N Steve Hayes
A P.O. Box 7648
A Pretoria
A 0001 South Africa
T 012-333-67277
S Internet hayesstw@yahoo.com
S Fidonet: 5:7106/20
S FamilyNet: 8:7903/10
S http://www.geocities.com/hayesstw/
B Khanya BBS +27-12-333-0004
C 28//Zmodem
D 3/MSDOS/1440
F Family History System, PAF, others
R Searching for all GROWDON & GROWDEN
R families everywhere, and any STOOKE
R families in Devon, England
Z 60 Tiny Tafel Editor v2.2 --- This TT may be freely distributed!
A450 1756*1820*ALLEN\Winscombe, Somerset, ENG/Winscombe, Somerset, ENG
B230 1806*1810:BAGOT\Lancashire, England/Lancashire, England
B230 1892*1937*BAGOT\Natal, South Africa/England
B616 1790*1790*BARBER\Devon, England/Devon, England
C100 1838:1838*CHAFFEY\Bedminster, Bristol, ENG/Bedminster, Bristol, ENG
C560 1950 2000:CHAWNER\England/England
C150 1943 1970:COBBAN\South Africa/South Africa
C150 1679*1716:COPPIN\Cardinham, Cornwall, ENG/Cardinham, Cornwall, ENG
C350 1800*1920*COTTAM\Manchester, England/South Africa
C200 1703*1760:COUCH\Cardinham, Cornwall, ENG/Cardinham, Cornwall, ENG
D120 1896 1961:DAVIS\Newcastle, Natal, RSA/Durban, Natal, RSA
D620 1929 1996:DRAKE\South Africa/South Africa
D635 1943 1975:DRYDEN\South Africa/South Africa
D500 1880 1950:DUNN\Somerset, England/Avon, England
D600 1812*1812*DYER\Roche, Cornwall, England/Roche, Cornwall, England
G225 1948 1968:GASCOIGNE\Johannesburg, RSA/South Africa
G263 1935 1996:GAZZARD\Durban, South Africa/Australia
G650 1842*1941*GREENAWAY\St Teath, Cornwall, England/South Africa
G634 1850.1951:GRIDLEY\Somerset, England/Somerset, England
G635 1800*1993*GROWDEN\Bodmin, Cornwall, ENG/Alaska, USA
G635 1851*1989*GROWDON\Bodmin, CON, ENG/Durban, Natal, South Africa
H400 1954 1968:HALL\Estcourt, Natal, RSA/South Africa
H550 1827*1979*HANNAN\Girvan, Ayrshire, SCT/Glasgow, Scotland
H620 1818*1818:HARRIS\Whitchurch, GLA, Wales/Whitchurch, GLA, Wales
H633 1861 1947:HART-DAVIS\At Sea, English Channel/Natal, South Africa
H200 1785*1981*HAYES\North Curry, SOM, ENG/Eshowe, KZN, South Africa
H616 1831*1831*HERBERT\Manchester, England/Manchester. England
H452 1790*1821*HOLLINS\Staffordshire, England/Bristol, England
H540 1543*1943:HONYWILL\Devon, England/Ashton, Devon, England
K000 1855 1975:KAY\Turton Tower, ENG/South Africa
L620 1905 1961:LARGE\Natal, South Africa/South Africa
L152 1820*1820:LIVINGSTON\Lanark, Scotland/Lanark, Scotland
L251 1684*1707:LUSCOMBE\Doddiscombsleigh, DEV, ENG/Devon, ENG
M635 1784*1864*MARTIN\Belfast, Ireland/Belfast, Ireland
M240 1938 1965:MAXWELL\Benoni, South Africa/Durban, South Africa
M263 1832*1832*MCCARTNEY\Maybole, Ayrshire, SCT/Maybole, Ayrshire, SCT
M233 1810*1810:MCDADE\Ayrshire, Scotland/Ayrshire, Scotland
M216 1820*1858:MCFARLANE\Glasgow, Scotland/Glasgow, Scotland
M620 1869 1974:MOORS\Bruton, SOM, ENG/South Africa
M430 1905:1905*MOULD\Transvaal, South Africa/Transvaal, South Africa
N550 1915 1930:NAUMANN\Dunedin, New Zealand/Dunedin, New Zealand
N363 1925 1929:NOTHARD\Durban, South Africa/Durban, South Africa
P620 1828*1828*PARK\Belfast, Ireland/Bath, SOM, England
P100 1833:1840*POPE\Tintagel, CON, ENG/Tintagel, CON, ENG
R000 1885 1973*RAW\Natal, South Africa/South Africa
R320 1949 1980:REDDICK\Salisbury, S. Rhodesia/Motherwell, Glasgow, SCT
S536 1730*1766*SANDERCOCK\Cardinham, CON, ENG/Cardinham, CON, ENG
S364 1635*1635:SATTERLEY\Trusham, DEV, England/Trusham, DEV, ENG
S536 1760:1973*SAUNDERCOCK\Cardinham, CON, ENG/Blacktown,NSW, AUS
S546 1598*1748*SMALLRIDGE\DEV, ENG/Doddiscombsleigh, Devon, England
S330 1910 1986:STAYT\Durban, South Africa/Durban, South Africa
S320 1592*1928*STOOKE\Devon, England/Cheltenham, Victoria, Australia
T400 1820*1820.TILLY\Cornwall, England/Cornwall, England
T455 1915:1989:TOULMIN\Bristol, England/Canada
V200 1742*1988*VAUSE\Epworth, Lincolnshire, ENG/Natal, South Africa
V650 1711*1726*VERRAN\Broadoak, Cornwall, ENG/Broadoak, Cornwall, ENG
W425 1914 1917:WILKINSON\Durban, South Africa/Durban, South Africa
W452 1830.1830:WILLIAMS\Winscombe, Somerset, ENG/Winscombe, SOM, ENG
W523 1927 1961:WINNICOTT\Eastern Cape, RSA/Pietermaritzburg, RSA
W300 1804*1804*WYATT\Lincolnshire, England/England
W 03 Oct 2004
--
Steve Hayes
E-mail: hayesmstw@hotmail.com
Web: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/7734/stevesig.htm
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/7783/
Surname interests
Moderator: MOD_nyhetsgrupper
-
Dave Hinz
Re: Surname interests
On Sun, 03 Oct 2004 11:17:54 GMT, Steve Hayes <hayesmstw@hotmail.com> wrote:
What's this format please, Steve? Looks like a good combination of
human-readable and computer parse-able.
