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Topics Available 
Speaking Highlights 
Memberships 
Publications
Education 
Web Sites Hosted 
The Bottom Line

  Elizabeth Kelley Kerstens, CG, CGL

Certified GenealogistSM and Certified Genealogical LecturerSM, Liz is the creator of the software program Clooz—the electronic filing cabinet for genealogical records, and co-creator of the software program GeneWeaver for your family health history. She is managing editor of both Digital Genealogist and the NGS Newsmagazine. She authored the books Plymouth's First Century: Innovators and Industry, a photo history of Plymouth, Michigan, and Plymouth in Vintage Postcards, a postcard history of 20th century Plymouth. Liz is also the executive director at the Plymouth Historical Museum in Plymouth, Michigan.

  Topics Available  

Internet/Computers
Collecting Data from the Internet: What Do You Trust?

 

Guidelines for determining the credibility of information found on the Internet, a sample Internet Research Calendar, and examples of good and bad information available on the Web.
Organizing and Time Management--Your Keys to Success

 

All family researchers acquire mounds of paper as a result of their research. What is done with that paper determines how successful the genealogist is at analyzing research and finding the sources from time to time. This lecture discusses various methods of organizing the records so they are easily retrievable, including using various computer programs to house the pertinent genealogical data contained within the records. A discussion of time management is also included.
NARA Online The National Archives has an extensive Web site that can be very useful to genealogists in their quest to find records. This lecture walks users through the pages that will help genealogists in their quests.
Irish Research
The Irish That Helped Build the Motor City and Its Environs

 

A discussion of Irish immigration into the Territory of Michigan and the Detroit area during the nineteenth century and the records available for research.
Demystifying Irish Ancestor Origins

 

Learn the basics of determining the place of origin of your Irish ancestor, using records available at major repositories in the United States. A case study will be used to show how some Irish immigrants’ origins were determined.
U.S. Sources for Beginning  
Irish Research
(3-hour workshop--can be tailored) This lecture will cover some of the basics of finding the origin of Irish ancestors using resources available in the United States. Research strategies will be presented for working in passenger lists, immigration records, military records, census records, city directories, and other original sources of value in tracking down the origin of Irish immigrants. A case study covers sources available at the National Archives, Library of Congress, and the Family History Library.
Researching Your Irish Here Before Going There

Research in Ireland is not for the faint-hearted. But those with Irish ancestry can accomplish an incredible amount of research on those ancestors without even leaving the United States. This lecture focuses on the ways you can fill in your research blanks using facilities in the U.S., saving the tough tasks for your trip to Ireland.

Separating Fact from Blarney in Irish Oral Tradition

 

Oral tradition is alive and well in many families. In Irish-American families, oral tradition can be the link to information about the origins of the Irish ancestor. But how do you know if the information passed down is accurate? This lecture uses a case study to show how facts within a story passed down in an Irish family were proven and disproven.
National Archives Research
Early Passenger Lists This lecture covers the types of passenger lists and customs records available at the National Archives for the period before Ellis Island opened in 1892. The discussion includes an overview of Web and CD-ROM resources.
NARA Online The National Archives has an extensive website that can be very useful to genealogists in their quest to find records. This lecture walks users through the pages that will help genealogists in their quests.
Territorial Papers

 

Many records are available at the National Archives that cover the territorial period for those states that became part of the U.S. after the Revolutionary War. This lecture will show examples of records from various record groups and will explain how to find the records.
They Went Down With the Ship, but Do Their Records Survive?

There have been about 25,000 ship wrecks on the Great Lakes in the last 300 years. How does someone go about finding any records of a shipwreck that contained an ancestor? This talk will discuss record sources and repositories that hold shipwreck records and will give examples of records found.

Michigan Research
In Search of Michigan Ancestors Discussion centers around finding records for your Michigan ancestors, whether they settled there or just passed through. Examples of various record types will be given, as well as references to useful Web sites and repositories.
The Irish That Helped Build the Motor City and Its Environs

 

A discussion of Irish immigration into the Territory of Michigan and the Detroit area during the nineteenth century and the records available for research.

