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Saturday, December 8, 2018

WHY YOU SHOULD NOT MISS ROOTSTECH 2019

Rootstech will be even bigger and better in 2019!

Rootstech 2018 MC Jason Hewlett will be back to entertain! 

As an Australian Rootstech Ambassador and a passionate genealogist, I for one will not be missing Rootstech 2019 (February 27 to March 2). This huge conference in Salt Lake City is lining up to be an even bigger and better event than ever before.

There are SO MANY REASONS to make it a 'MUST DO' to attend this genealogy plus technology conference, one of the largest of its kind in the world. 

There is so much to DISCOVER at Rootstech
You can read some of the compelling reasons to attend Rootstech, just so you understand how  great an experience this conference which blends genealogy with technology is. There is always SO MUCH TO DO AND SO MUCH TO LEARN at Rootstech. 

Rootstech is truly a place where every family historian whether they have beginner or advanced skills feels they BELONG. Every year there are so many AMAZING CLASSES TO CHOOSE FROM. I love CONNECTING WITH NEW PEOPLE and CATCHING UP WITH GENEALOGY FRIENDS FROM ALL AROUND THE WORLD. 

Now, if that alone wasn't enough to encourage me to attend Rootestech 2019, the spectacular line up of guest speakers and performers makes this particular Rootstech one I cannot miss.

Dinner with friends from the US, UK, Germany, Australia

Entertainer and comedian Jason Hewlett was a fabulous MC for Rootstech 2018 and I am thrilled that he is returning to host the 2019 conference. I am certain he will wow the crowds again with his humor, wisdom and captivating personality. 

I was privileged to interview Jason at Rootstech last year along with fellow Australian ambassador Jill Ball aka Geniaus. 

Jason Hewlett speaking to Jill Ball and myself at Rootstech 2018

There have been TWO ANNOUNCEMENTS IN PARTICULAR regarding keynote speakers, which have me anticipating Rootstech 2019 with even greater enthusiasm (if that's possible).

The first exciting news was that Saroo Brierley is to be a guest keynote speaker at Rootstech on Friday March 1 2019.  

Saroo's incredible story of courage and resilience was told in the 2016 movie Lion. His story began when he was five years old and became separated from his brother at a railway station. You can read more about Saroo Brierley's story here. 

Image belongs to Rootstech Organisers

I  cannot wait to hear Saroo speak at Rootstech 2019!

Being a guitar and ukelele player, my excitement level soared through the roof when it was announced that world renowned ukelele player, Jake Shimabukuro will be both appearing as a keynote speaker and performing at Rootstech 2019. NOTHING... I MEAN NOTHING WILL KEEP ME FROM ATTENDING THIS CONFERENCE!

Jake Shimabukuro Image Wikimedia Commons
Jake shot to fame when a video of him playing George Harrison's song While my Guitar Gently Weeps went viral on Youtube in 2005.

Why don't you take some time to listen and be astounded as Jake Shimabukuro plays this very song in Central Park, New York City. 




Jake Shimabukuro playing Bohemian Rhapsody is probably my favourite of his performances and I will definitely be in awe watching him perform live at Rootstech 2019. 

Perhaps you get the picture. I will be one starstruck attendee at Rootstech 2019! 

But I know that there is SO MUCH MORE TO ROOTSTECH THAN CELEBRITIES. And there is a always a reason behind the appearance of a celebrity at Rootstech. They all have inspiring stories to share and it is always a privilege to hear these stories. 

Brandon Stanton was a moving speaker at Rootstech 2018. Image Sharn White
I can't wait to listen to the inspiring and informative speakers in classes as well. There's always a HUGE range of topics to choose from. My personal favorites are DNA topics. Anything to do with DNA and genealogy fascinates me. I always come back to Australia with excellent tips on subjects such as deciphering German Script and understanding English parish records and ways to share stories and much, much more.

I am looking forward to meeting my Rootstech Pass winner Paula, who by an amazing twist of good fortune will be attending Rootstech with her daughter Kari, who also won another Ambassador's Pass to the conference! 


I HOPE TO SEE YOU ALL AT ROOTSTECH 2019! So put the dates in your calendar - 27 February to March 2, 2019. 

I will leave you with another incredible video of Jake Shimabukuro playing Hallelujah on ukelele.
Happy listening....




