Linda and Everyone, I'm so glad that you are putting this resource back into the present. Reminds me though that the Internet Archive (and Wayback Machine) is useful for finding such sites that have disappeared. Check out: http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www2.eos.net/dajend/catholic.html to see how The Catholic Heritage of Cincinnati Ohio website looked at its last update before being taken down. This Archives site can help you find many (?most, ?all) websites that have been taken down and are no longer findable on the internet (some from as early as 1996). You only need to know the url you used and, there you are. I discovered this resource when I couldn't go back to a family page I had found several years before, and needed to document what I had used. Good hunting! Pat Salt rainy and raw MA [email protected]
Pat & all I had put the instructions for the WayBack Machine on the Hamilton Co OHGenWeb section titled Churches and Synagogues when I realized that The Catholic Heritage of Cincinnati Ohio website was no longer online. But, I've changed it this week as the webmaster of that site, David Endres, is in the process of forwarding all of the html pages to me which I'm uploading to my Hamilton Co OHWenWeb site here: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ohhamilt/catholic/catholic.html This is what was formerly http://www2.eos.net/dajend/catholic.html Not all of the links work yet as David has not sent me all of the pages. I rec'd a few yesterday which I will be uploading later today. He's trying to go through and make some minor adjustments before he sends. Meanwhile the Wayback Machine http://www.archive.org/web/web.php is helpful not only to find websites which have disappeared, but also to see how an existing website has changed over the years. Perhaps there was something on a page that isn't there any longer, you still might be able to locate it if you know the url where it was formerly located. BTW, I have recieved an amazing amount of information this week, not only from David Endres, but Ruth Battle has contributed a number of Cincinnati Year Book indexes, several with scans of the senior classes, all which are now inline & Joan Asche has asked me to take over her website where she's had numerous Cincinnati maps, news articles regarding the 1884 Riot when the courthouse burned etc. I've added most of what she's sent, will be working on the 1884 Riot info next. I have a page where I try to remember to list each update to the website which you can find here: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ohhamilt/updates.htm Linda Boorom ----- Original Message ----- From: "Pat Salt" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, May 04, 2008 10:21 AM Subject: Re: [OHHAMILT] Archdiocese of Cincinnati-Parish Histories > Linda and Everyone, > > I'm so glad that you are putting this resource back into the present. > Reminds me though that the Internet Archive (and Wayback Machine) is > useful for finding such sites that have disappeared. Check out: > http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www2.eos.net/dajend/catholic.html to > see how The Catholic Heritage of Cincinnati Ohio website looked at its > last update before being taken down. > > This Archives site can help you find many (?most, ?all) websites that > have been taken down and are no longer findable on the internet (some > from as early as 1996). You only need to know the url you used and, > there you are. I discovered this resource when I couldn't go back to a > family page I had found several years before, and needed to document > what I had used. > > > Good hunting! > > Pat Salt > rainy and raw MA > [email protected] >