Family History Month Challenge Day Eleven: Road Trip

by Eowyn Langholf and Abby Glann
Hi Cousins!

gfr challengeOctober is Family History Month so for fun we’re giving a challenge every day of the month relating to ways you can celebrate your family, your lineage and your heritage!

Ready for Day 11? Here it is: Take a road trip to see how many of the homes your ancestors lived in are still standing. Take pictures. They might not be up there forever. This can be especially fun if you have old photos of these same places to compare.  If you feel really brave, go knock on the door, introduce yourself and ask to see how it looks inside now.

Family History Month Challenge Day Ten: Plan a Big Family Sunday Supper

by Eowyn Langholf and Abby Glann
Hi Cousins!

gfr challengeOctober is Family History Month so for fun we’re giving a challenge every day of the month relating to ways you can celebrate your family, your lineage and your heritage!

Ready for Day 10? Here it is: Have a big family Sunday supper like was so common so many years ago. This might seem like such a trivial thing, but just sharing a meal together can foster discussion that can give you insight into your history, plus it’s fun. Potluck it to make it easy for everyone to participate. Make it Saturday to avoid needing to be home early. Play some games. Make it fun!

Cousin Connection Tip #9: What’s That Sound?

by Abby Glann

Although census records are a great way to add family to your ancestors fast, there are little tips and tricks that can make them a bit more useful. One thing you should know about is the Soundex system. A lot of genealogical search engines use the Soundex to widen results to include names you may not have thought were related to your own. Our ancestors didn’t necessarily spell as well as we may now, and census takers often simply spelled things phonetically, especially when dealing with new immigrants whose names might have been difficult to understand.

The definition of Soundex, from Wikipedia, is “a phonetic algorithm for indexing names by sound, as pronounced in English.” It is amazing how this algorithm helps us. If you have ever spent time in a historical library, you’ll have seen this system in use. Without getting into the exact details, which are expounded on on the Wikipedia page, as well as numerous others, what it does is takes letters that look or sound similar and put them in a similar group, so when you search for a name that starts with B, for instance, it will also pull up names with similar following consonant sounds that begin with F, V, and P. When you get your FamilySearch results and you get Potters in with your Butters, this is why. It’s a good thing-your friendly neighborhood census taker may have misheard and put Potter down thinking Butter didn’t sound correct. Do not discount those results that seem odd-look at the folks in the household, where they lived, and their ages. It just might be your family!

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(image courtesy of Twisted Twigs on Gnarled Branches on Facebook)

Family History Month Day Nine: Share with your Family

by Eowyn Langholf and Abby Glann
Hi Cousins!

gfr challenge

October is Family History Month so for fun we’re giving a challenge every day of the month relating to ways you can celebrate your family, your lineage and your heritage!

Ready for Day 9? Here it is: Share your research with your family. I know, so many of them aren’t as interested in your hobby as you are, but find an interesting story or photo (or few), sit down and share it with them. Especially the younger generations might find it really cool to hear about Great Grandpa in the War or Uncle Joe’s penchant for shoemaking.

Family History Month Challenge Day Eight: Are You Connected?

by Eowyn Langholf and Abby Glann
Hi Cousins!
 

October is Family History Month so for fun we’re giving a challenge every day of the month relating to ways you can celebrate your family, your lineage and your heritage!

Ready for Day 8? Here it is: Have you figured out how you’re connected to the rest of the world, yet? Check out the Global Family Reunion on WikiTree, Geni, and FamilySearch to see if you can find some ancestors you share with AJ Jacobs and the rest of world.

Not sure how to do that? Complete our Join the Family form and we can help you get started!

Family History Month Challenge Day Seven: Do Something With Those Old Photos

by Eowyn Langholf and Abby Glann 
Hi Cousins!
 

October is Family History Month so for fun we’re giving a challenge every day of the month relating to ways you can celebrate your family, your lineage and your heritage!

Ready for Day 7? Here it is: Do something with those old photos. Scan them into the computer so you do not lose them should something happen, and then save them a few different ways-on a disc, a removable drive, an online “cloud” like AncestorCloud or DropBox. Be sure to put who is in the photo and their information in the file name.

“I Am A Cousin” – Meet Michael Stills

Michael and AJ are 25 steps apart.
 
