RootsWeb Review: RootsWeb's Weekly E-zine 15 December 2004, Vol. 7, No. 50, Circulation: 816,285+ (c) 1998-2004 RootsWeb.com, Inc. http://www.rootsweb.com/ * * * Editor: Myra Vanderpool Gormley, Certified Genealogist Editor-RWR@rootsweb.com Certification: http://www.bcgcertification.org/certification/ * * * Keep informed about the latest news, new databases, webpages and mailing lists at RootsWeb. Subscribe to the free weekly RootsWeb Review. http://newsletters.rootsweb.com/ Search/download past issues of the RootsWeb Review: http://e-zine.rootsweb.com/ * * * Is your e-mail address up-to-date at all RootsWeb sources? http://passwordcentral.rootsweb.com/ * * * Search and share family trees: WorldConnect: http://wc.rootsweb.com/ Learn how to find your ancestors: http://rwguide.rootsweb.com/ Post and read messages on all relevant surname, locality, and topic Message Boards and Mailing Lists: Message Boards: http://boards.rootsweb.com/ Mailing Lists: http://lists.rootsweb.com/ RootsWeb HelpDesk: http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/ =============================================================== IN THIS ISSUE: 1. NEWS AND NOTES 1a. Editor's Desk: "Foiling the Phishers" "No Rich Uncles Either" 1b. Tips from Readers: "Ciao, Ciao, My Cousins" 1c. Using RootsWeb: "Information at your Fingertips" 2. Connecting Through RootsWeb: "Finding Branches Years Later" "Tracking Descendants Pays Off Handsomely" 3. New RootsWeb Mailing Lists 4. New Webpages at RootsWeb 5. New/Updated FreePages and HomePages 6. New User-contributed Databases 7. RootsWeb Review's Bottomless Mailbag: "Tales of our Ancestors" "Filling in the Blanks" "Sorting Out Ancestors with Similar Names" "Your Ancestor Was Born -- Where?" "Juicing Up a Name" "Creative Search by Locality Pays Off" "Building Brick Walls" "The Bottom Line" 8. Humor/Humour: "Martial Bliss" 9. Subscriptions, Submissions, Advertising, Reprints =============================================================== 1. NEWS AND NOTES 1a. EDITOR'S DESK: FOILING THE PHISHERS. Phishing is a growing form of online fraud. It blends old-fashioned confidence scams with innovations in technological trickery. The best way to avoid becoming a victim is to remember that real companies almost never send e-mail asking you to submit any personal data. Phishers use "spoofed" [fake] e-mails and fraudulent websites designed to fool you into divulging personal financial data such as credit card numbers, account usernames and passwords, Social Security numbers, etc. By hijacking the trusted brands of well-known banks, online retailers and credit card companies, phishers can fool you. They often include fancy graphics, trademark symbols, and an authentic- looking e-mail address in the "from" line, but all of these things can be faked easily. One of the easiest ways to tell that it comes from a phiser is if the message tries to scare you into giving up personal and financial information by saying that your account needs to be verified, updated or confirmed. If you think a message might be legitimate, contact the organization by phone or open a new Internet browser window and type in the company's Web address. Do not cut and paste material from suspicious e-mail messages and never reply to a suspected phiser. Be smart. Be safe. Here's more on how to avoid these phishing scams: http://www.antiphishing.org/consumer_recs.html * * * NO RICH UNCLES EITHER. On another fraud front, many genealogists have been contacted by perpetuators of what's known as the Nigerian Advance Fee Fraud or "4-1-9" scheme -- so named after the section of the Nigerian penal code that addresses fraud schemes. These are often quite creative as family historians are discovering. A large number of victims are enticed into believing they have been singled out from the masses (often by using your family names) to share in some multi-million dollar windfall profits. Don't fall for such frauds either. Read this online public awareness advisory: http://www.secretservice.gov/alert419.shtml * * * 1b. TIPS FROM READERS: Ciao, Ciao, My Cousins By Esther Aiani Behnke Before going on a vacation to Italy, I called our local Italian Consulate and inquired if it would copy pages from its Rome telephone book that had a certain family name. I received a page with six names. Then I sent a letter to each, stating the reason I'm writing, my great-grandmother's name, and asking if there is a connection. Within a week, I received a packet of information, including my family tree back to 1422, a history of my family, and other information. Then I received a telephone call from Rome, asking what day I'll be in Rome, that my newfound cousins wanted to have a party for my husband and me. What a joy! I was delighted to meet cousins