 And thank you everybody for joining us. Today we're going to be going over the highlights for the Wiki Tree Challenge number 17, which was for the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society, the Nashville Chapter. So we'll go ahead and get started on revealing what we found in our week of working on the ancestors that they provided. For those who don't know, the Wiki Tree Challenge is one of our, it actually is our biggest ongoing community event. We've been doing it for a few years now, actually this is our third year. So what we do is we grow seven degrees of connections for the seven starting people chosen by the guest organization. So let me go ahead and bring those up for you all so you can see what they look like on Wiki Tree. So I'm going to go ahead and go to the, just a minute, we have some people wanting to join us here. Okay. We have Denise and Annette, Stephanie and Blaine are coming in. Excellent. We'll wait until they are in here and then I'll go ahead and, so welcome everybody. It looks like we have Elaine and Stephanie and Kossie is coming in now. We have Ruby and Annette. Welcome everybody. I hope everybody's having a nice evening or for whatever time it is where you are in the world. So I was just going to go through and show the profiles on Wiki Tree that were provided by the partner organization, the Afro American Historical and Genealogical Society, National Chapter, which we have several in the chat, and just to let everybody know that just came in, this is being recorded. So if you wouldn't, don't want your, don't want to be part of the recording, just want to listen in. You can just stop your video if that's what you'd like to do. So this is the space page where we collaborate on the challenge and right here at the top we have links to all the starting profiles. If you haven't been on Wiki Tree before, we'll kind of go through the profile so you can see what a profile looks like, an ancestor profile looks like on Wiki Tree. So here's the first one, Josephine Amanda Groves Holloway, 1898 to 1988. And you can see here all the relevant data for her life, the dates are right here at the top and the family relationships are also available on the side there. So you'll note that there's right here across the top we have a link and a note that this profile is genealogically defined by the US Black Heritage Project, which is what is the project that's managing this profile. She's a notable ancestor, so that is going to be noted there at the top. And this is a lovely profile, it's got a great biography written up. And it's wonderful to have a picture there on the side. So on Wiki Tree we have the ability to have a biography section where we can really flesh out all those dates and facts of the profile into the story of their life. So we've got an echo, somebody who just joined or if you can mute, actually, if everybody can mute while we're doing the presentation then that'll probably help with that. And if I can help with that, let me know. Okay, all right, and so her profile also, another aspect of Wiki Tree that we have that's really wonderful is we have the ability to add a section for research notes. And I think almost all of the profiles, if I remember I have research notes, it's just another way to collaborate on a profile and share information, work out maybe facts that are in conflict, so that's kind of what you're seeing here in the research notes. At the end of each of the facts and the biography, there's an inline citation, and that takes you down to the sources section where you can see all the sources that are for those facts on the profile. So this is her profile, again it's a really great job on the profile that was done here. And you can see here at the top that it's noting that she's a notable connection. And down here it's saying she has 345 connections and that's how many connections she has within seven degrees of her. So she's at zero and then every degree out like her parents, siblings and children and spouses would be at one degree away. So that's what that means. And you can see here, right here it says 34 degrees, that's how far away she is away from me. So if you're a Wicked Tree member and you're connected to the tree, the main tree, then you'll be able, whenever you're visiting any of their ancestor profiles, you'll be able to see their connection to you. If you have a relationship with them through biological lines, then it'll say what that is, like a cousin, you're a 14th cousin, three degrees removed. So that's what that, it'll all be up here at the top. So that's kind of a brief about what the Wicked Tree profiles look like for ancestors. Another thing I just want to mention here is the categories section. So these are categories that are relevant for her lifetime. And so you'll see links to the category for Tennessee State University. So if you click into that category, you can see other people that also went to Tennessee's or taught at or were somehow related to that university. There's also a link for here, the Greenwood Cemetery in Nashville, Tennessee. I believe, Tania, you were saying that that's one of the members was working on. Yes, we have a friend of the society who was working on identifying people buried there. Yeah. Yeah, so that's great. All right, so the next profile is William Edmondson. And he has 172 connections now, also notable connection. And