Nordic Family History Conference: Difference between revisions
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The Family History Library and the Research Specialists of the Nordic Reference team invite you to a free, week-long conference focused exclusively on Nordic research. The conference, which will be held | The Family History Library and the Research Specialists of the Nordic Reference team invite you to a free, week-long conference focused exclusively on Nordic research. The conference, which will be held September 11th - 15th , 2017, is perfect for beginning and intermediate genealogists interested in learning about records of Nordic localities, and Family History Library collections. | ||
Come and spend a week at the world renowned Family History Library learning from our expert staff of genealogists as well as experienced guest genealogists. Learn how to effectively use historical records, and how to do research in the Nordic countries. Explore such topics as census, church, immigration, and vital records. Learn more about Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and Finnish research. And discover new techniques, strategies, and methodology to apply to your genealogical research problems. | Come and spend a week at the world renowned Family History Library learning from our expert staff of genealogists as well as experienced guest genealogists. Learn how to effectively use historical records, and how to do research in the Nordic countries. Explore such topics as census, church, immigration, and vital records. Learn more about Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and Finnish research. And discover new techniques, strategies, and methodology to apply to your genealogical research problems. | ||
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== Monday, | == Monday, September 11, 2017 == | ||
=== 9:00 am - 10:00 am === | === 9:00 am - 10:00 am === | ||
[[Media:Best Practices on Family Tree for Nordic Ancestors.pdf|'''Class Handout''']] | |||
=== 10:15 am - 11:15 am === | === 10:15 am - 11:15 am === | ||
<font size="4">[[Media:Calendars_and_Feast_Days_in_Scandinavia_F_Juenglingworksheet.pdf|Class Handout]]</font> | |||
=== 11:30 am - 12:30 pm Lunch === | |||
=== | === 1:15pm - 2:15 pm === | ||
( | ===== Exploring European Feast-Day Calendar (Liv Anderson, CG, AG®) ===== | ||
=== 2:30 pm - 3:30 pm === | |||
== Tuesday, | == Tuesday, September 12, 2017 == | ||
=== 9:00 am - 10:00 am === | === 9:00 am - 10:00 am === | ||
Line 194: | Line 172: | ||
well as identifying additional resources for working with these records. '''[[Media:Introduction to Estate Inventories.pdf|Class Handout]]''' | well as identifying additional resources for working with these records. '''[[Media:Introduction to Estate Inventories.pdf|Class Handout]]''' | ||
== Wednesday, | == Wednesday, September 13, 2017 == | ||
=== 9:00 am - 10:00 am === | === 9:00 am - 10:00 am === | ||
Line 206: | Line 184: | ||
The Swede’s have a rich history of record keeping. The challenge is knowing what records exist and how to find them. This presentation will explain Swedish church, civil, and judicial administration between the mid-1600’s and up to about 1900. We’ll look at each jurisdictional structure and the records they kept. With this knowledge, you will be able to search beyond the regular strategies in church records. '''[[:Media:Jurisdictions for Swedish Genealogy 2016.pdf|Class Handout]]''' | The Swede’s have a rich history of record keeping. The challenge is knowing what records exist and how to find them. This presentation will explain Swedish church, civil, and judicial administration between the mid-1600’s and up to about 1900. We’ll look at each jurisdictional structure and the records they kept. With this knowledge, you will be able to search beyond the regular strategies in church records. '''[[:Media:Jurisdictions for Swedish Genealogy 2016.pdf|Class Handout]]''' | ||
=== 11:30 am - 12:30 pm === | === 11:30 am - 12:30 pm Lunch === | ||
=== | ===1:15 pm - 2:15 pm=== | ||
=== | ==== Introduction to Icelandic Church and Census Records ==== | ||
=== | === 2:30 pm - 3:30 pm === | ||
===='' | ====''Finland:'' (Bradley Marchant AG®)==== | ||
== Thursday, | == Thursday, September 14, 2017 == | ||
=== 9:00 am - 10:00 am === | === 9:00 am - 10:00 am === | ||
===='' | ====''Norwegian Church Records'' (Liv Anderson, CG, AG®)==== | ||
=== 10:15 am - 11:15 am === | === 10:15 am - 11:15 am === | ||
===='' | ====''Norway: We're getting married. Traditions and Records. ''(Anka Magee, AG®)==== | ||
=== 11:30 am - 12:30 pm Lunch === | |||
=== | === 1:15 PM - 2:15 pm === | ||
====''Norway: "Lensrekneskapsbøker"'' (Jeff Svare, AG®)==== | |||
=== | === 2:30 pm - 3:30 pm === | ||
==== ''Norwegian Migration and Immigration'' (Anka Magee, AG®) ==== | |||
== | ==Friday, September 15, 2017== | ||
=== 9:00 am - 10:00 am === | === 9:00 am - 10:00 am === | ||
===='' | ====''Danish Estates'' (Jeff Svare, AG®)==== | ||
