 We've got a full house out there and we've got a full house in here too. Tonight we've brought David Lambert with us, yeah we're going to do his reveal tonight. We've got Christine which is his captain and she's just bursting with all her discoveries. And then over to her we've got Dana Leeds who's week is starting tonight so we're all really excited about that. It's going to be a great week. So before we start with all the fun I'm going to say a little bit about wiki tree for anybody that doesn't know who we are and why we're here. We are a community of genealogists who are working together on a single family tree. In other words we collaborate to grow an accurate global tree that connects us all and remarkably it's free. Now the wiki tree challenge is our year-long event and part of our year of accuracy where each week a team of wiki treeers takes on a genealogy tree and we collaborate to make it more accurate and complete than it is anywhere else. Our goal is to improve our accuracy on wiki tree, make more family connections and make more friends which we've definitely done this year. Now this week we worked on the branches of David Lambert and here is Christine to tell you what we found. Okay so I promised Mindy that I would just speed through this because I put a lot of slides in this presentation. I better put my glasses on. All right I tried to make the font big so we could see it. So first we're going to start with James Albert Lambert. Unfortunately we didn't really get anywhere with the Lambert line. We tried really hard in Canada. I don't feel so bad. Yeah they are very much brickwalled in Nova Scotia Ireland and England but we did make progress on Hannah's line and with the McDade family I did have one of the team members working really hard in Ireland trying to find the McDades but really we only added a brother for Margaret and he was named after their father Hugh. We still don't have a mother for them but that's how it goes. Still a breadcrumb. Still a breadcrumb. So in Hannah's line so Hannah was the daughter of John Harrison and Sarah Lovell and this is your comparison tree that we took from Ancestry. Then the two of them and their nine children came over to Nova Scotia on board either the Thomas and William or on the Prince George on either May 14th or 16th in 1774. Excellent. Looking at Hannah's line. So Hannah is the great granddaughter of Richard Lovell and Anne Widd which you know of Yorkshire England. Now Robert has parents and they also moved that back several generations to as far as Richard Clarkson and Elizabeth Moer who are now your great grandparents. Oh new ancestors I love that. You've got a lot yeah. You've got a lot. Sabina Pike was also very much brickwalled in Atlantic Canada. There was a lot of frustration trying to find records in Atlantic Canada but there was definitely some successes. Now there was a lot of discussion and research and commiseration over trying to either prove that her surname was Tulk or Fitzpatrick and the conversation went back and forth and DNA was considered but there was a lot of intermarrying between the Fitzpatrick's and the pikes and whatnot so it was hard to distinguish everybody and come to a final conclusion. Sure. There was some more work done on that today but I had to cut it off so Kathy did try so hard. She did. Good job Kathy. Thank you. Thomas William Clark. So you already had most of his tree but he has a new mother which is Anne Nottingham and all of that that you see in the orange box is all new ancestors as well. So your line now stands in other three generations on the Clark side and then if you go up to William Clark and you see Ellen Barraclough she continues again. You see the little colored arrow. Yeah. If you're in the tree you can click on that and go further. Well you're into the 16th century then. That's amazing. Oh that's awesome. And on Thomas Clark's side this is one of your he is your first cousin three times removed Melbourne Taylor. He worked for the railroad. He was a breakman and he was trying to couple up some cars on a train and he tried to jump from a stationary car to a moving one. I guess this must have been something that he would do all the time. Yeah. Unfortunately he fell. Now he survived the fall but did not survive his injuries. He died later that day. His legs were amputated. They took him off to the hospital but it was not they weren't able to save him. Well you know it's interesting. We had the family story that my great-grandmother Taylor had come to America briefly and then they went back to New Brunswick. This might be that link right there for that tight family. I read this and I thought well maybe he was just maybe he follows the train or something but that's possible that he was actually just living there. Yeah that's great. Now that Taylor family is not connected to this Taylor family so far. We have Beth and Jane Taylor so far. So due to a property