Online Status
hi,
first my apologies for posting this to the "research" list but I did it
since that is the group with the highest number of subscribed members.
I'm overwhelmed. I thought that moving from Yahoo to the new site would
be better and so far it is vastly better and the site is a beautiful
creation of Arturo Ramos the webmaster. Thanks Arturo!
. . .but it one way, a critical way, it is way to much better. I thought
that the amount of work would stay about the same or even less with the
new sites functionality and added features. Some how the new site is
attracting new members to the group in a way that is very much superior
to the yahoo group and that is making my job one that can't continue the
way it is going. I've got a lot of other things going on
(http://NuestraFamiliaUnida.com and http://H2Opodcast.com) and adding
new projects as well and the work for the Nuestros Ranchos site needs to
be trimmed for me to continue as the originating Moderator of the group.
For those reasons I'm thinking to make group membership available only
to persons that:
1) have their representative genealogies in hand and will send them in
as part of being accepted into the group.
or
2) if they are a brand new researcher and have nothing to submit. A
brief written report stating the oral history or other reasons why they
believe they are tied to the states of Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or
Aguascalientes.
or
3) They request a special exemption that will need to considered on a
case by case basis.
What do you as the membership think about this?
joseph
=========================================
pardon esta traducción terrible pero aquí es los pescados de Babel
(http://babelfish.altavista.com/):
hola,
primero mis apologías por fijar esto la lista pero a mí de la
"investigación" la hicieron desde entonces que es el grupo con el número
más alto de miembros suscritos.
Me abruman. Pensé que la mudanza desde Yahoo al sitio nuevo estaría
mejor y es hasta ahora sumamente mejor y el sitio es una creación
hermosa de Arturo Ramos el webmaster. ¡Gracias Arturo!
. . but una forma, una manera crítica, él es manera a mucho mejor.
Pensé que la cantidad de trabajo permanecería casi igual o aún menos con
la nueva funcionalidad de los sitios y las características agregadas.
Vaya algo cómo el sitio nuevo está atrayendo a nuevos miembros al grupo
de una manera que sea mucho superior al grupo del yahoo y que está
haciendo mi trabajo uno que no pueda continuar la manera él. Tengo
muchos de otras cosas que van encendido (http://NuestraFamiliaUnida.com
y http://H2Opodcast.com) y la adición de los nuevos proyectos también y
del trabajo para el sitio de los ranchos de Nuestros necesita ser
ajustada para que continúe como el asesor el originar del grupo. Por
esas razones estoy pensando para poner calidad de miembro de grupo a
disposición solamente las personas eso:
1) tiene sus genealogías representativas a disposición y las enviará
adentro como parte de ser aceptado en el grupo.
o
2) si son investigador nuevos y no tienen nada someter. Un breve informe
escrito que indica la historia oral u otras razones por las que los
creen se ata a los estados de Jalisco, de Zacatecas, y/o de Aguascalientes.
o
3) solicitan una exención especial que necesite considerado caso por caso.
¿Qué usted como la calidad de miembro piensa de esto?
joseph
Policy Change
Joseph,
I think your new proposed policy is fair to anyone and to you. I appreciate your leadership and your flexibility. The fact of the matter is that quite a number of others do not have either the time, money, or tools to have signicant "posts." As the years tick by, they may be able to learn from those that do post. Genealogy, like computers and the Internet, are a time sink, and people have other priorities and/or are involved with constantly changing life dramas. We can still all learn from each other. I favor the more liberal requirement for membership.
Sincerely,
Edward Serros
Seriously Considering a Policy Change/Seriamente en vista de un
Take this as an opinion and preferance: I would like to have access to the gedcoms and family reports of those members that have to be axed from the group; so for me people go and reports have to stay as long as the group deserve to have those reports in the files section, because it is data, that in some cases "fell as gift from heaven", maybe it should be a explicit rule when someone subscribe.
Most of the time I don´t participate because not many share my genes, so I expect not to be axed. In fact nobody in the group share family members nor places, as long as I know, but instead I enjoy so much the sense that I belong in a group that share the same pasion. It is my refuge to look for mail mostly when there are so many adobe walls to brake or to pray at.
Hope it is a strong rason for not to be expelled.
Thanks for your kindness and help in advance.
Joseph Puentes escribió:
hi,
first my apologies for posting this to the "research" list but I did it
since that is the group with the highest number of subscribed members.
I'm overwhelmed. I thought that moving from Yahoo to the new site would
be better and so far it is vastly better and the site is a beautiful
creation of Arturo Ramos the webmaster. Thanks Arturo!
. . .but it one way, a critical way, it is way to much better. I thought
that the amount of work would stay about the same or even less with the
new sites functionality and added features. Some how the new site is
attracting new members to the group in a way that is very much superior
to the yahoo group and that is making my job one that can't continue the
way it is going. I've got a lot of other things going on
(http://NuestraFamiliaUnida.com and http://H2Opodcast.com) and adding
new projects as well and the work for the Nuestros Ranchos site needs to
be trimmed for me to continue as the originating Moderator of the group.
For those reasons I'm thinking to make group membership available only
to persons that:
1) have their representative genealogies in hand and will send them in
as part of being accepted into the group.
or
2) if they are a brand new researcher and have nothing to submit. A
brief written report stating the oral history or other reasons why they
believe they are tied to the states of Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or
Aguascalientes.
or
3) They request a special exemption that will need to considered on a
case by case basis.
What do you as the membership think about this?
joseph
=========================================
pardon esta traducción terrible pero aquí es los pescados de Babel
(http://babelfish.altavista.com/):
hola,
primero mis apologías por fijar esto la lista pero a mí de la
"investigación" la hicieron desde entonces que es el grupo con el número
más alto de miembros suscritos.
Me abruman. Pensé que la mudanza desde Yahoo al sitio nuevo estaría
mejor y es hasta ahora sumamente mejor y el sitio es una creación
hermosa de Arturo Ramos el webmaster. ¡Gracias Arturo!
. . but una forma, una manera crítica, él es manera a mucho mejor.
Pensé que la cantidad de trabajo permanecería casi igual o aún menos con
la nueva funcionalidad de los sitios y las características agregadas.
Vaya algo cómo el sitio nuevo está atrayendo a nuevos miembros al grupo
de una manera que sea mucho superior al grupo del yahoo y que está
haciendo mi trabajo uno que no pueda continuar la manera él. Tengo
muchos de otras cosas que van encendido (http://NuestraFamiliaUnida.com
y http://H2Opodcast.com) y la adición de los nuevos proyectos también y
del trabajo para el sitio de los ranchos de Nuestros necesita ser
ajustada para que continúe como el asesor el originar del grupo. Por
esas razones estoy pensando para poner calidad de miembro de grupo a
disposición solamente las personas eso:
1) tiene sus genealogías representativas a disposición y las enviará
adentro como parte de ser aceptado en el grupo.
o
2) si son investigador nuevos y no tienen nada someter. Un breve informe
escrito que indica la historia oral u otras razones por las que los
creen se ata a los estados de Jalisco, de Zacatecas, y/o de Aguascalientes.
o
3) solicitan una exención especial que necesite considerado caso por caso.
