Monday, October 29, 2007

Fort Polk helps heritage families hold on to history


Polk helps heritage families hold on to history
http://www.fortpolkguardian.com/articles/2007/10/26/fort_polk_news/24heritage.txt
By DOC MOULTON, Public Affairs Office
Between 1940 and 1945, the U. S. War Department took possession of privately owned lands to develop Camp Polk. Some families sold their land to the War Department. However, some property was condemned and land acquired through eminent domain, a power given to states to seize a citizen's private property without their consent for government or public use.

More than 300 families were uprooted from their homesteads and displaced throughout the nation. Livestock and crops were lost and families had difficulty adjusting. Deceased loved ones were left behind in the community cemeteries that still dot Fort Polk's range today. Only a few remnants of homesteads and communities bear witness to the families that sacrificed their way of life for the defense of the nation.
In 2007, the Joint Readiness Training Center and Fort Polk recognized the potential risk of losing a phase of American history. Several descendants of area families were asked what they would like to do to preserve their history and heritage. The response was to develop a Heritage Family Collection of Camp Polk's Displaced Families covering 1820 to the early 1940s. It was decided the collection would be housed in the Fort Polk Archaeological Curation Facility and a second copy in the Northwestern State University archives.

The collection will be preserved and made available to the public. Future plans are to make the material Internet accessible. The collection will consist of photographs and documents contributed by the heritage family descendants.

Oral interviews taken by the Louisiana Region Two Folklife Center at NSU and research material, such as copies of the parish property transfers, known legally as conveyance records, will be included in the collection.

The integrity of the collection is dependent upon input from family descendants. The collection should have a file of historical information on each displaced family, but specific families must submit the information to the collection.

The "Heritage Day" observance will be held Nov. 3 at 9 a.m. in the Main Post Chapel on Entrance Road. If you have information to contribute or questions about this collection, call the Fort Polk archaeological curator at 531-0916 or e-mail Ellen.Ibert@us.army.mil.

_________________________________________________

Heritage Day to be held at Fort Polk

By KELLY MOORE/Staff Writer
Published: Monday, October 29, 2007 8:49 AM CDT

http://www.leesvilledailyleader.com/articles/2007/10/29/news/news1.txt - photo credit

FORT POLK - Fort Polk will be hosting Heritage Day Saturday, Nov. 3 to honor families affected by the expansion of then Camp Polk.

Registration will begin at 8:30 a.m. and will be followed by the Opening Ceremony at 9 a.m. at the Main Post Chapel. Throughout the day exhibits will be on display chronicling the families that lived on the range prior to Camp Polk.

A memorial will be dedicated at 11:15 a.m. at Warrior Park followed by cemetery tours.

In the late 1930s and 1940s Vernon Parish, like much of the nation, was exiting the Great Depression and people were on the move across the nations trying to find homes, jobs and families.

Soon the nation was being called on to fight in World War II and still battered from World War I there were still required to prepare for their newest endeavor.

Soon the powers that be decided that Louisiana would be an ideal area for training and that much of Central Louisiana would be turned into Camp Polk and soldiers would train here to fight the powers of Europe and Japan.



Unfortunately there were families living on these lands and they were move, some by force from the lands that they had worked and lived for generations.

The goal of Heritage Day is to pay honor to these families and to show them that the sacrifices that they and their families made were not in vain and that the sacrifices that they made were instrumental in not only the organization of what would be Fort Polk, but that the thousands of soldiers that trained at Camp Polk were directly responsible for maintaining the freedoms that are felt daily.

Col. David Sage, Garrison Commander said, “This day is to honor the people who gave up their land to establish Fort Polk and to gain history about the area prior to Fort Polk.”



Sage said that one of the goals is to show the families is that the Army has an obligation to maintain the old homesteads and cemeteries and that they are keeping their obligations.

Sage said that there are 17 families that are going to participate in the days events and that tables are going to be set up to collect information, artifacts and oral histories.

The oral histories are going to be collected by the Louisiana Regional Folklife Program at Northwestern State University.



The will be conducting oral interviews with people who lived on lands now encompassed by Fort Polk.

The interviews will be completed by Donna Green and 20 interviews have already been completed.

Greer has traveled to various locations to interview people who remember life on the range.



The collection of interviews will be housed with the Fort Polk Heritage Family Collection. One copy of the collection will be curated in the Fort Polk Curation Facility and the other will be held at NSU.

The collection will be made available to the general public and preserved for future generations.