=== 10:15 am - 11:15 am === | === 10:15 am - 11:15 am === | ||
===='' | ====''Little Used Records on the "Arkivalieronline"'' (Anka Magee, AG®)==== | ||
=== 1:15 PM - 2:15 pm === | |||
=== | |||
=== 2:30 pm - 3:30 pm === | |||
====''Research in Copenhagen'' (Boyd Nielsen, AG®)==== | |||
== Presenters == | == Presenters == |
Revision as of 10:58, 26 May 2017
Nordic Family History Conference | |||||
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In order to attend these classes you must register. To attend in person click here. If you are going to attend online click here. When registering please check ALL of the boxes you wish to attend. We will use Eventbrite to process your registration. Your information will be processed in accordance with their privacy policy located at Eventbrite's Privacy Policy. IN PERSON CLASSES ARE GOING TO BE HELD IN 2ND FLOOR NORTH LAB. Click here to attend the webinars: http://bit.ly/2bkRNpd. | |||||
TIME | Monday, 11 September | Tuesday, 12 September | Wednesday, 13 September | Thursday, 14 September | Friday, 15 September |
9:00-10:00 AM MDT | Norwegian Church Records | Danish Estates | |||
10:15-11:15 PM AM MDT | Norway: We're getting married! Traditions and Records. | Little Used records on the "Arkivalieronline" | |||
11:30 AM-12:30 PM MDT | |||||
1:15-2:15 PM | Exploring European Feast-Day Calendars | Introduction to Icelandic Church and Census Records | "Lensrekneskapsbøker" in Norway | Tanner?? | |
2:30-3:30 PM | Norwegian Migration and Immigration | Research in Copenhagen | |||
Finland--Brad |
Nordic Family History Conference[edit | edit source]
The Family History Library and the Research Specialists of the Nordic Reference team invite you to a free, week-long conference focused exclusively on Nordic research. The conference, which will be held September 11th - 15th , 2017, is perfect for beginning and intermediate genealogists interested in learning about records of Nordic localities, and Family History Library collections.
Come and spend a week at the world renowned Family History Library learning from our expert staff of genealogists as well as experienced guest genealogists. Learn how to effectively use historical records, and how to do research in the Nordic countries. Explore such topics as census, church, immigration, and vital records. Learn more about Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and Finnish research. And discover new techniques, strategies, and methodology to apply to your genealogical research problems.
Seating in the Family History Library Classrooms, is limited to 26 participants, so be sure to register early to secure a spot.
Registration for the conference begins on 17 September 2016 at this link for Webinar guests:
(https://www.eventbrite.com/myevents/)
at this link for in-house attendees [link here]
Please bring your free tickets provided through your Eventbrite registration for entrance at the door. 500 spots will be available to webinar attendees and (add number) seats.
500 spots will be available to webinar attendees and (26) seats available for in-person LABS which will all be held in the Family History Library B2 floor LAB. 500 spots available for webinar LABs.
A Syllabus can be downloaded from the FamilySearch Wiki. They are available for individual download:
- Best Practices for Nordic Ancestors in FamilySearch Family Tree
- Feast Dates and Calendars
- FamilySearch Wiki for Nordic Countries
- Scandinavian Handwriting, Part 1 & 2
- Research Your Swedish Heritage Using Arkiv Digital
- Figure Out Place Names for Swedish Genealogy
- Using Name Searchable Registers in Arkiv Digital
- Parish Record Substitution
- Introduction to Swedish Estate Inventories
- Migration, Travel papers, and Government Inns in Sweden
- Jurisdictions for Swedish Genealogy
- Learn by Doing: Mistaken Identity of Johanna Andersdotter (Lab)
- Finland: An Introduction to Finnish Church Record Online Resources, Handout 2, Handout 3
- Danish Military Research
- Finland: A Case Study Using HisKi and Digitized Online Church Records
- An Introduction to Danish Census Records
- Danish Church Record research: A Case Study
- Using Witnesses to Find Your Danish Ancestors
- Danish Probate Records
- Research in Copenhagen
- Introduction to Danish Land Records
- How to find ancestors in the Norwegian Digital Archives
- Norwegian Military Records
- Understanding Probate records in Norway
- Finding Ancestors in Online Norwegian Farm Books
- The Norwegian Emigration Experience
- Danish Military Research
- Danish Church Record Research
- Using Witnesses to Find Your Ancestors
We hope this conference will not only be informative and instructive, but that it will also encourage and inspire you to continue your family history research. Perhaps this will be just what you need to break through that 20 year old brick wall research problem. We look forward to working with you!
Please note that there are 2 classes running concurrently with the Finnish classes on Wednesday.
