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Professional Genealogy Blog

Category: Announcements

05/15/09

Permalink 11:46:26 am, Categories: Announcements, News, Professionalizing Professional Genealogy, 322 words   English (US)

David Rencher, AG, CG and APG member is named Chief Genealogical Officer at Family Search

We've just heard the fantastic news about our fellow Salt Lake Professional Genealogist, David Rencher, AG, CG. We are thrilled to learn of his accomplishments and new position as FamilySearch's Chief Genealogical Officer. Great Choice!!!! A top-drawer professional has been chosen to lead-out and continue the expansion and growth that is to come at FamilySearch. David Rencher's appointment is a strong statement about the standards and growth of the public domain family tree.

David is a great example for all who wish a viable career in Professional Genealogy. He is a full-time professional genealogist who has earned the professional designation. He has had a rich and diversified career experience, rooted in;
#1- Genealogical Research
#2 - Member of the Premier Genealogy organization and library in the world - FHL
#3 - Technology-based Genealogy for FamilySearch.org
#4 - Instructor, Teacher, Lecturer.

These are some of the professional career path hallmarks of his 28 year career in Professional Genealogy:

Formal Education: BA, Family and Local History, Brigham Young University, 1980
Formal Training: BYU and Family History Library
Formal Employment: Vice President of Genealogical Society of Utah and Chief Genealogical Officer of FAMILYSEARCH.
Formal Credentials: AG, CG
Formal Continuing Education - As Instructor and Participant - multitude of national and international institutes, conferences and seminars - including Samford's IGHR, Salt Lake Institute, NGS, FGS
Formal Pro Bono Publico - served as President of UGA

This is Professional Genealogy in the 21st Century!
(Deseret News Mormon Times 05/15/09 http://tinyurl.com/qryh63)

Submitted by:

James W. Petty, AG, CG,
B.A. (History), B.S. (Genealogy)
Member APG - Salt Lake Chapter

Mary E. Petty, B.A.(History), B.A. (Genealogy)
Member APG - Salt Lake Chapter
==============================================================
Ancestors are the People of History. Do you know who yours are? Let the Professionals at HEIRLINES Family History & Genealogy find your ancestry!
1-800-570-4049; www.heirlines.com; PO Box 893, Salt Lake City, UT 84110
© 2009, Heirlines Family History & Genealogy, Inc. All rights reserved.

10/04/08

Permalink 12:10:54 pm, Categories: Announcements, News, 180 words   English (US)

Thank You to Heirlines for help in finding Lost Sister

From: PR
Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 11:54 AM
TSubject: SISTER FOUND

Hello,

To all of you who helped me in my search for my sister, I say thank you. On Monday I was so blessed to find her through my own "walking" through many processes, including obtaining the death certificate of an aunt, which gave me the information I needed about my sister's married name. Wow!

What an experience when I contacted her by telephone. She was at first stunned, then extremely happy to find that she has a family she never thought she'd have! She is 76 and her husband is battling cancer, so it was very timely that I found her. My children are delighted and I know that each of them will contact her telling her how delighted they are.

Thanks for the help. Now the "getting to know you" process begins. Isn't it grand? I now have two sisters, my adoptive one and my blood one! How lucky can an old dame be?

Blessings to all,

PR

Submitted by Mary E. Petty, BA (History), BA (Genealogy)
www.heirlines.com
800.570.4049

10/01/08

Permalink 09:46:50 am, Categories: Announcements, 76 words   English (US)

Heirlines Professional Genealogy Boston Research Trip 11/09/09-11/14/08

Heirlines Professional Genealogy Boston Research Trip has been scheduled for 11/09/08-11/14/08.

Professional Genealogist Mary E. Petty, BA (History), BA (Genealogy) will be conducting research in the Boston area this coming November 9-14, 2008. We will focus on Salem, Plymouth, Cape Cod, and Boston in our research efforts.

If you have a research problem requiring onsite research in these areas, please contact Heirlines to arrange for professional genealogy research services.