Wednesday, November 28, 2018

AND THE WINNER OF MY ROOTSTECH PASS GIVEAWAY IS.....

THE WINNER IS...

Getting ready for Rootstech Image Sharn White
I was overwhelmed by the number of entries I had this year for my Rootstech Pass Giveaway. All were deserving. It seeems that more and more people are interested in attending every year!
One entrant described Rootstech as her Disneyland. I loved this. 

Reading all the entries I just wished I could give a pass to everyone!  I drew the winner using a random generator to be fair and ....

Australian Rootstech Ambassadors 2018

THE WINNER IS...

PAULA MOULTRIE of Paradise Utah. 

Paula wrote in her entry , "I love Rootstech! I was lucky enough to go to Rootstech 2018 with my two daughters and two dear friends. Hoping all can attend in 2019. I would love to win a Rootstech pass."

Congratulations Paula! You're going to Rootstech 2019. I am very much looking forward to meeting Paula at Rootstech. 

Here are just some of the reasons why I enjoy attending Rootstch. https://www.rootstech.org/blog/9-reasons-to-attend-rootstech-2019

I watched the movie Lion last year and Saroo Brierley's story is an inspirational one of perseverance and courage. I am thrilled at the announcement that he is to be a Keynote Speaker at Rootstech 2019.

Once again, CONGRATULATIONS PAULA! 

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

ROOTSTECH 2019 PASS GIVEAWAY!


     WIN A 4 DAY PASS TO ROOTSTECH 2019




My ROOTSTECH GIVEAWAY COMPETITION is up and running and I must say that this Australian Rootstech Ambassador is VERY excited to be giving away a COMPLIMENTARY 4 DAY PASS to Rootstech 2019 (valued at $299).

You will find details on how to enter my ROOTSTECH PASS GIVEAWAY competition at the end of this blog post.

BUT FIRST...

Read on to find out WHY you should enter to WIN A COMPLIMENTARY PASS to Rootstech 2019 and HOW to enter my giveaway competition.




There are just so many excellent reasons to attend Rootstech. It is one of the largest conferences in the world to combine Genealogy and Technology. EXCITING! There is so much to learn and so many genealogy enthusiasts to meet and to share your Rootstech experience with. I have traveled all the way from Sydney, Australia, three times to attend Rootstech and will be attending Rootstech again in 2019.

This is a conference NOT TO BE MISSED.

RootsTech 2019 will be held in Salt Lake City, Utah, February 27 – March 2, 2019.

You can find out more about Rootstech by visiting the Rootstech website.




Your WINNING PASS will give you access to -

  • Over 300 informative classes 
  • Exciting and inspiring Keynote Speakers
  • General Sessions
  • The amazing Expo Hall
  • Evening events
Brandon Stanton speaking at Rootstech 2018. Image Sharn White.


You could even arrive in Salt Lake City a little early to sight-see or as I did, to do some genealogy research and knock down a family brick wall or two in the huge Family History Library! 

Don't miss out on this wonderful opportunity to win a FREE PASS to Rootstech. Don't worry if you have already registered. The wonderful team of organizers at Rootstech will fully refund the cost of your Registration should you WIN the PASS.


The funny, talented Jason Hewlett being interviewed by Ambassadors at Rootstech 2018. 

NOTE: This Pass does not include airfares, hotels, paid lab sessions or paid meals.


HOW TO ENTER

  1. To be eligible to WIN my complimentary PASS to Rootstech 2109, simply find me on Twitter @sharnwhite, or on one of my Instagram accounts, Sharn White, or FamilyHistory4u, Google Plus, my existing Facebook account, or on my new Facebook Page, FamilyHistory4u . Should you not be a social media whizz, simply leave a COMMENT in the comments section below this blog post. 
  2. HASHTAG your entry #rootstech2019pass so I will know you are an competition entrant.
  3. Tell me briefly WHY you would be excited to attend Rootstech 2019. The winner will be chosen on November 22 and contacted with instructions.


