 Good morning, everyone. Happy Saturday or Sunday. Mostly Saturday. I think Saturday for the majority of people, Sunday or... All day Saturday. Saturday today all day. I wish Saturday could be every day and I never have to go to work and we could do a live cast every morning. We could. Hey Joe, how are you? We have a lot of chatting before we even went live. Yeah. We did do some chatting before we went live. Kathy was here right at 9.30 pretty much. 9.36. You get the whoopee cushion for the day. And then we have Chris, John, Lynette. Let's see. Janine, my mom. We have Rich. Rich is here every once in a while. Hello, Rich. And let's see who else is here. We have Thomas. Thomas, we missed you last time. I feel like we had mentioned something about you, but I don't remember exactly what it was. Donna, Patricia, Hillary. And I think that's it. Hello, everyone. And if you're watching, please say hi in the chat. How is everyone doing? It is the end of September. It's almost October. Kind of crazy. Cool nights. Good sleeping. And if you are in the Northern Hemisphere, it's coming... Well, at least for me, it's been cool this week in North Florida, so it's been very nice. I don't know how... And if you're in the Northern States or you're in the Southern Hemisphere, you're going into spring. So it's getting hot for you. Yeah, getting pretty. So people are making some... Thomas is making Earl Gray. I have my coffee. And then Mags also has her coffee. She always has her coffee. Hello, Flo from the Pacific Northwest. Okay, well... That says he's sorry he couldn't make it last time. That's fair. We allowed you. You can sleep in once. Yeah. Once. That's it for the year. And we're sleeping in. And second, I still sleep in on Saturdays. 10 a.m. for me is not... Ooh, 64. It is. How cool is it right now for me? Oh, it says 84 right now. Is it really 84? I feel like that is not correct. You know, we know that. Yes, I am aware. We know that. And it snowed in North Carolina on Wednesday on top of Mount Mitchell, the highest point on the Eastern seaboard. Actually, three years ago, it snowed for the first time in Florida until it has to. And I was actually... I had a video of it. And a lot of people actually drove up from South Florida just to see the snow. Did Joe drive up to see the snow? No, she didn't. No. They did not. Hey, Sarah, guess what? What? There's something important happening soon. Let me see if I have it out. I feel like it's super important. It's super exciting. Okay. I'm going to... Max has something super important to share. I do. Chris was like, that's the second most Florida thing ever to drive up to see snow. We can't see anything, Max. Is it not running? No, you didn't share your screen. I did. Hold on a second. Technical difficulties. Technical difficulties. Share my screen. Let me back it up. Let's try this again. Because it's really good. Screen to share. Add to stream. There we go. Okay, so... Here we go. That's not my thing. That's not my thing. Woo. If you want to share that, it's up on the WikiTree page. The WikiTree, WikiTree page. So you can share that if you want. Yeah. That is next weekend. Starting Friday at 8 a.m. eastern time. And whatever time that is for you if you're not in the eastern time. You can figure out... I think there's a little link to figure out the time for you on the page. Yes, anyone did do a good job on that. I like the music. It sounds like Downton Abbey music a little bit. It sounds very proper. It also reminds me of... What's that other show with the... Bridgerton. There we go. I was thinking of something similar to Downton Abbey. With that music. Doctor Who, no. Eligator Point. I was actually there just a few weeks ago. Patricia. I'm sorry. I was surprised for those of my goodness. Okay. Sorry. I just read in the comments. Stop talking. Okay. So, Sarah, I guess we'll... We have something else exciting and important. We have a question of the week. And it's an exciting question of the week. You didn't ask us. You know what? I get to share photographs. Let me pull her up. The question of the week was, do you have any... What is your favorite photo? Do you have a favorite photo of an ancestor? And we had lots of great answers. I'm going to start with Facebook. Kevin Gerard Eccles says, my second great-grandfather, James Eccles. He likes that picture. Nice watch chain. But is that a watch? I can't tell if that's a watch or not. It's an interesting... It's like a little pocket watch. It's got pointy things on it, though. It looks like to me. Zoom in. It looks square. Yeah. That looks like a pocket watch. It's interesting. It's a cool picture. He's got great eyes. And then this one from Travis Henderson, taken of my grandfather, the blurry boy on the left that can't sit still while everybody else is sitting wonderfully still. He's a ghost. He's a ghost. He's two-faced. The time of year is coming up. Ghosties. Ghosties. But isn't that a great picture? Look at the Christmas tree and everything. The wallpaper on the walls. That is such