Family History Blogs
Elizabeth S. Mills: https://www.evidenceexplained.com/blog
Mary Kircher Roddy Blog: https://www.mkrgenealogy.com/searching-for-stories-blog
Tanner Family History Blog - Family History (particularly LDS) blog by James Tanner.
Genealogy's Star - James Tanner Blog.
Family Tree Magazine Insider Blog
Genealogy tip of the day: https://genealogytipoftheday.com/
https://www.americana-archives.com/articles
https://ancestorintroductions.com/blog/
The Formidable Genealogists: https://www.theformidablegenealogist.com/blog
Bill Buchanan blog on duplicate records in Family Tree: Easier way to find duplicates
The Legal Genealogist: http://legalgenealogist.com/blog/2013/05/31/ordering-the-ss-5/
Genealogy in Time online magazine: http://www.genealogyintime.com/dictionaries/genealogy-latin-dictionary-pageA.html?awt_l=KMmk2&awt_m=JAA8hvjbuwk.Vy This blog gives updates on new sources for genealogy. It also includes articles and a genealogy Latin word list. It features a top 100 websites annually.
Climbing my Family Tree. See article "How to index your family documents".
Webinar Calendar on geneawebinars.com/
The Daffodil Principle at familylocket.com: http://familylocket.com/family-history-and-the-daffodil-principle/
Heritage Paper Dolls: Patterns for paper dolls
Ancestral Breezes: Using excel in genealogy
Legacy family tree blog: https://www.legacytree.com/blog/new-development-german-census-records
Empty branches on the family tree: https://emptybranchesonthefamilytree.com/2019/07/fridays-family-history-finds-109/'
Lise louise cooke.com/ Free YouTube genealogy videos: https://lisalouisecooke.com/elevenses/
https://genea79.wordpress.com/category/dessins-dans-les-registres/ [See Gl ossary of gnealogical terms on this site].
https://genealogiealsace.wordpress.com/fonds-documentaire/. See list of periodicals and articles from French periodicals on this site: Periodicals Articles
“One evening, on a familiar path that is dear to me, following in the footsteps of those who came before me on this earth, I felt the tree of silence shiver. […] There was no more wind, nothing was moving, everything was calm, and yet I heard something like a whisper. I got the impression - the conviction? - that it came from the tree from which we came: that of our families, whose branches are innumerable and whose leaves quiver deep within us. So many sheets, so many voices that you have to lean towards to hear them properly, to give them the attention necessary to perceive a silence which, in reality, is not one and only asks to be listened to . I know today that this whisper has the power to give meaning to our existence, to prolong the lives of those to whom we owe ours, because they inhabit us intimately. "
- Christian Signol, They dreamed of Sundays
« Un soir, sur un chemin familier qui m’est cher, en mettant mes pas dans les pas de ceux qui m’ont précédé sur cette terre, j’ai senti frissonner l’arbre du silence. […] Il n’y avait plus de vent, rien ne bougeait, tout était apaisé, et pourtant j’ai entendu comme un murmure. J’ai eu l’impression - la conviction ? - qu’il provenait de l’arbre dont nous sommes issus : celui de nos familles, dont les branches sont innombrables et dont les feuilles frissonnent au plus profond de nous. Autant de feuilles, autant de voix vers lesquelles il faut se pencher pour bien les entendre, leur accorder l’attention nécessaire à la perception d’un silence qui, en réalité, n’en est pas un et ne demande qu’à être écouté. Je sais aujourd’hui que ce murmure a le pouvoir de donner un sens à notre existence, de prolonger la vie de ceux auxquels nous devons la nôtre, car ils nous habitent intimement. »
- Christian Signol, Ils rêvaient des dimanches