RootsWeb Review: RootsWeb's Monthly E-zine
11 June 2008, Vol. 11, No. 16
(c) 1998-2008 RootsWeb.com, Inc. http://www.rootsweb.com/
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http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/review/2008/0611.txt
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ROOTSWEB STORE: Check here for the latest in genealogy books, software,
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http://www.therootswebstore.com/
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ROOTSWEB REVIEW ARCHIVES: Check here for previous editions:
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==============================================================
IN THIS ISSUE:
1. Editor's Desk: News and Notes
1a. The "RootsWeb Review" Celebrates its Ten-Year Anniversary
1b. Changing Your Banner from Gray to Green
1c. Happy Birthday to Elaine Bukove
1d. Interactive Vietnam Memorial Wall and "Family Tree Magazine"
Podcast
1e. Book Notice
2. Using RootsWeb
Creating Your Own Freepage on RootsWeb
3. Genealogy Tip
Creating a Printable List of a Folder's Contents
4. Connecting
More About Orphan Heirlooms
5. Bottomless Mailbag: Readers Write In
Headstones for Union Civil War Soldiers Revisited
Orphan Yearbooks
More Difficult Surnames to Search
A Court Record Database for Southeast England
6. What's New: Databases, Freepages, and Mailing Lists
6a. New User-contributed Databases
6b. New/Updated Freepages by Individuals
6c. New/Updated Freepages by Counties, States,
and Genealogical/Historical Societies
6d. New Mailing Lists
7. You Found It
8. Subscriptions, Submissions, Advertising, and Reprints
==============================================================
IN THIS ISSUE:
1. Editor's Desk: News and Notes
1a. The "RootsWeb Review" Celebrates its Ten-Year Anniversary
The first issue of the "RootsWeb Review" went out ten years ago this
month, on 17 June 1998. Congratulations on ten years of keeping the
RootsWeb community connected.
1b. Changing Your Banner from Gray to Green
If you have a personal freepage and would like to change the background
color of the RootsWeb masthead from gray to green, follow the
instructions in the "Masthead Update for Freepages Sites" Newsroom
Announcement: http://blogs.rootsweb.ancestry.com/newsroom/
If your genealogical society or group would like to change the
background color of the RootsWeb masthead on its page, follow the
instructions in the "New Mastheads--Look for Them Today" Newsroom
Announcement: http://blogs.rootsweb.ancestry.com/newsroom/
1c. Happy Birthday to Elaine Bukove
Elaine Bukove, our message board administrator, is celebrating her
birthday tomorrow, on 12 June. Elaine has been with RootsWeb for nine
years. Thanks for all your hard work Elaine.
1d. Interactive Vietnam Memorial Wall and "Family Tree Magazine" Podcast
Do you have a family member that served in the Vietnam War? Footnote.com
has created an interactive Vietnam Memorial Wall where you can search
for and view individual names on the wall, as well as information about
the individual (rank, years of service, casualty type, etc.). You can
also add an image, a story, or other comments to the name. Check it out
here: http://go.footnote.com/thewall.
Also, check out a new monthly family history podcast being produced by
the popular "Family Tree Magazine":
http://www.familytreemagazine.com/podcast/. Lisa Louise Cooke--creator
of the Genealogy Gems podcast--hosts the half-an-hour program, which
includes interviews with experts, tips on genealogy resources, sneak
previews of upcoming magazine issues, and more.
1e. Book Notice
American Fever--Australian Gold
By Denise McMahon and Christine Wild
Australians Denise McMahon and Christine Wild have completed five years
of research into the lives of more than 170 men and women who ventured
from America and Canada to Australia from 1850-70.
This book details the ups and downs of these immigrants' lives as they
sought their fortune. Old newspapers, personal letters, and diaries
unearth a history previously unknown, including information on many men
previously missing from family histories.
For further information on the book, e-mail goldfever2008@gmail.com.
