Showing posts with label Find A Grave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Find A Grave. Show all posts

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Virtual Cemeteries on Find A Grave


Find A Grave is a popular online genealogical resource.  Many people use Find A Grave but do not understand the Virtual Cemetery feature.  Hopefully this blog post will help you understand more about them.

What is a Virtual Cemetery?

 A Virtual Cemetery is a collection of links (to memorials) that you curate, like a list with links included.  The memorials are still managed by the profile that is assigned to manage them. The Virtual Cemetery is a quick link to the memorial. A Virtual Cemetery can be private or public. Your virtual cemetery might have memorials from many different cemeteries.  The Virtual Cemetery is different than Find A Grave’s “My Cemeteries” (which are links to a cemetery’s page).  

Find A Grave Feature definitions:

Memorial - page honoring a person, showing cemetery where buried
Cemetery - collection of Memorials located in a cemetery
My Cemeteries - a place to save a link to the cemeteries you work with often 
Virtual Cemetery - a curated collection of links to memorials

You can create a Virtual Cemetery for a variety of subjects.  Here are a few ideas:


o   List of famous gravesites: famous people, veterans, etc.
o   Family name: saving the links to all your family line in one easy to find place.
o   Cemetery research: quick access list of everyone to research in a particular cemetery
o   To Do: a list of memorials that you would like to research or take photos of
o   High school Class alumni             





This is a listing of Virtual Cemeteries  You can see that some are lists of tasks for a cemetery.  And then there are lists of famous people. The number next to the Virtual Cemetery name indicates how many memorials are included for that cemetery.




And here are a couple of examples of Virtual Cemeteries:


 

How do you create a Virtual Cemetery?


When logged in your Find a Grave account go to your profile page by clicking your profile name:   




Then go to your Contributor Tools:




Click the edit button next to “My Virtual Cemeteries”:



Click Add New:







Fill in the Your Cemetery name.  This one just has the same name as the cemetery I am working on. Click Yes if you would like this to be visible to the public, or No to keep it private.  Then click Add This Cemetery:




Your cemetery will appear in your list of Virtual Cemeteries.  It will not show up as a clickable link until you add memorials to it. The Virtual Cemeteries that are private have an * next to the name:




To edit a virtual cemetery click on the Virtual Cemetery link in your Contributions to Find a Grave page:





How do you add Memorials to a Virtual Cemetery?


To add a memorial to your Virtual Cemetery: Click on the Edit Virtual Cemetery link on the memorial page:





Then click the box next to your Virtual Cemetery you would like to place the memorial.  Click on Save Changes:




Here is the record in the Virtual Cemetery:



HCGS Makes a Difference Volunteer Project


We are using Virtual Cemeteries for the Hamilton County Genealogical Society’s project on documenting Hamilton County’s Civil War Veterans. Each Virtual Cemetery is a gallery of the cemeteries we have researched.  This makes it easier for our volunteers to find memorials they are working on without having to look up each person repeatedly.  For the public it shows the record of the soldiers in each cemetery, as if we created a memorial wall of the Civil War Veteran’s in each cemetery.

Our virtual cemeteries are located here: HCGS Virtual Cemeteries Or check out our Find A Grave Profile 

The image below shows a portion of the Virtual Cemeteries we have created for the project.  



We will need volunteers to help us with our project. If you like to work with Find A Grave searching and adding memorials to our Virtual Cemeteries or would prefer to head to the cemetery and take photos we would love your help.  Check out our earlier post on the project for more info: 


Saturday, June 21, 2014

Hamilton County Genealogical Society Makes a Difference Volunteer Project

quilting fabric and blocks representing those of the Civil War period
Now that the summer is upon us we have a volunteer project that might interest you. Do you like to wander through cemeteries taking photographs? Would you like to honor and memorialize Civil War Veterans buried in Hamilton County? Or maybe you would like looking up memorials on Find a Grave?

With the period for recognition of the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War drawing to a close, we’ve planned a project that needs lots of volunteers, each undertaking a small amount of effort. We want to place photos of the tombstones, burial site, or memorialize on Find a Grave.com all the Civil War veterans buried in Hamilton County. These soldiers we seek to honor fought to preserve the Union – so we did not become a nation divided.   

We will need volunteers to “adopt” a cemetery and take photos of the graves of soldiers. We will provide the list. Other volunteers are needed to research Find a Grave.com and verify if a memorial has been created already for the soldier. This volunteer will also move existing memorials to our “virtual cemeteries” for our project. And finally, we will need volunteers to create new memorials on Find a Grave.com for soldiers who need them.

