Georgia History Festival Colonial Faire & Super Museum Sunday

Georgia History Festival – Bringing history to life for all ages

The Georgia History Festival is the signature K-12 educational program of the Georgia Historical Society. Beginning with the new school year in September, a variety of public programs, exhibits, in-school events, and educational resources bring history to life for students of all ages and encourage Georgians to explore the richness and diversity of our state’s past. The Festival culminates in February, the founding month of the Georgia Colony, with Founding City events like the popular Colonial Faire and Muster living history program held at Wormsloe State Historic Site, Savannah’s colorful Georgia Day Parade, and the annual Trustees Gala.

Georgia History Festival Colonial Faire & Muster- Wormsloe State Historic Site- Savannah Sunday, February 7, 2016 12:00-4:00-  Experience the everyday life of colonial times through historical re-enactments, cannon firings, demonstrations of cooking and craft techniques, music and dance. Free and open to the public.

Georgia History Festival’s Super Museum Sunday

Sunday, February 7, 2016- 12:00-4:00

Georgians and visitors alike experience our state’s rich history and cultural life as historic sites, house museums, art museums, and other points of interest in Savannah and throughout Georgia open their doors to the public, providing an exceptional opportunity to experience the history in our own backyard. Over sixty cultural institutions participate in this popular annual family event.

Multiple sites throughout Georgia -Free and open to the public.

List of sites

Georgia History Festival – Bringing history to life for students of all ages

 

 

 

Family Tree Maker is BACK! Breaking news from Rootstech!

and RootsMagic will will connect to Ancestry by the end of 2016!

News from Ancestry.com:

New Family Tree Maker Options

Kendall Hulet for Ancestry.com

Since our Family Tree Maker announcement last December, we have continued to actively explore ways to develop and support Family Tree Maker and ensure you have choices to preserve your work in ways that matter to you.

Today, I am pleased to announce two options for desktop software that will work with Ancestry.

Software MacKiev

Software MacKiev, with whom we have a long-standing relationship, is acquiring the Family Tree Maker software line as publisher for both Mac and Windows versions. Software MacKiev has been the developer of Family Tree Maker for Mac for more than six years and is thrilled at the opportunity to publish future versions of Family Tree Maker for Mac and Windows.

This new agreement means you will receive software updates and new versions from Software MacKiev, and have the ability to purchase new versions of Family Tree Maker from Software MacKiev as they are released.   You will have continued access to Ancestry Hints, Ancestry searches, and be able to save your tree on Ancestry with Family Tree Maker moving forward.

RootsMagic

We have made an agreement with RootsMagic, a leading genealogy desktop software program publisher, to connect Ancestry with the RootsMagic software by the end of 2016. With this new relationship, RootsMagic can serve as your desktop family tree software, while having access to Ancestry hints, Ancestry searches, and the ability to save your tree on Ancestry.

We have heard your concerns and are working to provide the solutions you requested. These new agreements will make it possible to preserve your work on Ancestry and Family Tree Maker and enable future features and benefits to help you discover your family history. Be assured that Ancestry, in cooperation with Software MacKiev and RootsMagic, will continue to support you as you discover your family history.
We ask for your patience as we work diligently through all the details to make these solutions available. Be sure to check back on our blog as we share more information about Family Tree Maker in the next few months.

For more information on Software MacKiev and RootsMagic, click below:

Columbus -Emmy award winner to deliver keynote- Ga History Festival

Emmy Award winner to deliver Georgia History Festival keynote at Columbus Museum– Feb 4, 2016- 6pm

Rootstech 2016 Live Streaming Schedule

Sadly, We all can’t attend Rootstech February 3-6 in Salt Lake City. Fortunately, Rootstech shares by streaming some of the sessions. Several sessions, including the general key note sessions on Thursday and Saturday will be streamed live on the homepage of Rootstech.org

You can view the streaming schedule here. Presenters include Lisa Louis Cooke, Gov. Michael Leavett, Peggy Lauritzen, Anne Mitchell and James Ison among many others.  Topics include British research, Ancestry.com, the Genealogical Proof Standard,  Google for Genealogy, and the always exciting Rootstech Innovator Showdown finals.

