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-   -   Daughters of this and that (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=94344)

Beryana 03-10-2008 12:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SWTXBelle (Post 1615548)
Don't forget that if you are Scottish, odds are you have a clan to which you can claim membership - many of them have American branches that do lots of Scottish type things. Eating haggis and drinking Irn Bru is entirely optional. www.cosca.net
Me? I'm Clan Fraser!

I'm Clan Sinclair - or so I believe because I haven't gotten the name outside of New England. However, there was a rather large Sinclair population in Vermont where my family is from (as well as the Carolinas).

honeychile 03-10-2008 12:55 PM

Both my mother & I lucked out on two things:

1) One Colonial book series which seems to track my ancestors from place to place (I ended up finding the series at a rare book dealer - worth its weight in gold!) and

2) A major sale on loose leaf binders & archivally safe top loading pages.

We've put our certificates in the front of each of the binders, then put our applications & proofs in each. So we have several copies of a few pages, but we know where they are, and in the proper order!

What we need to do is to make a few travel drives and put them in the safe deposit box.

MysticCat 03-10-2008 03:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by honeychile (Post 1615583)
McLeod? I had a professor named MacLeod, and on the first day of class, he wrote his name on the board, and said, "The first person who can say my name correctly gets their grade raised one letter." Everyone guessed, but I came up with the correct way. :D

LOL. I would expect nothing less of you. ;)

When we were at the Grandfather Mountain Highland Games last summer, I told the kids to be on the lookout for the MacLeod tent, but I wouldn't tell them how to spell it. I wanted to see if either of them could figure it out when they saw it. My son did.

SoCalGirl 03-10-2008 09:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MysticCat (Post 1615708)
LOL. I would expect nothing less of you. ;)

When we were at the Grandfather Mountain Highland Games last summer, I told the kids to be on the lookout for the MacLeod tent, but I wouldn't tell them how to spell it. I wanted to see if either of them could figure it out when they saw it. My son did.

Help me out. Do they pronounce it right in the Highlander movies? I can't think of another way that sounds right. :confused:

AlwaysSAI 03-10-2008 10:05 PM

"Daughters of a great and singing nation...."

The very first line of the SAI chorale. :D

Sorry, couldn't resist.

honeychile 03-10-2008 10:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MysticCat (Post 1615708)
LOL. I would expect nothing less of you. ;)

When we were at the Grandfather Mountain Highland Games last summer, I told the kids to be on the lookout for the MacLeod tent, but I wouldn't tell them how to spell it. I wanted to see if either of them could figure it out when they saw it. My son did.

Let's hear it for MysticCat, Jr!

I've gone to the Highland games in Ligonier & in Delaplane, but since they "bookend" my birthday, I try to go to whichever one is closer. That way, I can tell a certain someone, "gee, that would look so great..."! ;)

KappaKittyCat 03-11-2008 09:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlwaysSAI (Post 1616040)
"Daughters of a great and singing nation...."

The very first line of the SAI chorale. :D

Sorry, couldn't resist.

Kick ass. :D

MysticCat 03-11-2008 09:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SoCalGirl (Post 1616035)
Help me out. Do they pronounce it right in the Highlander movies? I can't think of another way that sounds right. :confused:

LOL. Yes, think Connor MacLeod (i.e., MacCloud).

And never mind that Connor is more of an Irish than a Scottish name. :D

Drolefille 03-11-2008 08:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MysticCat (Post 1616165)
LOL. Yes, think Connor MacLeod (i.e., MacCloud).

And never mind that Connor is more of an Irish than a Scottish name. :D

Psh, Duncan's way cooler... and sexier.

SoCalGirl 03-11-2008 10:35 PM

For all you who are in the societies or heavily into family research. Do you find it's more common for people to be more involved if they have an uncommon surname? Like, are there many Jones, Smith, Johnson types? I was completely not feeling work today and was messing around with familysearch.com and I think I would shoot myself if I had to research my surname beyond my grandfather. It's not quite "Jones" but it's almost there. Plus common first names, like John, were ever so popular for the guys.

It'd be a million times easier to research my mom's side or my paternal grandmother's side. I can pretty much count on anyone in the country with the same last name is related in some way. For example, for my great grandmother's maiden name there's only 17 matches when I do a search on whitepages.com That's for the entire country!

icelandelf 03-11-2008 10:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SWTXBelle (Post 1612739)
www.daughtersofnorway.org - it's for descendents of Scandinavian countries (not just Norway) I'm trying to get icelandelf to join . . .:)

I haven't forgotten :) I'm making it my summer project!

