THE BUTLER PEDIGREE The surname, BUTLER , originated in the Chief Butlerage of Ireland conferred upon Theobald Walter the first...
-->What is The Livestock Guardian Dog Record Book? The LGD Record Book: PDF is a collection of records to improve production and management of your homestead Livestock Guardian Dogs. -->What's Inside The LGD Record Book?? The LGD Record Book includes the following record-keeping sheets: •LGD Identification- Use this ID sheet to store the history, pedigree, and photo of each dog. This record is great to have on hand during a sale and for general reference anytime. •Medical Treatment- Keep track of the medications and treatments used on your animals with this medical treatment chart. •Breeding Record- Keep a detailed account of your LGD breeding program using this breeding record sheet. •Whelping Record- This sheet expands on the breeding record. It holds the names of the sire & dam, the whelping date, and other pertinent whelping information. •Additions + Losses- If a dog dies or if you add more LGDs to your homestead, enter the details here. •LGD Sales- When you sell a dog, record it here with the customer information. •LGD Expenses- List all LGD-related expenses here. •Notes- Keep any additional notes about your livestock guardian dogs on this sheet You can get The Homestead LGD Record Book for only $4! Get the full Livestock Management Binder for $24 (an $80 value) here--> https://www.etsy.com/listing/680192380/the-homestead-livestock-management *This is a PDF product *Do not duplicate or resell *Refunds cannot be offered on digital products.
This is an activity designed to be a final in-class assessment for pedigrees. Students should already be familiar with pedigrees before doing this in class. A 5.5 page activity titled "The Blue People of Troublesome Creek" focuses on the "Blue Fugates" of Kentucky. This family suffered from a rare genetic disorder known as methemoglobinemia. This is really fascinating and my students LOVE hearing about this. They can hardly believe it's real. It goes into detail about the history of the Fugates, as well as methemoglobinemia itself. Students must answer analysis questions (7) about the information provided. Students then construct a pedigree (partial pedigree) of the Fugate family and must answer questions and do Punnett squares as part of the analysis. There are a total of 16 analysis questions for this packet, including one bonus question. Lastly there is a short, fun, 12 slide PowerPoint to wrap things up! Complete with plenty of visuals. Please download the free preview for a more detailed look at the product. Recommended for high school (or advanced 7th + 8th grade students). This product IS part of the Pedigree Mini Unit, found here: Pedigree Activity Pack (mini unit) ☆☆Follow me on☆☆ Pinterest Facebook Instagram Newsletter Terms of Use: Vanessa Jason Biology Roots For single classroom only; not to be shared publicly (do not create publicly accessible links). Copying for more than one teacher, classroom, department, school, or district is prohibited. Failure to comply is a violation of the DMCA (Digital Millennium Copyright Act).
This free, easy to use and printable pedigree chart creates a snapshot of your direct ancestors over several generations.
The creator of House Elves Anonymous teaches you how to create a 12 generation pedigree spreadsheet for your genealogy research, using only free software.
So, I'm a genealogy nut. I've been researching my family lines since the age of 14. That's um...about 18 years or so. It's the one hobby tha...
Yours FREE, courtesy of Teach Me Genealogy. Click here to download and or print your Family Now & Family History Bundle
This eight generation pedigree chart will allow you to write in up to 255 individual names including marriage details and there will still be space for you to include other facts that you have about your ancestors. This is very much like our eight generation chart but is half the size. The chart is available printed on either: 120 gsm white paper - with coloured boxes. Or 120 gsm white paper - with plain boxes. Approx Size: 23 x 16.5 inches (42 x 60cm) A2 size We recommend our acid free pens! for writing on these charts Chart orders are despatched in an acid free sleeve, in either a cardboard tube of box depending upon the size and method of despatch. Multiple chart orders will be despatched wherever possible in the same packaging, so if you require extra tubes please be sure to add those to your cart (see related products).
