So much has changed; retired but the list of projects hasn't gotten any smaller.
Currently living in Durham, NC. First week of April and there are hummingbirds and salamanders.
The saga of being a family researcher. Or as other family members say: a full time non-paying job.
Thursday, April 9, 2015
Monday, April 30, 2012
Tiffin landmark's steps shattered
Crews start to demolish Seneca Co. Courthouse
Protesters bewail beginning of end, officials' failure to act
BY JENNIFER FEEHANBLADE STAFF WRITER
It was the first blow to the downtown building's sandstone exterior since front-end loaders were brought on site last week.
"It's like mourning. You're waiting for that loved one to die," said Ruth Brown of Tiffin as she watched the work through the chain-link fence.
PHOTO GALLERY: Seneca County Courthouse demolition
Ms. Brown was one of 44 Seneca County taxpayers who filed a last-minute lawsuit against county commissioners with the Ohio Supreme Court and asked the high court to halt the demolition of the courthouse. The court denied the residents' appeal for intervention, and the reality of demolition is sinking in.
"We tried to save it," Ms. Brown said. "You can only do what you can do. I'm just disappointed."
Not everyone has given up.
"It only takes one judge to stop this," Lenora Livingston said, referring to the possibility that one of the county's common pleas court judges could order the commissioners to stop demolition and renovate the courthouse as usable space for the courts.
Pioneer Cemetery Restoration
Two Iowa residents preserving the state's earliest graveyards
By Gwendolyn Purdom | From Preservation | Spring 2012Like most 17-year-old boys, Dylan Brown-Kwaiser is always happy to get some time behind the wheel. But unlike his joy-riding peers, the high school junior’s road trips include his grandmother in the passenger seat and a long list of historic pioneer cemeteries to explore.
“He does all the driving so I can stare out into the wilderness and see if we can find something,” says Gail Brown, Brown-Kwaiser’s grandmother and a professor in the geographic information system program at Kirkwood Community College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. “Sometimes we just knock on doors.”
Brown and Brown-Kwaiser have documented and mapped about 1,300 gravestones in dozens of burial grounds since Brown received the Kirkwood Endowed Chair for 2011–2012 to pursue research on 19th- and early-20th-century Iowa cemeteries. The pair’s work—which involves GPS technology, photography, and detailed note taking—helps historians and preservationists piece together information about some of the state’s earliest settlers. Photos and coordinates of each headstone are turned over to the Iowa Gravestone Project, an online database operated by genealogy group IAGenWeb.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Library references for research
Need a place to start looking? I ran across this reference today which is outstanding and free.
http://www.newberry.org/research-guides
Research Guides
Welcome to the Newberry’s Research Guides. Librarians have compiled these bibliographies, checklists, collection descriptions, and links to articles about our holdings to assist you in your exploration of the Newberry’s rich collections.Tuesday, January 17, 2012
IGHR Birmingham 10-15 June!
Two years ago, I tried to get into the Law and Government Documents course at this institute. It is only open once every two years. At that time, I was just ready to input my credit information and the system I was on had an electrical breakdown and I missed my opportunity because the class filled in less than 10 minutes.
Today was no exception on the amount of time it took for the class to close, but this time I was able to register!
Anyone else heading to Samford??
Today was no exception on the amount of time it took for the class to close, but this time I was able to register!
Anyone else heading to Samford??
Sunday, December 25, 2011
Research thoughts:
For those looking for SSDI information [Social Security Death Information] try http://go.fold3.com/ssdi/. This service used to be on Rootsweb but was shoved off for 'security' reasons. Other free sites that offer the database include familysearch.org.
My current 'can't put it down' reading is The Courthouses of Early Virginia. Starting with international research, Carl R Lounsbury, discusses the relationship of pre-1600 court information with the development of the court system in colonial Virginia. History, architecture, vignettes of cases and court protocol is included with diagrams over time of blueprints of expansions and photographs starting from the Civil War. For my personal interest: the history of court systems over time of each individual county!
For those looking for SSDI information [Social Security Death Information] try http://go.fold3.com/ssdi/. This service used to be on Rootsweb but was shoved off for 'security' reasons. Other free sites that offer the database include familysearch.org.
My current 'can't put it down' reading is The Courthouses of Early Virginia. Starting with international research, Carl R Lounsbury, discusses the relationship of pre-1600 court information with the development of the court system in colonial Virginia. History, architecture, vignettes of cases and court protocol is included with diagrams over time of blueprints of expansions and photographs starting from the Civil War. For my personal interest: the history of court systems over time of each individual county!
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