Showing posts with label publication. Show all posts
Showing posts with label publication. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Query -- A Thousand Mortgages

I've been corresponding with a historian who has compiled a database on 1,000 mortgages from around 1835, and is interested in how and where best to share them with the genealogical community (monetary return not a consideration).

I've made some suggestions and would appreciate hearing others' thoughts. These happen to be in Ohio, but your thoughts might be helpful to others in similar situations as well!




Harold Henderson, "Query -- A Thousand Mortgages," Midwestern Microhistory: A Genealogy Blog, posted 12 December 2012 (http://midwesternmicrohistory.blogspot.com : accessed [access date]). [Please feel free to link to the specific post if you prefer.]

Thursday, June 16, 2011

IGHR Samford Day Four: states' opportunity

One highlight of Thursday:

Tom Jones observed that in his view, state-level genealogy journals have an opportunity to fill a big gap in the genealogy literature, by publishing well-documented portions of family histories that are not difficult enough to be of interest to national publications.

This strikes me as a good idea for several reasons:

(1) For the author, it's a lower-cost method of publication than in book format. Publication is a method of preservation.

(2) For the author, it doesn't take as long to see results if you write up two or three generations than if you have to wait until you have done them all.

(3) If the article's title mentions the most relevant surnames, the article will be picked up in the periodical search index PERSI (which does not index every name within a journal) and thus will be much more accessible to future genealogists, perhaps more accessible even than a book.

(4) For the readers, well-researched and documented accounts of other families are likely to be of more interest than abstracts of local records -- which are better placed on line anyway, where they will be more accessible.

I know that the supply of such writings can be a problem. But the genealogical public is growing and genealogical education opportunities are expanding. (See, for instance, Angela McGhie's blog, Adventures in Genealogical Education, and many of Kimberly Powell's posts at About.com). So there ought to be more people out there who can do this.

The potential writers need to make writing a priority. And the state editors have to ask, and be willing to select wisely.