dispute Edmund's father was proven to be John Kelly. He died and tested in 1880 leaving land that had been granted to him and his brother Philip who was a new person for you. Edmund took up occupancy in 1881 planting potatoes and buckwheat. In 1900 however Philip's descendants decided to petition the court to have the land give him back to them. Really? Even though he had been putting in his hard work and time and effort over 20 years. And this was one of those cases. We're like sorry here you go Phillips people have it back. That's amazing. And this is a picture of Monkton in 1881. Yeah I see the looks like the like insurance survey for Edmund Kelly's property. Yeah that's great. Now on Betsy's line this was a late occurrence. Another George Taylor was found and after a bunch of research we have taken George Taylor away from you. Oh no. George Taylor's parents. So you still have George Taylor and his wife Charlotte Lehmann but the other George Taylor was married to Susanna Lewis and his parents were Joseph Abner Taylor and Clarissa Oblenus. So I was kind of excited because the Oblenus line goes back to a loyalist. Right. In Dutch New York too. Sorry. No that's okay. The wiki tree give it then the wiki tree take it away. And here we give it back to you. So on George, John George Lee's line. Again we had a change of parents. So James Lee's parents were changed from George Lee and Mary Fernival to William Lee and Anne Tipping. And you can go to these profiles and you can look at all of that documentation. The team looked at wills and probates and like just all sorts of stuff. It's absolutely crazy what they found. So you can read all of that and look at all those sources for yourself. Excellent. Jane Liversidge, her mother was Mary Hawkenhull and she gained a father Thomas. We know that her father is now Thomas. So that's a new family member for you. We are so, so close to deciding on who her mother is and possibly Thomas's parents as well. But the England team, like I don't even know how they're still awake. They work so hard. They're just always online. They're just always working. So even late today they're like, oh, I have this record. I have this record. I'm like, no, no, no, I don't know if you know this story. In John Lee's line, Thomas Lee, which is your fourth great grand uncle, which is James's brother, and several burglars break into his outhouse, which maybe is not a bathroom. It's just an outer building. And they stole a Gamecock. Oh, yeah. Those are big back in those days. Oh, for crying out loud. So out of the four of them, one was acquitted. The other three were found guilty and they were sent to the prison to do hard labor for six months. Now, this isn't the ancestor of the person who was living next to my family in 1841. I heard about last week, isn't it? That's great. I forgot about that one. And 14 members who is in England went out to the graveyard for you. Oh, that's amazing. Nobody could read some of the tombstone pictures that you can read. It was a bit of a foggy day too. I mean, it's England. What do you want? That's very true. So this is St. Oswald's Church in Briarton comes Smithwick. Many of your relatives are buried there. There's lots of gravestones for Lee and Wilkinson and tipping. And then this third picture is a pub, which is next to the church, where we assume most of your family would have gone to, you know, tip of pint. And to convince you over the lost Gamecock that was beautiful. And then Harriet Wilkinson's line. So we have all of these orange arrows on the side are all new people for you. She has a new father. So her father is Peter. You had Hannah Kettle married to John Evans. She's not a kettle. She's a done. And right. And so her, we found her the record here and her parents were proven. Kettle was actually a married name. So done is her maiden name. And we also have her parents. So her parents are Samuel Dunn and Eleanor Molyneux, which sounds very French to me. It does for somebody who doesn't have a lot of French genealogy. That's fascinating. So that's, and then somebody's today found another Molyneux and I, Charlotte, and I think she was maybe in the Hawken hulls or something, but more work for you to do. Absolutely. Still with Harriet Wilkinson. We have Margaret Hulse Sprosin or sometimes it's Sprosin. There was a bit of debate like the records are at the very end of the week. Yeah. Yeah. Some of them are with a T. Some of them are not. But we think maybe we would tend towards the one with the T in it because there is a place called Sprosin. Yeah. So we can, that can be changed later. Anyway, her parents are now Job and Elizabeth Hulse. Yeah. And Elizabeth's maiden name is White. He was born in 1723 in Cheshire, England. He first married Rachel Cardin and then Elizabeth White was his second wife. Margaret's husband, James Sprosin, also had parents discovered. So his parents are Richard and Richard Sprosin and