Featured Record
Transcribed on June 26, 2024
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1887-1936 / 1929 / 1929 03 35 Zella to Viv_0003.jpg ]
BAC Miss Zella Vee Barnson
Cedar City, Utah
Mar 25, 1929
Darling Mama, Cleone, Uncle Avery
and all,
are you enjoying winter out
there today or summer? For
the last few weeks we have
had beautiful weather but it was
tpp good too last. Yesterday it
blowed and snowed. Today has
just been cold. The snow did-n't
lay on the ground but
was sufficient to spoil what
might have been two nice days.
I've been so sleepy all day
that I couldn't do anything and
Alva acted as if he was
walking in his sleep when
he came home for dinner.
We used to could stay up with
anyone, but since we've quit
sporting were like all other
married stiffs I guess
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Archive Owner Posts
Posted June 24, 2024 by Archive Owner
My mother LaKay M. Weber was an amazing wormen who wrote in her diary almost daily and was a great genealogist. She kept all the pictures her parents had collected and tried to make notes about who they were and what is happening in them. When she died my siblings and I inherited her volumes of scrapbooks. This sight is our effort to not hide them in a closet somewhere but share them with the world. There are 2 Kindex archives this is the first and covers up untill her marriage and is public as most of the persons are either children or dead. The second I am still working on covers the period from 1952 to present and to gain access to that one you need to send your e-mail to Laura Anderson at paffanatic10@yahoo.com and if you are part of our family, I will invite you to the private archive that has LaKay's Journal, letters written by the family, 8 MM films, pictures of family gatherings etc. Please help me to get the transcriptions profected on these sights! Laura
Posted November 8, 2018 by Archive Owner
With her family's biannual reunion several months away, reunion organizer Tonna Bounds used Kindex to hold an on-site digitization event in Delta, Utah--a "family scanning party".
Weeks before the event, Kindex provided a "Call for Records" image to promote the event. When families arrived with records, Kindex created an inventory of owners and items to be scanned. Records were gathered from New York, Colorado, Arizona, and Utah. Soon all scanners were busy, and several family volunteers--including youth--jumped in to help.
Family members now have access to more than 30 gigabytes of records they had never before seen.
Tonna exclaimed, "How can I explain something that took place at our past reunion that was so futuristic in thought and action? People don't understand its potential--jaw dropping in thought! Aunt Zelda and Uncle Ivo's history was destroyed, but their lost histories can now be pieced together with even more force than could be imagined."
Posted September 30, 2019 by Archive Owner
Among the many documents Dorothy Clark left behind was a handwritten list of attempts to be published. She sent articles to church magazines and the Reader's Digest--but not once was she published.
As an amateur artist, Dorothy never had an art exhibit beyond the walls of her own home. Her handwritten letters--hundreds to family & friends--sat folded up in boxes for years. Her amazing life never made headlines. Her records are not held in any institutional archive. She was however a leader worth following--a mother worth remembering. She deserves an archive. What about your records?
If family records are kept, they are often at risk of being lost, damaged, or forgotten. How will you ensure your records are preserved? Do your photos, journals, diaries, letters, and other precious family records deserve an archive? Do you deserve to be remembered? The answer is Yes.
Kindex brings amazing archival tools to everyday families, making their records more accessible and relevant than ever.