he's 28 degrees away from me. That's some of the fun parts of having profiles on Wicked Tree here. You can always see how you're related or connected to somebody. So another great picture for him there. And it's lovely to get that from one of the society members. If you click into the go look, let's go look. She found it on Wicked Media. That's great. So that's just a really good point. Every profile on Wicked Tree and free space pages have an images tab where you can upload images. You can see all the images that are there. Another tab that's available on Wicked Tree profiles, of course, is the tree apps. And this is just different ways you can view this ancestor's profile in their ancestors or family groups or just different ways you can view their relationships to the main tree. So it's what you'll see here, it usually will default to whatever you were last viewing. So right now it's trying to bring up ancestor webs, which takes kind of a lot. For anybody new on Wicked Tree, they'll be having the default view of the dynamic tree, I think is the default one. Am I right on that, Karen? Is that what that is? The default one is the dynamic tree. Okay. All right. So Prince, you caught me switching away. But I couldn't tell you. I'm always just defaulting to the ancestor view. Oh, okay. So Prince Albert Ewing is the next one. And here is his profile. These are stickers. So that's just something to, there's something about this profile or this person that you want to kind of highlight. We have stickers for different things. Like you can see we have stickers for somebody's a twin. You can have that on the profile, which is really great. Another great aspect of Wicked Tree is being able to link into what we call space pages. So you'll see here there's a link to Traveller's Rest Plantation. Oh, that's to a, sorry, that's to a Wikipedia page. But the US Black Heritage Project also does plantation pages. So maybe somebody has one they want to share. I can share that in a little bit, just drop it into the chat. So you can add that to a profile too. And you can see this one is linked into the story, has information about other people. So it's linking to their profiles on Wicked Tree as well. So you can go right to that profile, which is pretty great when you're writing out the biography. Okay. And so this also has a section on slave owners and a note about being enslaved at Traveller's Rest Plantation. And then it's linked here to Mary McConnell White Overton. So you can see all about that and see what the links are there. And here are all the sources again. So there's just a lot you can do with a profile on Wicked Tree. Just lots of options. Another aspect of the profile that you can look at is to see all the changes that have been made to the profile. So when you go into a profile, you can see what was changed. You can even go into the actual change that was made. Let's go down here to you can see the before and after of a change that was made, which is kind of nice because if there's a maybe a mistake was made, you can see what the mistake was and go ahead and fix that. Okay. Preston Taylor is in our next ancestor and he's out of 168 connections. Another notable connection. Quite a few categories connected to him. Another Greenwood Cemetery, National Tennessee. That's great. Preston actually was the founder of the cemetery. So when you go in, his burial spot is right there at the front in this circle. Wow. And spend some time on his profile. Just, oh, I'm glad that someone added his infant son because I knew about how to do it. And I had heard mention of a son of papers. Yeah. And it looks like we've got a military sticker for the Civil War service. So that's great. Just another way to highlight something about this ancestor. And another great. Oh, and we have even a picture of the grave site. So that's wonderful. Love to see that. Oh, it looks like somebody's created a space page. Yes. Yes, I did. This is what I was talking about. You can link it to the space page if it's relevant to the ancestor profile. So this is a great example. Awesome. This is great, Tanya. Yeah, this is what I think we'll be working on in the new year is building up some of the content for the history of African-Americans in Nashville. Awesome. That's like so exciting. All right. So yeah, lots you can do. A free space page can be for anything really. Just want to mention, too, another way you can use free space pages is for one place studies. So for instance, if there's maybe a neighborhood within Nashville or Shreveport or even a street or a house, you can actually have a one place study for that location. So if anybody's interested in that, definitely look into starting a one place study there. They're pretty great. They're kind of addictive, though. That's the wording. Okay. So our next ancestor is Samela Shepherd Moore and another notable connection, 22 degrees away from me, getting closer. And she has 218 connections. So hermitage must be a smaller part of Nashville. Looks like. So that would be great. One place study. Maybe somebody wants to start a one place study for that place. She's got several categories on her profile, American musicians. It looks like we have Fisk Jubilee singers, even a category for that. That's wonderful. And Fisk University. Great. Yes. That's where he met. And I love to see twice, right? No, I love to see these pictures. That's