Find-a-Grave Virtual Cemeteries

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Ancestry® Expands Reference Panel to Deliver More Precise Results and New Regions



Consumer genomics is a new and evolving field and Ancestry® is at the forefront, constantly developing new ways for you to learn about yourself through DNA. Today, we’re proud to announce that our team of scientists have increased the AncestryDNA® reference panel to more than double its previous size with samples from more places around the world, resulting in the latest update to AncestryDNA ethnicity estimates.

Over the next several months, AncestryDNA customers may receive updated ethnicity estimates, thanks to our expanded reference panel, which allows us to determine ethnic breakdowns with a higher degree of precision. This means there may be some changes to your results.
Additional story at: https://tinyurl.com/y2lu9ybr









Monday, October 21, 2019

Ancestry's DNA health screening will require doctor's order



Ancestry.com is entering the growing field of genetic health screenings with a strategy that’s markedly different from that of its biggest competitor.

Ancestry said Tuesday that its new consumer health tests will require authorization by a physician. Its main competitor, 23andMe, went through the lengthy and expensive process of getting approval from the Food and Drug Administration so it can sell its tests directly to customers without a prescription.

The involvement of doctors in Ancestry’s tests places it in the midst of a debate over whether physician-ordered genetic screening is merely a way for companies to avoid the regulatory scrutiny of the FDA. Several other DNA startups, including Color and Veritas, also require a doctor to order health tests.

Additional story at Health Watch: https://www.healthdatamanagement.com/articles/ancestrys-dna-health-screening-will-require-doctors-order

Monday, August 26, 2019

Google Photos just got an awesome feature that makes it a must-have Android and iPhone app


Chris Smith
Google Photos is easily one of the best apps you could have installed on your phone, especially if it’s an Android device, and especially a specific type of Android that comes with unlimited storage. Even if you prefer a different cloud or storage device for your photos, you should still consider getting the Google Photos app on your Android or iPhone right now, because the service is about to get a super convenient feature.

Learn more at: https://bgr.com/2019/08/23/google-photos-features-ocr-text-recognition-on-android-and-iphone/

Thursday, August 22, 2019

Five Photos You Should Take at the Cemetery


BY AMY JOHNSON CROW

It’s sad — and rather frustrating — to go to a cemetery, take some photos, and realize when you get home that those photos don’t really help you. (It’s especially frustrating when you’re not able to get back to take more photos.) To help ease the frustration, here are 5 cemetery photos that you should get in the habit of taking every time:

1. The Cemetery Sign?
The cemetery sign should be the first photo you take each time you go to the cemetery. I know it feels a little strange to take a picture before you even get into the cemetery. Honestly, this was a hard habit for me to get into, but I am so glad I did!

When you go to several cemeteries, you can lose track of which one was which. Having the sign as the first photo for that cemetery, you never have to wonder later, “Which cemetery was this?” All you need to do is scroll back through your photos until you get to the cemetery sign.

More great ideas at: https://www.amyjohnsoncrow.com/5-photos-you-should-take-at-the-cemetery/?fbclid=IwAR18wn10AmH3WoKEa8P7NXKCkkhJLnKk9FpwybqNzJBu7pLCbs5VBf8q0eo

The Actress Who Left the Stage to Become a Civil War Spy





Pauline Cushman, now featured in a Smithsonian photography exhibition, unexpectedly found herself spying for the Union after accepting a dare
By Emily Toomey

In a photograph no bigger than a playing card, a woman dressed in military costume cradles a sword, staring confidently beyond the frame. Her name is Pauline Cushman, an actress turned Civil War spy whose story dances between the boundary dividing history and fiction.

Born Harriet Wood in 1833, Cushman changed her name when she moved to New York City to pursue acting at age 18. There, she met her first husband, who joined the Union army as a musician, but tragically died in 1862. (Like much of Cushman’s story, the specifics of her husband’s death are unclear...

Additional story at: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/actress-who-left-stage-become-civil-war-spy-180972821/
(photo-Amazon)

Pauline Cushman-Spy of the Cumberland
https://www.amazon.com/Pauline-Cushman-Cumberland-William-Christen/dp/1889020117/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=pauline+cushman%2C+spy+for+the+cumberland&qid=1566486404&s=gateway&sr=8-2

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

August 1650 in New Sweden History

August 1650 in New Sweden History
Martha Ashman was born in August 1650.
Generally known as Captain Lasse Cock, Lars was a Wicaco church warden, had served as a justice on the court since 1680, was a member of Pennsylvania legislature and was frequently called upon by William Penn's government to act as interpreter and witness to treaties with the Indians of Pennsylvania.