Dave
N Steve Hayes
A P.O. Box 7648
What's this format please, Steve? Looks like a good combination of
human-readable and computer parse-able.
Dave
-
Jeff
Re: Surname interests
"Dave Hinz" <DaveHinz@spamcop.net> wrote in message
news:2sd994F1i5k72U2@uni-berlin.de...
You will find an excellent format desctibed at:
http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/help/rsl6.html#Submit
This is the ROOTS SURNAME LIST and as well as getting
guidance from their format you should also submit your names
there.
news:2sd994F1i5k72U2@uni-berlin.de...
On Sun, 03 Oct 2004 11:17:54 GMT, Steve Hayes
hayesmstw@hotmail.com> wrote:
N Steve Hayes
A P.O. Box 7648
What's this format please, Steve? Looks like a good
combination of
human-readable and computer parse-able.
Dave
You will find an excellent format desctibed at:
http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/help/rsl6.html#Submit
This is the ROOTS SURNAME LIST and as well as getting
guidance from their format you should also submit your names
there.
-
Jeff
Re: Surname interests
"Jeff" <jeffxxx@yahoo.com> wrote in message > You will find
an excellent format desctibed at:
Probably would be useful to show that format here (copied
from URL above)
FORMATTING YOUR SURNAME INFORMATION
In the same message as the "How to Reach You" information,
include one line of data for each surname you are
submitting. What should the surname entries look like? Each
entry should be on one line, and should consist of five
parts. Entries that don't contain at least one date and
location will not be added to the database. The five parts
are:
The name of the family, in mixed case (Smith not SMITH or
smith).
The earliest date for which you have information about the
family. (For instance, the birthdate of the founder of the
family, or the year he or she first showed up in the
records.)
The most recent date for which you have information about
the family. (When the last person with that surname died or
skipped town, for instance. Use "now" if you know people of
this surname that are still around -- yourself, for example.
It's up to you whether a woman is considered under her
maiden surname, married surname, or both.)
The migration of the family. For instance, if my ancestors
started out in Virginia, moved to Kentucky, then on to
Missouri, this would be VA>KY>MO,USA. If I still have room
(remember, all fields should fit on one line -- the long
Keithley entry in the example below is pushing the limit),
then I add some county information to further distinguish
the family: OrangeCo,VA>KY>GentryCo,MO,USA. A list of most
of the most common abbreviations can be found at
http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/codes/ or just spell out the
location in your submission, and the person who does the
final data entry will put in the proper abbreviation, if
any.
The nametag of the submitter. This is so you can be found in
the address list. See discussion above for how to select
one.
The RootsWeb Surname Index is rather oddly computerized.
There aren't any firm restrictions on the presentation of
the data, but do try to use something like the format
suggested above and illustrated below.
Here are a few sample entries (my own, funny thing):
Bell 1780 1940 OrangeCo,VA>KY>GentryCo,MO,USA
karen
Carr - see Kerr (karen)
Keithley c1750 1923
DEU>PA?>MD>RowanCo,NC>BathCo,KY>FloydCo,IN,USA karen
Keithley c1750 1923
DEU>PA?>RowanCo,NC>KY>StCharlesCo,MO,USA karen
Kerr 1760 now HuntingdonCo,PA>VenangoCo,PA>IA,USA
karen
Kicheli - see Keithley (karen)
an excellent format desctibed at:
http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/help/rsl6.html#Submit
This is the ROOTS SURNAME LIST and as well as getting
guidance from their format you should also submit your
names
there.
Probably would be useful to show that format here (copied
from URL above)
FORMATTING YOUR SURNAME INFORMATION
In the same message as the "How to Reach You" information,
include one line of data for each surname you are
submitting. What should the surname entries look like? Each
entry should be on one line, and should consist of five
parts. Entries that don't contain at least one date and
location will not be added to the database. The five parts
are:
The name of the family, in mixed case (Smith not SMITH or
smith).
The earliest date for which you have information about the
family. (For instance, the birthdate of the founder of the
family, or the year he or she first showed up in the
records.)
The most recent date for which you have information about
the family. (When the last person with that surname died or
skipped town, for instance. Use "now" if you know people of
this surname that are still around -- yourself, for example.
It's up to you whether a woman is considered under her
maiden surname, married surname, or both.)
The migration of the family. For instance, if my ancestors
started out in Virginia, moved to Kentucky, then on to
Missouri, this would be VA>KY>MO,USA. If I still have room
(remember, all fields should fit on one line -- the long
Keithley entry in the example below is pushing the limit),
then I add some county information to further distinguish
the family: OrangeCo,VA>KY>GentryCo,MO,USA. A list of most
of the most common abbreviations can be found at
http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/codes/ or just spell out the
location in your submission, and the person who does the
final data entry will put in the proper abbreviation, if
any.
The nametag of the submitter. This is so you can be found in
the address list. See discussion above for how to select
one.
The RootsWeb Surname Index is rather oddly computerized.
There aren't any firm restrictions on the presentation of
the data, but do try to use something like the format
suggested above and illustrated below.
Here are a few sample entries (my own, funny thing):
Bell 1780 1940 OrangeCo,VA>KY>GentryCo,MO,USA
karen
Carr - see Kerr (karen)
Keithley c1750 1923
DEU>PA?>MD>RowanCo,NC>BathCo,KY>FloydCo,IN,USA karen
Keithley c1750 1923
DEU>PA?>RowanCo,NC>KY>StCharlesCo,MO,USA karen
Kerr 1760 now HuntingdonCo,PA>VenangoCo,PA>IA,USA
karen
Kicheli - see Keithley (karen)
-
singhals
Re: Surname interests
Dave Hinz wrote:
That's the old Tiny Tafel format, Dave. DOS based.
Cheryl
On Sun, 03 Oct 2004 11:17:54 GMT, Steve Hayes <hayesmstw@hotmail.com> wrote:
N Steve Hayes
A P.O. Box 7648
What's this format please, Steve? Looks like a good combination of
human-readable and computer parse-able.
