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  • 17 Nov 2020 8:24 PM | Anonymous

    In many shopping malls across America, you will see pushcart vendors selling reproductions of coats of arms, claiming to be the "proud history and heritage of your family name" or similar words. These merchants sell coats of arms on parchment paper, suitable for framing. They also may sell coats of arms on t-shirts, sweatshirts, golf jerseys, stationery, coffee mugs or even key chains.

    Similar "businesses" exist on the Web. A number of Web sites proclaim that they can sell you "authentic" copies of your family’s coat of arms. One Web site says, "What is your Name? What was it's origin? Was it taken from the name of a village? Was it taken from the Bible? A clan name? An Occupation? An ancient landmark? Who were your historical namesakes who bore your fine family name in the homeland of your ancestors?" Sometimes they also claim to sell "gifts of lasting heritage."

    I have one thing to say to these con artists: "Balderdash!"

    Actually, that’s not my first choice of response, but, after all, this is a family newsletter.

    The study of coats of arms is called heraldry. Those who control the issuance of arms are the heralds. Typically, each country in Western Europe as well as in England, Scotland, and Ireland has an office of the heralds, sometimes called the Kings of Arms. The heralds are empowered to decide who is authorized to display a certain coat of arms. If you do not have authorization from the heralds, you are not authorized to display any coat of arms. That authorization must be on paper, signed, and made out to you personally, not to your entire family and never to everyone of a certain surname.

    Most Americans seem ignorant of one very basic fact: in Western Europe and in the British Isles, there is no such thing as a "family coat of arms." A coat of arms is issued to one person, not to a family. After that person is deceased, his eldest heir may apply for the same coat of arms. Again, when he dies, his eldest heir may apply. The rules for determining who is eligible to display a coat of arms are very similar to the rules for becoming King or Queen of England. However, even the proper heir cannot display the coat of arms until he or she has received authorization (been confirmed) by the heralds. At any one time, only one person may rightfully display a coat of arms.

    According to the American College of Heraldry, "While Americans are usually fascinated by the beauty of heraldry, they are rarely familiar with its meaning and traditions and, therefore, often misunderstand and even abuse this rich cultural heritage. They seldom understand that a coat of arms is usually granted, certified, registered or otherwise recognized as belonging to one individual alone, and that only his direct descendants with proven lineage can be recognized as eligible to inherit the arms. Exceptions to this rule are rare."

    The American College of Heraldry also says, " It is highly inappropriate for one to locate the arms of another person sharing the same surname, and to simply adopt and use these arms as one's own." My interpretation of this is that, if you are displaying an unauthorized coat of arms, you are impersonating someone else.

    You can read more on the American College of Heraldry web site at http://www.americancollegeofheraldry.org/body.html.

    The College of Arms in England (the heralds for English, Welsh, Northern Irish, and Commonwealth families) says (at http://www.college-of-arms.gov.uk/resources/faqs), "There is no such thing as a 'coat of arms for a surname'. Many people of the same surname will often be entitled to completely different coats of arms, and many of that surname will be entitled to no coat of arms. Coats of arms belong to individuals. For any person to have a right to a coat of arms they must either have had it granted to them or be descended in the legitimate male line from a person to whom arms were granted or confirmed in the past.

    Despite these warnings, many vendors are making money by preying on Americans’ ignorance of the topic. The pushcarts you see in shopping malls typically are franchise operations. One pushcart owner told me that he paid $6,000 for a "franchise" to sell this stuff. The so-called franchise did not include a protected territory; another franchisee was free to set up business in the same area. For the $6,000 investment, the franchisee receives a computer with a database containing thousands of surnames and so-called "family coats of arms," a high-quality printer, a supply of parchment paper (actually not parchment but simply paper that has been treated to look like parchment), and a supply of coffee cups, key chains and other paraphernalia. These franchisees reportedly receive no training in the study of heraldry. The ones I have talked to didn’t recognize the term "College of Arms."

