This week’s crème de la crème — November 17, 2018

Some of the bijoux I discovered this week.

Crème de la crème of genealogy blogsBlogs
The Intentionally Forgotten by Colleen Murray on Colleen Murray.

Resources: Monographs and Surveys of Franco-American History by Patrick Lacroix on Query the Past.

The New York Times will Digitize its Photo Archive by Dick Eastman on Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter.

5 Overlooked Things on FamilySearch by Amy Johnson Crow on Amy Johnson Crow.

About those burial cards… by Judy G. Russell on The Legal Genealogist.

Back to Basics with U.S. Church Records – Part 2 by Diana Elder on Family Locket.

Valuation Office Revision Books: latest digistation news by Claire Santry on Irish Genealogy News.

Hints for Dealing With Ancestry Hints by Ken McKinlay on Family Tree Knots.

We must Name them to truly Remember! by Angela M. Money on Out on a Limb Genealogy.

LAC moves to centralize & preserve digital documentary history by John D. Reid on Canada’s Anglo-Celtic Connections.

Correcting the Record on Privacy by Leah Larkin on The DNA Geek.

How do you feel about your DNA being used by the police? – the results of a survey by Maurice Gleeson on DNA and Family Tree Research.

My DNA Results Are Wrong. What Can I Do? by Jennifer Dondero on The Occasional Genealogist.

Contacting Your Birth Parent or Siblings on Legacy Tree Genealogists.

Articles
Retracing a long-ago London soldier’s life, death and legacy by Jennifer Bieman, London (Ontario) Free Press.

Capturing northern Ontario’s lost military past, CBC, Sudbury, Ontario.

‘A treasure waiting to be seen’: Yukon First Nations crack open massive archive by Paul Tukker, CBC, Yukon.

Home Office responds after genealogy blogger finds records are missing from GRO indexes by Rosemary Collins, Who Do You Think You Are Magazine, Hammersmith, London, England.

For more gems like these throughout the week, join the Genealogy à la carte Facebook group. When you submit your request to join, you will be asked to answer two questions about your family history research.

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