While doing some research, I visited the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) website and stumbled on the notice that they’re once again offering a free Virtual Genealogy Fair. It’s next week, October 26 & 27 from 10 am to 4 pm eastern time each day. You can watch all the sessions on YouTube. Registration isn’t required. All you have to do is put it on your calendar so you don’t forget.
You can read the lineup here. There will be six one-hour sessions each day, all surrounding NARA’s holdings. I’m hoping to pay a research visit there next year, so I’m really excited to learn more. There’s even a session about the latest accessions of the National Archives branch here in St. Louis, which I’m also interested in, naturally.
I think I’m most intrigued by the talk entitled, “The Best National Archives Records Genealogists Aren’t Using,” which will be presented by Lori Cox-Paul at 11 am on Wednesday.
I’m very grateful for this free learning opportunity and hope to be able to spend at least a part of each day watching!
If you’re planning to attend RootsTech 2017, the giant conference where genealogy meets technology, now’s the time to register. Until Friday, you can get the early-bird discount of $159 for the four-day conference registration. It’s being held February 8-11, 2017 in Salt Lake City. To me, $159 is a huge bargain (but then again, I routinely pay $600 or $700 to register for conferences for professional organizers).
I was going crazy looking for my great great grandfather, Benjamin Franklin Igleheart, and his family on the 1880 census. None of my searches of various sites turned him up. I really wanted to find that census, because I knew from the 1900 census that his wife, Mattie, had given birth to 11 children, only three of whom were alive in 1900. I had found five of them, but I assumed that finding the 1880 census would reveal the names of more. (Mattie was 25 in 1870.)