Update

Here’s an idea for a logo for the website. Please comment your thoughts below.

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As far as the colors are concerned I wanted something bright and colorful, integrating the concept of growth. The bottom version includes the concept of growth in two directions.

Email still doesn’t seem to be working, so I’m going to to move everything to a new host.

Comment spam continues to be a problem and I’m not happy with the solution I was waiting for. As a result (and along with moving to a new host) I’ve decided to switch software for the weblog to WordPress. It has moderated comments, which means the software can be configured so that any comment posted to the website won’t be public until it is approved.

I’m probably going to wait (hopefully) for the latest and greatest version to appear. The software appears solid (Genealogy Blog has also been using WordPress for a while).

In the mean time you may experience sporactic down time.

U.S. Surname Distribution

Query the U.S. Surname Distribution database at Hamrick Software and get a colored coded US map showing showing distribution for the surname of your choice. Optional years are 1990, 1920m 1880 and 1850.

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1990 Distribution for “Bodily”

Brought to you by Hamrick Software producers of VueScan. I’ve used VueScan for about a year and highly recommend it (especially if you can’t find a driver for your scanner).

Via Genealoge

Family Reunion

Any Ropers (we’re from Mary Ann Bodily) who will be in SLC in August and would like to meet your Bodily cousins take note:

The Nielson family reunion is mainly for the Peter and Delecty Bodily Nielson line. You are welcome to join with us and enjoy getting to know and visit. We are all from the Robert Bodily Jr family line.

August 21st, 10 am to 6 pm, 300 East 8800 South, Sandy Utah.

Its an old Church with plenty of room. Fenced play area for the kids. We will have the cultural hall area, kitchen and maybe the chapel. Some one needs to contact those in the Vernal area, I have sent two letters to those in the white pages but got no reply.

– Jim Nielson

About Family Preserves

I’m the youngest of seven children. My parents always kidded about having two families. One that included my four brothers, and a second that consisted of my two sisters and I.

The earliest memories I have of my oldest brothers are after they had left home. As a child I used to spend a lot of time exploring our family’s informal archives (a filing cabinet and my father’s top dresser drawer).

I was curious of what our family was like before I came along. I remember spending hours looking at black and white family photographs. These pictures provided a visual glimpse for me to travel back in time to experience the part of my family that I had never known. This was one of my favorite activities.

Fast forward 20 years. I never really lost the interest of my childhood.

I started to realize that as a youngest child many historical family objects and memories would soon start to disappear. I decided (out of selfish reasons) to try to preserve them. My father graciously provided many photos, papers, certificate and other things. I spent a couple years attempting to create a cd-rom and printed magazines. I never seemed to be able to completely finish these projects.

Since I was a teen I have been interested in technology. In August of 2003 I decided to start “blogging” the historical things that my father provided me with. The weblog is called Family Preserves http://www.familypreserves.com/

Many other family members (including siblings, cousins, parents, aunts & uncles and distant relatives) are contributing items. Hundreds of items that I never knew of have been shared. These include many historical photos, personal histories, old letters, certificate documents, ration books, and many other “really cool” items.

The weblog format has some great features. These include the ability to search all the content, organize items by category (we are using surnames), multiple authors, web interface, comments, date & time stamps. Weblogs aren’t perfect for family history though, hence I’m now in the process of integrating the weblog (Movable Type) content with genealogy software (The Next Generation of Genealogy Site Building). Google and other search engines tends to rank weblogs well, because of this when one searches for the name of an ancestor, the results are generally at the top of the list.

I’ve attempted to keep the content digital. This means that text in a scanned image has been typed in. Although this slows down the process of adding content I believe the value of the text being indexed is well worth the time.

Integrating. the content on the site to genealogy software is the next logical step. This provides the ability to browse a family tree and find related photographs, documents and other items. This brings order and structure to all the data we are acquiring.

My next goal after completing the integration is to get interested relatives who do genealogical research to document their work on the weblog (as they would with a research log) and update the information on the website. This provide a way for researchers to know what others have found out, avoid duplication of effort, and have a always current source of information.

There are so many things that I have learned about my family’s history (over the last few years) that I couldn’t write it all. I’ve gained a new appreciation for those who I am a very real part of. My motivation to keep our family’s history alive has only increased. I’m now in the process of adding a lot more material from my wife’s family and have many more discoveries to make.

This website would be nothing without the help and contributions from many relatives and friends including Marv Roper, Amy Cook, Terry Roper, Laura Jensen, Teryl Roper, Peggy Harvey, Deloris Ramon, Christopher DeSantis, Mike and Irene Brooks, Jim Nielson, Randall Roper, Jane Jeffs and many others I’ve haven’t mentioned.
Continue reading About Family Preserves

100 Years Ago Today

My Mother’s Grandfather Niels Moller Eilersen passed away 14 May 1904. At the time my Grandmother was 10 years old.

From Anna Hypolita (Eilersen) Hansen History

… Mother was something of a tomboy. Perhaps this was encouraged since her parents had lost a boy older and one younger than she and her father dearly wanted a son. She and her father were constant companions and she loved to help him around the farm. How she enjoyed riding the horses and helping in such ways as driving the horses in a circle while he fed the machine they pulled straw from the barn. This was a straw cutting machine which cut the straw into short pieces for the animals…

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… The family then had to sell Cozy Hill Farm and move to the city of Horsens because here father’s ill health (tuberculosis of the stomach, chest and throat) wouldn’t permit his taking care of the farm. However, he couldn’t leave all the horses behind so he took some of his best horses and a few pigs with them. These were cared for by a hired man outside the city limits, and the family leased an apartment in Horsens for one year. Mother and her sister Sophie went to private school during that year…

… Her father died when she was nearly nine (May 1904). This was a great sorrow to the family and a tremendous loss was undoubtedly felt by the young girl Lita who had always loved and favored her dad and known his constant love and companionship…

Fix

I fixed the Genealogy search in the side bar. It may not have worked properly in some browsers.