Monday February 8, 2010 
SPECIAL SECTIONS
CONTACT US
Click to view our SmartEdition
View The Citizen SmartEdition

READER POLLS
(view past polls)

SECTIONS
·  News
·  Editorial
·  Sports
·  Entertainment
·  Obituaries
·  Columns
·  RSS

In Memoriam

PHOTO GALLERIES
Parrsboro Old Home Week 2009
Graduation Night
2009 Cumberland County 4-H Rally
Harbourfest '08
Community Submitted Photos
view all | submit photo

Video-on-Demand
view all | submit video

REGIONAL NEWS
Amherst Daily News
Halifax Daily News
Truro Daily News
New Glasgow News
Sackville Tribune Post
The Springhill Record

OTHER TRANSCONTINENTAL PUBLICATIONS

Hockey News

Canadian Living

Nova News Now

Transcontinental Atl

COLUMNS   Columns RSS Feed
Last updated at 11:32 AM on 20/04/07  

Genealogy…it’s a family thing print this article
Diana Tibert
DIANA TIBERT Diana Tibert RSS Feed
The Amherst Citizen

MILFORD – How many times have you wished you had started researching your family tree when you were younger? We can’t go back in time, but we can give future genealogists—our children and grandchildren —a head start.

Children and adults are interested in things for different reasons; when washing a car, adults want to clean - kids want to play in the water. Bombarding children with rules, endless (meaningless to them) data and hours in the archives is not the way to capture their interest.

Start their journey by creating a simple pedigree chart with three generations. In most cases, everyone in the chart will be familiar and still alive. The kids can relate to them.

Instead of using only names and data, create one with photographs. It can be on construction paper or Bristol board. Use lots of colour, stickers or anything else the child wants to decorate with. If they are old enough to write, get them to enter the names and birth dates beside each photograph. Once complete, it can be hung where everyone can appreciate it or taken to school for show and tell. Store these pedigree charts in the child’s genealogy keepsake box.

Scrapbooking is growing in popularity, making supplies readily available and more affordable. Creating a page for each member of the immediate family, grandparents, aunts and uncles is a great way to preserve the information that is commonly known now. Remember, it doesn’t have to be perfect. Children have their own opinions on how things are arranged. Your job is to make sure the information such as the name spellings, dates and places are correct.

A few years ago, I found a publication series, “My Mother (or Father, Grandmother, Grandfather) and Me - A Memory Scrapbook for Kids” published by Kids Can Press. Created like a picture book, children enter data on the particular relative, compare their lives, fill in a three-generation family tree chart and add photos.

Genealogy vacations are great ways to involve children in family history. Visit places where you, your parents and grandparents were born and raised. Stop at old homesteads, schools, churches and other significant places. Take pictures to use in scrapbooks or albums.

While travelling, make comments such as, ‘I remember visiting Nanny when she lived there. She had eight kids’. Even on short drives past familiar places, remark about where, what and who. For example, ‘my Dad used to work there’ or ‘Nanny and Poppy lived there before they moved to . . .’ My parents naturally did this, so my head is filled with family history that I now pass on to my children.

The first time my daughter visited a cemetery, she was in a baby car seat. Since then, she and her younger siblings have been in dozens of cemeteries helping me find family members. These visits help nurture a respect for burial grounds that hopefully will last a lifetime and create individuals who preserve these places instead of vandalizing them.

Keep genealogy ‘lessons’ short and simple. Hopefully, they’ll be begging for more.

Researcher’s File

Seeking information on Evan Corkill of Liverpool, England and his five children. Evan’s children arrived in Nova Scotia in the 1870’s as British Home Children. One later moved to Massachusetts, one went to BC and three remained in Nova Scotia. Contact: Betty Fredericks, PO Box 84, No. Billerica, MA 01862 USA; email: bbffrrpp@comcast.net



EDITOR’s NOTE - Diana Lynn Tibert is a writer living in Milford, NS. Submit genealogy queries to RR#1 Milford, Hants County, NS B0N 1Y0; e-mail: tibert@ns.sympatico.ca
21/04/07  



Recent columns :




Past Diana Tibert columns :

February 2010 January 2010 December 2009 November 2009 October 2009 September 2009
August 2009 July 2009 June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009
February 2009 January 2009 December 2008 November 2008 October 2008 September 2008
August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008
February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 September 2007
August 2007 July 2007 June 2007 May 2007 April 2007 March 2007
February 2007

 





Weblocal - Search. Find. Share.

Are you searching for a product, a service or a local company?

Search
Local Deals, local advertisers, everyday!

February 8, 2010
Cumberland Honda

CE Harrison


Hospital Foundation


Classifieds Merkado

Web cams

Airport

Canadian Living Recipe of the day
Recipe of the day
Slow Cooker Pulled Pork Tacos
Slow Cooker Pulled Pork Tacos
More >>




Email:
TOP 9 ARTICLES
Most Viewed  |  Most Discussed

awagstaff@amherstdaily.com
Phone: 902-661-5440
Fax: 902-667-0419



Click here to view our privacy policy.

A Transcontinental Media, Local Solutions Group site

This site is part of the Transcontinental Media Network


Daily Newspapers:
Nova Scotia: Amherst Daily News; Cape Breton Post; The News (New Glasgow); Truro Daily News.
Prince Edward Island: Journal Pioneer (Summerside); The Guardian (Charlottetown).
Newfoundland & Labrador:The Telegram (St. John’s); The Western Star (Corner Brook).
Saskatchewan: Moose Jaw Times-Herald; Prince Albert Herald.
Weeklies and Specialty Publications:
Nova Scotia: The Advance; The Hants Journal; The Kings County Register; Kentville Advertiser; The Annapolis County Spectator; The Yarmouth County Vanguard; The Digby County Courier; The Shelburne County Coast Guard; The Citizen; Nova Scotia Business Journal; Burnside News; Farm Focus; Springhill Record; Bedford Sackville Weekly News; Dartmouth Cole Harbour Weekly News; Halifax West Clayton Park Weekly News; Halifax News Net; The Atlantic Construction & Transportation Journal
New Brunswick: Sackville Tribune Post; ENBusiness.
Newfoundland & Labrador:The Charter; The Southern Gazette; The Compass; The Labradorian; The Aurora; The Beacon; The Pilot; The Packet; The Gulf News; The Coaster; The Georgian; The Nor’wester; The Advertiser; The Northern Pen.
Saskatchewan:Southwest Booster; SaskNewsNow; Coronach Triangle News; Grenfell Sun/Broadview Express; Oxbow Herald; Radville/Deep South Star.
Consumer Magazines:
Canadian Living; Elle Canada; Homemakers; More; Good Times; Canadian Gardening; Canadian Home & Country; Style at Home; Western Living; Ottawa at Home; Vancouver Magazine; TV Guide; The Hockey NewsMochasofaOccasions MagazineGolf Ontario StyleGolf EastGroup Travel Planner.
Services:
Weblocal; Merkado