Monday, December 27, 2010

Bay State Roots

An interesting little gadget I recently found on Boston.com which shows the ethnic origins of Massachusetts towns:

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/graphics/12_26_10_mass_roots/

Not a genealogical gold-mine,but interesting information on migration & settlement in Mass.

Happy Holidays,
B~

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Free Irish Records!!!!

I just found a new website for free parish records in Ireland (including some of my people!):

www.irishgenealogy.ie

The site is run by Ireland's Dept. of Tourism, Culture & Sport.

Records so far include:
Carlow(COI)
Cork & Ross (RC)
Dublin(COI) Dublin (PRESBY.) Dublin(RC)
Kerry(COI) Kerry(RC)

All are different time periods.

That's it for me. I'm finally pushing back from the keyboard and enjoying a little sunshine (and wind!!) this weekend.

Hope to see you all this Wednesday!

B~

Thursday, July 22, 2010

I'm Back Again... more Irish than ever!

Now that I'm back and caught up from all my travels, here's a little news from me...

I didn't think it was possible to be more Irish than I am, but a little research has uncovered that an ancestor born in Scotland (and assumed to be Scottish for years), was actually born in Scotland during the famine times to Irish parents!

And, I've just been able to add another generation back in Ireland, so I'll need to update my surname list to add Connolley!

I just love it when the ancestors are discovered!

Friday, June 18, 2010

Welcome to the blog of the Martha's Vineyard Island Chapter (MVI) of the Massachusetts Society of Genealogists, Inc. (MSOG). And kudos to Brenda Welch for making it happen. Thanks also to MSOG webmaster Hope Tillman for spending her wait time at the New Orleans airport this morning making sure we got linked to the world.

Martha's Vineyard is an island about seven miles off the coast of Massacusetts. I guess we are pretty well known now due to a lot of the well known making us their summer destination but the other three seasons find us living a much less frenzied life. A lot of people ask what we do in the winter and I always think that's such a funny question. We do pretty much what everyone else does and while it's true that island winters are probably happiest for those with a serious reading habit or of a contemplative turn of mind, as our population grows so does the demand for real world activities, and we are also only a short boat ride away from mainland America.

One thing a lot of us do is genealogy. For those with Island ancestry we have the Martha's Vineyard Museum which houses a library overflowing with historical and genealogical resources. Each of our six towns has its own library as well. We have an LDS Family History Center. And we have the Internet.

As this blog progresses we'll be talking a lot about "The Vineyard" and what we do here and find here in relation to our ancestral searches. Some of our chapter members are descended from the first known occupants, The Wampanoag Tribe of Aquinnah. Some are descendants of Thomas Mayhew, first English governor in the 1600's and other early settlers. Some have ancestors who arrived on whaling ships, particularly the Portuguese who were well established by the mid 1800's. Many of our members,however, trace their roots beyond these immediate shores and so our interests are geographically far-reaching as well.

Our main focus in this blog is Martha's Vineyard but just as our goal as a chapter is to help all our members no matter where their roots are, I hope this blog will become a lively forum for conversation and shared discoveries across the spectrum of our favorite common interest.

Marna Waller

Friday, June 11, 2010

We're Online!

Check here for updates from the Massachusetts Society of Genealogists, Inc. Martha's Vineyard Chapter.