who knew there was a branch in the U.S. but had no way of contacting us. It is so lovely to have a correspondence going with them. * * * Have you encountered and solved a pesky research problem? Share it with the RootsWeb Review readers. Send to: Editor-RWR@rootsweb.com * * * 1c. Using RootsWeb: Information at your Fingertips Don Hayes recently began researching his family history. One of the first suggestions made to him by more experienced researchers was that he should subscribe to RootsWeb mailing lists for the surnames and localities he had found thus far in his searches. Well, Don is one of those guys who never reads the owner's manual or asks directions. So he promptly trashed the "welcome messages" he received after subscribing to the mailing lists. This turned out to be a mistake. Don soon realized he didn't have a clue as to how to post a proper message to the list when he received a private admonition from the list administrator for posting an off-topic message. When Don asked the admin how he was supposed to know that posting a message about his HAYES ancestors was off-topic on the MILLER list (unless he included information as to how his HAYESes were connected to his MILLER family), the reply let him know in no uncertain terms that the list rules were spelled out clearly in the welcome message that Don had deleted unread. Uh, oh. Later when Don and wife decided to visit family over the holidays and he would not have access to his e-mail, he realized that he didn't recall what he was supposed to do to stop the list mail. Once again he was coming to the belated realization that he might have acted too swiftly in ignoring and deleting the welcome message. The welcome letter you receive when you first subscribe to a mailing list often contains customized text about the rules, policies, and procedures for list members to follow on that specific list. Since RootsWeb's volunteer list administrators are given a great deal of leeway in administering lists, careful attention should be given when you receive each new welcome letter. Each administrator's list rules and instructions will vary. Save all your welcome letters and don't assume "if you have seen one, you have seen them all" because many contain unique information and customized introductions. As Don learned when he crossed paths with the list administrator, if you lose your welcome message for any reason, you can obtain a new copy for any list to which you currently subscribe by sending an e-mail to LISTNAME-L-request@rootsweb.com (if you are subscribed in mail mode) or to LISTNAME-D-request@rootsweb.com (if you are subscribed in digest mode). Replace the generic word LISTNAME with the actual name of the mailing list. Put the word "archive" (without quotation marks) as the subject and the words "get welcome.txt" (no quotation marks) on the first line of the message body and no additional text. Turn off any signature files. Since this is a command to a computer, your e-mail must be formatted exactly as shown above in all lower-case letters with one space between the command get and welcome.txt (the file you want the computer to send you). Don subscribed to some mailing lists in mail mode, meaning he opted to receive each individual list message as a separate e-mail. He soon learned he could benefit by paying attention to the rotating taglines the list administrators often place at the bottom of every list message. The taglines contain such information as instructions for subscribing and unsubscribing, how to contact the administrator, links to the archives for the list, links to helpful webpages where list rules or other pertinent information can be found, information about how the message board gateway works, if applicable, and even a link to the corresponding message board. List taglines are set by the volunteer administrator and are as varied as the interests and knowledge of the individual administrators. Tag- lines are often changed from time to time, so it pays to look and not assume you have read them before. While not all administrators use list taglines, those who do put the reminders there for a reason -- to keep list members informed of important information they need to know. Savvy list members pay attention to taglines. Don also subscribed to a few very active mailing lists in digest mode and soon learned that list administrators also often customize information contained in the list digest "administrivia." The administrivia is the text that you find in every digest immediately following the index that explains how to unsubscribe from the digests, how to contact the list administrator, and often other helpful information such as a link to a corresponding message board. So, while Don still continues to toss out owner's manuals for new products and refuses to ask directions while traveling -- much to the consternation of his wife -- he has learned not to be so hasty where RootsWeb mailing lists are concerned. He's discovered that he can actually find hints and tips for making the mailing lists work better for him by paying attention and not overlooking the information readily at his fingertips. 