If you wish to give an oral interview about living on the range and have not been contacted by Fort Polk or the Louisiana Regional Folklife Center please contact Dr. Dayna Lee or Ms. Greer at 318-357-4328.

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Sunday, October 28, 2007

Acadian Memorial

The Lafayette Genealogical Society has posted an event for the Acadian Memorial Foundation on November 10, 2007.

November 10th, 6:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. - Acadian Memorial hosts second annual "L'Ordre Du Bon Temps Gala" -"401 years of Acadian/Cajun Men Cooking: 1606 Acadia/Acadie - 2007 Louisiana/Louisiane.

Join the Acadian Memorial at the Lafayette Petroleum Club for the "L'Ordre Du Bon Temps-Louisiane" which was established in 2007 to celebrate the first social club established in North America in 1606.)

For tickets info@acadianmemorial.org

Southwest Louisiana Genealogical and Historical Library

Calcasieu Public Library has links to the Southwest Louisiana Genealogical and History Library's newsletters in PDF format. The newsletter is entitled Genealogy News and contains information about new book additions to the library. The library recently held a conference, "Branching out in Genealogy" at the Lake Charles Civic Center. The conference was held Saturday, October 27, 2007. More information about the conference was found concerning the event from the AGP-L mailing list:
The full day conference featured three nationally recognized Genealogists - two of whom were Lone Star Chapter members: John Sellers---"History's Role in Your Genealogical Pursuit", and Richard Hooverson---"Tricks of the Trade: Tried and True Research Techniques". Sponsors of the Conference included Libraries Southwest, The Calcasieu Parish Friends of the Library, the Southwest Louisiana (SWLA) Genealogical and Historical Society, and the Calcasieu Parish Public Library, where Lone Star Chapter member Linda Gill is employed.

Lone Star members Debbie Wayne and Dee Dee King distributed APG literature and Chapter information, including the "Member Services Directory", and information about the Texas State Genealogical Society Conference in two weeks.

This was a very well organized, delightful event that included a free reception with a refreshment buffet and a tour of SWLA Genealogical & Historical Library. Attendees were like kids in a candy shop with the after-hours library research all to ourselves. Approximately 80 people registered for the conference, with about half from the Lake Charles area and the remainder from other communities. This successful first-time event should certainly encourage the sponsors to make this an annual conference.

Dee Dee King, Certified Genealogist
President, Lone Star Chapter APG

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Mississippi marriage records, Georgia death certificates, & Library hauntings

The Clarion Ledger announced in late September that several Mississippi counties marriage records had been recorded in book form by Ann Allen Geoghegan. The books can be viewed and ordered at http://stores.lulu. com/anniegms

"...Now completed are the Adams County Mississippi Marriages 1799-1900 (196 pages); Amite County Mississippi Marriages 1805-1900 (267 pages); Claiborne County Mississippi Marriages 1816-1900 (157 pages); Franklin County Mississippi Marriages 1820-1900 (119 pages); Jefferson County Mississippi Marriages 1805-1900 (223 pages); and Wilkinson County Mississippi Marriages 1805-1925 (204 pages)..."

Eastmans online newsletter along with others are excited to announce that the Georgia Death Certificates are viewable online. Try it out!

There's some good news concerning Louisiana. None of the libraries in Louisiana, nor any of its genealogical libraries were cited as being haunted, but several Ohio libraries genealogy archives are on this list!


Monday, October 15, 2007

Oaklawn cemetery in Jonesboro, Arkansas officially on the National Register of Historic Places

Story Date: Monday, October 15, 2007
http://www.jonesborosun.com/archived_story.php?ID=29748
Caraway grave site, Tyronza water tower make U.S. Register

By Keith INMAN

JONESBORO — The final resting place of the first woman ever elected to the U.S. Senate is now officially on the National Register of Historic Places.

U.S. Sen. Hattie Caraway's Grave Site in Oaklawn Cemetery in Jonesboro is now on the country's official list of historically significant properties, Arkansas Historic Preservation Program Director Ken Grunewald said late last week. The grave site was among 25 added to the list.

The Tyronza Water Tower, constructed in 1935 with Public Works Administration assistance, also was named to the list.

The Jonesboro Parks, Recreation and Cemeteries Department nominated the grave site.

"There is nothing spectacular about this particular grave site, except it consists of two former U.S. senators," parks employee Jarrod Stroud wrote in the nomination form.

Recognizing the Caraways

Hattie Wyatt Caraway and Thaddeus Caraway, along with their son Robert, are buried in Oaklawn Cemetery, on the corner of Loberg Lane and West Matthews Avenue.

