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Monday, December 5, 2011

Christmas Special Low Discount Rate to Subscribe to 6 Genealogy Websites. Hurry!

Christmas Special expires December 24th or when full. Space is limited, so act now to be certain that you get the best rate.
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Sunday, November 20, 2011

Colonial Families on Kentucky Pioneers.com

Genealogies from the Colonial Families of the US by George Norbury McKenzie (1912). This series of volumes were published in 1912 and includes extensive genealogies going back to the Colonial days.

• Akers - Louisville
• Barrick - Versailles & Perryville
• Bell - Shelby Co.
• Breckinridge - Lexington
• Bullitt - Louisville
• Clark/La Nauze - Louisville
• Courtney - Louisville
• Hedges - Bourbon Co.
• Hoge - Oldham Co.
• Holstein - Fayette Co.
• Huie - Jefferson Co.
• Hundley - Louisville
• Jacob - Louisville
• Jones - Clark Co.
• Lawson - Greenup
• Lyle - Allen Co.
• Milton - Lexington & Fayetteville
• Morgan - Fayette Co.
• Nightingdale - Louisville
• Akers Pottenger - Nelson Co.
• Quisenberry - Georgetown & Winchester
• Robinson - Jefferson Co.
• Robinson - Louisville
• Scott - Louisville & Owensville
• Shelby - Lexington
• Short - Lee Co.
• Watson - Louisville
• Wilson - Louisville

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Friday, November 18, 2011

Gedcom files added to Kentucky Pioneers.com

This Gedcom collection is the private traced genealogy collection of Jeannette Holland Austin. The files are currently being gathered to add to this website. Subscribers of Kentucky Pioneers may view and/or download the files.

* Adair of GA, SC, VA
* Camp of America; the emigrant into USA, hundreds of families. Begins 1559 in England; goes to early 1900's. (356,752 bytes)
* Evans, descendants of Arden Evans of MD
* Lane of GA,NC,AL
* Mckinney
* Roquemore
* Stegall
* Williams of VA, GA

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Saturday, November 5, 2011

Family Histories Added to to Kentucky Pioneers

Genealogies added to Kentucky Pioneers
Akers of Louisville
Barrick of Versailles & Perryville
Bell of Shelby Co.
Breckinridge of Lexington
Bullitt of Louisville
Callaway, Job
Clark/La Nauze of Louisville
Courtney of Louisville
Crenshaw, Cornelius
Hedges of Bourbon Co.
Hoge of Oldham Co.
Holstein of Fayette Co.
Huie of Jefferson Co.
Hundley of Louisville
Jacob of Louisville
Jones of Clark Co.
Lawson of Greenup
Ligon, William
Love, William
Lyle of Allen Co.
Milton of Lexington & Fayetteville
Moore, Robert
Morgan of Fayette Co.
Nightingdale of Louisville
Pottenger of Nelson Co.
Quisenberry of Georgetown & Winchester
Robinson of Jefferson Co.
Robinson of Louisville
Scott of Louisville & Owensville
Shelby of Lexington
Short of Lee Co.
Stice from Germany
Taylor, James
Watson of Louisville
Wilson of Louisville

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Thursday, September 29, 2011

Returning Subscribers to Genealogy Websites get Lowest Rate today

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Friday, August 19, 2011

Hocker of Garrard County, Kentucku\y

A sketch of the Hocker famiy of Maryland to Garrard County, Kentucky has been added to Kentucky Pioneers

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Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Monday, July 4, 2011

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Hardin Family Traced on Kentucky Pioneers

The Hardin families of Virginia and Kentucky are discused from ca 1706 on Kentucky Pioneers and includes a video.

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Friday, June 24, 2011

Monday, June 20, 2011

Boone Genealogy Traced by KentuckyPioneers.com

The Daniel Boone Genealogy is traced back to ca 1600 in England and goes to Pennsylvania and Kentucky.



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Power Outage Caused Recent Problems

The last two days, there was a power outage in Nevada due to storms, etc. which made our server unstable. This has been repaired. However, they are recommending that everyone clear their cache from the browser (delete the history, etc.)

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www.southcarolinapioneers.net
www.virginiapioneers.net
www.kentuckypioneers.com

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Sunday, June 19, 2011

Check List on Where to Start Genealogical Research

Here is a guide line of where to start.