Dave
That's the old Tiny Tafel format, Dave. DOS based.
Cheryl
-
Terry Wells
Re: Surname interests
On 4 Oct 2004 15:41:24 GMT, Dave Hinz wrote:
Looks like a Tiny Tafel to me.
Regards,
Terry
What's this format please, Steve? Looks like a good combination of
human-readable and computer parse-able.
Dave
Looks like a Tiny Tafel to me.
Regards,
Terry
-
Stephen Hayes
Surname interests
FamilyNet Newsgate
Dave Hinz wrote in a message to All:
DH> From: Dave Hinz <DaveHinz@spamcop.net>
DH> On Sun, 03 Oct 2004 11:17:54 GMT, Steve Hayes
DH> <hayesmstw@hotmail.com> wrote:
DH> What's this format please, Steve? Looks like a good combination of
DH> human-readable and computer parse-able.
It is that.
It's known as a Tiny Tafel.
TINY TAFEL INFORMATION
compiled by Steve Hayes, with acknowledgements to Christopher Long
EXACTLY WHAT IS A TINY TAFEL?
A Tiny Tafel is a condensed list of the surnames you aere researching, with
information about the place and date of each line where it begins and ends,
and an indication of your level of interest in that line.
In a Tiny Tafel, an entry is made for each family line that is in the
Ahnentafel Chart. It does not contain any personal details of those ancestors.
Instead, it lists basic data about each family line - more specifically, a
surname and then the years and places of the earliest and most recent persons.
When looking for someone who's research might cross with your own, it would
not be immediately helpful to be told all of the specifics of a list of per-
sons. But, if you were told "I have research on the COLLINS family from 1700
to 1986, starting in England and ending in South Carolina" you would be able
to immediately decide if there is a possibility of your lines crossing. This
is the idea behind a Tiny Tafel.
Tiny Tafels have a rigid format. This allows computers to more easily read and
compare them. If you deviate from that format, it is very likely that your
Tiny Tafel will not be able to be processed by matching programs such as the
Tiny Tafel Editor and the Tafel Matching System.
It is possible to create a Tiny Tafel using a word processor or a text editor
(such as Windows notepad), but you need to know the specification and follow
it exactly.
This is why a special TT editor is useful, as it automatically checks for the
correct format.
If anyone would like a copy of the Tiny Tafel Editor, a shareware program by
Chris Long, please e-mail me at hayesstw@yahoo.com and ask for it. I will send
it by e-mail attachment as a .zip file.
WHY MAKE A TINY TAFEL?
Think of it as a snapshot of what you are researching. At a glance, a person
can immediately see your research and be able to tell you if any of your lines
look like they might meet with their own. If they look promising, you both may
benefit from sharing your research.
Plus, there are ways to automate the process of comparing Tiny Tafels. The TT
Editor program can be set to run fuzzy or exact matches on names,and places.
SAMPLE OF A TINY TAFEL
=========== SAMPLE TT BEGINS =============================
N Ronald Hickman
A Villa Devereux
A Route Orange
A St Brelade
A Jersey JE3 8GP
A British Channel Islands
T (0534) 43822
F Family History System (C:FAMILY .NAM)
R No modem, but will answer snail mail
R queries
Z 40 Tiny Tafel Editor v2.2 --- This TT may be freely distributed!
A350 1760*1760*ADAME\Cape Colony/Cape Colony
A536 1860:1982:ANDERTON\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
B340 1930.1951:BATAILLE\Natal, south Africa/UNKNOWN
B552 1770*1953*BENINGFIELD\London, England/Durban, South Africa
B552 1802 1802 BENNINGFIELD\Whitechapel, London/Whitechapel, London
B632 1782*1800 BREEDSCHOE\Cape Town/Cape Town
B632 1755*1755*BREITSCHUH\Eisleben, Germany/Eisleben, Germany
B650 1940.1985:BRIAN\Chelmsford, Essex, ENG/Chelsmford, Essex, ENG
B652 1829.1955:BRINK\Cape Town, South Africa/South Africa
B655 1822*1866*BUEHRMANN\Amsterdam, Nederland/Ermelo, Transvaal
B652 1940.1940:BURMEISTER\South Africa/South Africa
B622 1881.1881:BURROUGHES\Holt, Norfolk, England/Holt, Norfolk, England
B622 1919.1919:BURROUGHS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
C500 1942.1942:CAINE\Dundee, South Africa/Dundee, South Africa
C516 1935.1967:CHAMBERLAIN\Natal, South Africa/UNKNOWN
C430 1849.1882:CHILD\UK/UK
D000 1883.1965:DEE\London, England/Durban, South Africa
D146 1965.1973:DEVILLIERS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
D623 1916.1948:DURSTON\Plymouth, Devon, ENG/Durban, South Africa
E452 1773*1773:ELLINGTON\London, England/London, England
F450 1780*1825*FLAMME\Twiste, Hesse-Nassau/Cape Town, South Africa
G431 1931*1931 GOLDBOLD\Umtata, South Africa/Umtata, South Africa
H200 1868.1943:HAWKE\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
H255 1797*1966*HICKMAN\England/Nazeing, Essex, ENG
L162 1930.1930:LIVERSAGE\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
L000 1903.1974:LOWE\Pietermaritzburg/Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
L320 1910.1954:LUDIK\South Africa/South Africa
M624 1907.1948:MARSHALL\Port Elizabeth, South Africa/South Africa
M260 1935.1958:MCRAE\Natal, South Africa/UNKNOWN
M460 1868.1961:MILLER\Kwelegha, E Cape, South Africa/Durban, South Africa
N345 1826*1900:NEETHLING\Worcester, Cape Colony/UNKNOWN
P456 1914.1945*PALMER\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
P560 1888.1888.PIENAAR\South Africa/South Africa
R534 1964.1970:RANDALL\Pietermaritzburg, South Africa/Johannesburg, RSA
S363 1861.1894.STEWARD\South Africa/South Africa
T250 1896.1926:THESEN\Knysna, south Africa/Knysna, RSA
V536 1943.1946:VANDERPOEL\South Africa/South Africa
V526 1900.1963:VONSORGENFREI\South Africa/South Africa
W425 1905.1963:WILSON-YELVERTON\Natal, RSA/Natal, South Africa
W623 1803.1803.WRIGHT\London, England/London, England
W 01 Nov 1995
============ SAMPLE TT ENDS ===================================
Some notes on the structure:
N Ronald Hickman <-- Name of person
A Villa Devereux <-- Snail mail address
A Route Orange
A St Brelade
A Jersey JE3 8GP
A British Channel Islands
T (0534) 43822 <-- phone number
F Family History System (C:FAMILY .NAM) <-- genealogy software used
R No modem, but will answer snail mail
R queries
S <-- for e-mail addresses etc
Z 40 Tiny Tafel Editor v2.2 --- This TT may be freely distributed!