Hannah Austin. Now, aren't you glad your record is that one where it is not below in the folder where you can't read it? I'm looking squinting. Yes, exactly. Vellum dog. It's always fine. It's just the one right above there. It's almost like they naturally outlined it for me. That's great. Yeah. And you'll see more of this in the presentation later on, but there is a lot of male longevity in your branches. So you should be, you should be pleased with that. Excellent. Excellent. And then we go to Alexander Pour. So the parents of Richard Dole, which is your seventh great-grandfather, were discovered. Richard was baptized in 1621, and he is the son of William Tanner Dole and Joanne Heel. Interesting. He was one of the many people that you have throughout your tree that migrated to Massachusetts during the Puritan Great Migration. Oh, excellent. And some of these profiles, I mean, they were established a while ago. So the people on those projects have just done amazing work, just amazing work on them. We do have a separate, on Wicked Tree, we do have a separate project for the PGM profiles. So a lot of them are marked as that, and then the project can work on those. Going to Clista and Gail. Great-grandmother. Several, several people worked on this. Somebody was very excited to work on this line. That's very ill. So your, the parents existed already for Thomas Emerson, one of your brick wall ancestors. He was the son of Alexander Emerson and Jeanette Hornsley. After connecting everyone, it was determined that you are the seventh great-grandnephew of Hannah Emerson Dustin, who I, this is a statue of, in, let's say it correctly, Haverill. Yeah, you've got it right. Yes. Haverill. Oh, I had to have a tutorial. Versus Haverill, yes. Yeah, that's great. Well, yeah, she was well known in Massachusetts history. That's great. Also on your Gail line was Martha Chuthaker Emerson. That's your eighth great-grandmother. Now she was accused of being a witch by Mary Warren and Mary Lacy during the Salem Witch Trials. Eventually her case was thrown out due to a lack of evidence and she was released from jail. Her arrest warrant was there beside the script. She had four known children with Joseph Emerson and died at the age of 58 in Massachusetts. I'm not even going to do it. David, your eighth great-grandmother, Mary Perkins Bradbury, was also accused of witchcraft and she was actually convicted and slated for hanging, but the sentence was later commuted and we don't know why. I can actually tell you why. Because the people of her community sent a petition to save her life and I did Nathaniel Filberg's genealogy for him and I thanked him for, he thanked me for doing the genealogy for him and I said, I said, no, I'm just repaying a favor. He goes, well, I said, your ancestors signed the petition to save Mary's life. So that's amazing. And I did not tell Martha Chuthaker Emerson, so that's a new one. And there's the whole arrest warrant you can read. Yes. And you already know about this one about James shooting in the kitchen. Everybody was very shocked when they found this. Yeah, they don't speak very highly of him yet. It adds a color to it. I never thought I knew. Well, you know, it's funny because how I found it is I Google searched on the Boston Globe, oh, that address. I said, wow, it sounds like an apartment building or a hospital. I wanted to figure out what was there when I ever saw that. I'm like, what? Lots of news stories on that. No photograph, unfortunately. Right. No, that would have been nice. No. So on his on his profile, there's like a big write up and other links and stuff to that, which I'm sure you've seen. That's great. And John Pittman. So your Clista is great. Your grandfather, John Pittman lived to the age of 101 years old. So here we can see the centenarian sticker that we have profiles that indicate people who lived over a hundred. Excellent. Yes. And his children, he actually had five children that lived well into their 80s. So definitely a definitely a strong line. That's where the longevity comes in the family. Clista's mother died fairly young. She was only 57 or 58. But Clista lived into her 80s. My grandmother lived into her 80s. So it's I hope the trickle down stays in the DNA. That's great. So often when we're working on stuff, we do free space pages or free space profiles. And that's for anything that we're researching that isn't an actual person. So we use those for one space, one place studies or name studies. And this week, we have this entire list of pages. And I had to like keep adding them in because they kept popping up on the other space page where we are keeping track of what everybody was doing. The screenshot here on the right is from the Lee wills in Brierton, come Smithwick. So somebody went and researched every single will that belonged to somebody with the last name of Lee. Thank you in that community. They also did deaths. So there's