This competition blog post will be published on the following Social Media platforms and

TWITTER Sharn White: https://twitter.com/SharnWhite
INSTAGRAM  Sharn White : https://www.instagram.com/sharnwhite/,
INSTAGRAM FamilyHistory4u: https://www.instagram.com/familyhistory4u/
FACEBOOK  FamilyHistory4u: https://www.facebook.com/sharnwhiteaustralia/ 
GOOGLE PLUS https://plus.google.com/113636356847213963502 

I'll be posting the Giveaway on my Sharn White FACEBOOK as well so there will be plenty of opportunities to WIN.


THIS COMPETITION CLOSES AT MIDNIGHT ON NOVEMBER 22. 


THE WINNER WILL BE ANNOUNCED ON THE ABOVE SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORMS AS WELL AS IN A FamilyHistory4u BLOG POST.

ENTER NOW AND GOOD LUCK! 

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

"What's in a name? That which we call a Rose by any other Name would Smell as Sweet."

                When Wrong Names are Recorded!


Image Wikipedia. Licenced under Creative Commons.


Wouldn't life be simple if we could believe everything we read? Unfortunately, when it comes to family history, our ancestors did not always leave a factual paper trail for us to follow. Sometimes, the original records we find for ancestors, (often those who were illiterate and who relied upon clerks or others to record details), contain mistakes. There are a number of reasons why names were and still are, recorded incorrectly. Whatever the case, it was the recent discovery that my own first name was wrongly recorded on my daughter's marriage certificate 18 months ago, which made me think about a particular brick wall I had. 

Family historians follow paper trails of names on birth, marriage and death records and we rely on names to find further generations of forebears. A  mistake on a record can cost a considerable amount of time and misguided research. Such was the case with my Scottish GIBSON ancestors.


Image The Blue Diamond Gallery of Free to Use Images, Creative Commons.

This blog is dedicated to the many McDade/Gibson cousins who have traveled with me on our family history journey. To them, I am disclosing that I have discovered an error on a marriage record which changes the fabric of a line of our Scottish ancestry. In this blog post I aim to set things right.

Elizabeth Gibson (1872-1936) Image in possession of author. Permission required to use.


My great-grandmother, Elizabeth Gibson, was the youngest of four children born to James GIBSON and Mary FEARNS in Renfrewshire and Stirlingshire, Scotland. Elizabeth was born on October 18, 1872 in Denny Stirling [1] where the family had moved to, following the birth of their eldest child Margaret Campbell Gibson in 1866.[2]

One thing my Scottish ancestors did almost religiously, for which I am most grateful, was to give their daughters the surnames of grandmothers for middle names. Since Margaret was the second born daughter,to James and Mary, her middle name of Campbell was a significant clue to the maiden name of a paternal grandmother. Findmypast offers an excellent insight into Scottish naming traditions here.[3]


Image Wikipedia Licenced under Creative Commons.

Elizabeth's mother, Mary Fearns, caused me considerable confusion with her surname being spelled on birth and marriage records as FERNS, FEARNS and FARNES and it took me years to discover that Mary's Fearns' own mother's maiden surname of COUPLES was really CUPPLES. Let me just say that this family required quite some research! I wrote a blog post about how I 'accidentally' solved the puzzle of my COUPLES/CUPPLES ancestors, which you can read here.  

The present blog post, however, is not concerned with incorrect spelling, but rather the confusion caused by finding wrong first or given names on records. When we find the names of parents of a bride and groom on a marriage record, it is a big deal. With these names we have discovered a whole new generation of family. But what happens when a name is not correct? I have two cases of wrong given names on marriage certificates in the same family. One of these puzzles, I was able to resolve quite easily, as outlined below in Case 1. The case of James Gibson, however, has been an ongoing and significant brick wall.

CASE 1 - Parents of Elizabeth Gibson.

My great-grandmother Elizabeth Gibson was married twice. On each marriage document, a different father's given name was recorded. At the time of her first marriage to William Kane on March 17,1891, in St Ignatius Catholic Church in Dalziel, Lanarkshire, Elizabeth's parents' were recorded as John Gibson and Mary Ferns


1891 Marriage Elizabeth Gibson and William Kane [4]


When, as a widow, on January 4 1894, Elizabeth married my great grandfather, John McDade in the Catholic Church, at Maryhill, Lanarkshire, her parents were stated to be James Gibson and Mary Ferns. 

