Our Board & Volunteers
President | Gordon Lane |
Vice President | Jim Benedict |
Secretary | Dorothy Clements |
Treasurer | Larry Stone |
Director (Events & Education) | Sharon White |
Director (Facilities) | Zolton Walford |
Director (Finance) | Anna Babaeva |
Director (Library & Research) | Linda Murray |
Director (Marketing) | Stanley Clute |
Director (Member Relations) | Suzanne Davidson |
Casino Manager | Jane Hillsden |
Cemetery Projects Co-ordinator | Wendy Schultz |
Coaching at CPL | Linda Murray |
Communications | Marion Peterson |
Editor, Chinook Arch | Amber Godfrey |
Equipment | Warren Peterson |
Events Co-ordinator | Sharon White |
Marian Jones | |
Federation of Family History Societies Contact | Iris Morgan |
Library Committee Chair | Linda Murray |
Membership Co-ordinator | Roy Aggarwal |
Privacy Officer | Suzanne Davidson |
Program Committee Chair | Christine Hayes |
Research Assistance Committee Chair | Mabel Kiessling |
Social Media (Instagram) | Marion Peterson |
Society Archives | Marion Peterson |
Webmaster | Jim Benedict |
Website Calendar | Marion Peterson |
Basics | Bev Smith & Marion Peterson |
Celtic | Stephanie Thiele |
Digital Genealogy SIG / FamilyGenes Group | Jim Benedict |
DNA | Linda Murray & Wayne Taylor |
English/Welsh | Bev Smith |
Family Tree Maker | Nola Gutsche |
Legacy | Bev Archer |
Ontario | Bev Swan & Gail Ames |
Writing | Kelly Southworth |
Meet Our Volunteers
1. How did you get started in family history research?
Shortly after purchasing our first home computer in the late 1990s, I asked my husband for Family Tree Maker as a Mother’s Day gift. I was looking for something more interesting to do on the computer than Solitaire games. I was hooked…
2. How did you find the Alberta Family Histories Society and become involved?
I read an article in the Calgary Herald about a conference in March 2001 and attended it. It took me a while to attend a meeting, but when I walked in the door, I discovered someone I already knew (Rosemary Kry). She and I carpooled to AFHS meetings, and about a year later, we both answered a plea for volunteers on the Programs Committee. Shortly after, I ended up as the Programs Committee Chair. Since then, I’ve volunteered in many different roles. It is a great way to get to know people!
3. Which of your ancestors would you most like to meet and what would you ask them?
I would like to meet my Irish 3X great-grandmother, Jemima (Hall) Rath. I would ask her who her parents were. There are no records that can help me figure this out.
4. What is one research tip that you would like to share with our Society members?
Learn all you can about various ways of organizing your information, then decide on a method that makes sense to you which can expand as you collect more and more information. This is especially important for digital files. When I started, I named too many items with unhelpful names like “birth registration” or “obituary.” That’s a big mistake!
5. What family names are you researching and what areas of the province/country/world have you done research in?
I’ve done a lot of research in Middlesex, Oxford, Perth, Brant and Waterloo Counties in Ontario, Canada. My English ancestors came from Cornwall, Devon, Westmorland, Devon, Yorkshire and Nottingham. My Irish lines came from County Wexford and County Antrim, and my Scottish line came from Inverness, so I’ve done a bit of research in these areas as well. I’ve also done some Swedish and Danish research for my husband’s family.
1. How did you get started in family history research?
I started working on my family history at the age of 20. My paternal Grandmother was 80 at that time and I constantly asked her questions about her family in Scotland. I was lucky that she lived to the grand old age of 102 years because I had a lot of questions! I also wrote letters to my maternal Grandfather’s cousin in Ontario to ask about the ancestors who had settled there. I was always curious about my family roots.
