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Family Tree
Family Tree September 2019
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Other Articles in this Issue


Family Tree
Welcome
It’s time to dig for victory, see what clues your delving
Sculptures bring 19th century street back to life
Anew public art project is bringing to life the stories
Veterans’ charity films stories for archive
To commemorate its centenary this year, the charity
New website digitising 17th century Hearth Tax records
Afree new website aims to open up a remarkable 17th
Heritage festival harnesses people power as it turns 25
Heritage festival harnesses people power as it turns
YOUR FREE RECORDS
At Family Tree we’ve teamed up with UK family history
Norfolk parish records among releases
TheGenealogist has added more than half a million Norfolk
Top speakers at Oxford conference
The Association of Genealogists and Researchers in
Great-grandson achieves tribute
The great-grandson of Constance Baker, known as ‘Mother
Looking after your home archive
Paul F Cockburn looks at some of the ways in which you can preserve and present the results of your research – now and for future generations
How to inspire the next generation!
Nina Hoole finds visiting archives can be child’s play with a youngster in tow
How to structure your blog content
Discover how to structure your blog content using ‘categories’ and ‘tags’. Paul Carter explains how – just follow his simple step-by-step advice
Spotlight on… Gwent Family History Society
Sonia Jones profiles Gwent Family History Society, a group with five different branches and a busy programme of events, meetings and projects for anyone with ancestors in the old county of Monmouthshire
How did you do?
Find out the answers to last issue’s Family Tree Academy challenges. Our Academy tutor David Annal explains all
This issue’s theme is immigration & emigration records
Now it’s time to put your research skills to the test. Have a look at the following documents and answer the questions below. The solutions aren’t always in the documents themselves; sometimes you’ll need to look at other sources to find the answers
ONE-NAME STUDIES
This issue one-name researcher Julie Goucher suggests ways to collect surnames data and has some quick wins up her sleeve
Putting flesh on the bones
Researcher Nick Thorne explains how to discover more about your forebears’ lives by using the collections on TheGenealogist.co.uk
Taken a DNA test?
DNA tests grow ever more popular and can lead to fascinating new insights about your ancestry. There is a lot to learn, but help is at hand with Karen Evans’ practical advice for making so much more sense of your DNA
The lunch hour genealogist
Being busy doesn’t mean you have to neglect your favourite hobby, you can still learn in your lunch break! Squeeze just 60 minutes of family history into your daily routine and you’ll soon start to see your tree blossom. It’s time to tuck into Rachel Bellerby’s genealogy treats
Your questions answered
With our panel of experts Jayne Shrimpton, Penny Walters
Books
Karen Clare takes a look at some new titles of interest in the world of family history, in particular books covering the lives of our 20th century ancestors
DIARY DATES
Find or post diary dates at www.family-tree.co.uk/Events
Your letters
No need for heirloom gloom with these ideas to keep them safe into the future
Tying up loose ends
It may take a while, but we can overcome family history obstacles given time, as Diane Lindsay found out when she solved a naming mystery
NEWS
MOVERS & SHAKERS
Fergus Smith from Twitter’s #AncestryHour team reminds
Unlocking secrets of historic workhouse infirmary
Ahistoric workhouse infirmary has opened to visitors
Tracing your ancestors in the early 20th century
Chris Paton explores the key resources to help with early 20th century family history research
Fashion on the Home Front
Eighty years ago families watched and waited as tensions
Calmness & courage
Kath Garner delves into the memories of friends who lived through the Second World War as children and can recall the stoical mothers of Britain whose spirits would not be broken
The count down to war
The Second Great War did not break out unexpectedly. Many fought against the signs and portents for years. But come it did. Military historian Graham Bandy looks at the state of the Army 80 years ago, and Britain’s quiet preparation for conflict, once it became clear that it was inevitable
THE LAST DAYS OF KINDERTRANSPORT
With Kristallnacht (the Night of Broken Glass) shattered the last hope for Jews in Germany, and within days many were seeking temporary travel visas to get their children out – fast. Melody Amsel-Arieli looks at the last journeys made by Jewish children, fleeing Nazi Germany, in the final weeks before the door closed, leaving millions to their fates
Our ancestors & the 1939 Register
The 1939 National Register is part of our families’ shared history. A handwritten record of each of our ancestors named therein, in those early dark days of a world at war. Helen Tovey looks at how the record came about 80 years ago this September, and how and it can help your family history research today
Twiglets
Diarist Gill Shaw charts the rollercoaster ride of researching her family history
Tramps, tinkers & travellers
You might think that you’ve reached a dead end if you find an ancestor with an itinerant lifestyle, but there are a range of options to explore, as Simon Wills reveals
Local history for family historians
Exploring the local history of the area where your ancestors lived will help you grow and enrich your family history research. Delve into the past with Karen Clare and watch your family’s past spring into life…