Heirlines
1.800.570.4049
Free Consultations are available www.heirlines.com

09/30/08

Permalink 11:05:06 pm, Categories: Announcements, Consumer Education, Articles, 1274 words   English (US)

Honoring the 1st Genealogist I ever knew - Wilda Wimmer McRae - On her 100th Birthday Celebration September 30, 2008

Honoring the 1st Genealogist I ever knew - Wilda Wimmer McRae - On her 100th Birthday Celebration September 30, 2008

To Honor the first "genealogist" I ever knew, Wilda Wimmer McRae, on the occasion of her 100th B-Day Celebration, September 30, 1908 -2008, Heirlines re-issues this Meridian Magazine Article written by professional genealogist, James W. Petty, AG, CG,. While she passed on in 1998, in the true spirit of family history, the family gathered together and we held a wonderful party for her on Sunday September 28, 2008. We served her favorite recipes including "G'Ma Wilda's Carrot Cake" in her very own handmade welded aluminum cake pan. She was a professional lead welder for McDonald Douglas Aircraft and made a mean weld and to die for cake! Enjoy!

GRANDMA WILDA'S CARROT CAKE

By James W. Petty

It's that time of the year, Family Reunion Time! Families get together at a favorite camp or picnic site. Uncles, Aunts, Cousins, and of course Grandpa and Grandma. We start off greeting people we haven't seen in, possibly...years, and reminisce about the last time we saw each other. A family picnic is laid out, with salads and casseroles set in pot luck formation. Soda pop is available in a big cooler full of ice. Potato chips scatter everywhere, and the kids are eyeing the array of chocolate cakes and apple pies sitting on the dessert table. Those will be served with melty ice cream after the family ball game. Later in the day, while the kids are off playing with all of their new found cousin friends, the adults kick back and rest; and talk about old times.

"Do you remember going to Great Grampa Willie's home in Ogden Canyon? He was a Dentist, but he always wanted to be a sheep rancher. Great Grandma used to fix a Hash that was out of this world!" "Did you ever get to try her special Roast Beef? It just melted in your mouth." "Do you remember Uncle Darrell? We'd go to his house for New Year's and at midnight he'd get his rifles out, and we'd fire them at the mountains! What a great noise they'd make!" "His wife Verda made wonderful Jello salads!" "When I was a kid, I remember Grandma Winter serving chicken gizzards. Every other time that I've tried gizzards, they were tough and rubbery, and quite unappetizing. But hers were so tender you could cut them with a feather, and they were so savory and delicious. I've never had anything like them." "Cousin Jim cooks the best steaks I've ever tasted. He loves to cook, and I'll let him cook any time he comes to visit." "Yeah, I've had his Pepper Steak. Wow, was it good. He said it was a recipe handed down from his Mother."

The talk would get around to Lewis's amazing skill as a Fly-Fisherman, and a disgusting thing he would do with cherry pits. Or stories about Grandpa Jerry and Uncle Paris and their adventures during the Depression. But in the end the high point was always Grandma Wilda's Carrot Cake. It was a bit of heaven in the memory of every person in the family.

Eventually, a family meeting is held, where the family genealogy is discussed. Genealogy is often the "old maid aunt" of the family. Everyone loves her, but no one wants to go out with her. Most of the family didn't realize that while reminiscing about the "good old times", and Aunt Mary's fabulous Pumpkin Pie (made with Banana Squash), they were doing genealogy. Ellen recalled eating "Battered Rabbit" at the home of Great Grandma Emma Melissa. It sounded like a case of abuse, which is just what it was in reality. Great Grandpa Rob raised rabbits because they multiplied so rapidly and were a good source of meat. He would "batter" a few in the barn, and Great Grandma would "batter" them in the kitchen, and drop them in a deep fryer. The family would then enjoy a delicious meal of Bunny and Broccoli.
Someone then recalled seeing an entry in Great Grandma Wilda's diary that she kept when she was a young girl, which stated that Wilda had found a recipe for carrot cake, something like "Mrs. Carlisle's Carrot Cake." Alarmed family members recognized heresy when they heard it. Grandma Wilda may have learned off of someone else's recipe, but her carrot cake was unique. No one else made anything like it. No dime store recipe had the taste, the texture, or the love in it like Grandma Wilda's Carrot Cake. No, we wouldn't discuss this blasphemy any further. It was alright to gossip about that thing Uncle Richard did with fish, or Aunt Deborah's dark little secret; but casting doubt on the origins of the ultimate family treasure was forbidden.

Herein lies the key. Almost every favorite family recipe was found in someone-else's cookbook in a previous life, but delicious dishes aren't remembered for the recipe; they are remembered for the love put into the meal by the cook, and the love returned by the family for the cook.