¿Qué usted como la calidad de miembro piensa de esto?
joseph
"The Axe"
Joseph - Marionicia found the perfect words to say how I feel also.
Thank you to Marionicia............
Seriously Considering a Policy Change/Seriamente en vista de un
Sorry, but a person's genealogy work is their copyright protected work.
I can't make any kind of rule saying that even if they choose to leave
their work needs to stay behind. If people choose to leave and they
decide on their own to leave their files then that is their choice, but
I can't force that decision.
In the recent case of the member who chose to be unsubscribed he never
submitted a genealogy so there was none to be left behind.
Also there is a misunderstanding. The people that "Have To" be
unsubscribed from will not be voluntarily requesting to be unsubscribed.
If I "Have To" unsubscribe someone it will be because they "agreed" in
writing to satisfy two requirements and they failed to comply with one
or both of the requirements, in most cases the only one I can prove,
"Not sending in a representative example of their genealogy from our
target research area." Once a person does that even if it is only a
paragraph or two written in an email with a generation or two with some
dates and places in our research area they have met the requirement "for
life." I will never be coming around asking for more and more and more.
[note: yes from time to time I might suggest that people update their
information as they progress, but I'll never make it mandatory to remain
a member of the group].
Yes a simple paragraph or two in an email is enough to "SECURE" a
life-time membership in the group.
joseph
Leticia Leon wrote:
>Take this as an opinion and preferance: I would like to have access to the gedcoms and family reports of those members that have to be axed from the group; so for me people go and reports have to stay as long as the group deserve to have those reports in the files section, because it is data, that in some cases "fell as gift from heaven", maybe it should be a explicit rule when someone subscribe.
>
> Most of the time I don´t participate because not many share my genes, so I expect not to be axed. In fact nobody in the group share family members nor places, as long as I know, but instead I enjoy so much the sense that I belong in a group that share the same pasion. It is my refuge to look for mail mostly when there are so many adobe walls to brake or to pray at.
>
> Hope it is a strong rason for not to be expelled.
>
> Thanks for your kindness and help in advance.
>
>
>Joseph Puentes escribió:
>
>hi,
>
>first my apologies for posting this to the "research" list but I did it
>since that is the group with the highest number of subscribed members.
>
>I'm overwhelmed. I thought that moving from Yahoo to the new site would
>be better and so far it is vastly better and the site is a beautiful
>creation of Arturo Ramos the webmaster. Thanks Arturo!
>
>. . .but it one way, a critical way, it is way to much better. I thought
>that the amount of work would stay about the same or even less with the
>new sites functionality and added features. Some how the new site is
>attracting new members to the group in a way that is very much superior
>to the yahoo group and that is making my job one that can't continue the
>way it is going. I've got a lot of other things going on
>(http://NuestraFamiliaUnida.com and http://H2Opodcast.com) and adding
>new projects as well and the work for the Nuestros Ranchos site needs to
>be trimmed for me to continue as the originating Moderator of the group.
>
>For those reasons I'm thinking to make group membership available only
>to persons that:
>
>1) have their representative genealogies in hand and will send them in
>as part of being accepted into the group.
>
>or
>
>2) if they are a brand new researcher and have nothing to submit. A
>brief written report stating the oral history or other reasons why they
>believe they are tied to the states of Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or
>Aguascalientes.
>
>or
>
>3) They request a special exemption that will need to considered on a
>case by case basis.
>
>
>What do you as the membership think about this?
>
>joseph
>
>=========================================
>
>pardon esta traducción terrible pero aquí es los pescados de Babel
>(http://babelfish.altavista.com/):
>
>hola,
>
>primero mis apologías por fijar esto la lista pero a mí de la
>"investigación" la hicieron desde entonces que es el grupo con el número
>más alto de miembros suscritos.
>
>Me abruman. Pensé que la mudanza desde Yahoo al sitio nuevo estaría
>mejor y es hasta ahora sumamente mejor y el sitio es una creación
>hermosa de Arturo Ramos el webmaster. ¡Gracias Arturo!
>
>. . but una forma, una manera crítica, él es manera a mucho mejor.
>Pensé que la cantidad de trabajo permanecería casi igual o aún menos con
>la nueva funcionalidad de los sitios y las características agregadas.
>Vaya algo cómo el sitio nuevo está atrayendo a nuevos miembros al grupo
>de una manera que sea mucho superior al grupo del yahoo y que está
>haciendo mi trabajo uno que no pueda continuar la manera él. Tengo
>muchos de otras cosas que van encendido (http://NuestraFamiliaUnida.com
>y http://H2Opodcast.com) y la adición de los nuevos proyectos también y
>del trabajo para el sitio de los ranchos de Nuestros necesita ser
>ajustada para que continúe como el asesor el originar del grupo. Por
>esas razones estoy pensando para poner calidad de miembro de grupo a
>disposición solamente las personas eso:
>
>1) tiene sus genealogías representativas a disposición y las enviará
>adentro como parte de ser aceptado en el grupo.
>
>o
>
>2) si son investigador nuevos y no tienen nada someter. Un breve informe
>escrito que indica la historia oral u otras razones por las que los
>creen se ata a los estados de Jalisco, de Zacatecas, y/o de Aguascalientes.
>
>o
>
>3) solicitan una exención especial que necesite considerado caso por caso.
>
>¿Qué usted como la calidad de miembro piensa de esto?
>
>joseph
>
>
>
Seriously Considering a Policy Change/Seriamente en vista de un
Thank you Joseph, I understood clearly now.
Joseph Puentes escribió:
Sorry, but a person's genealogy work is their copyright protected work.
---------------------------------
Do You Yahoo!? La mejor conexión a Internet y 2GB extra a tu correo por $100 al mes. http://net.yahoo.com.mx
Seriously Considering a Policy Change/Seriamente en vista de un
I haven't submitted anything yet since I really haven't had time to do any
research. All I still know if what I submitted when I first subscribed.
Sounds bad but I have a 2 year old, full time job and in about a month will
have another baby so as much as I want to I can't seem to find the time to
dedicate to research. I subscribed hoping to be able to add my information
and be able to learn from others searching for ancestors in the same area. I
have learned a lot just from reading the posts of members of the group and
hope that I will not get the axe. I promise to submit info as soon as I find
the time to do a little research. I thank you for your patience with those
of us that rarely enter into group conversation-and provide really no
information on our "antepasados" although I can say for myself I enjoy
learning from all of you.
Thanks- Jessica Castaneda
----- Original Message -----
From: "Joseph Puentes"
To:
Sent: Saturday, September 23, 2006 2:47 AM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Seriously Considering a Policy
Change/Seriamente en vista de un cambio policial
Sorry, but a person's genealogy work is their copyright protected work.
