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Latest Articles

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  • 22 Sep 2025 2:10 PM | Anonymous

    Friday, Oct. 9th, 2025 is a red letter day for Norwegian-Americans in North Iowa an elsewhere.  To the very day, it is the 200th anniversary of the arrival of the first boatload of Norwegians to the United States.  It is the bicentennial of the start of one of the greatest mass migrations in history.  It is how North Iowa was settled.  It is why there are so many Norwegian Lutheran churches and communities stretching from Lake Michigan to the Pacific Northwest.

    On July 4, 1825, the schooner Restauration left Stavanger, Norway with 52 passengers on a one way trip to the Port of New York.   The wind-powered vessel reached New York on Oct. 9, 1825.  One newborn was added on route.  No one died on route.  Over the next one hundred years, almost 900,000 of their countrymen followed and thousands and thousands found their way to Iowa.

    This bicentennial has already been celebrated with coffee parties in Belmond, a Kumla feed in Thor, a gala banquet in Lake Mills, parades in Decorah and Spring Grove and scores of events nationwide.   Indeed Crown Prince Haakon of Norway will be in Decorah to celebrate the anniversary in October.

    A re-enactment of the 1825 voyage is underway.   A re-created schooner left Norway on July 4, 2025.  It will dock in New York on Oct. 9, 2025.    The arrival will be celebrated to say the least.

    This bicentennial is an opportunity for parents to share some family history.   After all, not all immigrants came on the Mayflower.  Share some stories.  Dust off that old family photo album.  Family heritage is worth sharing and celebrating.


  • 22 Sep 2025 2:06 PM | Anonymous

    Shropshire Council has announced that a huge collection of historic Shropshire newspapers, dating back to 1772 have been digitised and made available for people to view online, thanks to a project delivered by Shropshire Archives and Shropshire Libraries, in partnership with Findmypast and the British Newspaper Archive.

    Historic Shropshire newspapers are now viewable online

    The collection of local newspapers documents the everyday life of communities, with reports on everything from village fetes and town council meetings to entertainment listings, sporting fixtures and reports on crimes and sentencing.

    They also feature details relating to birth, marriage, and deaths, often accompanied by lengthy obituaries and reports on society weddings, so an ideal hunting ground for family historians.

    In all, 288,672 images have been added to the British Newspaper Archive.  This includes a significant increase in the number of copies of the Shropshire Star and Newport and Market Drayton Advertiser that are already included in the archive, as well as the addition of new titles such as the Shropshire and Montgomeryshire Times, the Shropshire Mercury, the Oswestry Herald, Bridgnorth Beacon and many more.

    The digitised newspapers are available to view for a subscription fee via the British Newspaper Archive or can be accessed free of charge by visitors to Shropshire Archives or any of the 21 Shropshire Libraries. The addition of the new collection makes it simpler than ever to uncover stories, trace family roots, and connect with the county’s history.

    James Owen, Shropshire Council Portfolio holder for Housing and Leisure commented: 

    “Newspapers are a treasure trove for anyone interested in social, local, and family history, offering vivid insights into the lives, events, and communities of the past. Until now, accessing these records required painstaking searches through fragile originals or scrolling through reels of microfilm.”

    More details about the value of historic newspapers will be revealed during a free talk at the Shropshire Archives on Thursday 25 September at 2pm. For details check out https://www.shropshirearchives.org.uk/blog/event/off-the-shelf-newspapers/


  • 22 Sep 2025 1:53 PM | Anonymous

    Kenneth Zimmerman is a highly experienced genealogist focusing mostly on Germans who settled in Pennsylvania. He has now written an article in his blog that will interest many others who research Germans who settled in Pennsylvania. He writes:

    "Got Pennsylvania Germans? Here’s a series for you! You can view it from this link: https://www.roots-branches.com/got-pennsylvania-germans-heres-a-series-for-you/"


  • 22 Sep 2025 1:33 PM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release written by the folks at WikiTree:

    In 2016, the WikiTree community created something new: an around-the-clock genealogy research marathon. Since then, there have been many similar events, but the Source-a-Thon remains the original and most popular event of its kind. The 10th annual Source-a-Thon will be held October 3–6, 2025. 