wonderful. Wow, I love it. And of course, another aspect of the tree that's wonderful is DNA. Our DNA tools are very feature rich. So if there were any DNA connections to Ella, they would be listed in this part of the profile. So once someone, once someone connects to the tree, they, they're, and they've added a DNA information, which just is not the raw data. It's just the fact that you took a test and where it was taken. And the indicators, like your, if you have a GED match that would go there or your ancestor user ID goes there. And then it populates out within 24 hours out to the tree, to people who would be a connection, a DNA connection to you. So that's, that's how that works. There's a lot more to DNA on WikiTree. There's a wonderful presentation that was done by Max during WikiTree Day. So that's out on our YouTube channel. That's WikiChairs on YouTube. Definitely something to worth checking out if you're interested in DNA. Okay. Our next profile is Richard Henry Boyd. Another notable connection and another great picture. 28 degrees from me. Okay. So he has 123 connections within seven degrees. And here we go. He's a publisher, Baptist minister. So he has all those categories that are associated with those things. And here we have a section on the research notes talking about the discrepancy between a passport application for his son versus what the Fine and Grave Memorial has. So that's just an example of how you can really get down to the nitty-gritty of working through, you know, maybe some conflicts in the data or the sources. Okay. Kali Guy House is our last one. And here's her profile. 175 connections have been set up for her. I think that we added all of those. We'll check the stats sheet in just a moment. Another notable connection. And you'll see another cemetery map, Mount Ararat Cemetery in Nashville. Is that one that some of our society members have spent some time researching? Or has Greenwood been keeping you all busy? So they're all connected. So Mount Ararat was the first African American cemetery. And now it's owned by Greenwood Cemetery. So there's Mount Ararat Greenwood Cemetery and Greenwood Cemetery West. So they're all, they're this conglomerate located nearby each other. Thousands of ancestors, right? Yes. That's a big, big job. All right. Here are the stats. So it looks like we added over 1500 profiles. Or no, that's how many, I'm sorry, I read it wrong. So this is the total profiles that are connected within seven degrees to these ancestors. But if you scroll to the bottom, we added over a thousand of those. And here are the total number that were added per ancestor. So that's really exciting. We did, in this column, the second to last column, we have the profiles edited. You can see what everybody was working on. Not everybody added profiles. Some people were adding stickers or working on biographies or looking up family search images. So a lot of different tasks that can be done during the Challenge Week. And so that's what, that's what was done. And a total of over 5000 edits were made during the week. So that's wonderful. Go ahead. Oh, go ahead. I was going to say there were new profiles were pretty well spread out across the seven. You know, it looks like people got excited about the third starting profile, but no one got left out and everyone got at least, got over a hundred, you know, fairly close relatives, right? People who are seven steps. So hopefully it just increases the presence, you know, of these seven folks. On the tree and and for those following, you know, it's kind of serves as cousin bait, you know, because these results come up pretty quickly on on wiki tree. So maybe we'll find some people who aren't connected to the society who are also interested in the folks you chose for us. Yeah. And just another more chances for people to come and find their family on, you know, wiki tree, find connections to the tree. It's they're going to be able to connect that much quicker. And I think everybody's connected. Is that correct? Let me just double check. I think, yeah, everybody was has a connection. Right. I was through and I didn't see that 175 connections on Prince Albert Ewing's profile, but he has, you know, he also has them. I just didn't see it up at the top there. Oh, was he next into the tree quite recent? I was just wondering too. He doesn't have the notable tag because he not have maybe he's just a regular guy notable, you know, maybe, maybe not. Okay. What makes an important thing is I was thinking he was a notable. Yeah. Yeah. Why did you all pick Mr. Young? He's the first black lawyer in Tennessee. Oh, yeah. So that's the kind of thing that people don't read about on Wikipedia. But yeah, but just the pioneer in his field, you know, getting to be legally recognized to practice the law, you know, by his peers and have to push his way into that profession. Yeah, that's great. He should be notable. Yeah, he's notable to us by golly. Yeah. A magistrate. Yeah, we'll work on that. Right. Well, yeah, go write him a profile too, or maybe one of us will. Oh, Wikipedia article, yes. Denise, did you want to share something, Denise? Well, I was going to say what what had just been said. If there is a Wikipedia page on him, he can be identified as a notable. We would need a representative from the Notables team to tell you more about that. They know more about what constituted a