6th December 2006, 10:07 am
Yikes! Submitting to Cyndi’s List sure has given me a lot of attention! For those of you just discovering this site please don’t be discouraged by the lack of posts. I just started this a week or so ago and I’m adding to it regularly. So if genealogy or land research is your thing, please bookmark me! Thanks muchly!
5th December 2006, 11:29 am
I was browsing the Youngstown Vindicator today and found this article:
December 4, 2006 7:46 pm
YOUNGSTOWN — Lynn G. Housteau was born July 31, 1912, in the city, and died last month in an assisted living facility in Fort Myers, Fla.
In between he joined the Air Force, worked as a general contractor and married and divorced a woman named Evelyn. He had no children. Little else is known about him.
“Everyone says he was a very private person,” said Bill Lawyer, who administers the indigent cremation program for Lee County’s Department of Human Services in Fort Myers.
Although the costs of his burial likely will be covered from Housteau’s assets, the department is looking for any distant relatives.
The bank where Housteau had an account won’t divulge the amount that’s in it, but Lawyer believes it could be significant.
For more information: Are you related to this man?
5th December 2006, 07:37 am
Looks like Steve Morse has added a new Ellis Island search form on the One-Step site — the gold form. I hadn’t noticed this sooner since I haven’t done any immigration work recently. It allows you to search on all transcribed fields for all passengers in the database! Woohoo! It also allows you to search on traveling companions, specify the sort-order for the results and also specify which fields to display on the results page. Pretty cool stuff.
If you’ve never checked out Steve Morse’s site you really should. It makes searching through the seemingly infinite amount of databases much easier and puts them all in one place.
4th December 2006, 12:12 pm
The Iowa Gravestone Photo Project is an awesome, awesome thing! I may be a bit biased, however. It turns out that some kind volunteer has photographed every tombstone in Bethel Cemetery outside of Logan. This cemetery is the final resting place of over four generations of McKeans. Go ahead - do a search for McKean in Harrison County!
These are the kinds of projects that everyone who is passionate about genealogy should be involved in! Think of how great it would be if you could find a photograph of almost any tombstone you were looking for. There’s also projects like Family Old Photos and others. All we need are volunteers to take photographs or scan old photographs or transcribe old documents, and so on.
4th December 2006, 06:35 am
One of the great things about Geographic Information Systems (GIS) is the ability to find the location of something you’ve found in an old atlas and then find out all sorts of information on it — if you’re lucky enough to be doing research in a county where GIS is available. GIS can be insanely valuable for genealogists and I will probably spend a lot of time posting about it and tools such as Google Earth. Here’s a little technique I use to find what I’m looking for by recognizing road patterns.
This research takes us to the Northwest corner of East Huntingdon township in Westmoreland County, PA. There was a Post Office there named McKean’s Old Stand shown in the 1867 atlas of Westmoreland. Evidence has been mounting that my family came from Westmoreland to Mercer County in the very late 18th century, so this is an interesting find. McKean’s Old Stand is also mentioned in some Westmoreland history books, but there’s not much information. Let’s see how GIS can help us find out more about this place.
First, we want to identify some patterns in the roads near McKean’s Old Stand. Luckily there’s a nice triangularish pattern directly south. I’ve highlighted this as well as some of the roads leading out of the area in the image on the left. Now, let’s go to the Westmoreland County GIS site.
I won’t go through all the details of how to use the site here. Maybe in the future I’ll give an overview of GIS with some tips on using most county sites (they usually all have the same types of tools.) So, we’re given an overview of the entire county. First we should turn off the Tax Parcels layer. That layer will show us every parcel of land when we zoom in and this will clutter up our image. We’ll get back to that layer a bit later.
We want to zoom into the Northwest corner of East Huntingdon. This is an easy one, really. The pattern should become apparent instantly. Now we know the approximate location of McKean’s Old Stand. But what good is this for genealogy? Well, turn the Tax Parcels layer back on, select the information tool and now you can find out who currently owns the nearby parcels. This will allow you to trace the history of the area as far back as records will allow by going through the chain of title. It’s a pain in the butt, but it can reveal lots of good information.
Maybe some day I’ll get down to Westmoreland County and finally figure it all out. Maybe…