Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Future projects

 Oh dear,
Its been awhile. *sigh* Lately I haven't been able to actually do much research lately. I am still Indexing with Family Search, we had a reenactment at Friendship, Indiana {it was a blast, hot very hot, but a great time}, we have been looking for a house {one of the worlds most stressful thing}, and various stresses of everyday life.

I have 2 more family trees to create, another for my grandmother of my step-grandfather's side with a matching wedding "tile" {Thats what I am calling it, basically it will be a small rectangle with his and her names with the wedding date}, and one for my future mother-in-law. I also want to do a scrap book like thing. I don't scrap book it doesn't interest me. But I do want to take a book on the First page my brother and I, the second page would be of my mother, the facing page my father and so on. I want it in something I can add pages to that way when I have kids or I find another relative I can add them to the book. I feel like it would be a good visual representation that you can sit down and flip through. Maybe with pockets for copies of census or military records I'm not sure.

My crafts will just have to wait, coming up with a down payment while paying rent, and bills will break even the hardest saver into broke submission.

Maybe some of you would like a hand painted family tree on canvas? hint hint!!!!






We all grow up with the weight of history on us. Our ancestors dwell in the attics of our brains as they do in the spiraling chains of knowledge hidden in every cell of our bodies. ~Shirley Abbott

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

The 1940's Census

We are all excited to find ancestors in the recently released 1940's census, but it might be awhile before we are able to easily find them. Right now you can find them using enumeration numbers and I will tell you how later. 

First I want to let you know how you can help hurry up the process. If you go to Family Search Indexing you can find information on how to get started indexing the census (and other records) from HOME! It is volunteer but it super simple, the hardest part is reading the hand writing, there is even a test drive on the site so you can try it out. You can do 1 or 50,  you can do half of one before dinner and the other after. You just download a free program, for both PC or Mac, and start; rated beginner, intermit, and advanced; and in practically every language. At least take a look and give it a try. You can also index through the National Archives. I don't care which one, or if its another just pitch in and lets get this information out there.



If you just want to dive in you will want to know the enumeration number. Enumeration numbers are the particular area that a certain census taker was located. So in a county of 100 there may have only needed to be one census taker thus one enumeration number, but in a county of 200,000 there may have been 200 census takers thus 200  enumeration numbers...cross eyed yet? If you go to https://the1940census.com/ you can just follow the prompts to find out enumeration numbers and then you can use those to search for the census. Eyes still crossed?
It is really easy I promise just lots of steps and here they are. (This is if you need the enumeration number)

  1. Go to the https://the1940census.com/ web site and click Get Started
  1. You will have 2 choices 'Do you know the location where the person lived' or 'Do you know the 1940 enumeration district number' 
  1. Since we are pretending that we don't know the number we are going to pick the first option.
  1. Now enter what you know. I did my home county of Franklin County, Indiana.
  1. Now if you know what area/township you are looking for just find it in the 'description' results, if you don't click on 'maps' and find the area and it tells you. *warning* There might be multiple pages to the map*
  1. Now that you have the ED (enumeration number) for example ED 24-1 click on 'census schedules' and click on the one with the corresponding number.
  1. HUNT! Scroll through till you find the people you are looking for.
See! wouldn't it be easier if you could just go to familysearch.org or the National Archives and search the indexed files?







We all grow up with the weight of history on us. Our ancestors dwell in the attics of our brains as they do in the spiraling chains of knowledge hidden in every cell of our bodies. ~Shirley Abbott

Thursday, April 12, 2012

My Baby is back!

Thanks to the hard work of the boys at Signature Mac and Apple I have MacBook back! After I got done hugging it, I opened it, started it up and I held my breath.....

....MY FILES ARE SAFE!....

After the hallelujah's and tears of joy, I was able to put her gentle down and do some house work. After a nail biting week off I can finally get back to doing some research. 1940's census anyone?


