While the various indexing projects go on, I'm reading a select number of cities page by page. The subsription database ANCESTRY has Nevada and Delaware (two states with small populations in 1940 indexed if you want to try them out.)
I've now found, in New Jersey and in Pennsylvania, two extremely populated states circa 1940, that institutions are getting their own ED district. I've now read entire lists of prisoners, orphans, and tuberculosis hospitals on single EDs. Some of these are just a few pages. ARE YOU NOTICING THIS IN ANY OTHER STATES? LET ME KNOW!
27 April 2012
25 April 2012
18 April 2012
TSARS MISSING CHILDREN SOLVED BY DNA STUDY
"All five children of Russia's last Tsar were murdered by the Bolsheviks, according to a new DNA analysis that ends decades of conspiracy theories about family members who had escaped abroad. "
Remains thought to be Russia's last tsar Nicholas II, his wife Tsarina Alexander Fyodorovna, and children Prince Alexei and Princesses Olga, Tatyana, Maria and Anastasia were proven to be who they are because of the donated DNA of Prince Phillip of Great Britain, the husband of Queen Elizabeth. Over 200 people who claimed to be Anastasia in their lifetimes were proven to be either liars or deluded. Early in this story, remains had been found and identified except for the two youngest children. The children were found in a separate grave.
Linking to the London Telegraph Story!
Remains thought to be Russia's last tsar Nicholas II, his wife Tsarina Alexander Fyodorovna, and children Prince Alexei and Princesses Olga, Tatyana, Maria and Anastasia were proven to be who they are because of the donated DNA of Prince Phillip of Great Britain, the husband of Queen Elizabeth. Over 200 people who claimed to be Anastasia in their lifetimes were proven to be either liars or deluded. Early in this story, remains had been found and identified except for the two youngest children. The children were found in a separate grave.
Linking to the London Telegraph Story!
13 April 2012
ANCESTRY.COM and FAMILYSEARCH and the 1940 CENSUS : INDEXING PROJECTS RACE TO COMPLETE AN AMBITIOUS PROJECT
If you use the ANCESTRY.com database, which you can use at home with a subscription and at no charge at some libraries, you will notice that the 1940 census is in process.
Last I checked the states of Delaware and Nevada had been indexed on Ancestry.com, so a name should take you to census pages for those states. Ancestry is paying people to index and as I hear it, made a deal (paid) with National Archives to use the images.
I'M VERY HAPPY TO SEE THAT THE CITY INFORMATION on ANCESTRY.COM INCLUDES THE WARD OF THE CITY on the pull down menu. I checked a couple cities and made lists of ED districts by ward which I will read by ward as my research path.
What makes a ward? Well, it could be that wards were numbered by the development of that town, take into consideration geography such as rivers and hills, railroad tracks, even churches, with perhaps a population expanding and more suburban development. In some cases, if you found an ethnic ghetto in a ward in 1930, that's a good place to start on the 1940 for the descendants of those ethnic people.
Because there are over 13 million images for the 1940 census, it could be a very long time before the entire census is indexed. As most of us know badly or wrongly spelled surnames, inkblots, cross outs, and horrible handwriting, are all challenges to indexers.
THE LATTER DAY SAINTS have launched an ambitious project soliciting volunteers among those attending church at stakes throughout the country with a goal of all names in all states to be completed in 6 months! THE INFORMATION WILL BE FREE FOR USE ON THEIR FAMILYSEARCH SITE. (Yes some of us are joking "Just in time for 12-12-2012."
One LDS volunteer I met has personally indexed at least 37,000 people! I believe you can join this INDEXING PROJECT without being a church member and if interested I would call the closest LDS Family History Library to ask. They have some software that makes it easier to do. I believe also that you can sign up to do a small portion - say one ward of a town or even one page, but it must be coordinated.
IN ORDER TO DEAL WITH INACCURACIES on the FAMILYSEARCH project, each page will be indexed twice (by two different volunteers) and then a third person will compare and make a judgement where there are any discrepancies. It's a good idea and should help a lot, but you may still find yourself reading page by page anyway.
