database on a flash drive so you can share your gedcom file with any cousins you meet. It is also always good to have a recent back up.

When you arrive at the conference

  • If you pre-registered for the conference, you will pick up the conference materials at a booth in the lobby of the convention center labeled “Attendee Check-In.” The booth will be open from  noon until 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, 10 May 2011, and will open at 7:00 a.m. on Wednesday morning. You will need to show personal identification. Before you leave the booth area, check to make sure you have all the tickets for events you purchased when you registered.
  • Your name tag provides you with access to all the lectures and the two general sessions. Be sure to wear your name tag at all times. You will need a ticket to the paid social events. The last day to purchase tickets for the social events is 26 April 2011. However, we recommend you purchase tickets as soon as possible, as space is limited and the events are filling up quickly.
  • You will receive a tote bag with your program and other conference materials. Put your name on your program in case you lose it. We only print enough copies for each attendee to receive one. The tote bag will help you carry your program materials as well as purchases you make in the exhibit hall.

What to pack

  • Business casual clothes are proper attire for most of the conference. If you have registered for the NGS Banquet, business attire or a cocktail dress is appropriate. You will notice the speakers all wear business attire.
  • Convention centers can be cold, so be sure to bring a sweater or jacket to wear during the day.
  • Comfortable shoes are a must.
  • South Carolina is warm and beautiful in May. However, you may need a sweater or jacket if you go out for the evening, especially if you are taking the dinner cruise on Wednesday night. 
  • A shower is possible any day during the week, so you may want to pack a small umbrella.

Where to research

Sightseeing and dining

  • Historic downtown Charleston is twelve miles away. If you are staying at the Embassy Suites you can take a shuttle downtown for $10 each way, or find a friend and share a cab.
  • Charleston has wonderful restaurants. Most require reservations, especially on the weekend.
  • Charleston barbeque may be prepared with a local yellow sauce or the  traditional red sauce, so when you see it on a menu you should ask how the barbeque was prepared. 
  • “The Hospitality Booth” across from “Attendee Check-In” will have a comprehensive visitors guide available.

Airport and parking

  • The Charleston Airport is less than five miles from the convention center and hotels.
  • All of the conference hotels have a shuttle that will pick you up at the airport. Have their phone number handy and call them as soon as you have your luggage.
  • If you leave your hotel in North Charleston ninety minutes before your flight departs Charleston, you should have plenty of time to make your flight.
  • If you are driving to the conference, parking at the convention center  is only $5 per day.  Parking is free at all of the seven conference hotels. A trolley will run Wednesday through Friday from the six conference hotels  to the convention center. The Embassy Suites is connected to the convention center by a covered walkway. The trolley schedule is posted on the NGS conference blog.

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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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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Save the date, 11-14 May 2011, Charleston, South Carolina

In 2007 the NGS Board of Directors began looking for a conference location for 2011 in which we could commemorate the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the beginning of the Civil War. Charleston was selected because it is a charming city, rich in history, and the first shot of the war was fired at nearby Ft. Sumter 12 April 1861. Come early to enjoy the sites in and around Charleston.

Whether next year will be your first NGS conference or your tenth, there will be many new lectures and programs to increase your family history research skills. A four page pre- conference flyer is available as a PDF at http://www.ngsgenealogy.org/cs/conference_info and includes contact information for the area hotels as well as a listing of research facilities in Charleston. The flyer also briefly describes the evening social activities.

Program highlights will include tracks on military records, ethnic research, church records, immigration and migration, methodology and an emphasis on research in the southeast.  The Board for Certification of Genealogists will again sponsor the Skillbuilding Track presented by nationally known experts in the field of genealogy. Each day will include two tracks about technological advances in genealogy covering subscription databases, software, Internet resources and more. This year we are also offering a Family History & Genealogy Track which will help you flesh out and record the stories about your ancestors.  Once again, the conference will also have an Exhibit Area with more than 100 vendors including FamilySearch and Ancestry.

The Military Track will begin with a lecture on Revolutionary War records and continue into the twentieth century, with an emphasis on both Union and Confederate records. Our ethnic track will include a series of lectures on both African American and Native American research as well as Irish, Scot-Irish and German research.

If this is your first conference, we will have a Family History Skills Track with a focus on the essential record groups and how to use them.  You can attend any of the lectures that interest you and move from track to track throughout the day.

The NGS 2011 Family History Conference will be held at the Charleston Area Convention Center, 5001 Coliseum Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, which is located near the Charleston Airport. The convention center is surrounding by a several hotels in a campus environment. The Embassy Suites hotel is the main conference hotel and is connected to the convention center. However, the Embassy Suites is a smaller hotel, so many of the attendees will be staying at the other nearby hotels including the Hilton Garden Inn, Holiday Inn, Residence Inn, Hampton Inn and newly renovated Crowne Plaza. The Charleston Visitors and Convention Bureau will be providing trolley service between the hotels mentioned above and the convention center. We encourage you to make your hotel reservations early, because we are expecting a large attendance due to the recent television shows and the increased interest in family history. Some of the hotel facilities are suites hotels and most of the facilities include a microwave and refrigerator. Please check the conference website for the details: http://www.ngsgenealogy.org/cs/conference_info.

The conference registration brochure will be available online about 1 December 2010 at http://www.ngsgenealogy.org/cs/conference_info. Several of the social events have limited space, so to ensure a space we encourage you to register early. After that date you will be able to register online at http://www.ngsgenealogy.org/cs/attendee_registration or print the registration brochure and fax or mail in your registration and payment. If you need help registering for the conference, e-mail registration@ngsgenealogy.org. The conference registration brochure will be printed and mailed to NGS members with the NGS Quarterly early in January. The early bird registration will be available until 22 March 2011.

We hope to see you in Charleston.



-Janet A. Alpert
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