a great picture. I do like that. It's a great picture. It's a great picture. It's a great picture. It's a great picture. It's around the Christmas table. Yeah. That is so fun. Kind of reminds me of like a last supper kind of photograph painting kind of thing. And going back up here at the top, there's a couple that were done as thumbnails. This one is from Candice Fulford. Let me grab. There she is. That is a gorgeous picture. I feel like they've shared that for a photo. I don't know. I feel like I've seen something like that shared for a wedding photo challenge thing. The next one that is in the DVD post as a thumbnail, so you can't really see it very well, is this one. Artemis Clark Thomas holding daughter, Jesse A. Thomas. Yeah, from Virginia Fields. That's a good picture. The baby has blue eyes and she has dark eyes. Both my parents have dark eyes. Well, my mom has dark eyes. My dad has light eyes and both my sister and I have light eyes. This is one of my favorites of the week. Look at the expression on that baby. He looks shocked. Yeah. This is from Chuck Biggs. His second great-grandfather was a photographer. This was a promotional thing. This is the actual glass print of this little promotional card that they would hand out to people. It's fun. Meg, they're saying that the watch is actually in the pocket and the thing dangling is a watch fob. Thank you very much. Thank you. Okay, let's go to page one. That's over here. That's a beautiful picture and it looks like it's been folded. You can put it into, I don't know, folded. Maybe they had it in a smaller frame. That's from Dieter. 1886. The oldest photo that he's got. This is of Marguerite Richards Ross from 1896 to 1978. She's in North Wales. Is she an umbrella? Yeah. Do they call that an umbrella or a parasol? Maybe a parasol. That's up near where Hillary lives. That's a cool picture. That's a cool picture. You're standing amongst the seaweed in the rocks. You barely see the horizon of the ocean there on the picture. That's a cool picture. This is like my second favorite, but most favorite, I think. How risque is that? That's an incredible picture. Alexis Nelson, of course, it's your picture. It's signed. 1928 photo of my great aunt, Nora Long. I'll see if I can get a bigger picture of it. Nope. I can make my screen bigger. Did that help? Yep. Whoops. Woo, doggy. That is a pretty photo. Robert S. Providence, I guess. Providence, Rhode Island. I guess that's the person, the photographer. That's a gorgeous picture. Scrawling on down here. This is a picture of Pamela. Pamela Evelyn Galloway Denton in the early 1900s. And this is, she's got a brooch. Looks like she's wearing a pen. And this is from Jeanine, isn't it, Eiselman? Yeah. Jeanine. And Jeanine has a coffee grinder that she cherishes, that she inherited from this beautiful woman. This is taken about the time she married. The next one is Elizabeth Hartlick Pritchard, my great grandmother on my dad's side. She looks so pretty and innocent in about 1870, around age 21. She married in 1874 and three years later, the city burned to the ground. She was born in New Brunswick in 1877. Three of her six children died as infants. She was separated from her husband because he wanted to live near the wilderness. She wrote of being in the blues in an 1897 letter. Nice earrings, too. Yeah. Very fashionable. Very fashionable. All right. I'm going to give you guys three guesses that you might have posted this one. Three guesses. Anybody got a guess? Nobody's guessing? No. I sneezed, so I missed the beginning. I could only guess. This is Chris Fariello's picture. I think it's his great-great-grandfather and his great-grandmother on the left and her sister. And I think he has a comment down here that's like, got to love that. Hater's going to hate vibe he's got going on. Kind of like that. Oh, Joe thought it might have been Ben Molesworth. Has Ben here? I haven't seen Ben yet. I know. I haven't seen him. He fell asleep. I love this photo. My favorite picture of my dad with a great bird, with a bird that greets him every time he saw my dad and a kid hanging out in the background that kind of looks like he's amazed that the bird's sitting on the fellow's head. Apparently, Susan Larson thinks her father might have been feeding the bird, which made the bird really like him. So that's a cute picture. I think that was photo of the week one week, actually. Oh, yeah, cool. I think so. I love this one. Cheese makers. They're cheese makers. But it's so cool. Judy Stutz Iowa, Wisconsin. From the 1920s. That's a cool picture. And all of the men in this hay crew are my relatives from Michael Lewis and horses and horses, but none of the horses are his relatives. Oh, all right. There's there's horsey bunnies in there for Sarah. That's a cool picture too. And I posted this one. Oh, yeah, there's two pictures of it. Alex Franson. I love that you can see the detail of her shirt. The polka dots or the flowers or whatever the design is on the shirt. What is the string going up and