OneGreatFamily Blog

  • Pearl Harbor Remembrance

    The attack on the United States naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii by the Japanese navy occurred on Sunday, 7 December 1941. Four U.S. navy battleships were sunk: the USS Arizona, the USS Utah, the USS Oklahoma, and the USS West Virginia. The USS Maryland, USS Pennsylvania, USS Tennessee, and USS Nevada were also hit by Japanese missiles. Altogether, there were more than 2,400 American soldiers and seamen killed that morning.

    The USS Arizona is the final resting place of 1,177 of the men who were killed; nearly all of the crewmen of the Arizona perished with her. To honor those who had died, a flagpole was erected over the sunken battleship in 1950. In 1958, President Dwight D. Eisenhower approved an official memorial, which was completed in 1961. The USS Arizona Memorial has become a monument to all the American men who died on 7 December 1941.

    A few hours after the Pearl Harbor disaster, President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered his legendary speech to a joint session of Congress: "I ask that the Congress declare that since the unprovoked and dastardly attack by Japan on Sunday, December 7th, 1941, a state of war has existed between the United States and the Japanese empire." Within an hour, Congress had complied with the president's request and passed an official declaration of war against Japan, thus bringing the United States into World War II.

    Do you have relatives who were stationed on the base at Pearl Harbor or on a U.S. navy ship there at the time of the attack? There are published Pearl Harbor casualty lists online, including the one at http://www.usswestvirginia.org/ph/phlist.php. The casualty list is searchable by surname and records the full name of each man killed, his rank and/or age, whether he was a civilian or whether he served in a branch of the military (most of the men killed were in the navy), and where he was stationed (the Pearl Harbor base itself or one of the ships docked there).

    You can also access Pearl Harbor Muster Rolls with a subscription to www.fold3.com. These records list all men stationed on ships at Pearl Harbor from 1939 to 1947. The muster rolls list each man's full name and service number, the ship he served on and the date received on board, and the date he enlisted.

    With all the records being uploaded online every day, learning more about the Pearl Harbor disaster-and the soldiers and seamen who were involved-is becoming easier and easier. And the 7th of December 1941 continues to be a date that will live in infamy.

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  • Get Your Family Excited About Their Ancestors

    Doing genealogy work together as a family is a great way to involve everybody in a shared hobby. Researching your ancestors draws on the family knowledge and stories of the older generation, while younger family members can contribute useful computer and Internet skills to the ancestor research project. 


    Working together is a great way to schedule family time. Here are some ways that genealogy research can bring your family together:

    1. Ancestor research starts at home. Even small children can ask Grandma and Grandpa for stories about their families, though they may need your help recording information. "What was it like when you were my age?" can elicit some memorable answers.
    2. Make visits to local libraries, museums, and archives. Family adventures are an exciting way to pursue your ancestor research. Take family members of all ages to visit a local history museum so older relatives can explain the common objects of yesteryear to younger folk.
    3. When you know a little more about your family tree, plan vacations around important places on your ancestors' lives. Compile a list of houses, cemeteries, and places of historical interest connected with your family history. A trip to Ellis Island has much more meaning and interest when you know the names and stories of some of your family members.

    Whether you're a genealogy expert or just starting out, OneGreatFamily.com offers the chance to add entire branches to your family tree. You may find a lost ancestor or an entire forest of new connections. Share the fruits of your ancestor research with other members of your family. Our families, even those members who lived generations before us, are the stuff we are made of. They are our roots, our beginnings, and they influence our lives in ways we may not even understand.

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  • Are You Looking For A Meaningful Gift To Give This Holiday Season?

    The Holiday Season and genealogy go hand in hand. Why? The holidays are embodied with the spirit of family and gift giving. And genealogy is a gift to your family members today as well as for future generations. What better gift to give this Holiday season than the gift of genealogy? Nothing could be more important or more meaningful than bringing your family closer.

    This Holiday Season, we want to make it easy for you to give the gift of genealogy. There are two different ways you can share what OneGreatFamily has to offer to those on your Holiday gift list:

    1) Use the feature on Family Dashboard that allows you to share your family tree with others.

    Under the "Information About Your Family Tree" section of Family Dashboard, there is a button "Share this Dashboard"

    When you click on the link, a page will open with a very simple form for you to fill out.

    Once you click 'Submit' the person with whom you are sharing your Family Dashboard will get an email with a link for them to view your Family Dashboard. They can also click on the "View my Family Tree" button and be able to see your family tree in Genealogy BrowserT.

    However, the person will not be able to make any changes to any of your data on Family Dashboard or Genealogy Browser.

    Family Dashboard is the perfect way to get your family members excited about genealogy.  The wide range of widgets and the tight integration with Genealogy BrowserT makes it fun for people to explore.  Imagine your children or siblings experimenting with the Relationship Calculator, or looking for all their ancestors who share their given name or tracing your family's history through the Migration Calculator, or getting a Time Capsule for their own birthday.  Family Dashboard really brings genealogy alive, and now it is so easy to share without worrying about them messing up your valuable work.    

    2. As a member of OneGreatFamily, you can buy gift certificates for your loved ones.

    Please visit: http://www.onegreatfamily.com/GiftCertificate to give those special people on your list a gift that will last the whole year long.

