Family History Friday: He’s Amazing!

My wonderful daddy has set up a little work area at the hospital.

He is one of the reasons that I love Family History as much as I do.

Here he is, in the hospital waiting for heart surgery and he has his computer set up and he is staying busy. I brought my lap top up to visit him today and we worked on our

Family History for a bit. photo 1 (13)

He’s so popular that we had lots of interruptions. I had so much fun!

And I had to take a picture of his snazzy glasses!!! photo 2 (13)I would say he is an ideal patient. He wrote his own Discharge Goals! My favorite part is the “attitude-Bring on the world, I’m ready for whatever comes my way.”

photo 3 (7)He really is an amazing man!

We’ll be praying for him to do well in surgery. We’ll also have the same attitude, “ready for whatever comes [our] way.”

Happy Family History Friday! Love, Joy

Family History Friday: The Leading S!

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Source

If you are searching for your ancestors in the 1800’s you may have seen the “leading S” or the “double S.”

It is very common in documents like a census record or other older documents. 

It looks like a cursive “F” that is backwards. 

I like to keep samples of the way it looks in my research helps. 

You can see what it looks like, and some great information about it, here!

It is always good to have helps when you do research!

Happy Family History Friday! Love, Joy

Family History Friday: Great Grandpa Emil!

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I snapped this picture on my phone of a picture my dad has hanging in his home. It is a picture of my great grandparents and their children on the day of their 50th wedding anniversary. What a nice photo, and very handsome people.

I called my dad to ask him about his uncles and aunts and he said he didn’t really know them. His dad is the 3rd from the right on the back row. They moved across the country when he was about 8 years old, and they didn’t stay close to his dad’s family. At least not the aunts and uncles. I know he wrote and received letters from his grandpa Emil.

Thankfully I was able to do a search on Ancestry.com and found this:

EmilOscarHansonFamily

There they are! My grandpa is Otto in the middle on the front row. They’re all a little younger in this picture, but still very handsome! Now I can write to the person who uploaded this picture and see if he has any other information about this family. Maybe he is a long lost cousin (twice removed).

I love Ancestry.com!

Happy Family History Friday! Love, Joy

Family History Friday: Speaking of Indexing…!

Last week for Family History Friday I talked about the indexing program the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is doing. Well, it turns out the they set a record for the number of records submitted.

“FamilySearch indexing volunteers broke a record this week during the first Worldwide Indexing Event. FamilySearch International, the largest genealogy organization in the world, was hoping an unprecedented 50,000 contributors would participate in the 24-hour effort to submit genealogy records, beginning at 6 p.m. MDT on 20 July 2014. A total of 66,511 indexers and arbitrators went online to submit records, surpassing the goal by 16,511 people.”

Read more about it here!

and here!

Indexed: 4,682,746

Arbitrated: 941,932

Total Records Processed: 5.7 million

Great job, all you indexers and arbitrators!!!!

Happy Family History Friday! Love, Joy

On Pioneers and Pilgrims!

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On this beautiful Pioneer Day I would like to share a post written by my Dad.

Here you go!

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On Pioneers and Pilgrims

“Of logs we built our houses, of shakes we made the doors, of sod we
made the chimneys, dirt we had for floors.” Joel William White wrote
that in his journal. He was my wife’s 2nd great grandfather and one of
the early pioneers. Another one stated that; “We swept our dirt floors
with a sage brush and when we were done we threw it in the fireplace
to heat our home.”

On the 24th of July, we will again be celebrating ‘Pioneer Days’ with
a parade, rodeo and fireworks; it is primarily a Utah holiday and
rightly so. That is the day, in 1847, that our first Utah pioneer
forefathers drove their covered wagons down into the Salt Lake Valley
after a thousand mile trek across the dusty plains. They had been
driven out of their homes in Illinois because of religious
persecution. They came here looking for peace and safety from the
intolerance of the, so-called, civilized areas of our then young
nation. A nation that had recently instituted a constitution that
guaranteed religious freedom.

Each year on this celebration day, do our minds ever leave the
parade, the rodeo and the fireworks long enough to contemplate what
those early pioneers went through to get here? Do we try to
understand, on that day, the 24th, the many things they had to do in
August, September and October in order to survive their first year.
They had to plant crops late in the summer so they would have food to
eat through the coming winter or they would actually starve to death?
For them, it wasn’t a matter of, well, if the corn doesn’t mature
we’ll have to run down to Albertsons and buy some. Theirs was a matter
of, if the corn doesn’t mature we won’t have any. It was a very
difficult life for them; unlike us, they had very few choices in terms
of what they could do. And when you don’t have choices, what you have
to do must be done with energy, hope and a prayer in your heart that
it will be a successful effort. One interesting way of trying to put
ourselves back then was stated by an unknown author this way; “If we
were put back in that time we would not be ourselves.” We would be put
into an entirely different dimension, a dimension not unlike the
popular TV series of several years ago, called the ‘Twilight zone’.