 New lecture topics can be accommodated!

Speaking Highlights
National Genealogical Society
conferences
(1990, 1997-2000, 2002-2004, 2006-2008)
National Archives
(1998, 1999, 2003-2008)

Memberships
Association of Professional Genealogists

Board for Certification of Genealogists
Associate

International Society of Family
History Writers and Editors

1st Place Winner, Feature Articles,
2001 Annual Writing Contest
3d Place Winner, Magazine Journal and Periodical Articles,
2000 Annual Writing Contest

National Genealogical Society
Editor (2005- )
NGS Newsmagazine

Plymouth, MI, Historical Society
Executive Director (2007- )
Head Archivist (2002-2007)
Most Outstanding Volunteer, 2006

Publications

Ancestry.com
Editor, Genealogical Computing (2000-2006)

Online Columnist, "Get It Together" (1999-2000)
Online Columnist, "GC Extra" (2000-2001)

Author, Ancestry (1998- )

Disguised Patriots: Women Who Served Incognito
For this article, I was awarded 1st place 
in the Feature Articles category in the 
2001 International Society of Family History Writers 
& Editors Excellence in Writing Competition

Fact or Blarney?
(About Proving and Disproving Family Stories)

Funeral Cards

Go West, Young Man! Discovering Your Frontier Ancestors

Lasting Images: Protecting Your Photographic Heritage

Manuscripts Illuminate Family Histories

Old Letters Unravel a Mystery
For this article, I was awarded 3d place
in the Magazine Journal and Periodical Articles category in the
2000 Council of Genealogical Columnists 
Excellence in Writing Competition

On the Record--Collecting Oral Histories

A Penny for Your Thoughts
(About Postcards and Genealogy)

Research in the Great Lakes States

Safeguarding Your Legacy

Secure the Shadow...'Ere the Substance Fades

Shipwrecks on the Great Lakes

Victorian Death Rituals

What if Your Ancestor Lied?

What's In a Name?

Why Isn't It on the Internet?

Wildcat Bleachers

Arcadia Publishing
Plymouth's First Century: Innovators and Industry (2002)
Plymouth in Vintage Postcards (2003)

Heritage Quest Magazine

Getting to Know Your Ancestors Using Artifacts

House Histories

NGS Quarterly

Finding the Irish Origins of Charles Doherty (September 2004)

Tracking a Soldier Day by Day (December 1995)

Education
"American Genealogy: A Basic Course," NGS (1985)
Family History Certificate, BYU (1993)
National Institute on Genealogical Research (1995, 2000)
Bachelor of Journalism, University of Texas (1983)
Master of Arts in Public Relations, University of Maryland (1992)
Certificate in Archival Administration, Wayne State University (2006)
Working on Master of Arts in History, Eastern Michigan University

Web Sites Hosted
Ancestor Detective
Ancestor Detective Speakers Bureau
Clooz
Digital Genealogist


Personal Pages:

The Parish of Outeragh, County Tipperary, Ireland

Descendants of William Kelly of Harwich, Essex Co., England
Descendants of James Presley of Ireland and Elizabeth, Union, NJ

The Bottom Line
I am not currently accepting speaking engagements.

Elizabeth Kelley Kerstens, CG, CGL
P.O. Box 6386
Plymouth, MI 48170-8486
(734) 354-6449
Fax (734) 354-6442



Copyright 1998-2007 Ancestor Detective, All Rights Reserved.

This page was last updated Tuesday, 22 April 2008

CG and CGL are service marks of the Board for Certification of Genealogists (BCG),
used under license after periodic evaluations by the Board.
BCG grants certification to qualified applicants in three categories.
A CG is a Certified Genealogist; a CGL is a Certified Genealogical Lecturer.