2. Using RootsWeb
Creating Your Own Freepage on RootsWeb
By Jana Lloyd
editor-rwr@rootsweb.com
Every month when I send out the Review, I include a list of new
freepages (free Web pages) created by RootsWeb users and genealogical
and historical societies. And every time I think, "I should make a Web
page on RootsWeb." The problem is, I have only a basic knowledge of
HTML.
I suspect there are many of you out there who also have very little or
no knowledge of HTML or how to create Web pages. This article is for
you.
This very basic guide will get you familiar with the resources on
RootsWeb that can help you build your own Web page. It will not help you
create the page of your dreams--yet. I will write several follow-up
articles on this topic over the upcoming months that go into more depth.
Getting Started: What You Need to Build a Website
To build a website you need 1) space on a server where you can host your
site; 2) software to help you create the site.
The great thing about RootsWeb is that it provides both of these
things--it offers free space on its servers, and it has a very basic
HTML editor to help you create your site. (It also has a basic WYSIWYG
(What You See Is What You Get) editor so you can create a page without
having to know HTML, but as of this writing it is broken. I'll let you
know when it is working again.)
I'm going to walk you through these first two steps. First we're going
to request free server space for your site on RootsWeb. Then we're going
to use the RootsWeb HTML editor to make a basic Web page. It's not going
be a very pretty page--just a page. We will go into more about designing
an attractive page in the follow-up articles.
Step One: Requesting Free Server Space on RootsWeb
1. Go to the RootsWeb homepage (www.RootsWeb.com).
2. Click the Web Sites tab on the main toolbar.
3. Click the "Request Free Web Space" link on the upper left-hand side
of the page.
Note: You can only request space for one individual freepage on
RootsWeb, although there is no limit to the number you can request for
historical societies or other genealogical groups.
4. Click the "Freepages" link.
Note: Freepages are for pages created by individuals; if you want to
create a page for your historical society, click
"Genealogical/Historical Society Accounts."
5. Read the terms of agreement and click I agree at the bottom of the
page.
6. Provide your name, e-mail address, and an account name, as directed.
Write down your account name. You will need it for Step Two.
7. Click the Submit button.
In three to five days you will receive an e-mail stating that your
request has been received. You will be given the URL for your Web page
and a password, which you need for Step Two. You will also be signed up
for the Freepages Mailing List at RootsWeb (FREEPAGES-
HELP_L@rootsweb.com), where you can participate in useful discussions
with other people working on their freepages.
Note: You cannot complete Step Two until you have received this e-mail.
Step Two: Creating Your Website Using the RootsWeb HTML Editor
Once you have received an e-mail from RootsWeb giving you the password
for your new Web page, you can use the RootsWeb HTML editor to create a
basic Web page.
1. Go to the File Manager at RootsWeb:
http://freepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/fileman.
2. Enter your account name and password from Step One. Click Log in.
3. You will be prompted to select a "community." Select "Genealogy" from
the drop-down list.
4. Click the Enter File Manager Button.
5. Scroll down to the "HTML Editing Controls" box. Press the Create New
HTML File button.
6. A field will appear with "Enter the name of the file" above it. Type
"index" in the field, making sure to use only lowercase letters. Press
Create and Edit.
7. Copy and paste the following in the box that appears. This is the
basic HTML structure behind any Web page.
8. Think of a title for your Web page and type it between the
tags. This title will not appear on your Web page anywhere; it
will appear on the title bar of your Web browser.
9. Type something simple, such as "This is my first Web page," between
the tags. This text will appear on your Web page.
Anything on your Web page goes between these two tags.
Your document should look similar to this:
My Web Page
This is my first Web page
10. Click Save. You will be taken back to the main File Manager page,
where you can see the file, titled "index.html."
Congratulations. You have now created your first Web page. You should be
able to visit it by opening your Web browser and typing in the URL that
was sent to you in Step One. It should look something like this (your
account name will be behind the ~ in your URL):
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jlloyd
Note that whatever you put between the tags is in the
title bar of your Web browser; whatever you typed between the
tags is on the actual Web page.
Next time we'll explore some ways to create a more dynamic, interesting
page with images, formatting, and links to other pages.