    The Source-a-Thon focuses attention on the importance of citing sources. Inexperienced genealogists don’t always record their sources, or their tree has been handed down to them. Second-hand family history deserves to be preserved and shared, but it needs to be verified. In the Source-a-Thon, hundreds of genealogists work side-by-side in teams – such as the Flying Dutchmen, French Fries, Germany Genies, Kiwi Crew, Mighty Maple Leaves, Team Massachusetts, Team Virginia, Toddlin’ Tortoises, and Wizards of Aus – to add sources to as many profiles as possible.

    Of a previous Source-a-Thon, high-scoring participant Charlotte Shockey wrote, "Despite little sleep in 72-hours I had a lot of fun working towards a common goal with my fellow WikiTreers in a competitive spirit! The cherries on top were the real sense of community with loads of laughs and friends that were made.”

    To encourage participants, individuals and organizations from around the genealogy community are donating prizes to be awarded at random. Over $2,000 in prizes have been donated and more are expected. To donate a prize, please contact eowyn@wikitree.com. To register for the event and be eligible for prize drawings, join WikiTree (it’s free!) and then choose your team.

    WikiTree has been growing for 17 years, from the grassroots up. Our community now includes over one million members and over 42 million person profiles. Our tree is considered the most accurate and trusted global tree because of WikiTree’s collaborative culture, sourcing requirements, and incorporation of DNA. See this 90-second animated explanation.



  • 22 Sep 2025 8:11 AM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release written. by the folks at the Dawes Arboretum:

    Thanks to partial funding by an Ohio Local History Alliance (OLHA) Digitization Grant, The Dawes Arboretum is excited to announce that the collection of our co-founder, Beman Dawes, has been scanned and is now available online for you to explore!

    With the support of the OLHA grant, The Dawes Arboretum’s archive was able to purchase a new flatbed scanner, scanning software, storage and photo editing software which were used to complete the digitization of this project. These new tools will continue to support future efforts as we work to grow our digital archive. Currently, about 45% of our entire archival collection has been digitized. There is still much work to be done, but we are eager to see what hidden treasures we will uncover next!

    The goal of digitizing Beman Dawes’ manuscripts was to ensure the accessibility of Dawes’ personal and business papers relating to Ohio. By digitizing this collection, we ensure that those interested in Ohio’s history regarding gas, petroleum, politics and environmental conservation can learn from Dawes' legacy.

    This collection features correspondence and documents spanning from 1876 to 1953. The manuscripts in this collection consist of letters, shares, investments, properties owned by the Dawes family, trust information and more. Together, these manuscripts highlight Dawes' impact on Ohio’s industrial growth and environmental stewardship, making his collection substantial not only to The Arboretum but also to the state of Ohio. Much of the information in this collection is one-of-a-kind and cannot be found in any other repository!

    We invite you to explore this online collection and discover the remarkable legacy our co-founder, Beman Dawes! If you have any questions about archival collections available, contact our Archivist at zkthomas@dawesarb.org.

    View the collection

    Interested in helping us expand our digital collection or assisting with other archival projects? Please reach out to our Volunteer Coordinator at mgconklin@dawesarb.org.  


  • 22 Sep 2025 7:52 AM | Anonymous

    Sudden cardiac arrest and death among children and young people can happen to anyone at any time. Experts say improving prevention efforts, such as a national screening program, is an ambitious but achievable goal that could save lives. New recommendations put forth by experts establish a path toward a new paradigm for primary and secondary prevention.

    The consensus statement was led by the Cardiac Safety Research Consortium (CSRC), a group of experts and stakeholders from public, private and academic sectors, that first convened two decades ago to solve vexing issues in cardiovascular medicine. The group’s third and most recent think tank in 2024 builds on the momentum of the previous ones. In a full report, published in the American Heart Journal, the authors describe sudden cardiac death in the young (SCDY) and sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) as public health issues, discuss challenges in screening, posit new prevention strategies, and call for increased collaboration.

    Challenges with screening

    Current screening methods are falling short. So says, Peter Aziz, MD, a pediatric electrophysiologist at Cleveland Clinic and an author of the report. While economical, reasonable and endorsed by medical organizations, like the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Heart Association, healthcare professionals must contend with several issues.

    Currently, screening is assessed by obtaining a detailed family history and physical as a sports clearance measure. “As long as there are no red flags, then the patient is cleared to play,” says Dr. Aziz. “While that’s all well-intended and cost-effective, which is certainly part of the equation, this approach isn’t capturing everyone.”

