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Latest Articles

  • 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


  • 20 Sep 2025 8:09 AM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release written by the folks at the National Archive in England:

    Delve into The National Archives’ collection of railway records to help you trace your family history.

    To mark the 200 anniversary of the first passenger train on the Stockton Darlington railway, join Jessamy Carlson, family history specialist at The National Archives as she delves into their extensive collection of the surviving records of private railway companies before nationalisation in 1947.

    Discover a collection that includes maps, plans, stock registers, staff files and accident reports. You’ll also learn how to use records to gain insights into the working lives of railway workers to help you with your family history research.

    This webinar comprises a pre-recorded film followed by a live Q&A with Jessamy Carlson, so come prepared with your questions.

    When

    Friday 17 October 2025, 2pm – 3pm

    Tickets

    Free, book at eventbrite.co.uk.


  • 20 Sep 2025 8:04 AM | Anonymous

    Dame Judi Dench is perhaps our greatest Shakespearean actor.

    In Shakespeare, My Family and Me, the Oscar winning star turns history detective to solve a great mystery in her family’s past. Did one of her ancestors actually meet her hero, William Shakespeare?

    Made by Proper Job Films, this 1x60’ film will see Dame Judi follow the clues buried deep in the Danish archives and find out if her eight times great-grandfather may have met Shakespeare in 1606, the year he wrote three of his greatest plays, plague returned to England and Londoners were reeling from the Gunpowder Plot.

    Having played nearly every key female part in the Bard’s canon, Dame Judi will look back on the special place the words and worlds of Shakespeare have had throughout her luminous career on stage and screen.    

    Dame Judi Dench says: “It has been such an adventure to explore the possibility that an ancestor of mine might just have got within touching distance of my hero William Shakespeare. All the years I’ve spent playing Shakespeare and feeling a genuine, genuine passion for him and his work, to be on a journey where you might be stepping closer to him, it’s beyond my wildest dreams.”

    Harvey Lilley, CEO of Proper Job Films says: “To be able to ask Judi if she remembers anything from a Shakespeare play she last performed in nearly 40 years ago and for her then, completely unrehearsed, to perfectly deliver a complete soliloquy illustrates for me what it was like to get to make this film. Unforgettable.”

    Emily Shields, Commissioning Editor at Channel 4 says: “It’s been a real privilege to work with Dame Judi Dench and the team at Proper Job on this beautiful and very personal film exploring the ways Judi’s career and family history have intertwined with those of her literary hero. The result is an utter treat.”


  • 20 Sep 2025 7:59 AM | Anonymous

    Valerie Nagle spent decades wondering what happened to her older sister who was last seen in Oregon in 1974. She searched online databases of unidentified persons cases looking for her and sent DNA to a popular ancestry website in the hopes of finding a match.

    That all changed in June when authorities in Oregon called Nagle “out of the blue” to ask about comparing her DNA to a cold case known as “Swamp Mountain Jane Doe,” she said. Nagle’s DNA ultimately helped confirm that the remains of a woman found near a mountain creek in Oregon’s Central Cascades in 1976 were that of her sister, Marion Vinetta Nagle McWhorter.

    Oregon State Police publicly released the news this week after the remains were identified in June.

    “I was very surprised that they called,” Nagle, a 62-year-old who lives in Seattle, told The Associated Press. She was 11 when her sister went missing. “I was really glad that they found me through DNA.”

    McWhorter was last seen at a shopping mall in the Portland suburb of Tigard when she was 21.

    She was the oldest of five siblings, and Nagle was the youngest. Their mother was Alaska Native of the Ahtna Athabascan people, Nagle said, and her big sister had been named for an aunt who died in a boarding school for Indigenous children in Alaska in 1940.

    High rates of disappearances of Indigenous people, particularly women, have festered for generations amid inadequate public safety resources.

    Nagle, who lived in New York with her parents and one of her brothers at the time of her sister’s disappearance, said her mother may have contacted authorities but that she wasn’t sure of the exact extent of the efforts made by her parents to find her sister.

    “I mean, there were, you know, efforts to search, but it was limited,” she said. “We didn’t have that much to go on.”

    She does know her sister had come from California to Oregon with plans to continue on to Seattle and eventually Alaska when she called an aunt who lived near the Tigard shopping mall for a ride in October 1974 — but the aunt didn’t end up meeting up with her, Nagle said.

    Nearly 20 years later, the aunt shared another detail with Nagle: When McWhorter called her that day, she told her that a man in a white pickup truck had offered to give her a ride. It was unclear why her aunt waited that long to share that information.

    Nagle said that when she learned this puzzle piece, she “started in earnest with more searching,” including by checking databases with unidentified persons cases.

    “I remember spending a lot of time on those pages, just scrolling through and trying to look,” she said.

    In 2010, a bone sample from McWhorter’s remains was sent to the University of North Texas Center for Human Identification, and a profile was created in the national missing persons database NamUs, state police said. An additional bone sample was submitted for DNA extraction in 2020, allowing for a unique genetic marker profile to be produced.

    In 2023, Nagle did a DNA test when she signed up for Ancestry, a genealogy company with a DNA database, hoping it would yield a clue about her sister, she said.

