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Search Results for: 30 x 30 challenge

How They Do It: Amy Johnson Crow

July 4, 2017 By Janine Adams 8 Comments

Today’s entry in my How They Do It series is an interview with Amy Johnson Crow, professional genealogist and blogger at AmyJohnsonCrow.com. I really enjoy Amy’s blog, where she offers really great and practical advice, and I was privileged to do a video interview with her for her blog when we were both at RootsTech earlier this year. I hope you enjoy reading this interview as much as I did. I wholeheartedly agree with her assertion that Simple is good!

How They Do It: Amy Johnson CrowHow They Do It: Amy Johnson Crow

How long have you been doing genealogy?

I’ve been interested ever since I was little. My grandma was the unofficial family historian in the family and she told me a lot of stories. I did my first “real” research in 1990 and became certified in 1995.

What’s your favorite part of doing genealogy?

The hunt. I love taking a research problem, figuring out how to approach it, finding resources, and putting it all together.

Do you consider your genealogy research well organized?

Fairly. I try to always go into it with some sort of objective. “Who are Matilda’s parents?” “Where was John in 1850?” “Why is there a gap in the ages of these children?” It helps me not go down the research rabbit hole as often (but it still happens!)

What type of software do you use for organizing your genealogy research?

I’m kind of between genealogy software programs right now. For organizing my research and my notes, I use Excel for timelines (I would be lost without timelines) and Word for my notes.

Do you keep a research log? If so, what format?

My notes are all in Word. I don’t keep a separate log, but I integrate it into my notes. I’ll add the title, etc. of whatever I’m looking at, why I’m looking at it, and what I found (and what I didn’t find).

Do you have a tree on Ancestry? If so, is it public or private? Why?

I have several trees on Ancestry. One is public, the rest are private. The public tree is for cousin bait and DNA. The private trees are for my “works in progress” and trees where I’m helping someone.

What’s your biggest challenge when it comes to organizing your genealogy?

Digital files, especially photos. I’ve been known to take dozens or even hundreds of photos when I’m researching or at a cemetery. I organize them by general category, but it’s the specific tagging that trips me up. There are times when I *know* I have a photo of a particular type of tombstone, but I can’t find it.

What’s your biggest piece of advice to beginning genealogists in terms of keeping track of their research?

Get in the habit of copying or scanning the title page of whatever book you’re using. Also note when you *don’t* find something.

What do you think is the most important thing for people to do to stay organized when it comes to family history research?

Find a method that works for them. Some people have to organize by family, while others go by location or record type. (I’m more of a location-based organizer myself, but I know that doesn’t work for everyone.)

If you were starting out new as a genealogist what would you do differently?

I would have started out with better citations. Back when I first started, my genealogy software allowed all of 8 characters to record a source. So many of my earliest citations were “stone” or some code that I later had no idea what it meant. It wasn’t a whole lot of fun trying to figure out where some of those facts came from!

Do you keep paper or electronic files (or both)?

Both. As techie as I am, I still love some paper.

Are you folder or binder person for your paper files?

Folders. I find them more flexible for how I organize.

Do you use Evernote, One Note or any other electronic organizing system for your genealogy? If so, how do you use it?

I’ve dabbled in Evernote, but I don’t use it regularly.

Do you have a dedicated space in your home for doing genealogy research? What’s it like?

I have my own home office. (I joke that the best piece of office equipment that I have is my door!) I’m actually scaling it back and getting rid of an entire bookcase of books (donating them to a couple of different libraries.) I love books — I am a librarian, after all — but I find that having a workspace that’s more “minimal” helps with my work.

Do you have anything to add?

There’s a lot to be said for organizing how it makes sense and is comfortable for you. However, I would encourage people not to make their systems too complicated. If another researcher or a family member ever has to go through your papers later and it isn’t clear how things are organized, that’s when research ends up getting tossed. Simple is good.

Amen, sister! A great example both of a simple organizing strategy and the kind of practical advice that Amy shares on her blog is one of her favorite posts (and mine), The Easy, Low-Tech Way to Label Scanned Photos. Organizing systems don’t have to be complicated–in fact we think it’s better if they aren’t!

