Saturday, November 12, 2005

Generating Fake Family Trees Automatically

Reply To Black Hat Forum: "The issue of whether or not you can make money is the top rung of a ladder that looks like this:

Can I make money on this again in to the forseeable future? "

Syndk8.co.uk Black Hat Seo Blog - Seo Blackhat News

Basics of Black Hat Seo - By G-Man, the co-creator of Syndk8: " common misunderstanding is that it's similar to white hat techniques. I.E. You create a site, coddle it, love it, add content and tweak (stuff) your keywords, hide your text, etc. ad nauseum.

Well folks, I'm here to tell you that what black hat is really about is TRAFFIC and lots of it. But how to get that traffic you ask?

Ahhh...that's where the secrets of black hat seo come out. You see, it's all about bottom fishing. Bottom fishing is going to the bottom of the barrel looking for the keywords that are only going to score 10,20, maybe 500 hits a month."


deseretnews.com | Fake family trees online may trip up genealogists: "Don Harrold, co-creator of a program called 'Fake Family,' which he sells for $75, says data it produces has 'absolutely zero chance' of matching any real person or family. He says he has offered the program to fewer than 30 self-described Internet advertisers, so its use is not widespread, and he has not made money on it."


new software

Gendatam - Home Page: "21st September 2005 The demonstration version of Gendatam Suite is currently being finalised. It is likely to include the database component (with limited record count), a small report selection and basic charting."

"Always interview brothers and sisters together in the same room. "

"Genealogy Rule #14:

Always interview brothers and sisters together in the same room - since they can't agree on anything about the family tree, it makes for great fun to see who throws the first punch."



"Always interview brothers and sisters together in the same room. " - Google Search

Genealogy Bulletin's Weekly Feature Article by Acclaimed Author and Genealogist, William Dollarhide:
One way to quickly learn what you don?t know about your ancestors is try to fill out a pedigree chart ? from memory. A pedigree is a diagram that identifies the direct ancestors for a person, that is, their parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, and so on.

Tom Jensen, Sr.1901 - 1992

Jensen Steam Engine Museum Page: "Tom Jensen's genius for designing and making steam engines was evident at an early age. In 1911 at the age of 10, he fashioned his first engine using steel cans, after becoming enamored with the horse drawn steam threshers that visited the family farm in his native Denmark.

Twelve years later, while completing schooling for his Mechanical Engineering Degree, Tom built a 175 pound monster steam engine, complete with a hand made generator, which today, we know as 'Old Number 1'. This engine was so well designed and executed that it won a Silver Medal at the 1923 Denmark State Fair.



Today, almost 80 years later 'Old # 1' still runs like new. (This extraordinary engine can be seen up above on this page.) Tom did not know at the time that this engine would prove to be the seed from which, nine years later, in Jeannette Pennsylvania, the Jensen Steam Engines of today would grow."

Like millions before him, Tom came to America in search of a better life and the promise of a career in his chosen field of Mechanical Engineering. The Great Depression quickly put a damper on this young Engineer's plans for a "real job".

I found the image in my browser cache today - too nice to pass up - so this blog got edited

11/11 Remembrance Day

Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild

passenger lists We currently have over 7000 manifests transcribed, all with free access

pain in your back?

tema er: Identiteter - hvem er jeg?

www.gentofte.dk -: "Arkivernes Dag"

Arkivernes Dag i hele Norden l�rdag d. 12. november 2005
beware pop up window with pdf file http://www.danskearkiver.dk/medlem/ad/ad_kalender_05.pdf

Sammenslutningen af Lokalarkiver

Temaet for Arkivernes Dag, 10 november, var "K�rlighed til...".
Arkivernes Dag 2001

Friday, November 11, 2005

Thomas Patrick Anson AKA Lord Lichfield

MSN News: "LONDON (Reuters) - Patrick Lichfield, whose dashing looks, royal pedigree and artistic talent made him one of the fashion world's best-known photographers, died in hospital on Friday after suffering a stroke. He was 66." ONLY

which is a pity, he was 3 years younger than me
He went to school at Harrow then moved to the army officer school of Sandhurst before joining the Grenadier Guards.

His interest in photography was sparked when his mother gave him a camera as he was sent off to boarding school at the tender age of seven.

I was lucky enough to end in the ranks - not an officer - which meant I got to know ordinary people.
my own photography started when I found and old camera lying about at 230 Widney Lane Solihull.