    The Web sites aren’t much better. The ones I have looked at seem to have carefully-worded claims. Instead of saying, "your family’s coat of arms," they will say something like "your historical namesakes." Okay, "namesakes" doesn’t mean "ancestors," but it still will be misleading to many people. When a Web site proclaims, "your historical namesakes," most people will think that means "my family." However, if argued in court, the wording on the Web site would probably be considered correct. In short, I doubt if these companies will be shut down for misrepresenting their wares as they are very careful in their choice of words.

    The next time someone offers a copy of your "family’s coat of arms," ask them for the documentation. They won’t have any. If a friend of yours is displaying a coat of arms on his stationery or on his fireplace mantel, I suggest you simply walk away smiling. There’s no sense in upsetting a good friendship. But don’t be as gullible as your friend. And please, please do not display your "family’s coat of arms" on your genealogy Web site unless you have been confirmed by the heralds, Okay?

    If you would like to learn more about the serious study of heraldry and any rights you might have to display coats of arms, there are a number of Web sites devoted to the truth. Here is a short list of some of the more reputable ones:

    The Augustan Society at: http://www.augustansociety.org

    The American College of Heraldry at: http://www.americancollegeofheraldry.org/

    The Baronage Press at: http://www.baronage.co.uk/

    British Heraldry: http://www.heraldica.org/topics/britain/ and especially the article on "Regulation of Heraldry in England" at http://www.heraldica.org/topics/britain/england.htm

    The College of Arms (the official repository of the coats of arms and pedigrees of English, Welsh, Northern Irish and Commonwealth families and their descendants) at: http://www.college-of-arms.gov.uk/

    None of the above sell printouts on parchment paper, t-shirts or key chains. Some of them do sell books and magazines devoted to the study of heraldry, however.

    Anyone who claims to sell "your family coat of arms" is a rip-off.

  • 17 Nov 2020 10:20 AM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by FamilySearch:

    FamilySearch added millions of Massachusetts Vital and Town Records 1626–2001, Ohio Grave Registrations (for soldiers) 1810–1955,  Iowa County Deaths 1880–1992, plus indexes for Rhode Island births / deaths from 1639–1900, while expanding United States collections for CA, CT, IA, MD, MS, NC, OH, TX, VA, and WA. Country collections added 2.3M records for Canada, England, FijiFinland, Germany, Guatemala, Mexico, Norway, Peru, and the UK. Discover your family connections for free at FamilySearch.org.

    Search these new records and images by clicking on the collection links below, or go to FamilySearch to search over 8 billion free names and record images.

    The full list of all the newly-added digital records is very long, too long to fit here. However, you can see the list of this week's updates at: https://media.familysearch.org/new-free-historical-records-on-familysearch-week-of-16-november-2020/.

  • 16 Nov 2020 11:27 AM | Anonymous

    Just in time for the holidays, MyHeritage has just announced the launch of the new MyHeritage gift memberships.

    You can now give someone special the MyHeritage Complete plan, the company's best plan for family history research. To celebrate the launch, gift memberships are now available with a 50% introductory discount.

    With many people spending more time at home and looking for meaningful activities to enjoy, the MyHeritage gift membership makes the perfect holiday gift and is sure to delight a dear family member or close friend.

    The gift membership provides access to all features and all 12.7 billion historical records on MyHeritage.

    What’s included?
    You can choose to give either a 1-year or 6-month gift membership. Gift memberships are one-time and do not renew.

    The gift membership includes the following benefits of the Complete plan:

    • Unlimited family tree size and unlimited photo storage
    • Access to MyHeritage’s 12.7 billion historical records
    • Automatic Record Matches for the family tree
    • Automatic Smart Matches™ to millions of family trees
    • Instant Discoveries™ consisting of Person Discoveries and Photo Discoveries
    • Tree Consistency Checker that identifies mistakes and inconsistencies in the family tree
    • Unlimited use of MyHeritage In Color™ and the MyHeritage Photo Enhancer


    You can learn a lot more in an article in the MyHeritage Blog at: https://blog.myheritage.com/2020/11/introducing-the-myheritage-gift-membership/ as well as in the video below:

  • 16 Nov 2020 11:16 AM | Anonymous

    US vice president-elect Kamala Harris’ ancestry is 50% from India, a fact that is well-known in the ISA. However, less well known is the possibility that president-elect has relatives in the same country.