By the way, if you have more experience with building Web pages, feel
free to write in. I would love to get a dialog going. Send in neat
tips--like how you added a guestbook to your freepage, where you found
easy-to-use freeware online, or some tricks you've learned about using
the RootsWeb freepage tools.
In the meantime, check out some tutorials written by RootsWeb users on
HTML and creating your own freepage:
Pat Asher's "Web Tutorials":
http://freepages.computers.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~pasher/
Pat Geary's "Website Design for the Genealogist":
http://www.genealogy-web-creations.com/
Juanita Ballard's "Help Pages":
http://freepages.computers.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ballard/
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3. Genealogy Tip
Creating a Printable List of a Folder's Contents
By Mary Harrell-Sesniak, maryh@volunteer.rootsweb.com
Genealogy is not just a pastime; it's a passion.
Sometimes tasks that should be simple aren't--like creating a printable
list of the contents in a Windows folder (e.g., all the files in a
folder or all the folders within another folder). This is a much-
requested procedure and an important one for managing files and
pictures. Since there is no built-in command within Windows to do this,
Microsoft offers two solutions: 1) take a screenshot of the folder's
contents, or 2) use the Command Prompt within the operating system.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/196628
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/196158/EN-US/
I have another solution. You can use Windows to create a batch file, or
a file with a list of commands for the computer to execute.
1. Open Notepad or a program that saves in text format. Notepad is
located at Start>All Programs>Accessories>Notepad.
2. Cut and paste the following into the document. The remarks (REM)
lines aren't part of the command, but they document the procedure so you
can remember how to do it in the future.
dir/b>myfilelist.txt
REM Save this file as myfilelist.bat in the folder where you wish to
create a file list.
REM Double-click the file to run the program.
REM Previously published in RootsWeb Review by Mary Harrell-Sesniak.
3. Save the document as a batch file. Select Save As from the File menu
and navigate to the folder where you wish to create a file list. Name
the file "myfilelist.bat", making certain to add the extension ".bat" to
the name (no spaces or quotes).
4. Close Notepad. Navigate to the folder where the .bat file is located
and double-click on it. A file named "myfilelist.txt" will be created in
the folder.
5. Open the .txt file and print or edit it as necessary.
Note: I have kept this process as simple as possible, but our more
technically savvy readers may know variations. For instance, if you
remove the "/b" from the command in Step 2, the dates and times will be
included in front of the document names. And to sort by document types,
add an "/oe", which orders the list by extension.
dir>myfilelist.txt
dir/oe/b>myfilelist.txt
Also, one word of caution. Feel free to share these instructions with
others, but don't send the batch (.bat) file via e-mail as an
attachment--although this one is safe, batch files are sometimes
perceived as spyware.
4. Connecting
More About Orphan Heirlooms
By Myra Herron
After reading the article "Orphan Heirlooms" in the 26 March issue of
the "RootsWeb Review," I wanted to share my own heirloom story.
My story takes place over nearly thirty years. While I lived in Battle
Creek, Michigan, during the 1980s, I loved to go shopping at antique
stores and antique markets. There were plenty around Battle Creek. At
one point I purchased a little leather-bound diary from 1880 that had
been written in by a woman named Susie Errington. It was a charming
little book, and I wanted to make sure it didn't get discarded and lost
forever. At the time I gave no thought to transcribing it. Fast forward
to about 2002, in Alpena, Michigan.
While I was in Alpena, I became interested in genealogy. I tried to read
the diary, but it was nearly impossible because it was written in pencil
and very faint. Even when I tried to enlarge and copy it, it was very
hard to read some pages. When I bought a scanner I had much more
success. I then moved back to Utah and continued to transcribe the diary
while doing a little research on the young lady who had written it. I
contacted genealogical societies in the Battle Creek area, and in
Muskegon, since it was mostly written there, where the author was living
in 1880. Both organizations found me much more family information, and
together we got the diary completed and put online on two sites:
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~micalhou/diary_of_susie_errington.htm
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~mimuskeg/Errington1.html
Fast forward again to March 2008. I received an e-mail from Starr Rico,
who told me the location of a school where Susie Errington had applied
for a teaching position. I wrote back and mentioned (as I always did)
that I was searching for a family member to return the diary to. She
replied and said, "I'm the Special Projects Coordinator for the Muskegon
Family Heritage Network." After several conversations she offered to
have her group take custody of the diary and put it in the Muskegon
County Museum. I agreed, with the caveat that if a descendant ever asked
for the diary, he or she could have it.
