Author: Nichelle Barra Page 46 of 91

Review: Essential Family Tree Forms

About a month ago, Geneabloggers Genealogy Bargains mentioned the Essential Family Tree Forms Library CD on sale for 25% off (it still is 25% off by the way!). The rave review from Geneabloggers and the price made this a simple decision for me. And this week, it finally arrived!

Essential Family Tree Forms

What Is It?

There are 75 worksheets/checklists/templates included in the CD. They are all a PDF but you can type into them and save the forms (which I love)!

  • Basic Genealogy Forms
    • Includes the usual pedigree (5-generation) and family group sheet but ALSO includes an adoptive family chart, a step-family chart, and a source list!
  • US Census Extraction Forms
    • 1790-1940 – These are really great when pulling information from census records and you can’t for whatever reason download/print the actual image of the census record.
  • Checklists
    • For census records, home sources, military, and just records in general. There’s also a handy cousin-chart and an example for source documentation.
  • Immigrant Research Forms
    • Includes an ancestral village worksheet, customs lists, and passenger lists through the years along with a passenger list search worksheet
  • Online Research Helps
    • Includes an ancestor worksheet for online searches and an online search tracker
  • Person Worksheets
    • Includes an ancestor worksheet, a biographical outline, a living relative search worksheet and a military service record sheet
  • Photo and Heirloom Forms
    • Includes sheets for recording your inventory of archived items, heirlooms, and photos. It also includes sheets for ancestral homes, recipes, helping to identify pictures, who has what and where, etc.
  • Records Worksheets
    • Includes worksheets for: birth, death, marriage index, deed, land, cemetery, news clipping, and burned county information
  • Research Logs
    • A great table of contents chart for your files along with the usual items you’d expect: correspondence log, note taking forms for library research, research items like a journal, calendar, planner, and log.
  • Research Trip Aids
    • Wonderful charts for helping you to research the repository before you go, as well as a great budget planning sheet and a packing list.
  • Story and Tradition Forms
    • Great for family get togethers! These include a family interview sheet (in case you weren’t sure what to ask), a family stories sheet, any family traditions, and a record for your oral interviews.
  • Surname Worksheets
    • Sheets for recording the story behind a certain name, any variations in the spelling of the name along with when and where, and a great surname worksheet where you can keep track of several names (and their variants) in one place.

Pros

The Ancestral Village Worksheet was something I hadn’t thought about until I saw the sheet and I can see how useful it could be! Certain items, like other historical names, are incredibly important to remember when looking for your ancestors!

The Passenger List Search Worksheet is great when you’re looking for someone with a name that could be spelled and transcribed many ways. This sheet has you write down everything you already know in order to help you better search for your ancestor in a passenger list database.

The Online Search Tracker and the Ancestor Worksheet for Online Searches are unique. As a professional, this is a great chart to use when I am quickly doing a surface search for someone, but have not created a tree for them yet and just need some background first. This is a great place to keep the information organized.

The Ancestor Worksheet I could see being very useful when you hit a brick wall. It’s a great place to quickly put all you already know about them in one place and then see what you could be missing.

The Correspondence Log does not need to be just family. I keep one that goes for everyone I’ve asked for information on whomever I was looking for. This includes when I ask societies or libraries. It’s a good habit to get into!

I really enjoy the Research Trip Aid items. They are wonderful and I can already tell I’ll be using the budget one frequently. The set up for the repository worksheet is great as well as it includes things people may not think about right away like are they closed for lunch? What restrictions are there for electronics? Or is anything stored off-site? All great questions you should know before you go!

Cons

While useful, I don’t know that I’d create checklists for things like JUST census records or military records. I tend to look at one person and see what I have for them, so that makes the records checklist probably the most beneficial for me.

I am a proponent of citing something instead of nothing so the included citation cheat sheet will help with that. However, it is missing a few components that I feel are important (like who you are specifically looking at), but for those who haven’t cited before, it is still a great start.

Some items, like the Photographic Record, Heirloom Recording Form, the Military Service Record, and the Recipe History Recorder are nice for presentation. If you aren’t going to present that information in some way, I don’t find them incredibly useful. All that information can be recorded elsewhere (although the Heirloom and Recipe Recorder do leave room for memories/stories about said heirloom/recipe).

As mentioned, the Correspondence Log is a great habit to get into but this one lacks information I would want to include. Besides the basic columns in the log (date, who to, address, information received, sent, or requested), I also like to include information on the person I’m researching, the specific question I had, if I sent money, and then the result. Since this is just a family log, I suppose it doesn’t need as much detail, but I just use a bigger one that I created.

Overall

I’d say this was a sound purchase! The price was great and I already see many worksheets/templates/checklists that I will be using in the future. This may be less of a value to someone who has been in genealogy for a while and may have already created similar documents. I hadn’t yet though and I find many of these to be quite beneficial!

 

 

Friday Finds August 8th-14th

By André Karwath aka Aka (Own work) [CC BY-SA 2.5 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5)], via Wikimedia Commons

By André Karwath aka Aka (Own work) [CC BY-SA 2.5 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5)], via Wikimedia Commons

Blogs/Articles

Webinars/Videos

Resources

  • New FamilySearch Collections (from week of August 5th) – Dick Eastman has a large list of new collections available on his page. Check out all the new resources!
  • FindMyPast Friday’s! This week’s new records are:
    • Northumberland Baptisms
    • British Army, Casualty Index War of 1812
    • British Army, Deserters and Absentees in Police Gazette 1914-1919
    • British Jewry Book of Honor 1914-1920
    • Scottish Covenanters 1679-1688
    • Church of Ireland Parish Record Search Forms
    • New South Wales, 1828 Census Householders’ Returns

Tuesday’s Tip: Indexing with FamilySearch

Don’t you just love being able to type a name into a database like those on Ancestry.com or FamilySearch.org and get results?

