Let me summarize one lesson of fourteen:
Update family group sheets with information from last weeks exhaustive (& exhausting) survey of already submitted information on the web. Don't forget correct citations.
AND
Read the article in the Appendix.
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Read CHAPTERS 3, 6, 7, 18, 19, 20, 22, and review chapter 2 of one book.
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Read pages 81-193 in the boring book. (112 pages!!)
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Read another article in the Appendix.
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Read discussion material in this lesson. (only 4-5 pages)
AND
Read the abstract of someone's property, reviewing each page for types of real property. Describe each transaction. If there are any undefined types, look up in Black's Law Dictionary.
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Don't forget to submit your research log.
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The Locality Survey. (the most fun but time intensive of the list!):
Select a county. Prepare a research report for the county & towns in that county where the selected ancestral family lived. Include a brief description of your research status, a brief review of the jurisdictional history, a list of records from the FHL in SLC, a list of records from one of the cataloging systems like WorldCat (references to MANY libraries throughout US), also a Google search, Cyndi's List, & the US Genweb project; copies of maps both modern & ancient plus entries from gazetteers & atlases; a Bibliography of resources identified through searches above, in a specific $60 textbook format; a DETAILED RESEARCH PLAN with records to search & film numbers & addresses; plus copies of relevant items for future reference.
AND
"if you have time" haaahahaha - watch the movie Far and Away.
I am learning a lot while going through this process, but if I didn't really, really feel passionate about genealogy, I'd be throwing in the towel on this one!!! I am grateful that I have 25+ years of research experience. I am trying to learn & just take one chunk at a time, but I am trying to finish this class in 3-4 months. Ahhhh!!!
Next entry I will include some links to helpful videos that I've watched to help grasp some of the concepts. Yay for YouTube, Ancestry, & FamilySearch.
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