Relatives
Family Bibles. Search local archives and special collections from groups such as the DAR
Cemeteries. Get a county map with a good legend.
Church Records. While out visiting cemeteries, visit local churches to learn if they kept baptismal records, etc.
County Records. Search wills and estates (everything), plus marriages, deeds and tax digests.
Census Records.
Pensions, civil war, Mexican war, War of 1812 and Revolutionary War. These are found on microfilm at the National Archives.



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Thursday, June 16, 2011

Carson of VA and KY

The Carson family first came through York County, PA, then Washington County, Virginia and finally to Fayette and Lincoln Counties, Kentucky, traced on Kentucky Pioneers

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Friday, June 3, 2011

Callaway Family Histry added to Kentucky Pioneers.com

A sketch of the Callaway family fom Birginia into Boonesboro is now available to members of Kentucky Pioneers
Included is a video.

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Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Low membership price to bloggers. Only 3 left.

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Save $305.00. A password will be sent to you. We only have 3 left of this special offering for bloggers to our genealogy blogs. Act now! These will go fast!

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  6. Genealogy-Books.com
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Saturday, April 30, 2011

Getting Started on Researching your Ancestors

Here is a guide line of where to start.

Relatives
Family Bibles. Search local archives and special collections from groups such as the DAR
Cemeteries. Get a county map with a good legend.
Church Records. While out visiting cemeteries, visit local churches to learn if they kept baptismal records, etc.
County Records. Search wills and estates (everything), plus marriages, deeds and tax digests.
Census Records.
Pensions, civil war, Mexican war, War of 1812 and Revolutionary War. These are found on microfilm at the National Archives.

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Friday, April 8, 2011

Finding Origiinal Documents

The discovery of an original last will and testament, deed or marriage record is indeed difficult for the genealogist to locate. We really need to view the original will document because it not only provides the hand-writing of the decedent, names of witnesses, but detailed information about the disposal of the worldly goods. Ypu can read the abstracts all day long. However, until you read the original document, you do not fully understand your ancestor's intent. Now, where are these originals? Well, initially the wills and marriages are filed in the record room of the clerk's office of the probate court. Deeds are filed in the record room of the Superior Court. These documents were copied by the clerk in his own hand-writing in the large, heavy books inside the record room. The copying sometimes added error, misspellings, omitted words and lines. I worked on the Brantley genealogy in Georgia for a number of years trying to unravel a last will and testament. Finally, upon visiting the court house, I located the original document. What a difference! The name of the testator had been incorrectly written by the clerk. Finding this document resolved a genealogy of errors by all of those who accepted the clerk's record. The oldest documents have virtually disappeared from all court houses. They got stored, lost or even stolen. In today's world, some court houses (like Chatham County, Georgia) are storing their old books on an off-site location and you have to wait several days for them to be delivered to the court house. In other words, the public does not have access to the storage facility. I filmed as many of Chatham's old wills as possible upon my visits there and put them online available to members of Georgia Pioneers Also, I have to tell you that the employees of some court houses have no knowledge of old records and cannot help you locate them. In the State of Virginia, the old books were removed to the Virginia State Archives in Richmond. Still, these are not the documents themselves. The Georgia State Archives has been given some original documents, such as land plats,but you have to sign them out. Also, I understand that they have some original wills for certain counties. The thing to do is to ask the librarian and hope that she is knowledgeable. What is happening is that some original documents are turned over to State Archives. Georgia is having budget issues now and is only open 3 days a week to the public. When you visit there, look in the glass display cabinets. Georgia Pioneers.com has filmed most of Georgia's 156 oldest county will books and continues to work on this project. Another place to search for the oldest books would be local historical and genealogical societies. Do the employees at the court house know this? No. You simply have to nose around. I suspect that we may lose more of our record books as time passes, for one reason or the other.

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Obama's Birth Certificate

With all of the Donald Trump controversy about Obama's birth certificate, there are certain facts which the genealogist should be aware of when seeking copies. First of all, to apply for a copy you need to be a relative. I have had no difficulty stating that I was the granddaughter or even great-granddaughter and receiving a copy of the original Birth Certificate. They are obtained from the Bureau of Vital Statistics in Atlanta (or for Honolulu, you would obtain it from the local health department or Bureau of Vital Statistics). Since most States did not make the filing of a birth certificate mandatory until rather late, the 20th century, you do not travel very far back into the lineage. It is desirable to provide the full names of the parents and as much accurate data as possible.