 

Filed Under: Challenges, Excitement, Genealogy tips, Organizing Tagged With: amy johnson crow, How They Do It, organizing aids

Have documents to scan? Join the Family Curator’s Scan Along!

June 20, 2017 By Janine Adams 2 Comments

I was so delighted to get an email from Denise Levenick of The Family Curator about her Genealogy Scan Along, starting tomorrow. Denise is scanning her own old family photos with the intention of creating a family history photo book. And she wants you to join her!

Each week for four weeks, beginning Wednesday, June 21, she’ll post a tutorial and instructions for creating a family history photo book step-by-step using the techniques in her book How to Archive Family Photos.

I think this is a brilliant idea. I’m a huge fan of accountability and working alongside people who are working on their own projects (whether in-person or virtually). I’ve joined knit alongs in the path. And right now I’m part of a little group on Facebook doing a 30-day plank challenge together.

If you have photos you’d like to scan and especially if you’d like to create a photo book through a service like Shutterfly, now’s your chance! I think this is an amazing opportunity to actually get it done. And you get expert advice while you’re at it!

You can get more details (including about the Scan Along Facebook group and sign up on the Genealogy Scan Along page. Have fun!

Filed Under: Excitement, Genealogy tips, Preservation Tagged With: Denise Levenick, organizing aids, photos, scanning

How They Do It: D. Joshua Taylor

June 6, 2017 By Janine Adams 6 Comments

If you watch Genealogy Roadshow, you’re probably familiar with D. Joshua Taylor, a regular on the show. If you’re a member of genealogical society, you’re probably familiar with him, since he is a past president of  the Federation of Genealogical Societies. If you go to genealogy conferences, you may have heard him speak, since he’s a popular speaker in our field.

I had the pleasure of hearing him present four talks at the Genealogy Society of Southern Illinois’s annual conference in 2015. I blogged about his substantial time management wisdom shortly after the conference–and in that post revealed that I learned through one of his talks that Josh and I are cousins!

Josh obviously has a very impressive resume. (And he’s in his mid-thirties!) He is currently the president of the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, America’s second oldest genealogical association. I was thrilled when he accepted my invitation to contribute a How They Do It interview. I bet you’ll be as impressed as I am that he took a year away from his research to focus on organizing his research materials. Enjoy!

How They Do It: D. Joshua Taylor

How long have you been doing genealogy?

More than 20 years at this point – though on a professional basis for the past 12.

What’s your favorite part of doing genealogy?

The unpredictable nature of “what’s next” in the process. Solving one question always leads to more – resulting in a perpetual process of discovery.

Do you consider your genealogy research well organized?

Yes! But only because I took a year away from research to focus specifically on organizing my materials. I find it impossible to conduct thorough research without a structured organization system in place.

What type of software do you use for organizing your genealogy research?

A variety of things. I use apps such as Trello to organize specific research projects; software programs like Roots Magic and Heredis to manage my family tree database, and a variety of spreadsheet and database tools to track my notes and documents.

Do you keep a research log? If so, what format?

Absolutely. My research log is part of a customized database I built for my research notes. However, it all started as a spreadsheet and then grew from there.

Do you have a tree on Ancestry? If so, is it public or private? Why?

Yes, though not a complete version of my tree. I keep a few online trees online at a time – all of which are strictly based in projects I am actively researching. These projects are largely private (though I don’t mind sharing when asked).

What’s your biggest challenge when it comes to organizing your genealogy?

Maintaining consistency within my organization system. The quantity and variety of materials can easily become overwhelming. My unwritten personal rule is that a research “trip” or “session” is never complete until I have spent the time analyzing and filing the materials I located. This forces me to consistently keep my materials orderly – but sometimes life gets in the way and the piles start to slowly build.

What’s your biggest piece of advice to beginning genealogists in terms of keeping track of their research?

Avoid being too specific. Why? Because your family history journey will eventually cross other geographic regions, multiple surnames, various record types, and other items that won’t easily fit into a strict tracking system. Leave the breadcrumb trail wherever possible.

