metro Growing A Family Tree from page 11 Corey Samuels world, as well as from the government archives located in the told countries," Manson said. "A common myth is also that names were changed at Ellis Island. No names were ever changed there': he said. "The manifests from the ships people came here on were made before they left, at the port they came from, so their original surnames should be accurate." Manson said many researchers find documents in other languages, like Yiddish. "If you post them on Jewishgen.org on the `viewmate' section today, by tomorrow they will be circulated around the world and you will have at least five responses': he said. Grey said, "If someone thinks they can't get information because their family members have died, they should realize they can get as much from birth, marriage and death records — which often include names of survivors or ancestors — as they can from living family. "I learned my great-grandparents' names from my grandfather's death cer- tificate," Grey said. "It also said where they were from in Lithuania." Vital records, including birth, death and marriage certificates, are public informa- tion and can be accessed by phone, mail, in person or on the Internet from hospitals and government offices. "Before phone books, there were R.L. Polk city directories, which have alpha- betical listings of people and their family members, occupations, ages, complete data on business activity in the city, categorical sections by type of business or institution, with houses of worship listed:' Manson said. These and other city directories are housed in libraries in the cities for which they were published. Census records are available online on ancestry.com and on microfilm at most major libraries. Public libraries may pro- vide access to the U.S. edition of www. ancestry.com Library Edition at no charge. Helping One Other Manson hopes to run classes for school- children and at Jewish senior apartments with children and their grandparents and great-grandparents to get the kids inter- ested and to begin their research. Grey, who speaks regularly on geneal- ogy, gives specific information to older groups. "A group in their 80s wants to be able to help their grandchildren and future generations': he said. "They don't want to know how to access websites. I talk to them about how to preserve their stories on audio or videotape and about labeling their pictures. They don't want history les- sons; they've lived it!' At 19, Corey Samuels Rosen of Farmington Hills does want to delve into the past. "I love history, and a family tree is your 12 July 14 » 2011 personal history:' he said. "I wanted to find out more about who I am and why my ancestors made the decisions they made. It is fascinating to trace them from Europe to America and then all around the country, and then put that into a historical context and see what was going on in the world at that time." Among the 1,204 names on his tree is his great-great-great-great-grandfather. "I found cousins of my grandmother who she had never even heard of — in just a few days': Rosen said. "I discovered that some ancestors were rabbis, some were distillery owners, others married their nieces and that my grandpa was at least a fourth-generation baker. I discovered dozens of relatives who were victims of the Holocaust. I also found out that my fourth cousin — whom I've never met — married my longtime math tutor's son." Included in the websites he has accessed is www.familysearch.org ."It has a lot of historic government documents on it:' Rosen said. "An invaluable resource for locating and getting pictures of out-of- state graves is www.findagrave.com ." Recording The Past Earlier this year, Karen Rader flew to Miami Beach to tape conversations with an 85-year-old cousin, who is her great- grandmother's grandson. "He had a little black notebook that had my great-grand- mother's recipes and papers with the name of the city she lived in and the ship she came to America on',' Rader said. "Finding information is like adding pieces to a jig- saw puzzle. "When I was with my cousin, I told him that I remembered a giant blue marlin that somebody caught that hung over a piano in my great-grandmother's home when I was a child. He told me the marlin wasn't in her house, it was in his house and he had caught the fish. Meeting him allowed me to share my memories and have them vali- dated;' she said. In September, Rader plans to come to Detroit to go to area cemeteries and take pictures of headstones over her great-grandparents graves so they will be recorded in case the already-fading writing disappears. When Rader's mom died, she found 8mm films of her parents and grandpar- ents that she converted into DVDs for her children and future generations. Unusual Research Site This summer, Rader plans to travel to Salt Lake City, Utah, where Grey said he and Manson have visited "to do real research:' at the vast index of genealogical informa- tion at the LDS (Latter-day Saints) Family History Library. "When the Mormon Church cast a net Rosen and a photo of his great-great-great- grandparents Israel Grossman (1827-1920) and Hava Friedman Grossman in the late 1800s in Ostrow, District of Lomza, Poland for records of its members' ancestors from a particular city, town, village or shtetl, they got all the people, including the Jews," Manson said. "This is how I found my great-grandfather Meier Mac (Matz) from Skaryszew, Poland, and his original birth record from 1872, written in Russian Cyrillic. It gave me his parents' correct names and ages, his maternal grandfather's name, Boruch, and age, and then I found Boruch's death record from 1895, which listed his parents." Technology has sped up the process of research immensely. "Ten years ago I had to travel to Utah for a week to do what I can do now in an hour in my office because of subscriptions and digitized records': Grey said. "When my father-in-law retired 25 years ago, he sat down at the dining room table with a roll of white butcher paper and drew the family connections with a ruler." In later years, Grey transferred it to the computer. A Few Tips "When we do genealogy, we always keep the maiden name, the birth name Grey said. "That's how we can find people who have changed their names through mar- riage or, like my father whose name was Archie Goldstein, changed to Grey. At the Burton Historical Collection at the Detroit Public Library, I was able to have copies made from a glass negative of his gradu- ation picture from 1921, with his cap and gown, filed under his 'maiden name." Gunsberg suggests social networking. "I Facebooked (Gunsberg' and contacted people about building a family tree': he said. It's like a family reunion online." Grey suggested, "Don't create your own software; most of what's out there is user- friendly." Resource materials are available using Soundex, which lists names according to how they sound, not how the researcher thinks they might be spelled. "It's also helpful to know that a lot of people with similar last names came from the same families': Gunsberg said. Some names were changed or shortened. Some names are distinctive to where people lived. Manson discovered his own name was once Manskij and is unique to a specific section of Volkovysk, in a town in Belarus. "This hobby can become bigger than you can imagine, but if you focus on the part you want to get started with, like your mother or father's family, it will be man- ageable," Grey said. Who's Related To Whom? "Genealogy is not just about finding dead ancestors; it's also about finding living family': Manson said. "I found a third cousin who lives a mile from us!' Manson's son and daughter-in-law con- tacted and visited fifth cousins who turned out to be rock star brothers in Costa Rica. Manson also is related to Betty Provizer Starkman, who founded the JGSMI in 1985. Grey found he is related to Suzy Eban, wife of Israel's former foreign minister, Abba Eban, and he visited the couple while in Israel before Abba Eban's death. Rosen discovered that a third cousin on his mom's side and a third cousin on his dad's side, both living in California, know each other and worked together. "It's an incredibly small Jewish world': Rosen said. "In combining family trees with others, I found one of my best friends is now on my family tree because his wife's cousin mar- ried into my family:' Manson said. "When you find one connection, it gets attached like a virus." And it's neverending. "You can get 80 percent of the work done in the first year': Manson said. "The next 20 percent will take the rest of your life, and you will never finish. That job is left up to your children and grandchildren. "The time to do genealogy is yesterday because last night someone died who had all the infOrmation you needed!' ❑ For more information on getting started, access the Jewish Genealogical Society of Michigan website at jgsmi.org/home/contact or call (248) 553-2400, ext. 16. To schedule a tour with the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan, call (248) 432-5517.