Starr did more research and found out Susie's marriage date; then found
out Susie died a year after her marriage (which grieved both of us). She
got in contact with Debra Stanley, Office Manager of Oak Hill Cemetery,
to try and find Susie's burial site. However, Debra did more than just
find her burial site. She found a relative of Susie's that would be able
to take the diary back. He was seventy-nine-year-old Eugene Provost, who
lived almost exactly where Susie had been born and raised. I mailed him
the transcription of the diary and Starr mailed him the diary itself.
Eugene said he planned to show the diary to his ninety-eight-year-old
cousin, who was very anxious to see it. No one knows why the diary was
lost, but now it's back home where it belongs.
Without places like RootsWeb, and without all the great genealogical
organizations that always seem to be just waiting for a special project,
this could never have happened. No one knows why the diary was lost and
that little book traveled at least 8,000 miles to get from Battle Creek
back to Battle Creek, but it's finally home in good hands now. Starr and
I feel that we've accomplished a miracle, and we don't know if we'll
ever be this effective again. But we certainly will keep trying.
To read "Orphan Heirlooms," from the 26 March 2008 "RootsWeb Review,"
visit http://ftp.rootsweb.ancestry.com/pub/review/2008/0326.html.
5. Bottomless Mailbag: Readers Write In
[Editor's note: The opinions expressed herein are those of the
authors and are not necessarily those of the editor or of
RootsWeb.com.]
-------------------------------------------------------------
Headstones for Union Civil War Soldiers Revisited
I am writing in response to the recent comments about free headstones
being provided for Civil War veterans by the Veteran's Administration
(VA). My husband is a member of the Sons of the Union Veterans of the
Civil War. He is also the grave registration chairman for our county in
Michigan.
The Sons have undertaken a project for a number of years to register all
Civil War veterans' gravesites in the United States. In the process,
cemeteries are walked and records are researched. If a stone identified
as belonging to a veteran is unreadable or if there is no stone present,
one is ordered; in many instances a dedication ceremony is also
scheduled. We have held a dedication service for new stones placed every
May for the last three or four years. The Sons can help with the forms
and the necessary records that need to accompany the form. Sometimes
they even dig the holes and install the stones if it's a small cemetery
without a sexton who can do that job.
The Sons have a national website with links to different state
departments and grave registration chairmen for each state. Each
chairman has access to a database where they can look up grave
locations. The website is www.suvcw.org.
Mary, Michigan
quilter87@sbcglobal.net
* * *
Orphan Yearbooks
Jana Lloyd wrote an article titled "Orphan Heirlooms" in the 26 March
issue of the "Review," in which she talked about a reader's orphaned
yearbook find.
Orphan yearbooks are usually welcomed by alumni groups of the
school or community where the yearbook originated.
My hometown's old high school was destroyed in a fire many years ago,
and it destroyed their collection of yearbooks. Filling in the gaps has
been the project of our alum group for many years. I'm sure many schools
also have gaps in their collections, and even if they don't, they
usually welcome duplicates.
If the school in question no longer exists or can't be located, local,
county, and state libraries often welcome such orphans. So do local
museums.
I was able to obtain an interesting "orphan"--a collection of old school
photos from the 1930s through the 1950s--from another school in the
community. An on-going project of mine is to identify those in the
photos, which is proving to be a real challenge.
Yearbooks and school photos are important layers of history for
communities.
To read "Orphan Heirlooms," visit
http://ftp.rootsweb.ancestry.com/pub/review/2008/0326.html.
