This week’s crème de la crème — January 22, 2022

Some of the bijoux I discovered this week.

Crème de la crème of genealogy blogs

Blogs
Passenger lists of the Holland-America Line have been digitised by Joan Bos on Joan’s Ancestral World.

Invaluable scanned records from Russian and Ukrainian archives posted online by Vera Miller on Find Lost Russian & Ukrainian Family.

Anglican baptismal registers from Derryloran parish in County Tyrone by Chris Paton on Scottish GENES.

Why You Should Be Using a Newspaper Research Log by Kenneth R. Marks on The Ancestor Hunt.

PERSI Tips: What Kind of Index is it? by Cari Taplin on Genealogy Pants.

How to Find Downloadable Books on Google Books by Dan Russell on SearchReSearch.

Genealogy on YouTube.com by James Tanner on Genealogy’s Star.

The essential difference by Judy G. Russell on The Legal Genealogist.

Can We Ever Really Know Our Ancestors? by Dorothy Nixon on Genealogy Ensemble.

Getting a Chance to Give Back by Jacqi Stevens on A Family Tapestry.

What I See in My Crystal Ball: The Future of Genealogy Research and Debbie Parker Wayne, R.I.P. by Dick Eastman on Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter.

Almost Dying Changes You by Roberta Estes on DNAeXplained.

Articles
23 Unexpected Websites You Can Use for Genealogy Research by Lisa A. Alzo, Family Tree Magazine, Blue Ash, Ohio.

Petworth Emigration Project: Project looks into the families who left Sussex for Canada by Charlotte Harding, Midhurst and Petworth Observer, Midhurst, West Sussex, England.

History Hunter: Anton Vogee is a treasure from the vaults of the Yukon Archives by Michael Gates, Yukon News, Whitehorse, Yukon.

Grimsby Museum offering chance to uncover history from home by Moosa Imran, Niagara Falls Review, Ontario.

N.S. pays tribute to Black Loyalists who sailed to Sierra Leone in 1792 by Emma Smith, CBC News, Nova Scotia.

Historical center in Brunswick to explore immigration to the southern Midcoast by C. Thatcher Carter, Portland Press Herald, Maine.

Making connections by Nicole Dotzenrod, The Valley Breeze, Lincoln, Rhode Island.

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.

This entry was posted in Crème de la crème and tagged , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.