We often narrow our focus too much on a single family or trying to find a particular maiden name. For example, we sometimes become so focused on finding a specific maiden name or a birth date but in reality, those might be very difficult (if not impossible) to find. So as such, we have to realize that we will need to venture “away” from the path we have planned as researchers.

What do you think is the most important thing for people to do to stay organized when it comes to family history research?

Never lose sight of the legacy you are building. Your research notes are just as important (if not more so) than the actual documents you uncover. Therefore, it is key that you find ways to organize and preserve those materials alongside the records you uncover.

If you were starting out new as a genealogist what would you do differently?

I’d avoid trying to research so many lines at once. The need to focus on a few families changed the way I could tackle specific research problems. A pedigree can be nearly unending, so taking it a piece at a time from the very beginning would have been a much better approach.

Do you keep paper or electronic files (or both)?

Both. I love paper and I also love the convenience of electronic files. My organization system allows me to keep a current paper file alongside a digital version of every document. While it requires diligence to keep both in sync, the payoff is well worth it.

Are you folder or binder person for your paper files?

Well…both. My documents that I know are attached to the tree end up in binders, organized by number. However my research notes for active projects are all in folders. I consider these to be active research files, while the binder is a more permanent solution.

Do you use Evernote, One Note or any other electronic organizing system for your genealogy? If so, how do you use it?

I have used both One Note and Evernote in the past and will sometimes use Evernote for specific projects. To me, the ability to tag notes by specific surnames, localities, and repositories was the key way I used Evernote – as an active storage place for my notes, thoughts, etc.

Do you have a dedicated space in your home for doing genealogy research? What’s it like?

Yes. In addition to my computer, my space includes binders of all my documents (to my left), key research aids and books (to my right), and my file cabinets of active research files (behind me). In addition, I have a dry-erase board on the wall I use to keep track of active research notes, projects, etc. My desk consists of an “inbox” where new documents and other materials are placed until they are filed.

Do you have anything to add?

Only this – the need to create an organization system that works for your research project is so essential. Different projects require varied approaches. The search for an individual’s parents might require a different approach than a complete study of an individual’s descendants.

There are lots of great nuggets in there, but  one that really jumped out at me was “My unwritten personal rule is that a research “trip” or “session” is never complete until I have spent the time analyzing and filing the materials I located.” I know that in the past I’ve happily gathered new documents and information without properly processing it, though I try hard now to focus on analysis, not discovery. Josh’s discipline in analyzing and organizing all his research materials is inspirational!

Filed Under: Challenges, Excitement, Genealogy tips, Organizing Tagged With: How They Do It, Joshua Taylor, organizing aids

How They Do It: Pat Richley-Erickson (DearMYRTLE)

May 2, 2017 By Janine Adams 10 Comments

Grab a cup of coffee or tea and settle in for a great read. Today’s installment of How They Do It features Pat Richley-Erickson, known to genealogy enthusiasts as DearMYRTLE. Pat is a prolific writer and educator. She has the DearMYRTLE Genealogy blog, the DearMYRTLE YouTube channel, her own Google+ genealogy community and hosts frequent hangouts. She is one of the administrators of the wildly popular The Organized Genealogist Facebook group. So she knows more than a little about organizing genealogy. She generously shares her insights and workflow (!) in today’s interview.

How They Do It: Dear Myrtle

How They Do It: Pat Richley-Erickson

How long have you been doing genealogy?

My first foray into genealogy was in early middle school where I learned calligraphy and created an illuminated manuscript of my five generation pedigree.

What’s your favorite part of doing genealogy?

Uncovering stories of the life and times of an ancestor. Historical context is everything when it comes to understanding why someone moved, joined the army, took up a profession, etc. Mr. Myrt once hired a professional guide as we toured Gettysburg. The guide was a specialist who knew the precise troop movements for my ancestor in the 19th Indiana, part of the Iron Brigade. I had assumed the Union retreat through the town of Gettysburg was a frantic mess, but the guide explained not so for the units in the Iron Brigade. They took up the rear, laying a suppressing fire to defend the troops from Confederate attack at the rear. The guide also took us to Culp’s Hill and explained how my Union soldier’s regiment did not engage in battle against Cousin Russ’ Confederate Marylander. The hill is more of a ridge, where the battle with Russ’ ancestor took place on the south and southeast, while my ancestor’s unit was bivouacked on the north side of the ridge and did not engage.

