Archive for the ‘Gen News’ Category

Historic Papers Missing From Archives
By LARRY MARGASAK

WASHINGTON (July 4) –
National Archives visitors know they’ll find the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights in the main building’s magnificent rotunda in Washington. But they won’t find the patent file for the Wright Brothers’ Flying Machine or the maps for the first atomic bomb missions anywhere in the Archives inventory.
Many historical items the Archives once possessed are missing, including:

Missing National Treasures
U.S National Archives Records Administration
Over the years, many pieces of America’s history have vanished from the National Archives. Some were stolen. Some were checked out and never returned. Others simply disappeared. Here, the first of the three-page patent application for the Wright brothers’ Flying Machine is shown. The document was last seen in 1980.

— Civil War telegrams from Abraham Lincoln.
— Original signatures of Andrew Jackson.
— Presidential portraits of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
— NASA photographs from space and on the moon.
— Presidential pardons.

Some were stolen by researchers or Archives employees. Others simply disappeared without a trace.
And there’s more gone from the nation’s record keeper.

The Archives’ inspector general, Paul Brachfeld, is conducting a criminal investigation into a missing external hard drive with copies of sensitive records from the Clinton administration. On the hard drive were Social Security numbers, including one for one of former Vice President Al Gore’s daughters.

Because the equipment also may include classified information, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, calls it a a major national security breach.
Brachfeld has documented thousands of electronic storage devices, including computers and servers, that have gone missing over the past decade from the National Archives and Records Administration.
Grassley, who has demanded an accounting of all missing items, said the loss of historical documents “robs our nation of its history and is completely unacceptable.”

The Archives’ stewardship of the nation’s records has been questioned before. In a well-publicized incident, former President Bill Clinton’s national security adviser, Sandy Berger, took documents from the Archives in the fall of 2003 while preparing, along with other ex-Clinton administration officials, for testimony to the Sept. 11 commission.

In September 2005, Berger was sentenced to two years of probation, 100 hours of community service, a $50,000 fine and loss of his security clearance for three years.

Some records have been missing for decades from the Archives’ 44 facilities in 20 states and the capital, including 13 presidential libraries.
“When I came here nine years ago, there was no acknowledgment that we had a problem,” Brachfeld said in an interview with The Associated Press.
Since then, he has started a recovery team that attends trade shows and Civil War re-enactments, and enlists the help of dealers and researchers to recover historical items that belong to the government.

The agency has two missions that sometimes are in conflict: preserving documents and making them available to the public in monitored research rooms with surveillance cameras.
“We do not have item-by-item control,” said Archives spokeswoman Susan Cooper. “We can’t. We have 9 billion documents. We don’t know exactly what’s in each of those boxes. There’s no point in preserving materials that cannot be used.”

Each missing historical item has its own story.
— From 1969 to 1980, the patent file for the Wright Brothers Flyer was passed around multiple Archives offices, the Patents and Trademarks Office and the National Air and Space Museum. It was returned to the Archives in 1979, and was last seen in 1980.
— In 1962, military representatives checked out the target maps for the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. The maps have been missing ever since.
— In May 2004, one of FDR’s grandsons asked to see a portrait of his grandfather at the Roosevelt presidential library in Hyde Park, N.Y. It couldn’t be found, and hasn’t been seen since 2001.
— Shaun Aubitz, a former employee at the Archives’ facility in Philadelphia, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 21 months in prison in 2002 for stealing — among other items — 71 pardons signed by Presidents James Madison, James Polk, Zachary Taylor, Millard Fillmore, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes and Lincoln. The Archives recovered 59 records. They had been sold to manuscript dealers and collectors.
— In 2005, researcher Howard Harner was sentenced to two years in prison, two years probation, and a $10,000 fine after pleading guilty to stealing more than 100 Civil War-era documents from the Archives between 1996 and 2002. Fewer than half were recovered.
— A 40-year-old National Archives intern in Philadelphia stole 160 Civil War documents. About half were sold on eBay. The documents included telegrams about the troops’ weaponry, the War Department’s announcement of Lincoln’s death sent to soldiers, and a letter from famed Confederate cavalryman James Ewell Brown Stuart.