Ginger Ewing
leone123@aol.com
* * *
More Difficult Surnames to Search
Editor's Note:
We continue to expand our list of difficult surnames to search from
lists published in earlier contributions to the Bottomless Mailbag.
Close
Durbur
Fought
Gay
Junior
Labs
Lake
Link
Pocahontas
Pou
Rothenburgh
Ruble
Sheets
Songs
* * *
A Court Record Database for Southeast England
My attention has been drawn to a website that could be useful to
researchers with an interest in the Southeast area of England,
particularly the London, Middlesex, area--especially where a relative
may have been the perpetrator, victim, or witness to a crime; or where
he may have been a judge, prosecutor, police officer, etc.
The site is www.oldbaileyonline.org and displays verbatim the reports of
cases held at the Old Bailey, or the Central Criminal Court, from 1674-
1913. There are also scanned images of the transcripts of trials.
The site is fully indexed. I recommend the Advanced Search for surnames.
An Any Word search is available, as is a link to maps. Wherever a
street/road is mentioned in the transcript, one click takes you there.
What's more--it's free!
Keith Sales
familyksales@talktalk.net
6. What's New: Databases, Freepages, and Mailing Lists
6a. New User-contributed Databases at RootsWeb
http://userdb.rootsweb.com/submit/
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No New User-Contributed Databases.
6b. New/Updated Freepages by Individuals
To Request a Free Web Account: http://accounts.rootsweb.com/
-------------------------------------------------------------
Have you created a freepage at RootsWeb? Have you significantly revised
your old freepage? If so, we want to know about it. Send in the URL, the
title, and a BRIEF description, including major surnames, to Editor-
RWR@rootsweb.com.
* * *
If your genealogy- or history-related site is located somewhere
other than RootsWeb, you can add the link to RootsWeb here:
http://resources.rootsweb.com/~rootslink/addlink.html
* * *
No New/Updated Freepages by Individuals
6c. New/Updated Freepages by Counties, States, and
Genealogical/Historical Societies
To Request a Free Web Account: http://accounts.rootsweb.com/
-------------------------------------------------------------
Some of these Web pages might not be accessible yet. 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/~xxxxxx[accountname]
* * *
Note that the ~[tilde] before the Web account name is required.
For example, the Northeast Alabama Genealogical Society website is at
http://www.rootsweb.com/~alnegens/
* * *
ALHN = The American Local History Network
SUVCW = Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War
UDC = United Daughters of the Confederacy
USGW = United States GenWeb
U.S.A.
alnegens -- Northeast Alabama Genealogical Society
arlrcjs -- Little Rock Company (Arkansas) Jamestown Society
gapcgs -- Paulding County (Georgia) Genealogical Society
njihcudc -- Isaac W. K. Handy (New Jersey) UDC
ohsnodcs -- Snodgrass Clan Society (Ohio)
okkinggs -- Kingfisher County (Oklahoma) Genealogical Society
okrogwgc -- Ward Grove Cemetery near Foyil, Rogers County, Oklahoma
tnalhnlc -- Lauderdale County (Tennessee) ALHN
tnknox -- Knox County (Tennessee) Local History Network ALHN
tnuvcwfd -- Fort Donelson Camp 62 (Tennessee) SUVCW
txatasco -- Atascosa County (Texas) USGW
CANADA
canpenti -- Penticton (Canada) Family History Centre
6d. New Mailing Lists
To Request a New Mailing List: http://resources.rootsweb.com/adopt/
-------------------------------------------------------------
To find or subscribe to a mailing list, or to search archived posts to
more than 30,000 RootsWeb-hosted genealogy mailing lists, go to
http://lists.rootsweb.com/.