    CAUTION: The relationship is not proven. It should be considered to be a POSSIBILITY, not a proven fact.

    A plaque commemorating 19th-century British ship captain Christopher Biden has become a popular selfie spot in the eastern city of Chennai since the US election, and a Biden family in western India says that it has become “exhausted” by calls since their namesake staked his claim to the White House.

    Joe Biden has well-documented Irish ancestry (see my earlier article at https://eogn.com/page-18080/9352626), but he also spoke of possible Indian connections on a trip to Mumbai in 2013 when he was vice president. Joe Biden said in a speech that he had received a letter from an Indian Biden after becoming a US senator in 1972, suggesting that they could be related.

    According to the Reverend J. George Stephen, the Bishop of Madras, "We’ve come to know the records of two Bidens — William Biden and Christopher Biden — who were brothers and became captains of the East India Co on merchant ships in the 19th century.”

    Stephen said that “while William Biden died at an early age, Christopher Biden went on to captain several ships and eventually settled down in Madras,” which is now known as Chennai.

    If Joe Biden does have an Indian ancestor, Christopher is considered the most likely candidate, said experts who have studied family records.

    There are also Bidens in Mumbai and Nagpur in Maharashtra state who could be descendants of Christopher Biden, one of eight children of a John Biden who could be the common link.

    You can learn more in a syndicated article from the AFP/India news agency at https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2020/11/15/2003746960.

  • 16 Nov 2020 11:15 AM | Anonymous
    The following announcement was written by Vivid-Pix:

    Vivid-Pix “Gathering Traditions” Shows How to Connect While Distant 

    Create Holiday & Reunion Time Capsules for Genealogy & Reminiscence

    Vivid-Pix BOGO Buy One/Gift One for Free Holiday Promo 

    Lets You Give the Gift of Restored Memories  

    Savannah, GA, November 10, 2020 – Vivid-Pix www.vivid-pix.comthe leading provider of AI-powered image restoration software, understands that Thanksgiving and the holidays are not going to be the same this year, with families and friends unable to get together or share holiday traditions physically due to CDC social distancing guidelines and travel quarantine restrictions. Vivid-Pix has an answer to help stay connected: hold these events virtually and create time capsules with Vivid-Pix’s “Gathering Traditions,” easy-to-implement tutorials at: https://vivid-pix.com/education.html to relive past holiday gatherings and for future reminiscing.  

    Vivid-Pix Educational Tutorials on Creating Time Capsules 

    Vivid-Pix Gathering Traditions online education teaches how to create holiday and reunion time capsules for genealogy and reminiscence at: https://vivid-pix.com/education.html. Classes include step by step directions on: 

    • How to use Zoom.
    • How to record today’s feelings for tomorrow’s reminiscing.
    • How to share an image on Zoom and relive yesteryear’s fun and laughter.
    • Using Gallery View to capture togetherness conversations.
    • Using Speaker View to record individual feelings.
    • How to “interview” older family members to ensure involvement and engagement.
    • Fun activities for young and young at heart to enjoy remotely by Zoom or when physically together.
    • How to improve cherished photo memories.

    Vivid-Pix, Reunions Magazine, Dear Myrtle, and Kenyatta D. Berry, PBS Create Virtual Reunions and Time Capsule Education 

    Vivid-Pix is partnering with Kenyatta D. BerryReunions MagazineDearMYRTLE, and Cousin Russ to provide free, valuable how-to information.  “These tools will help families during the holidays and create time capsules for past and future connectedness,” said Rick Voight, CEO, Vivid-Pix. “By working with reunion and genealogy experts, this education series can be used for virtual reunions and gatherings, as well as creating genealogy interviews and capturing traditions to hand down to future generations.” 

    Perfect Time to Use Technology to Discover New Family Stories  

    As host of the Genealogy Roadshow on PBS, Kenyatta D. Berry has brought genealogy into the homes of millions. “Family stories and oral history is often critical and one of the most enjoyable parts of the genealogy journey. It’s important to interview older family members, close relatives, and family friends. While we are at home, this is a great time to use technology for these interviews, to discover new family stories and share photographs. I hope this education series inspires everyone to create their own time capsule,” described Kenyatta D. Berry.  