The grave markers make no mention of the Caraways' political career.

Local officials began exploring ways to bring attention to Hattie Caraway's place in American history in early 2005. Arkansas State University has sponsored Hattie Caraway Day the past two years, and the U.S. Postal Service named its new office at 2404 Race St. the Hattie W. Caraway Station earlier this year.

Hattie Caraway was married to Sen. Thaddeus Caraway when he died in office in 1931. She was first appointed to fill the Senate seat until a special election could be held. She won that special election in January 1932.

According to presentations by Dr. Nancy Hendricks, ASU alumni affairs coordinator, Caraway sat on the last row and was seen as an "outsider" as she began her career. However, when Huey P. Long of Louisiana took an empty desk next to her in January 1932, he gave her the political support she needed. When she decided to run for a full term in 1932, Long campaigned for her in Arkansas.

More than 200,000 Arkansans heard them speak over an 8-day period, Hendricks said. She won that election by a fairly wide margin. She was defeated in a bid for a third 6-year term in 1944 by J. William Fulbright.

Hattie Caraway has been credited with helping ASU survive the loss of hundreds of students as a result of World War II.

By 1940 Arkansas State's student body had dropped from 1,000 to 329 students, Hendricks said at one Hattie Caraway Day observance. There was even talk of closing its doors.

But when the New Deal was put into action, Caraway secured funding for a number of campus buildings, Hendricks said. Three of those facilities are still standing on the ASU campus — the Math and Computer Science Building, the Nursing and Health Professions Building and a building used as a power plant, she said.

When World War II broke out and students began to leave for the service, Arkansas State started a program in which military men were taught to fly so they could be officers, Hendricks said. Many of them stayed in Northeast Arkansas after the war ended.

Following her defeat, President Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Caraway to the Federal Employees Compensation Commission, and later to the Employees Compensation Appeals Board.

In July, the State Review Board of the Arkansas Historic Preservation Program encouraged Jonesboro to seek historic status for the entire cemetery. Former Gov. Francis Cherry is also buried in the cemetery.

Parks Director Jason Wilkie said last week that he expects that application will be submitted next spring.

The AHPP is the Department of Arkansas Heritage agency responsible for identifying, evaluating, registering and preserving the state's cultural resources.

inman@jonesborosun.com

__________________________________________________
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Saturday, October 13, 2007

Groups, Hoops, and Engines

Groups
Today I've edited the Links and the Blogroll to include the groups that I belong to. It is a bit easy to access through my Yahoo360 profile page. All of the Louisiana groups are located to the right of the page. You may have to join some of the groups in order to view their messages. I did find another Yahoo group for adoptions in Louisiana, Louisiana Adoption Advocates. Somewhere else on the net is a Baton Rouge group for adoptions - I "oversurfed" that site recently and will have to backtrack in order to find the link!

Hoops
The MSN group site has the ability to create pages. I've added a link to the MSN group site. MSN Groups will allow visitors to surf the group pages without joining - so far as I can tell. I logged out and surfed into the site without a hitch. Creating pages on MSN is a bit of a problem. You won't believe what I had to do to get the HTML to work properly. I created them on the Google site and they cut and paste fine, but if I attempt to create my own html MSN fouls it all up. Now, Bloglines allows public access to your blogroll and blog at Bloglines, but it does not allow for edits. I changed the links for the Bloglines blogroll to "public" in the html. Otherwise the blog shows and not the blogroll. The hoops you have to jump through. And as for the WordPress site. I should clarify that creating an account is different from creating a user name. If you create an account on WordPress you will get your own blog. If you check the correct box on the sign up form, then from Louisiana Genealogy Blogs @ Word Press, go to bottom right "Log In" - you can create a user name only and will be added to the blog as a contributor. Otherwise WordPress will set you up with your own blog. And that's fine, too, but not the idea I had in mind. Google notifications - this isn't working out on Yahoo as planned. The notifications show up in plain text on the Yahoo message board instead of the expected HTML. MSN group doesn't post many of the items that I have requested it to post. The few items that have actually appeared do post in HTML and so the links to the items work properly on the MSN Groups site. I'll have to post further Google notifications from the Yahoo Group site, instead of from my email due to this bug in Yahoo Groups posts that allows for text only. I understand that the Rich texts editor in Yahoo messages is still in beta. Map Stats - Map Stats was added to Blogger and then the site meter disappeared. I have enjoyed site meter for quite some time. It will additionally allow you to view where your visitors are located and sometimes give you their referral links. The Map Stats from Blog Flux were added to the left hand side, but it quit working until today after I added the button. Now Blog Flux Map Stats is up and running again. If you compare Site Meter locations and Blog Flux locations you will see a big difference!