You can see the bad habits of some the english upper classes killing them off, drinking, and probably smoking too like many of the royals, born with a silver spoon in his mouth and access to cigarettes too.

Referat af møde i brugerrådet for Arkivalieronline

afholdt d. 28. oktober 2005 på Landsarkivet for Nørrejylland
IN PDF

the user group for http://www.arkivalieronline.dk/ only meets twice a year

the project is funded by monies fromthe Danish National Lottery and the sale of Mobile Telephone Network licenses

Improved quality control and rescanning means that no new uploads have been made for six months

Church books (parish registers ( from 1892 to 1925) are not being filmed but directly digitised

Work has also started on 1906 and 1925 census / Folketælling.

Per Agerbæk is named ( udvikler af AO Værktøjer) see also AOHackers

AO Værktøjer version 2.4.13 frigivet

Thursday, November 10, 2005

Ordbog over det Danske Sprog and Deutsches Wörterbuch

Denne hjemmeside er ikke i drift
15. november skulle Ordbog over det Danske Sprog (ODS) være at finde i en gratis online udgave. Ifølge Politiken har tyve kinesere i et år indtastet de 28 bind uden, at kunne et eneste ord dansk. ODS mangler så de fem supplementsbind for at være fuldendt. Dem er der ogå planer om at få digitaliseret.

Politiken.dk - det levende net

Online-Wörterbuch aufschlagen
and Deutsches Wörterbuch von Jacob und Wilhelm Grimm

Grimm's Dictionary

danske RSS feeds
Danmarks største RSS-feed portal
med nyhedsfeed, weblogs og RSS feeds
and guess what - this BLOG too

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

european satellite weather map

MSN Weather , UK weather neat maps

looks like a Finnish company Foreca
Foreca, a global weather service provider, has signed an extensive agreement with MSN to provide the weather channel interface to multiple MSN international markets. Through this agreement, Foreca makes available its localized content in 25 languages to MSN international sites

Founded in 1996, Foreca Ltd is the first Finnish privately owned weather service enterprise. Foreca provides professional global weather services using the latest IT-technologies. The company has now a staff of 25 experts in meteorology, programming and marketing.


european satellite weather map - Google Search
many many images Search


Tuesday, November 08, 2005

who

BBC NEWS England Kent Man who assumed baby's ID jailed

Christopher Edward Buckingham stole his name in 1983 from the birth certificate of a baby who died 20 years earlier.

Under the name Christopher Edward Buckingham, the fraudster had met his wife to be, Jody, while backpacking in Bavaria in the 1980s. They married in 1984 and had a son and a daughter, aged 16 and 19, who took his name. He later purloined a title, the Earl of Buckingham, albeit one that had been extinct since 1687.

He lived as a bogus peer for 22 years. Now he's in jail. But who is he? · 'Day of Jackal' ploy used to steal dead baby's identity· Mystery man's children left in nationality limbo Sandra Laville
Wednesday November 9, 2005The Guardian

For 22 years he deceived his wife, his children, his employers and the UK authorities.

Posing as Christopher Edward, Earl of Buckingham, he married, had a son and a daughter, obtained a British passport, national insurance number and driving licence, worked as an IT consultant and boasted of owning four hereditary titles.
But in what a judge yesterday called an "intriguing conundrum", the mystery man who called himself Lord Buckingham had stolen his identity from an eight-month-old baby who died in 1963, in a direct copy of the plotline from Frederick Forsyth's thriller, The Day of the Jackal.



Article continues




Given a last chance to reveal his true identity at Canterbury crown court yesterday, the bogus peer refused. He smiled and raised a single eyebrow as Judge Adele Williams jailed him for 21 months for admitting making a false application for a passport. Despite his guilty plea, she said he had shown no remorse for what was "full-scale identity fraud".
"Inevitably, someone doesn't assume a false identity unless there is a very good reason, or some very, very deep-seated cause," the judge said.

As he was led to the cells, police said their attempts to uncover his identity were continuing in Israel, South Africa, Germany and Switzerland, where he has lived most recently. But Detective Constable Dave Sprigg said: "I think he has got some dark secret and I don't think he will ever reveal who he is."

The court heard that "the most astonishing, complex and massive lie" began to unravel at 1.30pm on January 15, when the bogus peer was stopped at the port of Calais for a routine passport check while driving a hired car from Switzerland to the UK. The check revealed that his passport had been revoked in 2003, during a trawl which showed that it exactly matched the details of a dead child in the register of births, marriages and deaths.