around her neck there? It doesn't look like a design on the shirt. It actually looks like there's a string holding something there. It looks like an accent on the, but I don't know. I don't know because down here it's not connected to the shirt. Where's our fashion expert who commented on the watch thing? Yeah, come on. Tell us. In lightness. Oh, that one didn't come through. And this is, I think it was just a double one of that same one. I tried to get it to open and it gave me the same information. The right reverend judge, Isaac S bird. 1800 the oldest ancestor for whom I have a photo. He had three wives, 15 children and a list of accomplishments. A mile long. Now there's something interesting I noticed about this photo and I don't know if it's like each got on the photo in an unusual way. One of his eyes is blue and the other one looks brown or dark. That's, that's a, that's a something special. And that's from Marion's Seroody Marion in here. And this isn't a picture. It's a portrait or it's a, I don't know if I can't figure out what it is. This is from Marion Seroody as well. I love the lace. Gloves on this portrait. And the handwriting is of her great grandmother, I believe. That's a cool picture too. And I like her little gloves. Yeah. Is there a name for those like half gloves? I don't know if there's a name for them. Let's see. I love the hair. See in the 19th century, the favorite photo was usually the only photo and had a place of honor on the parlor wall. My great, great grandfather Hiram Haftaling was killed in the battle of Port Hudson. His widow, Ellen would have treasured this picture even before she had a parlor wall. She used her widow's pension to buy a two room house and it would not have had a parlor. This is Joyce Vander Bogart. That's an interesting portrait thing. I wonder when that battle was. Doesn't look like a picture really, does it? It almost looks like a drawing painting. Yeah. And it's very good. And then Johannes of Holland, circa 1525. For me, it's an easy answer. However, I may use a portrait instead of a photo. Of course you can. So portrait of 10th great grandfather, Johannes, no last names who lived in Goringham. Interesting photo portrait there from Rod Corkham. And another one rather than call those a favorite photo. I'd like to say a very fond of a photo of a portrait of the honorable Alicia Maud Tottenham. 1783 to 1866. She loves the kindness in her eyes. It's pretty. From John Thompson. Thank you, John. And that's all of the photos for the question of the week. How fun. I got to do photos too. Both get to do photos. And then we have our photos at the end. But first we have nobody answered about the. Whatever was on her shirt. Or the gloves as there's a name for a half love or not. Okay. So our photos, our photos, our profiles of the week. Is. I'm going to learn a lot of interesting stuff too. So swing riots. 1830 uprising by agricultural workers in Southern Eastern England. That's who we're featuring this week. And the main one is Charles the second. Charles second Earl Gray. Born in 1760. Huh. Was he drinking tea? Did he introduce the tea? What's up with that? I know that there were someone was just making Earl Gray. So. Is it related? Oh, let's see. Probably says if it's related to us. So he was a member of the aristocracy. He's remembered for his involvement in the swing riots and subsequent parliamentary reform. Lord Gray suggested in a house session that the best way to end the violence of the riots was to introduce reform in the House of Commons. But. Drink tea. But is he his name? Well, he's second Earl Gray was the first Earl Gray. Oh, look right here. However, perhaps his most notable legacy outside poxics is that Earl Gray tea is named after him. Thomas, if you know this before you were starting drinking Earl Gray tea today, or just a coincidence. And he also your mama, your mama. What about my mama? Love it. You probably. Glovelets. A little lace gloves. Yeah. Okay. What was I saying? Oh, that grace government also enacted the slavery abolition act in 1833, bringing about the abolition of slavery and most of the British Empire. I think my favorite part about this is he's named the girl great. He's named after him. So fun fact. Next we have Henry. I was almost going to say carnivore Earl carnivore counts Earl Carnivon. For 1772 in England. He was the Earl town and country of Carnivon from June 3 1811 to 1833. He supported the plight of the worker during the swing riots dating in the House of Commons that their role had been greatly depleted and impoverished by the advent of the use of new machinery, which led employers fewer to use fewer workers to farm their land. And you're 21 degrees from him through your daddy. How close was I to Earl gray? Oh, let me go back. You were. 20 degrees from Earl gray through. Your dad. Oh boy. It's the British side. Yeah, he is actually so. Next we have William Cobbett. Born 1763 in England. I'm assuming all of them are going to be born in England. And he was a focal journalist