Congratulations on your 100th podcast. We are lucky to have you. Thanks so much Connie for another great video! And your point about writing down our stories, in my case, hit home! I was just talking yesterday with another family researcher about how we need to get those stories written down... I even have a file on my computer for my stories. I just went back in and jotted down some notes about the tornado that hit here in 1998...
Congratulations on your 100th episode! You are a great asset to the project of finding out who we are. I found your channel about two months ago and binge-watched! You’ve turned me from a leaf-chaser to a researcher! Thank you sooo much! I trimmed my tree from all those leaves, cut it in half! Haha! Look forward to many more videos from you. Watching from Nampa Idaho. 😊
Congratulations on the 100th episode!!! I truly enjoy watching your shows as there is always something new to learn. Very informational and just long enough to hold a listeners interest without going so long that you feel you have to stop to do something else and come back to it later. Thanks for contributing to the community and best wishes for huge growth in the coming years. Janice Brown
lorie from Green Bay, enjoy your programs and I learned a lot of tips and tricks for ancestry. A lot for the DNA also. Keep them coming in current and we will all be so appreciative. Thanks for the tips on writing our stories and what to put in them. I’m in the process of writing my family story starting with my immigrant ancestors and ending with me. The cool thing I did was go on a freedom march with the Reverend Jesse Jackson downtown Chicago when he used to have a church there. 1971.
Thank you SO much for the list of your 100 episodes that you put in the newsletter. I was new to your channel and had no idea of the great gems in the past. I'll use it as a hand-out for those I teach genealogy to.
I always manage to learn something new watching your programs, my German grandfathers accordion is prized possession of mine, it's almost a hundred years and still works , and I did the happy dance when I found out why a street was named in honor of a distant relative I had been trying to figure it out for over 20 years . Another distant cousin came to the rescue.
What a cool treasure to have. I know this is an older note... but I reread it again... and was thinking that family heirlooms like that are some of my most prized possessions.
In the area where I grew up, there must be a dozen roads named after various relatives who lived on those roads. There's even one street in a subdivision that my Dad named after my sister & me. In town is a street with my name but it was named by another guy after his granddaughter, not me.
I love your videos. Very informative and well explained. My family is from NC (Wilson, Nash, Edgecombe, Green) and I enjoy your website as well. I live in NV. Thanks again! Pat Skinner
Just found your channel from Randy Seaver's Genea Musings blog - he has a link to this video. Good to know there are 99 previous videos - I have a lot of catching up to do!!
I just want to thank you for your continued support. You may get this message a couple of times as I'm trying to clear out old comments... but I do appreciate you.
I enjoy your you tubes and appreciate your work and time. I realized from your recap that I need to go back and find some past episodes. Can you do an episode on different genealogy software programs?
I realize this is an old comment, but you can go to www.relativefinder.org/#/main and search to see if you are related to anyone famous. You do need to have yourself connected to the tree at FamilySearch first.
Heirloom - over 100 year old square cast iron skillet with lid, super heavy. Now passed on to one of my daughters. It was my great mother's, went from Tennessee to Oklahoma to California to Kansas now on Utah. Some of that travel in a covered wagon. Great grandmother fried her Sunday night chicken dinners in it. My great father was hurt through a farming machine accident, so great-granny (Mattie Myrtle Maupin Riggs), needed to support the family. One way was raising chickens for eggs and selling them, also ironing, taking in borders and other things. They had 8 children. Depression era. How did they do it? BTW, I have cooked in that skillet.
Hi Connie, I know you've discussed roadblocks and different ways to break through them. I'm interested in "hidden information" or other buried records. thanks
Favorite Heirloom are the Antque shifter and measuring cups from my great aunt Carrie. I learned to cook using them. PS The cooking was done on a Woodstove. The recipes were a handful of this and a pinch of that style.
Hi Jackie. I hope so but my husband has been in the hospital for several weeks with many to go. So I quietly took a break from the live shows until things settle down. I’m still doing the group and private coaching with the GTV Insider’s, but the live shows are very time consuming to prep for them. I likely will not resume until after the first of the year.