1894 Marriage Elizabeth Gibson and John McDade [5]

I knew that the bride named Elizabeth Gibson, named in both marriages was one and same person, because of her mother's name of Mary Ferns. I knew also that Elizabeth had been married previously, since she was a widow when she married the second time to my ancestor John McDade. From Elizabeth's age on the two records I had a range of years within which to search for her birth. But I did not know if her parents were John and Mary Gibson or James and Mary Gibson.

Fortunately for me, Elizabeth Gibson's birth was easily located, being registered in Denny, Stirlingshire, on October 18, 1872, where I expected it to be. Her parents were named as James Gibson and Mary Farns and their marriage was noted as having taken place in December of 1862 at Polmont, Stirling. [6] 



Scotlands People, 1872 GIBSON, ELIZABETH (Statutory registers Births 476/ 158)

I was able to establish that James Gibson (not John) was the correct name for Elizabeth's father since James was the name given on Elizabeth's birth certificate and the birth records for her siblings, Margaret, Robert and Mary. Mary's mother's surname on each birth record was spelled differently as Ferns, Fairns, Farns and Farnes. Despite the confusing variations of Elizabeth's mother's surname, I knew that her father was definitely named James.

 The next logical step was to find the marriage of Elizabeth's parents, James Gibson and Mary Ferns, expecting that the complication would be the many different spellings of Ferns, Fairns, Farnes and Fairns. With these variations in mind, I searched for a marriage in 1862 between James Gibson and Mary (with no surname) on Scotlands People and found the marriage with Mary registered as Fearns (yet another spelling). From this marriage and the names of their parents, I expected to find another generation of ancestors.

CASE 2 - Parents of James Gibson.

On the marriage record of James Gibson and Mary Fearns, the groom's parents were noted as George GIBSON and Margaret CAMPBELL. The bride's parents were George Fearns and Mary Ann Couples.





Searching for a marriage between George Gibson and Margaret Campbell, using a very wide search parameter, I found one only marriage on ScotlandsPeople, between a couple with these names. 

George Gibson and Margaret Campbell nee BULLOCK, widow, married at St Cuthbert's, Midlothian on October 13, 1828. When searching for a birth for a Margaret Bullock, I found one in 1781, to John Bullock and Helen Hill of Perth. I eliminated this Margaret since she would have been too old. The only other was a baptism of a Margaret Bullock, which took place on March 13 1812 in Renfrewshire. This Margaret was the daughter of Sergeant Edward Bullock of the 70th Regiment and Mary McFarlane. 

On the marriage record of Margaret Bullock/Campbell to George Gibson it states that Margaret's first husband had been an Army Captain named Colin Campbell. He had died and they had no issue. Following her marriage to George Gibson, Margaret gave birth to a son named George - in fact the birth took place only two days after their wedding. This was definitely a shotgun wedding and just in time! 

St Cuthberts, Eddinburgh, Image Wikimedia under Creative Commons.

THEN THE TROUBLE BEGAN!

This marriage appeared to be the correct one, in the absence of any other marriage between two people of these names. It was and still is the only marriage I can find of a George Gibson to a Margaret Campbell (albeit married name Campbell, maiden name Bullock). There was no other George and Margaret Gibson who could possibly be my three times great-grandparents. 

No matter how much something appears to match given criteria, you need to look beyond the obvious to find evidence to support you finding. Looking like it is correct, is not the same as being correct. Although George Gibson and Margaret Campbell were the ONLY couple who had married in Scotland with these names, as my research progressed, I discovered things that made me suspect this couple were not my third great grandparents. 

FIVE PROBLEMS WITH GEORGE GIBSON AND MARGARET CAMPBELL/BULLOCK BEING MY THREE TIMES GREAT-GRANDPARENTS 

1. I could find no birth registered for my two times great-grandfather James Gibson, nor births for any other children born to George Gibson and Margaret Campbell. The only birth registered to this couple was George born two days after the marriage in 1828 in Midlothian. 
2. With two grandparents named George - George Gibson and George Fearns-  it seemed unusual to me that George was not a name passed on in this family.
3. In accordance with traditional Scottish naming patterns, the second born daughter of James Gibson and Mary Fearns was given the first name of her paternal grandmother - Margaret but the second name of Campbell not Bullock. This struck me as somewhat odd, since Campbell was the surname of the paternal grandmother's first husband Colin Campbell. Still - stranger things have happened in my family history!