I can't make any kind of rule saying that even if they choose to leave
their work needs to stay behind. If people choose to leave and they
decide on their own to leave their files then that is their choice, but
I can't force that decision.
In the recent case of the member who chose to be unsubscribed he never
submitted a genealogy so there was none to be left behind.
Also there is a misunderstanding. The people that "Have To" be
unsubscribed from will not be voluntarily requesting to be unsubscribed.
If I "Have To" unsubscribe someone it will be because they "agreed" in
writing to satisfy two requirements and they failed to comply with one
or both of the requirements, in most cases the only one I can prove,
"Not sending in a representative example of their genealogy from our
target research area." Once a person does that even if it is only a
paragraph or two written in an email with a generation or two with some
dates and places in our research area they have met the requirement "for
life." I will never be coming around asking for more and more and more.
[note: yes from time to time I might suggest that people update their
information as they progress, but I'll never make it mandatory to remain
a member of the group].
Yes a simple paragraph or two in an email is enough to "SECURE" a
life-time membership in the group.
joseph
Leticia Leon wrote:
>Take this as an opinion and preferance: I would like to have access to the
>gedcoms and family reports of those members that have to be axed from the
>group; so for me people go and reports have to stay as long as the group
>deserve to have those reports in the files section, because it is data,
>that in some cases "fell as gift from heaven", maybe it should be a
>explicit rule when someone subscribe.
>
> Most of the time I don´t participate because not many share my genes, so
> I expect not to be axed. In fact nobody in the group share family members
> nor places, as long as I know, but instead I enjoy so much the sense that
> I belong in a group that share the same pasion. It is my refuge to look
> for mail mostly when there are so many adobe walls to brake or to pray at.
>
> Hope it is a strong rason for not to be expelled.
>
> Thanks for your kindness and help in advance.
>
>
>Joseph Puentes escribió:
>
>hi,
>
>first my apologies for posting this to the "research" list but I did it
>since that is the group with the highest number of subscribed members.
>
>I'm overwhelmed. I thought that moving from Yahoo to the new site would
>be better and so far it is vastly better and the site is a beautiful
>creation of Arturo Ramos the webmaster. Thanks Arturo!
>
>. . .but it one way, a critical way, it is way to much better. I thought
>that the amount of work would stay about the same or even less with the
>new sites functionality and added features. Some how the new site is
>attracting new members to the group in a way that is very much superior
>to the yahoo group and that is making my job one that can't continue the
>way it is going. I've got a lot of other things going on
>(http://NuestraFamiliaUnida.com and http://H2Opodcast.com) and adding
>new projects as well and the work for the Nuestros Ranchos site needs to
>be trimmed for me to continue as the originating Moderator of the group.
>
>For those reasons I'm thinking to make group membership available only
>to persons that:
>
>1) have their representative genealogies in hand and will send them in
>as part of being accepted into the group.
>
>or
>
>2) if they are a brand new researcher and have nothing to submit. A
>brief written report stating the oral history or other reasons why they
>believe they are tied to the states of Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or
>Aguascalientes.
>
>or
>
>3) They request a special exemption that will need to considered on a
>case by case basis.
>
>
>What do you as the membership think about this?
>
>joseph
>
>=========================================
>
>pardon esta traducción terrible pero aquí es los pescados de Babel
>(http://babelfish.altavista.com/):
>
>hola,
>
>primero mis apologías por fijar esto la lista pero a mí de la
>"investigación" la hicieron desde entonces que es el grupo con el número
>más alto de miembros suscritos.
>
>Me abruman. Pensé que la mudanza desde Yahoo al sitio nuevo estaría
>mejor y es hasta ahora sumamente mejor y el sitio es una creación
>hermosa de Arturo Ramos el webmaster. ¡Gracias Arturo!
>
>. . but una forma, una manera crítica, él es manera a mucho mejor.
>Pensé que la cantidad de trabajo permanecería casi igual o aún menos con
>la nueva funcionalidad de los sitios y las características agregadas.
>Vaya algo cómo el sitio nuevo está atrayendo a nuevos miembros al grupo
>de una manera que sea mucho superior al grupo del yahoo y que está
>haciendo mi trabajo uno que no pueda continuar la manera él. Tengo
>muchos de otras cosas que van encendido (http://NuestraFamiliaUnida.com
>y http://H2Opodcast.com) y la adición de los nuevos proyectos también y
>del trabajo para el sitio de los ranchos de Nuestros necesita ser
>ajustada para que continúe como el asesor el originar del grupo. Por
>esas razones estoy pensando para poner calidad de miembro de grupo a
>disposición solamente las personas eso:
>
>1) tiene sus genealogías representativas a disposición y las enviará
>adentro como parte de ser aceptado en el grupo.
>
>o
>
>2) si son investigador nuevos y no tienen nada someter. Un breve informe
>escrito que indica la historia oral u otras razones por las que los
>creen se ata a los estados de Jalisco, de Zacatecas, y/o de Aguascalientes.
>
>o
>
>3) solicitan una exención especial que necesite considerado caso por caso.
>
>¿Qué usted como la calidad de miembro piensa de esto?
>
>joseph
>
>
>
Seriously Considering a Policy Change/Seriamente en vista de un
I think it's a wonderful requirement to make posting what we want to share of our genealogy work. Some people like Jessica are new and learn from our research, others learn from the things we share about how to go abt finding and reading information. By requiring people to share it stops those who would only take and not share.. I'm sure there is something to be learned by all of us from each person who has agreed to work as part of this group.
Personally I like sharing whatever I have since I know time and money limits many people. Because of that I've posted my records of close to 38,000 names on ancestry world tree, the free site of Ancestry.com. I do know that they put them on their pay site too but my records are wasted if I hoard them for myself. I do understand that others make a living researching for others and may use and sell whatever I post, I'm okay with that.. as long as someone somewhere gets a chance to find and reclaim their family.. I'm just part of a chain that helps people from Mexico reclaim and remember their families.. just my opinion..
Linda in B.C.
Jessica Castaneda wrote:
"I haven't submitted anything yet since I really haven't had time to do any
research. All I still know if what I submitted when I first subscribed. . I subscribed hoping to be able to add my information and be able to learn from others searching for ancestors in the same area. I have learned a lot just from reading the posts of members of the group and hope that I will not get the axe. I thank you for your patience with those of us that rarely enter into group conversation-and provide really no information on our "antepasados" although I can say for myself I enjoy learning from all of you."
Thanks- Jessica Castaneda
---------------------------------
Get your email and more, right on the new Yahoo.com
correction
large correction... I now have almost 28,000 names not 38,000... I had a worm and had not backed up my files and lost close to 5,000 names before posting them online... I do have the original files so am now in the process of reentering... another lesson newbees can learn... back up your files!
Linda in B.C.
