From Deseret News archives:

Family ties: Conference to help genealogists update their Internet skills

Published: Monday, Jan. 8, 2007 6:20 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
There's a revolution right now in genealogy, and it is coming from a number of fronts," says Rich Running. His part in the revolution is to provide what he calls "the bathrobe experience." Picture, if you will, an army of pajama-clad researchers.

As head of product management for the Family History department of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Running's job is to take the Church's 2 1/2 million rolls of microfilm and another 1 1/2 million microfiches and scan all those billions of birth and marriage and death records and get them on the Internet.

Running wants everyone who owns a computer to be able to access all the Church's records from their homes — late at night, early in the morning, any time they want. No more getting cleaned up and combing your hair and driving to your nearest family history library.

In a free public lecture, Running will explain how the LDS Church is progressing in the effort to digitize the records. He'll speak on Tuesday at the Radisson Hotel in downtown Salt Lake City as part of the annual Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy, presented by the Utah Genealogical Association.

This is the Institute's 12th year. Marilyn Markham, president of the UGA, says the Institute draws amateur and professional genealogists from around the United States and even from other countries.

Story continues below
The UGA is a nondenominational organization and has had board members belonging to faiths other than LDS. However, Markham says, the big draw for the Salt Lake Institute, as compared to other genealogy conferences, is the proximity of the LDS Church's Family History Library. Most of those who come to the five-day conference will spend their mornings in classes at the hotel and their afternoons just a block away at the Family History Library.

Utahns who haven't signed up for the $345 Institute can still hear experts, including Running, at a series of evening lectures.

Karen Clifford, a local genealogist, will be the banquet speaker. She'll talk about some of the funny findings — including a headstone that not only gave the name and birth and death dates of the man, but also listed his widow's address and noted that she "yearns to be comforted."

Clifford will also talk about some of the more humorous mistakes people made when they were learning to do genealogy. When the electronic sources first came online, she says, beginning researchers found families they thought they were related to and disseminated the wrong information much more widely than they'd ever been able to before. A woman with a common name might be said to be the mother of more than 100 children.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

Hall reprimanded by MWC

Max Hall is not the only BYU affiliate who has harsh feelings against Utah....

I thought his speech was dynamic and "transparent," but like Senator McCain...

Witness: Mitchell wanted attention

The LDS church did not have a prior policy of reporting incest and child...

Obama orders 30,000-troop boost

Yepper's, you betcha, (as Sarah Palin would say), the same DNA is running in...

TCU dominates all-MWC honors

I'm with you, Big Time BYU fan. Well said.

Obama orders 30,000-troop boost

As a Republican, I fully agree with what President Obama has said. Declaring...

BYU says Hall incident resolved

Jorgensen repremanded last week, Hall this week. Wonder who will be next...

KSL is No. 1

I usually watch channel 5 but man all those commercials drive me crazy....

TCU dominates all-MWC honors

I thought Sylvester was an excellent linebacker the past two seasons. I...

Would it have been different if BYU had lost and Max had made such remarks?...

Advertisements