These wonderful stories and memories, along with the recipes can be preserved in a Favorite Family Recipes Book (create your own title). This can be a delightful experience for the whole family at a reunion, or any family get together. Each recipe should be included with a picture of the person associated with the given recipe, and a brief biographical sketch, and a personal story about that person. For each recipe pertaining to that person, a different personal story should be included. This way those favorite memories and recipes are passed on in a unique flavorful telling of family history. If the recipes are put into a three ring binder, new recipes, as they are prepared, can be added. There can be a section for "Murphy's Law"- "If something can go wrong, it will." This can include the recipe for "Uncle John's Flaming Franks" (put 18 hot dogs on a barbecue and set them on fire). No one will care about the recipe, but Uncle John will be remembered forever. Or the time Wilda prepared four large trays of carrot cake for a wedding, only to discover she had used salt instead of sugar.

With a Favorite Family Recipe Book, future family reunions will add new recipes and forgotten stories to the family history. A loved granddaughter may develop her own select version of a favored old recipe, and get a page with her picture overlaying that of Grandma Marion, a special honor. But in the end we always remember Grandma Wilda's Carrot Cake.

G'ma Wilda's 14 (Kt.) Carrot Cake

2 cups flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
2 tsp cinnamon
} Sift flour, baking powder, soda, salt and cinnamon together.

4 eggs
2 cups sugar
1 1/2 cups salad oil
} Add sugar, oil, eggs and mix well.

2 cups finely grated carrots
1 can 8 1/2 oz. crushed pineapple drained
1 cup chopped nuts (walnut or pecan)
} Stir in carrots, pineapple and nuts.

Put batter into 3 - nine inch layer cake pans,
or 1 - thirteen by nine inch pan greased and floured.

Cook 35 to 40 minutes at 350 degrees till top springs back.
(Check at 20 25 minutes, until you know your oven)

Frost with cream cheese frosting when cake is cooled.

Cream Cheese Frosting

1/2 cup butter, softened
1 8 oz pack Philadelphia cream cheese softened
1 tsp vanilla (up to 1 Tb)
} Combine butter, cream cheese, vanilla.

Beat until well blended.

1 lb. (about 4 cups) confectioner's sugar sifted
} Add sugar gradually, beating in thoroughly.

If frosting is too thick, thin with a very small amount of
milk until it is your desired spreading consistency.

Submitted by Mary E. Petty, BA (History), BA (Genealogy)
Family Health History Specialist

09/23/08

Permalink 11:28:35 am, Categories: Announcements, 507 words   English (US)

How to Survey your family online at the Family History Library - http://www.familysearch.org

Query: What are some ideas to online survey my ancestors at the Family History Library - http://www.familysearch.org?

Heirlines Professional Genealogy TIP:

Always record your positive and negative findings on your research log, with citations.

1. IGI - International Genealogical Index - Search this database for all names that appear on your pedigree chart. If new names and information are found, try to extend the pedigree. If it appears that there is considerable information, stop temporarily, and go to #2 Ancestral File, to see if the lineage you are searching is filed there. If it is, use the Ancestral File for this part of the survey. If the lineage does not appear in the Ancestral File, then return to the IGI and copy the entries found at least one generation beyond the information on your chart, then stop. Make proper citation on your research log of all discoveries.

If you do not find the names of the pedigree chart in the IGI, pick two or three of the principal names on the chart, and look for surnames in the IGI, in the same area. Remember that you can have the computer focus on just a specific state or country, for example: Bennetts of Maine. This way you can copy out all Thomas Bennetts or Ann Bennetts who appear in Maine. Make a paper copy of this file so you can see what families or informa6tion appear in the IGI for that area.

2. Ancestral File - Search for each Family line on the pedigree chart in this database. It may only go back one generation or 5 generations or more. If a large lineage is found, make a copy of it on a disk or flash drive and also a copy of the pedigree chart on paper. If no lineage is found, then just indicate such in your research log.

3. Pedigree Resource File - do the same here as you did in #1 and #2.

4. Social Security Death Index - Check this database for any findings and record on your research log.

5. Family History Library Catalog -- Family Histories -- Check the catalog for the principal family surnames on the pedigree chart. If any are found, make a paper copy of one or two of the entries, and then print the catalog index sheet which shows how many histories pertaining to that surname appear in the library collections.

6. Family History Library Catalog -- Locality -- Identify the principle counties and states that the families on the pedigree chart were from. Locate that county and state in the catalog (such as Adams, Pennsylvania) and copy the index page that identifies what types of sources and the numbers of sources available for that country.

7. Census Records Search - At the end of the computer database searches, you need to search one or two census records for the families on the pedigree chart as a beginning of research and to show the client evidence of their families on original records.

Submitted by:

Mary E. Petty, BA (History) BA (Genealogy)
Professional Genealogist
Heirlines.com

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