The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Polish, German genealogy research guides published

- By Kenneth H. Thomas Jr. Contact Kenneth H. Thomas Jr., P.O. Box 901, Decatur, Ga., 30031, or kenthomaso­ngenealogy.com.

Good news for those looking for informatio­n on ancestors from Poland and Germany: New research guides have been published. But remember that each nation has had major boundary changes in the 20th century. A large portion of Poland before 1918 was part of the Russian Empire, and a lot of today's Poland was Germany up until 1945. The “Polish Genealogy Research,” by noted expert Rosemary Chorzempa, is a new addition to the “At a Glance” series by the Genealogic­al Publishing Company (genealogic­al.com). It is a fourpage laminated guide synthesizi­ng what she knows about Polish research, including the latest websites and books.

“Pole Vaulting,” by Lisa Alzo, appears in the SeptemberO­ctober issue of Family Tree Magazine. It's on newsstands now or at familytree­magazine.com. Alzo covers the major Polish research websites, the Polish Genealogic­al Society of America and the Polish State Archives (szukajwarc­hiwach.pl). She details Jewish sources and border changes. The same magazine has an insert, “German Genealogy — Cheat Sheet,” which includes eight panels including a map, the various provinces then and now, a German alphabet guide and an example of records. She concludes with a long list of books, website, and organizati­ons, useful for anyone just beginning or as a reminder to seasoned researcher­s.

Dating photograph­s using women’s fashions

The Georgia Archives' virtual Lunch and Learn — at noon, September 11 — is on “Identifyin­g Photograph­s from the 19th and 20th Centuries Using Women's Fashions,” by

Penny Cliff, Georgia Archives Education Specialist. It's free and can be accessed via GeorgiaArc­hives.org, then “Visit” and then “Programs.” The photograph­s used will be from the Vanishing Georgia Collection, found online at the Georgia Archives. This collection is one of Georgia's real treasures.

Roseland Cemetery

Roseland Cemetery, located in East Point at Cleveland Avenue and I-85, has the Roseland Cemetery Volunteers Associatio­n. It can be reached at P.O. Box 25, Newnan, Ga., 30263, or 770-304-2405. The group now have a Facebook page “Roseland Cemetery Atlanta, Georgia Group.” As a privately created cemetery with no endowment, it struggles for maintenanc­e funds.

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