[The firstborn child of my two times great grandparents, James Gibson and Mary Fearns had been traditionally named Mary, after her maternal grandmother Mary Fearns  (name on this birth recorded as Farnes). 

4. Significantly, I started having unexplained Campbell DNA matches pop up. If Margaret was a Bullock by birth then where were my Campbell DNA matches coming from? This suggested to me that James mother was a Campbell as was suggested on his marriage certificate, and that Margaret Campbell/Bullock was not my three times great-grandmother. 
5. If 'my' Margaret Bullock was born in 1812, a marriage in 1828 placed her age at barely 16 years and already a widow. This raised serious doubts in my mind that I had the correct person.

Since there was no other marriage I could find between a George Gibson and a Margaret Campbell, I began to suspect that, similarly to my own daughter's marriage certificate, there had been an error when recording the names of the parents on the marriage record of James Gibson and Mary Fearns.

FINDING JAMES GIBSON'S PARENTS

At the time of his marriage to Mary Fearns, James Gibson's age was given as 21 and Mary was 18 years old. This placed James' birth at circa 1841 and Mary's at around 1844. In the 1871 census James and Mary can be found living in Kirkslap Road, Denny, Stirling. James was an ironstone miner aged 29 years (suggesting a birth year of 1842) and with him was his 30 year old wife Mary. Mary, who was two years younger than James when they married was now a year older. Nothing about researching this family has been simple! 

Their children were Margaret 4, Robert 2 and Mary 9 months. I knew this to be the correct family since the names, birthplaces and ages of the children matched my Gibson family perfectly. 

1871 Census, James Gibson [7]

Since I had established that there was no birth of a James registered to a George Gibson and Mary Campbell, I searched for his birth using his mother's name only. I also widened the search to the years between 1830 and 1845 - in case James' age had been incorrectly documented on records. I used only the surnames of Gibson and Campbell in my search.

BINGO! 


Births registered of James Gibson 1830 -1845 [8]

I found two births of a James Gibson to a mother with the surname Campbell. Both had fathers named James Gibson. The first birth was registered on December 27, 1830, to James Gibson and Margaret Campbell in Abbey, Renfrewshire. The other was in 1844 to James Gibson and Elizabeth Campbell in Govan. 

The birth of son James to James Gibson and Elizabeth Campbell, turned out to be an incorrect transcription. This child was named Robert, not James. That left one birth within the years 1830 and 1845, of a child named James Gibson, born  to a father named James Gibson and a mother named Margaret Campbell. The birth was registered in Abbey, Renfrewshire and the father was a spirit dealer. 


James Gibson, Birth 27 December 1830, Renfrewshire.[9]

SO WHAT WAS WRONG?

This birth in 1830, placed my James' age at 31 at the time of his marriage when his marriage certificate in 1862 stated he was 21 years. It would be an easy mistake to write 21 instead of 31, however this would not explain the ten year age discrepancy in his age again in the 1871 census, when James  claimed to be 29 years old. If James was born in 1830, he should have been 40 or 41 in 1871. One might expect it to be could be a stretch to claim to be 29 years old if you were 40. Putting aside the issues with age differences, I searched for a death for James, now convinced that his father may have been named James and not George, and found it.

James Gibson died in Denny, Stirling, where I knew the couple lived at the time of his death. James, an ironstone miner, died on April 23, 1876 of heart disease, from which it was claimed he had suffered for two years. The record states he was married to Mary Farnes and the witness to his death was the widow herself. James' age at the time of his death was given as 35 years (indicating again, a birth year of 1841). Had he been born in 1830, he would have been 46 years old. 

James Gibson, Death 1876 [10]

HAVE I FOUND JAMES GIBSON'S PARENTS?

Looking for James Gibson's birth raised as many questions as it has answers for me. What I have determined, is that George Gibson and Margaret Bullock/Campbell are not my three times great grandparents. I believe that James' mother was a Campbell by birth. I have DNA matches to prove this. As yet I cannot find enough evidence to prove beyond doubt, that the 1830 birth is that of my ancestor. If my James Gibson was born in 1830, then for some reason he lowered his age by ten years, consistently from the time of his marriage. There are any number of reasons why ancestors did this - eligibility for employment being the most common. Perhaps if his bride was only 18 years old, James feared that Mary's mother (who was alive when they married), would disapprove of the union? 