    DearMYRTLE and Cousin Russ have helped genealogy societies, institutes, and individuals with their research journey through Zoom education. “During this time of social distancing, fun family stories and traditions can be shared and recorded via Zoom. Why not create virtual time capsules and save the recordings for future generations?” said Pat Richley-Erickson, DearMYRTLE. “Photographs, traditions, and reminiscing can be shared, so that these stories that might otherwise be lost can brighten our lives today and enrich the lives of future generations tomorrow.” 

    Discovering Your Roots Can Brighten the Holidays and Enrich Future Generations’ Lives 

    Edith Wagner, Reunions Magazine’s editor, has been on the frontline of countless events cancelled and postponed. She said, “Reunions and gatherings of all kinds have been upended this year and we don’t know how long it will last. Deprived of physical contact, reunions cleverly found a way to ‘gather’ on Zoom and now you, too, can learn these techniques to assemble your family or group in substitute reunions. Shaking hands, hugs, and kisses will have to wait, but smiles, laughter, and excitement don’t have to!”

    Vivid-Pix BOGO Buy One/Gift One for Free – Great Gift for the Holidays 

    In addition, in order to provide a fun holiday activity, relive past holiday memories, and provide a great gift for yourself and loved ones, Vivid-Pix is offering a Buy One/Gift One Promo for Vivid-Pix RESTORE photo and document restoration software. With a purchase of RESTORE Windows/Mac software for $49.99, Vivid-Pix will send a free gift coupon of the software so you can send to a friend or family member and together you can share the gift of memories for the holidays. For more information:  https://vivid-pix.com/bogo-restore.  

    New Version of RESTORE Launched - AI Powered Vivid-Pix RESTORE Restoration Software Fixes Images with Just One Click 

    Vivid-Pix RESTORE patented AI software automatically restores faded old black and white, sepia, and color photos and documents; and provides image organization, editing, and saving. Now available, Vivid-Pix just launched a new version of RESTORE in September 2020 that improves a wider variety of image formats; metadata tagging for research, transcription, and sharing of family stories; and Crop/Recalculate to hone in on specific areas that need fixing – details essential for genealogists and family historians.  

    The U.S. Patent Office has awarded two patents to Vivid-Pix for its image processing techniques used to automatically correct images. The new version of Vivid-Pix RESTORE is available now for Mac and Windows for $49.99 at: https://vivid-pix.com/restore/buy.html  with a 10 Free-Fix Trial without a credit card required at: https://vivid-pix.com/restore/free-trial.html. See Vivid-Pix RESTORE in action at:  https://Vivid-Pix.com/restore. For more information, see the website at: https://vivid-pix.com/.

    About Vivid-Pix 

    Vivid-Pix was founded by Rick Voight and Randy Fredlund, who have a combined 47 years of experience from Eastman Kodak Co. They brought Kodak’s “You Press the Button, We Do the Rest” philosophy to the design of Vivid-Pix RESTORE AI software. For more info, see: https://vivid-pix.com/.

  • 16 Nov 2020 9:51 AM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was posted on the IAJGS Public Records Access List and is republished here with permission:

    The National Archives of Australia (https://www.naa.gov.au/)  has signed contracts for the bulk digitization of more than 650,000 Second World war service records.

    This is a four-year $10 million (Australian) contract of which 220,000 have already been digitized.

    This project will ensure Australians can access almost one million of these records digitally by 2023.  This builds on the already digitized records of those who served in the First World War

    To search by name is not difficult. Enter the name and select either World War 1 or World War 11 in the category filter. The digitized item column will indicate if a digital copy of a service record is available.To learn more go to: https://www.naa.gov.au/explore-collection/defence-and-war-service-records

    Thank you to Gail Dever and her blog Genealogy à la carte for informing us about these newly digitized records.

    To read the previous postings about Australia’s National Archives go to the archives of the IAJGS Records Access Alert at:  http://lists.iajgs.org/mailman/private/records-access-alerts/. You must be registered to access the archives.

     To register go to: http://lists.iajgs.org/mailman/listinfo/records-access-alerts and follow the instructions to enter your email address, full name and which genealogical  organization with whom you are affiliated 

     You will receive an email response that you have to reply to or the subscription will not be finalized.