another free space page for all the deaths. And there's a free space page for Eli versus Ella Follett Gale. They were actually brothers and they conflated because I guess couldn't keep them apart in the records. Yeah. So there's a whole space page on who was who and what did who did what to get them apart. Amazing. Somebody was researching Harriet Wilkinson and found so many Harriet Wilkinsons just in a very short time span and did a conflation page. Well, you know what's confusing is my great grandmother was Harriet and Wilkinson, but my great grandfather, her husband, his mother was Anne Wilkinson and not the same family. The one with those great patronymic names up in Cheshire. And if you were to watch the discord, everybody is like, Oh, I have Wilkinsons and I have Wilkinsons and I have to say for once, I too have Wilkinsons in my family. Cousins everywhere. Miner from Manchester. Shucks. And then we always look for profiles of people who have been have served in the military or have military background. So we have from just the Revolutionary War, you have Colonel Joseph Hughes, which you know. And then Jonathan poor, which is your fourth great grandfather, Nathan poor, which is his brother, Joshua Whitney, which is your fourth great grandfather, Ebenezer Ingalls, which you know, which is your fifth great grandfather, and Sin Josiah Emerson, which is your fifth great grandfather, William Emerson, who is Josiah's uncle, Ella Fulett Gale, who's your fifth great grandfather, Benjamin Patty, which is your sixth great grandfather, and Nathaniel Reynolds, who is your sixth great grandfather. Well, that's really great, because I'm an actual state historian for the Massachusetts Sons of the American Revolution, even though I have people get it qualified as United Empire Loyalist, I didn't know about Nathaniel Reynolds. Well, you only have one now, because you're technical blenus. Okay, that's okay. I still I still have the mills is right. Oh, I didn't see the mills is okay. And there was just one another note on John Luigi and the Dar. Everybody researched that, but they couldn't actually prove that he served. So again, there's another free space page to read all of that. There's a lot. And yeah, we love those. And we did, we made a mess in your branches. I'll call it a mess, but it's a good mess, because there are breadcrumbs left all over your profiles. We had so many people that were just pushing it hard, you know, trying to get past those brick walls. And so they left all those crumbs are waiting for you to go out and discover them all. Are you really? Yes, that's the door to have David Mills. Yes, he is the one loyalist, the one loyalist. Okay, perfect. Perfect. And then we have Charles Robbins. He's also served in World War One and World War Two. Excellent. Yeah, excellent stuff. Well, you know, I'll tell you, like I said, in a comment on Twitter earlier, I said, you know, most people have to run for office to get their genealogy done in this capacity, they're not doing it themselves. No, just go to WikiTree. And I'm really, this is like genealogical holiday extravaganza. I know the holidays are coming up in December, but I really just opened the biggest present in all the 45 years of research to have somebody actually help me with mine. Thank you to all of you. You're all my new best friends. It has been our pleasure. Oh, my flits. Really thrilled. Thank you so very much. I did it, Mindy. I did it under 25 minutes. You can breathe, Christine. Now you can breathe. Wow. Okay, so here is, of course, the brick wall chart that we work off of during the week, me and the captains. And this for if you're not used to the working with one of these, it's a fan chart. So each ring is a generation. We have nine generations here. If you feel it completely, and it's 510 ancestors, now all of those yellow spots were where there was a possible brick wall ancestor. So on the primary tree, there was no ancestor on that line. And then as you can see from the little pop out on the right, every one of those bees in there is a brick wall that we broke down. So you can really see the clusters on the maternal side in certain areas that I'm sure you expected. And then a little baby section over on the left-hand side. That's great. That's great. Every little bit counts in genealogy. And you know, it's like I say, the wiki tree giveeth and wiki tree takeeth away. But I think that you learn from comparing notes with others, as I've told people for years, is doing it myself at work. And to get the shoe on the other foot, so to speak, this is great. Thank you so very much for all of this. Okay, now we're going to talk a little bit about our collaboration that we had during the weekend. Boy, do we have some collaboration this week. Now of course, the spreadsheet on the left is what we use to keep track of which profile we're working on. That way, when we've got 25 people working on the same