    But the breakthrough came in April when a first cousin once removed uploaded their genetic profile to FamilyTreeDNA, another genealogy company with a DNA database, Oregon State Police spokesperson Jolene Kelley said in an email Thursday. That allowed genealogists to get a better idea of McWhorter’s family tree and led them to find that Nagle was a surviving family member.

    “This case was cold for 49 years. That means that family members lived and died without ever knowing what happened to their missing loved one,” State Forensic Anthropologist Hailey Collord-Stalder said in a statement, adding that McWhorter “likely did not go missing voluntarily.”


  • 20 Sep 2025 7:47 AM | Anonymous

    Wondering how to research your family story? Join Carol Litchfield, genealogist with the Haywood County Historical & Genealogical Society in Haywood County, North Carolina, for an overview of genealogical resources and tools available at the Haywood County Public Library.

    There will be two opportunities to attend the workshop. The first will be from 2-3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 30, in the Waynesville Library auditorium, and the second will be from 3-4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 1, in the Canton Library auditorium.


  • 19 Sep 2025 7:25 AM | Anonymous

    SUMMARY

    Colleen Shogan made history when she became the first woman to serve as archivist of the United States in 2023, until February, when President Trump fired her with no warning or reason given. Now Shogan has a new challenge, which she unveiled during our exclusive interview. On Constitution Day, she launched a national bipartisan effort, part of an alliance of 34 presidential centers and some 100 groups, called More Perfect, working to strengthen our democracy.

    View the transcript of the story.

    News alternative: Check out recent segments from the NewsHour, and choose the story you’re most interested in watching. You can make a Google doc copy of discussion questions that work for any of the stories here.

    WARM-UP QUESTIONS

    1. Who is Colleen Shogan?
    2. What are the goals of In Pursuit?
    3. When does the U.S. celebrate its 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence?
    4. How does the National Archives help tell the story of America?
    5. Why did Shogan say she was fired by President Trump?

    ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS

    • Why do you think it is important to preserve American history?
    • How is the work Shogan is doing now with More Perfect's In Pursuit a continuation of her work at the National Archives?

    Media literacy: Shogan said she was not given a reason for her firing from the National Archives. How was Shogan's firing different and similar to the many of thousands of federal workers who have lost their jobs under the Trump administration? Why do you think her story was covered and not others?

    WHAT STUDENTS CAN DO

    Learn more about the National Archives and the initiatives carried out by this government agency. Take a look at Milestone Documents on the National Archives website or scroll through the timeline. According to the National Archives website, "The primary source documents on this page highlight pivotal moments in the course of American history or government. They are some of the most-viewed and sought-out documents in the holdings of the National Archives."

    What documents do you recognize? Which document do you see as a milestone in history and why?


  • 18 Sep 2025 7:04 PM | Anonymous

    In February 2023, the skeletal remains of an unidentified individual were found in a tree line adjacent to the Veterans Administration Center in Taney County's Branson, Missouri. Investigators found clothing including blue shorts, a discolored shirt, red Crocs shoes, and a safari hat. Eyeglasses, toiletry items, a glucose meter, and an insulin pen were also found alongside the remains. The Taney County Coroner's Office determined that the remains were likely a White man between the ages of 45 and 60 years old who was 5'5" to 5'9" tall.

    Officials conducted an extensive investigation into the man's identity, including publishing an artist's rendition of what the man may have looked like when he was alive. Despite investigator's efforts, the man could not be identified and he became known as Taney County John Doe (2023). Details of the case were entered into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) as UP134364 in December 2024. A composite sketch was developed and released to the public in hopes that it would assist in generated new leads in the case.

    Working with the Missouri State Highway Patrol, the Taney County Coroner’s Office submitted forensic evidence to Othram in The Woodlands, Texas to determine if advanced DNA testing could help identify the man. Othram scientists successfully developed a DNA extract from the provided evidence and then used Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing® to build a comprehensive DNA profile for the man. Othram's in-house forensic genetic genealogy team used the profile in a genetic genealogy search to develop new investigative leads that were returned to law enforcement.

    Using this new information, a follow-up investigation was conducted leading investigators to potential relatives of the man. Reference DNA samples were collected from a relative and compared to the DNA profile of the unidentified man. This investigation led to the positive identification of the man, who is now known to be Robert Michael LaFaire, born June 30, 1964. Robert LaFaire's family has been notified of his identification.

    The casework cost associated with this case were funded by legislation sponsored by State Representative Tricia Byrnes of Wentzville. In 2024, Rep. Byrnes secured $1.5 million in state funding to support the Missouri State Highway Patrol’s efforts to identify unidentified human remains through forensic genetic genealogy.

    Individuals who have taken a consumer DNA test can aid ongoing forensic investigations by joining the DNASolves database. Expanding the pool of available DNA data increases the likelihood of successful identifications, helping to reunite families with their missing loved ones and resolve cases that have remained unsolved for years.

    The identification of Robert LaFaire, represents the 22nd case in the State of Missouri where officials have publicly identified an individual using technology developed by Othram. Visit DNASolves to learn about other Missouri cases where your support can help bring long-awaited answers to families.


  • 18 Sep 2025 11:47 AM | Anonymous

     The Orange Mound Library and Genealogy Center at 5094 Poplar Ave.
    Memphis, TN has been honored by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

    Earlier this week, the library was given the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation National Preservation Award.

    It’s a national award given each year by the Trust.


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