Engines
Google has customized search engines that I've created and linked to MSN as well. This customized engine works okay. I wouldn't say that it is fabulous, however. When I searched, as suggested, for the main Yahoo Louisiana group, Google couldn't find it directly. There are some ticks to work out. I'm soliciting for collaborators - and some in put. The fine tuning of this search engine will require someone with more knowledge than I have, but for the time being - it works. The search engine on MSN Louisiana Genealogy site searches all of the MSN Google and Yahoo groups that are listed on the MSN site Groups link.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Foster cemetery of Lawrence county Alabama relocated

Foster cemtery in Lawrence county, Alabama gets moved about a mile away- remote sensing equipment from University of Mississippi was used to initially locate the graves as only a few headstones remained. Some bodies are identified to be slaves and one veterans grave identified. The known surnames of the cemetery are: Allen, Bynum, Campbell, Dillon, Fitzgerald, Foster, Harris, Hampton, Hill, Hood, Johnson, Jones, Lyles, Minor, Penchion, Sherrod, Speake, Smith, Smiley, Steward, White and Willard.. If you have additional information about the cemetery, please contact Tom McKnight at (256) 332-3016 or (914) 409-5529.

Monday, October 8, 2007

Searching Blogger

I've noticed that there are a few people in Blogger who enjoy genealogy, however, the majority do not fill out their interests in Bloggers profile pages. I've posted in my profile my interests that are copied below. In order to find others with the same interests you must add your interests in your profile. From the dashboard you may "view" your profile where you can access the feature.

You can cut and paste this one: Interests: Allen, Ascension, Assumption, Beauregard, Bienville, Caddo, Calcasieu, Cameron, Catahoula, Claiborne, Concordia, De Soto, East Baton Rouge, East Carroll, East Feliciana, Evangeline, Franklin, Grant, Iberville, Jackson, Jefferson, Jefferson Davis, Lafayette, LaSalle, Livingston, Madison, Morehouse, Natchitoches, Orleans, Plaquemines, Pointe Coupee, Rapides, Red River, Red River, Richland, St. Bernard, St. Charles, St. Helena, St. John the Baptist, St. Landry, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Terrebonne, Union Parish, Vernon, Washington, Webster, West Baton Rouge, West Carroll, West Carroll, West Feliciana, Winn, Louisiana, genealogy, Southeastern United States, Southeastern U.S., Louisiana Genealogy, Mississippi Genealogy, Texas Genealogy, North Carolina Genealogy, South Carolina Genealogy, Arkansas Genealogy, Alabama Genealogy, Georgia Genealogy, Florida Genealogy, West Florida, Cemeteries, Family History, Yahoo Groups, Library, Libraries, Louisiana History, Creole, Cajun, Southern, Live Journal, Communities, Surnames, Rootsweb, USGenWeb, Ancestry, My Heritage, Our Story, Blogging, bloggers, WordPress, Genebase, Footnote, Family Tree Circles,

And surf this one:


  • Allen
  • Ascension
  • Assumption
  • Beauregard
  • Bienville
  • Caddo
  • Calcasieu
  • Cameron
  • Catahoula
  • Claiborne
  • Concordia
  • De Soto
  • East Baton Rouge
  • East Carroll
  • East Feliciana
  • Evangeline
  • Franklin
  • Grant
  • Iberville
  • Jackson
  • Jefferson
  • Jefferson Davis
  • Lafayette
  • LaSalle
  • Livingston
  • Madison
  • Morehouse
  • Natchitoches
  • Orleans
  • Plaquemines
  • Pointe Coupee
  • Rapides
  • Red River
  • Red River
  • Richland
  • St. Bernard
  • St. Charles
  • St. Helena
  • St. John the Baptist
  • St. Landry
  • St. Tammany
  • Tangipahoa
  • Terrebonne
  • Union Parish
  • Vernon
  • Washington
  • Webster
  • West Baton Rouge
  • West Carroll
  • West Carroll
  • West Feliciana
  • Winn
  • Louisiana
  • genealogy
  • Southeastern United States
  • Southeastern U.S.
  • Louisiana Genealogy
  • Mississippi Genealogy
  • Texas Genealogy
  • North Carolina Genealogy
  • South Carolina Genealogy
  • Arkansas Genealogy
  • Alabama Genealogy
  • Georgia Genealogy
  • Florida Genealogy
  • West Florida
  • Cemeteries
  • Family History
  • Yahoo Groups
  • Library
  • Libraries
  • Louisiana History
  • Creole
  • Cajun
  • Southern
  • Live Journal
  • Communities
  • Surnames
  • Rootsweb
  • USGenWeb
  • Ancestry
  • My Heritage
  • Our Story
  • Blogging
  • bloggers
  • WordPress
  • Genebase
  • Footnote
  • Family Tree Circles
  • Wednesday, October 3, 2007

