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Family History Class. Spokane 22 nd Ward Lesson 8 Family History Library and Centers. Overview. The development of microfilming began during World War I The Genealogical Society of Utah was among the first to send out photographers to microfilm genealogical data on site
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Family History Class Spokane 22nd Ward Lesson 8 Family History Library and Centers
Overview • The development of microfilming began during World War I • The Genealogical Society of Utah was among the first to send out photographers to microfilm genealogical data on site • James Black was one of the church’s first microfilming pioneers • Original microfilms are stored in Granite Mountain Vault in Little Cottonwood Canyon near Salt Lake City
Visiting the Family History Library • Located at 35 North Temple Street in Salt Lake City • An average of 2,700 people visit each day. • Its doors are open 82 hours per week, including many holidays • It has more than two million roles of microfilm and 700,000 microfiche • It employs some of the world’s leading genealogists • Visitors from all over the world come to visit
Family History Library • Main floor houses computers with FamilySearch and books with genealogical data for the US and Canada • Second floor houses complete US Census, as well as computers. • Administrative offices and cataloging facilities are on the third floor • First lower level houses books and microfilm for international genealogical records • Second lower level has books/microfilms for the British Isles
Library Rules • Handle film, books, and equipment carefully • Cellular phones used only in lobby • Don’t leave personal belongings unattended • Maintain quiet so others can work • Children under twelve must be supervised • No food and drinks allowed • No smoking allowed • Don’t take more than 5 microfilms at a time
Library Rules (Continued) • If you will be gone from your microfilm reader for more than 30 minutes, take your possessions with you so someone else can use it • Use no more than 5 books at a time. Return them to the red shelves on either end of the bookshelves when finished • Limit yourself to 5 photocopies if others are waiting
Visiting the Joseph Smith Memorial Building • The facilities of the JSMB are designed to help tourists and those who are new to family history • On the main floor, hundreds of computers are located in the FamilySearch ™ Center • On the 4th floor are more than 70,000 printed family histories, as well as a copy of the 1920 Soundex and Census • Also on this floor are 8 million family group records submitted by Latter-day Saints
Family History Centers • Most people aren’t able to go to SLC to use the main Family History Library • For that reason, the Church has an ongoing program to establish branches throughout the world • Computers with FamilySearch ™ are located in them • Through the microfilm ordering service, there is access to the vast microfilm collection of genealogical records in SLC
For More Information • Read “Early Church Information Guide,” “Family History Library and Family History Centers,” and “PERiodical Source Index (PERSI” in Family History SourceGuide on CD-ROM available from LDS distribution centers or the FHC • Visit the Family History Center nearest you and see how they can help
Class Assignments • Search the Family History SourceGuide for information about the area where one of your grandparents or great-grandparents lived • Plan a visit to the FHC • Take a tour of the main Family History Library on the FamilySearch website at www.familysearch.org