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  • Peter Cromar 1690 descendancy study is complete!

    Peter Cromar 1690 descendancy study is complete!

    Six months Six months to the day after I received Ron Cromar’s notes from Paul Smillie, I finalized the descendancy study for our progenitor Peter Cromar. If you wish to cut right to the chase and see the results, you’ll notice a new link in the menu above: Database. As of this writing, the compilation…

    Read on …

    25 05 2022
  • Anniversaries, outreach, and progress

    Anniversaries, outreach, and progress

    Two anniversaries This is a big anniversary in a couple of ways, and while I don’t want to interrupt the flow of documentation this blog is intended to journal, it would respect the spirit of this work to include a brief mention. My mother’s passing First and foremost, this week marks the anniversary of my…

    Read on …

    12 05 2022
  • Genealogical data and visual design II: mixing metaphors

    Genealogical data and visual design II: mixing metaphors

    In our previous post, we discussed Edward Tufte’s notions about the rich visual expression of data, and we introduced some basic metaphors used in genealogical diagramming: trees, fans, roads, timelines, quilts, and networks. We observed any one of these can express perhaps one or two classes of data very well, but often at the expense…

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    9 05 2022
  • Genealogical data and visual design I: metaphors in visualization

    Genealogical data and visual design I: metaphors in visualization

    Will they tell your story? TimeWho lives, who dies, who tells your story? TimeWill they tell your story? TimeWho lives, who dies, who tells your story? — Lin-Manuel Miranda Genealogy is data… … but what does this data do? Well, for starters, it can tell your story. Data, alas, does not willfully do so. Left…

    Read on …

    16 04 2022
  • The Cromar-Robb line IV: allies and associates in the Scottish Diaspora

    The Cromar-Robb line IV: allies and associates in the Scottish Diaspora

    Many names Where the previous post debated the merits of a one-name study for the Cromar family, this one takes on the reality that “one-name” is an abstraction. Like anyone else on earth, Cromars are intertwined with a vast array of family lines, but given the close-knit nature of communities bound by geography and technology,…

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    3 04 2022
  • The Cromar-Robb line III: toponymies, diminutives and one-name studies

    The Cromar-Robb line III: toponymies, diminutives and one-name studies

    World-wide distribution of the Cromar and Robb surnames in 2014. Dark red equates to higher frequency, transitioning to pale yellow representing lower incidence. Robb is more geographically dispersed, but Cromar seems to be easier to trace. We’ll explore why. | Screen-captures from Forebears A couple of posts back, I had arrived at a mid-point in…

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    20 03 2022
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cromarbaile

Recent Posts

  • Day 2: 15 June 2023 – “Cromar Day” with Kathy Ader of Wild History and Whisky Tours28 12 2023
  • Day 0/1 – 13 & 14 June 2023: Our Journey Begins!10 09 2023
  • Planning our trip to Scotland: Leveraging lessons from my brother, Bill2 09 2023
  • The trouble with GEDCOM17 06 2023

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Rescuing my humble ancestors from the enormous condescension of posterity