set of branches, we're not stepping on each other's toes. So that's where we mark who we want to work on. Now on the right, that's our G2G post. And we put the eight great grandparents out there and allow people mostly to mark brick walls now. Sometimes though, they'll put an interesting find or a question or hey, I left off this line at this place. I've got to stop now, you know, so somebody else can take it over. Both very useful tools while we're doing our collaboration. And then this is our biggest one. And we're going to have to break Dave in on this this week. Discord is our live chat. And we honestly could not do without it. We are a global site. We have people working on these branches around the clock. Somebody from somewhere, it's their time to work on it, and they're on these branches. So we use this for a little bit of everything. If we want a second set of eyes on something, we ask in there, we need a translation. We have people that are just really good at finding obituaries. If we need that, we can jump in there and go, hey, I need no bit for so and so. We have somebody that loves transcriptions. He's amazingly patient with them. And sometimes we just cheer each other on. So that's excellent. And while it's not about the point system, we do use one. It's a great motivator. And it also tells us how we're doing with our progress. So there's two ways to earn these bounty points or the sorry, the points during the week, we have bounty points, which is the big one. Now that's 10 points for every brick wall ancestor that's found the first one on every line. And then the individual points are for the nuclear relatives. So children, siblings that are added to those direct ancestors. And those can add up, depending on how big those families are out there. I've seen some pretty big ones. At the end of the week, we look at the total scores. The person with the most score is our MVP, some most valuable player. And this week, that was anonymous Sharkey. And second was Maddie Hardman. Third was Joan Whitaker. Fourth, Rosalina made it up there. And then fifth are Chris Ferriero. So yay to you guys. And, you know, everybody gets out there and works and really we see it more as teamwork instead of just, you know, one person getting the points. But we know that working within Discord and working with each other, you know, it takes a group like us. So we have people that do a lot of things that don't, they don't get points for. But while we are talking about those, I'm going to go ahead and switch over and then refresh. So I have the current scores. Now here's where you see the top five people. And these are the things that we keep track of so that we know how we're doing. Now we have total points and total points for this week was 659, which is a lot. And you'll hear why now created ancestors. Now this is only direct ancestors on the line. And I know some of these were already on your primary tree, you know, but we have to make the wiki tree branches really fully complete and hopefully add to them, which we did. So there were 104 direct ancestors. Now those nuclear family members, we talked about 365 profiles. Way to go guys. Yeah, it is. It's quite amazing. And then for bounty points, those big ones that we were talking about 190. So Dave, you've got 19 new brick wall ancestors, 19. Wow. You know, I'm not one more. So we could was always pushing them. I was like, anybody you got a last minute bounty points will hit 200. That's great. They were trying so hard. And then the next thing we look at is profiles edited. So, you know, here you're going to see edits that don't necessarily get other points, unique profiles edited. And this is just going to blow your mind 1000 and 20 profiles. Yeah, you know, and people have any fingertips left after this week. I just want to know. Well, and some of them don't sleep either. So that's true. And then total edits. And this is our biggest number yet. Now this is every time somebody went in, added a source made a change, you know, added a date maybe went in and made some sort of a contribution to it 3729 contribution points. I mean, this is just crazy. I I love everybody. This is amazing. Oh, wow. You know, I want to I want to just give I mean, thank you for everyone, but I just want to give a special shout out to my good friend and coworker Melanie McComb, who is part of your wiki triers, who has been her wranging me all week long with like, Oh, guess what? No, I can't tell you. Or Oh, no, what? I wish I could tell you this, but it's really terrible. But that's okay. Because I know that she's coming up and probably might be someone that I need to give the revenge to. And she'll be she'll be right after you Dana. So she's going to get quite the treatment. But anyways, really, I just I am so bold over I'm just it's just going to take me another week or two just to digest everything and just kind of look at it. So thank you for