Note that each of these "header" lines is preceded by a field letter: N for
name, A for address, T for phone, S for electronic mail service (BBS,
CompuServe, E-mail address etc).
The last header field, Z, shows that it is the end of the header, and gives
the number of lines that follow, and, optionally, the software used to edit
the Tiny Tafel.
Then follow the lines of the Tafel proper:
D000 1883.1965:DEE\London, England/Durban, South Africa
D146 1965.1973:DEVILLIERS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
D623 1916.1948:DURSTON\Plymouth, Devon, ENG/Durban, South Africa
E452 1773*1773:ELLINGTON\London, England/London, England
The first four characters are the SOUNEX code of the surname.
Space
Earliest date of Birth
Interest level (* = high, : = moderate; . = low, blank = none)
Latest date of birth
Interest level
Surname
Earliest place of birth, preceded by \
Latest place of birth, preceded by /
The interest level following the earliest year is usually taken as the
interest in ANCESTORS of that surname.
The interest level following the latest date of birth is usually taken as the
interest level in DESCENDANTS of that surname.
HINTS ON DRAWING UP A TINY TAFEL
When you draw up your Tiny Tafel(s), here are some things to bear in mind:
1. Include the date
If your genealogy program generates a Tiny Tafel, many dates may be left blank
or be shown as 0000. Edit them to give a rough guess for the earliest and
latest year of birth. A blank date will not help the matching system. A guess
could at least get the century right. MOST MATCHING SYSTEMS IGNORE ENTRIES
WITH NO DATES!
2. Include the place
Many Tiny Tafels have a blank or "unknown" for the place field. This is of
little use to other researchers. If you don't know anything else about the
place, at least put the country. If your family travelled to many places, you
may put in several surname lines to indicate some of t
FamilyNet <> Internet Gated Mail
http://www.fmlynet.org
Dave Hinz wrote in a message to All:
DH> From: Dave Hinz <DaveHinz@spamcop.net>
DH> On Sun, 03 Oct 2004 11:17:54 GMT, Steve Hayes
DH> <hayesmstw@hotmail.com> wrote:
N Steve Hayes
A P.O. Box 7648
DH> What's this format please, Steve? Looks like a good combination of
DH> human-readable and computer parse-able.
It is that.
It's known as a Tiny Tafel.
TINY TAFEL INFORMATION
compiled by Steve Hayes, with acknowledgements to Christopher Long
EXACTLY WHAT IS A TINY TAFEL?
A Tiny Tafel is a condensed list of the surnames you aere researching, with
information about the place and date of each line where it begins and ends,
and an indication of your level of interest in that line.
In a Tiny Tafel, an entry is made for each family line that is in the
Ahnentafel Chart. It does not contain any personal details of those ancestors.
Instead, it lists basic data about each family line - more specifically, a
surname and then the years and places of the earliest and most recent persons.
When looking for someone who's research might cross with your own, it would
not be immediately helpful to be told all of the specifics of a list of per-
sons. But, if you were told "I have research on the COLLINS family from 1700
to 1986, starting in England and ending in South Carolina" you would be able
to immediately decide if there is a possibility of your lines crossing. This
is the idea behind a Tiny Tafel.
Tiny Tafels have a rigid format. This allows computers to more easily read and
compare them. If you deviate from that format, it is very likely that your
Tiny Tafel will not be able to be processed by matching programs such as the
Tiny Tafel Editor and the Tafel Matching System.
It is possible to create a Tiny Tafel using a word processor or a text editor
(such as Windows notepad), but you need to know the specification and follow
it exactly.
This is why a special TT editor is useful, as it automatically checks for the
correct format.
If anyone would like a copy of the Tiny Tafel Editor, a shareware program by
Chris Long, please e-mail me at hayesstw@yahoo.com and ask for it. I will send
it by e-mail attachment as a .zip file.
WHY MAKE A TINY TAFEL?
Think of it as a snapshot of what you are researching. At a glance, a person
can immediately see your research and be able to tell you if any of your lines
look like they might meet with their own. If they look promising, you both may
benefit from sharing your research.
Plus, there are ways to automate the process of comparing Tiny Tafels. The TT
Editor program can be set to run fuzzy or exact matches on names,and places.
SAMPLE OF A TINY TAFEL
=========== SAMPLE TT BEGINS =============================
N Ronald Hickman
A Villa Devereux
A Route Orange
A St Brelade
A Jersey JE3 8GP
A British Channel Islands
T (0534) 43822
F Family History System (C:FAMILY .NAM)
R No modem, but will answer snail mail
R queries
Z 40 Tiny Tafel Editor v2.2 --- This TT may be freely distributed!
