Episode 181 - 1950s, New Book Club Read

7 years ago
35

Genealogy Gems Podcast
Episode 181 with Lisa Louise Cooke

Today, we're turning back the clock to talk about two of my favorite eras, the 1950s and well, the second one is a surprise. I'll tell you later in the show when I introduce the NEW Genealogy Gems Book Club featured title!

But first, we'll talk a little news from a new Google innovation to two new record collections online that fill in a hole in American documentary history. I'll read some mail from YOU about the new Ancestry site and family history blogging.

NEWS

Wouldn't it be great if your smartphone alerted if you left your keys or eyeglasses behind when leaving the house? Google is working on it, based on a recent patent& it filed.

The patent describes a device that uses short-range wireless technology to link your smartphone with other must-have items like your wallet, keys or glasses. The idea is that if you leave a location with one item, but leave other items behind, an alarm will go off.

A commentary on the VentureBeat website explains that the user can control the amount of distance between the mobile device and the paired object that must exist before an alarm goes off. They can also control the type of alarm, as well as how often the device checks to see if all paired objects remain nearby.

Here's a drawing from the patent. In one way, it makes me think that Google is taking its Alerts out of cyberspace and right into our daily lives to help them run more smoothly.

Do you use Google Alerts? Setting them up lets me find out about new content online as it becomes available 24/7 relating to my favorite keyword searches. I use Google Alerts to automate my online genealogy searches and follow other favorite topics.

You can learn more about Google Alerts AND how to search for patents like the one I was just talking about for household items and inventions that shaped our relatives lives in my book, The Genealogist's Google Toolbox.

In last month's podcast, I mentioned the Civil War Soldiers & Sailors Database in response to a question from a listener who was looking for a good resource for Civil War sailors. Unfortunately, as I stressed in the blog post, the percentage of sailors included is still fairly low in that database. So I was pleased to see a new collection on Fold3 recently: U.S. NAVY SURVIVORS. Here's a link to a post about it.

Nearly 2 million records in this collection come from case files of approved pension applications between 1861 and 1910, so they include Civil War survivors and later Navy veterans until just before World War I. I love seeing all these new record collections that appear online that, ever so gradually, fill in the gaps to help us find our ancestors! At Genealogy Gems we blog about new record collections online every Friday watch for those on our blog!

Finally, there's another record set coming online that will just be HUGE for those researching African-American ancestors. Freedmen's Bureau records are finally being fully indexed!

Anyone with African-American roots or who has ANY Southern ancestors should know about these. The Freedmen's Bureau was organized after the Civil War to aid newly-freed slaves in 15 states and Washington, DC. Destitute whites were also helped. For several years the Freedmen's Bureau created marriage records, labor contracts, and other records of families and their military service, poverty, property, health and education. The richest documents are the field office records of each state. (Here's a link to a great article from the National Archives about these records.)

A few field office records are already transcribed or indexed; you can find links at the Freedmen's Bureau Online. Now FamilySearch and other national partners have issued a call to action for the genealogy community to help finish indexing them all an estimated 1.5 million records within the coming year. A press release says the records, histories and stories will be available on DiscoverFreedmen.org. Additionally, the records will be showcased in the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, which is currently under construction on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., and expected to open in late 2016.

#1950s #genealogy

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