You may have noticed that not all databases get pulled into these searches though; but you are welcome to go through page by page, to find what you’re looking for. It takes a long time and can be quite tedious. Don’t you wish those items were indexed?

Well this is where you can come in and pay it forward to the genealogy community!

FamilySearch.org is currently hosting a World Wide Indexing event and anyone can become involved in this project!

Get Started

You can check out some more information here but it’s quite easy to get started. First, you do need an account with FamilySearch – it’s free! You fill out the form and you’re set! Very simple.

Once you have that, you can then begin indexing. First, you’ll need to download the indexing program.

indexing1

It doesn’t take too long and then you’ll have a small icon that says FamilySearch Indexing on your desktop (well, that’s where I put mine anyway). Double click, log in – and start!

How To Index

Once you log-in, you’ll have a tip of the day show up. You can disable this or not. I leave mine up because the reminders are nice. Your screen will look somewhat similar to this:

indexing2

You have three main spaces here: My Batches, My Messages, and what I call My Results.

My Batches

Here is where you have a list of files you have chosen to index. In the above picture, mine is currently blank. To download a new batch, you just click on the download batch button. You can also choose to work offline or online.

My Messages

Self-explanatory really. Right now there’s a message up about the Worldwide Indexing Event. You can dismiss these messages as you read them.

My Results

Here you can view several different tabs. The above picture shows my goals, which I currently have nothing set. If you wanted to set some goals for yourself, that’s where you’d do it and keep track of your goal.

My history shows your records you’ve submitted and your points. Your points just let you see what you’ve contributed to FamilySearch indexing for the month, the quarter, the year, and since you’ve started.

Arbitration Results tells you the percentage of how much what you indexed matches with a reviewer. After you submit your work it goes to an arbitrator who goes through it once more. This is a good tool for seeing where you may need improvement (especially when reading those handwritten documents!).

The Indexing Links is the last tab and has guides, tutorials, projects, wiki’s, etc. for you to look through if you so wish.

Downloading a Batch

As I said, you click the download batch button to get your documents. A box will pop up and here you’ll have some choices

indexing3

In the upper right hand corner, you’ll see a link to edit your preferences. That takes you outside of the indexing program where you can choose your email preferences, project difficulty level, and project languages.

Once set, in the download batch box, you can choose to show all projects or your preferred projects. You can then organize the projects by project name, description, level, or points by clicking on the heading box of the category you wish to organize. For example, organizing by level will give you a result like this:

indexing4

Notice that it has all the beginning projects listed and it goes to intermediate and then advanced. Organizing this way is nice, especially if you’re new to indexing.

Once you find a project you’d like to work on, you can indicate how many batches you’d like in the lower left hand corner. You can use the arrows or type it in but you can’t have more than 10 batches at a time. You can also click the view sample button if you wish to see what it looks like before taking on a project.

So once you find a project you wish to work on, select it, choose how many batches you’d like, then hit ok and it will take you to the project indexing screen.

There are three boxes on this and are self explanatory. You’ll want to focus at first on the bottom right box for the specific project instructions.

Each project is unique, so I highly recommend reviewing all the instructions for the project before indexing. You can also see many image examples and see exactly how and what they want you to index as well as what to do when you can’t view the image or read the handwriting. A lot of this repeats and you’ll become more and more familiar with the process as you continue to index.

Once done with a batch, you submit it and it’ll disappear from your list on your start page.

What if I Can’t Do It?

No problem! Just send it back.  There’s a handy button for that:

indexing5

For whatever reason you can’t complete a batch, you can return it. If it’s too far above your level, you downloaded more than you can do, etc. Just send it back! It’ll ask if it is something for other indexers or if there’s a problem with the image, so click what is appropriate and send it back! No harm done 🙂

You’ll notice that there are due dates for batches. (In the list of projects, ones that are close to their due date can be in red to draw attention to them. So be aware that those have a shorter time-limit than the rest.) Once that due date is up, the batch will be removed from your start screen. So be sure to take on as many batches as is feasible for the time frame! If you decide to download the batches and work offline, you’ll need to be even more cognizant of that time frame.

Worldwide Indexing Event

If you’d like to find some more information on the event, check out Dear Myrtle! She has had several posts on her blog about it, like Saturday’s post. She also has a schedule of events if you wish to participate with her! Today’s indexing session is complete but check out her schedule for other events.

The event goes from August 7-14 so you definitely have time to contribute! There is a goal for 100,000 people to participate in this event and they are nearly halfway there! It’s a lot of fun to index regardless of this event so even if you don’t make it during this week definitely check it out and help other people find their ancestors just a bit faster. 🙂

indexing6

You can check out the FamilySearch Indexing Facebook Page or the FamilySearch Facebook page too for more information.

Enjoy!

Disclaimer: I am not affiliated with FamilySearch.org nor a member of the LDS church; I happen to find indexing fun and enjoy being able to help others search a bit easier 🙂

Friday Finds August 1-7

"National Archives Building". Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:National_Archives_Building.jpg#/media/File:National_Archives_Building.jpg

“National Archives Building”. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons – https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:National_Archives_Building.jpg#/media/File:National_Archives_Building.jpg

Articles/Blogs

Webinars/Videos

Resources

Page 46 of 91

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