2. Connecting Through RootsWeb. Thanks for sharing your stories. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Finding Branches Years Later By Sherry Sherman from Aurora, Colorado, USA In my family I'm known as the epitome of hope and patience. It all stems from a practical joke my beloved uncle played on me when I was a wee one, in which I spent years attempting to hatch "porcupine eggs" (a story for a different e-mail -- this one is to encourage others in hope and patience). Several years ago I placed an inquiry online in an attempt to discover more about the death of a paternal young cousin. Several wonderful people in that area responded and I gained what I was looking for and more. After that initial discovery, I promptly forgot about my inquiry -- until recently. Please note that my e-mail addy has not changed in more than 10 years and that my maiden name is unique to my paternal family alone. I received an e-mail from someone whose name I did not recognize, claiming her children shared my maiden surname. Careful skeptic that I am, I responded cautiously. Through multiple e-mails, I regained an entire branch of my family that I had not had contact with since I was 16 years old. This included an elderly aunt, four first cousins, their spouses, children and grandchildren. I am so thrilled and thankful that my practical joker uncle taught me so many years ago to always hope and practice patience and I am equally thrilled with technological advances. * * * Tracking Descendants Pays Off Handsomely By Joanne Wilson in West Palm Beach, Florida, USA After picking the "low-hanging fruit" on the family tree from the easy sources, it didn't take long to figure out that there were distant relatives out there who might well have information that I needed. I had found an 1881 ship's list online which showed my great- grandmother, her younger sister, and her parents as they came to New York from Holland. So it was a surprise a few months later to receive from my aunt an old formal portrait photo of the same great-grandmother, her sister, her widowed mother, and her brother. The names written on the photo by my grandmother included his: Cornelius VAN TILBURG. Being male he would have passed the family name to any offspring. Using the online white pages I got a list of several people by that last name in the area of northern Jersey where my ancestors had settled and where I had lived until moving to Florida in the late '70s. I wrote to each one, giving what relevant information I had, and including my e- mail address in my contact information. A few days later my e-mail box contained several replies. Among them was a man -- Gerry -- whose grandfather had had the name Cornelius VAN TILBURG. There was also a woman, Sheryl, living in Missouri, whose elderly mother had received my letter and phoned her with my e-mail address. She, too, was a descendant of a Cornelius VAN TILBURG. I doubted that it was "my" Cornelius, given the time span since the 1880s. However, after several e-mails it became apparent that the two correspondents were likely to be related to each other, based on names that both mentioned. Less than a week later, Gerry e-mailed me an old family portrait of his grandfather Cornelius with his wife and children. I almost came out of my chair as I recognized the same man as the one in my own old photo. Cornelius, it seems, had come over a couple of years before the rest of the family. The benefits of the small mailing effort and subsequent e-mails were many. Gerry had already done a large family chart of the descendants of Cornelius and we traded information for our respective trees. Sheryl put us in touch with another New Jersey cousin, Craig, who had researched the VAN TILBURGs back into Holland for several generations. He sent us photocopies of original birth, death and marriage certificates -- treasures -- as well as some personal recollections that filled in a number of family history details. Perhaps best of all, we are in touch after the family lost track of each other so long ago. * * * Do you have an online "connecting" story to share? Send to: Editor-RWR@rootsweb.com 3. New Mailing Lists at RootsWeb Request a New Mailing List: http://resources.rootsweb.com/adopt/ ----------------------------------------------------------------- Brand-new mailing lists can be found under OTHER/MISCELLANEOUS until