In between the sloth of summer and the hibernation of winter are the seasons where it's actually fun to get things done. This fall I have five speaking engagements coming up.
Tuesday evening September 8, La Porte County Genealogical Society, La Porte, Indiana:
"Probate Will Not Be the Death of You" (digest version).
Saturday September 19, Willard Library, Evansville, Indiana:
"Why We Don't Write and How We Can"
"Indirect Evidence: When Perry Mason Isn't on Your Side"
"Probate Will Not Be the Death of You"
" 'Are We There Yet?' Proof and the Genealogy Police," a case study
Saturday October 17, Northwest Indiana Genealogical Society, Valparaiso, Indiana:
"Land and Property: The Records No Genealogist Can Do Without"
Tuesday evening October 20, Marshall County Genealogical Society, Plymouth, Indiana:
"Ten Commandments for Being a Good Genealogy Client"
Tuesday evening November 17, Board for Certification of Genealogists public online webinar:
"Do You Have the Reflexes You Need to Become Certified? Fifteen Things Your Grandfather Would Tell You . . . If I Were Your Grandfather"
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Friday, August 28, 2015
Fall 2015 talks
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Harold Henderson
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10:40 AM
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Labels: BCG, genealogy reflexes, indirect evidence, La Porte County Indiana, land, Marshall County Indiana, NWIGS, probate, proof, speaking, Willard Library, writing
Thursday, August 27, 2015
Did you hear the latest genealogist joke?
Philip Freeman's August 26 article in JSTOR Daily, "Did You Hear the Joke about the Lawyer?", made me laugh out loud, and think about genealogy, which is trying to become a profession at a time when the professions we used to look up to are shrinking in power, numbers, and satisfaction.
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Harold Henderson
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1:29 PM
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Labels: jokes, JSTOR Daily, lawyers, Philip Freeman, professionalism
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
She went to Texas too
I have more Texas relatives than I thought,
but few this early. This book looks like it could be both a page-turner and a fine resource for those researching people -- not just men -- in the early Texas borderlands.
Amy M. Porter, Their Lives, Their Wills: Women in the Borderlands 1750-1846 (Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press, 2015).
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Harold Henderson
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9:20 AM
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Labels: 1750-1846, Amy M. Porter, borderlands, Mexico, Texas, wills
Saturday, July 18, 2015
Find your secret genealogy weapon -- manuscripts!
(I'll never forget the day I found an original mortgage document, with my four research targets' original signatures in different colors of ink, in an archived collection of unpublished papers.)
https://attendee.gotowebinar.
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Harold Henderson
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7:02 AM
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Labels: archives, Board for Certification of Genealogists, manuscripts, Shellee Morehead
Friday, July 10, 2015
Lennon on Temple in the Revolution
Genealogists talk a lot about historical context, but Rachal Mills Lennon does something about it. Her 19-page article on John Temple, a Virginian, in the March 2015 NGS Quarterly uses it as a major pillar of her research and analysis and correlation of the scanty evidence available on Temple's Revolutionary War career and pension. (Also, don't miss footnote 67.)
Having read this article, I hope that something similar will help with my Pennsylvania patriot problem.
Rachal Mills Lennon, "Context and Comrades Illuminate a Silent Southerner: John Temple (1758-1838), Revolutionary War Pensioner," National Genealogical Society Quarterly 103 (March 2015): 49-67.
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Harold Henderson
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5:24 PM
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Labels: historical context, National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Rachal Mills Lennon, Revolutionary War, Temple family, Virginia
Monday, June 29, 2015
Randolph County (Indiana) Relatives: Ina (Smith) Burdick
In the March National Genealogical Society Quarterly I traced a Smith family from central Iowa in 1870 back to eastern Indiana in 1850. It turned out that the parents of Ina (Smith) Burdick (1862-1932) were John Smith of Wayne County and Elizabeth (Smith) Smith of Randolph County, who were near neighbors.
(Ina married in Kansas City, Missouri, my wife's maternal grandfather's second cousin, Frank Burdick. He was one of the focus persons in the first portfolio I submitted to BCG for certification. So for those who are working on their own portfolios, remember that you may be able to reuse this material later on!)
Ina's relatives on both sides were crucial to identifying her parents and making a convincing case for their relationship, but it's in the nature of proof arguments that they only get mentioned, not described. The new (June) Indiana Genealogist fills in the picture by telling some of the stories of Ina's mother's extended Randolph County family, starting with Temple (1806-1885) and Priscilla (Crossley) Smith (1808-1890), who came up from Adair County, Kentucky, in the early days. Next issue will describe John's somewhat smaller family.
Together their descendants married into more than forty families:
Adams, Addington, Bias, Brake, Burdick, Chapman, Cox, Elliott, Engle (twice), Escher, Fetters, Getter, Hathaway, Hiatt, Hicks, Hildreth, Hill, Jennings, Johnson, Kinert, King, Kolp, Martin, Mason, McCurdy, Miller, Mundhenk, Newman, Pearson, Phillips, Piper, Ramsey, Ranson, Schwepe, Smith (again!), Summers, Swangle, Weaver, West, and Woodcock.
Members of the Indiana Genealogical Society can read it on line.
“Randolph County Relatives: Ina (Smith) Burdick’s Grandparents, Aunts, Uncles, and Cousins, Part One,” Indiana Genealogist 26(2) (June 2015): 5-29.
“Crossing the Continent with Common Names: Indiana Natives John and Elizabeth (Smith) Smith,” National Genealogical Society Quarterly 105 (March 2015): 29-35.
Posted by
Harold Henderson
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6:41 AM
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Labels: Indiana, Indiana Genealogical Society, Indiana Genealogist, Randolph County Indiana, Smith family
Thursday, June 25, 2015
April 2015 New York Genealogical and Biographical Record!
Some Empire State reasons why I don't blog here as often as in the past . . .
If you have New York interests, don't hesitate -- go out and buy the NYGBS's new research guide and gazetteer! I reviewed it in the April NYGBR.
Also in the April issue is the third installment of "A Missing Heir" involving the intertwined families of Lewis and Dorcas (Hoxie) Bassett and John S. and Zerviah (Hawkins?) Porter. This installment follows descendants of
* Lucy (Bassett) Hoffman and husband Matthew, whose trails lead to Genesee County, New York;, Lake County, Illinois; Chicago; and St. Louis;
* Harriet (Bassett) Burdick and husband Rodman, who also went to Lake County and Chicago; and
* Nathan Lee Bassett and wife Adelia S. (Reed) Bassett, whose trails lead to Jefferson County, New York; Walworth County, Wisconsin; Freeborn County, Minnesota; Larimer County, Colorado; and Chippewa County, Wisconsin.
More descendants to come.
Meanwhile I have had the privilege of joining NYGBR's editorial board as well.
Posted by
Harold Henderson
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11:33 AM
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Labels: Bassett family, Burdick family, Hoffman family, New York, New York Family History Research Guide and Gazetteer, New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Reed family


















