Genealogy Roundup, October 26
In this week's Roundup: Recipe epitaphs that are "a tip of the hat to life’s simple joys," girls who met while sailing to the U.S. meet again 75 years later, great new genie tools to play with, and more.
In this week's Roundup: Recipe epitaphs that are "a tip of the hat to life’s simple joys," girls who met while sailing to the U.S. meet again 75 years later, great new genie tools to play with, and more.
In this week's Roundup: Musical show about Annie Moore, Flat Stanley Does His Roots, research tools, and more.
In this week's Roundup: DNA surprises, every Japanese American incarcerated during WWII named, getting more awe in your life, a census hero, and more.
In this week's Roundup: A tombstone which, according to the photographer has become "a local legend around Salt Lake City," and a soldier accounted for from the Korean War.
In this week's Roundup: A great new research tool plus how life stories of enslaved people became "crucial to a legal battle over a Louisiana petrochemical facility that could triple residents’ exposure to carcinogens."
In this week's Roundup: A generation of Europeans, adopted as children, is now returning to Sri Lanka to search for their birth mothers; finding lost military personnel in the ocean, free research tools for genealogists, and more.
In this week's Roundup: How to live with your digital doppelgängers, the future of handwritten text recognition, seeking dual citizenship, 2030 census design, and more.
In this week's Roundup: 5 places that are special to Irish-Americans, reading the hidden stories in the U.S. Census, bringing the stories of enslaved people out of the shadows, and much more.
In this week's Roundup: What bones tell a bioarchaeologist about human life spans in pre-modern times, our ancestors weren't that different from us, happy little search tools, and more.
In this week's Roundup: A soldier lost in World War II has been accounted for, that feeling when you find out you're researching a relative, and more.