moved to their proper categories. For information and an index to the more than 28,600 RootsWeb-hosted genealogy Mailing Lists and for easy subscribing (joining) options go to: http://lists.rootsweb.com/ NEW SURNAME MAILING LISTS COATES-UK -- The COATES families of United Kingdom DRISCOLLS-TO-AUSTRALIA -- DRISCOLLs who immigrated to Australia, with emphasis on those from County Cork, Ireland TREASTER NEW ETHNIC AND SPECIAL INTEREST MAILING LISTS TEXAS-HOODS-BRIGADE -- Genealogical discussions of the members of the Texas Hood's Brigade 4. New Webpages at RootsWeb To Request a Free Web Account: http://accounts.rootsweb.com/ ------------------------------------------------------------- Some of these webpages might not yet be accessible. They are created by volunteers, so if one that interests you isn't up yet, please check again in a few days or next week. http://www.rootsweb.com/~[accountname] Note that the ~[tilde] before the Web account name is required. For example, the Ross and Cromarty County (Scotland) website is at: http://www.rootsweb.com/~sctrocfc/ SCOTLAND sctrocfc -- Ross and Cromarty County (Scotland) Free Census U.S.A. arwccs -- Washington County (Arkansas) Confederate Soldiers gatroup3 -- Troup County (Georgia) wvkanaw2 -- Kanawha County (West Virginia) 5. New/Updated Freepages and Homepages -------------------------------------- Has your website ever been mentioned here or do you have a new, updated, or substantially revised website located at RootsWeb (it will have "freepages" or "homepages" in the URL)? Send the URL (Web address), along with a brief description, including the major pertinent surnames and what is available on your site, to: Editor-RWR@rootsweb.com * * * ENGLAND. Further update of the index to local 18th- and 19th-century newspapers; now contains more than 35,000 names with further issues of the Salisbury and Winchester Journal (some 1782, mostly 1825) which cover Wiltshire, Hampshire, Dorset, Somerset, plus a few from the Northampton Mercury's (covering Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire) and some London Papers, 1725 and 1751, which featured local and well as London news reports. Includes the execution in Hampshire of David Tyrie, the murder of "Witch" by a mob at Tring in Hertfordshire, plus plenty of more light-hearted events and the usual blend of local adverts (from tradesmen, parish officials, etc), and the parish local news (inquests, lists of marriages and deaths, court cases, individuals to transported, etc.). Also updated is the "favourite" section, which contains a small selection of some of the webmaster's favourite stories taken from the papers. Click on the link to: Local Newspapers Index (excluding Windsor and Eton Express) at: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~dutillieul/index.html NEW YORK. Names of orphaned children in Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, Manhattan, from the 1900 census. Includes year and place of birth. http://www.rootsweb.com/~ote/orphans/orphans1900rc.htm NEW YORK. Names of orphaned children in Hebrew Orphan Asylum, Manhattan, from the 1900 census. Includes year and place of birth. http://www.rootsweb.com/~ote/orphans/orphans1900jewish2.htm NEW YORK. Names of orphaned children in Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society of New York, Manhattan, from the 1900 census. Includes year and place of birth. http://www.rootsweb.com/~ote/orphans/orphans1900jewish.htm NEW YORK. Names of orphaned children in Orphan Asylum Society, Manhattan, from the 1900 census. Includes year and place of birth. http://www.rootsweb.com/~ote/orphans/orphans1900oas.htm NEW YORK. Society for Relief of Half-Orphans and Destitute Children, Manhattan from the 1900 census. Includes year and place of birth. http://www.rootsweb.com/~ote/orphans/orphans1900half.htm NEW YORK. Names of orphaned children in Albany Orphan Asylum, Albany, from the 1900 census. Includes year and place of birth. http://www.rootsweb.com/~ote/orphans/orphans1900albany.htm 6. New User-Contributed Databases at RootsWeb ---------------------------------------------- SHARING OPPORTUNITY. Does your alma mater, old military unit, church, parish, province, county or state have material available that you think would be of interest to genealogists and historians? Do you have any compiled lists of names or databases (other than your personal genealogy) that you would like to share and that you think would be of value and interest to others? In most cases, RootsWeb would be proud to host such material. http://userdb.rootsweb.com/submit/ The following databases have come online recently. They are searchable, but not browseable. Search: To look for specific data or occurrence of text in a file. Browse: To view the entire