Born in New Sweden 21 March 1646, he married on 15 April 1669 Martha Ashman, English, born in August 1650. She was the daughter of Robert and Katherine Ashman, who had moved from Long Island to Passyunk by 1666. As a result of this union, Lasse acquired greater skill with the English language than his Swedish and Finnish contemporaries. Initially, Lasse Cock's family lived at Shackamaxon, but by 1678 their home plantation was located at Passyunk.

By 1693 his wife had borne eleven children, three of whom had died in childhood. Their eldest child, Catherine, born December 1669, had left home and was living nearby with her English husband, Richard Rhodes. Lasse's household included their son Peter, born 20 January 1671, his wife Elisabeth daughter of Anders Svensson, six unmarried children, John (born 20 January 1673), Anders (1675), Robert (September 1681), Måns (4 November 1683), Margaret (18 February 1685) Lars (15 August 1688) and a grandson, Lars Petersson Cock (1692). Captain Lasse Cock died in October 1699. His wife was still living in 1724.* 

Source: The 1693 Census of the Swedes on the Delaware by Dr. Peter Stebbins Craig, p. 29-30. To purchase the book or others, see The Swedish Colonial Society book store at https://colonialswedes.net/books-3/ Picture: Wicaco Church, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
*Subsequent children: Deborah (b. 7 July 1693), Gabriel (25 March 16950). On 25 May 1694, Lasse's son John married Margaret, daughter of Sven Svensson.
(Swedish Colonial Society)

Visiting Dead Relatives on Google Street View


This is just an incredible story. I hope you will take a moment to read it - you may also find a past loved one.

Google Maps is meant to look up addresses, but it can also provide a window into the lives of the recently deceased.
BY JESSIE SCHIEWE

Three years after her grandparents’ deaths, 19-year-old Luisa Hoenle looked up their old house on Google Maps. Feeling nostalgic if not a bit masochistic, the Switzerland-based art school student input their street address and then clicked on the Street View icon, which showed panoramic photos of the property.

Built decades ago by her grandfather Siegfried, the house had fallen into disrepair since his death from cancer in 2016, its once lush lawn now filled with withered and dying plants. But on Google Street View, Hoenle found older images of the home from before its decline. She scrolled through the photographs, reminiscing, when she noticed something else: her grandfather.

A Google Street View car had unknowingly snapped photos of the late Siegfried while he was gardening in his front lawn, a year or so before he died.

 Additional story at: https://www.okwhatever.org/topics/things/dead-relative-google-street-view

Monday, August 19, 2019

Finding Treasures and Fun in Garage Sales



In the United States the 2nd Saturday of August is National Garage Sale Day. The timing of this yearly event makes sense. August marks the approaching end of summer and families are enjoying their final weekends before the start of the school year. It’s a good time to sell what the kids have outgrown or search for what they will need. The holidays are just around the corner which means most people have an eye towards purging unwanted items and making some money for the expenses that they will face in the upcoming months.

Whether you call it an estate sale, tag sale, yard sale, or garage sale, the sale of your unwanted household items, toys, and clothes in front of your home is something that most of us have either done or gone to looking for deals. For the genealogist, yard sales can mean some great deals on vintage items that we remember our families owning or wish we kept.

Additional story at: https://news.legacyfamilytree.com/legacy_news/2019/08/garage-sale-weekend-national-garage-sale-day.html

Monday, August 12, 2019

The Mysterious Epidemic That Terrified Henry VIII


This summer, while updating my 'royal-connections', I discovered that King Henry VIII, was a second cousin, 17 times removed. While "17 times removed" is a very long time ago, it still counts as a cousin - right ?


Scientists still can't figure out the cause of the Tudor-era "sweating sickness"
Erin Blakemore

In 1528, Henry VIII slept in a different bed every night—and not in the way you might think. He did have a mistress, his wife’s lady-in-waiting Anne Boleyn. But it was fear of disease that drove him to move almost daily that summer. The king was terrified of sweating sickness, a deadly epidemic that
is nearly forgotten today.