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    Historic Bultman Funeral Home on St. Charles Avenue

    Preservation in the news from National Historic Trust

    Historic funeral home to be reborn as a bookstore

    Posted by The Times-Picayune October 03, 2007 7:40PM


    The exterior of the old Bultman Funeral Home on St. Charles Avenue. The building is being converted into a Border's bookstore.

    By Greg Thomas
    Real estate writer

    Borders has leased the former Bultman Funeral Home on St. Charles Avenue with plans to gut the iconic structure and convert it into a 24,000-square-foot bookstore.

    The store, expected to open in November 2008, will be the first national bookstore chain in Orleans Parish since BookStar closed its 12,000-square-foot French Quarter store in 2003.

    The retail project, which promises to revitalize a deteriorating yet high-profile Garden District intersection, already has the support of neighborhood groups and preservationists.

    But independent bookstores are girding for a battle much like the one that unfolded in "You've Got Mail," the 1998 movie starring Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan. In the movie, Hanks plays a chain bookstore magnate who drives out of business the small independent store owned by Ryan's character.

    "It's a deliberate, predatory move against independent bookstores," said Tom Lowenburgh, owner of Octavia Books. "They're a 500-pound gorilla, and it's not an accident" that Borders is situating itself between Octavia and the Garden District Book Shop, another well-established local store, he said.

    Commonly known as the House of Bultman, the site Borders is leasing operated as a funeral home under some version of the Bultman family name for more than 120 years. It hosted services for many historical figures ranging from Confederate President Jefferson Davis to 1950s actress Jayne Mansfield. In recent years, funerals for oil tycoon Patrick Taylor and poet and painter Stan Rice, the husband of author Anne Rice, were held there.

    But the funeral home was closed in August 2006, when the Alderwoods Group Inc. of Toronto put it up for sale along with several other local funeral homes.


    William Ryan, left, of Ryan Companies, and Lewis Stirling III, of Stirling Properties, sit in the main foyer area of the historic Bultman Funeral Home on St. Charles Avenue.

    It was acquired by a group of developers including Lewis Stirling of Stirling Properties and William Ryan of the Ryan Family Trust. Stirling is managing the property and signed a long-term lease with Borders on Wednesday. Stirling said chain book sellers have been trying to crack the Garden District/Uptown market for 20 years. The neighborhood's large professional class and proximity to universities make it appealing for such retailers, he said.

    Same outside, new inside

    Borders will leave the exterior of the sprawling, mansionlike Bultman building largely intact, although some demolition will occur in the rear to make way for elevators to the second story. Parking is planned to increase from 38 to 60 spaces, exceeding code requirements. The building's interior will be reinforced with concrete and steel to support the heavy weight of books and the elevators.

    Borders already has a store on Veterans Memorial Boulevard in Metairie. The St. Charles Avenue store will reflect its surroundings, offering recordings of local musicians and showcasing Louisiana books and authors. It also will include a cafe with outdoor seating along St. Charles Avenue.

    The St. Charles Avenue deal has been brewing for more than a year and has enjoyed strong support from Borders President and Chief Executive Officer George Jones, who owns a second home in the French Quarter, said Borders spokeswoman Anne Roman.

    This won't be the first time Borders has renovated an old building to make way for a new store, said John Sappington, Borders real estate director.

    Though Borders normally builds stores from the ground up, the chain has done many adaptive reuse projects, including several historic buildings in Washington, D.C.; Austin, Texas; and Boston.

    Has the company ever put one in a funeral home?

    "No, but we do have one in a old church in California," Sappington said.

    Hoping to co-exist

    Donna Allen, owner of the Maple Street Book Store, said she has been hearing rumors about Borders moving in for some time.

    "I've been keeping my fingers crossed that the deal wouldn't go through," she said. "How do (independent bookstores) compete? More personal service. We know our customers by name and we know what they're interested in," Allen said. "And our employees read."

