tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7849506599116665235.post2085835666369119864..comments2024-02-06T01:45:26.884-06:00Comments on The We Tree Genealogy Blog: Mapping with Google Course for GenealogyAmy Coffin, MLIShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00612044786240692282noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7849506599116665235.post-72883386078514115702013-06-17T15:51:03.855-05:002013-06-17T15:51:03.855-05:00This is a great tip! I signed up for it after I re...This is a great tip! I signed up for it after I read this post and I got my certificate for Google Maps and am now working on Google Earth. I could have finished the Maps section a bit sooner if I didn't get so carried away with my map project. I decided to do a whole thing about the Love family from Scotland to New Jersey. I knew a lot of the stuff in the course but not all of it, so I definitely learned more then I thought I would!Kathleen Moorehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01361040241014947379noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7849506599116665235.post-55059541405841905472013-06-12T20:55:13.667-05:002013-06-12T20:55:13.667-05:00Thanks for the heads up on the course! I use Goog...Thanks for the heads up on the course! I use Google Maps a lot to plot addresses for genealogical purposes. I have maps for Chicago & its northern suburbs as well as Springfield, Illinois; Houston and Corpus Christi, Texas (and now Fredericksburg, too); German and Lithuaniam ancestors; Portland, Oregon (Ewald Pape's architectural works); Pensacola, Florida; and a few other places. It's a great tool, especially for seeing how buildings look today (if they still exist) with Street View.Amandahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09902380558583190500noreply@blogger.com