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Homeschool Transcripts


Homeschool High School

Archive for December, 2011

Thank you to Jennifer Shoer for her second guest post for kids! If you missed Part I, you can still read it here.

Turn the Camera on Your Parents and Grandparents – Video for Family History – Part 2

The holidays are right around the corner. No matter what holiday you will be celebrating, I bet you will be spending time with your family. Sometimes it seems boring to spend time with older people, but when was the last time you sat down and asked them questions about their lives…what they love, what they remember and what it feels like to be X years old?

In my last post I told you about my grandfather, Bubba, who was an amazing family historian. He recorded the details of our lives in both photos and movie film. Bubba died twelve years ago. I will always remember how many years it has been because my youngest son was born the same year. Bubba did get to hold him, make a wish (Do all families make wishes on new babies?) and call him the ugliest baby in the family (the newest was always the ugliest).

I like knowing that Bubba lived to hold all of my babies and I love looking at pictures of him, but do you know what I really wish? I wish I had taken movies (or videos as they are known today). I wish I could hear his voice and his chuckle. He told my sister and me so many stories. I tell my kids the ones I can remember, but how much cooler would it be if they could hear his stories and his chuckle as if he was sitting in the room. Some people might find that creepy and it might have been hard to watch the videos soon after he died, but now twelve years later I would love to hear and see him tell one of his stories again.

Turn the Camera on Your Parents and Grandparents

When you get together with your parents, aunts, uncles, cousins and grandparents over the holidays, do me a favor and turn the camera on your parents and grandparents. Borrow a video camera or whip out your smart phone and ask one of them (or the eldest) to sit down with you. Tell them you want to learn more about them and their lives and that you would like to create a video of your conversation.

Create a Video for Family History

  • Make a list of questions before the interview or look at websites for questions:

http://genealogy.about.com/cs/oralhistory/a/interview.htm

http://articles.scrapbooking.com/family_history.htm

  • Be sure your video camera is fully charged and that you have extra batteries or a charger.
  • Ask as many or as few questions as you would like. There are no rules! This is your interview.
  • Prop the camera up so that your hands are free and so that your subject does not get distracted by it.
  • Let your subject talk without interrupting him or her. If you think of something to ask while they are talking, write it down and then ask it when they finish.
  • Thank them for their time and for sharing their stories with you!
  • Upload the video to your computer and share it with your family members. Burn copies to DVD or flash drives.

I hope you get a chance to make a video soon.

Happy Holidays!

Scrappy Gen

Let’s Remember!

www.scrappygenealogist.com

Photo credits: Jennifer Shoer’s personal collection. Used with permission.

Want to know more about Jennifer? You can find her at the Scrappy Genealogist blog or on Twitter @ScrappyGen.  Thank you Jennifer!!

 

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This continues a series of guest posts from my friends around the blogosphere who can offer specialized tips for kids.

Jennifer Shoer talks about Recording it for Posterity – Video for Family History – Part 1

Have you ever thought about creating videos of your family? If you are over the age of ten, you probably already have made at least one video of yourself or your friends. Many of you even have phones that video. Let me tell you about my grandfather and his videos.

My Grandfather, known to his grandchildren as Bubba, recorded thousands of feet of video tape during his life. He recorded his children, his siblings, his nieces and nephews and of course his grandchildren. It is possible for me to view in video most big events in my growing up years right through and including my wedding. Bubba taped that too.

If you listen to the later movies after Bubba bought a video camera with sound, you can hear his chuckle, or his quiet prompts for you to do something for the camera. I loved his chuckle. If we ever complained about being taped (I remember not loving it when I was a teenager.), he would remind us that we were “recording it for posterity.” At the time I didn’t know exactly what posterity was, but Bubba said it, which meant it was important.

Posterity means all future generations. How cool that Bubba recorded our lives as they unfolded for our children and our children’s children and their children. He was our family historian, creating an amazing record of the lives of his family members.

Bubba recorded his movies on film. Digital didn’t exist yet. His first sound camera was immense. Now, video cameras fit in your pocket. At the holidays this year, whip out your video camera and try recording your family members. Ask them questions about what they are doing. If they have a special skill, ask them to perform it. Ask them how they celebrated the holidays when they were younger. If they complain, tell them you are recording it for posterity. Your children’s children’s children will thank you.

 

 

Scrappy Gen

Let’s Remember!

www.scrappygenealogist.com

Photo credits: Jennifer Shoer’s personal collection. Used with permission.

Want to know more about Jennifer? You can find her at the Scrappy Genealogist blog or on Twitter @ScrappyGen.  Thank you Jennifer!!

 

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This continues a series of guest posts from my friends around the blogosphere who can offer specialized tips for kids.

Lorel Kapke on using Sort Your Story

Finding your grandparents name listed in a document can be very exciting, not just for you but for your parents as well. My dad Raymond Kapke, was 5 years old when his father Walter Kapke died and he new little of his fathers life. He took the train from Milwaukee to Cedarburg, WI to visit his grandparents, John Kapke and Mother Marie Nero but they passed away when Ray was 7 and 8 years old. Ruby Toll, Walter’s wife, was left to raise Ray and his three older brothers, this left little time to discuss their family history. Ruby and her mother Bertha Gilbert ran a boarding house and while cooking and baking they would talk about family with little Ray under foot, this was during the 1930’ and 1940’s, during troubled times.

So back to finding those documents and forming a picture of your family as you put the pieces of your puzzle together.

I went into Ancestry.com and entered my grandfathers SURNAME (last name) and First name and found my grandfather in the 1920 Census. Walter was listed with Ruby and dad’s older brothers but my father would have to wait until the 1930’s census as he was born in 1923.  Each Census offers different data and 1920 Census offered this information.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I transcribed and placed this valuable information into the Sort Your Story Profiler and included thumbnails of both the 1920 Census and the Ancestry.com 1920 Template Census for reference.

Now it is time to print out this data and add to the KAPKE PROFILER BOOK!

I’ve acquired valuable information to continue the search for more information about my grandfather.

Walter A KAPKE.

Have you found a Census of your grandparent???

 

Thank you Lorel for sharing your story about Walter Kapke!

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