Erlinda Castanon-Long wrote:
I think it's a wonderful requirement to make posting what we want to share of our genealogy work. Some people like Jessica are new and learn from our research, others learn from the things we share about how to go abt finding and reading information. By requiring people to share it stops those who would only take and not share.. I'm sure there is something to be learned by all of us from each person who has agreed to work as part of this group.
Personally I like sharing whatever I have since I know time and money limits many people. Because of that I've posted my records of close to 38,000 names on ancestry world tree, the free site of Ancestry.com. I do know that they put them on their pay site too but my records are wasted if I hoard them for myself. I do understand that others make a living researching for others and may use and sell whatever I post, I'm okay with that.. as long as someone somewhere gets a chance to find and reclaim their family.. I'm just part of a chain that helps people from Mexico reclaim and remember their families.. just my opinion..
Linda in B.C.
---------------------------------
Do you Yahoo!?
Everyone is raving about the all-new Yahoo! Mail.
Seriously Considering a PolicyChange/Seriamente en vista de un c
I am with you all the way, Linda. I just cannot understand the reluctance on the part of some to share their genealogical research. I have made so many new contacts with people that have helped me after I posted my information to WorldConnect via Ancestry World Tree or to the many message boards available. (Although if I knew how to upload gedcoms on my own I could have posted directly to WorldConnect thus bypassing Ancestry.com).
Ancestry.com allows me to use their online genealogy program Family Tree which is user friendly, and I don't have to buy a program for my computer where it could crash, etc.
I have given some folks new information (new to them) and vice versa, just as we have seen happen in this group. We help each other fill in the blanks and break down the brick walls, and it furthers the enthusiasm for this kind of work. I have instilled in many younger people the interest and passion for this. We are not going to live forever, so if I can help others this way, I consider I have done my part for posterity.
There are very few people who, after I have spent days doing their research at no charge whatsoever, don't at least e-mail me back to thank me and let me know they got and appreciate the information. I don't care. At least I feel gratified by the majority who do thank me, and who I know will continue the search. The agradecidos even hold family reunions and share all the info I gave them; I have reunited many clans this way. Some folks have lived in the same town for generations and never knew they were related.
How many instances have we seen where someone has done so much work, hoping to "one day" compile it into a copyrighted book, only to get ill and die before they accomplish it and have all that work languish in boxes in uninterested relatives' homes or where all that research is just destroyed? By uploading all my info to WorldConnect and to Nuestros Ranchos, I have left my work in a safe repository where no disaster in my home or to my computer or to me can touch it. I have not ever "stolen" anyone's information, only reviewed it for links to my ancestors. When I find a possible link, I do all the subsequent research myself by reviewing and obtaining copies of the actual records in order to be sure of the correctness of the info.
Thank you Joseph, Arturo, Linda, Jessica and all of you who do the best you can to put those names and places online (however skimpily) for the benefit of everyone.
Emilie Garcia
Port Orchard, WA ----
----- Original Message -----
From: Erlinda Castanon-Long
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Saturday, September 23, 2006 11:20 AM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Seriously Considering a PolicyChange/Seriamente en vista de un cambio policial
I think it's a wonderful requirement to make posting what we want to share of our genealogy work. Some people like Jessica are new and learn from our research, others learn from the things we share about how to go abt finding and reading information. By requiring people to share it stops those who would only take and not share.. I'm sure there is something to be learned by all of us from each person who has agreed to work as part of this group.
Personally I like sharing whatever I have since I know time and money limits many people. Because of that I've posted my records of close to 38,000 names on ancestry world tree, the free site of Ancestry.com. I do know that they put them on their pay site too but my records are wasted if I hoard them for myself. I do understand that others make a living researching for others and may use and sell whatever I post, I'm okay with that.. as long as someone somewhere gets a chance to find and reclaim their family.. I'm just part of a chain that helps people from Mexico reclaim and remember their families.. just my opinion..
Linda in B.C.
Jessica Castaneda > wrote:
"I haven't submitted anything yet since I really haven't had time to do any
research. All I still know if what I submitted when I first subscribed. . I subscribed hoping to be able to add my information and be able to learn from others searching for ancestors in the same area. I have learned a lot just from reading the posts of members of the group and hope that I will not get the axe. I thank you for your patience with those of us that rarely enter into group conversation-and provide really no information on our "antepasados" although I can say for myself I enjoy learning from all of you."
Thanks- Jessica Castaneda
---------------------------------
Get your email and more, right on the new Yahoo.com
Seriously Considering a PolicyChange/Seriamente en vista de un c
I for one am not sure how to share my info. Plus, I only have one generation in Mexico, and no siblings. The places my grandparents were born are not listed in the Ex Haciendas, and I haven't been able to make a connection yet. So I am not sure if I should quit or wait and see if someone hooks their info to mine!
Any pointers on how to get started in the group??
John Robles
Emilie Garcia wrote:
I am with you all the way, Linda. I just cannot understand the reluctance on the part of some to share their genealogical research. I have made so many new contacts with people that have helped me after I posted my information to WorldConnect via Ancestry World Tree or to the many message boards available. (Although if I knew how to upload gedcoms on my own I could have posted directly to WorldConnect thus bypassing Ancestry.com).
Ancestry.com allows me to use their online genealogy program Family Tree which is user friendly, and I don't have to buy a program for my computer where it could crash, etc.
I have given some folks new information (new to them) and vice versa, just as we have seen happen in this group. We help each other fill in the blanks and break down the brick walls, and it furthers the enthusiasm for this kind of work. I have instilled in many younger people the interest and passion for this. We are not going to live forever, so if I can help others this way, I consider I have done my part for posterity.
There are very few people who, after I have spent days doing their research at no charge whatsoever, don't at least e-mail me back to thank me and let me know they got and appreciate the information. I don't care. At least I feel gratified by the majority who do thank me, and who I know will continue the search. The agradecidos even hold family reunions and share all the info I gave them; I have reunited many clans this way. Some folks have lived in the same town for generations and never knew they were related.
How many instances have we seen where someone has done so much work, hoping to "one day" compile it into a copyrighted book, only to get ill and die before they accomplish it and have all that work languish in boxes in uninterested relatives' homes or where all that research is just destroyed? By uploading all my info to WorldConnect and to Nuestros Ranchos, I have left my work in a safe repository where no disaster in my home or to my computer or to me can touch it. I have not ever "stolen" anyone's information, only reviewed it for links to my ancestors. When I find a possible link, I do all the subsequent research myself by reviewing and obtaining copies of the actual records in order to be sure of the correctness of the info.
Thank you Joseph, Arturo, Linda, Jessica and all of you who do the best you can to put those names and places online (however skimpily) for the benefit of everyone.
Emilie Garcia
Port Orchard, WA ----
----- Original Message -----
From: Erlinda Castanon-Long
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Saturday, September 23, 2006 11:20 AM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Seriously Considering a PolicyChange/Seriamente en vista de un cambio policial
I think it's a wonderful requirement to make posting what we want to share of our genealogy work. Some people like Jessica are new and learn from our research, others learn from the things we share about how to go abt finding and reading information. By requiring people to share it stops those who would only take and not share.. I'm sure there is something to be learned by all of us from each person who has agreed to work as part of this group.
