Showing posts with label Cunningham family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cunningham family. Show all posts

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Social media as evidence!

Over at the ProGenealogists blog last month, David Vance commented on how social media worked a century ago in the social columns of local newspapers.

I would be interested in the thoughts of more tech-savvy people on this comparison. (And quite possibly there have been some in the hectic month between his post and this one!)

Vance translated some of the social items into 2012-speak, and it looked to me like the corresponding tweets contained somewhat less genealogical information than their 1912 originals. (Insert your own observation about the 2010 census vs. 1910 census here.)

Meanwhile, here's an example of a top-of-the-line genealogical article that used this kind of source:

Victor S. Dunn, "Social News as a Clue to Ancestry: Hester (nee Rogers) Cunningham of Virginia and West Virginia," National Genealogical Society Quarterly 93 (September 2005): 165-176.

It's available free on line to members of the National Genealogical Society.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

News from Illinois and Wisconsin

Real articles with sources, not just record collections!

Illinois State Genealogical Society Quarterly
42(3), Fall 2010

"Kathleen Matson's Pioneer Heritage in Stark County, Illinois," by Donald D. Schmidt and Marty Matson Hawk, pp. 133-149

"Civil War Diary of Gideon Richardson Taxis of Gardner, Grundy County, Illinois," by Marjorie Vance Rice, pp. 154-156


Wisconsin State Genealogical Society Newsletter 56(4), October 2010

"American Apostles: John Cunningham and Henry Harrison Deam," part 4 of 5, by Gregory R. Cunningham, pp. 211-226

"She Came from Strong Stock," part 1 of 2, by Robert E. Ash, pp. 227-230

Monday, July 20, 2009

Methodology Monday with who visited whom

This month's morsel for the Transitional Genealogists Study Group to read and discuss on line is an article by Victor Dunn from the September 2005 issue of the National Genealogical Society Quarterly (free download for NGS members): "Social News as a Clue to Ancestry: Hester (nee Rogers) Cunningham of Virginia and West Virginia."

When pretty much all else failed, two little words in an humble and somewhat erroneous unindexed social note in the 29 August 1885 Martinsburg (WV) Independent provided the clue that enabled Dunn to identify Hester's parents: "Miss Mary Kyle, of Winchester, is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. B. Cunningham." As Dunn writes, for genealogist on such a cold trail, no source is too obscure, no record too hard to read, no detail too small to follow up.