Join us for a great day of programming!
The schedule is in Eastern Daylight Time (UTC−04:00).
Saturday, April 10th, 2021
9:00 am | Welcome | |
9:15-10:15 am | The Central State Historical Archives of Ukraine, Lviv as a base of genealogical research Oksana Melnyk | |
10:30-11:30 am | Grafting twigs: Computer-assisted assembly of kinship networks from village-scale metrical records | |
Lunch, stretch break, and opportunities for virtual networking (details will be announced during the conference) | ||
12:30-1:30 pm | The Ukrainian Weekly and Svoboda: Using newspapers to conduct genealogical research | |
1:45-2:45 pm |
Session Summaries:
The Central State Historical Archives of Ukraine, Lviv as a base of genealogical research
This presentation will tell the history of Central State Archives of Ukraine, Lviv, give a detailed view of metrical records as a main source of genealogical research, and also presents other types of documents preserved in the Archive that may be used for research.
Grafting twigs: Computer-assisted assembly of kinship networks from village-scale metrical records
Greek Catholic birth/baptism, marriage, and death/funeral records from 19th century Galicia are remarkable in their "name density" and can include related individuals spanning as many as four generations. Each record thus defines a tiny fragment, or “twig”, from a larger family tree. By looking for overlaps among these twigs and "grafting" them together, we could in principle reconstruct nuclear family groups and even more distant relationships. Since a single metrical book can potentially generate thousands of such twigs, data management quickly becomes a major challenge. This becomes even more daunting if the village is dominated by a small number of very common surnames. In this talk, I will briefly review the structure of Greek Catholic birth and death records, describe my approach to data management, and present my recent work on a custom computational tool to assist in the assembly kinship networks from village-scale metrical record transcriptions.
The Ukrainian Weekly and Svoboda: Using newspapers to conduct genealogical research
Mr. Nynka will discuss how individuals can use the Ukrainian National Association's two newspapers - the Ukrainian language Svoboda, which has been continuously published since 1893, and The Ukrainian Weekly, an English language newspaper published continuously since 1933 - to conduct genealogical research.
Finding Family History in Ukraine
I will tell you about my experience doing research and finding my family in Ukraine. Plus provide a short presentation on the history of Halychyna including Lviv, Halych, Kolomeya, Sniatyn, Ternopil and Ivano-Frankivsk. I will tell you what it’s like travelling there today, finding family and doing research in the archives. Poland is also where many Ukrainian villages lay and I have spent lots of time exploring Peremysh, Yaroslova, Sanok and of course Krakow and I will tell you about travelling there as well.
Speaker Biographies
Mr. Nynka was a general assignment reporter for the Daily Record (Parsippany, N.J.), an education beat reporter for The Daily Journal (Vineland, N.J.), and the executive director of the Society for Features Journalism. In 2004, he covered the Orange Revolution in Ukraine for the publication's Kyiv bureau, covered the 9/11 terror attacks in New York City, and the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah. For The Weekly, he reported from The White House, Congress, the United Nations, as well as from inside a prison in Kharkiv. Learn more about his fascinating road from Ukrainian American kid in New Jersey to the editor of the oldest continuously operating Ukrainian-language newspaper in the world on Mike Buryk's Krynytsya podcast series.