NEW SURNAME MAILING LISTS
BARSOTTI
CROMETTE
DOERFLINGER
FOWLKES
KRAMBECK
LANDRIN
LAPECA
MACCONNELL
MACDORLAND
MACLELLAN
MCATEAR
MCCANSE
MCCASKEY
MCCLAINT
MCCONACHAY
MCCORT
MCCOWELL
MCELRAVY
MCGAW
MCRILL
NATOLI
NEVERS
PORTELLI
RANFTL
SELLECK
STEUBEN
SYDDELL
TIDERSLEIGH
UDREA
VIDAURE
WADDY
WHITTMORE
WINEGARDEN
NEW REGIONAL MAILING LISTS
MS-HANCOCK-OBITS -- A mailing list for sharing obituaries from Hancock
County, Missouri.
INDIA-PAKISTAN-DNA -- A mailing list for communicating with others about
Indian and Pakistani sub continental DNA and for backing-up existing DNA
projects through any testing company.
NEGEN-LANCASTER -- A mailing list specifically for announcements and
genealogy queries and data pertaining to the Lancaster County, NEGenWeb
Project website.
NEW ETHNIC OR SPECIAL INTEREST MAILING LISTS
CSS -- A mailing list for genealogists creating websites using CSS
(Cascading Style Sheets).
FAMILYSEARCHLABS -- A mailing list for discussing Family Search Labs,
including finding records, requesting lookups, and other topics
regarding the Family Search Labs website.
7. You Found It
In the 1980s, while working in a bank, I found the following name:
"Useless Love."
--Thanks to VLW
* * *
My mother comes from the family line of Winter, and while researching I
discovered a non-related Winter with the Christian name of Purple.
--Thanks to Stuart and Kathy
* * *
Here are a few interesting names I have transcribed for FreeBMD:
Olive Green Coates
Milder Currey
Fanny Packer
Owen Owen Owens
Kitchen Fawcett
Young Fry
Violet Tulip
Hugh Pugh
Wealthy Case
--Thanks to Dave
* * *
The person listed beneath my great-great-grandparents in the census has
listed as his occupation, "whiskey drinker."
--Thanks to Cheryl
* * *
A little girl asked her mother, "How did the human race appear?"
The mother answered, "God made Adam and Eve and they had children and so
was all mankind made."
Two days later the girl asked her father the same question.
The father answered, "Many years ago there were monkeys from which the
human race evolved."
The confused girl returned to her mother and said, "Mom, how is it
possible that you told me the human race was created by God, and Dad
said they developed from monkeys?"
The mother answered, "Well, dear, it is very simple. I told you about my
side of the family and your father told you about his."
--Thanks to Donna
* * *
I found the name "Young Boozer" in a University of Alabama yearbook from
the mid-1930s. I recall that this young man was a member of the football
team. He apparently lived a long life, since there is a Young Boozer
listed in the Social Security Death Index from Alabama who lived from
1912-2000 who seems to be the same person.
--Thanks to Tom Cooper
* * *
In the last "Review," someone wrote in about a humorous newspaper
headline announcing the marriage of a woman from a town named "Normal"
to a man from a town by the name of "Oblong." The headline, "Normal
Woman to Marry Oblong Man" immediately brought to my mind a similar
headline from a North Central Iowa newspaper that has been a source of
chuckles for several generations:
"Fertile Man Marries Manly Woman"
You'll find the towns of Fertile and Manly just north of Mason City,
Iowa, in southern Worth County.
--Anonymous
* * *
Found a funny name or humorous tidbit in old records or an
amusing entry in census, parish, church, or other records? Send these
and other genealogy-related humor/humour items to Editor-
RWR@rootsweb.com.
8. Subscriptions, Submissions, Advertising, and 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
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If you use a spam-filtering program, in order to receive the "RootsWeb
Review" please make sure that you're allowing e-mail from
rootswebreview@email.rootsweb.com. The "RootsWeb Review" is a free
publication of The Generations Network, 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. The announcement of books and products is
provided as a community service and is not an endorsement in any way.
All mail sent to the editor is considered to be for publication--send
to: Editor-RWR@rootsweb.com and please include your full name and e-mail
address in the text.
* * *
ROOTSWEB REVIEW ADVERTISING CONTACTS.
Ad Sales Worldwide: Tami Deleeuw, tdeleeuw@tgn.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: 11 June 2008, Vol. 11, No. 16.
* * * *