notable book because he was the first black lawyer in Tennessee. Oh, wait, I misspoke. Nashville. Sorry. In Nashville, okay. But still, you know, that's a major city in the state of Tennessee. Yeah, but that's not possible that he could still be identified as a notable. And then we could put a category on there that a Wikipedia page is needed. Yeah. Oh, I suppose so. But you know, it may just be enough for us that he is was a leading figure in his community. Yes. That he doesn't have written about in encyclopedias and newspapers and books. You know, correct. That to Nashville. He's an important man. Someone we want to recognize and learn more about. All right. So does anybody have any questions that they or anything they wanted to share on what they were working on this week? I was wondering what people found that was interesting. All right. Yes, let's go to them. You know. Oh, yeah. Because maybe it'll be interesting to us. There were quite a few interesting finds this week. So I can go through what the top seven were. If you guys. Oh, yeah. We had to have a poll, right? On at the end of the week to say what folks found. You know, their top seven since we have a seven people and seven days and seven degrees. It's all about the seven. Okay. So one of the interesting finds is near here near at the top. Can everybody see the page? Okay. And it's big enough. It's really big. Okay. So William Edmondson was an African American and a sculptor from Nashville, Tennessee. And he was exhibited in New York City's Museum of Modern Art in 1937. At the same time, there's another African American named William Edmondson by Hailing from Spokane, Washington. Also noted that he was a singer and actor. Also active in New York City in the 1930s. Wow. That was really interesting to me, too. Yeah, because they both had to keep going. No, I'm the other way. Good colleagues. And one of the other interesting finds that was on the top of the survey was for Julia Arvia Ewing-Heddox. She's the granddaughter of Prince Albert Ewing, managed the Heddox family pharmacy in Nashville, her husband's business after his death. She managed the pharmacy for several years in the 50s and 60s until her son took it over. When it closed in 2017 after her son's death, it was said to be one of Nashville's oldest black-owned businesses. So that's really neat. The next one was this one under Preston Taylor, Levi Mallory and Ida, or the parents of Ida, wife of Preston Taylor. So Levi and Ida had an inter-rational marriage, and they were charged with violating Tennessee's laws prohibiting that. So according to newspaper accounts, it was the first case of its kind to reach federal court. Well, unfortunately, he was murdered, so the suit was dismissed. And since daughter had he married into Mallory's family as well, I didn't ever learn was it that had he got married and then her father got to know the Mallory's and met Ida or was it that Preston knew the Mallory's and introduced one of their young men to his daughter? Yeah, I don't know. That is the next interesting find that was at the top of the survey was the daughter, Hattie Tyree. She's a daughter of Preston Taylor. She had an interesting marriage history. Seems she took great pains to hide her first marriage because her second marriage is called her first, her third is called her second, and so on. So her second husband, Henry Ballery, died tragically a year after their marriage, and she then married a third time to Albert Sylvester in Chicago after that marriage failed. She was apparently under the impression that the marriage had been invalid anyway, because she thought there was a court order placed on his previous divorce, which barred him from remarrying, and then she married a fourth time to Samuel Franklin Tyree without legally separating from Sylvester. So Tyree sued her and was granted a moment. Because she was technically other than this when they married. Right. There were half of my East Tennessee relatives. They ain't nobody in the mountains had money for a divorce, so they just married the second time in the next county over. Oh, okay. So the next one is Washington's Bradley father-in-law Preston Taylor. There was a lot of the interesting finds were on the Preston Taylor. Washington was a wealthy man. So he was a barber with an interesting quirk regarding his pricing. To be fair, he was also a real estate speculator, which is how he really made his money. So the following account is in his obituary. There is one peculiarity about the deceased that is worth mentioning. He never would raise his price on his old customers. No matter what might be the exigencies of the times or the fluctuations in trade and currency. 40 years ago, he charged five cents for shaving. 