tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7107705.comments2010-02-14T19:47:28.263-08:00More 4 The FamUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7107705.post-15471835020015622302010-02-14T19:47:28.263-08:002010-02-14T19:47:28.263-08:00I'm wondering. Did Ancestry/Rootsweb buy the c...I'm wondering. Did Ancestry/Rootsweb buy the census database that volunteers from USGenWeb built? Back in 1996, there was ROOTS-L, a listserv I belonged to where genealogy information was exchanged. And from there came a call to transcribe public records to the Net for public access. Volunteer response was phenomenal, and rapidly, and I mean exceeding all expectations, the US census records were up and searchable. Database seaches led to images of the orignals in old handwriting. Pure stuff. <br /><br />Today, try to search a census. You get limited results and are inevitably led to a screen requiring you subscribe to see the results. Go to US GenWeb and poke around. No real information. Locals activities, soft projects, but no census data, marriage records, etc. But there is this curious historical account of the making of free public access to genealogical records by them. No active links though. <br /><br />And I'm thinking, is this like the race for the public/private control of the human genome project? In that case, the public won out. But for historical records of lives on paper, I think we totally lost. THere is no free public internet access to public records. Ancestry owns them. <br /><br />So I tried the old-fashioned way and emailed the Registrar of Deeds for Caldwell County, NC, to request a copy of an ancestor's marriage certificate or record. The email bounced, no such place in cyberspace.<br /><br />Tell me, why should a for-profit company own our public records? Because they can. Municipalities need money and people don't want to pay taxes. <br /><br />More to come in the search for one man's trail.On The Prowellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00399260530870868863noreply@blogger.com