Class Descriptions[edit | edit source]
Monday, September 11, 2017[edit | edit source]
9:00 am - 10:00 am[edit | edit source]
10:15 am - 11:15 am[edit | edit source]
11:30 am - 12:30 pm Lunch[edit | edit source]
1:15pm - 2:15 pm[edit | edit source]
Exploring European Feast-Day Calendar (Liv Anderson, CG, AG®)[edit | edit source]
2:30 pm - 3:30 pm[edit | edit source]
Tuesday, September 12, 2017[edit | edit source]
9:00 am - 10:00 am[edit | edit source]
Research Your Swedish Heritage Using Arkiv Digital (Kathy Meade)[edit | edit source]
Learn how to research your Swedish heritage using ArkivDigital. This class will show the wealth and variety of Swedish historical records that are available in ArkivDigital. The presentation will demonstrate how to research one’s Swedish ancestry by searching and viewing church books, military records, passenger ship manifests and other records using a case study. Class Handout
10:15 am - 11:15 am[edit | edit source]
Figure Out Place Names for Swedish Genealogy (Geoffrey Fröberg Morris, AG®)[edit | edit source]
Place names everywhere! Whether it’s a household record, moving record, or the place of birth, we see place names all the time in Swedish records. The challenge is interpreting what it is, where it is, and where do we go next? This presentation will offer 12 steps to figure out place names for Swedish genealogy. Class Handout
11:30 am - 12:30 pm[edit | edit source]
Using Name Searchable Registers in Arkiv Digital (Kathy Meade)[edit | edit source]
Learn about the name searchable registers in ArkivDigital. Learn how to use the new name searchable registers for the household/congregation records between 1880-1920 and population registers for 1950 and 1960. Discover other name registers for older church books using registers within the register archive and name registers for city parishes. The presentation will focus primarily on showing how to use name registers for church books but name registers for estate inventories and tax records will also be highlighted. Class Handout
2:00 pm - 3:00 pm[edit | edit source]
Parish Record Substitution (Geoffrey Fröberg Morris, AG®)[edit | edit source]
In Swedish genealogy we use the household records, birth, marriage, death and moving in / out records the most. But what if you search all those sources and still don’t find what you’re looking for? What do you do if there are gaps in the records or a parish record collection was destroyed? This class will focus on finding information when the mainstream strategies fail. Class Handout
3:15 pm - 4:15 pm[edit | edit source]
Introduction to Swedish Estate Inventories (Kathy Meade)[edit | edit source]
The Swedish estate inventories (bouppteckningar) are usually the next set of Swedish documents, following the church books that one accesses to gain a better understanding of one’s Swedish ancestor’s life. The estate inventory, similar to a probate record, provides genealogical information as well as detailing all the assets and debts of the deceased’s estate. The class will focus on how to quickly identify the genealogical information in an estate inventory without knowing Swedish as well as identifying additional resources for working with these records. Class Handout
Wednesday, September 13, 2017[edit | edit source]
9:00 am - 10:00 am[edit | edit source]
Migration, Travel papers, and Government Inns in Sweden (Geoffrey Fröberg Morris, AG®)[edit | edit source]
Most people who do Swedish genealogy know about the moving -in or -out records that were created by the parish priest. You might not know that the county (or city) also issued travel papers under certain conditions. We will also discuss the government inn system and the migration patterns within the kingdom of Sweden over time. Class Handout
10:15 am - 11:15 am[edit | edit source]
Jurisdictions for Swedish Genealogy (Geoffrey Fröberg Morris, AG®)[edit | edit source]
The Swede’s have a rich history of record keeping. The challenge is knowing what records exist and how to find them. This presentation will explain Swedish church, civil, and judicial administration between the mid-1600’s and up to about 1900. We’ll look at each jurisdictional structure and the records they kept. With this knowledge, you will be able to search beyond the regular strategies in church records. Class Handout
11:30 am - 12:30 pm Lunch[edit | edit source]
1:15 pm - 2:15 pm[edit | edit source]
Introduction to Icelandic Church and Census Records[edit | edit source]
2:30 pm - 3:30 pm[edit | edit source]
Finland: (Bradley Marchant AG®)[edit | edit source]
Thursday, September 14, 2017[edit | edit source]
9:00 am - 10:00 am[edit | edit source]
Norwegian Church Records (Liv Anderson, CG, AG®)[edit | edit source]
10:15 am - 11:15 am[edit | edit source]
Norway: We're getting married. Traditions and Records. (Anka Magee, AG®)[edit | edit source]
11:30 am - 12:30 pm Lunch[edit | edit source]
1:15 PM - 2:15 pm[edit | edit source]
Norway: "Lensrekneskapsbøker" (Jeff Svare, AG®)[edit | edit source]
2:30 pm - 3:30 pm[edit | edit source]
Norwegian Migration and Immigration (Anka Magee, AG®)[edit | edit source]
Friday, September 15, 2017[edit | edit source]
9:00 am - 10:00 am[edit | edit source]
Danish Estates (Jeff Svare, AG®)[edit | edit source]
10:15 am - 11:15 am[edit | edit source]
Little Used Records on the "Arkivalieronline" (Anka Magee, AG®)[edit | edit source]
1:15 PM - 2:15 pm[edit | edit source]
2:30 pm - 3:30 pm[edit | edit source]
Research in Copenhagen (Boyd Nielsen, AG®)[edit | edit source]
Presenters[edit | edit source]
Liv H. Anderson, CG, AG® a native of Kristiansund, Norway with her first encounter with genealogy at the Trondheim Archive when she was 12 years old. Liv has worked for FamilySearch for over 35 years. The first 5 years in the Evaluation Department, processing individual and marriage entry sheets; the next 11 years in the Cataloging Department, and since November of 1995 as a Scandinavian Research Consultant. Liv is a Certified Genealogist through the Board of Certified Genealogists, Washington, DC and has accreditation in Norwegian research through the International Commission for the Accreditation of Professional Genealogists, ICAPGen.