    Unknown or incomplete information about family cardiac history can complicate the clinical picture. And the bigger question: what if the child doesn’t participate in sports? Current screening is rooted in this assumption. With these issues in mind, the CSRC made the following consensus statements/recommendations.

    Consensus statements and recommendations

    Recognize sudden cardiac death and arrest in the young as a public health issue

    Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in children occurs more than 20,000 times per year, the authors note, with only about 10% surviving to hospital discharge. SCDY tends to capture a greater share of public attention and awareness, but Dr. Aziz stresses it’s a public health issue that can affect any child at any time. Improved primary and secondary prevention strategies are critical.

    Establish a comprehensive national screening approach

    Efforts must focus on inclusivity: athletes and nonathletes, the symptomatic and asymptomatic, those with a positive family history and those without. Countries like Italy and Japan have implemented a national screening processes that are comprehensive and longitudinal. While there is no one-size-fits -all approach and each country is different, Dr. Aziz lauds the effort and adds, “If it’s going to be universal and uniform, this function would require a group of healthcare professionals to lead the initiative and make screening accessible long term, either through the school system or routine well visits.”

    Utilize emerging technology to automate screening

    AI-based tools, like automated screening of electrocardiograms (ECGs), may help address an existing roadblock for a national screening initiative. Use of ECGs could contribute to a higher screening quality, but also introduce unintended and, frankly, untenable consequences, like increased costs, additional time and managing false positives.

    Dr. Aziz notes that the group is partnering with organizations like Who We Play For, to help cultivate and integrate such tools into practice. “With a repository of ECG data on kids, we are exploring how we use that data to inform our practices, figure out what's normal, what's not normal, and then hopefully feed an AI system to be able to solve that problem for us, too,” he explains.

    Create tailored education/response plans for community readiness

    While a national screening program would address primary prevention, the CSRC also notes improving secondary prevention efforts. We need to be asking, “Is the community equipped to manage a child who goes into cardiac arrest? The outcomes for pediatric cardiac arrest are dismal outside of the hospital,” notes Dr. Aziz.

    Providers, educators and others who work closely with children and who may be likely to encounter a SCA or SCDY event should be adequately trained to handle a cardiac emergency. High-profile media attention on sudden cardiac arrest events, like in the case of NFL player DeMar Hamlin during a televised game, highlights a positive outcome in secondary prevention efforts. Dr. Aziz is hopeful that people learn from this positive outcome and others like it, adding that CPR training and accessible AEDs are key aspects of effective secondary prevention.

    Strengthen collaboration among all stakeholders

    Finally, the authors assert that stronger partnership is needed to connect the work happening in the silos of academic and organized medicine, governmental, nonprofit and industry groups to develop a unified front for this effort. This will help usher in widespread consensus and adoption of new guidelines and practices, bringing prevention of SCDY and SCA into a new era.


  • 22 Sep 2025 7:45 AM | Anonymous

    A postcard mailed more than 70 years ago from the United Nations headquarters in New York has finally found its way home, closing a mystery decades in the making.

    The card, postmarked June 17, 1953, was addressed to “Rev. F.E. Ball and family” in Ottawa, Illinois. But it never arrived—until it suddenly resurfaced at the Ottawa post office this August. Postal officials believe it had been misplaced at the UN for the past 72 years before being rediscovered and sent out.By then, the Ball family no longer lived at the address.

    Ottawa’s postmaster, Mark Thompson, refused to let the artifact be lost again. He reached out to the community, and soon local reporters, genealogists, and volunteers at the LaSalle County Genealogy Guild joined the hunt.

    Their research pointed to Dr. Alan Ball, now 88 and living in Sandpoint, Idaho.Ball had been just 16 years old when he mailed the postcard during a stopover in New York. He was en route to Puerto Rico, where he planned to spend the summer with his Aunt Mary on her coffee plantation. He had saved for years by mowing lawns and shoveling snow to afford the trip, describing it later as his first true step into adulthood.

    The postcard, which simply let his parents know he had made it as far as New York, never reached them. Instead, it remained in limbo for decades.

    Last week, Ball finally received the long-lost message, delivered with a smile from a Sandpoint postal worker who told him, “Sorry it’s so late.”Ball laughed at the surreal twist, saying it was astonishing to hold a card he had written as a teenager. Thanks to a postmaster’s persistence and a team of genealogists, the postcard’s journey—spanning more than 2,500 miles and seven decades—was finally complete.Credit: CNN NewsourceExplore: NBCPalmSprings.com, where we are connecting the Valley.