A350 1760*1760*ADAME\Cape Colony/Cape Colony
A536 1860:1982:ANDERTON\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
B340 1930.1951:BATAILLE\Natal, south Africa/UNKNOWN
B552 1770*1953*BENINGFIELD\London, England/Durban, South Africa
B552 1802 1802 BENNINGFIELD\Whitechapel, London/Whitechapel, London
B632 1782*1800 BREEDSCHOE\Cape Town/Cape Town
B632 1755*1755*BREITSCHUH\Eisleben, Germany/Eisleben, Germany
B650 1940.1985:BRIAN\Chelmsford, Essex, ENG/Chelsmford, Essex, ENG
B652 1829.1955:BRINK\Cape Town, South Africa/South Africa
B655 1822*1866*BUEHRMANN\Amsterdam, Nederland/Ermelo, Transvaal
B652 1940.1940:BURMEISTER\South Africa/South Africa
B622 1881.1881:BURROUGHES\Holt, Norfolk, England/Holt, Norfolk, England
B622 1919.1919:BURROUGHS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
C500 1942.1942:CAINE\Dundee, South Africa/Dundee, South Africa
C516 1935.1967:CHAMBERLAIN\Natal, South Africa/UNKNOWN
C430 1849.1882:CHILD\UK/UK
D000 1883.1965:DEE\London, England/Durban, South Africa
D146 1965.1973:DEVILLIERS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
D623 1916.1948:DURSTON\Plymouth, Devon, ENG/Durban, South Africa
E452 1773*1773:ELLINGTON\London, England/London, England
F450 1780*1825*FLAMME\Twiste, Hesse-Nassau/Cape Town, South Africa
G431 1931*1931 GOLDBOLD\Umtata, South Africa/Umtata, South Africa
H200 1868.1943:HAWKE\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
H255 1797*1966*HICKMAN\England/Nazeing, Essex, ENG
L162 1930.1930:LIVERSAGE\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
L000 1903.1974:LOWE\Pietermaritzburg/Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
L320 1910.1954:LUDIK\South Africa/South Africa
M624 1907.1948:MARSHALL\Port Elizabeth, South Africa/South Africa
M260 1935.1958:MCRAE\Natal, South Africa/UNKNOWN
M460 1868.1961:MILLER\Kwelegha, E Cape, South Africa/Durban, South Africa
N345 1826*1900:NEETHLING\Worcester, Cape Colony/UNKNOWN
P456 1914.1945*PALMER\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
P560 1888.1888.PIENAAR\South Africa/South Africa
R534 1964.1970:RANDALL\Pietermaritzburg, South Africa/Johannesburg, RSA
S363 1861.1894.STEWARD\South Africa/South Africa
T250 1896.1926:THESEN\Knysna, south Africa/Knysna, RSA
V536 1943.1946:VANDERPOEL\South Africa/South Africa
V526 1900.1963:VONSORGENFREI\South Africa/South Africa
W425 1905.1963:WILSON-YELVERTON\Natal, RSA/Natal, South Africa
W623 1803.1803.WRIGHT\London, England/London, England
W 01 Nov 1995
============ SAMPLE TT ENDS ===================================
Some notes on the structure:
N Ronald Hickman <-- Name of person
A Villa Devereux <-- Snail mail address
A Route Orange
A St Brelade
A Jersey JE3 8GP
A British Channel Islands
T (0534) 43822 <-- phone number
F Family History System (C:FAMILY .NAM) <-- genealogy software used
R No modem, but will answer snail mail
R queries
S <-- for e-mail addresses etc
Z 40 Tiny Tafel Editor v2.2 --- This TT may be freely distributed!
Note that each of these "header" lines is preceded by a field letter: N for
name, A for address, T for phone, S for electronic mail service (BBS,
CompuServe, E-mail address etc).
The last header field, Z, shows that it is the end of the header, and gives
the number of lines that follow, and, optionally, the software used to edit
the Tiny Tafel.
Then follow the lines of the Tafel proper:
D000 1883.1965:DEE\London, England/Durban, South Africa
D146 1965.1973:DEVILLIERS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
D623 1916.1948:DURSTON\Plymouth, Devon, ENG/Durban, South Africa
E452 1773*1773:ELLINGTON\London, England/London, England
The first four characters are the SOUNEX code of the surname.
Space
Earliest date of Birth
Interest level (* = high, : = moderate; . = low, blank = none)
Latest date of birth
Interest level
Surname
Earliest place of birth, preceded by \
Latest place of birth, preceded by /
The interest level following the earliest year is usually taken as the
interest in ANCESTORS of that surname.
The interest level following the latest date of birth is usually taken as the
interest level in DESCENDANTS of that surname.
HINTS ON DRAWING UP A TINY TAFEL
When you draw up your Tiny Tafel(s), here are some things to bear in mind:
1. Include the date
If your genealogy program generates a Tiny Tafel, many dates may be left blank
or be shown as 0000. Edit them to give a rough guess for the earliest and
latest year of birth. A blank date will not help the matching system. A guess
could at least get the century right. MOST MATCHING SYSTEMS IGNORE ENTRIES
WITH NO DATES!
2. Include the place
Many Tiny Tafels have a blank or "unknown" for the place field. This is of
little use to other researchers. If you don't know anything else about the
place, at least put the country. If your family travelled to many places, you
may put in several surname lines to indicate some of t
FamilyNet <> Internet Gated Mail
http://www.fmlynet.org
-
Stephen Hayes
Surname interests
FamilyNet Newsgate
Dave Hinz wrote in a message to All:
DH> From: Dave Hinz <DaveHinz@spamcop.net>
DH> On Sun, 03 Oct 2004 11:17:54 GMT, Steve Hayes
DH> <hayesmstw@hotmail.com> wrote:
DH> What's this format please, Steve? Looks like a good combination of
DH> human-readable and computer parse-able.
It is that.
It's known as a Tiny Tafel.
TINY TAFEL INFORMATION
compiled by Steve Hayes, with acknowledgements to Christopher Long
EXACTLY WHAT IS A TINY TAFEL?
A Tiny Tafel is a condensed list of the surnames you aere researching, with
information about the place and date of each line where it begins and ends,
and an indication of your level of interest in that line.
In a Tiny Tafel, an entry is made for each family line that is in the
Ahnentafel Chart. It does not contain any personal details of those ancestors.
Instead, it lists basic data about each family line - more specifically, a
surname and then the years and places of the earliest and most recent persons.
When looking for someone who's research might cross with your own, it would
not be immediately helpful to be told all of the specifics of a list of per-
sons. But, if you were told "I have research on the COLLINS family from 1700
to 1986, starting in England and ending in South Carolina" you would be able
to immediately decide if there is a possibility of your lines crossing. This
is the idea behind a Tiny Tafel.
Tiny Tafels have a rigid format. This allows computers to more easily read and
compare them. If you deviate from that format, it is very likely that your
Tiny Tafel will not be able to be processed by matching programs such as the
Tiny Tafel Editor and the Tafel Matching System.
It is possible to create a Tiny Tafel using a word processor or a text editor
(such as Windows notepad), but you need to know the specification and follow
it exactly.
