21 January 2014

Photo + Genealogy Sleuthing = 100+ Year Mystery Solved



Neat to read how genealogy sleuthing when combined with examining and matching photos from later in life helped solve a mystery. Read Mystery of iconic 1908 Lincolnton child labor photo is solved to learn how census records, public appeals and the talents of Maureen Taylor (The Photo Detective) to solve this mystery.

Read more about this particular photo and the search for who she was
here.

You can learn more about the Lewis Hines Project and Joe Manning (the sleuth) at his website.

You can access the National Child Labor Committee Collection of images on the Library of Congress website.  You can search the images by location (I checked both “North Carolina” and “Lincolnton”).

His photographs remind us what it was like to be a child and to labor like an adult at a time when labor was harsher than it is now. Hine's images of working children stirred America's conscience and helped change the nation's labor laws. (Teaching With Documents: Photographs of Lewis Hine: Documentation of Child Labor)

I will check this collection out further for Salem and Peabody MA.  My emigrant ancestors, were children in those communities in the early 1900s after emigrating – did they maybe work in a factory at a young age ?

Were any of your family members child laborers in a factory (versus on the family farm or in a family business) ?




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Follow NGS via Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com

20 January 2014

The Genealogy of Martin Luther King, Jr.


Today we celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize.

As you take a few moments to celebrate his life, his beliefs, his teachings and his impact on society, learn more about his family history via From the Roots of a Tree: The Genealogy of Martin Luther King, Jr. produced by the National Archives at Atlanta which summarizes the branches of his family tree and includes Census excerpts.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Follow NGS via Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com

17 January 2014

Upfront Mini Bytes – Old Bailey, Whaling Voyages, Anglican Records (Ireland), War of 1812, Montefiore Census of Jewish Inhabitants, Early 20th Century Irish Speakers, City Directory Abbreviations, Preservation ...


Welcome to our newest edition of our bi-weekly feature Upfront Mini Bytes.  In Upfront Mini Bytes we provide eight tasty bits of genealogy news that will help give you a deeper byte into your family history research. Each item is short and sweet.  We encourage you to check out the links to articles, blog posts, resources, and anything genealogical!

We hope you found the past editions helpful.  Use your favorite search engine with “Upfront with NGS” “Mini Bytes” or use this Google search link.

Do you have questions, suggestions for future posts, or comments?  Please post a comment or send an e-mail to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org.


++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Black sheep in the family always prove to be interesting.  If you had London ancestors who possibly were criminals (or you just love to read about crime), check out The Proceedings of the Old Bailey, 1674-1913.

The National Maritime Digital Library has a database of American Offshore Whaling Voyages that includes information about all known American offshore (or "pelagic") whaling voyages from the 1700s to the 1920s.
                                                                                              
The Anglican Record Project is an ongoing endeavor to make the registers of baptism, marriage, and burial from Church of Ireland parishes available in a digital format. You can access transcripts by selecting a parish of interest.

If you want to learn more about the War of 1812, particularly its causes, consequences, and lasting impacts, check out this presentation by Marlanne Ryan (Northwestern University) and Cathy Jervey Johnson (ProQuest).

Censuses of the Jewish inhabitants of the Holy Land, Alexandria, Sidon (Saida) and Beirut, were compiled by Sir Moses Montefiore between the years 1839 and 1875 and are now available online. You can search in English or Hebrew.

With a linguist daughter, I’m always seeking language websites.  As a genealogist, I love the juxtaposition of linguistics and information on how languages were written or spoken since knowing more always helps us interpret the documents we find. If your ancestors came from Donegal, you might find What Donegal men sounded like nearly a century ago very interesting and informative to listen to. The collection includes 136 speakers in 17 counties who recorded 400 stories, songs, prayers, charms, and parables between 1928 and 1931.
 