Personally I like sharing whatever I have since I know time and money limits many people. Because of that I've posted my records of close to 38,000 names on ancestry world tree, the free site of Ancestry.com. I do know that they put them on their pay site too but my records are wasted if I hoard them for myself. I do understand that others make a living researching for others and may use and sell whatever I post, I'm okay with that.. as long as someone somewhere gets a chance to find and reclaim their family.. I'm just part of a chain that helps people from Mexico reclaim and remember their families.. just my opinion..
Linda in B.C.
Jessica Castaneda > wrote:
"I haven't submitted anything yet since I really haven't had time to do any
research. All I still know if what I submitted when I first subscribed. . I subscribed hoping to be able to add my information and be able to learn from others searching for ancestors in the same area. I have learned a lot just from reading the posts of members of the group and hope that I will not get the axe. I thank you for your patience with those of us that rarely enter into group conversation-and provide really no information on our "antepasados" although I can say for myself I enjoy learning from all of you."
Thanks- Jessica Castaneda
---------------------------------
Get your email and more, right on the new Yahoo.com
John Robles
You just joined a few days ago. Let's put aside the discussion about
quitting for the moment. Why not start at the beginning and send in an
Introduction. Give us the surnames you are researching along with the
specific places in either Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or Aguascalientes. If
you don't have any of that information give us what you have and why you
believe that you have roots in one of those three states. It's a lot
easier for the members of the group to advise if they have some
information to go on.
thanks,
joseph
john robles wrote:
>I for one am not sure how to share my info. Plus, I only have one generation in Mexico, and no siblings. The places my grandparents were born are not listed in the Ex Haciendas, and I haven't been able to make a connection yet. So I am not sure if I should quit or wait and see if someone hooks their info to mine!
> Any pointers on how to get started in the group??
> John Robles
>
>
>
John Robles
John,
Also let us know what genealogical resources you are familiar with so far. Have you looked in FamilySearch.com or WorldConnect or visited any of the Family History Centers in your area? Can you read Spanish? There is a website called "Municipios de Mexico" that gives a lot of history of each state and city in Mexico.
It sounds like your folks may be from Aguascalientes if you say you looked in the Ex-Haciendas file. There is also a file called Diccionario Geografico that lists many place names. I found a baptism record for my husband's ancestors for 1748 in a microfilm for Aguascalientes that said his ancestors were born in "Mariquitas". Well, according to the Diccionario, Mariquitas was a ranch near Acoponita, Territory of Tepic, which is in another state entirely. I think this will lead me to what is now the state of Nayarit where the current Tepic is. I have found by experience that the priests or whoever wrote in the records would mention the name of the town someone was born in but not the state. Also, there are many in this group whose ancestors have been traced as far back as the late 1600s in Aguascalientes, so you might find a lot of help from them. Good luck.
Emilie Garcia
Port Orchard, WA ----
----- Original Message -----
From: Joseph Puentes
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 9:20 AM
Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
You just joined a few days ago. Let's put aside the discussion about
quitting for the moment. Why not start at the beginning and send in an
Introduction. Give us the surnames you are researching along with the
specific places in either Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or Aguascalientes. If
you don't have any of that information give us what you have and why you
believe that you have roots in one of those three states. It's a lot
easier for the members of the group to advise if they have some
information to go on.
thanks,
joseph
john robles wrote:
>I for one am not sure how to share my info. Plus, I only have one generation in Mexico, and no siblings. The places my grandparents were born are not listed in the Ex Haciendas, and I haven't been able to make a connection yet. So I am not sure if I should quit or wait and see if someone hooks their info to mine!
> Any pointers on how to get started in the group??
> John Robles
>
>
>
John Robles
John,
The reason I asked if you were familiar with the Spanish language is that there was/is a certain way that people in Mexico are named. They use as their surname both their father's followed by their mother's most of the time. You need to enter both surnames in certain fields in the FamilySearch.com's IGI database. My husband is not Antonio Garcia in Mexico; he would be Antonio Garcia Acosta, Acosta being his mother's surname. To clarify which Antonio Garcia Acosta he is, that being a common name, he might add his middle name of Carlos and then he would be Antonio Carlos Garcia Acosta. He would be addressed as Senor Garcia, not Senor Acosta.
Also, way back, men often used their mother's surnames and ignored their father's surnames even if they were legitimate, or even in the case of my husband's ancestors, some would give as their father's surname, the surname that their mother was born with. Also women often died young, and men would sometimes end up having had two or three wives and the children of the first marriages would give as their mother's name the name of their step-mother. All this makes it very interesting in finding our ancestors. You have to hunt for them by entering various combinations of known surnames and the various spellings for each. Good luck.
Emilie
----- Original Message -----
From: Emilie Garcia
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 10:39 AM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
John,
Also let us know what genealogical resources you are familiar with so far. Have you looked in FamilySearch.com or WorldConnect or visited any of the Family History Centers in your area? Can you read Spanish? There is a website called "Municipios de Mexico" that gives a lot of history of each state and city in Mexico.
It sounds like your folks may be from Aguascalientes if you say you looked in the Ex-Haciendas file. There is also a file called Diccionario Geografico that lists many place names. I found a baptism record for my husband's ancestors for 1748 in a microfilm for Aguascalientes that said his ancestors were born in "Mariquitas". Well, according to the Diccionario, Mariquitas was a ranch near Acoponita, Territory of Tepic, which is in another state entirely. I think this will lead me to what is now the state of Nayarit where the current Tepic is. I have found by experience that the priests or whoever wrote in the records would mention the name of the town someone was born in but not the state. Also, there are many in this group whose ancestors have been traced as far back as the late 1600s in Aguascalientes, so you might find a lot of help from them. Good luck.
Emilie Garcia
Port Orchard, WA ----
----- Original Message -----
From: Joseph Puentes>
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org>
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 9:20 AM
Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
You just joined a few days ago. Let's put aside the discussion about
quitting for the moment. Why not start at the beginning and send in an
Introduction. Give us the surnames you are researching along with the
specific places in either Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or Aguascalientes. If
you don't have any of that information give us what you have and why you
believe that you have roots in one of those three states. It's a lot
easier for the members of the group to advise if they have some
information to go on.
thanks,
joseph
john robles wrote:
>I for one am not sure how to share my info. Plus, I only have one generation in Mexico, and no siblings. The places my grandparents were born are not listed in the Ex Haciendas, and I haven't been able to make a connection yet. So I am not sure if I should quit or wait and see if someone hooks their info to mine!
> Any pointers on how to get started in the group??
> John Robles
>
>
>
John Robles
I am familiar with that practice. Actually, it frustrates me in my job - I work for Ventura County Probation Work Release program, and the staff always enters the mother's surname as the last name of the client, so when 'Antonio Garcia Acosta' comes in to the office and gives his name as Antonio Garcia, the staff complains they can't find the file - because it is listed as Antonio G. Acosta...arrgh....
