The Secret History of Your Name

What secrets do your last name keep?

Ancestry.com has created an exciting new tool that allows you to find out the history of your last name and what it might reveal about your ancestors.

To check this tool out, go to Ancestry.com’s site here.

ps – A little bit of a hint, try entering other family names you may know in your family history.

1 Assist Care’s Caregivers not only help with things like cooking and cleaning, they can also help the seniors they care for do their family history, giving those receiving care with a sense of purpose and accomplishment.

Have You Seen: 7 Lessons That Can Lead to Family History Breakthroughs

RootsTech 2016, the largest conference in the world focused on family history technology is all wrapped up.

FamilySearch, the conference’s organizer has published a set of 7 lessons you can use for “Family History Breakthroughs.”  Some are obvious, like “Family History is for Everyone.”  Some are not so obvious, like how to make your family tree public.

To read the entire list, check out the post here.

Did you know 1 Assist Care has helped our client’s do family history with them while providing care?  It has helped our clients feel a sense of purpose as they work towards a goal and service while in their homes.  Call us for more information! 208-557-4215

Get everyone involved in family history.

Cemeteries and Funeral Homes: Two Quick Phone Calls That Could Change The Game on Finding Information on an Ancestor

Cemeteries Information On FamilyYesterday, the Scottish Genealogy group on Facebook posted a great nugget concerning two phone calls you can make to find out additional information concerning a deceased ancestor.

When you are looking for your ancestor, don’t stop at the obituary or the gravestone inscription. Call or write to the cemetery and ask:

  • Who purchased the plot
  • What address was given for the person who purchased the plot
  • Whether any other family members are buried in the same plot

The cemetery office may also tell you the names of any other people with the same surname who are buried at the cemetery.

While you are at it, contact the funeral home listed in the obituary. Funeral homes keep detailed records about the individuals that they care for. This can be a valuable resource.

The funeral home will have:

  • A copy of the program or the card given to those who attend the service,
  • A copy of the death record they issued for the family and information on the next of kin.

If an autopsy was performed, the funeral home may supply you with the information for the name and address of the coroner asCall funeral homes and ask for information on ancestors well, which will allow you to contact that resource for detailed information on the cause of death and the details surrounding the death.

It will not hurt to ask the funeral home if they will provide you with:

  • The name of the deceased’s family physician
  • The name of the insurance company
  • The name of the clergy that performed the service.
  • They might even be able to provide you with information about where to find a will for the deceased.

In Idaho Falls and Ammon, there are four funeral homes you can reach out to. Rexburg and Rigby each have one, while St. Anthony has two.

1 Assist Care of the Valley Senior Care: Assisted Living At Home is a home care company located in Rexburg, Idaho. We provide provide weekly family history tips on our blog to help others with their family history work and genealogy.

We also provide assisted living services in the home to seniors in Idaho Falls, Rexburg, Driggs, Ashton, and everywhere in between. For some of our elderly clients, that includes doing family history with them.

To find out more about how we can help keep your elderly loved one home and safe rather than putting them into a nursing home, call us at 208-557-4215.

Doing Family History in 1 Minute: How to Get Started With Family History Indexing in 3 Steps

Great news. FamilySearch has a new version of their indexing program.

Here are three simple steps to start indexing. Follow these three simple steps and in less than ten minutes, you will officially be ready to index.

Step 1: Know what indexing is.

Here is a quick video that explains what it is. It is less than two minutes.

Step 2: Register to be an indexer on FamilySearch.

Step 3. Download the software. You need a Windows or Apple based computer to do this. (If you have an iPad, you can download an app as well, but that is another post)

This super short video takes you through steps 2 and 3.

Finished the three steps?

Fantastic! Now you are all ready!

Stay tuned next week to learn how to start indexing. Make sure to subscribe to the blog and like us on facebook to get updates on family history tips. You can do both of those on the upper right of this web page.

1 Assist Care of the Valley Senior Care: Assisted Living At Home is a home care company located in Rexburg, Idaho. We provide assisted living services in the home to seniors in Idaho Falls, Rexburg, Driggs, Ashton, and everywhere in between. For some of our elderly clients, that includes doing family history with them.

We also provide weekly family history tips on our blog to help others with their family history work.

Google Wants To Do Your Family History For You

The following is from a series of family history instructional blog posts by 1 Assist Care of the Valley in Rexburg, Idaho. 1 Assist Care of the Valley updates family history posts each weekend.

Google wants to do some family history work for you.

No really, it does.

And it wants to keep you updated you on a thousand different family history searches as it does.

At this year’s RootsTech conference, Deborah Gamble, Technology Solutions Manager at American Express gave a list of tools that will perform customized family history searches for you automatically. Google was the first one Ms. Gamble mentioned. 1 Assist Care of the Valley: Assisted Living At Home in East Idaho will address some of the others in future posts.

Google has a feature called “Alerts” that allows users to stay informed about new material on the web relating to any topic that the user is interested in. If they want to stay updated on Teton Valley hiking spots or powersports in Rexburg or Idaho Falls, you can use this tool to do just that. What Ms. Gamble pointed out was that this exact same tool is a powerful one for doing family history research.

Here are step-by-step instructions with screenshots.

Let’s say you are looking for search for the death of an ancestor who I think was buried in Loudoun County.

Step One: First you go to www.google.com/alerts

It will bring up a page that should have something like this. If you click on the image, you can make the image larger:

Do Family History using Google Alerts

Step 1: Go to www.google.com/alerts

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Step 2: Next, you will enter the search term you are looking for. In this example, I am looking for Loudoun County graves. I enter that term into my Search query. You can make this more specific or less specific.

The more general you make it, the more information you will receive, but you might miss something as the Google search “spiders” might not pick it up.. The more specific you make it, the less information you will receive, but you are likely to find very specific information as it becomes available.

You will see below what Google brings up. Again, you can click on the image to make it larger. But you will see it brings up examples on the right of what it will send you.

Using Google Alerts to Perform Family History

Step 2: Enter what you are looking for into the search query

 

 

 

 

 

 

Step 3: Choose the result type, how often, and how many you want.

Result Type – Choose what source you want the information from. You can choose from the following. Remember, the less option you choose, the less information.

  • Do you want only news articles?
  • Do you want only blog posts?
  • Do you only want results from books that Google has scanned into their database?
  • Do you only want videos uploaded on sites like YouTube?
  • Do you want everything that appears on the Internet (All of the above)

How often – Choose how often you want to be emailed about the information on the Internet.

  • Do you want an email once a day?
  • Do you want an email once a week?
  • Do you want an email right as it comes?

My suggestion – once a week is fine, otherwise you start filling up your email box.

How many – What do you want Google to send to you?

  • All results – Google will send you everything on the Internet.
  • Only the best results – Google will determine what it thinks you want and will only send you that information.

Step 4: Enter your email address that you want the information sent to. It does not have to be a gmail address. You can enter any email you want. If you are logged into Gmail, it will automatically enter that address. You can add a news feed, but to keep things simple, we will not address that here.

Step 5: Press Create Alert.

A new window that will open that looks like this:

Step 5: Create Your Alert

Step 5: Create Your Alert

Step 6: Live your life as normal. Google will automaticall send you the alerts to your email.

And you are all done.

You can add more searches if you want. You can do this for up to a thousand different searches.

To continue to learn and share ways to explore your genealogy and family history, be sure to like us on Facebook.