20 years ago, he charged five cents for shaving. And whoever was once shaved at his shop for that price could always be shaved there for the same. So I thought that was really interesting too. It's kind of neat actually. Okay. So the next one, there is a lot of interesting finds about him specifically too. Okay. So we have, we did William Advinson. We did Levi. We did Washington's Bradley. Hattie Tyree. Okay. So the next one is Dr. Irene Caldwell. Is it hypes or hips? I'm not sure. I'm going hips with a double letter because I always use a short file before. Okay. Then she comes home. So she's a great, great daughter of us, Shepard. And she was the assistant superintendent of schools in Washington DC in the 50s and 60s. A professor at Howard University. And there are 193, at least 193 articles on newspapers.com where she is mentioned as a speaker, educator, volunteer, et cetera, from 1937 to 1965. Irene played a leading role in desegregation in the nation's capital. And she's a graduate of Strait College, New Orleans, A, B degree from Howard University, and a PhD from New York University. Yeah. Who are there Harvard alumni, not Harvard, Howard alumni on the call? On the what? I'm sorry. Oh, on this on our call tonight. Yeah. I don't know. Do we have any out there? Yeah, not now on. Okay. What's that? Oh, go ahead. I was just going to say I have to hail, hail to old Purdue myself. All right. And the next one is Theodore Martin Alexander, a fourth degree connection to Shepard was an insurance broker. He co-founded the Atlanta Negro Voters League in 1937. Two decades later, he kept the Montgomery bus boycott alive by contracting with Lloyds of London to replace policies that were canceled by white-owned insurance companies. So there are your seven top interesting finds, but there are, as you can see, there are several interesting finds on the page. Does anybody have any that they maybe didn't get on the page in time or they want to share or any anything they'd like to share, just a profile that they're really proud of that they'd like to show off? We can have you share your screen or I can go there, whichever way you'd like to do it. This next section is military profiles, and it looks like we have several that have been added to this section. Oh, that reminds me. I was hoping someone could find Kristen Taylor's pension file in this weekend. Oh, email. Oh, yeah, that'd be great. Oh, and it looks like we have somebody entered on the list of free space pages. They've created a Spotify playlist for a mash filled with trees that challenge 17, featuring CC7 musicians like Norville Florinoy Eakin Miller and his two famous brothers Irving and is it Guitard? Guitard. Guitard? Guitard? I don't know. Is he named for a guitar or is it just a cool French name? So that's linked in there. Yes, so better go play it. Yep. So those would be all musicians that have music available on Spotify and are within seven family connections of our seven starting people. Yeah. Guitard, the fifth child limit says some of the other records said. Oh, I see. I always find it really interesting to see where people with the profiles, Barbados, Sweden, Guyana. I think we were even in China, weren't we? I thought I saw something about it. Yeah, someone said that someone in their CC7 married someone from China, so they were looking for help with those records. Yeah, in the days of WikiTree, we liked it when those connections got shorter. And so we joked about trying to marry off our relatives into far off places so that we could pull people from Guyana or New Zealand or wherever we felt we didn't have enough connections. We thought, well, who's that a married sister or brother? Something like that. I just find it myself by going to. If you go to TreeApps, that's the one I was trying to show before that it was stolen out of me. So right here on the tab on their profile. Oh, the TreeApps tab. And then was there someone else's not just? I just wanted to show that the default thing there is the, I think it's actually the dynamic tree. Yeah, who knows what I use less? Like I don't use these very much. So you can see there, if you do a drop down there, Karen, you can see all the different ways that you can view this ancestors, different ways to view his tree, the timeline, family portraits even within his family. So just a lot of great ways to view the information that's on WikiTree connected to this ancestor. So definitely recommend checking that out. There's even a game. Oh, yes, I forgot. I saw the release of Fando, but don't. So you're supposed to place all the ancestors in the proper spot on the chart. So maybe you better just do your own. Into the chart, that's silly. That's cute. Yeah. So it's just, there's a lot, a lot of, a lot you can do is what I was trying to show. So I'm going to go ahead and share my screen again. Okay, I'm gonna, you can share right over me or I'll find stuff. I just want to share. About two, maybe. Yes. Oh, six degrees about here. Yes. Okay, there we go. Okay. So I'm, I'm just putting in, you can change the central person to this one. I just changed it to Preston Taylor. So you can see it's filling in here. Okay, let me see where we started with Preston. We started, where is he at? Taylor, 169. So we added 161 profiles. Oh, so he only had eight relatives on the tree. Oh, we can go. Yeah. So this is a really great, we have before and after that we'll share with everyone. Later, but I just wanted to share kind of what it looked like. So there's seven degrees and you can see where all the connections are. So degree two, there's 18 people connected to him there. Degree one, of course, is his parents, siblings, spouses and children. But degree two is another, well, degree out. Another step out from him. And then degree three, we have 45. So this is another way that you can view the information about what was added to him. I believe we have before and after shots that will be, we can forward on to y'all and share that because it's great to see the before and after when we start with eight or six