I think most of us have a love/hate relationship with abbreviations.  We love to use them and we are sometimes challenged to know what they mean.  Next time you are pursuing city directories and run across an unfamiliar abbreviation, check out Genealogy in Time’s City Directory Abbreviations.

With the holidays behind us, you, like I, might have done a lot of housecleaning in preparation for guests!  Such often turns up a fair amount of junk and also treasures.  If the latter, you might want to read 6 Steps to Protect Your Family Heirlooms, Antiques and Treasures.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Follow NGS via Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com

16 January 2014

Oral History at Risk of Disappearing Within 3 Generations!


The headline of this recent piece is kind of scary to read -- Oral family history can be lost in three generations.  Yet, it does ring quite true as I recently wrote about in Forget What You Know & Challenge Assumptions -- You Might Just Knock Down that Brick Wall! where I talk about family lore given to me by my grandmother (2 generations from me talking about her great-grandparents (3 generations from her)) and the various errors that had crept in.  Now imagine going back a few more generations and relying on family lore (aka oral history) and one can just imagine an increased amount of inaccuracy to be found.

Think about it, how often can a group play telephone and end up with the same message that they started with?

In the mentioned article, Aaron Holt, National Archives Fort Worth states ...

“I tell people all the time that it only takes three generations to lose a piece of oral family history,” Holt said. “It must be purposely and accurately repeated over and over again through the generations to be preserved for a genealogist today.”

This reminds us that it’s imperative that we collect as much oral history as we can and that we then seek out documentary evidence to support what we’ve been told.  In this manner, future “oral history” will not perpetuate incorrect or incomplete information as it previously did in the absence of documentation.  Future generations will be able to “refresh” their memories with the archived and substantiated oral history legacies that we will now leave.

Here are some resources on capturing oral history:
+ Oral History & Interviews (Cyndi’s List)

Remember though that we will NOT be able to substantiate and document everything we are told via an oral history. Remember the expression “the devil is in the detail”?  So much of “life” is all the little details of life which will NEVER be documented except by us collecting oral history.  For example, before a distant great aunt died, she sent me a collection of her recollections about various family members, including my mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and others.  Most of these are not the type of stories that will ever be “officially” documented and yet they are priceless to me.  I published these online in A Window of Memories.  I did this to give a voice to my great aunt’s recollections and to also remind us all that it’s so many of the “little” things that make our ancestors more “human” to us.  I never think of my mom now without thinking of the wallpaper incident (page 22) or the caterpillar (page 21), or of my grandmother and the customs of the day about wedding blankets (page 19).  Every time I read these stories all of these long-deceased individuals come alive to me and that truly is “priceless.”




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Follow NGS via Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com

15 January 2014

OCLC & Worldcat + FamilySearch Catalog = Very Happy Genealogists!


WorldCat is such a great resource. I am always using it to see what materials are extant for a community.  I do this by searching in the catalogs of libraries around the world for published volumes, microfilm, digitized material and much more for a locale, person or topic of interest.  Historically, in parallel, I would do the same with the FamilySearch catalog.

Just about a year ago, I blogged about plans by OCLC (and WorldCat) and FamilySearch to partner up so that the WorldCat catalog would included entries from FamilySearch, OCLC and FamilySearch Partner Up -- WorldCat Just Continues to Get Better

“Under this new partnership, OCLC will incorporate data from FamilySearch’s catalog of genealogical materials into WorldCat, and FamilySearch will use OCLC cataloging services to continue to catalog its collections in WorldCat.”

It’s very nice to be able to report that this is now an actuality!  I did a spot check for Madison County KY.  First I checked a few books with no success and then when I checked on some original microfilmed records (see image), I did find an entry that these records are held by the Family History Library (aka FamilySearch).

To learn more, read these two articles -- FamilyHistory Catalog a Part of OCLC (Rootdig.com) and OCLC Link Appears in FamilySearch Library Catalog (Genealogy’s Star).

This is a very nice feature since eventually I will be able to check one catalog to find out what extant records and published works exist for whatever place or topic I am researching.  Once I have identified what exists and where it is located, I can then develop my plan to access material which just might answer a key question.