Rootstech is the largest family history event in the world and is the perfect place to discover, preserve, and share your family stories and connections across generations.

World class speakers – over 200 engaging classes – a huge exp hall- something for everyone!

 

Atlanta-Margaret Mitchell House-Forsaken – Ross Howell Jr.

Atlanta History Center- Margaret Mitchell House Lecture– February 9 2016 7:00 pm- Reservations Required-

Ross Howell Jr. – Forsaken                          

gig_forsaken

Ross Howell Jr.’s stunning debut novel Forsaken presents the chilling true story of Virginia Christian, an uneducated African American girl who was tried and convicted of murdering her white employer in 1912. Charlie Mears, a white man, covered the case as a rookie reporter. The book chronicles the story of the trial and its aftermath as seen through Mears’s eyes, weaving in actual court records, letters, and personal accounts.

Admission for all lectures is $5 for members, $10 for nonmembers. Reservations are required for all lectures.

Please call 404.814.4150 to reserve tickets. All lecture ticket purchases are non-refundable

GIG_Atlanta History Center -logo_2

Gwinnett- GHGS 2015 awards

Gwinnett Historical & Genealogical Society presented awards at the last meeting of 2015.

The Preservation Award- this award was given in recognition of educational efforts in Colonial Heritage and was presented to Bruce Maney. Bruce visits public schools and does a presentation on colonial history for the students.

The Distinguished Service Award was presented to Ed Williams in recognition of his volunteer work as Treasurer for the Society,  his efforts with the Winn Property, and other society projects.

The President’s Award was presented to Bobbie Tkacik. Bobbie served as the Cemetery Chair in 2015 and is the current office manager.

The society office is located in the old courthouse on the square in Lawrenceville. The office is open Monday- Friday  10:00 -2:00  and welcomes visitors.

 

 

 

Seniors benefit from know family history

Ben Sutherly for the Columbus Dispatch– 31 January 2016

Senior benefit from knowing family history-

When relatives gather, politics and religion are notorious no-nos. So when the next holiday rolls around, you might have better luck broaching the topic of your family’s health history.

It’s widely known that genetics play a role in diseases such as cancer and a range of cardiovascular disorders. But experts say that a familiarity with previous generations’ ills can help inform the care that people seek as they age, not to mention the preventative steps they take to safeguard their well-being.

If memory problems run in the family, for example, doctors should know. Dementia, while more prevalent among older people, is not a normal part of aging, said Dr. Meredith Mucha, a geriatrician at Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center.

“Information is power,” Mucha said. Documenting the health history of your family “allows us to be aware of things that you wouldn’t know otherwise to be aware of.”

It’s typical for doctors, of course, to compile comprehensive health histories of their patients, including pertinent information about family members. But doing your homework ahead of time can be a big help.

Such information often gives doctors insight and context for a patient’s health. If a patient’s parents had gout, for example, certain diuretics or blood-pressure medications might be bypassed to reduce the risk of side effects in the patient, said Dr. Greg Wise, a family medicine doctor in Groveport and the chief medical officer and medical director of MediGold, Mount Carmel Health System’s Medicare Advantage health plan.

Family history might help identify a patient’s liver as a culprit in his or her high levels of LDL, or bad, cholesterol. It can even help doctors determine proper drug dosages and how best to screen for aneurysms.

And family histories can help doctors rule out possible reasons for a patient’s health condition. “Sometimes family history helps us in a reverse way,” Wise said.

An awareness of previous generations’ health susceptibilities often is a helpful guide as one ages, but not always. Knowing your family has a history of early-onset Alzheimer’s disease, for which there is no cure, might be a source of anxiety instead of empowerment.

Still, many experts say it’s usually better for people to know more than less.

“Human beings in general need to be incentivized to do things,” said Dr. Michael Wasserman, a California-based geriatrician, speaker and member of the American Geriatric Society’s Health in Aging Foundation.

“If you know that you might have a higher risk of developing a problem if you didn’t exercise or follow a diet, you then have a choice.”