and then it just balloons out. So that's a lot of fun. So you can just change the ID and change it. Let me grab another profile ID here. Oh, and I heard a little bird say that there might be some phone cards in your email. Wait, I didn't hear you. What did you say, Karen? Oh, I heard that Aowyn might have sent Azure some fan charts. Oh, but this is fun, too. I'm going to go see how I connect to everyone. Yeah, that's that's something we could look at. Like how do people connect to this? Are you connected to the tree? I am connected to the tree. Oh, cool. So we can see. Do you want to share your screen? Oh, sure. Yeah, let me let me. Yeah, I was putting my family members in and got connected really quickly because somebody some people, some bodies have been doing work. So let me share my screen. All right. All right. What are the IDs? Let's do. Oh, let's see. Have you opened the score sheet lately? How do I get the score sheet? Oh, I'll drop it. I'm going to get the URL or are you just going to get it and drop it in the chat. Okay, great. All right. Right at the top. All right. Got it. All right. Cool. So let me go to Josephine. Do you have a favorite? Or are you just going to pick this one? I'll start with Josephine. All right. So I am 45 degrees from Josephine and. Right. She's the one who's got the way out there. Connections. So many. She's got the most, I think. Right? She's got 145 connections. Adding. Yeah. If you go to, if you go to her, we can treat your ID up in the upper right hand corner. The groves, 3666, another inch up. Wait. Oh, up here. Okay. Here we go. And then you can do connection to me. It's the second. Oh, connection to me. All right. Connection to me. Yeah, relationship is a blood relationship or a parent-child link. You know, well, people who can, who have step-parents or are adopted can put anything they like in their mother-father fields. Just if you're using DNA, you might prefer to put your biological folks there. And if you put somebody else there, we just ask that you mark the relationship non-biological. So here's the path to her. So. I like clicking that alternative view generational path, which is just down into the left of the cursor. Yeah. I just clicked it because I had, I like, I would not look at these. I like to see me first and then how I get to them. It's a little bit easier. Oh, yeah. And then I always put that, that long alternative view button because I like, which way in time we're going, you know, because we're going to what, Tanae has got a great, great grandfather, Mr. McNair. And then that goes, you know, his brother. Yes. So I like to see the, that, that other one. Okay. Just because the generation's up and down in time. So I can see we go back in time for generations from you and then to the wife and the brother and then, and then over, you know, and sometimes I look at like where, where there's a change in communities, you know, like, like are you bouncing to, are you staying in Tennessee or are you bouncing off to, you know, colonial Massachusetts or something because somebody's got a brother-in-law that's in the Sons of the American Revolution. Denise, did you have something you wanted to share? Well, I was had an alternative way to see this, but you're there now. So I won't worry about that. Sorry. Let me lower my hand. Oh, no worries. I just don't want to miss you. And Eileen mentions she bets that connection will be a lot shorter a year or so. Oh, yes. Yeah. Because Tanya keeps liking WikiTree and then she looks. Yeah. And they're cousins. And then all of a sudden somebody's going to, you know, marry into a relation of, of this, this is Hallways. Well, yeah, there's the, check some of the other ancestors. All right. So let me go to William Edmondson. Let me close this. So 172 connections he has and I'm 43 degrees away from him through my same line, my McNair ancestor. Is that bass in Ohio? In the middle, like 22, 20. I was just wondering. No, this is North Carolina. Yeah. All right. And then we'll go to, to Ewing. Yes, 309. Oh, wait. It's not going to tell me because his number isn't here. You can 36. Oh, 36 degrees. Okay. So he's a little closer. Nice. Um, okay. So this is, yeah, also through that McNair line of mine. All right. He's a little closer. Oh, we gotta get you some cousins on the other lines. Yeah. So, okay. This week's feature profile, Dory Miller, since I started becoming serious about WikiTree, he's, I'm the closest connected to a feature profile. I'm only like 17 degrees away. Okay. Preston Taylor, 41 degrees. Ah, we've gotten further away. Oh, sometimes people do some pruning and they cut off a whole branch. We have to say sorry for your loss. All right. Still that McNair branch. All right. Ella Shepard, she is 35 degrees separated from me. Probably that McNair line. Most of my connections are through this McNair line. Interesting. Although Dory Miller is not with most of my connections. So, let's see. Then we have Richard Henry Boyd, 38 degrees. Got a little bit further. So, again, through my McNair line. Same people all through here. Okay. And then Callie House Guy. Callie Guy House, excuse me. I am 52. I'm really far from her. But that's interesting. It can go map out that far. Yeah. Yeah. And it'll, you know, that's one great thing is that these profiles all, you know, everybody will probably still be working out of this. Trying to keep adding to them