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Friday, August 30, 2013

Follow Friday - Favorites for August 30, 2013

Favorites is my weekly list of favorite genealogy, history and random finds from across the Net.
17 amazing examples of mosaiculture
Evacuation day: controversial Order no. 11
We can't do it alone, but together we can build a Lego tower
An arm finds its way to World War I museum
If this old sidewalk to could talk
The dreaded telegram at The Pendleton Genealogy Post
A love letter like no other
Fireman in the family at Nuts From the Family Tree
Death takes no holiday at Arlington National Cemetery
Evolution of the soda can
The business 9 women kept a secret for 30 years
Ancestry.com offers free views of immigration records through Labor Day
Grave sightings: Joseph Schlitz, brewing magnate
Rita Hayworth is Stayin' Alive
11 things you might not know about Missouri
Could you pass a U.S. citizenship test?

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Wordless Wednesday - Two little White boys

"Clifton Melvin White age 6 months; Huston Lee White age 2 years + 8 mos."

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Tuesday's Tune - Mickey Mouse Disco

Mickey Mouse Disco album cover by K. Dooley at Flickr
I am a child of the seventies. And in the radiant glory of rust-colored shag carpet and avocado appliances I danced to disco. Yes, disco.

As I have mentioned before, my family has always loved music and I grew up in a time of albums. My family would hang out in my parents' room and throw album after album on the record player. My parents would watch my brother and I come up with crazy dance moves. The best album was Mickey Mouse Disco filled with can't-forget numbers like Watch Out for Goofy and Macho Duck. Last night on my XM radio I heard Macho Duck and couldn't help but shed a few tears remembering the good days...or rather missing them.

The album was released in 1979 and included new hits and disco versions of Disney classics:

"Disco Mickey Mouse" - 4:00
"Welcome to Rio" - 3:23
"The Greatest Band" - 4:10
"Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah" - 2:13
"Macho Duck" - 4:36
"Mousetrap" - 2:56
"Watch Out for Goofy!" - 3:30
"It's a Small World" - 2:28
"Chim Chim Cher-ee" - 2:10

Enjoy!

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Saturday's Source - For descendants of Peter Kuhn

Peter Kuhn, born in Germany in 1748, has a lot of descendants. Clara Stamy Venable, one of his many descendants helped to write a book about Peter and his lot entitled, "History and Roster of the Peter Kuhn Family in the U.S.A." published in 1932.
I have a long relationship with this source. When I was very young, maybe 8, my father showed me a copy of this book which was kept on the shelves in his office. I was fascinated...this was history and it was my history! I didn't know a single person in the book but they were my relatives. And then the book mysteriously went missing. For years I thought it about and wondered where it could have gotten to.

Turned out, I stole it! Many years later a big storm went through Kansas City and a tree limb fell on my parents' outdoor shed. They had stored a lot of "excess" stuff from my room in that shed and asked me to come over to save what I could. In one box I found several high school memories and my mysterious missing Kuhn family book. Unfortunately, the fallen limb had smashed the box open and the book was soaked. I left it out for a week and let it dry out, but the pages were now molded and brittle. However, I couldn't bear to part with my little bit of history.

Flash forward another 10 years and my patience and persistence in tracking down another version of the book have come to fruition. A cousin brought to my attention that the Allison-Antrim Museum in Greencastle, Pennsylvania had a digital copy available online. Fantastic! Thanks to cousin M and to the Allison-Antrim Museum for bringing back this little bit of me!

To learn more about Greencastle and it's history visit the Allison-Antrim Museum website.

Friday, August 23, 2013

Follow Friday - Favorites for August 23, 2013

Favorites is my weekly list of favorite genealogy, history and random finds from across the Net.
The entire history of the world...in one chart
The history of Fisher-Price Little People
Do you have New York Hewitts in your line? Check in here
Want a picture with the VP in his bathing suit? Just ask.
15 best blogging and publishing platforms
Happiness is stitching at Family History Fun
A day in the life of an Edwardian servant girl at Ancestor Quest
WWI tourism: looking for your family hero
A well-traveled travel book
Bringing black and white photos to color life
Ten days in a madhouse: woman gets committed for reform
11 things we no longer see in movie theaters 
Steel magnolias: those that stayed behind at Celebrating Family Stories
One of the best headstones I've ever seen
John at Filiopietism Prism asks: When all the paper is gone, what will we have lost?