1. Tell us a bit about yourself.
Well the short answer I give online is Husband, Father, Son, Digital Explorer.  I am part of that “Sandwich” generation, caring for elderly parents and a 16 year old daughter.  What time I have left, I divide between my wife and myself.  
I dreamed of a career that was a cross between Lewis and Clark and Star Trek, exploring the unknown but with high tech  gadgets.  I was a National Park Ranger before I ended up with a career in Volunteer and Nonprofit Management mostly for outdoor and nature organizations. Recently I started a small business assisting members of my community, an extension of taking care of my parents. And I am dangerously addicted to Genealogy and I like puzzles. When I discovered WikiTree, I had to figure it out and in the process I got hooked.
2. What first interested you in the Global Family Reunion? Are you thinking of attending the shindig in New York next year? 
I think it was through reading the G2G feeds and the curiosity of it played into what I was doing at the time. I was tracking down relationships to the US Presidents.  I find that many famous figures have had their genealogy done for them, usually it is well done.  If I find a connection, often I can push back my own lines or better source them.  Over time I realized that it is not, “Who are we related to?” but “Where are we related?”. The themes of the project resonated with my own. I think that is what Global Family Reunion is built on and what WikiTree is excellent at finding.  Besides, everyone was having so much fun I had to check it out.
I wish I could attend the event in New York.  My wife is from New York so it would be a fun trip for us both.  But alas, my budget is small so the adventures have to be local.  Be sure to say hi to all my cousins for me though, ok?
3. What is an unexpected connection in the links between you and AJ?
Once you realize everyone is connected, finding the connection is not unexpected but it sure is fun. 
 
But what is really unexpected is that AJ’s passion for his project and his relative newness to genealogy has found an outlet that has the potential to be transformative.  It was not some big name genealogist that got the ball rolling but a relative newcomer.  That’s awesome! I feel like we have just explored the proverbial “tip of the iceberg.” It will be interesting to see how this grows until the reunion next year and then to see what comes of it in years to come. Is this just another project for AJ or will the genealogy bug grab him like it has for many of us?  In any event, more fun and adventure ahead.
4. Who are some notable people you were glad to be connected to in the big tree? 
Thomas Jefferson because he was a “Renaissance man”.  I wanted to say John Wayne because my mom is a big fan, but he isn’t connected to the Global Tree yet!
I also love my ancestors in the New Netherlands Project.  New Netherlands history is a sorely neglected part of American History.  Russell Shorto’s book, “Island and the Center of the World” was a great read and very enlightening. Connecting to the supposed pirate, Anthony Jansen Van Salee and his wife, “Manhattan’s first prostitute” is a lot of fun, if a bit suspect.  But I am very glad to be able to find connections to regular folks at WikiTree too!
5. If you get AJ to invite one person to the reunion, who would it be? Who are some other notable people you would like to see connected to the tree?
Me??, …wait, I am invited!
Hmm…I can not think of one person specifically so I am going to say, history teachers.
Once you truly realize that we are all related, then we are back to “Where are we related?”  We need to enlighten those who have not yet discovered this reality and the potential behind it.  Imagine teaching history from the perspective that, “We are all related.” Not as a general platitude, but as if we are teaching about our grandparents.  Genealogy has the potential to make the experience of history real and personal.  We say the words, “Forefathers” but we do not “feel” the words.  If our common understanding of history includes the idea that we are all related (and we know exactly how), how would our relationships in the world change?  If our children understood historical figures as personal ancestors, how might their understanding of history change?
6. Who is someone in your family tree the rest of us would be proud to call “Cousin”?
My first “discovery” was learning about my great grandfather, Smith Alexander Stills. He is my primary focus and I feel a personal connection to him. Even though he was just a farmer from a long line of Tennessee farmers, what little I have about him suggests he was a good man.
Another ancestor I could point you to would be Dr. Chauncey Lee Sheldon.  He served as Surgeon’s Mate during the War of 1812, was County Clerk in Warsaw, New York, where he was also their first doctor and druggist. As County Clerk, he authenticated a lot of Revolutionary War pension applications and was a pillar in his community. He lived a lot of American history, yet he died at the age of 44 after fathering 13 children, of which at least three died very young.

Family History Month Challenge Day Six: Volunteer at your Local Society

by Eowyn Langholf and Abby Glann 
Hi Cousins!
 

October is Family History Month so for fun we’re giving a challenge every day of the month relating to ways you can celebrate your family, your lineage and your heritage!

Ready for Day 6? Here it is: Volunteer at your local historical society for an hour. Who knows-you might find something that helps you out as much as you helped them!

Here’s some helpful links:

Family History Month Challenge Day Five: Research a Collateral Ancestor

by Eowyn Langholf and Abby Glann 
Hi Cousins!
 

October is Family History Month so for fun we’re giving a challenge every day of the month relating to ways you can celebrate your family, your lineage and your heritage!

Ready for Day 5? Here it is: Research a collateral ancestor. Who was your great aunt’s husband? What about that gal with the funny name who married your fifth great uncle? Go find out about someone new. Sometimes clues for your own direct line lay buried with those collateral families.

Check out:

Lessons Learned From Collateral Lines
Cluster & Collateral Genealogy on Cyndi’s List

Family History Month Challenge Day Four: Start a Scrapbook

by Eowyn Langholf and Abby Glann 
Hi Cousins!
 

October is Family History Month so for fun we’re giving a challenge every day of the month relating to ways you can celebrate your family, your lineage and your heritage!

Ready for Day 4? Here it is: Start a family history scrapbook. Having all that information on the computer is great, but start your family story, including pictures and the stories your family tells you, as well as those in old town histories.

Here are a few sites that can help you get started!

  1. Scrapbooking your Family History 
  2. Scrap your Family History
  3. Scrapbooking on Cyndi’s List

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