allowing me to see new light on my family tree that maybe I've had the wrong set of glasses on for a long time or eating some of it. So I another set of eyes is truly help. Thank you so very much. It was a pleasure. It was definitely our pleasure. It was. And I guess that answers the question, did you get at least what you expected out of wiki tree or more? Did we meet your expectations? Did we above and beyond met my expectations? Like I say, this is a genealogical holiday present in September. I'm flattered to have been asked and humbled by all the amazing work. So thank you, everyone. I guess I all owe you one. So let me know if I can help you with the New England Historic Genealogical Society, because I'm working on other people's family trees, not my own, apparently, because look at all you found. So okay, and that'll segue into having Dana with us. Now she's been sitting there quietly seeing all this. She's probably going, I wonder what's going to happen with my wig. So let's tell you a little bit about her while she's while she's up here. She has developed the leads method of DNA color clustering. And if you do anything with genealogy, you know what that is, leads method named after her. She was working with an adopted person using DNA to find their biological parents and developed an interest in DNA genealogy and her leads method. She has a bachelor's degree in biology education. She got interested in traditional genealogy 20 years ago. And she works with search angels to help adoptees. So, Dana, do you want to tell us what you consider traditional genealogy? I get traditional genealogy. I think I've asked before DNA. So all the regular work that we used to do, well, we still do, but that's not including DNA. Right. Okay. And then what got you interested initially in genealogy? Yeah. So as the little bio said, I started, it's actually been now about 23 years ago. But so my husband and I had moved down to Houston, Texas, and our families are in Oklahoma and Kansas, which I just recently moved back to Tulsa. But so we were having a family reunion on my dad's side. And I got the invitation, but we weren't going to be able to go. But in it, it said that my great aunt was going to bring her family history book and that anybody who'd had babies or marriages or whatever, I'd be good to come and enter those and they could look through it. And so I reached out to her and said, Hey, I'm not going to make it. But can I see some of that? And she I will send you the tree. And I got that and start seeing off her notes. And she started teaching me back and forth through emails. And I spent a lot of time at Clayton Library. Those first few years, I was working temp jobs. So in between temp jobs, I would spend eight to 12 hours a day just looking through census records, mainly on the, you know, on the old microfilm. And just to get a handful of census records in one day. It's just addictive, isn't it? I mean, once you get started. Now, who's your favorite ancestor if you have to pick one? Yeah. So I think my favorite, her name is Sally Dixon. She's my grandmother's grandmother. So my great, great grandmother. But she raised my grandmother. My grandmother's mom died when she, when my grandma was a baby. And she had four older siblings, but they lived with her dad. But I guess dad wasn't prepared to take care of a baby. So grandma raised her. And so Sally is her name. And she was born in 1860 and died in 1960. And I just think of how history changed through her lifetime. I have a really neat picture of her and two of her sisters on horseback. And, you know, she lived to the time of airplanes and cars and everything. Wow. Yeah. And just a tiny bit more of her story is her husband was a Methodist circuit rider preacher. And he was murdered and thrown in the river. And they didn't find him for weeks. She had five young children at home at that time. But there was a trial. The guy was acquitted. But the family, we just recently got in touch with their family and their family has also passed down that this man actually did murder my great-grand-grandpa. So that's my favorite answer to her stories. That's incredible. So what interesting stories do you have to share? Other stories that you found? Yeah. So another two little interesting stories. So one is really quick. I have my great-great-grandmother, Sarah. She had been sick for about five years. This is from a newspaper article. I didn't hear this in person. But she'd been sick for about five years. We would keep getting notches. And one day she vomited something up and they thought it looked like a lizard. When I found that in the newspaper, I was like, this is crazy. I'm guessing it's actually some type of a parasite or something. Yeah. I was doing more research. And there's multiple articles in newspapers saying somebody vomited up either a snake or a lizard. And somebody said they think that these people used to drink