GRIP 2024 Virtual “Digging Deeper” Course, Thursday Sessions and about the Syllabus

Syllabus. That’s a positive word for any institute student. Think 150-250 pages of links, book citations and annotations, reminders of session discussions, maps, diagrams, charts, examples, and records you should be checking, and more info than can be covered in each 75-minute session. Whew. That’s a lot of detail. If a course has been previously offered, each year’s syllabus is different from previous years. New website links, recently digitized records, previous links verified, additional pages added based on the previous year’s discussions and questions, and sometimes a new instructor is added. The 2024 edition of “Digging Deeper: Records, Tools, and Skills is no different. All five of this year’s Digging Deeper instructors are busy compiling their syllabus sections. As the coordinator, I get to review what they submit and I am always amazed at their level of knowledge, experience, and there’s always something new that I have not yet learned. Amy, Cari, Cyndi, Debbie, and I have some really good “stuff” planned for students. Don’t forget that we’ll be in a virtual classroom for four full days and one partial day.

Don’t forget that registration opens on February 20th and make sure you are ready! The FAQ section on the GRIP website is filled with helpful details, including getting ready for registration. https://grip.ngsgenealogy.org/faq/

Now for the Thursday session descriptions. . .

Digitized Newspaper Update, Library of Virginia

A large client project was sent this morning and I am rewarding myself by doing my own research this afternoon. The Library of Virginia has updated its Virginia Chronicle digitized newspapers section with many more Virginia newspapers and years. It now encompasses almost 4.2 million pages from around the state.   

I have several collateral lines to investigate in 20th Century Virginia but figured one great granduncle was more likely to appear. My Great Grandfather, Alexander Charles Stuart’s brother, James E. Stuart, held several jobs for the U.S. Postal Service after the Civil War into the 20th Century. He began as a clerk for the Railway Mail Service and retired as Chief Postal Inspector for the Chicago region. I did a search for “James E. Stuart” Chicago and a new to me article popped up.

The Accomack News (Onancock, Virginia), of 8 March 1913, page 6, columns 3 and 4, carried a story about the Inauguration Parade for President Woodrow Wilson. A section of the parade was led by my great granduncle. In addition to his service in the two wars mentioned, he also served his country in the first World War.

 

 

 


Join me in more research at Virginia Chronicle!

 

 

Digging Deeper: Records, Tools and Skills at Virtual GRIP 2024 this June

One oft-repeated idea is that this Digging Deeper course is a perfect early step before taking some very advanced courses. We each judge our own ability and experience level. Digging Deeper is not a beginning level course, it’s more on the immediate level, but parts have some more advanced methodology and record background. We pride ourselves in hands-on exercises to immediately put some of the learning to work. It’s not push-ups, knee bends, or jogging exercises, but it’s research and brain exercises. Here’s the session lineup for Wednesday, June 26th. Remember, you sign up for one course that lasts five days. We stick together, share, analyze, and get to experience a course syllabus that will assist you for many years of research. More on that syllabus and on the extra afternoon sessions in a later post.

Wednesday sessions in Digging Deeper:

The Hidden Web: Digging Deeper  (Cyndi Ingle)
Finding undercover sources for genealogists means learning about how to search the hidden web. When Google and traditional search engines don’t return useful information, don’t stop there. We will explore resources that are invisible to Google and hidden deep within web sites and proprietary databases. The “hidden web” lies buried within the collections for commercial web sites, libraries, archives, and museums. We will also talk about the importance of indexes that deep-link into web sites online, thus uncovering hidden gems of information that may not be found easily through a search engine query.

Original Manuscripts: Finding Aids Online and Off  (Paula Stuart-Warren)
Manuscripts often hold details not found anywhere else. Often, these one-of-a-kind documents turn up in a repository almost anywhere where a family member resided or where a descendant donated the material. With today’s various free finding aids in print and electronically we can locate family letters, scrapbooks, church records, bibles, business records, and more that may have migrated from Pennsylvania to California, from Indiana to Texas, or anywhere else. The search may also result in an online detailed inventory of a specific collection.

Lunch Break

Finding Treasure in State Archives and Historical Societies (Amy E. K. Arner)
Most US states have a state archives or state historical society (or both). These institutions hold a variety of records useful to genealogists, including records created by businesses, educational institutions, governments at all levels, individuals, religious organizations, and more. During this session we’ll cover what kinds of records state archives and state historical societies hold and the tools available to use the collections.