2. How did you find the Alberta Family Histories Society and become involved?
I moved to Calgary on October 1, 1993. I found an ad for the Alberta Family Histories Society in a publication called Neighbours and joined later that month. So, I have been a member for over 30 years. I served on the board as membership secretary for a term of two years (2004-2006) and as a director for several years. I joined the library committee and have held the position of library chair since 2007. I have attended many AFHS Special Interest Group (SIG) meetings over the years including ones for Ontario, English, Celtic and Legacy software. I have been a co-chair of the AFHS DNA SIG since it was formed in 2014.
3. What is one research tip that you would like to share with our Society members?
Ask lots of questions and document the answers. In the early years, I was so excited to find the information but didn’t always document my sources. Also, make a note if you searched for information and didn’t find any answers.
4. What are some of the areas you have experience researching in?
I have researched my family extensively in Manitoba, Ontario, England, Scotland, New England, and Pennsylvania. I have done some research for my husband’s family in Alberta, Lithuania, and Ukraine.
1. How did you get started in family history research?
I got started in family history research by talking a class in family history in Lethbridge, while going to college at the Family History Centre in 1985.
2. How did you find the Alberta Family Histories Society and become involved?
I found the Alberta Family Histories Society (AFHS) by searching online for their website.
I became involved with AFHS because they requested help filling a volunteer position.
3. What is one research tip that you would like to share with our society?
I would recommend review your ancestors’ sources on a regular basis such as census records. My ancestor, Sarah Mabel (Mooney) Bailey, (1883 – 1965) was transcribed as Nanah Mable Bailey in the Canadian 1931 census. Upon deeper investigation and reflection, I reviewed the handwritten document of the census revealing the name of Sarah Mabel Bailey.
4. What are some of the areas you have experience researching in?
My areas of research are Ontario, Nova Scotia, Ireland, England, and United States.
How did you get started in family history research?
My mother (now in her 90s) took over our genealogy search from my grandmother. I now am picking up from my mother, and it is great to tell each other what we have learned in our research.
How did you find the Alberta Family Histories Society and become involved?
I met Wendy Schultz at a walking class and started talking about genealogy research and she mentioned the Alberta Family Histories Society.
What is one research tip that you would like to share with our Society members?
If you are looking for research and information the Society members are a wealth of knowledge. Just ask and you will always learn something new.
What areas of the province / country / world have you done research in?
I am new at the research part, but I have researched Alberta, Ontario, England, Wales and Scotland.
How did you get started in family history research?
I visited the LDS Church Family Search Centre on 17th Avenue SW back in the 1980s looking for records on my Benedict line. The staff were most helpful with searching through the microfilms. I did find my Benedict great-grandparents, living in Wallaceburg, Ontario. But my great-grandmother’s maiden surname was Benedict and it turned out my great-grandparents were first cousins! After that discovery, I was hooked!
How did you find the Alberta Family Histories Society and become involved?
I first found the Digital Genealogy group, which was not affiliated with AFHS at the time, but some attendees were AFHS members. As I became more familiar with genealogy studies through this group, I decided to also join AFHS as they had an active and enthusiastic group of computer users. I fit right in.
What is one research tip that you would like to share with our Society members?
Pick one area of your family branch and stay focused. Collect whatever sources and images you can and then digitize and store them on a website somewhere for your extended family to find and enjoy.
What are some of the areas you have experience researching in?
My research areas are Alberta, Ontario, New England, Maritimes (Acadian) and Alsace, France.
1. How did you get started in family history research?
Not totally sure but members of our family tended to donate various family artifacts to me. And, despite my engineering background, I had a penchant for writing. I tended to write up the family stories that I had collected.
2. How did you find the Alberta Family Histories Society and become involved?
When I retired, we moved to spending our winters in California and I joined a local genealogy club. One of the members of that club, Greg Cave, encouraged me to connect with AFHS back in Calgary, where we spend our summers. And that’s exactly what I did!
3. What is one research tip that you would like to share with our Society members?
I would recommend that folks structure their research information so that revisiting that material becomes an easy task. Find a set of standards that work for you and be highly disciplined in maintaining your records in that fashion.
4. What are some of the areas you have experience researching in?
I have researched in Saskatchewan, Ontario, Manitoba, Ireland, Scotland, England, France, Germany, and Australia.