Once again Geniaus has invited family historians to reflect
on their past year’s achievement through her Accentuate the Positive Geneameme. Here’s my reflection on what I have achieved
genealogy-wise in 2015.
An elusive ancestor I found was . . . where my 3rd
great grandfather, John William Rae, was born. His marriage certificate, death certificate
& his son’s (my direct ancestor’s) birth certificate simply stated his
birthplace as Ireland.
I took ordering birth certificates for
all of his children but, just as I’d hoped, it listed his birthplace on his
first child’s birth certificate – Belfast,
Ireland. Now if only I could find his immigration
record!
A precious family photo I found was the same as A
geneasurprise I received. I visited
my paternal grandmother this year to see what she could tell me about where her
Rae ancestors were from. While she
firmly believed that they were from Ireland, she wasn’t able to help me
any further. She gave me many of her
photos during this visit but the real surprise came a few months later. My father had been to visit her & gave me
a photo from her. This was a photo of
her on her wedding day. Standing on one
side of her was her paternal grandmother, Emma Guyatt, & on the other side
was her new husband’s paternal grandmother, Catherine Curran. As part of UTAS’s Introduction to Family
History course, I researched Catherine & her teaching career last year which
makes me treasure this photo all the more.
An ancestor's grave I found was also another geneasurprise
I received. I don’t really use
Facebook for genealogy, but someone I know told me to have a look at the Family
History Group of Bathurst’s
Facebook page as there were some Curran graves on there that had been restored.
I was hugely surprised to find that they
were the graves of my 3rd great grandparents!
A newly found family member shared a photo of a ring that was
passed down to him & which apparently belonged to my 4th great
grandfather, Carl Heinrich Vonthien.
A genealogy conference/seminar/webinar from which I learnt
something new was pretty much everything I watched / attended but the
AFFHO Congress in Canberra
really stood out. I still need to catch
up on the speaker’s papers!
While I don’t think I’ve achieved much in my own personal genealogy
research over the past year, I do feel like I have contributed to the genealogy
community by volunteering to help transcribe records online. This year I took part in FamilySearch’s Worldwide
Indexing Event again. I also helped to index
/ transcribe the WW1 Nominal Roll for the Australian War Memorial. The Prosecution Project is something else that
I’m involved in, entering data from historical court records. While I have helped transcribe records for
Ancestry & FreeBMD before, they were quite onerous. The Prosecution Project & the WW1 Nominal
Roll were straightforward, making it easier to transcribe greater amounts of
information. Hopefully I’ve been able to
‘pay it forward’ in a small way during 2015. J