I have been asked, "Where do you learn how to do genealogy"? Well, I read a lot, I ask questions of others (those in the know), I attend conferences and I listen to podcasts.
Podcasts are nothing more than a person who has taped themselves and/or others and provide information to the listening audience. There are podcasts on all types of subjects, including genealogy. The one I listen to the most is Lisa Louise Cooke and she is the producer and host of the Genealogy Gems Podcast. She is also an author of some of the best genealogy books I have the pleasure of reading and she is a conference speaker whom I have personally seen. She has a terrific website and offers both free and premium (subscription) podcasts. The premium version also includes how-to videos and handouts. She has a few free videos available also.
Her website can be found here. The following infographic was put together by Lisa and explains more about what podcasts are. I hope you check out her website and catch a few podcasts. They are so informative and you will learn a lot from her. She is one of the top people in the field of genealogy and she is an expert on how Google Earth can help with your genealogy as well as tons of other genealogy related subjects.
Follow me as I learn about my family history and unearth my family origins. Some of the names I am researching are: Modrell, Scott, Heneault (also Eneau), Main and many others.
Saturday, October 31, 2015
Saturday, October 17, 2015
10 Shots Fired in Holdup Fray
The following newspaper article is about Ben E. Mann. Ben was married to Willa Isadore Main, who is
the daughter of Jason Archie Main and Willa Ruth McCarthy. Jason is a brother to Cora Viola Main,
otherwise known as Grandma Scott (to me) – my mother’s mother. That relationship makes Isadore (the name I
knew her by) Grandma Scott’s niece.
The Kansas City Times
(Morning Kansas City Star)
Friday, November 3, 1961, Page 1, Column 1
10 SHOTS FIRED IN HOLDUP FRAY
Crowded Store at Truman Corners
Is Scene of Robbery Attempt
FOILED BY A DEPUTY
Ben E. Mann, 51, Wrestles One
Man, Shoots at the Other
An off-duty
Jackson County deputy sheriff wrestled with one holdup man while he fought a
gun battle with another in a crowded Katz drugstore in the Truman Corners
center last night.
Ten shots
were exchanged, four by the officers and six by the robber, at a distance of 10
to 15 feet.
The deputy,
Ben E. Mann, 51, said he thought he hit the robber twice. Mann was not hit.
Saw the Man Fire.
“I don’t
know how he missed me”, Mann said, “I saw him kneel down behind the counter and
fire from between the shelves”.
The shoppers
in the store started screaming and running when the shooting broke out. None was hit.
The deputy,
not in uniform, but carrying a snub-nosed pistol beneath his jacket, had gone
to the store to buy some dog food. A
member of the sheriff’s patrol nine years, he works in the store as a store
detective during the holiday seasons.
Warned by Official.
Mann was
standing by the prescription counter when George Stanley, Belton, assistant
manager of the sundries department, walked past with another man behind
him. As he passed, Stanley, who is tall,
leaned over to the shorter deputy and whispered:
“Mr. Mann,
this man has a gun on me to rob the store”.
The deputy
drew his pistol and ordered the robber to take his hands out of his
pocket. As he did this he was struck on
the head with the butt of a gun by the second robber.
A
pharmacist, John W. Broyles, 11111 Bristol avenue, described what happened:
“The man
pulled the gun out as if he were going to shoot and changed his mind, flipped
it over in his hand, and hit Mann a light blow with the butt.”
The blow
jarred me for a minute”, Mann said, “and it gave this man [in front of him]
enough time to get his gun out of his pocket.
I grabbed his gun and held it down away from me”.
Mann, holding
one man’s gun hand down with his left hand, turned on the other gunman, who
dashed behind a display case and started shooting.
Hits Glass Display.
Mann’s
first shot shattered a display of glass behind the robber.
Then the
robber moved to his right and fired two or three more times, the deputy
said. Mann said he was sure his second
shot struck he robber in the abdomen. A small
spot of blood was found near the front door after the men dashed out.
The robber
and the deputy exchanged shots again. Mann said he believed he had struck him a
second time.
All this
time the man he was scuffling with kept repeating:
“Don’t be a
fool. There’s three of us. There’s somebody coming up behind you”.
Finally the
robber who had been firing at Mann dropped to one knee and took careful aim
over the counter top. He missed again
and the officer fired back.
Someone shouted
at Mann, “Look out behind you”.
When I
heard that I figured it was the time to let go”, the deputy said. The two robbers dashed out the front door to
a 1956 blue-and-white Ford in the parking lot.