In Georgia, if you do not know the exact date, they will search several years for an additional fee. Be sure and phone ahead to obtain the application, and the current application fee. Notably, the issurance of a birth certificate is a State function because "the issuance is determined by citizenship".The U. S. National Center for Health Statistics creates the standard form to be used, however, States are free to create their own forms. These forms are completed by the attendant at birth or a hospital administrator, and are then forwarded to the local or State registrar, who stores the record and issues certified copies (when requested). That is, it is mandatorily delivered to the Bureau of Vital Statistics, or health department, as it is referred to in Hawaii. At different times in our lives, we need to obtain a certified copy for passport, school registration or other purposes. The copy issued our parents was not certified and is not accepted. It is really easy to acquire a certified copy of your own birth certificate because you can complete all of the blanks on the application. Remember, these are State workers and they are not going to provide an extensive search beyond the information on the form. Since it is mandatory to file the Certificate of Live Birth, if Obama was born in Hawaii, the certificate will be on record. Period. Let us say that you are curious and would like to have this information. Because you are not related (and because of his high profile), you would not obtain it. But there are other methods. Genealogists are detectives. If he were my ancestor and the bureau did not find a record, I would visit the local hospitals and see if they maintained copies. This is the computer-age, and some hospitals might have the information stored just as some public cemeteries. Everybody keeps old records for a certain number of years. I have been in more court houses than you can imagine. Their old policies included bundling up old records, storing them in basements, and even separate buildings. You are not going to find original documents (like wills) any more. However, I have found copies of birth certificates and death certificates in the probate court of a number of court houses around Georgia. There are filing cabinets inside the record room, generally unavailable to the public. Apparently, this is where the clerk of the probate court has to file some records because of space. They used to have old original wills, deeds and marriages inside the record room. Luckily, during the 1950's these documents were placed on microfilm by the joint effort of the State of Georgia and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. The church maintains more than 50 volunteers in the field to film documents. This is how they get preserved in modern times. We all know the story of the burned court houses. Another source which I would search would be newspapers for that time period. Bill O'Reilly stated on his program that he found the notice of Obama's birth in the Honolulu papers. But let us consider how this information is reported. It can come from a number of sources. First, from the hospital, which would announce the hospital, date and parents. You have to know that relatives provide announcements for the newspapers. You could say "Mr. and Mrs. Obama of Honolulu had a baby boy born to them on such date...." Compare this information in the newspaper of the time period. What style did they use? If a reporter was assigned to report live births, he would have gotten it from the hospital. If someone else phoned it in, the notice could say anything. Being "of Honolulu", for example, does not necessarily mean that the parents resided there. I have extracted the Georgia newspapers from 1740 to ca 1935 (these abstracts are in a database on www.georgiapioneers.com), and I have to tell you that births (and deaths) are spread throughout the newspaper for days at a time. They are found in local Community News, New Arrivals, Society News, and so on. You simply have to read every page. If I wanted to zero in on this Obama birth, I would search the newspapers 30 days before and after his birth. The reason: there is so much discovery there, from gossip, to fact, news of travelling to places, visitors to homes, and so on. Obama's parents did not have to be residents for a relative to report the news. They could have easily been residents of Kenya at the time of his birth, and later returned to Honolulu. There are all kind of variables. This is why searching for details in the newspapers are so important. Genealogists, this is what we do! It is a cumbersome job, tedious and tiring. But we do it because any tidbit of information is a clue. So, Bill O'Reilly, your data is incomplete. And, Donald Trump, they won't let you have access to the birth record, but they cannot stop you from researching the newspapers. Look for the microfilm in regional libraries and archives.



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Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Ebooks for Sale

EBOOKS FOR SALE NOW! Rare Out-of-Print Biographies and Genealogies :- The following out-of-print books are for sale in the PDF FORMAT. Upon receipt of your order for a book, it will be emailed to you. No Shipping. Save Money.
Order here
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•Adamson family by A. P. Adamson (1918). Begins with John Baldwin Adamson of Maryland who received a 1726 land grant in Frederick County and his son, Basil Adamson, 51 pp. 3.89 MB. $10.00.
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Bone Connections by Dorothy Holland Herring and Jeannette Holland Austin (1970), 35 pp., 6.07 MB. $8.00.
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•Burwell with Notes by George H. Burwell (1908), 36 pp., 2.88 MB. $8.00.
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•Camp 1630-1777 by Jeannette Holland Austin (1991), 137 pp., 15.86 MB. $10.00.