Legal Savvy for the Genealogist (Debbie Mieszala)
Finding and understanding historic and modern laws, considering their impact on a research question, and recognizing legally influenced records are essential skills for genealogists. The law influenced document and record creation (and sometimes destruction), and it impacted lives. Hands-on exercises provide experience to reinforce foundations in locating historic statutory and case law.

Optional Enhancement Session: Roundtable discussion on student submitted problems. (Debbie)



More Digging Deeper Sessions for June 2024, GRIP

Four Tuesday sessions, June 24, 2024 Virtual GRIP Institute

PERSI: Using the Periodical Source Index  (Cari Taplin)
In this session, we will take a look at Allen County Public Library’s Periodical Source Index (PERSI). We will examine its history and purpose, and its new interface at the ACPL website. Participants will also gain valuable tips and techniques for getting the most out of this often-overlooked resource of accessing information in older genealogical society journals through several mini case studies using PERSI and seeing its usefulness in giving your ancestors’ stories even more life.

Probate Records: More than Wills and Estates  (Cari Taplin)
Probate courts hold the records of deceased persons such as estates, inventories, administrations, and so on. But probate records usually hold more than simply the records of a deceased person. Guardianships for both adults and minors, commitments to institutions, apprenticeships, and more are included. These records should not be overlooked because you will find information on family relationships, ages, birth and death details, land ownership, marriages, and other evidence and clues.

Lunch Break

Getting the Most from Vital Records and Their Substitutes (Amy E. K. Arner)
Vital records are usually among the first types of records genealogists use. A variety of entities produce vital records—all of which have different rules about the creation and storage of the records. Those rules change over time. Complicating matters, vital records don’t always exist for the times and places where we research. During this session we’ll cover what vital records are, how to find them, what we can use as alternate sources, and how to glean all of the information from the records.

“Digging Deeper: Records, Tools, and Skills” Monday Sessions for GRIP Institute

This is the first post about the actual sessions. Next up will be Tuesday’s sessions. Amazingly, that’s the day that follows Monday on my calendar! If I hadn’t been busy meeting an extra details research case deadline this weekend, I should have posted this Monday lineup on Monday!

Monday

Student and instructor introductions and tweaking any tech issues.

Analyzing Documents Workshop: Self-Judging Your Expertise  (Paula Stuart-Warren)
Many documents seemingly end up meaning only what is said on the surface. Surprises lurk and a keen evaluation before more research shows that you are an experienced family historian. Are there times you question your analysis of a document? It’s likely you can do better than you give yourself credit for. In these sessions we will analyze some documents together, discuss the contents, and prepare research plans. Then we will break into groups for analysis and research preparation of a different document that evolves into a class project for the week. The result: a solid research plan, recognition of the value of discussion with other genealogists, and the sharing of knowledge to help attain the sought-after research goals. This includes hands-on work.

Analyzing Documents Workshop: Group Projects  (Paula Stuart-Warren)
In this session, the students will break into groups. Each group will do analysis, a research plan, limited research, and preparation for reporting about a document that has evolved into the group homework project for the week. Each group will have the same document and each group stays together during the week to work together on this. Guidance is provided by the instructor. The result: a solid research plan, recognition of the value of discussion with other genealogists, and an opportunity to compare how each group works from the document. . .

2024 GRIP “Digging Deeper: Records, Tools, and Skills” Course Details

Update: The GRIP website is finally live! https://grip.ngsgenealogy.org/

This week I am sharing some additional details on the 2024 GRIP Course, “Digging Deeper: Records, Tools, and Skills.” I will post over several days due to the length of all the details. Watch for those details on the individual sessions in upcoming posts about this course that is on the intermediate level. The National Genealogical Society will soon post more details about all courses and how to register.

Coordinator: Paula Stuart-Warren, CG®, FMGS, FUGA

My fellow instructors are amazingly experienced in their topics:

Amy E. K. Arner, CG
Cyndi Ingle
Debbie Mieszala, CG
Paula Stuart-Warren, CG
Cari Taplin, CG

This may be your course! It covers 19th through 21st century U.S. records, online resources, and methodology. If you answer yes to any of these questions, this is your course.

  • Are you past the beginning stages of researching your family history?
  • Have you researched online but know there is more elsewhere or that you have missed some online resources?
  • Do you need a stronger foundation before taking advanced or specialized courses?
  • Are you not yet comfortable with in-depth evaluation of documents and setting up research plans?