and growing them out even more. Definitely. Utah, it's a connection in Utah. So, I really like the degrees because when I share with people, I always reference the game six degrees of Kevin Bacon. And so it's like. And that's who the focus person was for the first couple years. Really? Yeah. And then it changed to an author. Because in 2015, AJ Jacobs threw a mobile family reunion and invited the entire human race. Yes. They did at least get Dr. Gates to show up. It'll be interesting to see how this evolves over time. Yeah. So, so yeah, this is cool. I'll stop sharing my screen. Okay. There's another view that we have. I finally got it to work again for me. So I'll just share that real quick. This is another view on the tree apps that's available. It's wiki tree plus maps option on here. And so what you can do is you can put in your profile. So I'm looking at Preston Taylor here. And if you scroll out, you can see the nuclear family of Taylor and their migration pattern. Or you can change it to descendants. So just another way to view the information, which is really interesting to me. The other one that we that will be available on the slideshow that will be made available to y'all is the connections with the seven degrees. The migration pattern of the all those profiles added. So you'll be able to see that as well. So that could be Hattie or her mom going up to Chicago there where we see them going to Chicago and then having them come back down to Tennessee. Yeah. Oh, and Aline mentions that there is a helpful data doctor, which data doctors is a project on wiki tree where we go in and we're alerted that something needs fixed on a profile. And so that's that's what the data doctors do. And that's what she's mentioning. There's one of those suggestions that is generated on ancestor profiles that tells us of a possible parent or spouse that might already be on wiki tree. So that's another way that we can keep adding to these profiles. So that's kind of exciting. The same thing I think is in place for wiki data. If there's a possible connection on wiki data for the person. There's a suggestion generated for that as well. Oh, yeah, that's the data site that drives wikipedia, right? So so for a more notable folks like Reverend Taylor, if someone has added a parent on. You know, the site that drives under wikipedia and wiki tree connects to it too because you can link back from wiki data. A wiki media foundation project back to wiki tree with their person maybe. Yeah. So this is Shepard and these are her descendants. You can put it nuclear family as an option as well. So this would be showing nine profiles. Just have to give it a second to Elenia, Karen, made her own wiki data from page. So you have a wiki. Oh, I did. Yeah, I can't remember if someone tried to take it off because I'm, you know, not very notable. I put it in his room, you know, but yeah, I did. Well, and wiki data is a little bit different too. I think there are there are pages on wiki data that there's not a wikipedia profile for. So like some locations or different things like that. So I did add a few small communities myself in the past week. But I can't remember if they were related to the challenge where they went on wiki wiki pedia and wiki data yet. So I just went and added them. I like this descendants because you know what I'm thinking like think about family union, right? You have the ancestral couple and then you could show where all the descendants have migrated to if everyone, you know, does a wiki tree profile. Yeah, it's yeah, it's really great. I was going to put in which, which one is the one that has a lot of we'll just check each of these, but I want to open up groves had the most profiles, I think, yeah. So it defaults to ancestors, change it to nuclear, which would be everybody descendants and our nuclear would just be the ones within one degree of her, I think, right? Whereas descendants would be all her descendants. We'd have to get Gregor Alesha or somebody to come and tell us. Yeah. So nuclear family was showing 10, I think. Yeah. So siblings probably as well as children. Yeah, they're really interesting. So Montgomery, Alabama, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, into Georgia looks like here's Boyd. All right. So is there anything else that anybody would like to see or share or talk about? We had a lot of fun this week. There's a lot going on in the chat. I want to come to Nashville and research at the state archives. We have a beautiful state archives. It was just I know I haven't been there since I was 1821. Yep. Well, if you go to the Renaissance Festival outside of Nashville, that is my high school best friend's cousin. Okay. Yeah. Well, now this is a lot of great work done by all the volunteers to build out the family trees of these these notable. So thank you. Oh my goodness. So exciting. And good night. Kassie and thank you that time. Right. It was wonderful seeing everybody and talking and sharing and, you know, seeing all this. Thanks, Nanette. Yeah. Well, thank you, Wiki Tree volunteers for your efforts and for our society members that are on. You'll see me share more about Wiki Tree in the coming year. There's a lot of great things we can do as a society to further our mission. And I believe Wiki Tree is a great platform for that. So this is just a start. Thanks. All right. Bye, everybody. Thank you. Good night.