The ED Converter on the sidebar here at ANCESTRY RESEARCH GENEALOGY I've tried at three different libraries - two public in two different cities - as well as at a Family History Center. It appears that it will take you to images at Ancestry (if you have a subscription you log on then) or the National Archives and some other options. I'm sticking with the National Archives.
Last I checked the states of Delaware and Nevada had been indexed on Ancestry.com, so a name should take you to census pages for those states. Ancestry is paying people to index and as I hear it, made a deal (paid) with National Archives to use the images.
I'M VERY HAPPY TO SEE THAT THE CITY INFORMATION on ANCESTRY.COM INCLUDES THE WARD OF THE CITY on the pull down menu. I checked a couple cities and made lists of ED districts by ward which I will read by ward as my research path.
What makes a ward? Well, it could be that wards were numbered by the development of that town, take into consideration geography such as rivers and hills, railroad tracks, even churches, with perhaps a population expanding and more suburban development. In some cases, if you found an ethnic ghetto in a ward in 1930, that's a good place to start on the 1940 for the descendants of those ethnic people.
Because there are over 13 million images for the 1940 census, it could be a very long time before the entire census is indexed. As most of us know badly or wrongly spelled surnames, inkblots, cross outs, and horrible handwriting, are all challenges to indexers.
THE LATTER DAY SAINTS have launched an ambitious project soliciting volunteers among those attending church at stakes throughout the country with a goal of all names in all states to be completed in 6 months! THE INFORMATION WILL BE FREE FOR USE ON THEIR FAMILYSEARCH SITE. (Yes some of us are joking "Just in time for 12-12-2012."
One LDS volunteer I met has personally indexed at least 37,000 people! I believe you can join this INDEXING PROJECT without being a church member and if interested I would call the closest LDS Family History Library to ask. They have some software that makes it easier to do. I believe also that you can sign up to do a small portion - say one ward of a town or even one page, but it must be coordinated.
IN ORDER TO DEAL WITH INACCURACIES on the FAMILYSEARCH project, each page will be indexed twice (by two different volunteers) and then a third person will compare and make a judgement where there are any discrepancies. It's a good idea and should help a lot, but you may still find yourself reading page by page anyway.
The ED Converter on the sidebar here at ANCESTRY RESEARCH GENEALOGY I've tried at three different libraries - two public in two different cities - as well as at a Family History Center. It appears that it will take you to images at Ancestry (if you have a subscription you log on then) or the National Archives and some other options. I'm sticking with the National Archives.
02 April 2012
TODAY'S THE MOMENTOUS 1940 U.S. CENSUS RELEASE! 3.9 IMAGES SCANNED!
released as in, no more privacy issues, released for the public viewing. We genealogists are Jumping!
Seriously, I'm taking a week off from blogging to hit the National Archives site to find some of my own ancestors on this census and I do so hope that they fall in the "every 16th family" category.
What's so special of being in that category? During the 1940 census every 16th family was asked ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS! (SEE CORRECTION BELOW!)
LINK TO THE EXACT PAGE TO START ABOVE and ON THE SIDE BAR! GOOD LUCK!
APRIL 1940 100,000 CENSUS TAKERS fan out across the United States... to finish their work in one month.
CORRECTION : I attended a lecture by Steve Morse yesterday and actually it's not every 16th family as you go down the list. In order to mix it up a bit, it was 5% of the population as determined by the line number on a page. The line numbers could be 14, 29, 54 and 68, for instance. (Census was taken on the BACKS of pages as well.)
Seriously, I'm taking a week off from blogging to hit the National Archives site to find some of my own ancestors on this census and I do so hope that they fall in the "every 16th family" category.
What's so special of being in that category? During the 1940 census every 16th family was asked ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS! (SEE CORRECTION BELOW!)
LINK TO THE EXACT PAGE TO START ABOVE and ON THE SIDE BAR! GOOD LUCK!
APRIL 1940 100,000 CENSUS TAKERS fan out across the United States... to finish their work in one month.
CORRECTION : I attended a lecture by Steve Morse yesterday and actually it's not every 16th family as you go down the list. In order to mix it up a bit, it was 5% of the population as determined by the line number on a page. The line numbers could be 14, 29, 54 and 68, for instance. (Census was taken on the BACKS of pages as well.)
01 April 2012
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