    A gift subscription will be rewarding long after the holidays are over. Imagine collaborating with your family members and building your family tree and preserving it for future generations in 2013.

    A OneGreatFamily Gift Subscription is a gift that will always be remembered.

    What a wonderful time of the year to get your family excited about working on your family tree together.

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  • Famous American Surnames

    Germany, Ireland and England are the places that most Americans claim as their ancestors' places of origin, so it's not surprising that many famed American surnames are Irish or English in origin.

    The Kennedys, of American political fame, are of Irish-Gaelic stock. The name Kennedy is an Anglicization of "O' Cinneidigh." The meaning of Cinnedigh is debated: "head of the clan," "helmet-headed," and "ugly-headed" are all suggested meanings. Before being American political elites, the Kennedys were titled and powerful in Ireland: the famed Kennedy progenitor, Cinnedigh, was a grand-nephew of the King of Thomond, and from the eleventh to the sixteenth centuries, the Kennedy clan were Lords of Ormond. The name O' Cinneidigh evolved to O' Kennedy, and during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, under the English penal code and the oppression of Irish Catholics, the "O" part of the surname was dropped. Kennedy became one of the more common surnames in Ireland, and subsequently an American surname.

    Actress Drew Barrymore, her grandfather John Barrymore, and his brother Lionel Barrymore also have Irish-English ancestry. The Barrymores originally came from Barrymore in present-day Lincolnshire, England; they were Anglo-Normans who went to Ireland as part of the Norman invasion of 1172. Many Irish families bearing the name Barrymore came to the United States during the great Irish Potato Famine of the 1840s.

    The Bush family's earliest American ancestor was Richard Bush, who came to Bristol, Plymouth Colony, in 1696. Richard Bush was English, and the Bush surname is English in origin. Its meaning-not surprisingly-was someone who lived by a bushy or forested area. Spelling variations of "Bush" include Bushe, Busch, Bysshe, Bish, and Bosch.

    Conrad Hilton, founder of the Hilton Hotel Chain, along with his infamous heiress Paris Hilton, also derive their names from English origins. The Hilton name dates back to at least 600 AD. It comes from Old English: "hyll," a hill, and "tun," a settlement.

    The surname Winfrey also dates back to at least the seventh century AD. It derives from Old English "Win," joy, and "Fred," peace. The earliest recorded version of the name was Winfrudus of Ethona, recorded in 1190 in England. The name evolved into "Winnifred" and later into various surnames, including Winfrith, Winfrid, Winnefrith, and Winfrey.

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  • OneGreatFamily Helps Genealogists On A Budget

    Most of us today seem to be constantly strapped for time and money. We all know that searching for our ancestors is really important, but the costs and time involved can seem overwhelming. We at OneGreatFamily can help!

    OneGreatFamily is a service that can save you hundreds or even thousands of dollars with your genealogy - not to mention saving you hours and hours of time as well.

    Researching one ancestor alone can take years and cost a lot of money! Now, you can get a start on your genealogy from the comfort of your home. Here are a few costs to consider when researching your family tree:

    • Family Tree Software
    • Travel Expenses
    • Photocopies, Mail, etc.
    • Professional Assistance
    • Backup hardware
    • Data Access on CD-ROM or Online

    Right away, OneGreatFamily saves you money on Family Tree Software. The included, downloadable Genealogy Browser is a full-fledged family tree software package with several unique features that you cannot find anywhere else. Our Family Dashboard, also free, provides powerful analytics to help you identify research needs quickly

    Next, OneGreatFamily saves you money by automatically backing up your family tree to our servers, providing you with the peace of mind that your work is not in jeopardy of being lost from accidents.

    Finally, OneGreatFamily can save you hundreds or thousands of dollars in travel, photocopies, professional assistance and data access fees. With most of us watching where our money goes, keep in mind an annual subscription to OneGreatFamily can cost less than one roundtrip drive to a family history library.

    Here are more examples of how OneGreatFamily saves you money:

    • OneGreatFamily.com efficiently eliminates duplicate family trees and relationships by creating ONE FAMILY TREE. Elsewhere, the internet has spawned a data duplication floodgate, which wastes your time as you wade through thousands of duplicate records.
    • OneGreatFamily.com provides you with access to the largest collective family tree available.
    • Collaborate with people from all around the world from the comfort of home . . . or wherever you have access to the Internet. Spend some time on OneGreatFamily before you take that trip to your ancestral homeland!
    • Online collaboration can help you save hundreds of dollars on correspondence, photocopies, and other expenses. Documents, photos, and other information can be stored electronically on OneGreatFamily or sent to distant family members you meet on OneGreatFamily via email.
    • Gather as much information as possible on OneGreatFamily.com to make sure your money is well spent if you decide to hire a professional researcher for further assistance.
    • OneGreatFamily includes access to MILLIONS OF NAMES; many with corresponding events, sources, notes, photos, biographies, and other supporting data. More data is being added every day.
    Why spend hundreds of hours searching for information that others have already found? Instead of duplicating research that is already done, you can now spend your time conducting new research or simply verifying information others have provided.

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