    But Stirling thinks independent book sellers won't suffer from Borders' presence.

    "Our ZIP code analysis shows that (New Orleanians) are going to Metairie and the West Bank to shop Barnes & Noble and Borders," Stirling said.

    Britton Trice, owner of the Garden District Book Shop, thinks he'll be able to weather Borders' arrival.

    "We welcome the competition. People will always go and check it out (when Borders opens), but I believe in the loyalty of our customers. I have customers that were children of customers" after 20 years of operation.

    "We'll all get through this with excellent customer service, excellent book knowledge and knowing our customers," Trice said.

    Trice, who also is president of the New Orleans Gulf South Book Sellers Association, said the independents can help one another -- and have in the past -- with joint advertising campaigns. Local stores might work together again as they adjust to the new competition from Borders, he said.

    Little red tape for store

    Despite its longtime presence on St. Charles, Bultman comes under the purview of the Historic District Landmarks Commission but has no architectural historical landmark status that prevents its demolition.

    Converting the site to a Borders requires no variances or approvals for the project, but Stirling said he knew that saving the building -- at least its exterior -- was a sure-fire way to garner support, particularly on a St. Charles corner that was rapidly deteriorating. His strategy seems to be working.

    Walter Gallas, a local representative of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, supports the deal.

    "The trust's position is that we're delighted a building (that) for so long a time stood on that corner and completed the historic streetscape is going to be retained," Gallas said. "There's so many examples on St. Charles, from the 1960s and 1970s, where we lost a lot of old buildings for unfortunate development."

    Getting the building restored and in commerce is critical because it's located in a commercial corridor that seems to be in decline, Gallas said.

    "Once you lose a corner in a historic neighborhood, it works like a cancer works, spreading along side streets and into the (historic) district," Gallas said.

    Boost for intersection

    Laura Shields, 2007 president of the Garden District Association, met with the development team as early as January.

    "We really are pleased to see an economic infusion at the site. It's a gateway for new development," Shields said.

    The other three corners of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues contain a recently reopened Rite Aid, a closed bakery, and a shuttered, collapsing gas station.

    The one thing that the Garden District Association would not have put up with was demolition of the Bultman site, something the owners could have applied for because the building has no historical protections.

    "We would not have been in favor (of a project) that didn't maintain the historical significance of that site," Shields said.

    Greg Thomas can be reached at gthomas@timespicayune.com or (504) 826-3399.

    Fodor's Review:

    This huge white mansion with an enclosed garden is a working funeral home, one of the most elegant in the South. A balcony bears a wrought-iron motif of downward crossed arrows, a symbol of death. Tennessee Williams set his play Suddenly Last Summer here in the solarium, which is now open for occasional Sunday-afternoon concerts. If no funeral services are taking place, they might let you in for a peek at the gracious interior.

    Tuesday, October 2, 2007

    RootsWeb hidden parish genealogy sites

    RootsWeb doesn't link to several Louisiana parish LAGenWeb websites from its main page. It is has been an issue for some time now. From the main RootsWeb page, click on "websites at RootsWeb", then "United States of America", and then "State websites" under the catagories heading. From this point click on "Louisiana" and for one reason or another not all parishes are listed in the links list. It has been copied below. I was searching for Caddo Parish, Louisiana today and found that the link is missing. Here is another Caddo genealogy site. Even from the National sites hosted by RootsWeb link Caddo parish is not listed. I wonder if the LAGenWeb coordinator is aware of the missing information. It makes searching difficult if you are not from Louisiana!


    County/Parish Websites:

    Allen | Ascension | Assumption | Beauregard | Bienville | Calcasieu | Cameron | Catahoula | Claiborne | Concordia | De Soto | East Baton Rouge | East Carroll (USGW) | East Carroll (AHGP/ALHN) | East Feliciana | Evangeline | Franklin | Grant | Iberville | Jackson | Jefferson | Jefferson Davis | Lafayette | LaSalle | Livingston | Madison | Morehouse | Natchitoches | Orleans | Plaquemines | Pointe Coupee | Rapides | Red River (USGW) | Red River (AHGP/ALHN) | Richland | St. Bernard | St. Charles | St. Helena | St. John the Baptist | St. Landry | St. Tammany | Tangipahoa | Terrebonne | Union Parish | Vernon | Webster | West Baton Rouge | West Carroll (USGW) | West Carroll (AHGP/ALHN) | West Feliciana | Winn

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