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•Chamberlain. One Branch of Descendants of Thomas Chamberlain of Woburn, 1644 by George W. Chamberlain (1897), 13 pp. $8.00.

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•Cooper. The Family Record of John Cooper 1778-1909 arranged by Sarah Edna Cooper Holtzclaw (1909), 27 pp., Bedford County, Virginia; Georgia. 14 pp., 12.22 MB. $8.00.

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•Copeland Genealogy. 900 years, begins in France, 19 pp., 2.09 MB. $8.00

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•Craighead Family. Descendants of Rev. Thomas and Margaret Craighead 1658-1876. (1876), 165 pp., 5.92 MB. $10.00.

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•Denison. A Record of the Descendants of Samuel Denison, late of Floyd, Oneida, NY, Commencing with William Denison to America in 1631 and settled in Roxbury, Massachusetts by George Burlingame Denison (1900), 88 pp., 2.74 MB. $10.00.

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•Graham. Letters from a Self-Made Merchant to His son by George Horace Loramer, Small, Maynard & Company, Boston (1905), 312 pp. Letters from John Graham, head of the house of Graham & Co., at the Union Stock Yards in Chicago, to his son, Pierpont, at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts - This book was a rare find in an antique shop in Brunswick, Georgia. 18.60 MB. $10.00

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•Harrison. Benjamin Harrison by Gen. Lew Wallace and Hon. Murat Halstead, 422 pgs., 1892 by Edgewood Publishing Co., includes a very interesting account of his life and many photographs. 19.23 MB. $10.00.

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•Holland (1000-1988) By Jeannette Holland Austin. 500 pages of genealogy and family history; photographs, illustrations. This book has been out of print since 1999 and will not be reprinted, 953.54 MB. - $20.00.

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•Loomis Family. One Bassett Family in America by Buel Burdell Bassett (1926), 18 pp., 1.18MB. $8.00.

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•Memoires D'Outre-Tombe (1814-1815) by Francois-Rene, Vicomte De Chateaubriand (1904). Includes extensive notes of 18th century French persons, including birth/death dates; a Genealogy Chart of the House of Bourboun beginning with Henry IV (1589-1610) and a Genealogy Chart of the House of Bonaparte, beginning with Charles-Bonaparte, the father of Napoleon I. 164 pp., 8.78 MB. $10.00.

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•Oglethorpe. Biographical Memorials of James Oglethorpe by Thaddeus Mason Harris. 177 pp., 382.85 MB. $10.00.

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•Rossdhu. Chiefs of the Clan Colquhoun of Luss, since the 12th century, 24 pp., 1.92 MB. $8.00.

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•Semple. Genealogical History of Family Semple from 1214 to 1888 by William Alexander Semple (1888), 59 pp., 1.59 MB. $10.00.

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•Severance Genealogy by Henry Ormal Severance (1927), 29 pp., 1.03 MB. $8.00.

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•Stokes. The Book of Stokes (1201-1915) by J. Lemack Stokes, D. C., 26 pp., 6.09 MB. $8.00.

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•My Vagabondage by J. E. Patterson. An intimate autobiography of Nature's Nomad (Patterson), 373 pp., printed in London by William Heineman. 33.25 MB. $10.00.

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•Yowell (genealogy) by Clark S. Yowell (1931). Includes Ewell family in Virginia, 87 pp., 1.67 MB. $10.00
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FAST RESEARCH by Jeannette Holland Austin - $27.00
Learn how to find your ancestors faster, which records provide the most information.


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Thursday, February 24, 2011

Ashcraft of Hardin County

Daniel Ashcraft, Revolutionary War Soldier. His family record was filed with his pension and a brief sketch of his family is available to members of Kentucky Pioneers.
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Anderson of Fayette County

The Revolutionary War family of James Anderson was included in his pension and is listed under "Genealogies" available to members.

