Denise Moss-Fritch

Member for
14 years 1 month
Find a Grave ID

Bio

I started my genealogical researches in 1965 using paper forms. I would NEVER return to paper forms with their major problems when transferring information by hand from one form to another.

In the mid-1980s I moved my paper genealogy records to computers, first onto CPM+, then DOS, and finally to Windows family history software. Over the years I have used most genealogy software, including many no longer available, such as The Master Genealogist (1994-2002) and Genbox (2002-2016).

In 1972 I completed the Ancestry Research Certificate program (Brigham Young University via mail) and in 2002 a Canadian Records program (National Institute for Genealogical Studies via the Internet). In the early 2000s I was the Review Editor for the "APG Quarterly" (Association of Professional Genealogists).You will find my early work on CD 1 of the World Family Tree series, FamilySearch Person records, the Loyalist Directory (United Empire Loyalists Association website), Find A Grave, and various 'family record collections' included in Ancestry record databases.

I was a member of the National Genealogical Society (1971-2016). In December 2016 I resigned my life membership with NGS in protest to NGS policies and treatment of individual members; along with their repeated refusal to offer any guidance to recording LGBTQ family members.

I retired from the US Army in 1983 as an investigator for counterintelligence (HUMINT) during which I "supervised and conducted counterintelligence surveys and investigations to detect, identify, assess, counter, exploit and neutralize adversarial, Foreign Intelligence Service, and terrorist threats to national security".

After retiring from the US Army, I spent the next 26 years as a writer (database API, schema, and reports) and manager (with an MBA) in Silicon Valley. The last decade before retiring at 66, I was the writer and manager of a publications department for an international company.

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NOTE: All photos I take and submit to Find A Grave are given freely and are to be considered in the public domain.

I started my genealogical researches in 1965 using paper forms. I would NEVER return to paper forms with their major problems when transferring information by hand from one form to another.

In the mid-1980s I moved my paper genealogy records to computers, first onto CPM+, then DOS, and finally to Windows family history software. Over the years I have used most genealogy software, including many no longer available, such as The Master Genealogist (1994-2002) and Genbox (2002-2016).

In 1972 I completed the Ancestry Research Certificate program (Brigham Young University via mail) and in 2002 a Canadian Records program (National Institute for Genealogical Studies via the Internet). In the early 2000s I was the Review Editor for the "APG Quarterly" (Association of Professional Genealogists).You will find my early work on CD 1 of the World Family Tree series, FamilySearch Person records, the Loyalist Directory (United Empire Loyalists Association website), Find A Grave, and various 'family record collections' included in Ancestry record databases.

I was a member of the National Genealogical Society (1971-2016). In December 2016 I resigned my life membership with NGS in protest to NGS policies and treatment of individual members; along with their repeated refusal to offer any guidance to recording LGBTQ family members.

I retired from the US Army in 1983 as an investigator for counterintelligence (HUMINT) during which I "supervised and conducted counterintelligence surveys and investigations to detect, identify, assess, counter, exploit and neutralize adversarial, Foreign Intelligence Service, and terrorist threats to national security".

After retiring from the US Army, I spent the next 26 years as a writer (database API, schema, and reports) and manager (with an MBA) in Silicon Valley. The last decade before retiring at 66, I was the writer and manager of a publications department for an international company.

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NOTE: All photos I take and submit to Find A Grave are given freely and are to be considered in the public domain.

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