This is why a special TT editor is useful, as it automatically checks for the
correct format.
If anyone would like a copy of the Tiny Tafel Editor, a shareware program by
Chris Long, please e-mail me at hayesstw@yahoo.com and ask for it. I will send
it by e-mail attachment as a .zip file.
WHY MAKE A TINY TAFEL?
Think of it as a snapshot of what you are researching. At a glance, a person
can immediately see your research and be able to tell you if any of your lines
look like they might meet with their own. If they look promising, you both may
benefit from sharing your research.
Plus, there are ways to automate the process of comparing Tiny Tafels. The TT
Editor program can be set to run fuzzy or exact matches on names,and places.
SAMPLE OF A TINY TAFEL
=========== SAMPLE TT BEGINS =============================
N Ronald Hickman
A Villa Devereux
A Route Orange
A St Brelade
A Jersey JE3 8GP
A British Channel Islands
T (0534) 43822
F Family History System (C:FAMILY .NAM)
R No modem, but will answer snail mail
R queries
Z 40 Tiny Tafel Editor v2.2 --- This TT may be freely distributed!
A350 1760*1760*ADAME\Cape Colony/Cape Colony
A536 1860:1982:ANDERTON\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
B340 1930.1951:BATAILLE\Natal, south Africa/UNKNOWN
B552 1770*1953*BENINGFIELD\London, England/Durban, South Africa
B552 1802 1802 BENNINGFIELD\Whitechapel, London/Whitechapel, London
B632 1782*1800 BREEDSCHOE\Cape Town/Cape Town
B632 1755*1755*BREITSCHUH\Eisleben, Germany/Eisleben, Germany
B650 1940.1985:BRIAN\Chelmsford, Essex, ENG/Chelsmford, Essex, ENG
B652 1829.1955:BRINK\Cape Town, South Africa/South Africa
B655 1822*1866*BUEHRMANN\Amsterdam, Nederland/Ermelo, Transvaal
B652 1940.1940:BURMEISTER\South Africa/South Africa
B622 1881.1881:BURROUGHES\Holt, Norfolk, England/Holt, Norfolk, England
B622 1919.1919:BURROUGHS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
C500 1942.1942:CAINE\Dundee, South Africa/Dundee, South Africa
C516 1935.1967:CHAMBERLAIN\Natal, South Africa/UNKNOWN
C430 1849.1882:CHILD\UK/UK
D000 1883.1965:DEE\London, England/Durban, South Africa
D146 1965.1973:DEVILLIERS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
D623 1916.1948:DURSTON\Plymouth, Devon, ENG/Durban, South Africa
E452 1773*1773:ELLINGTON\London, England/London, England
F450 1780*1825*FLAMME\Twiste, Hesse-Nassau/Cape Town, South Africa
G431 1931*1931 GOLDBOLD\Umtata, South Africa/Umtata, South Africa
H200 1868.1943:HAWKE\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
H255 1797*1966*HICKMAN\England/Nazeing, Essex, ENG
L162 1930.1930:LIVERSAGE\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
L000 1903.1974:LOWE\Pietermaritzburg/Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
L320 1910.1954:LUDIK\South Africa/South Africa
M624 1907.1948:MARSHALL\Port Elizabeth, South Africa/South Africa
M260 1935.1958:MCRAE\Natal, South Africa/UNKNOWN
M460 1868.1961:MILLER\Kwelegha, E Cape, South Africa/Durban, South Africa
N345 1826*1900:NEETHLING\Worcester, Cape Colony/UNKNOWN
P456 1914.1945*PALMER\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
P560 1888.1888.PIENAAR\South Africa/South Africa
R534 1964.1970:RANDALL\Pietermaritzburg, South Africa/Johannesburg, RSA
S363 1861.1894.STEWARD\South Africa/South Africa
T250 1896.1926:THESEN\Knysna, south Africa/Knysna, RSA
V536 1943.1946:VANDERPOEL\South Africa/South Africa
V526 1900.1963:VONSORGENFREI\South Africa/South Africa
W425 1905.1963:WILSON-YELVERTON\Natal, RSA/Natal, South Africa
W623 1803.1803.WRIGHT\London, England/London, England
W 01 Nov 1995
============ SAMPLE TT ENDS ===================================
Some notes on the structure:
N Ronald Hickman <-- Name of person
A Villa Devereux <-- Snail mail address
A Route Orange
A St Brelade
A Jersey JE3 8GP
A British Channel Islands
T (0534) 43822 <-- phone number
F Family History System (C:FAMILY .NAM) <-- genealogy software used
R No modem, but will answer snail mail
R queries
S <-- for e-mail addresses etc
Z 40 Tiny Tafel Editor v2.2 --- This TT may be freely distributed!
Note that each of these "header" lines is preceded by a field letter: N for
name, A for address, T for phone, S for electronic mail service (BBS,
CompuServe, E-mail address etc).
The last header field, Z, shows that it is the end of the header, and gives
the number of lines that follow, and, optionally, the software used to edit
the Tiny Tafel.
Then follow the lines of the Tafel proper:
D000 1883.1965:DEE\London, England/Durban, South Africa
D146 1965.1973:DEVILLIERS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
D623 1916.1948:DURSTON\Plymouth, Devon, ENG/Durban, South Africa
E452 1773*1773:ELLINGTON\London, England/London, England
The first four characters are the SOUNEX code of the surname.
Space
Earliest date of Birth
Interest level (* = high, : = moderate; . = low, blank = none)
Latest date of birth
Interest level
Surname
Earliest place of birth, preceded by \
Latest place of birth, preceded by /
The interest level following the earliest year is usually taken as the
interest in ANCESTORS of that surname.
The interest level following the latest date of birth is usually taken as the
interest level in DESCENDANTS of that surname.
HINTS ON DRAWING UP A TINY TAFEL
When you draw up your Tiny Tafel(s), here are some things to bear in mind:
1. Include the date
If your genealogy program generates a Tiny Tafel, many dates may be left blank
or be shown as 0000. Edit them to give a rough guess for the earliest and
latest year of birth. A blank date will not help the matching system. A guess
could at least get the century right. MOST MATCHING SYSTEMS IGNORE ENTRIES
WITH NO DATES!