I have not ruled out this birth, and at this stage it seems the most likely one for my two times great-grandfather. The birth in Renfrewshire matches the birthplace given for him in the 1871 census and it is the only birth of a James Gibson to a mother named Margaret Campbell. I have not yet found enough evidence though, to claim James Gibson and Margaret Campbell from Renfrew, as my three times great-grandparents. 

There are compelling reasons to think they are my ancestors. Margaret's father was Robert Campbell. This would finally explain why the name Robert has been passed on in this family right up to recent times. But wishing something to be true, does not make it so and I am hoping that my Campbell DNA matches will pave the way to knocking down this brick wall.

NOTE: I am rather excited to discover that I have a Campbell bloodline. When my second child was born, I was thinking of naming it if a boy, Campbell (the first child already having a Scottish name). My father in law, (whose mother was a MacDonald from the Isle of Skye) was horrifed. "Never can there be a Campbell and a MacDonald under the same roof", he declared. 

Glencoe, Edwardian painting of the site of the infamous 1692 massacre of the MacDonald clan in Glen Coe, Argyll. This picture is the copyright of the Lordprice Collection and is reproduced on Wikipedia with their permission.

The Campbell/MacDonald rivalry dates back to the massacre of Glencoe in 1692 and it seems that memories of the betrayal have not dimmed with time. I now find it ironic that I am descended from Campbells and my husband from MacDonalds of Clanranald. I guess we have proved that a Campbell and a MacDonald can live under the same roof after all... and hopefully I will have an update soon as to who my three times Scottish great-grandparents really are.

Image Wikipedia Creative Commons Licence


FOOTNOTES

1. Birth of Elizabeth Gibson, ScotlandsPeople, 1872 GIBSON, ELIZABETH (Statutory Registers Births 476/ 158), Crown Copyright, National Records of Scotland.

2. Birth Record Margaret Campbell Gibson, ScotlandsPeople, 1866 GIBSON, MARGARET CAMPBE (Statutory registers Births 562/ 231) Crown Copyright, National Records of Scotland.


4. Marriage Elizabeth Gibson to William Kane, ScotlandsPeople, 1891 Kane, William )Statutory Registers Marriages 639/ 49) Crown Copyright National Records Scotland. 

5. Marriage Elizabeth Gibson and John McDade, ScotlandsPeople, 1894 McDade, John (Statutory Register Marriages 622/1 25) Crown Copyright National Records Scotland. 

6. Marriage James Gibson and Mary Fearns, ScotlandsPeople,1862 GIBSON, JAMES (Statutory registers Marriages 487/ 32), Copyright National Records Scotland. 

7. 1871 Census, James Gibson, ScotlandsPeople, 1871 GIBSON, JAMES (Census 476/ 1/ 18) Page 18 of 27, Copyright National Records Scotland. 

8. Birth, James Gibson, ScotlandsPeople, Church Registers - Old Parish Registers Births and Baptisms, ScotlandsPeople, https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk

9. Birth, James Gibson, ScotlandsPeople, 27/12/1830 GIBSON, JAMES (Old Parish Registers Births 559/ 60 326 Abbey) Page 326 of 351, Copyright National Records Scotland. 

10. Death, James Gibson, 1876, ScotlandsPeople, 1876 GIBSON, JAMES (Statutory registers Deaths 476/1 45)





Friday, March 9, 2018

PHOTOS + STORY - The Lead up to Rootstech18

PHOTOS + STORY

Since Rootstech this year ran a Photo Plus Story Competition I thought it appropriate to write a blog about Rootstech in a photo essay format. 

Salt Lake Palace Image Sharn White

I was on the go from the moment my fellow Australian Rootstech Ambassador Jill Ball aka GeniAus and I landed in Salt Lake City, Thursday 22 February...

 GeniAus tweeting our departure from Sydney, Australia. Image  used with permission Jill Ball

Sensing the excitement grow as people flew in from all over the world, and meeting up with old and new friends, makes the pre- Rootstech week go far too quickly! 