Scientists are still fascinated by the mysterious disease, which swept through Europe multiple times during the Tudor period. Beginning in 1485, five epidemics plagued England, Germany and other European countries. But the epidemic’s origins and even the identity of the disease are still murky.

Additional story at: History - https://www.history.com/news/the-mysterious-epidemic-that-terrified-henry-viii

Finding Genealogy Clues in Coroner’s Records


another interesting article from Legacy's Tips from the Experts

Did your ancestor meet a tragic or untimely death? Perhaps you tracked down his or her death certificate and it included a notation about an autopsy, and/or a medical certificate of death, with the signature of a coroner or medical examiner.

Death certificates are staples of genealogy research, but many times there is more to the story. Coroners investigated all types of unexplained deaths from drug overdoses to drownings, mishaps to murders, making their records useful for learning more about an ancestor.


A coroner is a public official whose primary function is to investigate by inquest any death thought to be of other than natural causes or occur under unusual circumstances. Sometimes an elected position, the Office of the Coroner dates back to the Anglo-Saxon Common Law system of government, making it the oldest administrative office. This is sometimes an elected position, and the individual may not have a medical background. The powers and responsibilities have changed over the years.

Man, 33, Meets Father, Half-Siblings, and Grandparents for the First Time Thanks to MyHeritage DNA




Growing up, MyHeritage user Kevin Williams always wished to have a father. It was a DNA upload to MyHeritage — and a helping hand from MyHeritage Founder and CEO Gilad Japhet — that finally cracked the case for him.

After months of dead ends, I used the power of social media to try and break through the walls. I was not expecting what happened next. The CEO of MyHeritage saw the post and decided to help. He found an alternative way of making contact. This was absolutely mind-blowing!

Additional story at: https://blog.myheritage.com/2019/08/man-33-meets-father-half-siblings-and-grandparents-for-the-first-time-thanks-to-myheritage-dna/ DNA testing,

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Millions of Books are Secretly in the Public Domain !


And YOU Can Download Them for Free !

A quirk of copyright law means that millions of books are now free for anyone to read, thanks to some work from the New York Public Library.

Everyone is paying for books when they don’t have to. There’s so many ways to read almost anything ever published, for free, that it borders on the obscene. Libraries: They’re good! Sure, if you want the latest release from your favorite author you either have to pay or wait for a copy from the library, but for millions of older books, you can get a digital version, legally, for free. One secret of the publishing industry is that most American books published before 1964 never extended their copyright, meaning they’re in the public domain today.

Read more about this GREAT deal at: https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/kz4e3e/millions-of-books-are-secretly-in-the-public-domain-you-can-download-them-free

Archdiocese of Boston: St. Peter (Dorchester) now searchable

Today we’ve added six new volumes to Massachusetts: Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston Records, 1789-1920 from St. Peter in Dorchester. This update adds over 38,000 records and over 126,000 names to search.

Earlier this week we announced the extension of the Historic Catholic Records Online project up through the year 1920. This update includes 1901-1920 records when available in these volumes.
St. Peter (Dorchester) began in 1872 as an offshoot of St. Gregory in Dorchester. In James Sullivan’s One hundred years of progress, Joseph Byrne enthusiastically describes the appearance of the church which was dedicated in 1884, “No technical description can do more than faintly suggest the grandeur of St. Peter’s church which is a poem of architectural beauty” (175). The Dorchester Athenaeum’s history of the church has a very helpful paragraph (the sixth on the page) that explains the evolution of the Catholic parishes in Dorchester.

We’d like to thank Sam Sturgis for his help making this parish available on our site. The new volumes are listed below:
St. Peter (Dorchester) Baptisms, 1872-1887
St. Peter (Dorchester) Baptisms, 1887-1895
St. Peter (Dorchester) Baptisms, 1895-1908
St. Peter (Dorchester) Confirmations, 1882-1920
St. Peter (Dorchester) Marriages, 1872-1897
St. Peter (Dorchester) Marriages, 1897-1920

Please note: This database is available to Individual-level and above NEHGS members only. Consider membership.
Additional information at: https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/2726/massachusetts-roman-catholic-archdiocese-of-boston-records-1789-1900

Friday, August 2, 2019

Setting the Record Straight on Colonial Provinces and Colony Names



While entering states into your genealogy databases - have you ever wondered what the correct name for Georgia or the other twelve, before they became a state ? While most researchers opt for listing these as they are now known, during colonial days, Delaware, Maryland and the others were not states, but instead were known as  a colony or a province. Virginia during colonial days was known as Colony and Dominion of Virginia. The following list can assist your research as well as keeping a concise and correct name for those once known as the Thirteen Colonies.