Rachel Creswell, Rachel Creswell has served as a volunteer at the Family History Library on the International floor since 2002. Her main focus of research is in Finland.
Dr. Fritz Juengling, Ph.D., MA, BA, BA, AG® received his Bachelor’s degrees in German Studies and Secondary Education at Western Oregon University, his Master’s and Doctorate in Germanic Philology with minors in both English and Linguistics at the University of Minnesota. He has taught all levels of German, English, Latin and Old English (Anglo-Saxon) at the high school and university levels. He is an Accredited Genealogist® for Germany and the Netherlands through the International Commission for the Accreditation of Professional Genealogists and a German, Dutch, and Scandinavian Research Specialist at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Anka Magee, BS, AG® Anka is currently working as an International Research Consultant at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah. She has presented classes at various conferences and Libraries: National Genealogical Society (NGS), ICAPGen conferences, UGA Salt Lake Institute, BYU Genealogical conferences, and has taught numerous classes at the Family History Library in SLC. She worked as an instructor at BYU for a number of years. There have been numerous field trip experiences in Scandinavia, England and Germany. She has done research in various archives in Scandinavia and the British Isles. Anka is a proud native of Norway and is accredited in Norwegian and Danish research through ICAPGen.
Rick Mathews, Richard (Rick) Mathews, a native of Roosevelt, Utah, graduated from Brigham Young University in Accounting. He serves on the boards of the Swedish Heritage Society, Utah lodge of the Sons of Norway, Icelandic Association of Utah, and the Utah chapter of Rebild (a Danish-American organization). He served has a consultant in the Brigham Young University Family History Library for over 13 years. Rick has taught classes on Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Finnish, Icelandic, and Schleswig-Holstein research, transcribing Gothic handwriting, and other aspects of Scandinavian Family History. Rick served as a page administrator on the FamilySearch Facebook pages for Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland before they were combined into the Northern Europe Genealogy Research Community page where he is a frequent contributor.
Kathy Meade, Kathy Meade has been assisting persons with their Swedish research for more than ten years. She is the North American representative for ArkivDigital, a company that offers an online subscription service to Swedish historical records. She has given many presentations throughout the country as well as written genealogy articles for the Nordstjernan newspaper. She serves on the advisory board for the Swedish American Genealogy Center at the Swedish American Museum in Chicago and volunteers at the Arlington Heights Memorial Library helping patrons with their Swedish research.
Geoffrey Fröberg Morris, BA, AG® He began family history research as a teen when he was mentored by his mother (a native of Sweden) who was accredited in Swedish research. He received a bachelors degree from the University of Utah in Philosophy with a minor in Swedish. He has been employed for over 15 years at the Family History Library as a member of the Nordic research team. Among his work assignments, Geoff has engaged in many archival visits in Sweden and Denmark. He has authored hundreds of pages to the Family Search Wiki, and presents at conferences routinely.
A. Boyd Nielsen, BA, AG® A. Boyd Nielsen, founder of Nielsen Genealogical Services, has been involved in genealogical research for over 50 years. He specializes in Scandinavian, Germanic, British, and North American research. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English and German from Utah State University. He is an accredited genealogist through ICAPGen®. He is a member of the Association of Professional Genealogists, the Utah Genealogical Association, a Commisssioner on the ICAPGen® Board and on the grading committee for ICAPGen®. He also serves as the Scandinavian Chair for ICAPGen®.
Naomi D. Newbold, BA, AG® Naomi graduated with a B.A. from Brigham Young University with a major in Family History / Genealogy. She has been accredited with ICAPGen in Danish research since 2014. Naomi’s research experience includes full time employment at the Family History Library with the Nordic team, archival work in Denmark and Germany, and client work. She has a special interest in Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein in Germany.