Carol served as an MGS Director from 2015-2017 and as president of MGS Greater Portland Chapter (2008-9.) She is transcribing the Vital Records of Durham, Maine. Prior to her genealogy career, she worked as a college instructor and as a management development consultant and coach for Chase Manhattan Bank, UNUM, and McCoy Training and Development Resources, a one-person company. She has published books and articles on management training. eMail. |
His interest in genealogy began when he was 14, on a trip to a family Cemetery in Corinna, Maine with his father and started asking who were the various people buried in the lot and how they were related to him. This led to a meeting with his great-aunt who told him family stories of his ancestors, got him started in tracing all lines of his family. His passion for DNA began in 2016 after DNA testing revealed that his maternal grandfather was actually a neighbor to his grandparents and so began a journey to find his new relatives and ancestors and share his story of discovery with others. Peter lives in South Gardiner, Maine, but his roots are mostly in Penobscot and Piscataquis Counties and most of his family ancestors were early New England settlers and pioneers. eMail |
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As a member of Maine Old Cemetery Association, Penobscot County Genealogical Society, Taconnett Falls Genealogy Library and Washington County Historical & Genealogical Society, I’ve seen the power of volunteerism firsthand. Visit the Library at Winslow or the new Heritage Center at Machias, or any formerly forlorn cemetery after a MOCA workshop, and you’ll see for yourself. My interest in family history started when I spent childhood summers with my grandparents and went with them on their rounds to visit (i.e. check in on) older relatives in Downeast Maine and New Brunswick. Oh, the stories! I’m especially interested in people and families who once thought nothing of moving back and forth across a blurry border. Another interest is bringing to heirlooms to light: i.e. letters, diaries, documents, Bibles, autograph albums, and photographs, particularly of hardscrabble folks who might otherwise have left little record. Toward that end, I’ve been featuring items collected over many years on my blog “Heirlooms Reunited.” eMail |
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Celeste retired from Hewlett-Packard in Littleton, MA. in 2003 as a Complex Problem Manager in Customer Services. She and her husband David moved back to their native state of Maine and live on Thompson Lake in Otisfield. She received a B.A. in American History from the University of Maine and a Masters of Library Science from Simmons College. Celeste is also a member of the Board of Trustees and active volunteer at the Casco Public Library. With her mother, she has researched all sides of her family genealogy and has also done her husband’s families. She has continued to add to her mother’s collection of over 200 Maine Town History books and related items. eMail |
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Lynne was born and raised in suburban Chicago and is a graduate of Elmhurst College with a degree in Business Administration. She worked for over 30 years in various phases of horticultural marketing including procurement and sales in the mass market floral area in the Midwest, South and New England. Currently, Lynne is a Community Education Assistant and Volunteer Coordinator for the UMaine Cooperative Extension Master Gardener Volunteer program. She serves on various volunteer boards with a focus on Food Security for all. Lynne lives in Brunswick with her husband Ward and daughter Carolyn. eMail
Her term expires December 31, 2019.
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Helen has been doing family history for over 40 years and is the keeper of her family’s documents and artifacts. She holds degrees in anthropology from Ohio State University and the University of Michigan. As an anthropologist, her approach to genealogy is that of a community-wide study. Her particular areas of genealogical interest and expertise include the federal census, Ohio, New York, and West Virginia. Helen is married to Maine native William “Bill” Chapman; they have two sons. Since retiring to Maine Helen has become active in legislative issues concerning vital records access and cemetery preservation and access for family members. She also compiled an inventory of the records vault at the Lincoln County Courthouse where she was delighted to find original federal population and non-population censuses for most Lincoln County towns for 1850-1870. |
She first became interested in genealogy while still in high school after hearing her grandmother say that her own grandfather had been in the Civil War and was buried down south. She has published three books on her ancestral families of Clark, Hinckley, and Malbon, and also published a book on her “adopted” Oliver family from the Georgetown/Phippsburg region. Prior to this change of career, she worked for law firms in Bath as a legal secretary, and in Rockland as a bookkeeper. In her leisure time, Marlene transcribes images from early church records for the Congregational Library Archives in Boston. She has served on various Councils at her local church and is a member of its hand-bell choir and prayer shawl group. During the warmer months, she enjoys gardening, nature and taking morning walks. eMail
Her term expires December 31, 2020.