When we have checked basic records and done online searches but still have missing details, we need more leads and a better job of analyzing the records. We will dig deeper into a variety of records, some you may have never heard about, and where they are found. There will be several hands-on and interactive activities, small group discussions, and full class interaction.

Personal brick wall opportunity. A special course aspect involves receiving advice for one of your research brick walls. In late March of 2024, registrants will receive specific details and a firm deadline about sending the coordinator a brief research issue. These will be shared in the course syllabus. At the end of Monday through Thursday, we will work together to help solve these mysteries.

Best ways to take advantage of the week. The course includes a “homework” group project that is optional but strongly suggested. Past students found they gained much through these exercises. An extensive syllabus including both online and offline resources is provided for this course, and you do need to read ahead for each day. A helpful suggestion is that you work on a laptop, desktop computer, or electronic tablet for taking notes and especially for research on the week’s activities and the in-class hands-on work. Adding a larger extra external monitor is even better for your work during the week.


New Legacy Amendment Grants to History Organizations Throughout Minnesota

Historical preservation covers many angles. People, places, historical markers, and even work to apply for historical designations. The Minnesota Historical Society has announced small and large grants approved by the MNHS Executive Council in December 2023. The grants are mainly for work to be done in 2024. A selection of the grants is listed below. The URLs below each section will take to the full listings for each size grant.


Minnesota Historical and Cultural Heritage Small Grant Recipients

Faribault County Historical Society, Blue Earth, $10,000
To hire a qualified historian to complete an evaluation to determine eligibility for listing in the National Register of Historic Places for Walter Mondale’s boyhood home in Elmore, Minnesota.

Historical and Cultural Society of Clay County, Moorhead, $10,000
To hire qualified professionals to publish a book on the history of two female Clay County painters whose pioneer families’ histories were preserved in their writings and artwork.

Upper Mississippi Academy, St. Paul, $8,190
To add Indigenous Minnesota history educational items and books to Upper Mississippi Academy’s holdings to make this information more accessible to the public.

https://www.mnhs.org/media/news/small-legacy-grants-october-fy24


Minnesota Historical and Cultural Heritage Large Grant Recipients

City of Browns Valley, Browns Valley, $259,681
To hire qualified professionals to repair the Browns Valley Carnegie Public Library, listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

City of Duluth, Duluth, $165,725
To design, produce, and install a set of interpretive markers on the City of Duluth’s Lakewalk to tell the history of the city’s growth and evolution.

Heritage Organization of Romanian Americans in Minnesota, St. Paul, $85,978
To hire qualified professionals to produce a documentary on the recent history of Romanian immigration to Minnesota.

Ramsey County Historical Society, St. Paul, $24,000
To develop a web-based portal that will enable better public access to Ramsey County Historical Society’s historic resources.

Wakan Tipi Awanyankapi, St. Paul, $200,026
To hire qualified consultants to develop and install an exhibit to interpret the history and cultural significance of Wakáŋ Tipi Cave (Dwelling Place of the Sacred), a historically significant Dakota sacred site in St. Paul.

https://www.mnhs.org/media/news/large-legacy-grants-fy24


GRIP Genealogy Institute Summer 2024 Pricing

The long-running and fabulous Genealogical Research Institute of Pittsburgh (GRIP or GRIP Genealogy Institute) is now part of the National Genealogical Society. Registration opens 20 February 2024 and NGS promises a full website soon. Among the many courses offered, I will once again be coordinating and teaching the intermediate level course “Digging Deeper: Records, Tools, and Skills.” I have invited Amy E. K. Arner, CG, Cyndi Ingle, Debbie Mieszala, CG, and Cari Taplin, CG to be instructors in the course. I will describe more about the course and sessions in a few days. In the meantime, get ready for this virtual course 23-28 June 2024 and be ready to register, learn, experience an extended syllabus, and get hands-on experience in some sessions and the opportunity to get one of your genealogy research problems analyzed.



Holocaust survivor had no clue who he was. A MyHeritage DNA test found family and his name.

An amazing story of a young child now an older adult being reunited with family due to a match from his MyHeritage DNA test. The MyHeritage blog has the full story of family in two distant countries matching. If you are interest in match stories and reunions, check for more on the MyHeritage blog.

From the blog: “Until several months ago, Shalom Korai, 83, knew nothing about his past: not who his parents were, not his given name, not a single detail. He was a man without roots.”

Read the blog post here https://blog.myheritage.com/2024/01/holocaust-survivor-orphaned-as-a-toddler-finds-his-family-thanks-to-a-myheritage-dna-match/. You’ll be glad you did. Wow.