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Showing posts from April, 2021

Born on St Patrick's Day: Happy 115th Mary

They say that its good luck to be Irish, and that the luckiest of all are those who are born on St Patrick's Day. No doubt this is what was said the day that my great grandmother was born. However, her life was not necessarily filled with the good luck that the superstition had predicted. As much as she had a hard life, her life was also an "ordinary" one of a young British immigrant to Canada. Despite that, the simple life she led in youth was filled with fun. She embrace the changing times, new found freedoms, and innovations. Its the heirlooms from that chapter of her life that fascinate me the most because they show aside to her that none of my relatives knew - a woman who was happy. So today, I am going to share the side of her that one of those heirlooms tells. I have a small black autograph book that was hers.  At almost 100 years old, the book binding has all but disintegrated yet the leather cover is in near pristine condition and the partially bound pages are al...

Free Genealogy Spring 2021

Many years ago when I first started genealogy, I was a broke student and didnt have the funds to purchase a subscription to a major genealogy site. I thought that I would quickly reach a point where the free research would end and I would have to find the cash or stop - thankfully this was not the case. I learned that many of the major sites offer free trials and free weeks or weekends throughout the year. The goal to performing free research is learning how to capitalize on these promotional offers.  The following list will continue to be updated as further promotional offers become available. Spring 2021 April 18-24: MyHeritage Birth Records

Breaking through the Glass Floor of Descendancy Research

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 In life there are many things that we hear the term "glass ceiling" associated with. Although a metaphorical glass ceiling does exist in genealogy, not every researcher ends up hitting it. The reason for this is that we encounter brick walls in which (after much dedicated research) are able to break through. The glass ceiling is only encountered when the records run out. The purpose of this post though is to focus on research that is moving in the other direction - descendancy research.  In simple terms, descendancy research is defined as tracing all of the ancestors that descend from a single couple. The majority of these people are not your direct ancestors, rather they are your distant cousins. There are a multitude of reasons why you may want to find these people. Maybe they are the ones that inherited the family heirlooms and photographs; maybe one of them is the perfect candidate for that DNA test that will allow you to break through the brick wall; or maybe you just w...

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