Mar 10

web ancestry

web ancestry
Other than ancestry.com?

What other web site(s) can I search for my ancestors? I’ve located grandparents, the rest go back to Europe. I signed up for worldwide access, thought I could get records (pre-1900) for Europe, they don’t have any.



Another good site to check is www.cyndislist.com Eventually, you may have to go to an historical society or large metro library and “hit the books.” Web sites are good; but, a lot of their info comes from other people and not real documented sources.


Family Tree Maker 2010 Platinum Software


Family Tree Maker 2010 Platinum Software


$88.88


Get step-by-step instructions and tips that will help you easily build and grow your family tree with Your Family Tree Maker 2010 Platinum software….

RootsMagic Family Tree Genealogy Software


RootsMagic Family Tree Genealogy Software


$29.95


Awarded “Editor’s Choice” by Heritage Quest Magazine. RootsMagic is an easy to use family tree program with extensive family history reports, multiple navigation views, photos, publishing, and website creation features. RootsMagic supports unlimited people, families, events, notes, and photos. Users can print complete books (where the program writes the sentences for each event), spectacular chart…

Reunion 9


Reunion 9


$80.00


Reunion is a genealogy software program — a “family tree program” — for the Macintosh.
Reunion received the highest rating for genealogy software in MacWorld, MacAddict, and Mac Home Journal magazines.
Reunion helps you to document, store, and display information about your family — your ancestors, descendants, cousins, etc. It records names, dates, places, facts, plenty of notes, sources of in…

Family Tree Maker 2011 Deluxe


Family Tree Maker 2011 Deluxe


$39.98


Ancestry.com Family Tree Maker software gives you 100+ new and exciting ways to discover your family history and preserve it for generations to come. Rich storytelling tools let you build your family tree, create charts and reports, plus incorporate photos and video. The Deluxe version comes with a free three-month Ancestry.com membership that provides access to three billion U.S. immigration,…

The Official Guide to Ancestry.com


The Official Guide to Ancestry.com


$16.30


Whether you are coming to Ancestry.com for the first time or have used it for years, you need The Official Guide to Ancestry.com. Written by noted genealogist and lecturer George G. Morgan, this official guide takes you inside the #1 website for family history research for an unprecedented tour. This second edition includes chapters on the new search at Ancestry, MyCanvas, and Ancestry DNA. In add…

Organizing Your Family History Search: Efficient & Effective Ways to Gather and Protect Your Genealogical Research


Organizing Your Family History Search: Efficient & Effective Ways to Gather and Protect Your Genealogical Research


$17.99


As genealogists everywhere will testify, few hobbies generate more paper work than genealogy. This guide successfully tackles the process of organising family research, from filing piles of paper to streamlining the process as a whole.’…

The Official Guide to Rootsweb.com


The Official Guide to Rootsweb.com


$8.31


From the former editor of the RootsWeb Review and the author of The Official Guide to Family Tree Maker 2006 comes the insider’s tour of RootsWeb.com. In it, you will learn how to put your family tree online, locate valuable research resources, create successful message board posts, search effectively, connect with other users, and much more. The guide also features success stories from members of…


Ancestry In Progress


Ancestry In Progress


$8.49


Ancestry In Progress

Ancestry


Ancestry


$13.58


Saxophonist Trevor Watts has made no bones about his love for the South African expatriate musicians, especially Dudu Pukwana, who came to London during apartheid. In recent years, Watts has been playing the kwelas, high life and ritual dance music so much a part of the jazz styles of those players, especially the members of the Brotherhood of Breath, who mingled with many British improvisers. Hand percussionist Jamie Harris joins Watts for this recording of original jam tunes that reflects the traditional African and modern English way for making new music. While their range in timbre, pacing, and interplay is limited, the expression of joy they exude is rarely trivial. The difference is mainly measured in degrees of pace and energy as a slightly overblown soprano saxophone in the 6/8 ritualistic dance of “Alpino” and 4/4 of “Sarawak” with Watts on alto sets the tone. At their most creative, a stretched 10/8 time signature in extreme upper octave levels on “Three & More” and the circular sped up line of “Kerrytown” shows these two undoubtedly belong to the modern musicians sect. Vocals add to a swirling, frantic effect during “Tandem Voices,” while a more whirling dervish, Turkish or Arabian flavor has the woodwinds sounding overdubbed, but it’s actually a vocal accent on “Balintan.” Often you feel Harris is an accessory, or a second brought simply for support, as there is not much interplay or counterpoint involved. Then again, one might contend it’s all call and response as in most African music. Watts so thoroughly dominates this project, and though there’s a certain joy, exuberance, or in the case of “Anna B,” romanticism, he’s expressing his inner calling, with Harris along for the safari. While not a definitive recording, and assuredly for specialized tastes, what Watts and Harris have achieved is undeniably unique unto itself. ~ Michael G. Nastos, Rovi

Across The Divide (A Tale Of Rhythm & Ancestry)


Across The Divide (A Tale Of Rhythm & Ancestry)


$9.99


Across The Divide (A Tale Of Rhythm & Ancestry)

WEB CARD


WEB CARD


$310


WEB CARD

Web Of Deficit


Web Of Deficit


$7.99


Web Of Deficit

Clotho's Web


Clotho’s Web


$7.99


Clotho’s Web

Strings To A Web


Strings To A Web


$10.49


Strings To A Web

Charlotte's Web


Charlotte’s Web


$4.99


Charlotte’s Web

Ancestry in Progress


Ancestry in Progress


$11.98


On its first full-length in four years, Marie Daulne’s Zap Mama project returns to Luaka Bop from a brief encounter with Narada and resumes its quest to wind African melody and vocal harmony around hip- hop, jazzy breaks, soul and Afro Cuban rhythms first explored on 7 and continued with mixed success on A Ma Zone. Produced by Daulne and Anthony Tidd, the music production was supervised by the Roots’ Richard Nichols. As such, this exotic blend is earthy, steamy, full of souled-out slips and shimmers in “Bandy Bandy” with special guest Erykah Baud, and the laid-back funk of “Show Me the Way,” with guests Air Thompson Bahamadia and Lady Alma. This is far more an urban recording, where urban pop and nu-soul are informed by worldbeat esthetics rather than the other way around. Take “Miss Q’N” with its late-night groove and stacked harmonies (all performed by Daulne) coming from out of the ether and weaving a tapestry of soft seductive lullaby around the lyric. “Yak,” with its male chorus intoning the pronunciation (“Yah Yoa”) is an intro against the whispering hi hat loop, before a huge chorus of alto and contralto voices re-frame it and Daulne’s solo voice. As the hypnotic effect becomes the M.O., M.C. Intense begins rapping from his urban reality perch and throws the whole thing into overdrive. And so it goes, drifting, cutting, edging, and willowing toward some otherworldly collage that is all held together in the sheer vocal magic of Daulne’s vision. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi Performers: Marie Daulne – Bottle, Clapping, Sound Effects, Vocals (Background), Percussion, Keyboards, Vocals; Mfali Kouyate – Cora; Scratch – Beat Box; Lene Nørgaard Christensen – Clapping, Vocals (Background), Vocals; Common – Rap; Dana Leong – Horn; Jonathan Finlayson – Horn; Lady Alma – Vocals (Background); Larry Gold – S


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