and speaker in support of the rural workers quite. He had worked as a clerk in London and then he joined the 54th regiment of foot of foot and 1785 sailed for Nova Scotia with his regiment and was promoted up to sergeant major and returned in 1791. Let's see anything else. I want more fun facts like somebody was named after a tea. So. So his last great cause was his opposition to poor law reform which would and did sweep away outdoor relief and bring in the era of the workhouse. That's a great thing. Next we have Lord Melbourne. And he insisted on harsh punishments for workers involved in the riots. William lamb. Wait, that. Yep. Okay. The second viscount of Melbourne. Born in 1779. He was he was usually addressed as Lord Melbourne was a British Wig statesman who served as Home Secretary and Prime Minister. He is best known for his intense and successful mentoring of Queen Victoria. At the ages 18 through 21 in the way of politics. Apparently his paternity was open to question due to his mother's many affairs. Oh my. Oh my. You're 20 degrees from him. Well if his paternity is open to question who knows. And then. Has a very long biography. So Melbourne would left a considerable list of reforming legislation not as long as that of Lord Gray. The one who's named after. Gray. He was involved in a bed chamber scandal. What's the hair scroll up just a hair. In 1839 in the Brett bed chamber crisis occurred when Melbourne tried. To resign and Victoria rejected the request. Cool. Yeah. Learning lots of lots of stuff. Okay next we have James lush. Was it one of the rioters. In 1788 England and died in Australia. I wonder if he got. Well it looks looks like he did go to. Australia for. The penal colony. He arrived in Tasmania in 1831. He did. For his. Hulk life. He turned into the whole. Maybe if maybe that's why they sent him to Australia they couldn't contain him in England because he turned into. The ship was named. Success. Success. Is a pretty in depth biography as well. Yeah really well done. Lots of photos. Chains and balls for the background. Yeah. So in 1830 James with a number of other men formed a mob and stormed toward Bartlett Coombs property with the intention of asking for food and money to support their family. This is recorded in witness statements and court transcripts at the old Bailey. Apparently they also smashed machinery. And. And he gathered up to 2030 men and some guns to fend off the mob. Oh that that was. Hulk's. I want to know what a Hulk is. That's something. Hulk's like my ancestor. Oh. Australia. I don't know. When we're reading about stuff like this. We live in a very very good. Age. We live in a good time. What are the Hulk's in Australia prison. Hulk's for floating prisons used from 1776 is temporary accommodation for prisoners from overcrowded jail. A hook is a ship that is still float but unable to put to sea. So, just kind of, I guess, docked. The ships were decommissioned and converted were warships. Conditions aboard the ships weren't healthy and aren't hygienic. Look, we learned something new every day. We do. I was afraid I was just going to search Hulk and then, you know, I was going to get the green... Green, green stuff. A ship that's not fit to sail. Hey, Charles Platt. And more people are telling us what Hulk's are. And your mother just saw them out. Okay, next we have David Heath. I wonder if he was named for the Heath bar candy. In 1807, he also was in Australia. He also probably went on a Hulk to... He was banished. Apparently, we're not sure of his origins. He may have been bored at Ramsbury, Wiltshire, and they haven't found his parents. Let's see. I want to read about his banishment. So, he has a pretty well done... So, warrant dated on November 26, 1830 led to David Heath and William Kipple White, being committed by magistrates Thomas Bollett and Joms James Wilde Esquires, charged on the oaths of William Smith and others of Cricklade with having broken a thrashing machine his property. There's not nowhere by whom David was arrested. And let's see. I guess there's a lot of snippets from probably all the documents they found. I want to see. When was he banished? So, I don't know. February 6, 1831, the ship Eliza. And yeah, it's a lot of snippets. I don't have a photo for him either. I wonder... Hillary's been working on those Wiltshire rioters. That's cool. Did she... I was looking at the change history. Okay, next we have Mary Ann Withers, wife of a convicted rioter. You are 20 degrees from her through my daddy. Born... I'm not sure exactly when she was born, probably around 1798. So, her husband, who was a rioter was Peter Withers, a local shoemaker. They married in 1828. They had twin girls. So, her husband, Peter, made the decision to join the rioters, which led to a serious altercation with a special constable from Marlborough, Oliver Codrington, who Peter maliciously wounded by throwing a hammer. For committing such offense, Peter was sentenced to death in January, 1831. When the verdict was announced, a local