Emilie Garcia wrote: John,
The reason I asked if you were familiar with the Spanish language is that there was/is a certain way that people in Mexico are named. They use as their surname both their father's followed by their mother's most of the time. You need to enter both surnames in certain fields in the FamilySearch.com's IGI database. My husband is not Antonio Garcia in Mexico; he would be Antonio Garcia Acosta, Acosta being his mother's surname. To clarify which Antonio Garcia Acosta he is, that being a common name, he might add his middle name of Carlos and then he would be Antonio Carlos Garcia Acosta. He would be addressed as Senor Garcia, not Senor Acosta.
Also, way back, men often used their mother's surnames and ignored their father's surnames even if they were legitimate, or even in the case of my husband's ancestors, some would give as their father's surname, the surname that their mother was born with. Also women often died young, and men would sometimes end up having had two or three wives and the children of the first marriages would give as their mother's name the name of their step-mother. All this makes it very interesting in finding our ancestors. You have to hunt for them by entering various combinations of known surnames and the various spellings for each. Good luck.
Emilie
----- Original Message -----
From: Emilie Garcia
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 10:39 AM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
John,
Also let us know what genealogical resources you are familiar with so far. Have you looked in FamilySearch.com or WorldConnect or visited any of the Family History Centers in your area? Can you read Spanish? There is a website called "Municipios de Mexico" that gives a lot of history of each state and city in Mexico.
It sounds like your folks may be from Aguascalientes if you say you looked in the Ex-Haciendas file. There is also a file called Diccionario Geografico that lists many place names. I found a baptism record for my husband's ancestors for 1748 in a microfilm for Aguascalientes that said his ancestors were born in "Mariquitas". Well, according to the Diccionario, Mariquitas was a ranch near Acoponita, Territory of Tepic, which is in another state entirely. I think this will lead me to what is now the state of Nayarit where the current Tepic is. I have found by experience that the priests or whoever wrote in the records would mention the name of the town someone was born in but not the state. Also, there are many in this group whose ancestors have been traced as far back as the late 1600s in Aguascalientes, so you might find a lot of help from them. Good luck.
Emilie Garcia
Port Orchard, WA ----
----- Original Message -----
From: Joseph Puentes>
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org>
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 9:20 AM
Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
You just joined a few days ago. Let's put aside the discussion about
quitting for the moment. Why not start at the beginning and send in an
Introduction. Give us the surnames you are researching along with the
specific places in either Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or Aguascalientes. If
you don't have any of that information give us what you have and why you
believe that you have roots in one of those three states. It's a lot
easier for the members of the group to advise if they have some
information to go on.
thanks,
joseph
john robles wrote:
>I for one am not sure how to share my info. Plus, I only have one generation in Mexico, and no siblings. The places my grandparents were born are not listed in the Ex Haciendas, and I haven't been able to make a connection yet. So I am not sure if I should quit or wait and see if someone hooks their info to mine!
> Any pointers on how to get started in the group??
> John Robles
>
>
>
John Robles
EUREKA! Thanks for the note - I may have found an important clue thank to you! After reading your note about names, I started thinking how somewhere I had seen my grandfather referred to as Antonio Nieves Robles, not just Nieves Robles. I looked thru my archives and found his death certificate, and his father's name is given not as Marcial Robles, but as Marcial Nieves!!!! I will now start searching under that name and see what I can find! I also found the handwritten birth certificates of my dad and two siblings who died before the family left Mexico. The earliest was born in 1905. My aunt told me that my grandmother remembered giving birth to one of her children under a tree on a hill..tough days...
John
Emilie Garcia wrote:
John,
The reason I asked if you were familiar with the Spanish language is that there was/is a certain way that people in Mexico are named. They use as their surname both their father's followed by their mother's most of the time. You need to enter both surnames in certain fields in the FamilySearch.com's IGI database. My husband is not Antonio Garcia in Mexico; he would be Antonio Garcia Acosta, Acosta being his mother's surname. To clarify which Antonio Garcia Acosta he is, that being a common name, he might add his middle name of Carlos and then he would be Antonio Carlos Garcia Acosta. He would be addressed as Senor Garcia, not Senor Acosta.
Also, way back, men often used their mother's surnames and ignored their father's surnames even if they were legitimate, or even in the case of my husband's ancestors, some would give as their father's surname, the surname that their mother was born with. Also women often died young, and men would sometimes end up having had two or three wives and the children of the first marriages would give as their mother's name the name of their step-mother. All this makes it very interesting in finding our ancestors. You have to hunt for them by entering various combinations of known surnames and the various spellings for each. Good luck.
Emilie
----- Original Message -----
From: Emilie Garcia
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 10:39 AM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
John,
Also let us know what genealogical resources you are familiar with so far. Have you looked in FamilySearch.com or WorldConnect or visited any of the Family History Centers in your area? Can you read Spanish? There is a website called "Municipios de Mexico" that gives a lot of history of each state and city in Mexico.
It sounds like your folks may be from Aguascalientes if you say you looked in the Ex-Haciendas file. There is also a file called Diccionario Geografico that lists many place names. I found a baptism record for my husband's ancestors for 1748 in a microfilm for Aguascalientes that said his ancestors were born in "Mariquitas". Well, according to the Diccionario, Mariquitas was a ranch near Acoponita, Territory of Tepic, which is in another state entirely. I think this will lead me to what is now the state of Nayarit where the current Tepic is. I have found by experience that the priests or whoever wrote in the records would mention the name of the town someone was born in but not the state. Also, there are many in this group whose ancestors have been traced as far back as the late 1600s in Aguascalientes, so you might find a lot of help from them. Good luck.
Emilie Garcia
Port Orchard, WA ----
----- Original Message -----
From: Joseph Puentes>
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org>
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 9:20 AM
Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
You just joined a few days ago. Let's put aside the discussion about
quitting for the moment. Why not start at the beginning and send in an
Introduction. Give us the surnames you are researching along with the
specific places in either Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or Aguascalientes. If
you don't have any of that information give us what you have and why you
believe that you have roots in one of those three states. It's a lot
easier for the members of the group to advise if they have some
information to go on.
thanks,
joseph
john robles wrote:
>I for one am not sure how to share my info. Plus, I only have one generation in Mexico, and no siblings. The places my grandparents were born are not listed in the Ex Haciendas, and I haven't been able to make a connection yet. So I am not sure if I should quit or wait and see if someone hooks their info to mine!
> Any pointers on how to get started in the group??
> John Robles
>
>
>
John Robles
That is great John. It gives me such a warm fuzzy feeling when I have helped someone break through a wall. Thanks for telling me. Did you do the Genealogist's Happy Dance?