http://news.aol.com/article/national-archives-missing-items/556022?icid=main|htmlws-main|dl1|link3|http%3A%2F%2Fnews.aol.com%2Farticle %2Fnational-archives-missing-items%2F556022

A financially strapped Denning McTague was sentenced in the case to 15 months in prison in 2007. He had told a psychiatrist that he was angry that his internship was unpaid.

The following article is from Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter and is copyright by Richard W. Eastman. It is re-published here with the permission of the author. Information about the newsletter is available at http://www.eogn.com.

The great-grandson of Apache warrior Geronimo argues in a lawsuit that a secretive society at Yale University holds the remains of his great-grandfather. Geronimo was buried in Oklahoma, but some say a secret society absconded with his remains.

Harlyn Geronimo has sued Yale and the society — the Order of Skull and Bones — to try to recover the remains. “I think what would be important is that the remains of Geronimo be with his ancestors,” he said.

Skull and Bones, a collegiate society that’s been around since 1832, includes alumni such as former President George W. Bush and his grandfather, Prescott Bush.

In 1990, a federal law was passed to protect Native Americans’ rights to their family member’s remains. The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act addresses the rights of lineal descendants, Indian tribes and native Hawaiian organizations to Native American human remains as well as cultural objects.

You can read more at: http://edition.cnn.com/2009/US/02/26/geronimo.remains/index.html.

On Feb 14 the Star Ledger newspaper ran an article with the following headline “Cash-strapped NJ Historical Society to slash hours, staffing.” As of 2/16, the Historical Society has eliminated its public hours in a “cost-cutting measure” that impacts genealogists in and out of NJ. Some staff members are being indefinitely furloughed, as well, to further cut their expenses.

They plan to continue their educational programs – including some lecture series and much of their children’s programming. My understanding is that some access to the Historical Society “by appointment” will continue to be available. It is unclear (at least to me) whether or not this will include access to their library. I hope it will – but if you’re planning a trip to the Newark area this spring or summer – better call ahead to find out…

(If you are planning a trip and hope to use the library – please be sure to explore their online information and catalog ahead of time. That way, if things need to be brought in from their off site storage you might be able to get it on your first visit and you will be able to make better use of the limited time you will have there.)

The society’s phone number listed in the article is 973-596-8500. Their website is: www.jerseyhistory.org

Those of you that have been reading Genealogy Path for a while know my feelings about online entities helping themselves to others hard work and volunteer services and manipulating it to make money off of it. I feel that this is purely profiteering and believe that those participating in it should pay some dire consequences. But in today’s social climate, if there isn’t an explicit law and you control the Terms & Conditions of a service completely, you can do pretty much what you want to.

Many remember the a few years ago the hub-bub over the fact that Ancestry.com usurped the family data that people uploaded to their different sites in order to share their research with others FOR FREE? Well, Ancestry.com had other ideas. They took that data and started charging people to access that data. Ancestry.com didn’t PAY for the information nor did they PAY for the time and effort that people spent working on it. The people did it for the love of genealogy and of being able to share the data with as many people as possible. Ancestry.com makes a profit from that data. Ancestry.com said that the Terms & Conditions (T&C’s) allowed them to do so and that everyone who uploaded data up agreed to those T&C’s. But they control the T&C’s and just because they say they can do it doesn’t make it ethical. But I guess if you have the power and the money, ethics is whatever you say it is. And Ancestry.com is the same company who took my money through their manipulation of these same T&C’s and the ONLY way I could get my money back was to file a fraud complaint with the State of Utah. But enough of that…water under the bridge…yada, yada, yada.