Under the name Christopher Edward Buckingham, the fraudster had met his wife to be, Jody, while backpacking in Bavaria in the 1980s. They married in 1984 and had a son and a daughter, aged 16 and 19, who took his name. He later purloined a title, the Earl of Buckingham, albeit one that had been extinct since 1687.
When Kent police searched his car, documents backing up his false identity were discovered; a driving licence in the name of Christopher Edward Buckingham, a car registration document for an MGB, a cheque book and a credit card statement.
Also found was a large quantity of notepaper headed with the heraldic crest of the Duke of Buckingham and the address of his "manor house" at Little Billing, Northamptonshire - which turned out to be a three bedroomed semi.
"I see that you are a lord?" one police officer asked.
"Yes, that's right," he replied.
"Where did you get your title?" the officer asked.
"My father, when he died," he replied.

Police later established that the real Christopher Edward Buckingham was born on December 24 1962 and died aged eight months on August 28 1963 while on a caravan holiday in Bognor Regis with his mother, Audrey Wing.
The mystery man applied for the passport in the child's identity in 1983, the same year he obtained a UK national insurance number. "It is a clear and direct copy of a device used in the Day of the Jackal," said Trevor Wright, prosecuting.


He lived as a bogus peer for 22 years. Now he's in jail. But who is he? · 'Day of Jackal' ploy used to steal dead baby's identity· Mystery man's children left in nationality limbo Sandra LavilleWednesday November 9, 2005The Guardian
For 22 years he deceived his wife, his children, his employers and the UK authorities. Posing as Christopher Edward, Earl of Buckingham, he married, had a son and a daughter, obtained a British passport, national insurance number and driving licence, worked as an IT consultant and boasted of owning four hereditary titles.
But in what a judge yesterday called an "intriguing conundrum", the mystery man who called himself Lord Buckingham had stolen his identity from an eight-month-old baby who died in 1963, in a direct copy of the plotline from Frederick Forsyth's thriller, The Day of the Jackal.



Article continues




Given a last chance to reveal his true identity at Canterbury crown court yesterday, the bogus peer refused. He smiled and raised a single eyebrow as Judge Adele Williams jailed him for 21 months for admitting making a false application for a passport. Despite his guilty plea, she said he had shown no remorse for what was "full-scale identity fraud".

"Inevitably, someone doesn't assume a false identity unless there is a very good reason, or some very, very deep-seated cause," the judge said.

As he was led to the cells, police said their attempts to uncover his identity were continuing in Israel, South Africa, Germany and Switzerland, where he has lived most recently. But Detective Constable Dave Sprigg said: "I think he has got some dark secret and I don't think he will ever reveal who he is."
The court heard that "the most astonishing, complex and massive lie" began to unravel at 1.30pm on January 15, when the bogus peer was stopped at the port of Calais for a routine passport check while driving a hired car from Switzerland to the UK. The check revealed that his passport had been revoked in 2003, during a trawl which showed that it exactly matched the details of a dead child in the register of births, marriages and deaths.
Under the name Christopher Edward Buckingham, the fraudster had met his wife to be, Jody, while backpacking in Bavaria in the 1980s. They married in 1984 and had a son and a daughter, aged 16 and 19, who took his name. He later purloined a title, the Earl of Buckingham, albeit one that had been extinct since 1687.

When Kent police searched his car, documents backing up his false identity were discovered; a driving licence in the name of Christopher Edward Buckingham, a car registration document for an MGB, a cheque book and a credit card statement.

Also found was a large quantity of notepaper headed with the heraldic crest of the Duke of Buckingham and the address of his "manor house" at Little Billing, Northamptonshire - which turned out to be a three bedroomed semi.
"I see that you are a lord?" one police officer asked.
"Yes, that's right," he replied.
"Where did you get your title?" the officer asked.
"My father, when he died," he replied.

Police later established that the real Christopher Edward Buckingham was born on December 24 1962 and died aged eight months on August 28 1963 while on a caravan holiday in Bognor Regis with his mother, Audrey Wing.

The mystery man applied for the passport in the child's identity in 1983, the same year he obtained a UK national insurance number. "It is a clear and direct copy of a device used in the Day of the Jackal," said Trevor Wright, prosecuting.
When interviewed the fraudster was asked for his parents' dates of birth. "Oh gosh", he replied, before claiming that his mother was born in 1952. If true, it would have made her 10 when he was born. Although he claimed he held four manorial titles, he could not remember all their names, but DC Sprigg said the alarm bells really started ringing when he could not tell him the schools he attended. "I have never met anyone who can't remember what school they went to," DC Sprigg said.