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Kentucky Genealogies

Akers - Louisville
Anderson of Fayette County
Ashcraft of Hardin County
Barrick - Versailles & Perryville
Bell - Shelby Co.
Bird from Shenandoah County, Virginia to Kentucky
Bowman from Shenandoah County, Virginia to Kentucky
Breckinridge - Lexington
Bullitt - Louisville
Callaway, Job
Calmes of Woodford County
Clark/La Nauze - Louisville
Collings of Spencer Co.
Cottrell of Daviess Co.
Courtney - Louisville
Crenshaw, Cornelius
Davis - Jessamine Co.
Fowler of Louisville
Funk of Clark County
Graham of Washington Co.
Green from Shenandoah County, Virginia to Kentucky
Harrison of Daviess Co.
Hawkins of Woodford Co.
Hedges - Bourbon Co.
Hoge - Oldham Co.
Holstein - Fayette Co.
Huie - Jefferson Co.
Hundley - Louisville
Jacob - Louisville
Jesse of Woodford Co.
Jones - Clark Co.
Kimbley of Daviess Co.
Lawson - Greenup
Lee of Bracken Co.
ligon.html">Ligon of Henderson Co.
Ligon, William
Love, William
Love of Crittenden Co.
Lyle - Allen Co.
Milton - Lexington & Fayetteville
Moore, Robert
Moore of Christian Co.
Morgan - Fayette Co.
Nightingdale - Louisville
Pottenger, Akers - Nelson Co.
Quisenberry - Georgetown & Winchester
Robinson - Jefferson Co.
Robinson - Louisville
Scott - Louisville & Owensville
Self of Daviess Co.
Shelby - Lexington
Short - Lee Co.
Steenhuis, Jacob
Stice, Germany to America
Taylor, James Watson - Louisville
Wilson - Louisville

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Nuts and Bolts of Genealogy

Here is a guide line of where to start.

Relatives
Family Bibles. Search local archives and special collections from groups such as the DAR
Cemeteries. Get a county map with a good legend.
Church Records. While out visiting cemeteries, visit local churches to learn if they kept baptismal records, etc.
County Records. Search wills and estates (everything), plus marriages, deeds and tax digests.
Census Records.
Pensions, civil war, Mexican war, War of 1812 and Revolutionary War. These are found on microfilm at the National Archives.

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Some Tennessee Information Added

Some Tennessee genealogies, revolutionary war pensions and gedcom files have been added to Kentucky Pioneers

Monday, January 3, 2011

Don't Forget Libraries

Libraries are still excellent resources for us genealogists. Each one has its own unique collection of family histories, books and census records. Some regional libraries are stocking microfilm of old newspapers, civil war pensions and donated materials. The advantage of visiting libraries is they are open longer hours and that gives you some room there.

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Internet Freedom

Our relatives provide tips for us throughout our lives. The time frame is usually wrong, perhaps a generation or so, but they do have little glimmers of knowledge. Check your own ability to remember things. Do you remember, for example, the year the Kennedy was assassinated? What were you doing at the time? These are the sort of questions to ask relatives, to awaken a more accurate memory. We can use this tidbits while visiting cemeteries, searching pensions, bibles, wills, estates, deeds and so on. Eventually  a piece of a memory can be compared to a fact and a conclusion drawn. The generation of keeping births, deaths and marriages inside of family bibles seems to have passed. Yet, there are still some old bibles out there, on microfilm at Archives, collections of historical and genealogical societies, in closets, attics and antique shops.

This is the era of public record-keeping on the internet. I would dare to venture an opinion that the internet was invented for genealogy. Yes, there is plenty of porn but genealogy hits far exceed the bad guys.  There have been a number of restrictive bills floated before Congress in the recent years of the democratic party control.  All of them would penalize, tax, subject it to regulations of public utilities, and restrict our use and personal freedoms. 

Look at flickr.com and bing.com  These websites feature the ability to upload our photos and share them with the world!  Imagine finding lost relatives there! It's wonderful!  Somebody out there having a photo of our ancestors will post it to the internet.

When I first started adding my files to the internet, I never would have believe that Georgia Pioneers.com would fill up with 22 gigabytes.  We spent years on our typewriters and putting notes in files, sharing when we could, but eventually losing touch with people.  In the beginning, hard copy books were published listing new websites, but you don't see much of that anymore. No one can keep up with it. I think of the internet as a permanet record. Once it is there, it does not have to be retyped.  You don't need a website. How about a blog?

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