Have you ever created a genealogical webring and then decided to delete it? Did you do it on Webring.com? Well, guess what? Webring is auctioning those sites off! Yep, they’re going to make whatever money they can from other people’s efforts and time. Even though people may have deserted these webrings, not all of them put them up for adoption/auction. Many just tried to delete them. But, nope…Webring.com wouldn’t have any of that. Can’t make any money that way. I had previously written about this situation at Webring.com on my other blog.

I checked out to see what they were auctioning off and I saw a few webrings that were specific to certain surnames. Why would anyone who has any ties to that surname want to pay ANYTHING to Webring.com for that webring? They have more of a right to that webring then Webring.com does. Again, this is another desperate measure by someone who made a stupid move to buy something that didn’t cost the seller anything (Webring came with GeoCities when Yahoo bought GeoCities) and the seller (Yahoo) found someone stupid enough to put up good money for it. IMHO, that person is just taking over other people’s efforts in order to make a profit. Challenge them and they will tell you that the T&C’s (which THEY control) allows them to do so because it states that if you create a webring through their service, they own it. You are NOT the ring owner, but the ring manager. This denotes that you work for them…albeit without compensation. Don’t you just love the legal system? Ethics means nothings to these pople. If there is no law against it, they feel they have a right to do it.

So, thank God there are laws against trespassing otherwise they would feel they have a right to walk into your home and do whatever they wanted.

The following article is from Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter and is copyright 2007 by Richard W. Eastman. It is re-published here with the permission of the author. Information about the newsletter is available at http://www.eogn.com

New Zealander Kevin Anthony Osborne had a lucrative scam going. He applied to District Courts for birth certificates, sometimes ordering large amounts claiming he was conducting genealogy research. He then looked for males with birth dates near his own who had since died. He then assumed their identity, applied for admission at various universities, and then applied for student loans.

“A couple of occasions they wrote to the courts saying they were conducting a genealogy research and could they have the birth certificates for x amount of people and they were subsequently supplied with them,” says Detective Sergeant Nigel Hughes, from Christchurch police.

Today, ten years later, Osborne was sent to prison. The judge sentenced him to 14 months behind bars, ending his 10 years on the run.

“He is a low life he must have had no morals what so ever and go around cemeteries and look at gravestones,” said Ian Barker. Ian and his wife Margerate are victims of his scam… Osborne stole their son Brett’s identity in the name of greed.

You can read more about this story in the TV3 web site at http://tinyurl.com/2wan2z.

This week has been interesting just based on the fact that there have been some interesting new resources added to the Web to help genealogists in gathering data for their family research.  Read further for more details. 

The following article is from Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter and is copyright 2007 by Richard W. Eastman. It is re-published here with the permission of the author. Information about the newsletter is available at http://www.eogn.com. 

National Burial Index for England and Wales Online

The National Burial Index (NBI) for England and Wales is is an index to help family historians find burial records. It is an ongoing project devised and orchestrated by the Federation of Family History Societies (FFHS). The burial records date back to 1538, the year that Henry VIII was excommunicated from the Catholic Church, up to 1837, the date when civil registration began.

These records come from different types of sources: parish registers, bishop’s transcripts (the copies of the original registers made each year for the bishop of the diocese in which they are situated), earlier transcripts or printed registers. Please note that the NBI for England and Wales does not contain memorial inscription records (MIs).

Note that this is an index; the results you are presented with will not contain images at the present time.

The records that have been transcribed to date are now available (for a fee) at FindMyPast.com at http://www.findmypast.com/national-burial-index-search-start.action?redef=0.

  

Old British Phone Books Now Online

BT is putting its entire archive of old phone books online for genealogists, or anyone else, to browse. The phone books date back to 1880 and contain 280 million names. They can be used to track down relatives, but you can also use the service to find out if your house has ever had any famous, or infamous, residents.

The first phone book contained 248 names but no numbers – callers were expected to call the operator to get connected.