Emilie
----- Original Message -----
From: john robles
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 3:22 PM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
EUREKA! Thanks for the note - I may have found an important clue thank to you! After reading your note about names, I started thinking how somewhere I had seen my grandfather referred to as Antonio Nieves Robles, not just Nieves Robles. I looked thru my archives and found his death certificate, and his father's name is given not as Marcial Robles, but as Marcial Nieves!!!! I will now start searching under that name and see what I can find! I also found the handwritten birth certificates of my dad and two siblings who died before the family left Mexico. The earliest was born in 1905. My aunt told me that my grandmother remembered giving birth to one of her children under a tree on a hill..tough days...
John
Emilie Garcia > wrote:
John,
The reason I asked if you were familiar with the Spanish language is that there was/is a certain way that people in Mexico are named. They use as their surname both their father's followed by their mother's most of the time. You need to enter both surnames in certain fields in the FamilySearch.com's IGI database. My husband is not Antonio Garcia in Mexico; he would be Antonio Garcia Acosta, Acosta being his mother's surname. To clarify which Antonio Garcia Acosta he is, that being a common name, he might add his middle name of Carlos and then he would be Antonio Carlos Garcia Acosta. He would be addressed as Senor Garcia, not Senor Acosta.
Also, way back, men often used their mother's surnames and ignored their father's surnames even if they were legitimate, or even in the case of my husband's ancestors, some would give as their father's surname, the surname that their mother was born with. Also women often died young, and men would sometimes end up having had two or three wives and the children of the first marriages would give as their mother's name the name of their step-mother. All this makes it very interesting in finding our ancestors. You have to hunt for them by entering various combinations of known surnames and the various spellings for each. Good luck.
Emilie
----- Original Message -----
From: Emilie Garcia
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 10:39 AM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
John,
Also let us know what genealogical resources you are familiar with so far. Have you looked in FamilySearch.com or WorldConnect or visited any of the Family History Centers in your area? Can you read Spanish? There is a website called "Municipios de Mexico" that gives a lot of history of each state and city in Mexico.
It sounds like your folks may be from Aguascalientes if you say you looked in the Ex-Haciendas file. There is also a file called Diccionario Geografico that lists many place names. I found a baptism record for my husband's ancestors for 1748 in a microfilm for Aguascalientes that said his ancestors were born in "Mariquitas". Well, according to the Diccionario, Mariquitas was a ranch near Acoponita, Territory of Tepic, which is in another state entirely. I think this will lead me to what is now the state of Nayarit where the current Tepic is. I have found by experience that the priests or whoever wrote in the records would mention the name of the town someone was born in but not the state. Also, there are many in this group whose ancestors have been traced as far back as the late 1600s in Aguascalientes, so you might find a lot of help from them. Good luck.
Emilie Garcia
Port Orchard, WA ----
----- Original Message -----
From: Joseph Puentes>
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org>
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 9:20 AM
Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
You just joined a few days ago. Let's put aside the discussion about
quitting for the moment. Why not start at the beginning and send in an
Introduction. Give us the surnames you are researching along with the
specific places in either Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or Aguascalientes. If
you don't have any of that information give us what you have and why you
believe that you have roots in one of those three states. It's a lot
easier for the members of the group to advise if they have some
information to go on.
thanks,
joseph
john robles wrote:
>I for one am not sure how to share my info. Plus, I only have one generation in Mexico, and no siblings. The places my grandparents were born are not listed in the Ex Haciendas, and I haven't been able to make a connection yet. So I am not sure if I should quit or wait and see if someone hooks their info to mine!
> Any pointers on how to get started in the group??
> John Robles
>
>
>
John Robles
Yes, and then I did the dance of befuddlement because now I have to find the connectons! There are no films from the years I am looking for, but I have a pal who is going to help me get them from the LDS library.
John
Emilie Garcia wrote:
That is great John. It gives me such a warm fuzzy feeling when I have helped someone break through a wall. Thanks for telling me. Did you do the Genealogist's Happy Dance?
Emilie
----- Original Message -----
From: john robles
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 3:22 PM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
EUREKA! Thanks for the note - I may have found an important clue thank to you! After reading your note about names, I started thinking how somewhere I had seen my grandfather referred to as Antonio Nieves Robles, not just Nieves Robles. I looked thru my archives and found his death certificate, and his father's name is given not as Marcial Robles, but as Marcial Nieves!!!! I will now start searching under that name and see what I can find! I also found the handwritten birth certificates of my dad and two siblings who died before the family left Mexico. The earliest was born in 1905. My aunt told me that my grandmother remembered giving birth to one of her children under a tree on a hill..tough days...
John
Emilie Garcia > wrote:
John,
The reason I asked if you were familiar with the Spanish language is that there was/is a certain way that people in Mexico are named. They use as their surname both their father's followed by their mother's most of the time. You need to enter both surnames in certain fields in the FamilySearch.com's IGI database. My husband is not Antonio Garcia in Mexico; he would be Antonio Garcia Acosta, Acosta being his mother's surname. To clarify which Antonio Garcia Acosta he is, that being a common name, he might add his middle name of Carlos and then he would be Antonio Carlos Garcia Acosta. He would be addressed as Senor Garcia, not Senor Acosta.
Also, way back, men often used their mother's surnames and ignored their father's surnames even if they were legitimate, or even in the case of my husband's ancestors, some would give as their father's surname, the surname that their mother was born with. Also women often died young, and men would sometimes end up having had two or three wives and the children of the first marriages would give as their mother's name the name of their step-mother. All this makes it very interesting in finding our ancestors. You have to hunt for them by entering various combinations of known surnames and the various spellings for each. Good luck.
Emilie
----- Original Message -----
From: Emilie Garcia
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 10:39 AM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
John,
Also let us know what genealogical resources you are familiar with so far. Have you looked in FamilySearch.com or WorldConnect or visited any of the Family History Centers in your area? Can you read Spanish? There is a website called "Municipios de Mexico" that gives a lot of history of each state and city in Mexico.
It sounds like your folks may be from Aguascalientes if you say you looked in the Ex-Haciendas file. There is also a file called Diccionario Geografico that lists many place names. I found a baptism record for my husband's ancestors for 1748 in a microfilm for Aguascalientes that said his ancestors were born in "Mariquitas". Well, according to the Diccionario, Mariquitas was a ranch near Acoponita, Territory of Tepic, which is in another state entirely. I think this will lead me to what is now the state of Nayarit where the current Tepic is. I have found by experience that the priests or whoever wrote in the records would mention the name of the town someone was born in but not the state. Also, there are many in this group whose ancestors have been traced as far back as the late 1600s in Aguascalientes, so you might find a lot of help from them. Good luck.