    Jan Meisels Allen
    Chairperson, IAJGS Public Records Access Monitoring Committee

  • 16 Nov 2020 9:37 AM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by The Genealogy Guys:

    The Genealogy Guys Learn subscription education site is on sale from October 15 through December 31, 2020 for $69 for your first year's subscription (new members only). This is our lowest price of the year! 

    Genealogy Guys Learn currently offers 26 video and 26 written courses with new content added every month. Courses range from beginning to advanced topics. We also provide links to books and printed materials as well as links to helpful websites. (For a complete current list of courses, visit The Genealogy Guys Blog entry at http://blog.genealogyguys.com/ dated November 15, 2020.)

    Learn from The Genealogy Guys, producers since 2005 of the longest-running genealogy podcast, expert researchers and presenters, and prolific authors!

    Our regular annual subscription is $99 and the sale price of $69 is a $30 savings! This sale is only in effect until 11:59 PM Eastern U.S. time on December 31, 2020. Take advantage of this great price by going to the website at https://genealogyguyslearn.com/, click the red Enroll Now box at the bottom of the screen, fill in the information requested, and add the code Holiday2020 for your discount. 

    Fill the coming year with new knowledge and make some great new discoveries!

    Happy Holidays!


  • 13 Nov 2020 2:15 PM | Anonymous
    The following is an announcement from Findmypast:

    New and Exclusive Records Available To Search on Findmypast

    Warwickshire, Coventry Blitz, German Air Raids 1940-1941

    A unique collection created by Findmypast to mark the 80th anniversary of the Coventry Blitz, these records contain the details of casualties of German air raids over city between November 1940 and June 1941.

    Details include name and home address, nature of casualty (killed, injured etc.) and where the casualty was treated. Close to 2,500 individuals are included on these lists, including some who remained unidentified.

    The vast majority of casualties were citizens of Coventry, but there were also victims from the length and breadth of Britain whose names can be found on these lists, as well as military personnel and members of the Auxiliary Fire Service and Air Raid Precautions.

    Coventry was badly hit many times, the raid of 14th/15th November 1940 being the worst. For almost 11 hours, the Luftwaffe dropped around 500 tons of high explosive, 30,000 incendiaries and 50 landmines. This devastating attack left 176 dead, around 680 wounded, many families homeless and destroyed the ancient heart of the city including its 14th century cathedral.

    Children and adults alike are recorded in these lists, and surname searches quickly reveal whole families affected.

    Records show how James Dawson and Arthur Young, both living at separate addresses in Cambridge Street were injured in the November 1940 raid, but Cambridge Street on the whole, escaped serious damage. 

    Unfortunately that wasn’t to be the case when the Luftwaffe paid a return visit in April 1941. Numbers 133, 135 and 137 Cambridge Street were all hit, with members of the Arrowsmith, Webb and Sadler families, and other individuals besides, all killed.

    British Armed Forces, First World War Soldiers' Medical Records

    Thousands of additional records have once again been added to this important collection. Discover the names of injured soldiers, service details and where they were treated.

    Held by The National Archives and only available online at Findmypast, the collection includes admission and discharge records from over 20 hospitals, field ambulances and casualty clearing stations during the First World War.

    National School Admission Registers & Log-Books 1870-1914

    Over 17,000 new Yorkshire school records are now available to search. This latest tranche has been made available thanks to our partners at the Calderdale Family History Society.

    Yorkshire Baptisms

    Unique to Findmypast, over 6,000 new baptism records from St Simon’s Church, Sheffield are now available to search.

    Yorkshire Monumental Inscriptions

    Over 4,600 new records from the West Riding of Yorkshire round off Findmypast’s releases from ‘God’s Own County’. The locations covered include Charlestown, Hebden Bridge, Langfield, Luddenden Foot, Lumbutts, Midgley, and Mount Tabor

    Newspapers

    New titles in this week’s update include the Somerset Guardian and Radstock Observer.