All books before BT’s privatisation are public records. The service is available through http://www.ancestry.co.uk.

ScottishHandwriting.com

Scottishhandwriting_2 A new web site offers online tutorials in paleography (the study of old handwriting) for historians, genealogists, and other researchers who have problems reading records written in Scotland in the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. ScottishHandwriting.com provides online interactive tutorials and weekly posers to help you study the characteristics of Scottish handwriting. The emphasis of the web site is on practical help to improve the paleographic skills, rather than on the academic study of Scottish handwriting.

The online tutorials are well thought out. The information is presented in small lessons, followed by images of typical Scottish handwriting. Below each image there is a test in the form of a “fill in the blanks” quiz. At the end of each “quiz,” you can click on a link to see the correct answers and thereby grade yourself.

The site also has numerous hints about spelling in past years and commonly-used words that may now be rare. For instance, you might find the word “cephering,” which today would be spelled as “ciphering.” It refers to bookkeeping and arithmetic using Arabic numerals in place of the earlier Roman numerals.

Best of all, ScottishHandwriting.com is available free of charge. You can start learning right now at http://ScottishHandwriting.com.

Nova Scotia History at the Click of a Mouse

Almost three centuries of records from one of Nova Scotia’s oldest churches can now be researched, thanks to a massive multi-year effort by dedicated volunteers and the summer-long attention of a professional archivist.

“We’re thrilled out of our minds, but the whole process takes an awfully long time,” said Fiona Day, a member of the archives committee of St. Paul’s Anglican Church on Halifax’s Grand Parade.

The committee began 10 years ago to catalogue the church’s records, which were disorganized and improperly stored after their removal from the parish hall just before that Argyle Street building was demolished in the 1970s.

The group of parishioners soon discovered the historic significance of the dusty old documents and fragile register books, which date back to a baptism and a burial on June 1, 1749, when Edward Cornwallis arrived in Halifax aboard the ship Sphinx.

You can read more about this new offering in an article written by Monica Graham in the (Halifax) Chronicle Herald at http://thechronicleherald.ca/Religion/994047.html.

The following article is from Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter and is copyright 2007 by Richard W. Eastman. It is re-published here with the permission of the author. Information about the newsletter is available at http://www.eogn.com

I have written several times about Google Books and occasionally about Microsoft Books. Those two organizations are working with some major libraries to scan millions of older books. However, some libraries are no longer cooperating. They do not like the restrictions placed by those companies.

Several libraries, including a large consortium in the Boston area, are instead signing on with the Open Content Alliance, a nonprofit effort aimed at making their materials broadly available.

Google pays to scan the books and does not directly profit from the resulting Web pages, although the books make its search engine more useful and more valuable. However, Google does not allow the scanned books to be made available on other commercial search services. Microsoft Books has somewhat similar restrictions. Some libraries, like the Boston Public Library and the Smithsonian Institution, refuse to accept such restrictions. Instead, they are now affiliating with the Open Content Alliance, a nonprofit effort aimed at making their materials broadly available.

Last month, the Boston Library Consortium of 19 research and academic libraries in New England that includes the University of Connecticut and the University of Massachusetts, said it would work with the Open Content Alliance to begin digitizing the books among the libraries’ 34 million volumes whose copyright had expired. These 19 libraries are not willing to accept the restrictions that are in the Google and Microsoft agreements.

“We understand the commercial value of what Google is doing, but we want to be able to distribute materials in a way where everyone benefits from it,” said Bernard A. Margolis, President of the Boston Public Library, which has in its collection roughly 3,700 volumes from the personal library of John Adams.

It is interesting to note that Bernie Margolis of the Boston Public Library is well known as one of the leading library experts of today. His opinions will carry considerable weight.

You can read more about these issues in the New York Times at http://tinyurl.com/2mzhbb.

NOTE: The New York Times often places articles online for only a few days but then removes them. The article is available as I write these words but may disappear soon.

