Eastern Shore Cemeteries
Bryan Gidley 15 Sep 2007
SearchMyTree is a website commited to helping genealogists to understand the
terminology and technology and to have in one place all the tools necessary
to learn about genealogy, genetic genealogy and family history persuits. Learn
to trace your relatives, origins and roots.
Please feel free to check out the site. Why not start with
Genetic Genealogy
and learn about how to research your genetic ancestry.
Best regards,
Bryan Gidley
SearchMyTree begins to add Eastern Shore Cemeteries to its website
I have recently added some of the cemeteries to the website. You can mouse
over "Databases" on the menubar and choose Eastern Shore Cemeteries or
follow the link below. I have several more to add and will be doing so over
the next few days. If you have a preference, send me an e-mail and I will
add it next.
You can find out more here.
Ancestry Launches DNA.Ancestry Website
From their website
"What you can learn from your DNA?
You might already be familiar with how DNA testing can help solve crimes,
confirm the paternity of children, and even determine the identity of
ancient mummies. Now DNA can also help you with your genealogical research.
It's a simple and painless process to gather your DNA sample and within a
few weeks have results that you can compare with the ever-expanding DNA
Ancestry database to find potential genetic cousins. Learn more about the
science behind DNA, chromosomes, and genetics."
They also have a form that can be filled out to transfer your resuults from
Family Tree DNA. Be careful, once you give Ancestry your keys to your DNA
results, there will be no way to stop them from using your results as they
please. I personally will not send them my results.
You can find out more here.
At LostCousins our aim is to find your living relatives - accurately,
automatically, and confidentially. The more people who join, the more
cousins we can match - so we've decided to make the site COMPLETELY
FREE FOR AN ENTIRE WEEK!
Until Monday August 27 all LostCousins members, old and new, will have
the same privileges as paying subscribers. It's a great opportunity to find
living relatives who are researching your ancestors (and to invite your
friends to join!), just click
here.
An anonymous man who has been leaving biographical information on graves
in Nova Scotia says his unusual hobby is driven by a curiosity about the
people buried in cemeteries, just click
here.
WorldVitalRecords.com launched 8 new databases today including the
Allegations for Marriage
Licenses issued by the Vicar General of the Archbishop of Canterbury
1679-1694, and Familiae Minorum Gentium, Volumes 1-4. All of these
databases will be free to access until August 9, 2007.
Juust click
here.
Ancestry can be free for 3 days. Go to Ancestry, click on SEARCH and you
can acquire it for three days free Check it out, just click
here.
The Spartan DC Personal DNA Analyzer is available on the market right now.
Spartan Bioscience Inc. of Ottawa, Ontario, is now selling portable,
real-time DNA devices that are designed for "on-demand, non-batched
applications." The 9-pound desktop-sized device will analyze four DNA
samples at a time. Check it out, just click
here.
Sorenson Genomics, a DNA research firm, has announced a partnership with
Ancestry. Ancestry.com reportedly plans to launch the DNA testing product
by the end of summer, offering customers the possibility of finding DNA
matches in the site's 24,000 genealogical databases. Check it out, just
click
here.
A wonderful site for educational videos and articles on the human genome project.
Also a great resource for understanding the basics of genetic heredity and cell function.
Check it out, just click here.
An explanation of Wiki's and how to use them. The future of genealogical
sharing may involve the use of genealogically designed software to enable
sharing of data using Wiki's.
Also a great resource for planning family get-togethers and reunions.
To watch the video, click here.
Edwin Blancher was looking for a genealogical breakthrough. Was DNA able to help him? Read more , click here.
This could be a landmark decision for lineage societies. The Mayflower
Society has now accepted DNA evidence as proof of a descent from one of the passengers on that little ship. John Hawes married a
granddaughter of Mayflower passenger John Howland, Desire Gorham. Therefore, John and Desire Hawe'
children were descendants of a Mayflower passenger. They had a son John Hawes, who left New England
and popped up in North Carolina. Same person? If so, his issue could join the General Society of Mayflower
Descendants.
Historian General Ann S. Lainhart and Assistant Historian General Alicia Williams recently accepted this line
- on the basis of a Hawes DNA study of the Hawes Y chromosome.Everyone involved in DNA genealogy seems
to agree that the various lineage societies would accept DNA evidence sooner or later but this is the first such
occurrence I am aware of. The fact that the acceptance came from Ann Lainhart and Alicia Williams further
reinforces the acceptance. (Ann Lainhart is one of the nation's top experts on Mayflower and other New England
genealogy while Alicia Williams is another expert in all the Mayflower genealogies with special expertise in the
John Alden family.) Lainhart notes in an article in the June 2006 issue of The Mayflower Quarterly that the Myles
Standish family and the Pilgrim Edward Doty Society are starting Y-line DNA projects. That's the male line, also
known as the surname line. For information, visit www.mylesstandish.org and
www.edward-doty.org .
You can read the full article as posted by Dick Eastman
Permalink Thank you Dick Eastman
Ancestry is offering free access to their recent additional of many military records until 6 Jun 2007.
Writing in the Cincinnati Post's web site, Jan Mueller has published some very kind words about one of the projects that I am involved in. Jan wrote: The powerful and progressive impact of social networking sites continues to transform the Internet as well as online genealogical research with the ever-increasing popularity of interactive Web sites such as the free-content Encyclopedia of Genealogy. Sponsored by Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter and online genealogy bookstores RootsBooks.com and RootsBooks.co.uk, the Encyclopedia of Genealogy "serves as a compendium of genealogical tools and techniques," providing "reference information about everything in genealogy except people." You can read the full article as posted by Dick Eastman Permalink Thank you Dick Eastman
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