source: Carolina Crossroads |
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source: Carolina Crossroads |
April 25 is DNA Day. It is a great day to take advantage of discounted kits from all the vendors and the free online learning event offered by the FamilySearch Library. Here are details and Zoom registration link. Note: Times listed are Mountain Time. All times are 2 hours later in Eastern time.
Apr 25, 2023 09:00 AM in Mountain Time (US and Canada)
Register Here
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WCGS member, Tonya Lanier has requested assistance in locating family members that she has lost touch with. If you have any information that you can share or recognize the folks in the photo, please reach out to her directly. Thank you in advance.
From Tonya -
I am looking
for members of my family. This photo was
taken in the mid 1970’s. There is a lady
named Florence and her husband J.T.
Surnames include Beckwith,
Edwards, Green or Lanier. There was a
set of twins, a girl and a boy, named Antione
and Antionette. They lived in the
Raleigh/Apex area.
Please
contact Tonya Lanier, sonshiners61@gmail.com - 336-470-1100. Thank you!
Ella Josephine Baker, founder of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee was an alumna and former valedictorian (1927) of Shaw University. Baker is regarded as the mother of the civil rights movement. In addition to the SNCC, she co founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) with Martin Luther King,Jr. After college she moved to Harlem in New York. At that time Harlem was the hub of the black intellectual and creative thinking phenomenon known as the Harlem Renaissance.
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To learn more about the "unsung hero" Ella Josephine Baker, watch the video, Ella Josephine Baker - African American Trailblazers
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I received an email from NGS this week:
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view full email here |
This year’s conference will run from 31 May through 3 June and include
Don’t Miss Out on Your Early Bird Discount! Register by 31 March 2023.
Join us in Richmond or Sign up for Online at Home!
Let's salute Elizabeth Reid Murray, if not the Mother of Wake County (Margaret Wake Tryon), most definitely the Author of Wake County. Murray was a prolific writer and contributor to the historic writings of Wake and North Carolina at large. Her obituary provides an extensive list of her writings and awards.
From the obituary:
"Her major published works are WAKE: Capital County of NC, vol. 1 (1983); WAKE: Capital County of NC, vol. 2 (2008), with co-author K. Todd Johnson; and From Raleigh’s Past (1965).
Other published works include: editor and compiler, North Carolina’s Older Population: Opportunities and Challenges (1960); contributor, Windows of the Way (1964);
editor, Wake County Historical Society newsletter, 1965-1969;
editor/photographer, Wake County history filmstrip; guest editor, “Wake County Bicentennial” edition, Raleigh Magazine (1971);
contributor to a history of the Raleigh Fire Department; contributor, Dictionary of North Carolina Biography (1979-1996); and contributor, Encyclopedia of North Carolina (2006).
Awards: American Association State and Local History for From Raleigh’s Past (1965); first Meredith College Distinguished Alumna award (1970); W.P. Peace Award for best book on NC history (1983); Community Service Award, Raleigh Board of Realtors (1983); Wake County Phi Beta Kappa Award (1985); Silver Bowl Award, NC Museum of Art (1987); President’s Cup, Wake County Historical Society (1994); Anthemion Award, Capital Area Preservation, Inc. (1994)."
As genealogists in Wake County, we owe her a huge debt for her Wake : Capital County of North Carolina. All the Wake history you could wish to consume in two handy volumes. Check out Volume 1 at Digital NC. Volume 2, cowritten with Todd Johnson is available at the Olivia Raney Local History Library which houses the Elizabeth Reid Murray Research Collection.
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Update on McCullers Cemetery:
Cemetery Clean Up and Planning session For the Patriot Mathew McCullers Cemetery is scheduled Saturday, March 18, from 1-5:30pm. Optional Meet for lunch at Smithfield Chicken ‘N BBQ near the McCullers Crossroad by 11:30am
Cemetery located on Donny Brook Road across 401 South/Fayetteville Road from the South Campus of Wake Tech.
This is a Revolutionary War Soldier's grave site in Wake County. If you are interested in attending, please contact Holt Anderson directly. His contact info is in bold below. This is good work being done to save this and an ajoining slave cemetery.
Please help if you are able.
Original post::
Holt Anderson, Joel McCullers Hobby, and Tommy Broadwell
(all McCullers descendants) are in the early stages of organizing a cleanup
project of the McCullers
Family Cemetery in southern Wake County. They seek other
descendants and interested parties to assist in planning and executing the
effort to clear the site located at Donny Brook Rd and US 401 south of Raleigh.