Image Sharn White

A snowfall the day after I flew into Salt Lake City with fellow Australian Ambassador Jill Ball, was pretty to watch for we who don't experience very cold winters! I was very pleased I had packed my warm boots.

Image Sharn White

After planning to spend Friday February 22nd in the Family History Library, I decided instead, to recover from my long flight from Sydney, Australia. I did take a short walk in the snow!

Image Sharn White

Saturday, with the snow no longer falling, I walked to the family History Library where I ran into fellow family historian  and Australian, Jenny Joyce. I was pleased to meet in person, Jan Brandt who I had previously only known online. One of the wonderful things about Rootstech, is that it brings together like minded people from all around the world. It is such a pleasure to catch up with old friends, to put faces to names and to make wonderful new acquaintances.

Image Sharn White

I was thrilled to knock down, a longstanding Lincolnshire, UK brickwall, while scrolling through microfilm in the library! After three visits to Salt Lake City and Rootstech, this was my first time researching on level B2  which houses the British Isles records. Usually you'll find me on the European floor researching my Swiss and German ancestors. This trip I went with a mission and I was more than excited to find what I was looking for in parish records on microfilm. Familysearch are working hard to transcribe and digitise all of their films so if you have some spare time why not consider joining the transcription project.

 Image Sharn White

It goes without saying that researching in the Family History Library is a highlight of each visit to Salt Lake City.


On Saturday night, before Rootsech, a group of eager early attendees dined together at the Red Iguana 2 restaurant, where the Mexican food was quite delicious, - rivaled only by the fabulous company!

Image Sharn White

On Sunday February 25, Jill Ball and myself took a brisk and chilly stroll to Barnes and Noble for book purchases and some delicious hot soup! I couldn't resist a few photographs of the snow.

Image Sharn White

Walking through the old Union Pacific Station, one couldn't help but admire the beautiful heritage building which has been so lovingly preserved.

Image Sharn White

The ticket booths, beautifully conserved, echoed the din of a past busy railway station.

Image Sharn White
Image Sharn White

The interior of the Pacific Union Station is an art gallery of colourful images of past times and well worth a visit.

Image Sharn White

Back in the chilly air  and unused to the over 4000 feet elevation of Salt lake City,  Jill and I hopped on the Trax light rail to return to the Marriott City Creek, where the handy Starbucks in the lobby provided much appreciated warm drinks. The Trax system makes getting around in Salt Lake City so much easier. Our excitement when the next train was announced in TWO minutes was short-lived as we realised that we had mis-heard the announcement and the train was arrriving in TEN minutes! Still we managed to snap a selfie while we huddled behind the ticket machine for warmth!

Image Sharn White

Monday morning I headed to the Family History Library for a two hour 'Mondays with Myrt' session which was live streamed from the third floor of the library.  This part of the library, usually quiet, was abuzz with excitement as Rootstech attendees from around the world gathered to be a part of Pat's broadcast. Above is Laura Wilkinson Hedgecock from the USA, Jill Ball and myself from Australia and Hilary Gadsby from Wales, in the "Green Room".

Image Sharn White

With Roger Moffat acting as an able camera man, the live stream was set up. There was a festive atmospher  as people arrived who had not seen each other since Rootstech 2017. Above Kirsty Gray and Sylvia Valentine from the UK arrive amidst hugs and happy greetings.

Image Sharn White

Above Dave Robison (Old Bones Genealogy, USA) and Liv Birgit Christiansen from Norway, preparing to go live on Mondays with Myrt. All went well with our very organised Dear Myrt at the helm!

Image from Mondays with Myrt.

Live streaming from the Family History Library in Salt Lake City. The Geneabloggers Tribe Admin. team - from left to right - Cheryl Hudson Passey, Laura Wilkinson Hedgecock, Pat aka Dear Myrtle and  Jill Ball. I am not a member of the administration team but Pat kindly invited me to sit in on the discussion.


Image Sharn White

One of the things I most love about the Rootstech conference is that it transcends boundaries of nationality and cultural differences. This conference embraces and celebrates diversity! Rootstech gathers people together with a common purpose and provides a place where you can connect and feel you belong. Something poignant I took away from from this year's Rootstech CONNECT BELONG message was that by connecting with others we are able to better understand and respect the divergences in our world, and so gain a more meaningful understanding of belonging in a global sense.