Love your videos, watch them daily. Am looking for the surname of a 3rd great grandmother born in Germany. I dropped Ancestry.com but have Family Search. Would like to see a video on German research. Thank you, keep up the great work!
Agreed. My 2x ggf was born in Germany & came to the states with(?) his parents about 1840 when he was 11. No one in the family has been able to find a passenger list with his name on it. Since there's lots of cousins doing research, it's not from lack of trying. I have joked that I'm now looking for the airplane he came in.
In August 2011, a 5.8 earthquake in Virginia shook the nursing home in Carroll County, Maryland where my sister was visiting our mother. When I looked for more information, I learned there had been a 5.8 earthquake in Giles County, Virginia in 1897. My Dad's parents were living in that county at the time, but we never heard a word about it. Were they out of town that day or were they so frightened by it that they never talked about it? They & all their children are gone. I wish I could learn more about why I never knew.
@@GenealogyTV I am. I have pages and pages of notes. I will admit that I don’t watch all of the photo restoration because that is my husbands area of expertise! I do give a like for them though. I have really enjoyed what I have watched so far. Thank you so much for all that you do!
thank you for another good video with helpful hints. As for grandparents. WhY not adopt the swedish system !! we have different words for different grandparents. farfar = your fathers father farmor= your Fathers mother Morfar= your mothers father mormor= your mothers mothers
I would ask my Great grandmother who her parents are. I would ask her for the family Bible supporting, her husband, my great grandfather father, was Isiah.
It can be confusing to say a Google account is needed. You need a UA-cam account, which IS also a Google account. Then that account is connected to many other sites that Google owns. But if you already have a UA-cam account, you do NOT have to go get another Google account. It is already the same thing.
I know this is an old post, but I felt compelled to answer. I would definitely want to meet my mom. I spent 9 months in her and 4 days with her, before she left me at the Women & Children's Home to be placed for adoption. She said in her "letter" left with the social worker/nuns 🤔, that they tried to keep her from me, but she told them she wasn't going to be intimidated by them, she was an adult (27), and as long as she was there, SHE'D BE taking care of me. She was with me for 4 days. I think she was with me when they baptized me as well. (So I wouldn't go to Hell if I died before being adopted 🤨). Anyway, I would love to meet her. I found my birth family after my parents died. 💔
Wow. You do have a sad story. I'm sorry you didn't get to meet your bio parents before then died. My mom had the same situation. I get it. Hang in there.
Congratulations Connie on your 100th episode!!! Love your channel!!!
Congratulations on your 100th podcast. We are lucky to have you. Thanks so much Connie for another great video! And your point about writing down our stories, in my case, hit home! I was just talking yesterday with another family researcher about how we need to get those stories written down... I even have a file on my computer for my stories. I just went back in and jotted down some notes about the tornado that hit here in 1998...
Congratulations on your 100th episode! You are a great asset to the project of finding out who we are. I found your channel about two months ago and binge-watched! You’ve turned me from a leaf-chaser to a researcher! Thank you sooo much! I trimmed my tree from all those leaves, cut it in half! Haha! Look forward to many more videos from you. Watching from Nampa Idaho. 😊
Fabulous
Congratulations on the 100th episode!!! I truly enjoy watching your shows as there is always something new to learn. Very informational and just long enough to hold a listeners interest without going so long that you feel you have to stop to do something else and come back to it later. Thanks for contributing to the community and best wishes for huge growth in the coming years. Janice Brown
Thank you Janice Brown.
lorie from Green Bay, enjoy your programs and I learned a lot of tips and tricks for ancestry. A lot for the DNA also. Keep them coming in current and we will all be so appreciative. Thanks for the tips on writing our stories and what to put in them. I’m in the process of writing my family story starting with my immigrant ancestors and ending with me. The cool thing I did was go on a freedom march with the Reverend Jesse Jackson downtown Chicago when he used to have a church there. 1971.