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Her interest in genealogy began during her college years when she inherited a silver spoon that had passed to her as the seventh generation of youngest daughters. She and her mother set out to discover the identities of those women. She has been researching ever since. Having just about exhausted work on her own family, the move to Maine opened a new avenue to research her husband’s Waldo County ancestors. She has published articles in The Essex Genealogist, The NEHG Register, American Ancestors, Mayflower Descendant and The Maine Genealogist. eMail |
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Her interest in genealogy began in the 1970s when a family story led her on the detective trail to find out whether it was true or not. It wasn’t 100% true, it had been embellished over the years but that was all it took to get her hooked. Currently a member and newsletter editor for the Penobscot County chapter and chapter representative for the new MGS chapter of Washington County. She volunteers at the Franco Centre at the University of Maine and takes classes through Penobscot County Senior College through the Eastern Area Agency on Aging. As she says you can never stop learning! |
His love for genealogy stems from summer evenings spent sitting on his parents’ outdoor patio listening to his grandparents reminisce about the family. Since 1994, he has been the editor of The Maine Genealogist and editor of the Maine Genealogical Society’s focal Maine Families in 1790 project. Since 2000, he has been a coeditor of The American Genealogist and in 2017 was named a Consulting Editor of Vermont Genealogy. Joe has authored or edited eighteen books on various genealogical subjects and contributed numerous articles to genealogical journals. His genealogical research and publications have been focused mainly on Maine, New England, and New York. In 2000 he was appointed a Fellow of the American Society of Genealogists (FASG). eMail |
I was born in Farmingdale, Maine, with family roots in that area, Belfast area, and the Dover-Dexter-Cambridge area. After asking my parents and grandparents family questions, I started researching my family tree in 1980, staying a week at a time with my grandparents who lived near the Maine State Archives. I have been an officer in the French Family Assn, National Assn of Leavitt Families, Strafford County chapter – NH Society of Genealogists, York County Genealogical Society, MGS Greater Portland chapter, and still wear multiple hats, especially as Leavitt Genealogist trying to sort and compile all the Leavitt families. I have been compiling every-name genealogies for many of my families since the 1980s, mainly for finding new cousins and documenting my ancestors on my RolandRhoades.com website. I am also deeply involved in DNA research and have infected many of my cousins with the genealogy bug. eMail |
Brian’s interest in family history research started when he heard tales of horse thieves on the Mayflower being his ancestors. No horse thieves were ever found, but he has found connections to some Mayflower passengers as well as interesting stories of adoptions, military service, and family members that “disappear” from the records. He is currently working on a book about his great-great-grandfather who was accused of murder and spent 3 years in prison while working through the court system before being set free in 1904. eMail |
Marion’s father passed away when Emily was 5, and the decision was made to move to Thomaston and claim the home place. The “formative years” were spent there, thankfully outside the walls of the state’s penitentiary. Emily left this idyllic setting to attend college at the University of Southern Maine (known then as the University of Maine at Portland-Gorham, or POGO), and managed to get a B.A. in Geography/Anthropology in 1978. She returned to Augusta to work, and spent the last 37 years at Maine State Library in various positions. In 1988, she earned a Master of Library and Information Studies degree from the University of Rhode Island. A co-worker retired in 2007, and she added genealogy to her job duties. Emily is a new retiree! In addition to MGS, Emily is a board member of Kennebec Historical Society, and Secretary from 2003 to the present. She is also a Program Committee member. She lives in South China with her wonderful cats Mindy and Binford. eMail |
Ruth Gray, Honorary Director |
2017 Directors |