The site is the burial place of documented Revolutionary War soldier, Captain Matthew McCullers
and includes a total of 19 graves. An associated slave cemetery is located
nearby.
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Source |
Matthew Jones McCullers (1759-1825) married Sarah Lane (1763-1843). McCullers served in the Revolutionary War and attained the rank of Captain. He fought in the Battle of Moore’s Creek (NC), Battle of Brier Creek (Ga), Siege of Charleston and Battle of Lindley’s Mill (NC).
View Captain McCullers Rev. War Pension file here - http://revwarapps.org/w7415.pdf
View the Cemetery Find a Grave records here - https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2242193/mccullers-cemetery
Known associated surnames include Adkins, Anderson, Banks,
Heflin, Perkinson, Johnson, Lane, Nance, McCullough, and Rand.
If you are interested in helping plan and execute this cleanup project, please
contact Holt Anderson. Please share this information with anyone you think may
be interested and willing to participate.
Holt
Anderson
17 Chancery Place
Durham, NC 27707-5001
919-740-8697 (Mobile)
919-489-9310 (Home)
holta@mindspring.com
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See NCPedia for the full account of Dorothea Dix, name sake of Wake County's first hospital for the care of the mentally ill.
"Interest in the treatment of mental illness had been expressed in North Carolina in 1825 and 1838 but with no results. Several governors suggested care of the mentally ill to the General Assembly as a legislative priority, but no bill was passed. Then in the autumn of 1848 the champion of the cause of treatment of the mentally ill made North Carolina the focus of her efforts. Dorothea Lynde Dix was a New Englander born in 1802. Shocked by what she saw of the treatment of mentally ill women in Boston in 1841 she became a determined campaigner for reform and was instrumental in improving care for the mentally ill in state after state.
In North Carolina Dix followed her established pattern of gathering information about local conditions which she then incorporated into a "memorial" for the General Assembly. Warned that the Assembly, almost equally divided between Democrats and Whigs, would shy from any legislation which involved spending substantial amounts of money, Dix nevertheless won the support of several important Democrats led by Representative John W. Ellis who presented her memorial to the Assembly and maneuvered it through a select committee to the floor of the House of Commons. There, however, in spite of appeals to state pride and humanitarian feeling, the bill failed. Dix had been staying in the Mansion House Hotel in Raleigh during the legislative debate. There she went to the aid of a fellow guest, Mrs. James Dobbins, and nursed her through her final illness. Mrs. Dobbins's husband was a leading Democrat in the House of Commons, and her dying request of him was to support Dix's bill. James Dobbins returned to the House and made an impassioned speech calling for the reconsideration of the bill. The legislation passed the reconsideration vote and on the 29th day of January, 1849, passed its third and final reading and became law."
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The Spring 2023 Issue (Vol.6 Issue 3) of our award-winning newsletter, Wake Genealogy Watch, is now available online for reading or download. You can download the latest newsletter through this link – Wake Genealogy Watch, Spring 2023
Features in this issue include:
Click this newsletter page link to view this and all past newsletter content.
We welcome your feedback, input, and submissions for inclusions in future editions. Please address all concerns to newsletter@wakecogen.org.
Visit the WCGS Blog for more events, late breaking news, tutorials, updates, and other special posts.
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Anna "Annie" Julia Cooper nee Haywood was born enslaved in Raleigh, North Carolina, in 1858. From such humble beginnings she rose to accomplished heights too numerous to account for in a simple blog post. Here are the highlights of her career.
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In 1868, when Cooper was nine years old, she received a scholarship and began her education at the newly opened Saint Augustine's Normal School and Collegiate Institute in Raleigh eschewing the educational track reserved for women, Cooper fought for her right to take courses reserved for men, by demonstrating her scholastic ability.
Upon graduation, she became an instructor at Saint Augustine in 1883. She went on to attend the college level program (male student track again) and graduate from in 1884 Oberlin College in Ohio. Cooper taught there before moving to Washington DC to teach latin and later become principle of the M Street High School.
Cooper advocated for the classical education model for blacks as championed by WEB Du Bois rather than the vocational program promoted by Booker T Washington.
She is the author of A Voice from the South: By a Black Woman of the South, a well known and respected speaker. This and more of her writings are featured in a recent book titled, The Portable Anna Julia Cooper. Read a review about this book here.