Thank you SO much for the list of your 100 episodes that you put in the newsletter. I was new to your channel and had no idea of the great gems in the past. I'll use it as a hand-out for those I teach genealogy to.
Wow thanks!
I am really glad I found this site!!!
Awesome. Thank you.
I always manage to learn something new watching your programs, my German grandfathers accordion is prized possession of mine, it's almost a hundred years and still works , and I did the happy dance when I found out why a street was named in honor of a distant relative I had been trying to figure it out for over 20 years . Another distant cousin came to the rescue.
What a cool treasure to have. I know this is an older note... but I reread it again... and was thinking that family heirlooms like that are some of my most prized possessions.
In the area where I grew up, there must be a dozen roads named after various relatives who lived on those roads. There's even one street in a subdivision that my Dad named after my sister & me. In town is a street with my name but it was named by another guy after his granddaughter, not me.
I enjoy your videos. Thank you for all of your help.
Great show again. Love your channel.
I have just started watching your episodes this month. I have found them informative. Kansas
Sorry I missed the Show, I sometimes listen to your show on my MP3 at work. Always find ways to improve in my Genealogy search. Watching in Kansas.
Thanks.
Recently found your channel....love it!! Thanks so much :-)
Congratulations, I have only viewed a few of your videos and have enjoyed them, looking to go through the archive for more.
Love for what you all do and can not wait for you to post
Linda, please check you email... or email me at genealogytv1@gmail.com. I have you as one of the prize winners. You need to respond by Friday 10-4-19.
Congratulations! Great program as they all are, thank you so much.
I am so glad to have found your channel. Who knew there was a genealogy channel for those of us with this love and hobby!
Thank you for helping us climb our family tree
Congrats on the 100th episode, looking forward to more.
I love your videos. Very informative and well explained. My family is from NC (Wilson, Nash, Edgecombe, Green) and I enjoy your website as well. I live in NV. Thanks again!
Pat Skinner
Hey Pat. You might be interested in the NC Ancestry channel as well.
@@GenealogyTV I think I'm on that one too! I'll make sure! 😊
Just love your discussions! Angela in South Australia
Congratulations!
Thank you!
Love your shows! I always learn so much, and appreciate your sharing your expertise. My favorite so far was on Polish Genealogy.
Love your videos
Sorry I missed the live, but love this channel! Thanks for all the great information!
Just found your channel from Randy Seaver's Genea Musings blog - he has a link to this video. Good to know there are 99 previous videos - I have a lot of catching up to do!!
Welcome Barbara and the heads up on the referral from Randy Seaver’s blog. I need to thank him.
Congrats 🎉 from Ytown, Ohio! Enjoy much your knowledge of ancestry show.
As always, another great show. I actually answered some of those questions you asked on FB.
resently subscribed. love the content.
Thank you Thomas.
Love your presentations! I learn lots each time.
I just want to thank you for your continued support. You may get this message a couple of times as I'm trying to clear out old comments... but I do appreciate you.
Love your channel. I wish someone would do a segment on Swiss research.
Ok. Good suggestion. I’ll keep that in mind.
I enjoy your you tubes and appreciate your work and time. I realized from your recap that I need to go back and find some past episodes. Can you do an episode on different genealogy software programs?
I might consider that. Thanks for the suggestion.
i would love a video with hints/tips on how to research a family story about a famous person.
I realize this is an old comment, but you can go to www.relativefinder.org/#/main and search to see if you are related to anyone famous. You do need to have yourself connected to the tree at FamilySearch first.
Heirloom - over 100 year old square cast iron skillet with lid, super heavy. Now passed on to one of my daughters. It was my great mother's, went from Tennessee to Oklahoma to California to Kansas now on Utah. Some of that travel in a covered wagon. Great grandmother fried her Sunday night chicken dinners in it. My great father was hurt through a farming machine accident, so great-granny (Mattie Myrtle Maupin Riggs), needed to support the family. One way was raising chickens for eggs and selling them, also ironing, taking in borders and other things. They had 8 children. Depression era. How did they do it? BTW, I have cooked in that skillet.
