If you've visited my blog in the past, you already know my favorite find. It was a receipt for the purchase of a burial site, and it broke my 26-year brick wall wide open! Ever since I was 18, I'd been trying to find the place and date of birth of my great-great grandmother, Emma Anna Murphy, ...
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Genealogy Goals – 2022 Edition
It's that time of year when I back up all my files and determine what genealogy questions I'll focus on over the next year. First, let's take care of backing up those files... Ah, yes, it feels good to get that out of the way. I'm a little late with both the backup process and this post, but here ...
52 Ancestors, Week 1: Foundations
This month's theme for 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks is "Foundations" and so is this week's prompt. I'd like to talk about shaken foundations, when you find out the answer to a question isn't at all what you expected. Thanks to the wonders of DNA and genetic genealogy, my sense of self - of what I ...
WikiTree: A Collaborative Family Tree
In the summer of 2017, I joined WikiTree to see if there might be any useful information about my ancestors there. I also uploaded a limited GEDCOM to the site, to see if I could contribute anything of value. I experienced some ups and downs, so here are my thoughts and experiences. You could also ...
The Wallace family of Halifax, Nova Scotia
In confirming my great-great grandmother's paternity, I found myself digging deeper into her father's family. It's time to meet the Wallace family of Halifax, Nova Scotia. Emma's father was Francis Wallace. It seems more and more likely that he didn't marry Emma's mother, Eliza (Elizabeth) ...
Enslaved People in my Family History
Some of my ancestors fall under the definition of enslavers. Not all of them and not only the southern ones, either. Many people think slavery was endemic only to the southern United States, as far as U.S. history, but that's not correct. There were enslaved people in the northern states, and I ...