My thanks to Amelia James for telling me about this article.

Over 106 Million Articles Now Available for Family History Research

NAPLES, FL–(Marketwire – November 16, 2007) – GenealogyBank, a leading online provider of historical and recent newspapers for family history research, announced today the addition of 100 fully searchable historical newspapers. These newspapers will add 3 million new articles filled with significant genealogical content. GenealogyBank now has over 106 million historical newspaper articles available online for family history research.

Next month, GenealogyBank will add another 100 newspapers including over 2 million new articles. Now complementing more than 210 million family history records, this latest addition will expand coverage to over 2,200 U.S. newspapers in all 50 states.

“With over 300 years of historical newspapers at your fingertips, you can easily discover a breadth of information about your ancestors’ across generations,” says Genealogy Director for NewsBank, inc., Tom Kemp.

The addition features big city dailies and regional weeklies including:

Trenton(NJ) State Gazette (1863-1888), Arkansas (AK) Intelligencer, (1845-1858)

Tucson (AZ) Daily Citizen, (1900-1922), Augusta (GA) Herald, (1799-1815)

Portland (OR) Oregonian, (1911-1916) and many others. View entire list.

“I use GenealogyBank and have subscribed for about six months,” says Melinde Sanborn, F.A.S.G., Secretary of the American Society of Genealogists. “I find the historical newspapers collection absolutely invaluable. For a client who had searched in vain for 20 years, with one mouse click, I found a death notice in a 2-year-run of an obscure newspaper that I’d never have looked in without this search capability.”

Kemp adds, “Everyday we hear from visitors who have learned something new about their ancestors. Recently John Murphy of Elon, N.C. wrote to tell us within an hour of joining he discovered his 4th Great Grand Father, Thomas C. Donn, who happened to be a justice of the peace in Washington D.C. It’s exciting helping families discover new details about their ancestors’ lives.”

GenealogyBank, celebrating its first anniversary online, continues to add millions of new documents a month to its constantly growing collection of newspapers and other valuable family history records.

About GenealogyBank:

GenealogyBank, a division of NewsBank, inc., supplies individuals interested in family history research with over 300 years of U.S. newspapers, government documents and other historical records in all 50 states. GenealogyBank contains millions of obituaries, birth, marriage, and death notices and much more. GenealogyBank can be found at: www.genealogybank.com.

WALTHAM, Mass.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–@Ventures®, the venture capital business of CMGI®, Inc. (NASDAQ: CMGI), announced today that one of the companies in its venture capital portfolio, The Generations Network, Inc., has signed a definitive agreement to be acquired by Spectrum Equity Investors. Under the terms of the agreement, Spectrum will lead an investment of $300 million to purchase a majority interest in the company. The acquisition is subject to customary closing conditions and is expected to be completed within 60 days.

@Ventures has been a longstanding shareholder and supporter of The Generations Network and we are pleased with this acquisition, said Joseph C. Lawler, chairman, president and CEO of CMGI. @Ventures has developed a strong foundation of investments, and we are encouraged by the activities of our portfolio companies.

CMGI expects to receive initial proceeds of approximately $14.0 million in its second fiscal quarter as a result of this transaction. CMGI may receive additional proceeds of up to $0.7 million, assuming there are no claims against proceeds to be held in escrow.

The Generations Network is the leading online network connecting families with their histories and with one another. The Generations Networks portfolio of sites and products includes Ancestry.com and seven international Ancestry sites, MyFamily.com, Rootsweb.com, Genealogy.com, Family Tree Maker, and Ancestry Magazine.

About CMGI

CMGI, Inc. (NASDAQ: CMGI), through its subsidiary ModusLink, provides industry-leading global supply chain management services and solutions that help businesses market, sell and distribute their products around the world. In addition, CMGI’s venture capital business, @Ventures, invests in a variety of technology ventures. For additional information, visit www.cmgi.com.

