April 9, 2026

AF-1260: What I Accomplished Last Month in My Family History | Ancestral Findings Podcast


Last month was one of those good, steady months in family history where I didn’t uncover some huge surprise, but I still got a lot done. I didn’t add a long line of new names just to make the tree bigger. I didn’t solve every question that’s been sitting there waiting on me, either. But I did make real progress, and when I look back on it now, I can see that the kind of progress I made is the kind that helps later.

I spent most of my time working on one family line instead of bouncing all over the place. That alone helped a lot. When I let myself drift from one branch to another, it’s easy to end up with a pile of notes, too many open tabs, and not much that feels settled. Last month, I wanted to be more careful than that. I wanted to stay with one line, look at it closely, and really see what I had, what I still needed, and what I may have assumed too quickly before.

That turned out to be a good way to spend the month. By the end of it, I hadn’t finished every single thing I wanted to finish, but I knew that line better than I did when the month began. I had a clearer view of the people in it. I had a better sense of which records were helping me and which ones were raising new questions. I also had a much better idea of what I want to do next.

That’s a solid month of family history work in my book...

Podcast Notes: https://ancestralfindings.com/what-i-accomplished-last-month-in-my-family-history/

Ancestral Findings Podcast:

https://ancestralfindings.com/podcast

This Week's Free Genealogy Lookups:

https://ancestralfindings.com/lookups

Genealogy Giveaway:

https://ancestralfindings.com/giveaway

Genealogy eBooks:

https://ancestralfindings.com/ebooks

Follow Along:

https://www.facebook.com/AncestralFindings

https://www.instagram.com/ancestralfindings

https://www.youtube.com/ancestralfindings

Support Ancestral Findings:

https://ancestralfindings.com/support

https://ancestralfindings.com/paypal 

#Genealogy #AncestralFindings #GenealogyClips


Check out this episode!

April 6, 2026

AF-1259: Remembering the Founding, From 1776 to 2026 | Ancestral Findings Podcast


The founding of the United States is often treated as a closed chapter, something contained in a handful of documents, a few familiar names, and a short list of dates that everyone is expected to know. That version is easy to recognize, but it is much smaller than the real story. The founding did not stop when the Declaration of Independence was adopted, nor did it become fixed once the war ended. From the beginning, it was being carried forward in another way, through letters that were saved, papers that were organized, broadsides that were printed, speeches that were repeated, and collections that were built by people who understood that these years would not remain clear unless the record itself survived.

That is one of the most useful ways to approach the 250th anniversary. It is not only an opportunity to look back at what happened in the 1770s. It is also a chance to consider how those events were preserved, explained, and handed down. The founding has always depended on more than the original moment. It has depended on memory, selection, preservation, and the steady return of later generations to the documents and voices that remained. The official America250 effort frames July 4, 2026, as a national moment to reflect on the nation’s past and future, which makes this question especially fitting now.

From the start, the Declaration itself was part of that process. It was not merely approved and set aside. The National Archives notes that on the night of July 4, 1776, John Dunlap printed what became known as the Dunlap broadside, the first printed version of the Declaration, and copies were distributed immediately. The document was meant to move outward, not remain inside Congress.  That early movement set the pattern for everything that followed. The founding would survive not only because it happened, but because it was printed, read, copied, collected, and preserved...

Podcast Notes: https://ancestralfindings.com/remembering-the-founding-from-1776-to-2026/

Ancestral Findings Podcast:

https://ancestralfindings.com/podcast

This Week's Free Genealogy Lookups:

https://ancestralfindings.com/lookups

Genealogy Giveaway:

https://ancestralfindings.com/giveaway

Genealogy eBooks:

https://ancestralfindings.com/ebooks

Follow Along:

https://www.facebook.com/AncestralFindings

https://www.instagram.com/ancestralfindings

https://www.youtube.com/ancestralfindings

Support Ancestral Findings:

https://ancestralfindings.com/support

https://ancestralfindings.com/paypal 

#Genealogy #AncestralFindings #GenealogyClips


Check out this episode!