We all grow up with the weight of history on us. Our ancestors dwell in the attics of our brains as they do in the spiraling chains of knowledge hidden in every cell of our bodies. ~Shirley Abbott

Sunday, April 8, 2012

An Easter warning

As you all know my computer is in the shop. Lucky for me Apple is covering all cost since its only 6 months old. Unlucky for me the motherboard and the RAM exploded (ok not really, but they both crapped out ) anywho, it will be atleast a week maybe two before I get it back. So I have 2 pieces of advice.
1. If you have a smartphone download the blogger app. It's free, you can write post (like I am now, it is easier on a computer but great when traveling or when your computer kills itself.), you can also read post that you are following etc.
2. Save yourself from a mental break down....BACK UP your work. I was on the edge of shooting something, till they said they MIGHT be able to save my stuff...(might). For the love of your family,pets,and sanity back up everything.

On that note have a great Easter. Hug your family, and eat an extra piece of pie for me.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

My poor Mac

So this morning I tried to turn on my MacBook Pro only to find out that it died over night. It's only 6 months old so after 2 phone calls I learn that I can get it fixed for free....thank God for warrenties. Hopefully I can get it fixed without losing anything. Gahhhh!
But on the bright side its gorgeous outside.



Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Wordless Wednesday: Family Photos

This is going to be a not so Wordless Wednesday post. For the last few days I have spent time with my Grandmother going through the old family photos. The stories and names to numerous to count. So I present some of my findings:


The baby is my Great Grandmother Christine Long {June 3, 1916-1963}
with her parents Pennington [Pen] Long {1894-?} and Mary Ida (Rhinehimer) Long {1897-?}
And yes, in case you were wondering Pen is missing a finger.


Pennington [Pen] Long and Mary Ida (Rhinehimer) Long taken Feb 1946






We all grow up with the weight of history on us. Our ancestors dwell in the attics of our brains as they do in the spiraling chains of knowledge hidden in every cell of our bodies. ~Shirley Abbott

Friday, February 10, 2012

Who Do You Think You Are? : Marisa Tomei



Its Friday so its Who Do You Think You Are? night.
Tonight Marisa Tomei, traveled to Italy to find her Great-Grandparents and find out if the family story of her Great-Grandfather's murder.


If you haven't seen it, or don't want to know the details skip the part between the spoiler alerts.


*Spoiler*
Marisa Travels to the church where her Great-Grandparents are buried, only to find out she was off the year of death for her GGrandfather. Easily fixed she moved on to find their marriage cert. Now the family tale was that her GGrandfather was killed for being a womanizer but according to the paperwork he died of an illness. Of course Marisa digs further to find out what happened. In a newspaper article she finds that he was killed by a man who was arrested on the spot, she travels to the town that he was killed in and She meets with a professor in that town, in a cafe. What he tells her is that she is sitting in the exact cafe that he was murdered in front of, and that it was over a business deal between the two families (the murderer and Marisa's family) that caused it. She had to travel 1hr to the town that the trail was in, and found out that the man that killed him was acquitted but was guilty of carrying a gun which was only a misdemeanor and served 38 days and paid fines, the man then fled the area because of the honor code at the time.


At the end of the episode the researchers had found a cousin 1x removed who, at 88 yrs old, wrote her a letter explaining some things, like how after her GGrandfather died, her GGrandmother remarried and was very happy.
*Spoiler*


In other news if you go to ancestry.com/sweeps you can win the "ultimate family history journey" 3 Grand Prize winners will win a trip valued at $10,000 which includes a trip to the winner's homeland, round trip for two, hotel, and $2,000 in cash, a 6-month Ancestry.com World Explorer membership,and a DNA test. 20 First Prize winners will win 6-month Ancestry.com World Explorer membership. I mean wholly cow thats cool!


One last thing, like my last post I am asking you to sign The We the People petition, posted at http://wh.gov/khE about the SSDI  if you already haven't. We are going to need ALL the help we can get.


We all grow up with the weight of history on us. Our ancestors dwell in the attics of our brains as they do in the spiraling chains of knowledge hidden in every cell of our bodies. ~Shirley Abbott