2. Include the place
Many Tiny Tafels have a blank or "unknown" for the place field. This is of
little use to other researchers. If you don't know anything else about the
place, at least put the country. If your family travelled to many places, you
may put in several surname lines to indicate some of the places. The dates
should then relate to the family's association with those places. If a family
emigrated from England to South Africa, for example, in the "South Africa"
line you would put the date of the first and last members born there, not the
date of the earliest ancestor born in England.
DON'T FORGET THE COUNTRY! This seems to be a common failing with people in the
USA who have compiled Tiny Tafels!
One of the weaknesses of the Tiny Tafel system has been the lack of a
thesaurus for place names. I suggest a good way of working around it is to use
the abbreviations found in the Genealogical Research Directory, which are
fairly widely known and used. For countries use USA (not U.S.A.), ENG for Eng-
land, CAN for Canada, RSA for South Africa, WLS for Wales, SCT for Scotland,
GER for Germany, BEL for Belgium, FRA for France, AUS for Australia, NZ for
New Zealand, and so on.
3. Include family lines you have data on, but are not researching
If you have information in your records on families that you are not
researching, include them in your TT anyway, but indicate only interest in
descendants, not ancestors. This will enable other researchers in those
families to contact you.
4. Be careful what e-mail address you use
If you post a Tiny Tafel on newsgroups, remember that spammers harvest
addresses from newsgroups. It can be useful to get a webmail address (such as
Hotmail) where spam can be automatically deleted.
5. You can use different Tiny Tafels for different purposes
While it is good to have a comprehensive Tiny Tafel for matching purposes, if
you want to post it in newsgroups, mailing lists etc, it is often better to
create a smaller one for that purpose -- if a list, for example, deals with a
single English county or US state, make a shorter list with just the names
that have connections with that place for posting there.
Above information compiled by Steve Hayes
with acknowledgements to Chris Long
E-mail: hayesmstw@hotmail.com
Web: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/7783/tafel.htm
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/7734/famhist2.htm
Steve Hayes
WWW: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/7734/stevesig.htm
E-mail: hayesmstw@hotmail.com - If it doesn't work, see webpage.
FamilyNet <> Internet Gated Mail
http://www.fmlynet.org
Dave Hinz wrote in a message to All:
DH> From: Dave Hinz <DaveHinz@spamcop.net>
DH> On Sun, 03 Oct 2004 11:17:54 GMT, Steve Hayes
DH> <hayesmstw@hotmail.com> wrote:
N Steve Hayes
A P.O. Box 7648
DH> What's this format please, Steve? Looks like a good combination of
DH> human-readable and computer parse-able.
It is that.
It's known as a Tiny Tafel.
TINY TAFEL INFORMATION
compiled by Steve Hayes, with acknowledgements to Christopher Long
EXACTLY WHAT IS A TINY TAFEL?
A Tiny Tafel is a condensed list of the surnames you aere researching, with
information about the place and date of each line where it begins and ends,
and an indication of your level of interest in that line.
In a Tiny Tafel, an entry is made for each family line that is in the
Ahnentafel Chart. It does not contain any personal details of those ancestors.
Instead, it lists basic data about each family line - more specifically, a
surname and then the years and places of the earliest and most recent persons.
When looking for someone who's research might cross with your own, it would
not be immediately helpful to be told all of the specifics of a list of per-
sons. But, if you were told "I have research on the COLLINS family from 1700
to 1986, starting in England and ending in South Carolina" you would be able
to immediately decide if there is a possibility of your lines crossing. This
is the idea behind a Tiny Tafel.
Tiny Tafels have a rigid format. This allows computers to more easily read and
compare them. If you deviate from that format, it is very likely that your
Tiny Tafel will not be able to be processed by matching programs such as the
Tiny Tafel Editor and the Tafel Matching System.
It is possible to create a Tiny Tafel using a word processor or a text editor
(such as Windows notepad), but you need to know the specification and follow
it exactly.
This is why a special TT editor is useful, as it automatically checks for the
correct format.
If anyone would like a copy of the Tiny Tafel Editor, a shareware program by
Chris Long, please e-mail me at hayesstw@yahoo.com and ask for it. I will send
it by e-mail attachment as a .zip file.
WHY MAKE A TINY TAFEL?
Think of it as a snapshot of what you are researching. At a glance, a person
can immediately see your research and be able to tell you if any of your lines
look like they might meet with their own. If they look promising, you both may
benefit from sharing your research.
Plus, there are ways to automate the process of comparing Tiny Tafels. The TT
Editor program can be set to run fuzzy or exact matches on names,and places.
SAMPLE OF A TINY TAFEL
=========== SAMPLE TT BEGINS =============================
N Ronald Hickman
A Villa Devereux
A Route Orange
A St Brelade
A Jersey JE3 8GP
A British Channel Islands
T (0534) 43822
F Family History System (C:FAMILY .NAM)
R No modem, but will answer snail mail
R queries
Z 40 Tiny Tafel Editor v2.2 --- This TT may be freely distributed!