Some of the first settlers made a pilgrimage to this country from
Europe where they were persecuted for their religious beliefs. They,
too, struggled to prepare for their first Winter and many did not make
it. They were referred to as Pilgrims. The early Latter Day
Saints,also made a pilgrimage to the Salt Lake Valley and for the same
reason, religious persecution. They, too, arrived at an awkward time
of year and they, too, could be referred to as pilgrims.

When I was a young person, I read, “Pilgrim’s Progress”, a story about
Christian, a young man who supposedly was representing all Christians.
While venturing through life he ran into one moral obstacle after
another, each having to be overcome, before he could move on toward
his goal of eternal life. From that perspective we are all pilgrims
with the same challenges.

Those of us who have embarked on a search for our ancestral families,
are also pilgrims. We are often required to seek information from
distant lands. Like a quest, seeking old records, from  places, and
languages that we may have had no previous experience with. Searching
here and there for clues that will lead us to a name, a place, a time,
with the hopes that to find one ancestor we will be lead to another.
Do we not wander through time and to new places, even cyberspace. We
are truly pilgrims. We, too, are on a sacred quest with a prayer in
our hearts that we might weather the storms of failure until we find
success. -Emil

Family History Friday: Indexing!

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What is indexing?

Indexing happens after:

1- A document is scanned and prepared for the indexing program. If you want to be an indexer, you can download the program for free here.

2-You download a batch of records and then type the information you see in the records. Someone else is working on the same records. Then the an arbitrator looks at yours and the other persons to see if there are any mistakes.

3-The arbitrator clears up any information that was typed up differently.

4-The name and data are added to the FamilySearch database, where everyone in the world can see it and do research on their family.

5-Someone finds information about their ancestors in Family Search.

6-They perform ordinances for their ancestor in the temple.

What a blessing to those who do genealogy and family history research. They can find the information they are looking for much easier than if they had to search the whole document, or source to find what they need.

Those who do indexing are heaven sent! If you would like to find out more about it, and watch some videos and tutorials, check it out here.

Happy Family History Friday! Love, Joy

Everyone Has a Twin?

IMG_0309We were at a dinner recently celebrating our niece getting ready to serve an LDS mission. As we sat around in a group eating, I noticed this friend of our niece (the guy on the right).

I said to family, “Hey, he looks just like Corver, as a grown up! Don’t you think?”

They all agreed!

So we had to take a photo, because this is amazing. Maybe we really do have a twin somewhere out there in the world!

Family History Friday: Heaven and Families!

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      “Our doctrinal obligation is to our own ancestors. This is because the celestial organization of heaven is based on families. The First Presidency has encouraged members, especially youth and young single adults, to emphasize family history work and ordinances for their own family names or the names of ancestors of their ward and stake members. We need to be connected to both our roots and branches. The thought of being associated in the eternal realm is indeed glorious.”-Quentin L. Cook

Families are Forever!!!

Happy Family History Friday! Love, Joy

Family History Friday: Family Love!

I found a great story on YouTube about Stephen Colbert’s Uncle Eddy. Listen to it!

Do you know why Stephen has such a great love and respect for his uncle? It’s because his mom shared with him stories and letters and history about his uncle, and what was going on in his uncle’s life, and the world at the time he was alive.

That is why I love Family History. Because once I take the time to get to know my ancestors, I realize they’re not much different than me. They had hopes and dreams. They had challenges and sadness. They worked hard and sacrificed. They loved and shared their life with people they loved. They made life better for me. Knowing the things they went through, helps me know that I can go through hard things too. I feel like they are close and helping me. Rooting for me as I go through life. I will love them and remember them.

Happy Family History Friday! Love, Joy

Family History Friday: Treats & Sweets!

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Have you ever wondered what your ancestors had as a special treat?

I remember my Grandma Norma wrote in her history that a special treat for their family was sharing an apple, sitting around the kitchen table.

When I think of that image I smile. How simple and precious.

When I was a little girl I would get to go shopping with my mom. I remember it was always a special treat if she bought me a little box of animal crackers. You know the brand, it was Barnum’s Animals Crackers. I loved them! Still do. They came in a little box with a string handle, and different animal pictures all around the box. I always felt so special and they were so delicious.

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It is National Animal Cracker Day today!

When my children were little they got them for a treat too. I was also thinking about how I still feed Animal Crackers to the daycare kids. It is a memory a lot of us share. I looked up what people ate in England for desserts and treats and found out that sweets have been around for a long time, I just don’t think they came in a little box with a string handle.

I’m so lucky!

Happy Family History Friday! Love, Joy