February 14, 2026

AF-1241: Valentine’s Day and Our Ancestors | Ancestral Findings Podcast


Since Valentine’s Day falls in February, it is a good time to explore how our ancestors celebrated the day of love and how their traditions can help us learn more about them, their lives, and who they were as people. One way our more recent ancestors celebrated Valentine’s Day, similar to what we do today, was by exchanging cards. This tradition began sometime in the early to mid-1700s in England and eventually spread to the United States. Here is what you need to know about our ancestors and Valentine’s Day cards.

The first Valentine’s Day cards on record were from at least the mid-1700s, and possibly earlier, in Great Britain, and they were hand-made. Some families still have these early cards in their possession among their heirlooms, and the handmade, hand-written cards provide deep insight into who their ancestors were as people, and how they expressed love to different people in their lives, from family to lovers...

Podcast Notes: https://ancestralfindings.com/valentines-day-and-our-ancestors/

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February 13, 2026

AF-1240: Birth Records Through Time, Part 2: From Parish Books to Civil Registration Systems


Birth records did not shift from “nothing” to modern certificates overnight. For centuries, most births were documented through churches, town clerks, and community systems that varied widely from place to place. Even when governments began requiring civil registration, compliance was uneven, and older religious systems often continued alongside the new civil system. That long transition is why you can have one ancestor with a clean birth certificate, a sibling with only a baptism entry, and another relative with nothing obvious at all, even though they were born in the same region.

The purpose of this article is to help you understand the middle chapter of the story. This is the period when record-keeping became more systematic, but not yet standardized everywhere. When you understand how and why that happened, you can predict what records should exist for an ancestor’s time and place, and you can avoid wasting time searching in the wrong jurisdiction or the wrong record type...

Podcast Notes: https://ancestralfindings.com/birth-records-through-time-part-2-parish-to-civil-registration/

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