contaminated water that had eggs and then they would hatch in their bellies and years later. So like I said, I think it's a parasite. Really gross. And then I have another story I'd love to tell. So this is not a direct ancestor. The sibling of one of my ancestors. But so her name was Ollie. And she married a guy named Roy. And they were like 19 and 20. And when they married, her mom, her dad gave her a house. So they lived in that house for a short time. And then they ended up living with his parents. Well, that house that was hers ended up burning down. Well, her dad did not like her husband. And she went to her dad and told him that she had proof that her husband had burned the house down to collect the insurance money. So he was arrested. And a few weeks later, or months later, I'm actually not some of the time, some of his family. So his brother, his sister, a cousin and a friend invited her over and said, let's work together. Let's try to make our families be okay with each other. And she died a day or two later. And they found a high level of morphing in her body. And they believe that these family members placed in her. And again, they were acquitted. Actually, I found two of the acquittals I didn't find the other two. But wow, again, that was a story I just found through newspaper records and then some court records. But that's why we do genealogy, not just all the dates, which are great. Right. And I thought an answer. And I thought an ancestor who had somebody shot in their kitchen over $1.50 was bad. But see, it is true, you know, that sometimes there has to be that shocking something happened, or we wouldn't know anything about them at all. I mean, we just really wouldn't. You would just have those dates and be like, oh, yeah, there was this lady named Ollie and he died when she was 19. Who knows, who knows her story, but now we know her story. Thank goodness for newspapers. And I love how they didn't, you know, mince words. You get all sorts of details. Yeah. Well, listen, ladies, I hate to back out, but I do need to run for it. But thank you so much, Dana. You are in for a great surprise as I go more than I never bargained for. So I will probably be signing up soon. So maybe I'll be working on your treat too. Talk to you soon. Thanks, everybody. Bye. Thank you. Thank you. Okay. Okay. And when did you first discover Wiki Tree? So I, I've only recently discovered Wiki Tree. I was at Roots Tech 2020. And I, I forget it had only been a year or so, I had met Max Golden. And so I saw her at the booth and went over and started saying, Hey, so what is Wiki Tree? And so Max introduced me to Wiki Tree. Yeah, she's great. Megs is great. What are your current, what do you consider your most stubborn brick walls? So many. So my, my time. David's got all that new England and deeper around rates a lot than I do. So the one of them is my maiden name is Stuart. So of course, that's a very hard name to research. Yeah, back to my, I should have double checked. I think it's a third time great grandfather, Robert Stuart, who was born 1773 in Pennsylvania. And I do have a wide DNA test with somebody with zero genetic distance. That's a Stuart and has somebody from the same time frame and same phase and everything, but haven't made any progress. So I'd love that. I have three brick walls that are like just great, great grandparents, parents of those that are all in Perry County, Tennessee, where I have pedigree collapse. So DNA is not them, that's how I would love to break through those. And then I've only traced a handful of people to where they came, my immigrant ancestors. So I've got five that went back to Germany, one to England, and I've been hearing a lot of these English, I know we've got some great people over in England doing some great things. And one in the Netherlands that was a Huguenot. So I would like to find out more about those because once I traced them, I really didn't know I haven't done much else. And then I'd love I have nobody else that I know like, okay, this person was born in Germany, like everybody else was born in the United States. So I'd love to see one more cross over the sea would be awesome. And then I've seen some in the chat people talking about the Waldron family. So that would be awesome. And some people are interested in that that's a Pennsylvania line. And that would be really cool. Maybe we tie it together or something. Yeah, people are excited. It's a lot of fun when you don't have just one, you know, area of one location for the ancestors. We love being able to poke in all those different corners and bringing in our experts. It's really exciting. Now, what do you hope to see in participating in the challenge? You've already seen David's week. So David's week, I've been watching I've been on the past few weeks and I've been watching some of the older ones. You guys are doing incredible. I want to say thank you already before you get