The baby's mother, Mrs Wing, only discovered in April this year that her child's identity had been stolen. "I just want to ask him why he did it," she said yesterday. "What he has done has brought everything back to me."
The consequences for Buckingham's own children, who cannot be named, will not end with his prison sentence. The prosecutor said the UK authorities had ordered their British passports to be revoked with immediate effect because they were obtained under a false name.
In a statement read to the court, Buckingham's Canadian-born ex-wife, Jody, who lives in Northants with their children, said: "They [my children] are in a state of limbo; they are not sure who they are."
Speaking earlier, she said her former husband claimed he was educated at Harrow and Cambridge and his parents were diplomats. "He said they died in an air crash in Egypt in 1982. Early on in the relationship he was fine, we were bringing up two children and there was not much money. Toward the end he was incredibly controlling. But I don't think he was evil, it seems he was a Walter Mitty."

Buckingham intends to return to Zurich when he is released, where he claims documents in a safety deposit box will prove his innocence. But the judge said yesterday that with no valid documents and no identity he will be unable to leave the UK. with my thanks to The Guardian

Norwegian churchbooks on line

Digitalarkivet - Skannede kirkeb�ker

This is a new service from The Digital Archives, Norway, offering you browsing and presentation of digitised parish registers (as images). It is an extension of the already established service from 1998 that offers you searchable databases of transcribed sources.

the oldest is Andebu in Vestfold from 1623

Aktuelt fra Arkivverket

danish parish history online

Vort sogns historie - Indholdsfortegnelse:

I årene 1950-58 (ca.) blev udgivet en serie bøger under titlen "Vort Sogns Historie". Med hovedvæg-ten på sognets gårde og husmandssteder blev hvert sogn beskrevet. I bøgerne er der billeder af gårdene og husmandsstederne samt en beskrivelse af det enkelte steds avl og besætning. Ikke alle er dog med i de enkelte sogne, idet det kostede penge at komme med i bøgerne. (Man skulle subskribere.)

Mest interessant set med slægtsforskerøjne er nok opremsningen af ejerfamiliernes medlemmer og i medtagelsen af centrale personoplysninger (føde-sted, alder o.l.). Det blev også oplyst, af hvem de havde overtaget stedet, og hvornår.

Værket blev aldrig færdigudgivet, og det præges af mange huller. Det dækker endvidere kun dele af Jylland.


thanks to Henning H. Jacobsen Risskov, Danmark

ASK THE LOCALS

Another thought on cemeteries -- on our first family research trip after we became "hooked." We had difficulty locating ancestral graves in a very nice, fairly large cemetery in a small northeast town. We struggled for quite a while using one of our now standard research aids, binoculars (so we could scan a number of rows at once).

We saw an older gentleman in one section, and my husband engaged him in conversation, telling him the family for whom we were searching. Lo and behold, he was able to direct us to another cemetery on a farm out of town. The local historical society did not even know that this cemetery existed.

After asking permission to go to the cemetery, we found it was a super find, filled with folks who had previously been only names and dates to us. And there on the rusted gate, was a plaque with the name of one of our now favorite ancestors, Col. Asa Stanton.

Moral of the story: Don't give up and ask, ask, ask!

Louise Hawley

WWI DRAFT CARDS OPEN DOORS
In reading about your WWI draft cards, I recalled that my grandmother's brother's information was sketchy at best, until I opened up a huge door by looking up his WWI draft card. I hadn't thought at all about looking it up, until I realized that he was probably of draft age during that war. I had only an idea that he may have lived in North Tonawanda NY, from a letter that I had.

I checked his name in the WWI draft cards, and lo and behold, there he was! And what a wealth of information I got from one little card! I found out his definite birth date, his wife's name and address (I wasn't even sure he ever married), the name of the company he worked for, and what his position was (Master of Steam Ships on the Great Lakes, for O. W. Blodgett), and the fact that, even though he lived in Tonawanda NY, he registered in Duluth, Minnesota. Because of this information, I started querying on line, and was put in touch with a man who has a site started that is about Great Lakes ships and their personnel. He found even more about my ancestor, Henry Wilson Spaulding. And because of the kindnesses of others online, I now know that he died suddenly (I still don't know of what) in Menominee, Michigan in 1926, and is buried in Elm Lawn cemetery in Tonawanda.