  • 22 Sep 2025 7:39 AM | Anonymous

    We are so excited to have the opportunity to bring to you an in-person and professional speaker for our Lunch & Learn next week.  It is not often we are able to do that and we cannot thank MIchele Bailey enough for agreeing to take the time from her very busy schedule to bring this talk to us.  She is President of East Texas Genealogical Society, Director of Education for Texas State Genealogical Society and the Event Coordinator for the 23rd Annual Family History Conference – East Texas, being held in Tyler on October 11, 2025, to name only a few of her commitments.

    Lunch & Learn will be held this coming Wednesday, September 24, 2025, from 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. at 611 North Davis St., Sulphur Springs, Tx.  The Hopkins County Genealogical Society invites anyone who wants to learn more about doing genealogical research to join us.  You are encouraged to bring your laptop or tablet, and your sack lunch, salad or drive-through meal.  

    Michele will be bringing us a program entitled, “Next-Level Genealogy: AI Innovations from FamilySearch and Beyond.”  You will discover how AI – within FamilySearch and from other leading innovators – is revolutionizing how we locate and analyse records.  You will learn practical ways to integrate these tools into your research process.   Research faster, smarter, and BETTER!  Reveal records that you didn’t even know existed! This is NOT just a video, although the talk will be accompanied by a slideshow!

    So, please make a note of this date and time and plan to join us.  Michele is driving from Tyler to bring us this 1-hour program and we want to show her how much we appreciate that and how much we appreciate the opportunity to learn something new and exciting!


  • 21 Sep 2025 8:42 AM | Anonymous

    A full day of genealogy workshops and exhibits will help family history enthusiasts Oct. 4 at the Main Library in Toledo.

    The Toledo Lucas County Public Library’s genealogy fair runs from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the atrium and throughout the library at 325 Michigan Ave.

    Participants will be able to connect with local and regional genealogy organizations, authors, and services, a library announcement says. 

    Author and genealogist Michael John Neill, who hosts annual trips to the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, will lead four lectures: strategies that may be hindering your research, techniques for using Facebook for family history, how to research beyond direct family lines, and a broad discussion on his website and book Top Genealogy Tip of the Day

    Other presentations and activities include: Mounds on the Maumee: Exploring Maumee River’s First Peoples by Taylor Moyer, historic programs manager at the Black Swamp Intertribal Foundation; a program by Peter Ujvagi, a former Toledo city councilman known as the “mayor of East Toledo” on the Hungarian, Slovak, Italian, and Moravian immigrant workers who settled the Birmingham neighborhood; a discussion on research strategies and finding the genealogical records of disabled ancestors by University of Toledo history professor Kim E. Nielson; and a presentation on Holocaust survivor and Toledo businessman Philip Markowicz by Hindea Sohn Markowicz, director of the Holocaust resource center in Toledo and associate producer of the documentary Bearing Witness.

    The day also includes programming for kids, half-hour tours of the library’s local history and genealogy department, one-on-one assistance, and a pizza lunch for participants. 

    Activities are free and registration isn’t required. For more information, go to toledolibrary.org/genealogyfair.


  • 20 Sep 2025 8:19 AM | Anonymous

    Wilkinson County Bulletin 50th anniversary edition

    This past summer, the Digital Library of Georgia released several new grant-funded newspapers to the Georgia Historic Newspapers website. Included below is a list of newly available titles.

    Titles funded by the Burke County Genealogical Society

    Titles funded by the Charter Foundation of Valley, Alabama and the Chipley Historical Center of Pine Mountain

    Titles funded by the Chattooga County Historical Society

    Titles funded by the City of Covington

    Titles digitized with a donation from Harry Thompson and Chris Jones

    Titles funded by the National Digital Newspaper Program with a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities in partnership with the Auburn Avenue Research Library

    Titles funded by the Jack Tarver Library, Mercer University

    Titles digitized in partnership with the Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia (MOCA GA)

    Titles funded by a donation from the Oconee Historical Society

    Titles funded by a donation from the Wilkinson County Historical Society with a grant from the Oconee EMC Foundation

    Titles digitized by the UGA Libraries

    Titles made available as part of UGA’s Libraries Digital Newspaper Preservation Project


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