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Branching Out: Taken for Granted

By Diane Haddad Premium

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Got a genealogy pet project? Every month, Honoring Our Ancestors <www.honoringourancestors.com> Webmaster Megan Smolenyak Smolenyak awards a $200 to $250 grant to a society, library or individual who serves family historians.

“There’s a need that’s not being addressed,” Smolenyak says. “A grant a month doesn’t make a colossal difference, but each restored cemetery, set of rescued records or indexing project makes a difference…. It’s also a way for me to give back to the genealogical community and to honor my ancestors.”

Past recipients include an Indiana library’s record-indexing project, the DeadFred photo-reunion Web site <www.deadfred.com> and a Los Angeles family history teacher who wanted to purchase Tony Burroughs’ Black Roots for her teenage students.

The Virginia-based researcher favors innovative projects — those that are the first of their kind, entail collaboration among groups or use new technology. “A few I have pending involve using ground-penetrating radar in cemeteries,” she says. Visit the Web site to learn more.

Have you ever jumped for joy after finding Great-grandpa Philby’s gravestone inscription on a free Web site? Thank genealogy volunteers. USCenWeb <www.usgenweb.org>, a network of free genealogy sites covering nearly all US counties, organizes transcription projects for records from census rolls to obituaries. To learn more, go to the USGenWeb site and click Information for Volunteers. JewishGen’s Yizkor Book Project <www.jewishgen.org/yizkor> also needs volunteers to acquire, translate and post online the books that European Jews wrote to memorialize communities destroyed in the Holocaust. Or contact the Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild <www.immigrantships. net> to help transcribe passenger lists.

Public libraries often have tight budgets and welcome volunteers willing to shelve books or help visitors use the collections. Marcia Ford, head of genealogy and local history services at the Kokomo-Howard County (Ind.) Public Library, says her volunteers transcribe newspaper records, clip obituaries, scan pages from school yearbooks and help patrons find genealogical materials. “We have a really active volunteer project right now to index materials such as marriage, probate and court records that are held by the clerk’s office.” Likewise, genealogical and historical societies use volunteers to care for manuscripts, give presentations and edit newsletters.

If you’re short on time, one of the most worthy deeds you can do is also one of the easiest: Give the (properly cited) family history information you’ve gathered to a library or historical society. “You can donate information to your local library, and to any other library or society in an area where your ancestors may have lived,” says Ford. Contact the recipient you have in mind, or visit the Society of American Archivists’ guide to making donations to repositories <archivists.org/publications/donating-familyrecs.asp>.
 
From the October 2004 Family Tree Magazine.
 
 

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