Great story. Add that to you family history, if you’ve not done so already.
@@GenealogyTV Thanks. I do need to add to my history.
Hi Connie,
I know you've discussed roadblocks and different ways to break through them. I'm interested in "hidden information" or other buried records. thanks
Favorite Heirloom are the Antque shifter and measuring cups from my great aunt Carrie. I learned to cook using them. PS The cooking was done on a Woodstove. The recipes were a handful of this and a pinch of that style.
Congratulations! I'd love to win My Heritage, one year full access membership, please!
One of my own migrations was to North Carolina in 1973 from California. I did not know then that my Family was from there.
Enjoy watching and learning more.
Connie, Will you be doing more live videos?
Hi Jackie. I hope so but my husband has been in the hospital for several weeks with many to go. So I quietly took a break from the live shows until things settle down. I’m still doing the group and private coaching with the GTV Insider’s, but the live shows are very time consuming to prep for them. I likely will not resume until after the first of the year.
Love your videos, watch them daily. Am looking for the surname of a 3rd great grandmother born in Germany. I dropped Ancestry.com but have Family Search. Would like to see a video on German research. Thank you, keep up the great work!
Thank you Sandie. I'll keep that in mind. I'll need to find an expert in that area.
Agreed. My 2x ggf was born in Germany & came to the states with(?) his parents about 1840 when he was 11. No one in the family has been able to find a passenger list with his name on it. Since there's lots of cousins doing research, it's not from lack of trying. I have joked that I'm now looking for the airplane he came in.
Hi from Lafayette, Indiana
q explain newsletters?
I have a newsletter with GTV news and up coming videos. There is a link in the show notes if you’re interested.
From KS.
In August 2011, a 5.8 earthquake in Virginia shook the nursing home in Carroll County, Maryland where my sister was visiting our mother. When I looked for more information, I learned there had been a 5.8 earthquake in Giles County, Virginia in 1897. My Dad's parents were living in that county at the time, but we never heard a word about it. Were they out of town that day or were they so frightened by it that they never talked about it? They & all their children are gone. I wish I could learn more about why I never knew.
Sherry from McMinnville, Oregon
😊
I have made it through 100 episodes! Woohoo!🎉
Oh my goodness. I hope you’re learning a lot.
@@GenealogyTV I am. I have pages and pages of notes. I will admit that I don’t watch all of the photo restoration because that is my husbands area of expertise! I do give a like for them though. I have really enjoyed what I have watched so far. Thank you so much for all that you do!
Again.. thank you!
thank you for another good video with helpful hints.
As for grandparents. WhY not adopt the swedish system !! we have different words for different grandparents.
farfar = your fathers father
farmor= your Fathers mother
Morfar= your mothers father
mormor= your mothers mothers
I would love a list of those names to share.
I would ask my Great grandmother who her parents are. I would ask her for the family Bible supporting, her husband, my great grandfather father, was Isiah.
It can be confusing to say a Google account is needed. You need a UA-cam account, which IS also a Google account. Then that account is connected to many other sites that Google owns. But if you already have a UA-cam account, you do NOT have to go get another Google account. It is already the same thing.
Yes true. Thanks.
There's something wrong with tbis video. It just says stand by and never starts.
Fast forward until you see the show start.
I know this is an old post, but I felt compelled to answer.
I would definitely want to meet my mom. I spent 9 months in her and 4 days with her, before she left me at the Women & Children's Home to be placed for adoption. She said in her "letter" left with the social worker/nuns 🤔, that they tried to keep her from me, but she told them she wasn't going to be intimidated by them, she was an adult (27), and as long as she was there, SHE'D BE taking care of me. She was with me for 4 days. I think she was with me when they baptized me as well. (So I wouldn't go to Hell if I died before being adopted 🤨). Anyway, I would love to meet her. I found my birth family after my parents died. 💔
Wow. You do have a sad story. I'm sorry you didn't get to meet your bio parents before then died. My mom had the same situation. I get it. Hang in there.