newspaper reported that the prisoners and their grief-stricken families broke down and cried. However, petition for a more lenient sentence brought a reprieve and the wither sentence was commuted to transportation for life to the Australian penal colonies. Was he able to take his family with him when he was sent away? Well, she died in England. So, I guess not. I guess he had to go by himself. I guess because, I don't know, maybe Australia wasn't... I have no idea about how that worked. Oh look, by that time, in Tasmania, Peter had taken another wife. So, apparently he received his freedom in 1846 and promptly sold his property and removed to South Australia. Interesting. Okay, next we have Robert Blake, another rioter, 1805. He also went to Tasmania. Oh, there's a picture. So, him and his brother were swept up in protest to swing riots against the new agricultural machinery. Robert was convicted for stealing brass and transported to Van Demen's land, where he was put into the service of Archibald McDowell of Logan near Bothwell. And then he got sent to Tasmania, so involved earlier. Apparently, Robert owned a number of houses in the town in Bothwell. And he married his wife in Tasmania. Very cool. Okay, we have William Dove, maybe named after the Dove soap or the Dove chocolate. I'm just gonna... That's funny. Or maybe around 1809. He also passed away in Tasmania, so he got sent there. He participated in the swing riots as a machine breaker, revealing against farming machinery introduced during the industrial revolution. He was convicted in Norfolk and his punishment was transported from England to Australia in 1831 on the ship Proteus, along with 87 other male convicts. He was pardoned in February of 1836, and he married Sarah Standforth in Tasmania in 1838. And he died in 1866. Through your mama. Ooh, to my mom. And we have Richard Vinfield, 1810 in England, and passed away in 1836 on the Mount Egerton in the colony of Victoria. He was convicted in the Glauchester quarter session of machine breaking. They're machine breakers in 1831. And let's see, he was transported from Glauchester. That word always gets me. That's a tough one. Yeah, on January 4th, 1831, an abort the Eliza arrived in Van Diemen's land on May 28, 1831. I wonder if a lot of these, probably a lot of these men knew each other and probably maybe were friends. Richard received a pardon at, on February 3rd, 1836. The description list gives his age is 22. So he was 22 when he was pardoned. So in 1840, he married Eliza Brown in New South Wales. There you go. And then we have one more. Yep. James House, born in around 1804 and died in about 1850 in Australia. He was transported along the ship Eliza in 1831 to Tasmania as part of the swing riots. A copy of the ship's passenger list describes him as a plow room from Hedgebury near War Minister. He was convicted in December 27th, 1830, along with the number of other men. And he got his pardon on February 5th, 1836. You know, Hillary posted the swing riots were all about the introduction of machinery and poor pay for agricultural workers. And we're kind of on the verge or the precipice of something similar because AI is robotics are taking over some of the work that's been done by workers traditionally. Yeah, I mean, there's they already have some stores like in Japan or I don't know that are they don't even have any people in them. They're all you just kind of scan your stuff and hotels that are run by robots. Yeah. Yeah. Get into technology guys. Luther Brown says he needs more peanut butter and John Tyner said he had a deer in his yard yesterday in his garden. Was the deer eating your food, John? Oh, you're so cute. Deers are so cute, but let's hope he didn't hit the deer run the deer out because he was eating his dinner. I kind of hit a deer once with my car. Oh, I don't like it kind of like I hit the side of him. He's the side of my car and he was okay and ran away. I guess so. It wasn't the dark. It startled me. We had a we had a deer jump in front of our van once and just the my spousal unit hit the brakes just tap the brakes and it was just enough time for the deer to get away. Oh, that was a close one. Okay, so now we want any any food he was just eating grass and trees. So the deer is safe. Okay, just eating grass and trees. So now we get to look at some more photos. This is a photo filled day and these are unusual photos. That is a theme. Unusual. Let's see. Let's see. Let's see if anybody did their due diligence and put one with the animal. This is a memorial card for John, but it's I guess an unusual memorial card. John Mama. And it also a unique last name. So I like this one. Where? They're like there's a chair in the tree and it kind of reminds me of Jack and the Beanstalk. What did the caption say? Happily sitting. Peril McCleary's little cousin happily sitting in the middle of giant sunflower. Oh, I didn't realize they were sunflowers. I know. I wanted to see. I thought it said sunflowers. That could be you, Sarah. That could be me. It could