Beryana 03-11-2008 10:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SoCalGirl (Post 1616631)
For all you who are in the societies or heavily into family research. Do you find it's more common for people to be more involved if they have an uncommon surname? Like, are there many Jones, Smith, Johnson types? I was completely not feeling work today and was messing around with familysearch.com and I think I would shoot myself if I had to research my surname beyond my grandfather. It's not quite "Jones" but it's almost there. Plus common first names, like John, were ever so popular for the guys. [/I]

Try Benjamin Davenport who is the son of Benjamin Davenport who is the son of Benjamin Davenport. . . . .

Everyone will run into a name roadblock at some point in time. The more information you can find about your specific person the more you can narrow down the search. Even with limited information you can make up a log of where the person was located for various events to help narrow down the search.

honeychile 03-11-2008 11:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SoCalGirl (Post 1616631)
For all you who are in the societies or heavily into family research. Do you find it's more common for people to be more involved if they have an uncommon surname? Like, are there many Jones, Smith, Johnson types? I was completely not feeling work today and was messing around with familysearch.com and I think I would shoot myself if I had to research my surname beyond my grandfather. It's not quite "Jones" but it's almost there. Plus common first names, like John, were ever so popular for the guys.

First, yes and no - some of it depends on how exact you want to be. I'd rather have the right person than someone who may be my ancestor, so I get nitpicky. I know people in the DAR with Smith or Jones as their Patriot's name, and let's not forget that there can be over 20 ways of spelling the same name! I'd suggest that you find something that can make your lineage stand out a bit from others - no matter how small.

On my mother's side, there is a John & William CommonName in EVERY generation. Once we realized that there were two families in identical years, in the same county, with the same name, we literally had to do both lineages. Just to make it interesting, there are at least four people on the RootsWeb, Ancestory.com etc sites who live nowhere near the county in question, but insist that either these two lineages are the same or that there's a different Mrs. CommonName born in 1737. No matter how many times you try to tell them to "look at the church records!!," they won't change their minds! ACK!!

What I've done, and others have, also, is to give each a nickname - but never, ever Junior or Senior. I'm talking "John the bell ringer" and "William the shopkeeper" as opposed to "John the farmer" and "William the soldier" in the same generation.

Also, to make sure your search is miserable, ( ;) ) make sure that you use Soundex, and don't stay married to Smythe, instead of Smith (Brown/Browne, Johnson/Johston, etc). Spelling was only as good as the listener (census taker, pastor, undertaker) heard, and you could find yourself down the wrong road. This is a great Soundex Generator, especially if you're mostly researching online. FWIW, I put every one of our names into it, alphabetized the list, and printed it out for when I research. There are other fun gadgets to help with this sort of problem at Fun Stuff For Genealogists.com. I especially appreciate their "Cite your Sources!" Sticky-notes - sticky notes to put on the back of each piece of your research, so you know where to return (or NOT return!). Some societies insist on the information that's on them, so they can be a godsend.

http://www.funstuffforgenealogists.c...our-source.jpg

Last (for now!), don't forget that the lineages found online are only as good as the persons who entered them. I usually start off an email conversation with a nicer way of "what are your sources?" before I take one seriously.

SoCalGirl 03-12-2008 12:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by honeychile (Post 1616658)
Just to make it interesting, there are at least four people on the RootsWeb, Ancestory.com etc sites who live nowhere near the county in question, but insist that either these two lineages are the same or that there's a different Mrs. CommonName born in 1737. No matter how many times you try to tell them to "look at the church records!!," they won't change their minds! ACK!!

In your experience, how accurate is familysearch.com? I want to trust the LDS records because they've been doing it for so long but I have my doubts. My great great grandfather has unique first and last name. He first lived in MO then IL after he imigrated. But they also have same first/last name w/ a middle initial who moved to NY after IL. There's a 16 year age difference but the birth place listed for the middle initial guy is where I know my g-g-grandpa was born. Tiny town, impossible to spell or say, in Bavaria. I can't decide if it's a likely cousin or inputer error. :confused: It's annoying!

Beryana 03-12-2008 07:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SoCalGirl (Post 1616686)
In your experience, how accurate is familysearch.com? I want to trust the LDS records because they've been doing it for so long but I have my doubts. My great great grandfather has unique first and last name. He first lived in MO then IL after he imigrated. But they also have same first/last name w/ a middle initial who moved to NY after IL. There's a 16 year age difference but the birth place listed for the middle initial guy is where I know my g-g-grandpa was born. Tiny town, impossible to spell or say, in Bavaria. I can't decide if it's a likely cousin or inputer error. :confused: It's annoying!

While the LDS church has been collecting genealogies for many years, they do not require any sources before data is published. Familysearch.org is a good starting place (it's where I found my great-grandmother's name and most names in my line). HOWEVER you will want to do further research (census records, vital records, etc) to verify the data listed on the site. Even ancestry.com has data that needs to be taken with a grain of salt as members can submit lineages without including any sources (and most sources listed usually refer back to the LDS collection).

I like using heritagequest.com (through my local library) to search books for ancestors as well as getting copies of Rev War pension applications.


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