2026 June TAG Meeting
June 11, 2026 TAG
Visited the EWGS website: briefly reviewed upcoming events and where to find TAG Zoom link.
We watched short videos on YouTube from "The Formidable Genealogist" -
Here are a couple of the links. https://youtube.com/shorts/dUC3NRc9_vQ?si=LGCsbyyBPl2T8VLA, https://youtube.com/shorts/hgCA-vyEgY8?si=L7biy19ZXqJXZzHS.
If you like her short videos, find more on YouTube.
New Developments at the Ancestry website:
• Census comparisons • Ideas • New tags for "documentation"
• In "Tools," "Add DNA matches" (in Beta)
• Life Story view is where you can get AI narratives about time and place
Should mention:
Also can pull up "Member Connect" from tools.
Here you can find people who are researching the same person. I spotted this on Ancestry - don't always see it. But Ancestry offers tours - virtual (online) and in person.
See this link for details: https://www.progenealogists.com/heritage-tourism/?a1014&_gl=1*avhhsd*_gcl_au*MTgxMDg2NzE0NS4xNzgwNjcyMjA4
NOTE: If you're done with research at Ancestry, they offer a "Preserve my tree" subscription is $5/mo.
You'll still be able to see your tree and attached records.
Reminder: check to make sure you attach census records to the right person in a family.
We didn't watch this today, but if you're interested in digitizing all photos, slides, videos, etc, you may want to watch the video from Connie Knox on YouTube: Digitizing videos and more - Ancestry Preserve (13 min) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNCSARmzi8k&list=UULFcvpi8XvOScBogIxmarmADw
We covered searching for Swedish records. There was a lot of good information at Ancestry. See this link: https://support.ancestry.com/s/article/Finding-Swedish-Records?language=en_US
TAG member Chris Murphy shared some Swedish research insights and links - thank you, Chris!
I discovered our family farms by looking through my grandparents letters after they passed. As it was the early days of the internet, I joined a Compuserve mailing list (one with US and Swedish members) and asked how to connect with residents of the farms. One woman sent me the names and addresses of all of the Nordmans in the surrounding area. There was one that had an address of Myckelåsen. I wrote him and a month later, I received an envelope filled with photos of my family...as well as one of my grandfather as a child. Since then, we have visited twice and we continue to welcome Swedish cousins to Washington. And now our children are visiting them as well so our families are now intertwined... grandpa is smiling down on us.
As I get to know more about the family and DNA I am spending more time connecting to living cousins learning how we are all related and through which ancestor. I've been able to find quite a few on Facebook and there are a ton of my DNA matches on MyHeritage. I'm really looking forward to being a member of your MyHeritage group and learning how to use it because right now it totally confuses me. Thanks for all you do and have a wonderful summer. Chris Murphy
gravar.se (burial spots throughout Sweden)) https://minnessidor.fonus.se/ (obituaries)
https://www.familjesidan.se/ (obituaries)
https://www.hitta.se/ (living individuals and their information : birthdates, addresses, housemates)
https://www.hemnet.se/ (homes/ farms/real estate) mykil.se (the community that my great grandfather left) jamtli.se (historic photos, etc)
https://riksarkivet.se/en (I've found information by putting the surname in the search box....pulls up church records)
https://forum.rotter.se/ (again use surname)
We watched Crista Cowan's video on "The Genealogical Proof Standard." https://www.ancestry.com/c/discover/education/gps-accurate-treeShe highlighted the 5 "essential pillars" for meeting genealogical proof standards.
1) Conduct reasonably exhaustive search for census, vital, land, probate, church records, etc.
2) Save or create complete and accurate source citations. She explained the differences between original, derivative, and compiled records.
3) Analysis and Correlation - connecting the dots - involves comparisons and analyzing records
4) Resolve conflicts in records - consider source documents, claimed event dates, reliability. Bible records outweigh census or headstone records. Obituaries, death records, and FindAGrave records are almost the same as they may have been provided by one information
5) Write up why and how you came to a conclusion, include dates. Put in notes at Ancestry or create a document. Others researching your relative may want to know where you got your information and how you came to your conclusions. And it's good for you to have for your own reference.
TAG members - some of us have work to do!
RECOMMENDATION: Must see video (if you didn't already) at Ancestry's Education Center on advanced search techniques
https://www.ancestry.com/c/discover/education/advanced-search
Please send meeting topic ideas to me.
Our next meeting won't be until Thursday, September 10, so have a great summer!
TAG Attendance (17): Albert Calderon, Ardis Storms, Carol Hsu, Christine Klukkert (California), Chris Murphy, Janice Moerschel, Juanita McBride, Judy Benson, Lola McCreary, Marge Mero, Patricia Robison, Paula Davis, Ruth Halligan (Vallego, Calif.) Sandi Gaffney, Virginia Omoto. NEW: Tricia........., David Perrault.
Janice Moerschel T
he Ancestry Group (TAG)