Family History 4
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Newsletter No. 42
- September 2010.
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Family History For All Blog |
Contents:
1. Our welcome message.
2.
Featured Article
– Protect Your Precious Family History Data From Disaster
and Loss
Written by Michael R. Boyter
3. News
from Ancestry.co.uk
4. Next
Months Featured Article: Genealogy’s Most
Popular Disbeliefs Author:
Bob Brooke
1. Our welcome message.
I decided to give up on the August newsletter so here's
the September issue EARLY! Busy Busy with a new website that I thought
would be a simple project because of my passion for the subject. It turned
out being one of the most difficult sites that I've built. If you'd like
to take a look here's the home page:
http://www.ultimaterecipeslibrary.com/ There's a free recipe book
on this page and if you decide to take it you will see a link to a whole
library of recipe books on the download page. Enjoy.
We didn't get to Cornwall as planned but had a nice week
on the Yorkshire Moors staying near Pickering. Pickering is a great base
to explore the Moors and the Yorkshire coast. Although we had passed
through many times it was nice to explore the area. We particularly
enjoyed Goathland which is the setting for 'Aidensfield' in the TV series
Heartbeat.
Enjoy the rest of your newsletter.
Jim
2.
Featured Article
Protect Your Precious Family
History Data From Disaster and Loss:
by Michael R. Boyter
Fire! Fire! Fire!
In a frantic minute you grab the kids and get a safe
distance from your house. There you witness your home, and everything in
it, burning to the ground. It's a total loss.
A disaster of any kind is not ever a pleasant
experience, but at least there is insurance to build again and to buy new
furniture. But let's talk about what is not insured. Things that once
lost, are gone for ever!
I'm referring to your family keepsakes. Your home
videos, family photos, journals, diaries and other priceless family
treasures. Losing any of these things is a terrible tragedy!
-Video of your baby's first steps...Gone!
-All your wedding pictures...Gone!
-Your diary you wrote as a teenager...Gone!
What if you had to evacuate your house and only had
minutes or less to get out?
As I pondered this, I realized that it would be next to
impossible, in a short amount of time, for me to get all of these things
out of the house and to a safe location.
Why? Because I had 8mm tapes all through the house. My
old journals were stuck in a box somewhere in the garage. Some photo
albums were up in closets while others I looked and looked for but
couldn't find for awhile. I had no idea where they were. I had to go
looking for them.
In a disaster situation, there is no time to go
"looking".
Here's some of the preventative measures that I took in
order to keep myself from such a situation. Use these ideas and tips to
ensure that your family memories are preserved for generations to come!
FAMILY PHOTO ALBUMS:
Share them as gifts often – Pictures of the family are
great gifts to give to grandparents and other family members. If you lose
yours, you always have a way to regain copies.
Online photo storage – My wife and I have put many of
our pictures on a free, safe and secure family web site. There are many of
these but I personally like MyFamily.com Build your site in minutes and
you don't need to know a thing about making a web page. Your pictures are
stored remotely and something like a house fire couldn't touch them.
One central location - Designate a location for all your
photo albums and don't deviate. By putting them in a box and in one
location in your house, you increase your chances of being able to get out
quickly with all your pictures.
HOME VIDEOS:
Duplicate them - Makes copies and get them to other
members of the family. This makes for a great gift. What works for me is
to simply connect my video camera to my VCR. I then push play on my video
camera and press record on my VCR. This isn't the fanciest way of tape
duplication but it works and my parents have loved getting videos of the
grandkids.
JOURNALS, DIARIES, and PERSONAL HISTORIES
Personal histories of your own or those of an ancestors
are one of the most valuable items in your possession. If kept protected,
they will be treasured for generations to come.
Duplicate & Distribute - My grandma gave me a copy of my
late grandpa's life story. I typed it up and printed multiple copies for
all of my cousins and aunts and uncles. They loved it and we took steps to
make sure grandpa's life story will live on in the hearts and minds of his
posterity.
Diary Safeguard - If you
are currently writing a journal or diary I realize that some of it may be
personal and you may not wish for it to be distributed out at this time.
If you write your journal by hand, take your journal in
and photo copy any part that you plan to pass on to your children someday!
Don't wait! You may then look into putting a copy into a safe deposit box.
Just as long as it is out of your house.
If you write your journal with the aid of a computer, I
recommend storing copies often to any one of the many free online storage
web sites. Nobody will be able to access your data but you. I personally
recommend
Rule #1 in any of this is to duplicate your family
keepsake items and store them in multiple locations. This is the only way
to ensure that if disaster strikes, you will be able to easily recover
those priceless family mementos that define you as an individual and as a
family!
[You may use this article in your
online or offline publications, or Web site, as long as you include the
authors information (below)]
Written by Michael R. Boyter of
www.familyhistoryproducts.com
3. News from Ancestry.co.uk
Dear James,
Find out with the new National Probate Calendar at Ancestry.co.uk
Did your family live in luxury or squalor? Now you can find out,
with an exclusive new collection at Ancestry.co.uk.
The National Probate Calendar
www.Ancestry.co.uk/probate
is the most important family history release this year. As well as
revealing your ancestors' wealth and social standing, it lets you
build a detailed picture of their daily lives.
The original documents were made by the Principal Probate Registry,
which is responsible for the distribution of people's property after
they die across England and Wales. This means the Calendar contains
summaries of your ancestors' wills and probate records from all over
the country.
Until now, the only way to search the Calendar was to visit a
probate registry in person and scour the entries manually. Now it
has gone online for the first time, at Ancestry.co.uk.
The new collection is a fully-searchable version of the Calendar for
the vast majority of years between 1861 and 1941. Find an ancestor's
entry, and you'll discover their full name, their date and place of
death, and the executor of their will - often another family member.
Crucially, you'll also find the value of their estate, revealing
whether your forebear was a prince or a pauper.
That's not all. Once you've pinpointed a member of your family in
the Calendar, you can use its information to order copies of all
their other probate records, usually including a will.
This will list all the possessions they left, giving you a
fascinating insight into their hobbies, interests and possibly even
their job. It will also tell you who inherited these belongings,
providing you with a host of new relatives to explore. Find out how
to order the full records in Ancestry.co.uk's step-by-step guide.
More info:
www.Ancestry.co.uk/probate
4. Next months featured article:
Genealogy’s Most Popular Disbeliefs:
Author:
Bob Brooke
If you're just starting out on your quest for your
ancestors, you may get sidetracked by some of the disbeliefs about it.
Don't believe everything you hear... Full article next time.
I really hope you
enjoyed this months newsletter. And in case you forgot earlier -
Please sign the
Guestbook.
Jim. Editor
PS. Please forward
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