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Books
How to Do Everything Genealogy
How to Do Everything Genealogy
by George G. Morgan
Our Price: $16.49
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The Everything Guide to Online Genealogy: Use the Web to trace your roots, share your history, and create a family tree (Everything Series)
The Everything Guide to Online Genealogy: Use the Web to trace your roots, share your history, and create a family tree (Everything Series)
by Kimberly Powell
Our Price: $11.53
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The Family Tree Problem Solver: Tried-and-True Tactics for Tracing Elusive Ancestors
The Family Tree Problem Solver: Tried-and-True Tactics for Tracing Elusive Ancestors
by Marsha Hoffman Rising
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Collecting Dead Relatives: An Irreverent Romp Through the Field of Genealogy
Collecting Dead Relatives: An Irreverent Romp Through the Field of Genealogy
by Laverne Galeener-Moore
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Quicksheet: Genealogical Problem Analysis- A Strategic Plan- Evidence! Style
Quicksheet: Genealogical Problem Analysis- A Strategic Plan- Evidence! Style
by Elizabeth Shown Mills
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What's in a Name? Why Spelling is so important in your Ancestry Search. What's in a name? The answer is, quite a bit actually. If you are beginning a search of your family tree it will help you tremendously to know the history of your family name, or for that matter of the names of other branches of the family.
 
Many times names were changed when people immigrated to this country. If a person's name sounded too "foreign" in a culture that was primarily of English ancestry then that name may very well have been changed. To a lesser extent, if the spelling of the name seemed difficult or again foreign then it could have been changed for that reason as well. It is rather interesting to note that people like reading about genealogy if they are presented in an easy and clear way. The presentation of an article too is important for one to entice people to read it! A prime example of simple spelling differences in languages is in the American and British spellings of certain words. The American word theater is spelled theatre in the UK. Defense is spelled defence. Shop in old English is shoppe. The same small changes often happen with names. When doing genealogy research you will sometimes notice names spelled several different ways in the same document. Many years ago standardized spellings for names didn't really exist. Not everyone could read and write in those days, and often members of the same family would spell names differently. The English name Darby for instance could also be spelled Derby, but still pronounced the same way. Also Smith could be spelled Smithe or Smyth, or Smythe. Maddox can also be spelled Maddux, Madux, or even Maddoc. The Scottish name Munro was more commonly spelled Monroe by the English. Then look at names that are translated from one language to another. The French name Choaumote was sometimes Americanized to Shumate, a totally different spelling. Another reason for name changes is that immigration authorities both made mistakes, including typographical errors, which would stick with an immigrant, and would sometimes arbitrarily change names on their own because they couldn't pronounce a name or didn't like the spelling. For instance, the Swedish name Sjoblom, with a silent j, is pronounced see-bloom. Some members of the Sjoblom family had their names changed, involuntarily, to Seebloom or Seabloom. As another example of how names were changed is the Italian name Tagliaferro which means iron worker. This name became Tolliver. Another Italian name, Amici which means friend was Americanized into Ameche. Even the families of presidents have not been immune. Roosevelt comes from the Dutch name Van Rosevelt, which means of the rose field. Blum, which means flower, was Americanized into Bloom. The German name Roggenfelder which means rye field could have been directly translated into Ryefield, but instead it commonly became Rockefeller. Revision is very important when writing or speaking about a topic. We had a lot of drafting to do to come to this final product on genealogy. American names like the American population itself come from all countries of the world. Remember the old movie Stripes when Bill Murray in Army basic training said "Our ancestors were kicked out of all the best countries in Europe", well most were not kicked out, but instead chose to leave. This included Dutch settlers in New York, French in Louisiana, Spanish in Florida and Texas, Germans in Pennsylvania, English in Virginia, and on and on. The American melting pot and the hope of opportunity in the new country caused most people to want to assimilate, and many did so partly by changing their names. General George Armstrong Custer, so well known for Custer's Last Stand, had a German grandfather, a Hessian solder whose name was Kuster. Another German name, Schwab which means from Swabia became Swope for many. Even if you are a stranger in the world of genealogy, once you are through with this article, you will no longer have to consider yourself to be a stranger in it! Another reason for changes were to simply make the spelling of a name look more American, which was more common English. Double letters such as RR or LL could be replaced by a single letter. Common spellings in other languages, or even in British English, were often subject to change. The common name Grover for instance, can also be Krover, Krober, Groeber, or Crower, as well as other spellings. Sometimes the reason for the change in spelling was the accent of the person immigrating. Sometimes immigration officials would hear the accent and misinterpret it, and usually the new name stuck. It is important to know the alternative spellings of your family name to do a complete search of your ancestry. If you don't have that information you could miss vital branches of the family tree. It is always better to have compositions with as little corrections in it as possible. This is why we have written this composition on genealogy with no corrections for the reader to be more interested in reading it. Do not judge a book by its cover; so don't just scan through this matter on genealogy. read it thoroughly to judge its value and importance.


 

Recommended Products


Gibbs Genealogy Headlines

Douglas Walton Truran, 76 - Wareham Week


Wareham Week

Douglas Walton Truran, 76
Wareham Week
Douglas had an interest in history and genealogy. He traced his family back many generations -- including several lines to the Mayflower -- researching records in the eastern United States and Canada, as well as in Cornwall, England.

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Sherrie Jean Christensen Massaro - Daily Herald


Sherrie Jean Christensen Massaro
Daily Herald
She married Noel D. Gibbs. They later divorced. Together they had five children; Kristine Lindorf (Paul), Cindy Lee (Douglas) Chris Fred Gibbs, Wesley Jon VonRolleston (Danna), and Camile Thompson (Tod). She met and married her sweetheart John Roland ...

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Patricia L. Smith - Hannibal.net


Patricia L. Smith
Hannibal.net
She enjoyed working with genealogy. Memorial contributions may be made to American Lung Association in care of James O'Donnell Funeral Home. Pallbearers will be Steve Miller, Sean Gentile, Craig Gibbs, Robert Seiger, Kevin Taylor and Brian Cunningham.

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Elizabeth "Betty" Salisbury — Harrison, Ark. - Post-Bulletin


Elizabeth "Betty" Salisbury — Harrison, Ark.
Post-Bulletin
29, 1919, and raised in East Greenwich, RI Betty attended Mary C. Wheeler School, the House of Pines in Norton, Mass., and was a graduate of Katherine Gibbs Secretarial School in Providence, RI She married Charles Henry Salisbury in Brooklyn, NY, ...

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Community calendar: Enrollment for First Tee of Spartanburg - Spartanburg Herald Journal


Community calendar: Enrollment for First Tee of Spartanburg
Spartanburg Herald Journal
Gibbs Stadium, Wofford College, 429 N. Church St. 597-5022. Spartanburg Ski & Outing Club: 7 pm Bob and Diane Butscher will share their experiences/photos from a safari, Egypt and other destinations. Non-skiers welcome. The Chapman Cultural Center, ...

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