About @Ventures

@Ventures provides venture capital to early-stage and mid-stage technology companies. Formed in 1995, @Ventures has funded more than 75 software, IT, Internet, and clean energy companies. The focus of @Ventures fifth fund, formed in 2004, is on investments in the cleantech sector, including alternative energy, energy storage and efficiency, and water purification technologies. For more information, visit www.ventures.com.

This release contains forward-looking statements, which address a variety of subjects including, for example, the expected timing of the closing of the transaction, the expected initial and future proceeds from the announced transaction, the financial impact of the transaction on CMGI, our assessment of the companies within our venture capital portfolio and their prospects, and our assessment of the mergers and acquisitions market. All statements other than statements of historical fact, including without limitation, those with respect to future proceeds are forward-looking statements. The following important factors and uncertainties, among others, could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in these forward-looking statements: the transaction is subject to closing conditions which may not be met; the mergers and acquisitions and IPO markets are inherently unpredictable and liquidity events for companies in our venture capital portfolio may not occur; future proceeds from liquidity events are based upon the release of escrowed funds and in the event of successful escrow claims, a portion or all of the future proceeds may not be received as expected. For a detailed discussion of cautionary statements that may affect CMGI’s future results of operations and financial results, please refer to CMGI’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including CMGI’s most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K. Forward-looking statements represent management’s current expectations and are inherently uncertain. We do not undertake any obligation to update forward-looking statements made by us.

@Ventures and CMGI are registered trademarks of CMGI, Inc. All other company names and products are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies.

Source: October 17, 2007 BusinessWire.com

SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH—FamilySearch and the Georgia Archives announced today that Georgia’s death index from 1919 to 1927 can be accessed for free online. The online index is linked to digital images of the original death certificates. This free database will open doors to additional information for family historians and genealogists with Georgia ties. The index and images can be searched and viewed at www.GeorgiaArchives.org (Virtual Vault link) or labs.familysearch.org.

The names of Georgia’s deceased from 1919 to 1927 are now very much alive, searchable, and viewable online—and for free. The online index to some 275,000 Georgia deaths is the result of a cooperative effort between FamilySearch Record Services, the Georgia Archives, and the Georgia State Office of Vital Records and Statistics.

FamilySearch digitized the records, and volunteers from both FamilySearch and the Archives used FamilySearch indexing technology to create a searchable online index from the digital images of the original historic documents. “These death records are obviously a gold mine for genealogists and historians. Certificates include age, county of death, parents names, occupation, gender, race and cause of death; these documents open all kinds of possibilities to researchers,” said Georgia Archives director, David Carmicheal.

The deceased person’s name, birth and death dates, sex, spouse and parents’ names and location of death were extracted from each certificate for the searchable database. The linked image of the original death certificate can reveal additional interesting facts and clues for the family historian─like the names and birth places of the deceased person’s parents, place and date of the decedent’s birth, marital status, occupation, permanent residence, and place and date of burial and cause of death.

Before making the certificates viewable online, Carmicheal said patrons had to order copies through the mail for a fee or visit the state archive’s office in person. The new online database will make it quicker and easier for patrons to get the information they are seeking.

“It is always exciting for family historians when they can freely search a vital record index online like the Georgia death records. The link to the original death certificate is an added bonus—it saves you time, money, and provides rich genealogy data,” said Paul Nauta, manager of public affairs for FamilySearch. The users just type in an ancestor’s name that died in Georgia between 1919 and 1927. They will see a brief summary of information from the ancestor’s death certificate with a link to also view the original image. Additional state indexes are currently in production.

Genealogical Society of Utah, doing business as FamilySearch, is a nonprofit organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. FamilySearch maintains the world’s largest repository of genealogical resources accessed through FamilySearch.org, the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, and over 4,500 family history centers in 70 countries.  FamilySearch is a trademark licensed to the Genealogical Society of Utah and is registered in the United States of America and other countries.