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A California gathering of Utah friends

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My Bird ancestors were early photography enthusiasts. As a result, I have access to hundreds of old photos, some dating back to the earliest days of photography. Happily, many are labeled with names, dates, and places.  In addition to family members, there are  photos of friends, neighbors, and colleagues.  I love sharing photos that someone else's family might be grateful to see! Tagging  photos  and documents to a deceased individual's profile in the FamilySearch Family Tree will trigger a notification to relatives of that individual (as determined by connections in the shared Family Tree), alerting them to the photo's presence when they log in.  This photo of Birds and friends/colleagues from MT Bird album #12 was taken in July 1948. Back row, L to R are Kenneth Madsen,  Fred and Elizabeth Knobel, my grandparents MT and Florence Bird, and David Madsen.  In front are Luna Brite, wife of Duncan Brite, and Mary Collins Madsen.  (Was Duncan Brite possibly the one who took t

The clue (I missed) in the album

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Ella Sedgwick Ralph Album 2, p.24  Caroline Ralph Miller collection,  scanned with permission.  PL Embley digital collection. There may have been a Nancy Drew mystery by that title... I started this genealogical journey in the 1970s with a mimeographed list of my direct ancestors prepared by my grandfather Marion Taylor Bird. (Probably about the same time I would have been reading Nancy Drew mysteries. Are these two facts related?)  The "Ancestors Of..." list was extensive on my maternal grandfather's line but had few details about my maternal grandmother's ancestors. This was likely in part because her father John Albert Ralph died when she was not yet 10 years old. His father,  William John Ralph , was orphaned when he was only 7. Family information that would have passed naturally over years of association was lost.   Ella Sedgwick Ralph Album 2, p.12 Caroline Ralph Miller collection,  scanned with  permission. PL Embley digital collection. After my grandfather re

Fannie Moone Onderdonk: Identifying a Civil War-era photo using a Civil War-era signature album

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My g-g-aunt Marion Irene BIRD (1839-1903) kept a signature album where friends and family recorded poems and wishes to be remembered.  My uncle, who owns the signature album, allowed me to scan it a number of years ago. Many names in the album were easily identified as Marion's siblings, aunts, uncles, and cousins with ties to Warrenville, Illinois. Some of the names were totally unfamiliar, though. Who were those people? I recently determined that the next step for that album was to assemble the individual images into a single PDF that could be uploaded to FamilySearch Memories. This act not only helped identify the unknown connections in the signature album, it also became a critical link in identifying unlabeled images in a photo album of Marion's that had been donated to the  Warrenville Historical Society .  1840 Map of Orleans County, New York Dave Rumsey Map Collection Marion was one of eight children born to Frederick Bird and Louisa Goddard Warren. Her father died wh