Plentiful Mayflower Resources

With Thanksgiving in the US just a few days away, Roxanne Moore Saucier, in the Bangor Daily News (Maine), reminds us in her Family Ties genealogy column to “Be thankful for plentiful Mayflower resources “, and mentions several of the resources available to those genealogists descended from passengers of the Mayflower.

With Halloween having just passed, she also mentions several resources for those genealogists whose research takes them back to the Salem Witch Trials.

The Genealogue also has their take on Thanksgiving, with the Top 10 Signs You’re Descended from Pilgrims list.

Just What Did Your Ancestors Listen To?

The Department of Special Collections at the University of California Santa Barbara (UCSB) – Donald C. Davidson Library has made available a collection of 5000 cylinder recordings made from the 1890s through the 1920s. It’s called the Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project.

Cylinder recordings, the first commercially produced sound recordings, are a snapshot of musical and popular culture in the decades around the turn of the 20th century. They have long held the fascination of collectors and have presented challenges for playback and preservation by archives and collectors alike.

With funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, the UCSB Libraries have created a digital collection of over 5,000 cylinder recordings held by the Department of Special Collections. In an effort to bring these recordings to a wider audience, they can be freely downloaded or streamed online.

On this site you will have the opportunity to find out more about the cylinder format, listen to thousands of musical and spoken selections from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and discover a little-known era of recorded sound.

The Library of Congress has further information:

Cylinder recordings, invented by Thomas Edison in 1877, were the first successful form for recording and reproducing sound. Made first of tin foil, then wax, and later celluloid, the cylinder was used until the late 1940′s.

Cylinders, like early disc recordings, were recorded acoustically: sound was picked up by a recording horn, basically an inverted megaphone, causing a membrane placed in the small end of the horn to vibrate. A recording stylus attached to the membrane etched or embossed the sound vibrations into the surface of a rotating cylinder or disc. “Styli” to play such recordings were made from a wide range of materials, including cactus thorns, precious and semi-precious stones, and steel.

You can listen to comedy and vaudeville selections – two types that they highlighted.

If you are curious about what a cylinder recording is (and physically looked like), in addition to the Library of Congress page listed above, you can read about them at Wikipedia’s phonograph cylinder page.

Important: Do note that you may come across some recordings that would be considered offensive nowadays (mainly dealing with stereotypes that were held back in that time).

Genealogy & Health

KUTV (Salt Lake City) has an article, Genealogy & Health, that mentions the holidays as being a good time to cover your family’s health history, and discussing potential problems before they become serious problems.

Excerpt from the article:

“The questions feature things that are important that you need to know about your family’s health history…..Knowing such information can help families make decisions about lifestyle choices and early screenings for disease. Experts say the Holiday season is the perfect time to begin a dialog with family members.

They have a list of 10 questions to discuss with your family members, and it’s something to really think about – as genealogists, you maybe one of the few people in your family able to spot certain health trends.

You wouldn’t want to ride on these ships…

Mary Penner has written another wonderful column, You wouldn’t want to ride on these ships but you may want to read the passenger lists, in The Albuquerque Tribune. This column covers the various immigration logs and information available to genealogists on the web.

Excerpt from the article:

But millions of immigrants landed on the American shores, and genealogists are determined to discover the ship that carried them across the ocean.

After you have learned all you can about your immigrant’s life in America and once you have a good idea of when your immigrant came to America and from where, you can begin searching for records that point to the ship he or she came on.

I would highly recommend reading some of her other columns

Arizona State Archives

If you live in Arizona, you may want to check out an article, Lawmakers suggesting some changes for archives projects, in the Mojave Daily news, about the political wrangling going on over a proposed building to house the state’s archives.