Steve's Genealogy Blog
  • Home
  • About the Author
  • Calendar
  • Surnames
  • Contact
  • Links
  • Archives
  • Gallery

40 Best Genealogy Blogs

25 Most Popular Genealogy Blogs

Pages

  • Burski Genealogy
  • Chmielewski Genealogy
  • Dańko Genealogy
  • Gamache Genealogy
  • Gibson Genealogy
  • Izbicki Documents
  • Lather Genealogy
  • LeBlanc Genealogy
  • Markiewicz Genealogy
  • Niedziałkowski Genealogy
  • Olds Genealogy
  • Skowroński Genealogy

Recent Posts

  • The Marriage of Stanisław Hermoliński and Eleonora Marianna Chodkowska – 1851
  • The Marriage of Józef Krośnicki and Tekla Chodkowska – 1834
  • The Death and Burial of Jan Chodkowski – 1832
  • The Death and Burial of Julian Stanisław Chodkowski – 1856
  • The Death and Burial of Rozalia Chodkowska – 1852

Archives

 

March 2010
S M T W T F S
« Feb    
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org
Posted on 15 November, 2009 by Steve No Comments

How the Carnival of Genealogy Makes the World a Better Place in which to Live

Well, maybe the Carnival of Genealogy (COG) doesn’t make the whole world a better place in which to live, but I’d like to think it does. It certainly makes my world better. Let me give you a little history and tell you why.

I started this blog on Tuesday, April 18, 2006 at a time when genealogy blogs were few and far between. I searched and searched for genealogy blogs to include in my blogroll and found but a handful. Some of these earlier blogs had apparently not been updated in quite a while, and others touched on genealogical topics only rarely.

One rose among the thorns, however, was Creative Gene, written by Jasia. I found in her a kindred spirit, not only because she was writing a blog about genealogy, but also because she was Polish!  On June 29, 2006, less than three months after I started writing this blog, I wrote a post entitled “Top Ten Reasons to Suspect Jasia and I Were Separated at Birth” . To my delight, Jasia responded with a comment! And then Chris Dunham, author of The Genealogue, responded with a comment! Two of my genealogy blogging idols had left me comments, and all bloggers know how exciting it is to receive comments to your posts.

I remember reading about the Carnival of Genealogy on Jasia’s post dated June 2, 2006, where she described the concept of a blog carnival and, for the first few Carnivals, Jasia mostly hunted down relevant posts herself. The first actual blogger to submit an article to the Carnival of Genealogy was named Joe Kissel whose post really wasn’t related to the theme but, hey, in the days when it was hard to find genealogy blogs, you take what you can get!

The theme for the third Carnival of Genealogy was Immigration, and this theme really got my attention. Immigration is one of my favorite topics. And so, I wrote an article entitled “A New Look at Immigrant Passenger Manifests”and submitted the article to the carnival, hoping beyond hope that my article would be good enough for Jasia to consider including it in the Carnival of Genealogy.  I couldn’t have been more pleased when the Third Edition of the Carnival of Genealogy, published on July 2, 2006 included my article!

I didn’t submit another article until Edition 14, where I submitted “My Genealogy Christmas Wish List”, and by then the Carnival of Genealogy was really starting to take off. Eleven bloggers submitted articles to the Carnival of Genealogy, making this edition the first one that Jasia didn’t have to scour the net for relevant posts.

I became a fairly regular contributor after that, submitting articles for 43 of the 84 Carnivals of Genealogy.

But for me, personally, I found that the Carnival of Genealogy encouraged me to think outside my own comfort zone and post articles that I would not have otherwise written. The consequences of that encouragement have been surprising.

I turned my first Carnival submission “A New Look at Immigrant Passenger Manifests” into a lecture, one that has become one of my most popular genealogy lectures, and one that was subsequently featured in Episode 29, Episode 30, and Episode 31 of Lisa Louise Cooke’s “Family History: Genealogy Made Easy” podcasts.

My Carnival submission on “Ethics in Publishing Family Histories” drew comments from a number of genealogy luminaries and was subsequently picked up by a number of different genealogical societies and reprinted in their society newsletters.