Editor’s Note: Do recognize that this is a work in progress and that the full contents of the FamilySearch catalog is not yet available via WorldCat.

Editor’s Note: Here is a piece written on OCLC & WorldCat back in 2007.





~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Follow NGS via Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com

14 January 2014

New BCG Genealogy Standards manual limited time discount offer



NGS is pleased to share the following limited time discount offer, which is available until 27 January 2014. Genealogy Standards, an essential reference work for solid genealogical work, is an important addition to any genealogist’s bookshelf.

Only 13 more days to SAVE 20% off the cover price! Regularly priced at $14.95, the pre-publication softcover version price is $11.95 for orders placed until 27 January 2014. Orders are fulfilled through http://www.bcgcertification.ornumg/catalog/index.html by Maia’s Bookstore and benefit BCG in its work in the genealogical community.

For more information, please contact the Board for Certification of Genealogists, PO Box 14291, Washington, DC 20044, office@BCGcertification.org





~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Follow NGS via Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com


13 January 2014

Managing Mondays -- how to "hopefully" be more productive all week long!


Source: http://img1.picturescafe.com/pc/monday/monday_005.jpg

Mondays can be a very exciting day and also a challenging day. 

After hopefully taking the weekend off, away from work and genealogy, I kind of find that Mondays set the tone for my week.  If I don’t have my act together on Mondays, the ensuing week is often chaotic and a bit undisciplined!

That said, I have some Monday rituals and then some daily ones to try and keep me on track for the week.  With all the distractions of life, including social networking websites , having some discipline as you start (and end) your week can be invaluable.  Here are some of my rituals to help me “manage” the quantity of information that comes my way.  These also help me “manage” when I spend time reading the received material so that I am not constantly being distracted by “new” information.

Additionally, I do a lot of work at the North Carolina Archives which is closed on Mondays.  This makes Mondays a particularly good day to work on all the other stuff since I couldn’t go to the archives if I wanted to.

I bet many of my rituals might match your own rituals.  Do you have other rituals you engage in that help you “tame” all the information you are bombarded with?

Monday rituals:
1. This is an anti-ritual.  I try very very hard to never schedule any appointments or meetings on Mondays unless I cannot avoid doing so.
2. I use Mondays to identify and prioritize my work for the week, accounting for the constraints of any already scheduled time. 
3. I typically establish which days I will go to what archives (NC, UNC, Duke, etc) and related and also when I will run any needed errands.
4. I process any material collected during the previous week’s research trips and write up said research.  Often this extends into Tuesday and sometimes Wednesday depending on how successful my research trips were.
5. If I have writing deadlines, Mondays (or weekends) end up being the best time for this type of work.