Stanley ran
behind the prescription counter when the shooting started.
“I came out
to help Mr. Mann, who was scuffling with the man”, he said, “and the other man
drew a gun on me so I ducked under the counter”.
Started at 8:45.
Stanley
said the two robbers accosted him about 8:45 o’clock.
One man,
the one who fired, wore a suede jacket, a billed cap, and had a flesh-colored
bandage on his nose. The other had on
light gray trousers, a jacket and carried a rolled up paper shopping bag which
dropped on the floor in the excitement.
“This man
stopped me in the store and asked me if I was the manager”, Stanley said. “I said no, but he showed me his gun and
ordered me to the back of the store. On
the way, he told we were going to open the safe”.
Picture included with Newspaper Article |
Sunday, October 4, 2015
Genealogy Do Over
What is a “Genealogy Do Over”? Well, it is a learning program that I have
been following. A very well-known
gentleman in the genealogy community has provided information on how to “do”
genealogy correctly, such as citing your sources (which is the biggest failure
that we have all done) to research strategies, organization, providing forms to
help with your research, etc. His name
is Thomas McEntee and he has a group on Facebook specific to the Genealogy Do
Over and can be found here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/genealogydoover/. You can also check out the following page on
his blog where he further explains what this is about and why he started this
group: http://www.geneabloggers.com/tag/genealogy-do-over/.
On the Facebook page if you look under the "Files" tab, there are the weekly things to "do over" with your genealogy all listed in PDF format per week. This is a 13 week plan that is now in its 4th Cycle for the year. It is currently on Cycle 4, Week 1 so this is
a great time to check out the information.
There are also free forms to download (submitted by both Thomas McEntee
and the people that are following his “Do Over” plan). The Group provides you a chance to ask
questions about, as well as learn information about, the different aspects you
are presented with for each week.
This is what Thomas McEntee put on his blog which kind of
explains what the Genealogy Do Over is all about:
“Back on 15 December 2014, I made a big announcement: I was getting
rid of 20+ years of past genealogy research and starting over. Some people said
I was crazy. Some people said the idea was just “stupid” and wasteful.
But almost 10,000 genealogists and family historians have
either been actively participating in this crazy project or have followed it
over at the Genealogy Do-Over Facebook
Group. Many have said that they finally have a methodology and format for
research that they can live with AND that can bring them results.
Still more have taken the collaborative effort to heart
and have shared their own work, their own templates as well as tips and tricks.
The Genealogy Do-Over has been as close to a “genealogy hack-athon” and an
exercise in group problem solving as I could want.
With all of the organization I have been doing as a result
of this project, I can now find things instead of spending hours trying to
locate information in different areas of my home. I only have one (1) more family line to fill
out Family Groups Sheets on in an effort to see what types of information I don’t
have so I can more easily find that information
The family I have left is the Scott
side of my family (my mother’s ancestors).
I have located information on the Internet going back several generations,
however, we all know not to take the Internet for granted. I will need to prove the existence of each of
those family members and try to locate their birth, marriage, and death
information to try and prove that connection.
Please head on over to Thomas McEntee’s Blog or Facebook
page and I highly suggest joining his group on Facebook if you want to learn
how to do genealogy correctly the first time so you don’t end up like me. I had information spread all over the place
that contained no source citations and couldn’t find any documents I needed
when I needed them (and of course couldn’t find the place where I got that
information since the source citation wasn’t listed). Source citations are used in an effort to allow
others to find your information for themselves should they look at or copy your
documentation. Documents with source
citations are considered “facts”.
Documents without source citations are considered “possible facts” which
need to be explored further by a genealogist to find “facts” (and make sure you
provide source citations to those documents when you find them).
Some documents and sources are considered “Primary” and
others are considered “Secondary”. Primary
sources are those documents that were created by someone who was at the event
when it happened (Birth Certificates, Marriage Certificates, diary pages, etc.)
and Secondary sources are those documents where someone different supplied the
information (such as Birth Date and Place of Birth on a Death
Certificate). Most likely, the person
supplying that information was not there at their birth and only provided
information they were “told”. That
documentation needs to be supported by other documentation (preferred Primary
source) to be considered “fact”.
I digress, and I apologize.
I have learned so much from the genealogy community and I enjoy sharing
my knowledge. I wish you the best of
luck in your search for ancestors! I
will continue “Searching for Ancestors” myself when the opportunity arises, and
will post information as I locate it.
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