Immigrants Reviving a Town in Today’s Minnesota

“WORTHINGTON, Minn. (AP) — Immigration from around the world has transformed Worthington, bringing new businesses to emptying downtown storefronts as well as new worship and recreational spaces to this town of 14,000 residents in the southwestern Minnesota farmland.” In my beautiful home state of Minnesota where I still reside.

An article by GIOVANNA DELL’ORTO and JESSIE WARDARSKI is making the rounds of online news. Immigrants helping to revive a town. Immigrants starting new businesses, working in established businesses, attending church, shopping, children in school. Worthington is in Nobles County, in Southwestern Minnesota along Interstate 90 and is thriving because of a mix of recent immigrants with descendants of much earlier immigrants and probably some descendants of Native Americans. 

Read the article for free on The Associated Press (AP) website https://apnews.com/article/immigration-policy-integration-minnesota-history-churches-business-soccer-5385d18481c901ee1faeec19c16ebf6d

 

 

Legacy Family Tree Webinars October Top Ten and Runners Up

Geoff Rasmussen says “We’ve tallied the numbers and made a list of the Top 10 most-watched webinars for October 2024! Are your favorite topics or instructors among the list? Need something new to learn? Use the list to get inspired! You’ll see my name and my September presentation among the runner-ups. Guess it’s still drawing viewers. Thank you.

Now Legacy has 2,300 genealogy classes in the members-only library and its blog lists the most watched during the month of October 2024. Members get access to the 9001 syllabus pages! Join today if you aren’t already a member. My affiliate link to join is http://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/?aid=1739. Get ready for November webinars!

 

 

 

 

Free access to b, d, and related records on MyHeritage for a few days!

MyHeritage has announced that from “October 29 to November 1, 2024, it is offering free access to their “vast collection of death, burial, cemetery, and obituary records. With nearly 1.2 billion records in 435 collections, it’s the perfect chance to dive into the stories that connect us to generations before us.” 

Search Death, Burial, Cemetery & Obituaries now

 

 

 

Indigenous Peoples Day 2024 in the U.S. At least in some places.

Do you know who was on the land where you now live about 200 or more years ago? I’m betting that then or way before, it was Indigenous people who lived on “your” land in what became the United States. You may be a descendant of that group of Indigenous people whose land was taken away by force and by treaty by immigrants to the U.S., aka the federal government. Finally, more and more states, counties, and cities are paying some attention to the original inhabitants. This second Monday in October is being officially recognized as Indigenous Peoples Day. Unfortunately, the federal government has not made it an official “holiday.” My home state of Minnesota definitely has. https://mn.gov/indian-affairs/indian-affairs/indigenous-peoples-day-2024.jsp. The educational aspect noted in the graphic below is important, but only an hour? There needs to be more education and not just on one day.

 

 

 

My Legacy Family Tree Webinars September presentation made the top ten

Part of my work schedule for today is working on updating handouts and PowerPoint slides for a bunch of presentations I am doing in October and November. It’s always enjoyable to share my knowledge with groups around the world, but I am staying in the U.S. for the next several months. While I’m working on these, I hope you’ll allow me a bit of bragging. My Webtember presentation for Legacy Family Tree Webnars, “The Neighbors Knew: Strategies for Finding YOUR Ancestral Details in THEIR Records” made the month’s top ten!

Legacy Webinars is filled with almost 2,300 webinars that you can view from home. Most are free the first time presented. A one-year subscription allows you to watch them at any time and see the almost 9,000 pages of syllabus material. I’d appreciate it if you would use my affiliate link to join the thousands of us who have a membership as we keep learning. http://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/?aid=1739

 

 

 

Minnesota Digital Library: Beltrami County oral histories online

A recent newsletter from the University of Minnesota reminded me to look at other parts of the Minnesota Digital Library. The MDL is best described directly from its website. MDL “supports discovery and education through access to unique digital collections shared by cultural heritage organizations from across the state of Minnesota. Our contributors include libraries, historical societies, museums, and archives.”

Sounds good, right. “Begun in 2003, the Minnesota Digital Library includes digital content from over 200 participating organizations from across the state. Together we have digitized more than 60,000 photographs, postcards, maps, documents, letters, and oral histories. These materials are available online in a free searchable database.” Sounds more like excellence, right?

I was reminded about oral histories that are becoming accessible online via MDL. In a September 24, 2024, post about Minnesota Digital Library News, Stephanie Hess wrote about 135 historical oral histories made in 1950-1955 about Beltrami County that are now available. https://minitex.umn.edu/news/minnesota-digital-library/2024-09/beltrami-county-historical-society-audio-recordings-now . Bemidji is the county seat. Many of the audio recordings include references to area Native American reservations, area businesses, occupations, and many other states are mentioned. Just one collections example:

 

 

 

October is Family History Month, American Archives Month, National German Heritage Month, and many other awareness designations

Every day and every month I learn about some other event, designation, or awareness label in states, provinces, countries, and I can’t keep track of them all. The three in the title of this post are examples of some that apply to me and my fellow history/genealogy researchers. These and others apply to people all over the world. Where would we be without an understanding of history in general and specifically of our own families? Most of my friends are descendants of immigrants, as am I. I have friends who are descendants of the Native Americans who were here before my own ancestors.