contents of a file or a group of files. CANADA. Ontario. Perth County. Natives of Ireland buried in Roman Catholic Cemeteries; 295 records; Thomas J. Hunter http://userdb.rootsweb.com/canada/ U.S.A. CONNECTICUT. New Haven County. Southbury. White Oak Cemetery; 437 records; John Whalen http://userdb.rootsweb.com/cemeteries/ ILLINOIS. Effingham County. Effingham. Jackson Township. Little Prairie Cemetery; 191 records; Russell W. Zears http://userdb.rootsweb.com/cemeteries/ MICHIGAN. Wayne County. Dearborn. Fordson High School Class of 1939; 476 records; In memory of Christina Heelen http://userdb.rootsweb.com/alumni/ WEST INDIES. Assorted Cemeteries on Anguilla, Saba, Saint Eustatius and Saint Martin (Sint Maarten) islands; 205 records; Heather Nielsen http://userdb.rootsweb.com/intl/ Selected death records, 1883-1910 on Anguilla and Antigua islands; 117 records; Heather Nielsen http://userdb.rootsweb.com/intl/ 7. FROM ROOTSWEB REVIEW'S BOTTOMLESS MAILBAG [Editor's note: The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and are not necessarily those of the editor or of RootsWeb.com]. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Tales of our Ancestors By Pat Bowmaster I would urge caution in researching someone "born at sea." My husband's great-grandfather, Wolter BOUWMEESTER, supposedly was born at sea between Holland and America. He even stated this to a reporter who interviewed him on the occasion of his 61st wedding anniversary. I was able to find the ship on which his family came to this country. Wolter was listed, but there was no notation of birth at sea. After much searching and some help from Willem KAPPER of Holland, I found the record of Wolter's birth in 1847 in Staphorst, Overijssel, Netherlands. It turned out that he was four months old when the ship embarked. Before you give up on finding record of births at sea, be sure to check birth records in the residence country for several months prior to embarkation to the destination country. [Editor's note: Since about 1820, U.S. Customs officials have been responsible to see that the ships' manifests listed crew, passenger, and cargo, and the ships' logs provided statements on the conditions of the passengers, and births, marriages, and deaths at sea. This information is sometimes found at the end of the microfilm of what's commonly called ship passenger lists of the vessels entering the United States]. * * * Filling in the Blanks By Betty Ramsey A few years ago, my friend and I had recently started our genealogy research online. Her teenage son came in wanting her to do something for him while she was searching for ancestors on the Internet. Getting impatient with waiting for her to finish, he asked what she was doing. When she replied "genealogy research," he asked for more specifics. She said she was filling in the blanks in her family tree with the names of her ancestors. He said "Move over and let me fill them in, I can put names in all those blanks in a few minutes and then you can help me." Sometimes, I think that is what happened to some online genealogies that I find with wives called "Mrs. John Doe." * * * Sorting Out Ancestors with Similar Names By Justin Kirk Houser Regarding Kaye Powell's item, "Wildcarding for Ancestors," about the BROWNs in last week's RootsWeb Review, the Valentine BREON she mentioned as a success story was not a BROWN at all, but a separate individual in his own right who started out life in Berks County, Pennsylvania, in 1778, as a BRION, and ended it as a BREON in 1866 in Centre County, Pennsylvania. He was my 5-great-grandfather, and I've proven his lineage through wills, deeds, and church baptismal records. This demonstrates the importance of always checking out possible "matches" you find in online searches and not taking for granted that an individual you may find in a record is the same as your ancestor, especially when the details do not fit exactly. I have Valentine's lineage back to the late 16th century in France and there is no known tie to BROWN in his ancestry. I would, however, love to know who Valentine BREON's elusive wife, Anna Maria, was, before her marriage -- some speculate that she was a BATDORF but I have never found proof of this. * * * Your Ancestor Was Born -- Where? By Mac Hayes My own data has a non-blood relative who was "Born in an airplane." This has not been a problem so far, since the "airborne" party is no longer related to my line. * * * Juicing Up a Name By Sharon Fowler in Pleasanton, California, USA While researching the Schlosser families who migrated from Pennsylvania to Stark County, Ohio, and then on to Indiana and Illinois, I came across an interesting person. His name was probably either Orange Lemuel SCHLOSSER or Orange Lenias SCHLOSSER (phew!). The