Cooper had a long and illustrious career as an educator, author, public speaker and early black feminist. She though she died in 1964 in Washington, her memorial was held at Saint Augustine's chapel and she is buried nearby at Raleigh City Cemetery. A historical marker honors her and marks the way at the at the intersection of North East Street and East Edenton Street.
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source |
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- AI (artificial intelligence) is popping up often as vendors are discovering new ways to harness its power in the field of genealogy.
- Story telling and story automation (fueled by AI) are the activity of the year.
- DNA tools and methodology continue to be a steady interest and driver of presentations at this yearly genealogy and tech convention.
Here are some highlights regarding these three topics with links to guide you:
AI is pervasive in the development of new tools. The Innovation and Tech Forum featured several examples from small start ups to big players like FamilySearch.
At 20 minutes in, Andy Gold of FamilySearch introduced a new tree technology - Computer Generated Trees. These trees are built by location (world wide) using records specific to the area. They are processed in the cloud using machine learning, AI and clustering. These trees focus family structures by creating a scaffolding to store the data to process complex connections quickly. The CGTs are time savers and connection facilitators!
Storied.com (at 27 min)- an online genealogy tree builder with an emphasis on bringing trees to life with vibrant, collaborative stories, introduced a new tool called Story Assist that uses an AI interface to build story drafts that you can edit and craft to your own voice.
KinSame.org (at 36 min) - has used AI to develop technology for identifying family relationships from images for a variety of applications. Could this be the end of all those boxes and albums of unidentified family photos? Can't wait to see if this holds up.
Ericsson (just before 46 min) introduces game changing tech...literally... as they pioneer AI generated virtual experiences created for use in the family history/genealogy market. Don a set of virtual reality goggles and have a visit with your great grandparents or that Viking ancestor from the distant past!
In addition to the previously mentioned Storied.com, you will want to explore these new offerings.
Ancestry.com introduced Storymaker Studio just as RootsTech was getting started last week. Crista Cowan tells a great story from her family and walks us through the process of building a story with the new tool. Tool details start at about 52 minutes, but, really, watch all of Crista's Anatomy of a Story video. More information on building stories can be found on the website.
FamilySearch.org is using AI to create stories, too. Craig Miller illustrates how FS is using AI to create stories using records to enhance indivitual profiles in the FamilySearch 2023 video (starts at 16 min in). This new computer generated story panel can be seen by checking any profile and opening the "about" tab. Here is an example of a FamilySearch AI generated story on the page of my great grandfather, William G. Tarleton. (I find the sentence structure kind of clunky. I hope that improves as the tool evolves.)
New DNA Tools
My Heritage - Color Coding for Family Trees
My Heritage - cM Explainer for finer accuracy in relationship prediction for DNA matches
Ancestry.com - watch Expanding Your Family Tree with SideView and More AncestryDNA Innovations
Diahan Southard - (never miss a Diahan Southard class when it is offered!)
Should I take a DNA test elsewhere? Or at all?
Jonny Perl
How third-party DNA tools can help with your family history research
All the DNA topics for 2023
Not mentioned here are the huge number of traditional genealogy topics for everyone to looking to solve any research problem you can name. View the entire searchable on demand list here.
Be sure to catch this session on research methodology and workflow from Janet Hovorka, Diahan Southard, and Crista Cowan. They are a heavy hitter tag team. I guarantee you will learn a few new tricks.
Enjoy! I hope you find something that helps your research efforts.
Don't try to take in all this wonderful content at once. As you can see they keep a webinar library and much of the webinars are available for a year or more. So much to learn for free! I hope you will take advantage of all this goodness that RootsTech shares with us.
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March is Womens' History Month!
Let's start it off by recognizing the woman of Wake - Margaret Wake Tryon. She may or may not have been the "Mother of Wake County", but our county was certainly named for her in 1770, by none other than Joel Lane, according to Wikipedia.
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Wake was described as an "accomplished" and "learned" woman who had a talent for playing the organ and spinet.[3] She was known to avoid women's company and preferred to engage in men's conversation, particularly on the topics of government and military fortifications, which was considered unconventional at the time.[3] She was also interested in military strategy and religion, and kept a large library at Tryon Palace.[12] Wake reportedly insisted on being addressed as Your Excellency, her husband's form of address.[3]
You may enjoy this story about Margaret at the Norwich Castle Blog.
Hats off to Margaret! Huzzah!
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