Do you consider your genealogy research well organized?

Seriously? This must be a trick question. 🙂

What type of software do you use for organizing your genealogy research?

I organize my research findings in my genealogy management program and have networked my computers, tablets and printers. If I get the urge to look something up on any device, it can be printed and saved to a network drive. I use alternate trees, online and in my RootsMagic for “possibly related”  individuals and family units. Sometimes it takes research on several generations before I can distinguish the difference between two men with the same name living in the same locality. It is only then that I drag and drop the appropriate individuals to my main database. Unlike a GEDCOM file, the drag and drop feature in RootsMagic can bring one, all or some ancestors along with the digital files I’ve attached. (The current data transfer protocol known as GEDCOM has no containers for transferring the actual images.)

Do you keep a research log? If so, what format?

Research logs are essential for planning what to do next, and postulating where to look for applicable record sets. I’ve progressed from Word/Excel (in Dropbox) to Google Docs/Sheets simply because regardless of the device I choose to access the cloud-based research logs, that device doesn’t require Word or Excel to view it. See comments below under One Note where I’ve described a new change in my field research process rolling out these past few months.

Do you have a tree on Ancestry? If so, is it public or private? Why?

Yes, I have several private Ancestry member trees, in addition to those at FamilySearch, FindMyPast, MyHeritage, and WikiTree. I do this because I want to get the low-lying fruit of shaky leaf hints whenever possible. I have a big problem with “one big tree” sites where other researchers can indiscriminately modify my data. Three times someone has added a deceased Uncle Jack to my paternal grandparents on FamilySearch, though my true Uncle Jack is alive and well. I don’t have time to go around repairing the mistakes of others. The Ancestry trees were changed to “private” status when I noticed living individuals were clearly in full view to a cousin on her computer as she looked at my public tree.

What’s your biggest challenge when it comes to organizing your genealogy?

Does a backlog of digitizing paper files ring a bell with any of your readers? That’s my biggest challenge. Though my daughter and I spent a week of 8-hour days digitizing records, I think we’re only 20% finished.

What’s your biggest piece of advice to beginning genealogists in terms of keeping track of their research?

Develop a work flow consistent with the Genealogical Proof Standard, learning more about the GPS by attending as many genealogical institute courses as possible. There’s a difference between classes you pick and choose to fit your conference schedule, and dedicating a solid week of in-person or virtual institute classes designed by a coordinator who knows what you need to learn. We don’t know what we don’t know.

My work flow is this this:

  • Decide on a question to answer, i.e. what’s the bride’s maiden name, or who are the parents?
  • Read up on the locality – its history, culture, laws and various church and government jurisdictions for the time period my known ancestors lived there.
  • List possible record groups to research.
  • Review those records – most are offline at this point.
  • Analyze info from each document, correlating with info from other documents.
  • Work through conflicting evidence logically. Dr. Thomas W. Jones, CG has taught the most likely scenario is usually correct.
  • Summarize conclusions, or as Cousin Russ likes to call it “current thinking.”
  • Enter the conclusion narrative in notes for an individual or family unit in my genealogy management program.
  • Attach all documents, properly cited to the individuals in question.
  • Recognize that the narrative may change if new info comes to light. At least, the narrative will get me up to speed with my thinking when I return to the research later.
  • Proceed to the next research question.

What do you think is the most important thing for people to do to stay organized when it comes to family history research?

Digitize what you find immediately so it is easier to cite and then review all collected about a family or individual. Our dining room tables are only so big. Digital copies are also easier to share with distant cousins at a moment’s notice.

If you were starting out new as a genealogist what would you do differently?