Myra Herron
from ANCESTRY QUICK TIP JAMBOREE
8 November 2005

Monday, November 07, 2005

Albert Edward Collingridge (1875-1945)

Collingridge

well made web page

RootsWeb: Genealogy Mailing Lists

A complete indexs to RootsWeb's
29,512 genealogy mailing lists!

[SoG-NEWS] Events & News Around the Country

Society of Genealogists Homepage

RootsWeb: Genealogy Mailing Lists: SOG-NEWSA read-only mailing list for anyone interested in the activities of the Society of Genealogists (of Great Britain), in particular non-members of the Society

RootsWeb: SOG-NEWS-L Archives

The Society regularly gets posters and flyers a volunteer has kindly
summarised these for members' interests.

Events around the country


Greater Manchester County Record Office
Discovery Day
Date: Thursday 17th November 2005 10 am to 4 pm

Venue: 56 Marshall Street, New Cross, Manchester M4 5FU
Free admission.
Tours of the Office.
Talks - "Beginning your family tree",
"Beginnings of Healthcare from leeches to jabs",
"Infancy to Adulthood- Growing up in the Archives",
"Caring for your own archives - Conservation Advice"
Numbers will be limited; bookings on the day.
See: www.gmcro.co.uk for more details

============

Suffolk Local History Council
Annual General Meeeting
Date: Saturday 19th November at 2.30 pm

Venue: Mendlesham Community Centre, Station Road, Mendlesham
More information see www.slhc.org.uk or admin@slhc.org.uk

Also "Rags and Bones - A Social History of a working class community in
19th century Ipswich" by Frank Grace. Paperback, 300 pages with 60
illustrations to be published by Unicorn Press on 30 November 2005. Special
pre-publication subscription offer before 30th November copies can be
ordered at £15 each plus £4 p and p from Frank Grace 5 Oban Street,
Ipswich, Suffolk IP1 3PG or pub;lisher's email unicornpress@btinternet.com

============

BBC Hereford and Worcester
Local & Family History Fair - To be featured on BBC Hereford & Worcester
Date: Saturday 15th April 2006 10am - 4pm

Venue: Hereford Racecourse, Roman Road, Hereford.
Admission Free
More information www.rootsweb.com/-ukhfhs or www.bbc.co.uk/hereford

============

Dugdale and his Warwickshire
A weekend conference organised by the Dugdale Society with the support of
the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
Date: Saturday and Sunday 16/17 September 2006

Venue: Shakespeare Centre, Henley Street, Stratford upon Avon
Sir William Dugdale (1605-1686) was born and bred in Warwickshire, and made
a career on the national stage as a herald, and as a historian. He
conceived the idea of writing a history of Warwickshire when he was in his
twenties, and was helped in this project by a network of antiquarian gentry
in the county, such as Sir Simon Archer. The Antiquities of Warwickshire
was published in 1656, and has been used ever since as a scholarly work of
reference.

This weekend conference celebrates the 350th anniversary of the publication
of the Antiquities. Eleven speakers will analyse Dugdale's achievement;
examine the man against the background of his times; and explore the
society and culture of Warwickshire during his lifetime.
The programme on each day will run from 9.30 am to 5.00 pm with breaks for
coffee, lunch and tea. A reception, sponsored by Warwickshire County
Council, will also be held at Hall's Croft on the Saturday evening from
5.45 to 7.00 pm.
Fee: £50 per person; Concessions £47.50; Society members £45


The Dugdale Society was founded in association with the Shakespeare
Birthplace Trust in 1920 with the objects of publishing original documents
relating to the history of the County of Warwick, fostering interest in
historical records and their preservation and generally encouraging the
study of local history. The Society publishes volumes of original documents
relating to the County of Warwick, together with Occasional Papers based on
records relating to Warwickshire and such other record publications as may
be decided upon by the Council from time to time.
Membership is open to any person, library, museum, society or corporate
body interested in promoting the objects of the Society.

Contact: Mrs Cathy Millwood,
The Dugdale Society, Henley St, Stratford-upon-Avon CV37 6QW

============

"The Warning Carriers" a special issue of the Journal of the Silver Society
A notebook, dating from about 1730, held in the archives of The Goldsmiths'
Company for over 250 years but only now the subject of research, contains
tantalising information about these messengers, known as Warning Carriers,
and the work they undertook. Judy Jowett's investigations into this
document, which list some of the most famous craftsmen of the period (and
many more previously unknown to historians), have brought to light a
remarkable system of communication that was effective and efficient. This
publication will fascinate all those who are interested in the life of
eighteenth-century London and its luxury trades.

