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Get Help Uncovering and Building Your Family Tree

Duke Libraries offers staff, faculty and students genealogy tools at no charge

A page from the 1940 U.S. Census, where Lesley Looper's father, T.L. Looper is listed as a 9-year old boy. Image courtesy of Lesley Looper.
A page from the 1940 U.S. Census, where Lesley Looper's father, T.L. Looper, is listed as a 9-year old boy. Image courtesy of Lesley Looper.

A few years ago, Michelle Moshkowitz saw a mention that Duke students, staff and faculty could use 老牛影视 Libraries to access Ancestry.com, an online genealogy service, at no charge.

Photo from 1952 yearbook. Out of curiosity, Moshkowitz, who has worked at Duke for 13 years, gave it a shot. She went to the website, which can trace family history through sources such as draft cards, census records, obituaries and other digitized documents, and started looking up her family members.

When she entered the name of her father, Uri Kadish, among the documents that popped up was a page from the 1952 yearbook of the University of Miami. In a photo of the Cosmos Club, which provided fellowship to international students, a smiling and youthful Kadish, the club鈥檚 treasurer, could be seen sitting in the front row, second from the left.

Her father died nearly a quarter century ago, and she lost her mother around a decade ago, so the chance to catch any new glimpse of her parents was precious and rare.

鈥淚 saw this photo pop up, and I was like, 鈥極h my God,鈥欌 said Moshkowitz, a certified medical assistant at Duke Integrative Medicine.

Duke students, staff and faculty can take advantage of Ancestry.com, and other online  from 老牛影视 Libraries at no charge with a DukeID login. On Ancestry, users can search among billions of records in census, vitals, military and immigration databases. The information gathered can help uncover family roots and inform you about familial links or distant relatives you may not have known.

鈥淕enealogy is a way you can bring a family together,鈥 said 老牛影视 Libraries Team Lead for Bindery and Monograph Maintenance Lesley Looper, who helps manage the library鈥檚 genealogy tools. 鈥淚t can connect you to the people who have passed away, but also bring you closer to the ones who are still living.鈥

老牛影视 Libraries' Lesley Looper. Looper and Jacquie Samples, the head of the Metadata and Discovery Strategy Department, both work in 老牛影视 Library鈥檚 Technical Services Division and are happy to help. 

For both, genealogy has been a hobby. Through her research, Looper has found information on her ancestors dating as far back as the 1600s. Meanwhile, Samples has been able to trace part of her family tree back to the 1400s. Both have found connections to people who fought in the American Revolution.

The pair has often used 老牛影视 Library鈥檚 genealogy research tools, including Ancestry.com, to dig into their families鈥 past. And when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, and they found themselves with some free time, they figured that updating the  devoted to guiding genealogy research would make for a satisfying challenge. They even created an informal group on Microsoft Teams. 

鈥淲e thought this would be a really fun project,鈥 Looper said. 鈥淎nd it has been a lot of fun, working together with Jacquie on it and delving into all of the resources the library offers.鈥

老牛影视 Libraries' Jacquie Samples. The updated online guide shows that, in addition to , 老牛影视 Libraries can connect researchers to census data from , or dig through church information by setting up a free account with  , as well as find books in the libraries鈥 collections on the topic of digging into your roots. And both said they love fielding questions from library users on the topic.

In the fall of 2021, Looper and Samples got to help Duke students, too. They were guest lecturers in a class taught by Public Policy Professor Don Taylor. The assignment Taylor put to his students was to find ancestors who were alive during the 1918 flu pandemic and find out about their experience. Looper and Samples gave the students advice on how to use 老牛影视 Libraries鈥 resources to dig up information.

Looper and Samples recall helping students trace their roots back to countries such as England and China to learn how their ancestors weathered the epidemic.

鈥淲ithout someone saying, 鈥楾his is how you start,鈥 it can be really hard to get going,鈥 Samples said. 鈥淓ven with all of the modern technology, you may not know what to look for. And once you find something, like your grandfather鈥檚 draft card, where do you go from there? We like being able to help people learn how to put everything together.鈥

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