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Genealogy bloggers: what keeps us going?

Whew, what a conversation we had on Tuesday! I wrote a post about thoughts on quitting blogging. I had no idea it would garner the amount of discussion it did. I did not intend my post to be a pity party, but rather reflection on why blogging is important to me. Turns out that many people think about hanging up their blog from time to time. Many of you chimed in with why blogging is important to you and I thought it would be great to pull together all of your ideas in one post.
Better research - This was the most prevalent comment from our discussion. Blogging makes us better researchers. Knowing that what we post will be a part of the world wide web for as long as the platform exists, we put our best foot forward. Many of us attach sources to our posts so that down the line other cousins, relatives and descendants will have an easier go at following in our footsteps. And, perhaps more importantly, the information we leave behind will be correct to the best of our abilities.

Searchable research repository - Our blogs are our own personal libraries. We reference them to jog our memory and keep us from repeating our research steps and wasting time. Jacqi at A Family Tapestry made a great point: by blogging we create a public, searchable database of family information. Information that will be available to anyone, anywhere in the world. Our research and thoughts can now be found at a single Google click. That thought alone is fuel for creating well-written and researched posts! Many of you mentioned that you also turn your blog into a printed book. Blurb was one source mentioned for this option.
An outlet - I've written my whole life either in a journal or in my profession. It has always been an outlet for me so it is a natural transition to blog...especially about my favorite hobby. Several of you mentioned that you use your blog as a way to decompress and relax. Add that to a field of lavender and a hot bath and we're the most relaxed folks in the world.

Digging deeper - Not only do our blogs produce better overall research, but they help us to dig down to the interesting stories behind our ancestors. By focusing on creating a better researched post, we often come across stories that put the meat on the bones of our family story.

Finding kin - Our blogs are a great resource for connecting with distant relations. That Google search we mentioned up above? That is leading our information straight to cousins that just learned that we are related and may want to link up. What better way to draw cousins to you than your blog? And like Amanda mentioned below, they may have photographs!

Do it for you - Many of us are little guys in a big genealogy blogging world. We may never reach more than a handful of views for any given post. But for all the reasons above, it is worth the time...even if it is only for you. However, remember that the other little guys read your posts for inspiration or to cheer you along, even if you don't get many comments. We are members of a community that understand the joys and tribulations of finding a hidden uncle in the census or finally stumbling upon an obituary. It takes a community to grow a family tree.

My biggest take away from our discussion is that, for me, blogging and research are now one in the same. I have come to a point in my research where I have found most of the "hard copy" items on my ancestors: names, birth dates, death dates. By blogging I am pulling that information together and creating their story, rather than their facts. Thank you all for such a great discussion. Here's to many more years of blogging. And know that if you ever feel the urge to take a break or quit, there are so many reasons to keep plugging along!

Have I missed anything important to you? Please add it to the discussion!

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Wedding Wednesday - The best parents ever

This is a repost from last year, but since they are still the best parents I'm posting it again!

On Saturday my parents celebrate their 39th wedding anniversary. They were married in Kansas City, Missouri at the home of the parents of my dad's best friend, Joel. It was a small wedding and then they took a trip to Colorado for their honeymoon.






My parents got married during the time when bachelor parties were held the night before the wedding. My father, not one to ever shirk a good party, had a swinging bachelor party. Only problem was that somehow his glasses were broken amid the fun. (It will be long debated how this actually happened.) Luckily, my dad had a friend that wore a similar prescription and he borrowed those glasses for his wedding day. His glasses are crooked in all the wedding photos and I wonder how well he could see. No wonder that he had a headache with the wrong prescription glasses and a few beers too many!

My mother, knowing the bachelor party was the night before, refused to put her wedding dress on until she saw my dad pull up outside!

On a fun note, my husband and I also spent our honeymoon driving up Pike's Peak. Happy anniversary to the best parents ever!