    Further updates have also been made to the following titles:

    • Halifax Evening Courier covering 1926-1930, 1932-1934 and 1938-1939
    • Kinematograph Weekly covering 1923-1925 and 1927-1930
    • Western Morning News covering 1894
    • Birmingham Daily Gazette covering 1864
    • Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer covering 1947
    • Eddowes’s Journal, and General Advertiser for Shropshire, and the Principality of Wales covering 1853


  • 13 Nov 2020 5:01 AM | Anonymous

    Today is  Friday, the 13th of the month. That is an especially bad day for people who suffer from a phobia famously called triskaidekaphobia, a fear of the number 13. Any Friday that falls on the 13th of the month is especially bad, causing the fear of Friday the 13th, called paraskevidekatriaphobia, from the Greek words Paraskeví (meaning “Friday”), and dekatreís (meaning “thirteen”).


    Surprisingly, this is the second Friday the 13th of this year. The first Friday the 13th of 2020 occurred back in March.

    In the Christian world the number 13 has long been associated with many bad events. Jesus had 12 disciples, which meant there were a total of 13 people in attendance the evening of the Last Supper, with Judas being received as the 13th guest.

    On Friday 13, 1307, King Philip IV of France ordered Knights Templar Grand Master Jacques de Molay and scores of other French Templars to be simultaneously arrested. The Knights Templar were charged with numerous other offenses, such as financial corruption, fraud, secrecy, denying Christ, spitting on the crucifix, idol worship, blasphemy, and various obscenities. The soldiers arrested and imprisoned all the Knights Templar they could find. Most of those imprisoned were tortured until they died. Many in France were burned at the stake, including Grand Master Jacques de Molay. Only a few Knights Templar survived, mostly those who were in distant countries at the time, and they went into hiding.

    The German Luftwaffe bombed Buckingham Palace on Friday, the 13th of September, 1940.

    Hip hop star Tupac Shakur died on Friday, September 13, 1996, of gunshot wounds suffered in a Las Vegas drive-by shooting.

    The Costa Concordia cruise ship crashed off the coast of Italy, killing 30 people, on Friday, the 13th of January 2012.

    In 1907, Thomas W. Lawson published a novel called Friday, the Thirteenth, with the story of an unscrupulous broker taking advantage of the superstition to create a Wall Street panic on a Friday the 13th. The novel became a best seller of the time.

    In addition, the month of April is double trouble, according to Chaucer. Just as he fashioned April to be the “cruelest month” in his Canterbury Tales, he also fashioned Friday to be a day “of misfortune.”

    Then, of course, we have the hockey mask-wearing killer named Jason in the movie Friday the 13th, released in 1980.

    How many Friday the 13ths have you survived? A calculator embedded in an article by Philip Bump in The Washington Post gives the answer. You can check it out at: https://wapo.st/2GE9u1Y.

    In spite of these misfortunes, there is no truth to the idea that Friday the 13th is unlucky. Still, I am not taking any chances. You won’t see me this Friday as I am taking the day off and staying in bed.

  • 12 Nov 2020 9:11 AM | Anonymous

    "Stories Behind the Stars" is a nonprofit initiative that seeks to compile stories of the 400,000-plus fallen in one central database, accessible from a smartphone or other technology device.

    It is a monumental task that no one man, not even someone of Don Milne's talent and aspirations, can handle.

    To date, volunteers from 47 states and 10 countries, are dedicating time to "Stories Behind the Stars" as researchers and writers. Each volunteer receives training and free access to ancestry.com research tools.

    The goal, according to project creator Don Milne, is to allow visitors to hallowed sites such as war memorials and cemeteries the opportunity to scan the names of the fallen with a smartphone and gain instant access to the biographies, and photographs, hosted in the central database at www.fold3.com.

    "Stories Behind the Stars" is searching for more volunteers to find more information and to transcribe the data onto the project's online database. All you need is a smartphone and a desire to help.

    You can read more about this nonprofit project in an article by Jon Pompia in The Pueblo Chieftain at https://www.chieftain.com/story/news/local/2020/11/11/stories-behind-stars-chronicle-400-000-who-fell-wwii/6249630002/.

    You also can watch a video about the "Stories Behind the Stars" project at: https://youtu.be/lW_FN_wHQnA.


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