Daily rituals:
1. Review all e-mails that have arrived since I last checked.  Even if they are supposed to be auto-sorted using rules by Outlook (my desktop e-mail program), I still eye-ball every e-mail.  Each is then “filed” to be read later, deleted as junk, marked as spam, kept where is (e.g., the auto-sorting mechanism worked and I’m good!), moved to a client file or project file, quickly responded to, etc.
2. The above includes genealogically-related newsletters which I receive via email, which is most of them.  They auto sort to a file surprisingly called “Genealogy Newsletters.”  I just make sure that they all ended up there and then eliminate any duplicate copies (e.g. ones I receive personally vs those received as editor of Upfront with NGS, and those that Outlook just seems to love to create duplicates of)
3. Any e-mails that need a response that will require more than a quick one-liner are kept in my inbox to be dealt with after lunch.
4. Listen to any phone messages that have come in over night. I use a VOIP system and I have it send me an e-mail for any phone message sent.  I also get text notifications.  If the message is an FYI type, I immediately file or delete.  If I need to call back or follow-up with an e-mail or respond in some other fashion, it is kept in my inbox to be dealt with after lunch.
5. Review all FB posts posted since I last checked.  I try to check at least once per day even on weekends. It’s important to know what I have winnowed what I “see” on my FB feed down to what are most important for me to see “real-time.”  These include posts by family members, select colleagues, select companies/repositories/archives/libraries, select genealogical or historical societies, and more.
6. Any FB posts (or substitute here Twitter, Google+, Pinterest or whatever social media outlets you follow) that catch my eye I then e-mail to myself with a subject line that Outlook will then appropriately sort (e.g. any ideas I have for Upfront with NGS blog posts or mini-bytes have that subject line and so are automatically filed to the same-named working files).
7. Dig in to work.  Unless there is a phone call that I am expecting, I let all phone calls go to voice mail. 
8. Unless there is a critical e-mail expected, I do not check my e-mails until I stop for lunch.
9. After lunch and before resuming my work, I now respond to any e-mails or phone calls that require my attention, and I take a quick look to see if there are any time-critical e-mails.
10. Resume work.
11. As the day ends, collect the mail (I am at the end of the route) and immediately throw out, shred, file or put in a “to handle” pile (e.g. checks to deposit, client packets to peruse, etc).  I sometimes handle such immediately and on some days I wait until the next morning depending on how stridently I’m being called to exercise and/or eat dinner.
12. At the end of the day, I will typically review “any” new e-mails which have arrived. They are managed in the same fashion as in the morning.  Though any e-mails requiring action are kept in my inbox and I re-mark as unread so that I will notice them the next morning.
13. I will often re-check FB to see what has newly posted since the morning.  This concludes my work day.
14. If I am being a good girl, once my work day is done, I will NOT look at FB nor check my e-mails.  Though, I have to be honest and say that I will periodically check my e-mail during commercials while watching tv, or waiting in the checkout line at the grocery store, etc.

Weekly rituals:
1. Remember all those collected genealogy newsletters?  Unless some bit of “news” caught my eye in real-time (FB is good for that since something “hot” will be re-posted many times), as Friday rolls around, I try to make the time to skim over the newsletters which have been collected all week.  If that doesn’t work out, over my coffee on Saturday always works for me.
2. Make sure that my Google Calendar has an “hard” deadlines, appointments, etc for the upcoming week with reminders (I have Google Calendar send me e-mails (since again I can “file” those as needed) normally a few days or a week and then a few hours before something scheduled will occur to keep it on my radar).  When I am not home, I have a tendency to check my e-mails about every hour on a business day and so will be “adequately” warned of anything on my schedule.
3. Though I mentioned Google Calendar, I am still in love with my weekly paper calendar (mostly because it also serves as my “diary”) and so I peek ahead to the next week to see what is scheduled.

The above isn’t everything that I do to try and manage how I work and handle e-mails, phone calls, social media, etc, and it gives you a sense of how I have tried to bring some order and discipline to my work day so that I am not constantly distracted by the e-mails, FB posts, phone calls, etc which are constantly bombarding my computer and allows me to actually get needed work completed.

Please share the “rituals” that help you tame your work days and week!




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Follow NGS via Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com

10 January 2014

National Archives (aka NARA) -- Rubenstein Gallery now open



Earlier this month, the David M. Rubenstein Gallery at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) building in DC opened. It is the home of the new Records of Rights permanent exhibit “which showcases the long struggle to secure and exercise individual rights for all Americans.

The centerpiece of “Records of Rights” is the 1297 Magna Carta, which David [M. Rubenstein] purchased five years ago because he believed the one copy of this famous charter in the United States should not leave this country ...

The three major sections of “Records of Rights” highlight the struggles of Americans to define and realize their civil rights through the stories of African Americans, women, and immigrants. Through documents, photographs, drawings, and films from National Archives holdings, we explore how our forerunners sought to fulfill the promise of freedom set out in our founding documents.”

Next time you are in DC at NARA, consider visiting this exhibit.








~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Follow NGS via Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com