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Showing posts from February, 2018
Learnings from the Ruby study   #1 – Impact of the new GRO index One of the first things to do when starting out on a new One-Name Study is to construct some core data sets.   Apart from being a requirement set by the Guild, there are several other reasons why it makes sense to do this. 1.      These lists act as helpful checklists as one reconstructs families 2.      They can also be a useful reminder of the scale of the study in different countries and thus possibly aid in decision-making about where to start 3.      As one notes which individuals from each data set have been included the notes can be used as a means of checking progress and ultimately for answering the question, “How will you know you have finished?” The initial Ruby team constructed core data sets for several countries: notably Canada, England and Wales, France, Ireland, New Zealand, Scotland, and the USA.   The original England and Wales data set chosen was the 1881 census.   We thought it might be in

Introducing......the RUBY One-Name Study

Welcome to the Ruby surname blog!   We are a small team of Guild of One-Name Studies members who came together to undertake a project to honour the Guild’s 40 th anniversary in September 2019.   And what is the Guild, you ask?   For readers who are not members, the Guild is a non-profit society of those who work on or have an interest in one-name studies, or surname studies.   While traditional genealogy/family history works on a person’s own family line, a one-name study takes on the study of one surname (and perhaps its variants).   To learn more about this, and what motivates people to take on what seems a daunting task, visit the Guild’s website at one-name.org .   Be warned: one-name studies are known to be addictive. Why Ruby ?   For those of you who track such things, the ruby gemstone is associated with a 40 th anniversary and seemed an appropriate choice.   In looking into the surname, what became apparent was its multinational origins: French, German, Hungari