be me. That is adorable. That is I. Okay, that's it. That's the only photo we need to see today. Yeah, really, that's that's the photo of the week. Alexis uploaded this one. Alexis always has such a good photos. Were like does she take all the good family photos that were ever taken? Speaking of good photos, Betsy Koh has taken on a job of teaching a flute session on Saturday mornings and won't be here, but she said she's going to be posting photos anyway forever. Yeah. So an early motor vehicle. Does anybody know what the name of this early motor vehicle would be? Anybody have some insight? I would say these things probably went like probably no more than 10 miles an hour or something. I don't know. I don't know how fast they went. Hard rubber tires and no suspension. Yeah. So it can't go too fast or they would be dangerous. An apple peeler. That is unusual. That is. How do you know how that would work? Yeah, it works. I mean, I don't know. Like, I guess you put the apple in here in the middle. You put it on the side of a table and then you you sit the the you put it down on top of the apple and spin it around like that. I need to I need to see like a video on how this works. I can't imagine it. I don't think that was called a Model T, John. I think Model T was later. I think a horse, a horseless wagon is probably closer. And Hillary says she's got an apple peeler. I have an apple tree. You have an apple peeler. Come on over. My mom says a horseless wagon. No, silk. Ghost silks. Look, ghosties. Maybe they're ghost making some. Oh, that is a cool photo. People were moving around. Nice. This is also a fun photo. Probably like they just got a brand new TV when TVs were kind of first coming out when they're unpackaging it. And they're wearing tuxedos. Yes. He's so excited for his TV that probably had one channel. James Arthur Dodge. Oh, cool. That's a cool picture. That is pretty cool. An action shot. Nice. Trampoline. Oh, I haven't been any animals yet. I'm still very pleased. Look, she's smoking her pipe. Oh, fun. That's so funny. I woke up this morning thinking about this pipe that I have. It's cherry tobacco or whatever. I have one of those pipes. I wonder what kind of if they have just regular tobacco or if they did something special with it. Well, it's kind of tobacco, I'm sure. Something with eggs. Those look like eggs. Do those look like eggs to you? They do. Maybe there's a written something in the G2G post. Disney Land in California. Oh, wow. Janine uploaded this one. She's usually in the pictures, so I'm guessing that she's one of the little girls standing next to the... I don't know. Or maybe she took the photo. I don't know. Enlighten us, Janine. We hear no noise in the background, John. The Missoula sunset took us about 10 years ago, leaving work. I've never seen such an usual and beautiful sunset. It was beautiful. Guess that's an unusual looking house. Is that in Australia? It's in Burma. There's a bicycle there. Some people going in. I don't see anybody in the windows. The thatched roof has a net over it or something. Yeah, it kind of looks like that. Yeah. Oh, and there's people in the hats, the safari hats. Nice. You're right, John. Must be behind Sarah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. The windows are open so you can hear everything outside. That is another one by the same person, but this is in Canada, this house. His same, so he has a house in Burma and a house in Canada. Colleen Jane Hopkins. Looks like there's a baby in the middle. Oh, guess who's this is? That's a cow. Wait, what did the title say? She's got music. The Happy Mount Leprosy Connie harmonica band. That's pretty cool. That is cool. She's got music in her bones. So it's a scan from a pamphlet in her personal collection commemorating the 30th anniversary. Jane, Janine says she wasn't in that picture at Disney World. Luther Brown says it's a pith helmet. That Niagara Falls. She's in like a rainbow. Yeah. Young people at a country outing. You still have not seen any animals. Do not feed. There's an animal. It says it. Oh, ironic. Thomas, you uploaded that one. Yeah, Thomas Coloneline. You were close. It's close. It's going to get to an animal, I guess. You're all horses. Yeah, and yours. Oh, yeah, you're right. So let's see. Okay. So this one, it looks unsafe and not exactly weatherproof. Let's see if anybody said, okay, so I love old cars and don't get much older than that one. It looks like a single cylinder, large flywheel engine strapped to the front. Although we may commonly think that the American car was invented by Henry Ford around 1908. And then he linked something vehicles in production before 1900. So the John Mama. The apple peeler. My favorite photo. Yes. I think of all time. I'm looking to see if there are any animals in that background. I mean, there's got to be some insects in that sunflower to see. Those are animals. You can't see them. There's an animal in the tree. A human. I don't know. Well, I guess if she's the animal. Oh, we didn't see