I’d make notations about a record set even when I didn’t find anything applicable to my ancestors, and I’d learn to craft citations immediately, so I can find that record set again. Citations would include these elements: author, title, publication info, who it’s about and date of event, volume and page number and a little information about the repository. If the document is online include the URL and the date accessed. Elizabeth Shown Mills, noted author of Evidence Explained: Citing history sources from artifacts to cyberspace said in a forum post at EvidenceExplained.com: “Bottom line: As researchers, we may add anything to our citations that we feel will help us as we proceed with the project—recognizing that the citations may be trimmed at publication time.” So, don’t be afraid to annotate. I have rogue documents from research 30 years ago, usually pages from books, where I didn’t take the time to also copy the title and copyright page(s). At home I make a copy of the title page and write “no Fromans, no Goerings, no Phillips,” filing a copy with each surname folder on my hard drive.

Are you folder or binder person for your paper files?

When I moved from folders to binders, Ol’ Myrt here ended up with 122 four-inch 3-ring binders! Now I safely store in Hollinger metal edge boxes only precious, one of a kind documents, like original marriage records and family bibles.

Do you use Evernote, One Note or any other electronic organizing system for your genealogy? If so, how do you use it?

Last fall I learned from a friend’s husband how he does on-site research as a fire inspector. He uses a Microsoft Surface Pro – a highly portable computer that acts like a tablet. He takes pic with the device, adds them to One Note, where he uses a stylus to scribble field notes, and can tap to type as desired. I could see the immediate use in my genealogical research.

I’ve installed a full-version of RootsMagic, using my databases in a Dropbox folder shared on my home network. At an archive, I take a photo of the file folder label, and then the contents, The “paper” in One Note isn’t confined to any paper size, so you can draw mini pedigree charts when trying to figure out the relationship of people in the will. I am also careful to “bookend” all images from a file with the folder or box label. That way if I consult multiple files that day, I know which photos below to which folder.

This would also work well in a cemetery. I’d take a picture of the cemetery entrance sign, then the tombstones in question. I could add those images to One Note and then transcribe the text with my stylus. I could move around until I could decipher every letter, before moving on to the next image. When leaving the cemetery, I’d take another picture of the cemetery entrance sign. That would set apart those images from the next cemetery visited that day.

Do you have a dedicated space in your home for doing genealogy research? What’s it like?

My genealogy office has four full-height shelves, a four-drawer lateral file, and a closet with built-in shelves. Our big library is shared with Mr. Myrt, also a genealogist. My computer desk has three monitors. This works well since I provide most all-day seminars virtually to a distant society or library group. When researching, I keep RootsMagic open on my right screen, website research in the middle screen, and research log in Google Doc or Google Sheet on the left screen. I can zoom in on the document in question as I transcribe it word for word. I recently added an external hard drive strictly for artwork and my embroidery machine graphics. Everything is backed up to BackBlaze. All documents, images, handouts and PowerPoint slides are in Dropbox.

I’ve had to add a bookshelf outside my office in the hallway, so I guess you could say the books have gotten out of hand. At least they are basically organized by topic – Rev War, Civil War, WWI, WWII, African American, Quakers, general reference, British research, etc. Above that hangs what Mr. Myrt like to call a lesson in provenance. Not only do I have my father’s bear-skin rug, but I have the image of him hunting it at the Olympic Peninsula and the framed taxidermy receipt.

Yup! We eat, sleep and breathe family history.

I’m so grateful to Pat for sharing her insights, particularly her workflow and her recent use of One Note. I am inspired by the interview to give serious consideration to signing up for a genealogical institute course! Thank you so much, Pat!

Filed Under: Challenges, Excitement, Genealogy tips, Organizing Tagged With: DearMYRTLE, How They Do It, organizing aids, Pat Richley-Erickson

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about me

I'm Janine Adams, a professional organizer and a genealogy enthusiast. I love doing family history research, but I find it's very easy for me to get overwhelmed and not know where to turn next. So I'm working hard to stay organized and feel in control as I grow my family tree.

In this blog, I share my discoveries and explorations, along with my organizing challenges (and solutions). I hope by sharing what I learn along the way I'll be able to help you stay focused and have fun while you do your research, too.

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