A350 1760*1760*ADAME\Cape Colony/Cape Colony
A536 1860:1982:ANDERTON\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
B340 1930.1951:BATAILLE\Natal, south Africa/UNKNOWN
B552 1770*1953*BENINGFIELD\London, England/Durban, South Africa
B552 1802 1802 BENNINGFIELD\Whitechapel, London/Whitechapel, London
B632 1782*1800 BREEDSCHOE\Cape Town/Cape Town
B632 1755*1755*BREITSCHUH\Eisleben, Germany/Eisleben, Germany
B650 1940.1985:BRIAN\Chelmsford, Essex, ENG/Chelsmford, Essex, ENG
B652 1829.1955:BRINK\Cape Town, South Africa/South Africa
B655 1822*1866*BUEHRMANN\Amsterdam, Nederland/Ermelo, Transvaal
B652 1940.1940:BURMEISTER\South Africa/South Africa
B622 1881.1881:BURROUGHES\Holt, Norfolk, England/Holt, Norfolk, England
B622 1919.1919:BURROUGHS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
C500 1942.1942:CAINE\Dundee, South Africa/Dundee, South Africa
C516 1935.1967:CHAMBERLAIN\Natal, South Africa/UNKNOWN
C430 1849.1882:CHILD\UK/UK
D000 1883.1965:DEE\London, England/Durban, South Africa
D146 1965.1973:DEVILLIERS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
D623 1916.1948:DURSTON\Plymouth, Devon, ENG/Durban, South Africa
E452 1773*1773:ELLINGTON\London, England/London, England
F450 1780*1825*FLAMME\Twiste, Hesse-Nassau/Cape Town, South Africa
G431 1931*1931 GOLDBOLD\Umtata, South Africa/Umtata, South Africa
H200 1868.1943:HAWKE\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
H255 1797*1966*HICKMAN\England/Nazeing, Essex, ENG
L162 1930.1930:LIVERSAGE\Natal, South Africa/Natal, South Africa
L000 1903.1974:LOWE\Pietermaritzburg/Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
L320 1910.1954:LUDIK\South Africa/South Africa
M624 1907.1948:MARSHALL\Port Elizabeth, South Africa/South Africa
M260 1935.1958:MCRAE\Natal, South Africa/UNKNOWN
M460 1868.1961:MILLER\Kwelegha, E Cape, South Africa/Durban, South Africa
N345 1826*1900:NEETHLING\Worcester, Cape Colony/UNKNOWN
P456 1914.1945*PALMER\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
P560 1888.1888.PIENAAR\South Africa/South Africa
R534 1964.1970:RANDALL\Pietermaritzburg, South Africa/Johannesburg, RSA
S363 1861.1894.STEWARD\South Africa/South Africa
T250 1896.1926:THESEN\Knysna, south Africa/Knysna, RSA
V536 1943.1946:VANDERPOEL\South Africa/South Africa
V526 1900.1963:VONSORGENFREI\South Africa/South Africa
W425 1905.1963:WILSON-YELVERTON\Natal, RSA/Natal, South Africa
W623 1803.1803.WRIGHT\London, England/London, England
W 01 Nov 1995
============ SAMPLE TT ENDS ===================================
Some notes on the structure:
N Ronald Hickman <-- Name of person
A Villa Devereux <-- Snail mail address
A Route Orange
A St Brelade
A Jersey JE3 8GP
A British Channel Islands
T (0534) 43822 <-- phone number
F Family History System (C:FAMILY .NAM) <-- genealogy software used
R No modem, but will answer snail mail
R queries
S <-- for e-mail addresses etc
Z 40 Tiny Tafel Editor v2.2 --- This TT may be freely distributed!
Note that each of these "header" lines is preceded by a field letter: N for
name, A for address, T for phone, S for electronic mail service (BBS,
CompuServe, E-mail address etc).
The last header field, Z, shows that it is the end of the header, and gives
the number of lines that follow, and, optionally, the software used to edit
the Tiny Tafel.
Then follow the lines of the Tafel proper:
D000 1883.1965:DEE\London, England/Durban, South Africa
D146 1965.1973:DEVILLIERS\Pretoria, South Africa/Pretoria, South Africa
D623 1916.1948:DURSTON\Plymouth, Devon, ENG/Durban, South Africa
E452 1773*1773:ELLINGTON\London, England/London, England
The first four characters are the SOUNEX code of the surname.
Space
Earliest date of Birth
Interest level (* = high, : = moderate; . = low, blank = none)
Latest date of birth
Interest level
Surname
Earliest place of birth, preceded by \
Latest place of birth, preceded by /
The interest level following the earliest year is usually taken as the
interest in ANCESTORS of that surname.
The interest level following the latest date of birth is usually taken as the
interest level in DESCENDANTS of that surname.
HINTS ON DRAWING UP A TINY TAFEL
When you draw up your Tiny Tafel(s), here are some things to bear in mind:
1. Include the date
If your genealogy program generates a Tiny Tafel, many dates may be left blank
or be shown as 0000. Edit them to give a rough guess for the earliest and
latest year of birth. A blank date will not help the matching system. A guess
could at least get the century right. MOST MATCHING SYSTEMS IGNORE ENTRIES
WITH NO DATES!
2. Include the place
Many Tiny Tafels have a blank or "unknown" for the place field. This is of
little use to other researchers. If you don't know anything else about the
place, at least put the country. If your family travelled to many places, you
may put in several surname lines to indicate some of the places. The dates
should then relate to the family's association with those places. If a family
emigrated from England to South Africa, for example, in the "South Africa"
line you would put the date of the first and last members born there, not the
date of the earliest ancestor born in England.
DON'T FORGET THE COUNTRY! This seems to be a common failing with people in the
USA who have compiled Tiny Tafels!
One of the weaknesses of the Tiny Tafel system has been the lack of a
thesaurus for place names. I suggest a good way of working around it is to use
the abbreviations found in the Genealogical Research Directory, which are
fairly widely known and used. For countries use USA (not U.S.A.), ENG for Eng-
land, CAN for Canada, RSA for South Africa, WLS for Wales, SCT for Scotland,
GER for Germany, BEL for Belgium, FRA for France, AUS for Australia, NZ for
New Zealand, and so on.
3. Include family lines you have data on, but are not researching
If you have information in your records on families that you are not
researching, include them in your TT anyway, but indicate only interest in
descendants, not ancestors. This will enable other researchers in those
families to contact you.
4. Be careful what e-mail address you use
If you post a Tiny Tafel on newsgroups, remember that spammers harvest
addresses from newsgroups. It can be useful to get a webmail address (such as
Hotmail) where spam can be automatically deleted.
5. You can use different Tiny Tafels for different purposes
While it is good to have a comprehensive Tiny Tafel for matching purposes, if
you want to post it in newsgroups, mailing lists etc, it is often better to
create a smaller one for that purpose -- if a list, for example, deals with a
single English county or US state, make a shorter list with just the names
that have connections with that place for posting there.
Above information compiled by Steve Hayes
with acknowledgements to Chris Long
E-mail: hayesmstw@hotmail.com
Web: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/7783/tafel.htm
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/7734/famhist2.htm
Steve Hayes
WWW: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/7734/stevesig.htm
E-mail: hayesmstw@hotmail.com - If it doesn't work, see webpage.
FamilyNet <> Internet Gated Mail
http://www.fmlynet.org