this one. That's cute. You saw that one. Ghost silk weavers. Actual ghost pictures. Apparently, also this, they said that his dad was quite unaccustomed to wearing a suit, let alone a tuxedo. Oh, he won the TV. So he was wearing a tuxedo and he won a TV. There we go. This is an Emmy at Miller. The pipe smoking ladies. Let's see what this says. This photo was taken the early 1850s on a poultry farm. She was a poultry farm assistant. What is she doing? What is that device? Why is she holding it over the egg? Is she heating them up so they hatch? She might be shining a light on them to see. Oh, see if there's actually a... Oh, maybe that also makes sense. It looks like it's measuring the incubation temperature of the eggs. Candling egg, shining a light. Okay. So that's what you said too, Meg. Turning a light onto the egg to see if there's a possible chick to build the inside. Oh, look. We didn't see this one. Joyce uploaded this. The hair loom. Hair wreath. Huh. Send it in for DNA testing. Yeah, right. So apparently he had the house in Burma first and then he made this house which is reminiscent of his previous house in Burma. Oh, okay. Oh, no. So, Paulie Jane was born on August 21st, 1839. She was the first born child. She died three days after birth as an infant due to incompatible blood type in the birth canal. And apparently this is the kid, everybody surrounding her coffin. Oh, that's sad. Oh, don't cry, Sarah. I'm not going to cry. Just say it. I saw you go like this. And so the one that Betsy uploaded, she actually found a YouTube video, the short YouTube video about this, about the organization. So if anybody wants to watch that, Tiger Falls. Ella Catherine. Oh, and then the gang hanging out in the woods. Mm-hmm. Let's see. And then, so this is apparently Thomas' grandmother's uncle. That's funny. Okay, those are all of our photos of the week, guys. Those were some good ones. Yeah, I know. I've seen those kinds of photos before. I kind of thought that might have been it when I first saw it, but then reading it. Yeah. I'm going to give you a photograph. So, okay. Well, that, we did, we did everything on our to-do list. Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. My buddy Dana was the, she got lots of brick walls broken down this week in the challenge. For this coming week, for Melanie. Are we, we're not, we don't have any, but Melanie. Wait, now my, my brain, my brain is blank. Melanie Macomb. Melanie Macomb. I don't, I don't have an update. Do you have an update, Max? No. Well, I don't have an update either. Where's Mindy? I don't know. Where's Mindy? I'm going to shout out her real quick, see if she's there. So let's see. Let me, hold on. I'll look up something. Okay. Let's see. So we are currently Melanie Macomb and let's see. I'm just going to look. So we do have some bounty points for her. So to see the reveal, check out Wednesday. Wednesday night. Chris is like, I have an update. Things are going well. Thank you, Chris. Thank you. Wednesday night at eight o'clock. What do you do, channel? Yep. Check out the big reveal and then page on Facebook and find it. I would say, same time, same place next week, but, but it is the source. We watched the video. Yeah. Unless you came in late, but the source is on next week. Pretty good timing. It's seven minutes, five minutes before 11. You'll see, you'll see Julie and Aowyn and Azure and Mindy and us and I don't know who else. We might have Chris pop on or Pip. All of us for this, the source of the chats. It'll be a great time. Who's going to show up occasionally? Oh, occasionally. We're not sure about that. No, we might, he might just be in time out the whole time. Oh, I could do that. We could invite him in and I could just immediately put him in time out. I discovered this morning that I could put myself in time out if I wanted to. Mag, just put yourself in time out and then we don't. So the video is, oops, the video is on the Wiki3 Facebook page. If you want to grab it. I shared it yesterday. It's on my page as well. It's a good video. I love the music. It's like, like you said, Down Abbey or Bridgerton or something. Good music. Let me see if I have anything else that I can share. I don't think so. I think that is, I want some next week so we won't be here. Yeah, but the Wiki3 challenge after the source we're doing Dr. Shelly Murphy. Shelly! Shelly, Shelly, the family tree girl. Yes. So guess if anyone has anything they want to ask or say, we might head off for today, for this morning, for the evening, catching up with our connections. Oh, he's a direct line to Mary Elizabeth Ponson B Gray. Why is the girl gray? Cool. That is cool. You're on holiday, Hillary. You're not allowed to go on holiday. You're not going to be doing a source of thought. What? Wow, that's just not Wiki3. All right. Okay, then. Have a great week. Until next week, we will see you all weekend. All weekend next week. Starting at 8 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time Friday morning. Yep. Goodbye. Goodbye. Bye.