• BLOG
  • ABOUT
    • Privacy Policy

Organize Your Family History

Stay focused and happy while exploring your roots

Take newspaper information with a grain of salt

September 20, 2017 By Janine Adams 7 Comments

Just under a month ago, I wrote a post called Using newspapers to fill in the blanks in which I was very enthusiastic about newspapers and the discoveries they might contain. I still am.

A week before that, I wrote a post called Those Eureka! moments, in which I described finding a newspaper article that confirmed that a family I’d been researching was indeed related to me.

Newspaper research can be so fun and rewarding. But here’s a friendly reminder: Just because it’s in the newspaper doesn’t make it true.

Case in point: The article I described in the Eureka post did indeed provide the link I needed, which I have verified. But it also had a wrong cause of death for Mrs. G. W. Adams (Elizabeth Major Adams, 1889-1929). The article says she died of “an attack of influenza…with resulting heart complications.” Her death certificate, by contrast, says she died in childbirth. And cemetery records listing a single grave with “Elizabeth and Baby Adams” substantiate that information.

Why the newspaper said she died of influenza, I don’t know. But it’s a reminder that double checking facts in newspaper articles (or at least taking those facts with a grain of salt) is a good idea.

Filed Under: Genealogy tips, My family Tagged With: Adams, newspapers, resources

Using newspapers to fill in the blanks

August 22, 2017 By Janine Adams 8 Comments

I’ve been limiting my research to the Adams line of my family this year. I love the focus that gives me and there has been no shortage of information to ferret out!

Recently, I’ve been looking at newspaper articles in Olympia, Washington, where this family lived in the first four decades of the 20th century. The Daily Olympian (which I access via Genealogy Bank) was full of articles about things we wouldn’t consider of much interest today (like family members who live in the same town visiting one another). These articles help paint a picture of my ancestors’ lives and occasionally help connect dots.

For example, I read that my great great grandfather’s second wife, Della Adams, was critically ill in 1930 and that her son, Wayne Horace Adams, traveled to be at her side at the hospital all the way from Maryland, where he was attending the U.S. Naval Academy. I don’t know how he traveled cross country or how long it took, but it reveals a devotion that is an interesting detail as I try to piece together this family’s puzzling early life. In 1919, according to divorce documents, Della abandoned Horace (as he was known then) to the care of his 74-year-old father (my great great grandfather, George Washington Adams), when he was 12. As a 23-year-old he crossed the country to be with her when she was critically ill. By then, his father was living in the National Soldier’s Home in Danville, Illinois. (Della recovered from her illness andĀ  lived another 13 years.)

These newspaper articles also have allowed me to see how active my great grandmother, Hattie, was in various societies, like the Daughter of Union Veterans and the Daughters of America. I’m also learning the various cities where my grandfather’s sister lived. And I came across a delightful article on a badminton tournament that my own grandparents played in together.

I have the good fortune that my grandfather, Dave Adams, was a reporter for the Daily Olympian when he was in his twenties. So I was able to find some first-person articles that gave me some insight into his life (as well as a picture of him at work). I think my favorite was when he wrote about participating in a spelling bee. He was an excellent writer.

I spent a few hours on Sunday with the newspaper and was faced with the challenge of whether to be selective about which articles I downloaded or to take everything I found. Downloading and processing the articles can get quite tedious, so I wanted to be selective. But I know that even the smallest detail might shed light on a future quandary. (Of course, I have to bear in mind that newspaper articles are not always accurate, but they can provide some great clues.)

So I downloaded with abandon and decided that a few of the articles would reside in the appropriate person’s folder on my hard drive without necessarily getting entered as a source in my genealogy software. But the vast majority are being used as sources because a nugget–even if it’s just a data point about residence–can be gleaned.

In the near future, I plan to outline here how exactly I process these newspaper articles, in hopes that it will be helpful. (I plan to do a screencast.)

How about you? Do you use newspapers in your research? What’s your favorite source for relevant newspaper articles? And what’s the most helpful thing you’ve found in your newspaper research?

Filed Under: Genealogy tips, My family Tagged With: Adams, newspapers, resources

At long last, a new Orderly Roots guide!

June 2, 2017 By Janine Adams 2 Comments

When I announced that I would be publishing Orderly Roots guides (concise, downloadable pdfs) back in October 2015, I promptly published two. I fully expected to write more quickly, but then other priorities got in the way.

But I’m thrilled to announce that I just published the third Orderly Roots Guide, Organizing Your Genealogy Right From the Start! This 13-page guide will hope new and more experienced genealogists create a simple, complete organizing system. It allows me to go a little more in-depth than I can on the blog.

I just published Organizing Your Genealogy Right From the Start this morning. It’s available for immediate download, for $8.99.

Now that I’m back on it, I hope to publish more soon. Other topics in the works are:

  • Creating Great Genealogy Habits
  • Making the Most of Your Online Research Time
  • How I Organize My Genealogy Research
  • Getting Started in Genealogy
  • Essential Technology for Genealogists
  • Planning a Genealogy Research Trip
  • Planning a Cemetery Research Trip

Of course, that list might change. And I’m definitely interested in hearing from you if there’s another topic you’d like to see me cover in depth!

Filed Under: Excitement, Genealogy tips, Organizing Tagged With: excitement, learning opportunities, resources

Filling in the history in your ancestors’ timelines

April 19, 2017 By Janine Adams 7 Comments

A couple of years ago, at RootsTech, I learned about HistoryLines. I was intrigued and signed up for a subscription. Then I pretty much forgot about it. (I blogged about it back then.)

HistoryLines creates a timeline for your ancestor (after you upload a GEDCOM or fill in data on an ancestor), referencing the historical events and social history of the time in which your ancestor lived.

This week I received a notification that my subscription was going to autorenew. I went to the site, intending to cancel since I never used it. But once I started exploring, I realized that this really is a tool I’d like to use.

This past quarter I focused almost exclusively on my great great grandfather, George Washington Adams (1845-1938) and his children. When I called up a HistoryLines story for him today I really enjoyed the context it placed his life in. I can see doing this for many of my ancestors, especially those I’ve studied more in depth. (So many of my ancestors seem like just names and dates to me, though I’m trying to change that.)

If you’re intrigued, here’s a promotional video from HistoryLines.

If you try it out, let me know what you think!

Filed Under: Excitement, Genealogy tips, Technology Tagged With: excitement, genealogy tools, organizing aids, resources, social history, technology

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 27
  • Go to Next Page »

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.

tags

30 x 30 Adams amy johnson crow anniversary Brown cemetery census Civil War conferences connections dna electronic files Evernote excitement Family Curator family photos genealogy tools getting started goals How They Do It Igleheart Jeffries keepsakes learning opportunities maps newspapers NGS organizing aids overwhelm paper files planning quick tips rasco record keeping research research log research trip resources RootsTech social history source documentation Stacy Julian technology time management vital records

join the facebook community!

join the facebook community!

My organizing business

Learn more about my organizing business, Peace of Mind OrganizingĀ®.

Subscribe by RSS

  • RSS - Posts
  • RSS - Comments

© 2026 Janine Adams

 

Loading Comments...