Some of the genealogy bijoux I discovered this week.
Blogs
NAP Assistants and Volunteers Clear Brush at an Abandoned Graveyard Near the Bayou Teche by Mark Rees on The New Acadia Project.
Announcing the Genealogy Do-Over by Thomas MacEntee on GeneaBloggers.
Coming in 2015? by John D. Reid on Canada’s Anglo-Celtic Connections.
Ancestors: From Facts to Characters in Story by Lynn Palermo on The Armchair Genealogist.
Spend the money by Judy G. Russell on The Legal Genealogist.
If Miss Manners, Emily Post, or other experts on etiquette did genealogy! by Diane L. Richard on UpFront with NGS.
5 lessons we can learn from Who Do You Think You Are? by Yvette Hoitnik on Dutch Genealogy.
Feedback is a Good Thing: Virtual Institute of Genealogical Research Offers New Interactive Option for Courses by Julie Cahill Tarr on Julie’s Genealogy & History Hub.
A truly Dickensian Christmas by Angela Buckley on Victorian Supersleuth.
Articles
Acadians remember “deadly day” of The Great Upheaval by Mitch MacDonald, The Guardian, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.
An Edwardian Christmas by Robert N. Wilkins, Montreal Gazette.
Once an unacceptable practice, receiving holiday cards has become a much anticipated holiday tradition by Danelle Cloutier, Canada’s History Magazine.
Vandals damage 16 monuments, including one marking the grave of a fallen Peterborough soldier by Lance Anderson, MyKawartha.
200-year-old British cannon from Revolutionary War found in Detroit River restored by Gus Burns, MLive, Michigan.
13 DIY Family History Crafts and Gifts by Dana McCullough, Family Tree Magazine.