My Carnival of Genealogy articles on “An October Day in Second Grade, 1962″, “The Vincentian Institute in Albany, New York”, and “Mrs. Katzman, Children’s Librarian” have turned out to be some of the most popular posts on my blog, drawing wildly enthusiastic comments and emails from other people who grew up in my hometown.

My Carnival article entitled “Can DNA Confirm my Ancestry?” generated emails from two people who, subsequently, had a genealogical DNA test performed and ended up confirming my Niedziałkowski ancestry.

Besides those, some of my favorite posts have included my Carnival posts on “My Galician Grandfather”, “Memories of Grandmother Danko”, and “Born at the Right Time”.

Add to these personal successes, I’ve met so many wonderful bloggers through the Carnival of Genealogy, because the Carnival was really the first real gathering place for genealogy bloggers and, in a sense, was the first social networking tool for genealogy bloggers.

Since the advent of my blog in 2006, the genealogy blogging community has grown substantially, but the foundation of the community will always be the Carnival of Genealogy.

Written for the Carnival of Genealogy.

Copyright © 2009 by Stephen J. Danko

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Related Posts

  • Genealogical Resolutions for 2010
  • I Once Had a Horse
  • Polish Influences in my Family’s Language
  • Source Citations for Polish Parish Records
  • Born at the Right Time
  • Katarzyna Dańko: Veterinarian, Witch, and Exile
  • The Family Cat
  • The Swimsuit Edition
  • Gee, Mom, How’d You Get So Smart?
  • History of the Village and Parish of Dylągowa
Posted in: Daily Journal
If you enjoyed this post, please subscribe to my RSS Feed


Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

TAGS

Advent Calendar Albany Carnival of Eastern European Genealogy Carnival of Genealogy Cemeteries Congress Kingdom of Poland DNA Family History Library Filoli Flowers FTDNA Conference 2009 Galicia Gazetteers Genealogy Conferences GuestBlog Hesse-Darmstadt Immigration Jane Niedzialkowski Karniewo Katarzyna Danko Kirtorf Klonowo Krasne Lipowiec Maps Michael Danko Minnesota Naturalization New York City Nienadowa Notre Dame Cemetery Płoniawy Pałuki Piaski Poland Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth Pomaski Rukle Saxon Garden SF Genealogy Calendar Smile for the Camera St. Vincent de Paul Szwelice Vincentian Warsaw

RECENT COMMENTS

    • Fred Turner (VI'57): The Class of 1960 has posted information about their upcoming 50th reunion. Please check www.VIGrads.com...
    • Kathryn Doyle: Steve, Congratulations! Maureen was right but she missed your multitudinous knowledge, your multifaceted personality an...
    • Lisa Alzo: Congratulations, Steve! Great job!...
    • Al Wierzba: Congrats Steve!! Keep up the good work!! BR, Al...
    • benotforgot: Congratulations to you, Steve . . . and to your blog . . ....
    • T.Casteel: Congrats on being named "TOP 40"! Theresa...
    • Lisa: The meticulous genealogy and interesting articles that you share on your blog is an inspiration to many of us, Steve. C...
    • Becky Wiseman: Steve, CONGRATULATIONS! I was happy to see your name on the list. Like Apple, yours was one of the first blogs I found (...

POPULAR POSTS

  • The Vincentian Institute in Albany, New York
  • Ethics in Publishing Family Histories
  • The Two Kingdoms (A Cautionary Tale)
  • Two Years and 730 Articles Later...
  • The Church in Dubiecko and What I Found There
  • Family Tree Maker Announces Upgrades to FTM2008
  • A New Look at Immigrant Passenger Manifests
  • Disaster Strikes!
  • The Family Tree Magazine 40 Best Genealogy Blogs
  • Mrs. Katzman, Children's Librarian

Copyright © 2006 - 2010 Steve's Genealogy Blog All rights reserved

  • Home
  • About the Author
  • Surnames
  • Contact
  • Links
  • Archives
  • Gallery