Family histories are “a way of making it more personal,” Wasserman said.

Mucha’s mother, Bobbie Mucha, 69, of Westerville, modified her diet because her own mother and grandmother died in their early 70s of heart problems. She’s also careful about drinking because alcoholism runs in her family.

But it was her family’s brush with breast cancer — both Bobbie and her oldest daughter are survivors of the disease — that convinced her to get on the phone and speak with relatives, some of whom she hadn’t talked with for a long time.

“I felt that was the only way I would understand what I should be doing,” she said.

The U.S. surgeon general has had a family history initiative under way for more than a decade. Those wishing to create an online family health history that can be retrieved at a later date can do so at familyhistory.hhs.gov. The web-based tool can tell you whether you’re at greater risk for certain health conditions such as diabetes and colon cancer.

Your parents, siblings and children are most important to include in a health history. Grandparents, uncles, aunts, nieces, nephews, half-brothers and half-sisters should be included, too. It’s important to include not only serious health events such as heart attacks and strokes, but also how old a relative was he or she had a health scare. Even knowing your family’s countries of origin can be pertinent.

“Elderly people see it as a way to educate and inform their children and their children’s children,” Mucha said.

bsutherly@dispatch.com

Black History Month at the Georgia Archives

Johnny Jackson for Clayton News Daily

MORROW — The Atlanta chapter of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society, the Auburn Avenue Research Library, the Georgia Archives and the Friends of Georgia Archives and History will host a Black History Month program Feb. 13.

The daylong event, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., will feature guest speakers and lecturers on subjects ranging from African-American genealogical research to New Orleans plantation living.

The program is free and requires no registration. It will be held at the Georgia Archives, 5800 Jonesboro Road in Morrow. Visit georgiaarchives.org to learn more about this and other upcoming events at the Georgia Archives.

Athens: I Seek Dead People- Program for teens

Athens-Clarke County LIbrary – Wednesday – Feb 3.

I Seek Dead People: A Teen’s Intro to Genealogy – Ever wondered where you come from? Learn how to trace your past and find some of your ancestors!  A Heritage Room librarian will be on hand to teach you all the basic ins and outs of genealogy and searching for your ancestors. They can also answer questions you might have about starting your search so you can continue it after the workshop. You never know who you could be related to, so come join us!  This workshop is open to teens 11-18.
Where: Multipurpose Room C, Athens-Clarke County Library, 2025 Baxter Street, Athens, Georgia
When: 4:30 p.m.

Ashley Callahan to speak at GA Archives Lunch & Learn

Lunch & Learn Friday February 12, 2016- 12 noon

Morrow, GA, January 19, 2016– Ashley Callahan will speak about her book Southern Tufts:
The Regional Origins and National Craze for Chenille Fashion
on Friday February 12, 2016, at the Georgia Archives at 12 noon.

Southern Tufts is the first book to highlight the garments produced by northwestern Georgia’s tufted textile industry. Though best known now for its production of carpet, in the early twentieth century the region was revered for its handtufted candlewick bedspreads, products that grew out of the Southern Appalachian Craft Revival and appealed to the vogue for Colonial Revival–style household goods. Callahan tells the story of chenille fashion and its connections to stylistic trends, automobile tourism, industrial developments, and U.S. history. Southern Tufts presents a broad history of tufted textiles, as well as sections highlighting individual craftspeople and manufacturers involved with the production of chenille fashion.

Ashley Callahan has an MA in the history of American decorative arts from Parsons School of Design and the Cooper-Hewitt, Smithsonian Institution, and a BA in art history from the University of the South.

Please join us at the Georgia Archives on February 12 as Callahan speaks about the history of candlewick and chenille garment production in northwestern Georgia from the 1920s through the 1950s. The talk is part of our monthly Lunch and Learn series, which is free and open to the public.

For more information, please contact Jill Sweetapple at 678.364.3731 or email at Jill.Sweetapple@usg.edu.

 

Georgia Archives – 5800 Jonesboro Road, Morrow, Georgia 30260 – 678-364-3710