Kelley Becker and Neal Varner from AncestryDNA shared new genetic genealogy tools at their site! Some are in beta still, meaning they are brand new and still under development and you have to sign …
Our Collection Features: Historic ornament for woodwork-furniture applications Impressive pedigree dating back to famous English architect Robert Adam Over 16,000 designs to choose from All items made to order. As a result: No Refunds or returns accepted Lead time to ship is typically 1-2 weeks Rush ordering available - Add 25% to material cost Important: this is a composition material and is suited for interior use only Many items can be made in an exterior material. Please inquire 100% Made in USA Drawings: CAD IMAGE Additional Resources: PDF Catalog | Compo Square & Rectangle Rosettes PDF | "History of Compo" Installation Instructions: Important: Our all natural composite material requires special installation procedures PDF | Installation Instructions 1.) STEAMING METHOD 2.) NON-STEAMING METHOD
Does your surname have its own Welsh tartan? See below! You can purhcase cushions made from your clan's tartan below
My aunt and I had genealogy in common Originally published January 18, 2013 in the Santa Cruz Sentinel My aunt Georgy was a Christian in the best sense of the word. She lived her faith by example, always kind, generous, and interested in others. She remembered me, my brother, my husband and my kids every birthday and Christmas with a card and a gift. You knew that her cards were carefully selected, because she gave all the kindest words and phrases emphasis with her liberal underlining. The same abundant emphasis also appeared when she sent hand-written thank you notes. “Thanks for the wonderful birthday card, note, and PHOTO!!! I love it all!!! Especially the PHOTO!!!” Although she had not been feeling well, nor able eat much for quite some time, she died quickly after only a week of home hospice care, right after Thanksgiving and three weeks shy of her 87th birthday. As my cousin described their goodbye in her Christmas letter, “We saw her off with loving words and recorded hymns played on piano and organ, which she always loved.” My aunt lived near Sacramento—a three hour drive away—and over the years we didn’t see each other more than once or twice a year for family gatherings. So I wouldn’t say we were close in a day-to-day sort of way. But reflecting back on who she was, I would say we shared a common passion that is/was very dear to both of us: family history. Her hallway was a gallery of family photos, hung at many eye levels, up and down the walls. Family photo albums were always close at hand in her living room. And she always asked that we take family photos whenever we assembled for a holiday or wedding. I would oblige, getting out the tripod, lining everyone up in a shady spot, and making 8x10s for everyone in our small family. I had this photo but didn't know who the people were until I started researching my family tree. Like her sister (my mom), she didn’t own a computer. But if she had, I’m sure she would have gotten as caught up in family genealogy as I have. Researching one’s family tree has gotten so much easier due to the abundance of online resources, and it’s addicting. In a sense it reminds me of assembling a jigsaw puzzle: you know the pieces are out there somewhere, but you have to know where to look, and be able to recognize when a found piece still doesn’t quite fit. With practice, you get better at searching, the puzzle starts to take shape, and you make some remarkably satisfying discoveries along the way. The US Federal Census is a primary source document that will provide lots of information about your relatives, including names, spouse, children, ages, street address, birth place, parents birth places, and occupations. I unintentionally started my genealogy research three years ago when I took a history class from a great professor named Laura Guardino. I learned that good historians value primary sources. A primary source is an original artifact, document, recording, or other source of information that was created at the time under study. For creating a family tree, primary sources include censuses; birth, baptism, marriage and death records; draft registration and military records; photographs; and immigration, citizenship and travel records. Generally, accounts written after the fact without firsthand experience are considered secondary. Secondary sources may support primary information, but are one step removed since the writer or recorder was not actually an eyewitness to the event. 1863 draft registration for Lewis Hunsicker, my great great grandfather, found on ancestry.com Although primary sources may be preferable, they are not necessarily accurate. Selected census enumerators knew the citizens in their area and penned the lists, but didn’t necessarily know how to spell the names or write legibly. For example, my great great grandmother’s first name was Levina, or Lovina, or Lavina—I’m still not sure because no two censuses agree. And some sources are not “primary” in the strictest sense of the word. My grandfather wrote a six-page account of his family’s move to New Mexico in the early 1900s and their struggle to make a living there as ranchers. He was an eyewitness to the events, but wrote his story many years after the fact. It helps if pedigree charts are printable on standard-sized paper. I had to blow this one up to write on it, and then back down again to print it all on piece of paper. I like this format, because it tells the whole story at once, but detailed pedigree charts keep track of all the details. Although there are many websites to choose from, I started my research using ancestry.com. It’s a monthly subscription service that allows you to look at primary documents and the family trees of your fellow researchers. You can save your findings on an