Some of the bijoux I discovered this week.
Blogs
Native American Research Part 3: Indian Boarding Schools: Children Forcibly Removed from their Homes by Paula Stuart-Warren on Genealogy by Paula.
Dutch Genealogy News for November 2021 by Yvette Hoitink on Dutch Genealogy.
New WWII database documents soldiers, bombing victims and citizens forced to Germany from Stalingrad by Vera Miller on Find Lost Russian & Ukrainian Family.
Russia Decides to Return Greek Jews’ Holocaust Archives by Dick Eastman on Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter.
Passenger Lists: How Do We Know Which Database to Search? on Auntie Jen’s Family Trees.
Research Trip Preparation by Donna Moughty on Irish Family Roots.
Keep These Genealogy Resources Always Within Reach by DiAnn Iamarino on Fortify Your Family Tree.
Easy Cousin Relationship Chart by Kenneth R. Marks on The Ancestor Hunt.
The 12 Genealogy Days of Christmas by Lorine McGinnis Schulze on Olive Tree Genealogy.
It Pays to Share by Joe Smaldone on Vita Brevis.
Y DNA Tree of Mankind Reaches 50,000 Branches by Roberta Estes on DNAeXplained.
Articles
Stories of Black Canadian veterans the focus of new website by Rebecca Zandbergen, CBC, London, Ontario.
Abandoned Ontario cemetery with graves of Black settlers to be restored after campaign by local advocates by Michael Smell, CBC, Hamilton, Ontario.
Ancestry signs agreement to digitise Hampshire records by Rosemary Collins, Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine, Bristol, England.
National Railway Museum takes delivery of a remarkable family archive of railway enthusiast photographs from the age of steam, Museum Crush, England.
After cleaning up a cemetery, midcoast women are now telling the stories of veterans buried there by Lauren Abbate, Bangor Daily News, Maine.
300 long-missing historic photo negatives have come home to Maine by Troy Bennett, Bangor Daily News, Maine.
At least 200 people were enslaved by the Jesuits in St. Louis. Descendants are now telling their stories by Gabrielle Hays, PBS News Hour, St. Louis, Missouri.
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 quick questions about your family history research.