Emilie Garcia
Port Orchard, WA ----
----- Original Message -----
From: Joseph Puentes>
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org>
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 9:20 AM
Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
You just joined a few days ago. Let's put aside the discussion about
quitting for the moment. Why not start at the beginning and send in an
Introduction. Give us the surnames you are researching along with the
specific places in either Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or Aguascalientes. If
you don't have any of that information give us what you have and why you
believe that you have roots in one of those three states. It's a lot
easier for the members of the group to advise if they have some
information to go on.
thanks,
joseph
john robles wrote:
>I for one am not sure how to share my info. Plus, I only have one generation in Mexico, and no siblings. The places my grandparents were born are not listed in the Ex Haciendas, and I haven't been able to make a connection yet. So I am not sure if I should quit or wait and see if someone hooks their info to mine!
> Any pointers on how to get started in the group??
> John Robles
>
>
>
John Robles
Hi
I am familiar with lots of sources, but not from Mexico so I would appreciate any source info there. I have traced 3 branches of my mother's family back to the early 1600s, so am familiar with several online sources. From my dad's family I only have a few baptismal certificates from the US and two from MExico, and names of my great grandparents but no info on where they lived. My dad was born in Aguascalientes, and my grandparents too. That's about all I know, except that I have family members who I have never met living in Puebla, Pbla.
I will get together what I have and submit it later.
John
Emilie Garcia wrote:
John,
Also let us know what genealogical resources you are familiar with so far. Have you looked in FamilySearch.com or WorldConnect or visited any of the Family History Centers in your area? Can you read Spanish? There is a website called "Municipios de Mexico" that gives a lot of history of each state and city in Mexico.
It sounds like your folks may be from Aguascalientes if you say you looked in the Ex-Haciendas file. There is also a file called Diccionario Geografico that lists many place names. I found a baptism record for my husband's ancestors for 1748 in a microfilm for Aguascalientes that said his ancestors were born in "Mariquitas". Well, according to the Diccionario, Mariquitas was a ranch near Acoponita, Territory of Tepic, which is in another state entirely. I think this will lead me to what is now the state of Nayarit where the current Tepic is. I have found by experience that the priests or whoever wrote in the records would mention the name of the town someone was born in but not the state. Also, there are many in this group whose ancestors have been traced as far back as the late 1600s in Aguascalientes, so you might find a lot of help from them. Good luck.
Emilie Garcia
Port Orchard, WA ----
----- Original Message -----
From: Joseph Puentes
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 9:20 AM
Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] John Robles
You just joined a few days ago. Let's put aside the discussion about
quitting for the moment. Why not start at the beginning and send in an
Introduction. Give us the surnames you are researching along with the
specific places in either Jalisco, Zacatecas, and/or Aguascalientes. If
you don't have any of that information give us what you have and why you
believe that you have roots in one of those three states. It's a lot
easier for the members of the group to advise if they have some
information to go on.
thanks,
joseph
john robles wrote:
>I for one am not sure how to share my info. Plus, I only have one generation in Mexico, and no siblings. The places my grandparents were born are not listed in the Ex Haciendas, and I haven't been able to make a connection yet. So I am not sure if I should quit or wait and see if someone hooks their info to mine!
> Any pointers on how to get started in the group??
> John Robles
>
>
>
Seriously Considering a Policy Change/Seriamente en vista de un
I would like to commend "Linda in B.C." for her comments. I have perused these postings for 2-3 months now and I have always found Linda's to be refreshingly sincere, caring, open and honest. I sense a genuine willingness on her part to be helpful to the less resourceful and I've never sensed the slightest hint of self importance in her comments.
Bernardino
Erlinda Castanon-Long wrote:
I think it's a wonderful requirement to make posting what we want to share of our genealogy work. Some people like Jessica are new and learn from our research, others learn from the things we share about how to go abt finding and reading information. By requiring people to share it stops those who would only take and not share.. I'm sure there is something to be learned by all of us from each person who has agreed to work as part of this group.
Personally I like sharing whatever I have since I know time and money limits many people. Because of that I've posted my records of close to 38,000 names on ancestry world tree, the free site of Ancestry.com. I do know that they put them on their pay site too but my records are wasted if I hoard them for myself. I do understand that others make a living researching for others and may use and sell whatever I post, I'm okay with that.. as long as someone somewhere gets a chance to find and reclaim their family.. I'm just part of a chain that helps people from Mexico reclaim and remember their families.. just my opinion..
Linda in B.C.
Jessica Castaneda wrote:
"I haven't submitted anything yet since I really haven't had time to do any
research. All I still know if what I submitted when I first subscribed. . I subscribed hoping to be able to add my information and be able to learn from others searching for ancestors in the same area. I have learned a lot just from reading the posts of members of the group and hope that I will not get the axe. I thank you for your patience with those of us that rarely enter into group conversation-and provide really no information on our "antepasados" although I can say for myself I enjoy learning from all of you."
Thanks- Jessica Castaneda
---------------------------------
Get your email and more, right on the new Yahoo.com
Seriously Considering a Policy Change/Seriamente en vista de un
Bernardo, you're very generous.. I love this group because I find the majority are of a like mind when it comes to genealogy and helping others to learn and use all resources available.. One person can not do this alone...
thank you, Linda in B.C.
side note: Today I was contacted by a member of the Mendez family originally from Tamazula Jalisco Mexico, it is my gr-grandmother Maria Mendez line.. He found my records on Ancestry World Tree. I have photo's from my grandmothers album that are of this gentelmans grandparents and can't tell you how happy I am to be able to give them to him.. He lives in San Jose Ca. which is less than 2 hours from where I grew up in Stockton Ca and yet we never knew of each other.. what doors genealogy opens for us..
Mike Bernard Lopez wrote:
I would like to commend "Linda in B.C." for her comments. I have perused these postings for 2-3 months now and I have always found Linda's to be refreshingly sincere, caring, open and honest. I sense a genuine willingness on her part to be helpful to the less resourceful and I've never sensed the slightest hint of self importance in her comments.
Bernardino
---------------------------------
Do you Yahoo!?
Everyone is raving about the all-new Yahoo! Mail.
Seriously Considering a Policy Change/Seriamente en vista de un
Jessica,
You're going to be okay. As others have experienced in the past all I
really require is "communication" . . .when the time comes for me to
send out specific emails to those tha have not sent in their genealogies
and if at that time you receive one, just reply to it and give me a
reply like the one you said below and I'll give you an extension. My
bark is definitely worst than my bite. I only bite those that do not
reply or communicate at all. There will be plenty of those if past
experience is any guide.
joseph
Jessica Castaneda wrote:
>I haven't submitted anything yet since I really haven't had time to do any
>research. All I still know if what I submitted when I first subscribed.
>Sounds bad but I have a 2 year old, full time job and in about a month will
>have another baby so as much as I want to I can't seem to find the time to
>dedicate to research. I subscribed hoping to be able to add my information
>and be able to learn from others searching for ancestors in the same area. I
>have learned a lot just from reading the posts of members of the group and
>hope that I will not get the axe. I promise to submit info as soon as I find
>the time to do a little research. I thank you for your patience with those
>of us that rarely enter into group conversation-and provide really no
>information on our "antepasados" although I can say for myself I enjoy
>learning from all of you.
>
>Thanks- Jessica Castaneda
>