We have a Find A Grave profile that we will use http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=mr&MRid=48454462. The “virtual cemeteries” are located there.

We will provide work sheets and instructions for the cemetery you choose to adopt. Supplies to help the photographer will also be provided. We suggest you work in groups, so volunteer with a friend or join us as we tackle some of the larger cemeteries together.

This is the initial group of cemeteries we will be taking photos in. The number beside the name indicates the number of Civil War Veterans buried there. After checking on Find a Grave the actual count for each cemetery will be lower if memorials have been created already.

Armstrong Chapel (Methodist Churchyard)-19
Asbury Methodist Episcopal Chapel-5
Asbury Methodist Episcopal Churchyard-17
Baptist-Harrison-15-assigned
Bethel Baptist-8
Bevis Cedar Grove-35
Bridgetown-27
Carpenter’s Run Baptist Church Cemetery-2
Clough Baptist Churchyard-1
Coleman Presbyterian Cemetery-5
Columbia Baptist Churchyard-9
Compton Family Burial Ground-2
Congress Green-2
Dunlap Station-1-assigned
Ebenezer Methodist Episcopal Cemetery-4-assigned
East Miami River-1
Flag Spring Cemetery-49-completed
Glen Haven Cemetery-109
Green Township-5
Guardian Angels Catholic Cemetery-3
Hayes Rittenhouse-1
Hillcrest Afro-American-4
Huston-1
Laurel-136
Maple Grove-119
Markley-5
Meyers-1
Miami-65
Mt Healthy Evangelical United Brethren-5
Mt Pleasant-34
New Burlington-18
New Haven-16-assigned
Oak Hill-19
Our Lady of Victory-6
Reading Protestant-91
Rose Hill-2
Salem Methodist Episcopal-2
Schulinger-1
Shiloh-2-assigned
St Aloysius Gonzaga-14-assigned
St Bernard Catholic-4-assigned
St James of White Oak-10
St John the Baptist Catholic Churchyard-2
St John-17
St John Catholic-19
St Michael Catholic-5
St Paul Evangelical-2
St Peter and Paul, Reading-18
St Peter and Paul Old, Reading-2
Trinity Evangelical Lutheran-1
Union-6
Union Baptist African American-151
United African American-47
United Brethren-2
United Jewish, Clifton-9
United Jewish, Price Hill-10
Van Blaricum, privately owned-4
Vine St Hill-800+ (will have this be a large team project)
Whitewater-8
Willsey-6
Woodlawn-14
Zion United Brethren-7

Think about the cemeteries near you, or ones that you are familiar with and check in with us to volunteer.

If you would like to volunteer please email our coordinator for volunteers on this project, Jane Fitzpatrick, at jmfitz@fuse.net.

Please indicate how you would like to be involved:
  • Volunteer photographer at cemetery (pick one or several)
  • Research our list of soldiers on Find a Grave (and add them to a virtual cemetery)
  • Create memorials or add photos to Find a Grave

There are no deadlines for completion of the project; we’ll just keep moving ahead till we are finished.   

If you have any questions, feel free to email any of us on the Cemetery committee:
Amy Hartman, echoamy@yahoo.com 
Pam Sattari, pami@fuse.net
Jane Fitzpatrick, jmfitz@fuse.net            
Jean Morrison, morrij3@cinci.rr.com

Friday, January 27, 2012

Find A Grave

www.findagrave.com
Have you heard of "Congenealogy?"  This is a friendly group of genealogy buffs who meet once a month in Northern Kentucky.  It is sponsored by the Kenton County Library and led by librarian Jan Mueller.  Several HCGS members have ventured across the Ohio River to take advantage of the wonderful programs they offer. In fact, Mary Ann Faloon, Chair of our Irish Interest Group, was one of their guest speakers when she spoke about Griffith's Valuation at one of their meetings last May.

This month Debra Jacks, a longtime volunteer for Find-a-Grave, will share her knowledge and experience on this very worthwhile—and free—resource!  I'm not very familiar with this resource, but HCGS member Deb Eddy, has convinced me that this is a resource I need to consider using.  So I, along with several other members of our Chapter, are planning to attend.

Due to the extensive renovation project that is taking place at the Covington Mary Ann Mongan Branch, meetings are being held at the Baker Hunt Arts and Cultural Center.  The meeting will take place Monday, January 30th, beginning at 6:30.  Direction to Baker Hunt are listed below.


Come once and I promise you'll come again.