In eighteenth-century London, messengers from The Goldsmiths' Company
crisscrossed the city bringing urgent news of the latest thefts and other
crimes to the capital's goldsmiths, bankers, watchmakers, pawnbrokers and
jewellers. Introductory text explains the background to the warning system,
maps plot the routes of the messengers to nearly 550 addresses, and
contemporary documents have been searched for details of each business.
Together these bring to life the role of the Warning Carriers and reveal
how the various trades clustered in different parts of London.

Judy Jowett is a member of the Silver Society. This is the first major
research project carried out under the aegis of the Society. It is
published as a special issue of the Society's journal.

144 pages, 65 illustrations and 42 pages of maps in colour £12 plus £3
postage & packing

For more information contact: The Silver Society, Box 246 2 Landsdowne Row,
London W1J 6HL or email: secretary@thesilversociety.org

============

Lending Services at the Mitchell Library

>From summer 2005 the Mitchell will be introducing a lending facility.
Customers will be able to select materials from across the collections.
>From family history to art history, computing science to domestic science,
travel guides to travelogues there is something for everyone. This new
service will complement the existing lending stock in the Scottish
Literature and music collections.
Either come to the library or identify the book you want from the catalogue
and request it from your local library. The book will then be delivered to
the library most convenient for you.
Books on loan from the Mitchell can be found on the on-line catalogue:
www.libcat.glasgow.gov.uk


============

Please contact the addresses given rather than the Society.

You may also find it useful to occasionally visit GENEVA -
http://geneva.weald.org.uk
GENEVA is a joint GENUKI/FFHS list of GENealogical EVents and Activities
which often has dates and venues stretching twelve months (or more) ahead
- SoG events included!

http://www.sog.org.uk
On-line retail shopping? Use http://www.buy.at/genealogists our affiliate
shop and SoG gains funds at no cost to you.

RootsWeb: SOG-NEWS-L Archives

A brief history of the city of New York

Ancestry.com - subscribers

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
Todd, Charles Burr. New York:
American Book Co., 1899. 1990.

Part of the Family and Local Histories Collection, this online book is browsable or searchable and includes an index.

Table of Contents:
I. Introductory
II. The Dutch Dynasty--Peter Minuit
III. Wouter Van Twiller
IV. Wilhelm Kieft
V. Petrus Stuyvesant
VI. Dutch Manners and Customs
VII. The English Colonial Period
VIII. The English Colonial Period--Leisler's Revolt
IX. The Approach of the Revolution
X. The People Under British Rule
XI. Throwing off the British Yoke
XII. The Battle of Long Island
XIII. The Battle of Harlem Heights
XIV. New York in the Grasp of the Invader
XV. New York the Capital City
XVI. The Growth of Parties
XVII. Her Rise to Commercial Power
XVIII. The Erie Canal
XIX. The Railroad
XX. Typical New York Merchants
XXI. Ships and Sailors
XXII. New York in the Civil War
XXIII. An Old Man's Recollections of New York.
XXIV. A Hundred Years of Progress
XXV. Greater New York
XXVI. Brooklyn
XXVII. The Bronx
Index

Tracing Mormon Pioneers-Verify the Name Against a Roster

Tracing Mormon Pioneers-Verify the Name Against a Roster: "Tracing Mormon Pioneers
Resources for Tracing Pioneers

To see these books or films you need to visit a LDS Family History Center.

All of these are available at the main library in Salt Lake City, but you can order some of the films and/or fiche.

For a larger selection of reference books including many on handcart companies see the Family History Catalog under Utah/Emigration and Immigration. Another great place to look is under your ancestor's native land and Emigration and Immigration e.g. Denmark, Emigration and Immigration or Norway, Emigration and Immigration. "

Sunday, November 06, 2005

14 days


My sunday visit, this was
taken in daylight and
you can see Stine has a much much better colour

She now weighs 3550 grams.
Her birth weight was 3380 grams, after dipping to 3155 grams as babies do.



And after a good feed, Stine is sleeping but judging by her expression, in a while a little wind is still to come up.


before the nurse gave her food by tube through her nose,
Stine 2 days old was both very sleepy or lethargic and very dark if not actually yellow with jaundice.

too late and too expensive

Clearwire | WiMAXX dit bredb�nd supplying internet services over the copper cables of the electricity supply in Denmark