ever-expanding family tree template which shows every possible connection you can discover, or as a pedigree chart which shows only direct lineage, i.e. parents and no siblings. No matter your source, you’ll keep your information better organized if you start with paper and pencil and a pedigree chart. Google “pedigree chart” and pick one that will allow you to record names, birth/marriage/death dates, and birth/marriage/death places, and make notes. Gather information provided by your family: photos, memoirs, interviews, wills, birth certificates, family Bibles, etc. From there, look at the U.S. Federal Census. The U.S. has taken a census of its population every ten years since 1790, and, with the exception of the 1890 census which was largely destroyed by fire, the original hand-written pages can be viewed through the 1940 census. (More recent years are protected by privacy laws.) The early censuses listed only the heads of the household, but starting in 1850, every member of the household was listed. So, if you can find a child’s name, you can also learn their sibling and parents’ names, ages, occupations, birth place, neighbors, and other data. Besides the federal census, many states and counties also had censuses. On ancestry.com, I was also able to find my relatives on original documents such as draft registrations, baptism and marriage records, ship passenger lists, church membership rosters, death certificates and city directories. Fellow researchers also upload personal documents to share, such as portraits, wills, and cemetery headstone photos. This is how I came across my grandfather’s six-page New Mexico memoir, and photos of him in his WWI and police uniforms. After you’ve created pedigree charts as far back as possible, check your data against the charts of other researchers. Many of America’s founding families have been exhaustively researched, and their descendants proudly share their heritage on a family website. For example, if you Google “Addington family in America” you’ll discover the Addington Association’s website, which provides histories, descendant lists, wills, photographs, and family reunion information. Whenever you discover conflicting information, look to see if primary sources are listed as references. There are also plenty of books, YouTube videos, and other online sources that will give you help with finding, charting and preserving your family history. For a more personal presentation, I decided to make a scrapbook from scratch using Peter and Donna Thomas’s great book “More Making Books by Hand” as a guide. The hardest part of the project, however, was forcing myself to stop the research and start the book. I always wanted to do just a little more digging, try a new avenue, look for more corroboration. Tracing your family tree is like assembling a jigsaw puzzle that never ends—but in a good way. *** My aunt was many more things beyond a family historian: a loving parent and wife, a devoted sister, an artist, camper, traveler, dedicated pray-er, and many more things that I will probably never know. But I do know she loved her family very fiercely, and I was fortunate and blessed to have been her niece.
About Turf Monthly Turf Monthly was an integral part of the Australian racing tradition. For over half a century the magazine was a must read for anyone with an interest in racing. It gave insights into the horses and people who made racing such an important part of life. Now it is back on the shelf and will again bring to life the history and heritage of the turf. Relive the great moments, the champion horses, jockeys, and trainers, and those characters behind the scenes that give racing such a colourful history. Turf Monthly wants to bring the champions of the past into the modern era so they become more than just a name in a pedigree.
He was, according to most experts, the greatest thoroughbred who ever lived. Here’s a look in pictures at the career of the horse known as “Big Red.”
A simple pedigree chart to document your horse's history. This chart fits 5 generations on one page and features a parchment background with a horse silhouette. Chart out your horse's pedigree by downloading and using the PDF to fill in your information. You can also print and write in the information. *This is a digital file and will be emailed once payment is completed.
This is an activity designed to be a final in-class assessment for pedigrees. Students should already be familiar with pedigrees before doing this in class. A 5.5 page activity titled "The Blue People of Troublesome Creek" focuses on the "Blue Fugates" of Kentucky. This family suffered from a rare genetic disorder known as methemoglobinemia. This is really fascinating and my students LOVE hearing about this. They can hardly believe it's real. It goes into detail about the history of the Fugates, as well as methemoglobinemia itself. Students must answer analysis questions (7) about the information provided. Students then construct a pedigree (partial pedigree) of the Fugate family and must answer questions and do Punnett squares as part of the analysis. There are a total of 16 analysis questions for this packet, including one bonus question. Lastly there is a short, fun, 12 slide PowerPoint to wrap things up! Complete with plenty of visuals. Please download the free preview for a more detailed look at the product. Recommended for high school (or advanced 7th + 8th grade students). This product IS part of the Pedigree Mini Unit, found here: Pedigree Activity Pack (mini unit) ☆☆Follow me on☆☆ Pinterest Facebook Instagram Newsletter Terms of Use: Vanessa Jason Biology Roots For single classroom only; not to be shared publicly (do not create publicly accessible links). Copying for more than one teacher, classroom, department, school, or district is prohibited. Failure to comply is a violation of the DMCA (Digital Millennium Copyright Act).