Friday, June 5, 2026
GRIP Virtual Evening Sessions
Friday, May 22, 2026
MyHeritage - Free Access to U.S. Military Access Records from May 22-26, 2026
Happy Searching!
https://blog.myheritage.com/2026/05/enjoy-free-access-to-u-s-military-records-on-myheritage-for-memorial-day/
From May 22–26, 2026, MyHeritage is opening free access to 35 U.S. military record collections containing more than 213 million historical records.
Even if you only have a few minutes, pick one ancestor and see what else you can learn about his or her military service.
Honoring Those Who Served on Memorial Day
How well do you know your hometown and the nearby towns and counties? I grew up 10 miles from Waterloo, New York in Seneca County. Learn about Waterloo and its claim to fame about Decoration Day, now known as Memorial Day. Where ever and whenever this tradition started, I'm glad we pause to remember our ancestors and others who served.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterloo_(village),_New_York
https://time.com/5291026/memorial-day-started-birthplace-history/
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has an excellent webpage with Memorial Day history.
https://www.cem.va.gov/history/Memorial-Day-history.asp#MemorialDay
Explore the VA site to also learn more about veterans' burial and memorial benefits, info about headstones/ markers/ medallions in various types of cemeteries, and how to request service records.
Glad to see some flags already displayed for this long Memorial Day weekend. Check this link for other 2026 flag-flying days:
https://www.flags.com/Flag-Flying-Days-Holidays-Flag-Flying-Calendar-Half-Staff-Alerts?srsltid=AfmBOooPspBhxwfpcO-N0vG6CiCKa7V9e-o4h52Nl0Io5vNr-QhzNMtU
Friday, May 15, 2026
Newspapers.com Announces New Clipper
The clipping tool on Newspapers.com has been updated to allow the selection of multiple areas on a single page and save them as a single clip. This will be helpful when an article covers multiple columns.
Drag a box around the first part of the article, hit the blue + icon to add another block. You can add up to 5 separate blocks on the same page.
Here is a link to the blog article.
MyHeritage Updates
Family Infographics
Transform a Life Story into an Infographic using your photos and family tree data. Here is the Infographic created about Clara Magdalen Ziebold from my tree. It used the photographs I uploaded for Clara, her husband, and her parents. I used Google Notebook LM to create infographics but they didn't use the photographs of the people. I like this one better.
Tribute Reel
Turn your photos into a Video. Here is a blog post introducing this feature. I uploaded six pictures. They were colorized and animated in a 40-second video.
Scribe AI
Upload a historical record, letter, document, or photo, and AI will analyze it - Key Findings, Extracted Details, Historical Context, Research Tips.
I uploaded an Annual Report from The Waterloo Milling Company
Scribe AI provided an accurate transcription of the document, including both the printed and handwritten sections. There was also a summary and the following:
Historical Context
This document is a 1902 Annual Report for a corporation, specifically the Waterloo Milling Co., filed with the Secretary of State of Illinois.
- Purpose: It serves as a legal declaration of the company's active status, its primary business activities, its location, and its current officers. Such documents were required by state law to maintain corporate standing and provide public transparency regarding business leadership.
- Historical Context: Documents like this provide valuable insight into local economies and prominent businessmen of the era. The Waterloo Milling Co. would have been a significant agricultural and industrial entity in Monroe County.
- Terminology: The use of the word "do" in the table is an abbreviation for "ditto," meaning the entry is the same as the one immediately above it.
- The document is a 1902 Annual Report for the Waterloo Milling Co., located in Waterloo, Monroe County, Illinois.
- The company was actively engaged in the manufacture of flour, feed grain, and commissions.
- Jos. W. Rickert served as President, and Geo. Ziebold served as both Secretary and Treasurer, with their terms expiring in 1903.
- The document was officially signed, sealed, and notarized on February 8, 1902, by Geo. Ziebold and Police Magistrate A. C. Douglass.
- You should search MyHeritage for the 1900 and 1910 US Federal Census records for Jos. W. Rickert and Geo. Ziebold in Waterloo, Monroe County, Illinois, to discover their family members, ages, and birthplaces.
- You can look for local Monroe County historical societies or business directories from the early 1900s to learn more about the Waterloo Milling Co. and its economic impact on the area.
- Check MyHeritage for city directories or county histories that might feature biographical sketches of prominent local businessmen like Rickert and Ziebold.
- Investigate the Illinois State Archives online databases for further incorporation documents or subsequent annual reports for the Waterloo Milling Co. to track the company's history and leadership changes.
Saturday, April 25, 2026
Genealogy Friends from Afar - look to local historical/genealogical societies where your families lived
Small historical or genealogical societies are wonderful for getting to know more about your relatives' FAN Club. Here's an example on my mother's side of the family in Upstate New York (Scriba farming community established in 1811 in Oswego County).
https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/Scriba,_Oswego_County,_New_York_Genealogy
My journey started by reaching out to the Scriba Historical Society on Facebook. Then, I started emailing the society's President (Mary). I really wanted to borrow a copy of Charles D. Young's out of print, two volume books - A Scriba Anthology. I already had attempted Interlibrary Loan and received the Table of Contents. Going low tech, Mary sent them to me via US Mail, and I later returned them the same way.
I also have enjoyed watching videos that this small welcoming group posts:
https://scribahistoricalsociety.org/video/
Success came yesterday. After trying to join a monthly Friday roundtable sharing call via Facebook didn't work last month, I was able to join via ZOOM with the Scriba NY folks in the audience and a Wichita KS man who grew up in Scriba and knew my grandparents.
Tip for working with local societies: Free ZOOM works well - log back if needed. Also, volunteer to help remotely such as I did with some scanning.
"Grandma's Recipes" was the roundtable sharing topic. I brought my copy of the 1982 Oswego County Historical Society Cookbook. The participant from Kansas showed a Scriba Baptist Church cookbook from before I was born. I now literally have some more of my Grandma's recipes for apple cake, doughnuts, wine drop cookies, baked corn, tomato conserve, salmon loaf, and popcorn balls. If only I can find her directions for making homemade cottage cheese. I loved making and eating it with her.