indexers had quite a time it seems and the name was treated quite variously, but my favorite is "Orange J. SLUSHER." * * * Creative Search by Locality Pays Off By Janet Nevling I was looking for my husband's ancestors. I thought they had arrived in Monticello, Illinois in 1866. I did not find them listed in the 1870 county census and thought it very strange. I knew that they had arrived in New York in late May 1866, thanks to "Germans to America" books. I also knew that they were from Saxony, thanks to an ancestor's genealogical research, so what I did was to look at the letters behind each head of household name, and when I came to the three-letter code for Saxony I found them. The family name was Schloeffel, headed by Christoph GOTTHILF (Christopher the God-helper). But in the census the surname was listed as Christophschloeffel. I suppose the German accent threw off the census taker. In 1987 we moved from a Chicago suburb to Monticello, Illinois and I have been able to find the locations of houses in which the Schloeffel family lived, and to find in the courthouse that their older son had filed his intent to become a citizen in October 1865. So they had sent him over first, and had stayed in Saxony until the American Civil War had ended. * * * Building Brick Walls By Diana Szatkowski in Connecticut, USA As an amateur genealogist for the past six years, I have continuously tried to overcome what I call my brick wall. From the very beginning of my research I knew that my 2-great-grandfather, Asher S. CRAY, had been born in Vermont as well as his son Asher L. CRAY. His family was on the 1810 and 1820 census of Swanton, Vermont, but Asher CRAY was born in 1808 and I could never find any record of his birth or marriage in Vermont. Later he moved his family to Palmyra, New York and ran a brick-making business. Hoping to find some record in Palmyra that might indicate where Asher was born, I went there. Nothing could be found in Palmyra's records indicating where the family had come from other than Vermont. I was talking to the town historian telling her about Asher CRAY, the brick maker, and how I could not locate where he was born or married other than Vermont. Hoping that she might be able to help me, I explained how I had searched for six years and it seemed I could not overcome this brick wall. She looked at me and quite seriously explained, "Yes, and he obviously built the brick wall too." * * * The Bottom Line By Scott Aaron It's funny how over time, names can take on meanings that probably weren't intended when given. While researching one of my family lines on the 1900 Census, I found a niece living with them by the name of "Fannie BOTTOMLEY." I'm hoping for her sake that in 1900 that name wasn't as humorous as most would probably find it today. 8. Humor/Humour: Martial Bliss ------------------------------------------ Thanks to: Allison L. Ryall In recent mail I received an American Civil War pension file for an ancestor I am researching. There was a form which asked several questions of the soldier, such as: Are you a married man? When, where and by whom were you married, etc. One of the questions was: What record or proof or your marriage exists? The soldier's written response was: "She still lives." * * * Found a humorous sign or entry in census, parish, church, etc. records? Send to: Editor-RWR@rootsweb.com 9. Subscriptions, Submissions, Advertising, Reprints ----------------------------------------------------- SUBSCRIPTIONS. To manage your e-mail communications (i.e. to subscribe or unsubscribe to this newsletter, or to sign up for others), visit our newsletter management center any time at: http://newsletters.rootsweb.com/ The RootsWeb Review is a free publication of MyFamily.com, Inc., 360 West 4800 North, Provo, UT, 84604 * * * The RootsWeb Review does not publish or answer genealogical queries, and the editor regrets that she is unable to provide any personal research assistance or advice. RootsWeb Review welcomes short (500 words or less) articles, humor, stories, or letters, and reserves the right to edit all submissions. All mail sent to the RootsWeb Review editor is considered to be for publication — send in PLAIN TEXT (please, no attachments) to: Editor-RWR@rootsweb.com * * * ROOTSWEB REVIEW ADVERTISING CONTACTS. Ad Sales Operations Mgr. Shana Davis sdavis@myfamilyinc.com U.S. Worldwide Sales: Sacha Yenkana syenkana@myfamilyinc.com * * * REPRINTS. Permission to reprint articles from RootsWeb Review is granted unless specifically stated otherwise, provided: (1) the reprint is used for non-commercial, educational purposes; and (2) the following notice appears at the end of the article: Previously published in RootsWeb Review: 15 December 2004, Vol. 7, No. 50. * * * *