Thirteen Colonies

The chart below lists the 13 original colonies in alphabetical order, along with information about when each colony was founded and when each colony became a state:
 

Founded
Statehood
Connecticut
1636
January 9, 1788
Delaware
1638
December 7, 1787
Georgia
1732
January 2, 1788
Maryland
1633
April 28, 1788
Massachusetts
1620
February 6, 1788
New Hampshire
1638
June 21, 1788
New Jersey
1664
December 18, 1787
New York
1626
July 26, 1788
North Carolina
1653
November 21, 1789
Pennsylvania
1682
December 12, 1787
Rhode Island
1636
May 29, 1790
South Carolina
1663
May 23, 1788
Virginia
1607
June 25, 1788

Contemporary documents usually list the thirteen colonies of British North America in geographical order, from the north to the south.


·         Province of New Hampshire, later New Hampshire, a crown colony

·         Province of Massachusetts Bay, later Massachusetts and Maine, a crown colony

·         Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, later Rhode Island, a crown colony

·         Connecticut Colony, later Connecticut, a crown colony


·         Province of New York, later New York and Vermont,[3] a crown colony

·         Province of New Jersey, later New Jersey, a crown colony

·         Province of Pennsylvania, later Pennsylvania, a proprietary colony

·         Delaware Colony (before 1776, the Lower Counties on Delaware), later Delaware, a proprietary colony


(Virginia and Maryland comprised the Chesapeake Colonies)

·        Province of Maryland, later Maryland, a proprietary colony

·        Colony and Dominion of Virginia, later Virginia, Kentucky, and West Virginia, a crown colony

·        Province of North Carolina, later North Carolina and Tennessee, a crown colony

·        Province of South Carolina, later South Carolina, a crown colony

·        Province of Georgia, later Georgia, northern sections of Alabama and Mississippi, a crown colony

Other divisions prior to 1730
Dominion of New England
Created in 1685 by a decree from King James II that consolidated Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts Bay Colony, Plymouth Colony, Rhode Island, Connecticut,Province of New York, East Jersey, and West Jersey into a single larger colony. The experiment collapsed afterthe Glorious Revolution of 1688–89, and the nine former colonies re-established their separate identities in 1689.
Massachusetts Bay Colony
Settled in 1630 by Puritans from England. The colonial charter was revoked in 1684, and a new charter establishing an enlarged Province of Massachusetts Bay was issued in 1691.
Settled in 1622 (An earlier attempt to settle the Popham Colony in Sagadahoc, Maine (near present-day Phippsburg and Popham Beach State Park) in 1607 was abandoned after only one year). The Massachusetts Bay Colony claimed the Maine territory (then limited to present-day southernmost Maine) in the 1650s. Parts of Maine east of the Kennebec River were also part of New York in the second half of the 17th century. These areas were formally made part of the Province of Massachusetts Bay in the charter of 1691.
Settled in 1620 by the Pilgrims. Plymouth was merged into the Province of Massachusetts Bay in the charter of 1691.
Founded in 1635 and merged with Connecticut Colony in 1644.
Settled in late 1637. New Haven was absorbed by Connecticut Colony with the issuance of the Connecticut Charter in 1662, partly as royal punishment by King Charles II for harboring the regicide judges who sentenced King Charles I to death.
Settled as part of New Netherland in the 1610s, New Jersey was captured (along with New York) by English forces in 1664. New Jersey was divided into two separate colonies in 1674, which were reunited in 1702.
Founded in 1663. Carolina colony was divided into two colonies, North Carolina and South Carolina, in 1712. Both colonies became royal colonies in 1729.










Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Related surnames, buried in the old section of Hazlehurst Cemetery

part of Hazlehurst Cemetery


Hazlehurst Cemetery( Old Section)
Hazlehurst Cemetery is located in the town of Hazlehurst in Copiah County, Mississippi. It is one of the older cemeteries in the county. It can be reached from Interstate Highway 55 by taking exit 61 and going east for 0.7 miles. Then turn right on old highway 51 and go south through town. After you pass the Courthouse in the center of town go 0.3 miles and turn right on Fair Street. Go one block, and the cemetery is on the left. The oldest recorded grave is 1858. The new section of Hazlehurst cemetery is across the street from the old section.
There are approximately 812 identifiable grave markers. There are additional graves with no markers. The author made this listing on March 31, 2000. The information comes from the tombstones. In addition reference was made to World War I registration data, the Social Security Death Index database, the Federal Census, and the Copiah County marriage records. Where tombstones list birth dates and no death, that information was recorded. The individual may still be alive. Reference was made to a previous listing made in 1953 by Miss Francis A. Cook. Every attempt was made to ensure accuracy, but some stones were very difficult to read


Catching
 Mary
 S.
 McKinnell
 September 20, 1857
 January 29, 1947
 Wife of Dr. J.M. Catching

Catching
 Mary
 Palatire
 Lilly
 August 14, 1867
 July 12, 1892
 Wife of Albert A. Lilly

Conn
 Abe
 Heath
   December 27, 1877
 February 24, 1935
 
Conn
 Benjamin
 Franklin
 Dr.
 August 18, 1842
 June 11, 1886
 Husband fo Sarah Heath Conn


Conn
 Edwin
 B.
   April 20, 1848
 November 6, 1899
 Husband of Permelia E. Conn

Conn
 Henry
 Clay
   November 3, 1849
 May 12, 1903
 Brother of Edwin B. Conn

Conn
 Mollie
 Heath
   August 19, 1857
 January 5, 1946
Conn
 Mollie
 Heath
   December 31, 1891
 July 7, 1971
 
Conn
 Permelia
 E.
 Gates
 April 8, 1848
 April 21, 1907
 Wife of Edwin B. Conn

Conn
 Sarah
 Heath
   November 3, 1849
 September 27, 1929
 Wife of Benjamin F, Conn

Flowers
 Alice
 H.
   January 26, 1856
 June 22, 1869
 Dau of William S. & Martha J. Flowers

Flowers
 Ignacious
 R.
   February 12, 1853
 August 28, 1863


 Son of William S. & Martha J. Flowers

Flowers
 Joseph
 B.
   August 2, 1850
 April 1, 1904
 
 Flowers
 Martha
 Jane
  December 20, 1826
 December 17, 1908
 Wife of William S. Flowers

Flowers
 Richard
  May 11, 1784
 February 13, 1868
Flowers
 William
 S.
  December 25, 1817
 May 1, 1875
 Husband of Martha Jane Flowers

Funchess
 Infant
  November 19, 1866
 Son of M.A. & N.T. Funchess

Funchess
 Marcellus
  April 15, 1847
 September 5, 1925

Magee
 Durward
  February 4, 1911
 November 19, 1950
 
Magee
 Fannie
 Wilson
  August 3, 1888
 June 1, 1966
 

Magee
 Henry
 Elette
  December 21, 1886
 June 29, 1961
  
Magee
 Mary
 Lou
 Cato
 1884
 1923

Redus
 Harriet
 Ann
  July 26, 1828
 January 25, 1905
 Wife of James Chaffin Redus

Redus
 Harriet
 Ann
  July 24, 1850
 January 28, 1935
 Dau of James C. & Harriet A. Redus

Redus
 James
 Chaffin
  September 8, 1820
 December 31, 1903
 Husband of Harriet Ann Redus

Slay
 Nathan
 W.
 Captain
 January 31, 1830
 July 25, 1899
 Son of Alexander & Elizabeth Slay

Weathersby
 Guy
  November 22, 1889
 November 10, 1969
 
Weathersby
 J.
  August 26, 1857
 December 23, 1922
Weathersby
 Laura
 Martin
 Cannon
 December 8, 1894
 February 12, 1976


Weathersby
 Nonie
 A.
 January 10, 1865
 December 14, 1944
 
Welch
 Lizzie
 Dodds
 February 10, 1907
 April 9, 1907
 Daughter of T.E. & B.B. Welch