started. But so I'm just excited to see what you find as far as not just breaking through brick walls, which would be would be fantastic. But as you build out some of the people I already have. I'm just seeing wiki tree get stronger. I'm using it a lot more than now, of course, that I and I'm getting involved when I'm working on the other problems going there to see, you know, can has somebody else done something on this person that might help me where I used to just check the family search tree and ancestry. Now I had wiki tree also. So I'm just excited that it's growing and that people are getting excited about it. And this opportunity yes, yes. I know I can't wait to see what they do. They never cease to amaze me. I always think, oh, wow, we had such a fabulous week, you know, they just I can't believe they did this. And then they turn around and amaze us again, they go up and some other tangent and do something else. That's really wonderful. So every week after week after week, and I know it's not every week, I'm just afraid that we're going to end up with that one person. I'm sorry, we can't find anything about your family at all. Yeah. And so far, it just hasn't happened. Everybody's been so fantastic. And then I heard we did have find a great pictures available is what your captain said. Yes, yeah, my dad, especially on my dad's side, his my dad's mom, we have hundreds of pictures and my dad has been faithfully putting those up on find a grave, which I think is a great long lasting hopefully place to share pictures too. But so you're welcome to grab all of those. We want the family, you know, anybody to see them. So we're very happy to share those. Thank you so much. We definitely like to bring them up and put our stickers or, you know, pictures or something on there, make you feel like, you know, the person you want to know them just a little bit better. Yeah. So do we have any questions out in the audience? Oh, yeah. That was our one, we had no brick walls. Our next slowest one would have been Judy's with one. She had one, she had 10, 10 bounty points, one brick wall ancestor. Well, there are a lot of lines I haven't touched in, you know, 10 years. So I know. And that's the way it always goes. So, you know, you work everybody else's tree and then you're like, Oh, I'll get to mine later. So I left, I left plenty for you to do. Yeah, I knew Johnson Crow. When we were at Roots Tech, I think it was Roots Tech 2020, we were doing the little app where are you related. And we had seen that we were, it was either fifth or second, fifth or sixth cousins once or twice removed. It was the closest match we had. And we both had the lines to, we were like one generation from proving it. I had it to hear, I had it to hear, but we needed to make that connection. So, yeah, you guys had Amy on previously. So we're going to see if we make that connection or maybe you already have. I haven't, I didn't watch her reveal. So well, I did watch her reveal, but we didn't talk about that specific thing. So yeah. And I love that. I love the relationship finder and some of the other tools we have, you know, they're always developing some new app or some new little toy for us to play with. The genealogy toys, we love them. Yeah. We do, we all do the, how are we related to you at the start of your week, you know, because we want to see if it gets, if it gets closer or not. Because sometimes, you know, you start filling out those families and the connection is a little bit closer than what you thought it was. So. Yeah. I see somebody, Robin saying, got me in Pennsylvania. Yeah. So Pennsylvania and Tennessee are two big, big places where my family's from. My dad's from Pennsylvania. My mom's from Tennessee, a lot of the family. Now, have you found that they have a lot of burnt counties in Tennessee? I know Southern Kentucky has a lot. Yeah. And Perry County, where I was mentioning those brick walls is, I believe I'm remembering this correctly, a twice burned county. So yeah. But there's still a lot of records. And a lot of them are in family search, and I haven't been through them all. Or some of them, I've got the printed out poppies, I've not finished transcribing and, you know, digging for getting all that good information out of them. Well, we'll definitely have fun with that playing around and seeing what we can find. Do we have any other questions out there? I think we're about caught up. So okay. I want to thank everybody that worked so hard on David's screen last week. And we'll be working hard again this week. I want to thank everybody that's out there watching us. Because if you weren't watching, we wouldn't be here. Thanks, Dana, for showing up tonight. Once again, we're all excited about this. We're just ready to go at it with that tree. And everybody, if you want to see what we're up to, check us out at wikitree.com. And for tonight, we're going to go ahead and say goodbye.