Saturday 29 July 2017

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - A Family's Increase

View on Genea-Musings blog at http://www.geneamusings.com/2017/04/saturday-night-genealogy-fun-familys.html



YOUR ASSIGNMENT IS:

1) Pick one of your sets of great-grandparents - if possible, the one with the most descendants.

2) Create a descendants list for those great-grandparents either by hand or in your software program.

3) Tell us how many descendants, living or dead, are in each generation from those great-grandparents.

4) How many are still living? Of those, how many have you met and exchanged family information with? Are there any that you should make contact with ASAP?

5) Write about it in your own blog post, in comments to this post.


HERE IS MINE:

1) I choose my 3rd great-grandparents, Narcisse Dagenais (Abt. 1840 - Unknown) and Ester Deroin (Abt. 1845 - Unknown).

2) I made a descendants list in Family Tree Maker 2014. See below for the pictures of the descendant lists.

3) I am still researching this side of the family, so there is some relatives that I don't know that know that the death dates.














Saturday 22 July 2017

Why one man turned his DNA test results into fascinating works of art.

For an artist named Detour, a very deliberate trip to Tanzania changed everything.


Thomas "Detour" Evans was there as part of an outreach program. He didn't know the language or the culture, yet it was being outside of his comfort zone that made him feel most at home.

Which sparked the question: Where was home, originally?

The curiosity excited Evans. So much so that as soon as he came back to the U.S., he took an AncestryDNA test to dive deeper into his heritage.


When Evans got the answer he was looking for, he turned it into one of the most inspiring works of art in his career. More importantly, he sparked a much-needed conversation in the community.

The moving experience led Evans to start the "They Still Live" project.

It's a photography exhibition in collaboration with art collector Paul Hamilton.


Evans took some of Hamilton's traditional African masks, paired them with different members of the African-American community who took AncestryDNA tests, and started snapping some amazing shots of them in modern-day settings.


"As African-Americans, we still have some of that DNA within us," Evans explains. "We want to show it visually."
Well, the results are fascinating.



I mean, how awesome is this?


One of the coolest parts? The models for the shoot actually learned their AncestryDNA results at the show itself.



More than anything, "They Still Live" is a project that's bringing the community together and engaging young people in the arts.

During the exhibition, people even marked places on maps that showed where they believed their ancestors were from. From there, those that attended the event would spark conversations with others about the origins of their ancestors.
"When people were learning about themselves," Evans says, "you saw other people learning about themselves as well."
"It helped bridge a gap between us as people, and it kind of helps you just learn more about what's in your community."
In fact, with the help of activist Panama Soweto, Evans is now expanding his project to help 40 young people who are at risk of gang involvement.



The youths will start by creating their own mask based on how they see themselves. Then, after three months, the youths will do it all over again. Only this time, they'll have their AncestryDNA test results with them.*
"If you understand where you've come from," Soweto adds, "then the negative things that we put with ourselves every day in order to get by, we can chip away at them if we truly have a unique understanding of each other’s experiences and what that really means."

Each and every one of us has a unique story to tell. And sharing those stories with others only makes our bond even stronger.

As we learn more about the richness of our past and shared history, it undoubtedly lights the way towards a brighter and more unified future.
"Everyone has this background that they can shine a light on," Evans says. "And I want to try to give that to everybody, and this was a really unique way of doing it."

Watch how the entire experience unfolded right here: https://www.facebook.com/Upworthy/videos/1850417481665768/









Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - Your Middle Name

View on  Genea-Musings Blog At http://www.geneamusings.com/2017/03/saturday-night-genealogy-fun-your.html



YOUR ASSIGNMENT IS:

1)  What is your middle name?  Do you know why your parents gave it to you?  

2)  Do you have ancestors with your middle name as part of their name?

3)  Tell us about it in your own blog post, in a comment on this post.

HERE IS MINE:

1) My middle name is Marie.

I am named after Elvis Presley's daughter Lisa Marie.

2) Yes.  My mom has the middle name of Marie as well, her name was Linda Marie Dixon (Maiden Name Dagenais) [B. Sep 29, 1954 - D. Mar 31, 2010].

My Aunt has the middle name of Marie, her name was Corrine Marie Alice Dagenais (My Mom's sister) [B. Apr 19, 1959]

My niece has the middle name Marie, her name was Anne Louise Marie Dixon (My Brother John Marshall (Jay) Dixon's daughter) [B. Sep 9, 2011 - D. Sep 18, 2011]





Saturday 15 July 2017

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - Genealogy Sayings In Latin

I recently came across a genealogy blog I love to following called Genea-Musings.com where Randy Seaver does something called Saturday Night Genealogy Fun on his blog. I thought I would give it a try on my blog. As planning the game on my blog too. To view Randy's post visited http://www.geneamusings.com/2017/04/saturday-night-genealogy-fun-genealogy.html



YOUR ASSIGNMENT IS:

1) Find some of your favorite sayings, aphorisms, jokes, etc. They can be genealogy-related, or not.

2)  Translate them into Latin using Google Translate


3)  Share them with me in your own blog post, in a comment to this post.



MY 5 SAYINGS

1) Latin- Genealogists moriturum se radicibus amittere.
Genealogiæ suæ: A paleas'acervus plena acus. Non opus est relatorum.


English - Genealogists never die, they just loose their roots.
Genealogy: A hay stack full of needles. It's the threads I need.


2) Latin- Genealogiæ suæ: aliquando enim et vivere Collectis mortuus frater!

English - Genealogy: Collecting dead relatives and sometimes a live cousin!

3) Latin - Genealogiæ suæ: Ubi tu confundere, et mortuus vivos irritare.

English - Genealogy: Where you confuse the dead and irritate the living.

4) Latin - Et amicos ire solent parentes cumulare.

English - Friends come and go, but relatives tend to accumulate.

5) Latin - Si nescis historiam, nescio vos quidquam. Tu folium arboris partem esse, qui nesciat

English - If you don’t know history, you don’t know anything. You are a leaf that doesn’t know it is part of a tree

Friday 14 July 2017

Genea-Musings: Family Tree Maker 2017 Approaches the Starting Gat...

Genea-Musings: Family Tree Maker 2017 Approaches the Starting Gat...: I read this from Jack Minsky of Software MacKiev on the Family Tree Maker User group page on Facebook tonight: ==========================...CLICK THE LINK ABOVE TO READ THE REST OF THE POST ON GENEA-MUSINGS BLOG.

Friday Night Funnies & Quotes: Blue Man Group

Enjoy this week's comic strip!

Friday 7 July 2017

Friday Night Funnies & Quotes: The Biggest Lie

Starting a new weekly section on my blog, where I will be posted Genealogy comics and quotes. This section will be called "Friday Night Funnies & Quotes". Enjoy the first in this new section on my blog.


Tuesday 4 July 2017

U.S. Immigrant Oral Histories Featuring Lillian Galletta


As we celebrate the 4th of July holiday, we reflect to pay tribute to the sacrifices and hardships faced by newly arriving immigrants in the early to mid-1900s.





Sunday 2 July 2017

U.S. Immigrant Oral Histories Featuring Hatsumi Imagawa


As we celebrate the 4th of July holiday, we reflect to pay tribute to the sacrifices and hardships faced by newly arriving immigrants in the early to mid-1900s.

Saturday 1 July 2017

U.S. Immigrant Oral Histories Featuring Albert Donner


As we celebrate the 4th of July holiday, we reflect to pay tribute to the sacrifices and hardships faced by newly arriving immigrants in the early to mid-1900s.