What archives will you visit this month? What archives websites have you thoroughly investigated? What archives have you advocated for at state and federal levels? We need to interact with elected officials to be sure our archives and historical societies are fully funded so history can be preserved carefully. Think about one aspect of Hurricane Helene this past week. What historical materials have we lost along with people, homes, and government buildings?

For Family History Month, be sure to watch an online webinar and attend a presentation by a local genealogical society. Then take the handout or other material from that presentation and be sure to check the books and websites mentioned in it. Oh, the education we are able to get from that alone. Hundreds of webinars are available for free or low cost from all around the U.S. Hint: check Conference Keeper for links to tons of webinars and seminars. https://conferencekeeper.org/

I highly recommend Legacy Family Tree Webinars and my affiliate link for a membership is http://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/?aid=1739. For a year’s membership, we get access to 2,281 webinars and 8,947 pages of syllabus material. Most webinars are free when first presented and then for a week afterward, even without a membership. The syllabus material is only available to members. Well worth it as several new ones are offered each week.

German Heritage fits into the other two categories as far as my tips. It’s all a continuing education sequence. We never give up, never say we are finished, nor do we negate any clues we get unless thorough research proves the clues as wrong.

 

September 30: National Day of Remembrance for U.S. Indian Boarding Schools

My research career has taken me to the National Archives in  Washington, DC and other locations many times over the past 30 years. Much of my time was spent in Bureau of Indian Affairs records for individuals, law firms, and directly for Tribes. The direct reading of hundreds upon hundreds of pages of correspondence, student and family records, social workers commentary, and school superintendent letters was sobering. All these were related to U.S. government run Indian Boarding Schools. I’ve also consulted records related to day schools and boarding schools run by religious groups. As recently as last week, I was reading some of the heartbreaking correspondence.

What did I gain by reading these? Details on names, ages, relationships, and much more. But what has stuck in my mind are the awful details. Imagine an 8-year-old child removed from their parents, forced to travel by train or bus to such a boarding school, often far from home. The child’s traditional clothing was removed, replaced by what was proclaimed to be that of white children. That was followed by a haircut, again to the style of a white child.

Three months into the school year, the child has an appendicitis attack and has surgery. No parental permissions were sought. The school superintendent or other official might later send a letter to the parents and tell that their child had surgery and was doing ok. There may have been some other medical issues involved, but the hospital and school would take care of it. Not the parents, not the tribe, note Grandma.

That child was ill, in pain, placed in a dank hospital room lined with other beds, taken into surgery, sent back to that bed. No mother, father, or sibling to provide a hug, tell them that all would be ok, or provide other support. NOTHING. If the child died, the burial was likely on the school property. Again with no knowledge or permissions from the child’s parents.

In both the United States and Canada, efforts are being made to repatriate the children thus buried and bring them home to parents, other family, and to the land of their Tribe. Some are being brought home but not quickly enough and many still remain far from home.

To learn more about this topic:

 

 

Board for Certification of Genealogists free webinar 17 Sept: “A Myriad of Slave Databases”

FREE BCG-SPONSORED WEBINAR

“A Myriad of Slave Databases”

by LaBrenda Garrett-Nelson, JD, LLM, CG, CGL, FASG

Tuesday, September 17, 2024, 8:00 p.m. (EDT)

I know this is a last-minute posting. Sorry about that, my fault totally. BCG’s next free monthly webinar in conjunction with Legacy Family Tree Webinars is “A Myriad of Slave Databases” by LaBrenda Garrett-Nelson, JD, LLM, CG, CGL, FASG. This webinar airs Tuesday, September 17, 2024, at 8:00 p.m. EDT. 

When you register before September 17 with our partner Legacy Family Tree Webinars (http://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/?aid=9015) you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. Anyone with schedule conflicts may access the webinar at no charge for one week after the broadcast on the Legacy Family Tree Webinars website.

“Education is one of the most significant ways of achieving BCG’s mission for promoting public confidence in genealogy through uniform standards of competence,” said President Faye Jenkins Stallings, CG. “We appreciate this opportunity to provide these webinars that focus on the standards that help family historians of all levels practice good genealogy.”

Following the free period for this webinar, BCG receives a small commission if you view this or any BCG webinar by clicking our affiliate link: http://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/?aid=2619.

To see the full list of BCG-sponsored webinars for 2024, visit the BCG blog SpringBoard at https://bcgcertification.org/bcg-2024-free-webinars.  For additional resources for genealogical education, please visit the BCG Learning Center (https://bcgcertification.org/learning).