This week's news includes: Abraham Lincoln's ancestry is
questioned;
Ancestry.com announces new databases,
including WI Death Index (1959-1997), NC Death Certificates
(1909-1975), TN Divorces (1800-1865), and U.S. Colored Troops
Service Records (Civil War); The Florida Genealogical Society
(Tampa) celebrates its 50th anniversary; Modern Genealogy
(
http://www.moderngenealogy.com)
announces a new database for Windows XP and Vista and invites
people to assist as beta testers; Genlighten (
http://www.genlighten.com) is
building a network of people to look up and obtain copies of
documents at a reasonable cost; FamilyRelatives.com (
http://www.familyrelatives.com/)
has added lots of new British Isles trade and court directories to
its site; The National Archives (TNA) in the U.K. has completed
renovations and has reorganized its facility to accommodate the
addition of the Family Records Centre materials, and urges people
to check out the changes at their site at
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/;
the National Library of Ireland (
http://www.nli.ie) has unveiled a new
exhibition about William Butler Yeats and a virtual tour can be
viewed at their website; and Microsoft has anounced the closure of
its Live Search Books project.
Listener email this week includes: How does one become a doctor in
5 years or less?; using the My Maps feature of
Google Maps (
http://maps.google.com/) to trace and map your
ancestors' movements; Helen Parkhurst of the World Burial Index
(
http://www.worldburialindex.com) shares information
about this subscription database for searching cemetery monumental
inscriptions across England and elsewhere; a discussion of people
listed multiple times on the census -- and an example with Amelia
Earhart; tracing substitute soldiers and the men in whose stead
they fought; the
National Geographic Genographic Project;
origins of unusual first names; how will same sex marriages change
genealogy and software; and the delights of moving to
broadband.
There are a number of genealogy software packages for PDAs and
SmartPhones that run the Palm or WindowsMobile operating systems.
These allow you to load your genealogy data files on the devices
and take it with you.
George and Drew issue a
challenge to software developers to provide the equivalent software
apps (applications) for the Apple iPhone and for Blackberry
devices.
Natalie of Ogden, Utah, provided the following weblinks for all our
listeners:
- Western States Marriage Record Index (abish.byui.edu/specialcollections/westernstates/search.cfm)
- Free Birth & Death Certificates for Arizona (genealogy.az.gov)
- Utah Digital Newspapers (www.lib.utah.edu/digital/unews/)
- Illinois Statewide Death Index (www.ilsos.gov/GenealogyMWeb/idphdeathsrch.html)