Sunday, March 21, 2021
Zada's Poetry
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Poems for Mother ~ ala Little Lamar
Sunday, March 14, 2021
Deciphering Dropbox
Thursday, March 11, 2021
Animating Ancestors
For being several generations back, there are quite a few memories about ol' great-grandpa Sanderson (98 of them, pictures/text) on the FamilySearch website. Check them out HERE.
Here are more "live" pictures ...
the great-grandparents on the Westra side, Ate and Geeske
To use MyHeritage's Deep Nostalgia tool, it seems I did have to create a log-in (free). I used the tool a few times and then received a pop-up to subscribe (after a 14-day free trial). $150 a year, which seems excessive with FamilyHistory.org's free (and already mostly complete line for our family+) offerings. It seems if I came back to the site, I was able to upload and "liven up" more without having to pay or take further steps. I also accessed MyHeritage again from a different browser, and this time used the "Facebook" log-in (rather than setting up an email/PW) and used it several times and didn't get the "sign-up" pop-up (although I did recieve a general "welcome" email at the email address associated with my Facebook). So while you don't have to pay to use the tool, I do think you need to "sign-in" somehow before use.
Tuesday, March 2, 2021
Illustrious Ancestors - Looking for Links
One of the activities on FamilySearch is "Famous Relatives" ... tracing back in your family tree to find some of those well-known scientists, political figures, artists, etc. Here is the challenge Chris sent out:
Today the goal is to report back on one famous relative that you found fun and interesting. I chose Thomas Edison. Send me back a screenshot similar to mine. There are three extra rewards (1) for the quickest result submitted (2) the CLOSEST relationship to a famous person (you may want to try out a few) and (3) the person who BEST explains what "Three Times Removed" means (see the example in my Thomas Edison screenshot).
Each cousin can be numbered based on how many generations back your shared ancestors are and “removed” a given number of times, based on how many generations apart you are from each other.One thing to bear in mind when dealing with “removed” cousins is that determining whether you are first, second, or third cousins is a little trickier, since you end up with different numbers when counting back to your common ancestor. In these cases, the number is based on which one of you counts back the fewest number of generations. For example, if your cousin counts back three generations while you count back five, then you would be second cousins twice removed. The “second” would be due to the number of generations back your cousin counted to a common ancestor, and “twice removed” thanks to the difference in generations between you.
I'm STILL not quite sure, but luckily when all the ancestors are in place along the family lines, then family search figures it all out for us!
Several of the Jensen kids were feeling presidential ...Janelle found a link to Thomas Jefferson (3rd president)Josh found a link to Andrew Jackson (7th president)Jaiden found a link to Franklin Pierce (14th president)Janika found a link to William McKinley (25th president)Lincoln (shown earlier) was the 16th president ... now this is also a history lesson.None of the Jensen's presidential paths connected through the Westra line, but ...Elvis is apparently a 9th cousin ... removed differently. And NOT a Westra/Norman.Cayson. Jenna. Colton - Linked through the other side of the family.... and a couple more from Jared and Ellen (and Colton)Again - no Westra connection.Now before you think Colton was super excited about this project with all his contributions ... admittedly, it was Mom, looking up some on his account to get some different paths to the same people. Colton didn't actually participate, and didn't get the reward.Cooper did though ... and won the award for the closest connection.Removed by a lot ... but first cousin!Cooper wasn't even trying for the extra reward - this was the only match he looked up. His Physics class has been studying Newton's three laws, so he had Newton on the brain. Maybe he has a little of the brain power too? After all, they are totally related!With Roots Tech going on this week, Facebook has been full of "are we related" challenges, which would match your family history to see if you just might link up to some of your Facebook friends. Most "matches" were ## cousin ## removed ... but that's true for some of these famous individuals as well. Many people are related if you go back far enough, and with family history ... we can see pretty far!What will the next challenge be ... will YOU participate?
Wednesday, February 10, 2021
Fun Photo Activity - Family History
Tuesday, February 2, 2021
How Your Face Fits in Your Family
This past Sunday, the challenge was the "Compare a Face" activity found on the FamilySearch.Org site. If you go to the main page, there are a few options across the top. One is "ACTIVITIES" and if you click it, you'll get a drop-down menu of some fun options, one being the compare a face photo exercise. You upload a picture of you, and then it will automatically analyze and match you to one of your ancestors who you look most like. It will give you a percentage, and show multiple people and your percentage of similarity. We have featured this activity once before on the blog (see HERE).
Now - for this to be fully effective, you DO need to be connected to your family tree. I don't know if all the grandkids already had accounts, but the Blackham Boys didn't, so they had to be set up. Any living family members in your tree need to be added manually (privacy issues)... names and photos. If an ancestor is deceased, they should show up, and you can then link to them and all the pictures/histories that are saved for them.
You can manipulate the activity a bit, and try photos other than the featured faces on family search. Some of the grandkids played around seeing if younger faces were more of a match. Adria matched with a young Shane at 94%. A young Jaiden was a 93% match with Wendy at about the same age.
Wendy wrote: The kids had a lot of fun with the family history challenge "find-a-face" on FamilySearch yesterday and after they did their matches with various ancestors they started doing matches with their immediate family members. Mom and Chris and I were discussing the other day how many of our ancestors look so much alike from when they were children to when they were adults. (See the screenshot of Joseph and Edward Westra below compared with their thumbnails, for example.) But there are always exceptions and I think I am one of them! I put a recent picture of myself with a picture of myself at ten years old on the find-a-face and it only had a 38% match -- for the same person! It isn't until high school -- post braces and all that -- that I got a 100% match to myself now. Interesting! I was also surprised that I had a higher match to mom than to dad! I thought for sure it would be the other way around. I was also surprised that Jenna and Janika had a 98% match when comparing pictures of similar ages. Interesting stuff!
Here's a look at a couple more from the activity ...
































