 up a little bit this morning and let Madame Betsy go first over here. Yes. So that she can go and do some conducting this morning. Just imagine Mickey Mouse in the middle of Fantasia. Or Harry Potter, which is what they're actually going to be playing. Oh, nice. Big Harry Potter medley. All right, go for it, Betty. Betty? Who's Betty? All right, everyone. So let me go. My tip of the week is how to upload a photo to G2G because you know that we here at the Saturday Roundup live cast love the photos. So there are two places where you can put them. One is the free space page. So February, the theme is homes. And this is, this is, let's see, I am not on the free space page. I'm going to go to the free space page. Okay. Am I successfully there? You are. Yes, great. So you can post them here. And that's wonderful. And we always go through this. However, there's, there's no way to let us know the story behind the photos. And sometimes that's, that's really the magic of the photo is being able to share that. So the place to do that is to also post your photo in the G2G thread. So I'm going to go to one of my, oh, I just stopped sharing. Sorry. Share screen. Okay. This is one of my ancestors. And I've, I have a photo up here of him of his, of his house, his home. So when I go here, you can see that I've already put it to the home's free space page. What I'm going to do is I'm going to where is this? Where is this picture? Yeah. This is on it on the profile of Daniel Redwood. Where Chipping, Chipping, Sudbury Gloucestershire. Oh, oh yes. Chipping, Sudbury, small, small market town in South Gloucestershire. She is going to mention that GSL. We, yeah, she knows about the comment on the image page, but on that space page, it doesn't really show up very easily when you're going through it. So there you go. Okay. Yes. So what I'm going to do, you just go to where the photo, in order to post to G2G, it already needs to be somewhere else on WikiTree. Okay. So a profile or the free space page either would work. And so here what I'm going to do is I'm going to just copy the image address. So I believe if you're a PC user, you would do this with a right click. Is that right mags to copy the image address? What I usually do is scroll down and actually grab the URL from the WikiTree information down on the right. Down on the right. There you go. Yeah. Or you can grab it from the URL at the very top. Oh, okay. All right. So now that I have that in my clipboard, I'm going to go back to the G2G post. I'm going to answer the post. Step number one, click on the little photo icon. And then you're going to paste the URL in there. My favorite part of this whole process is the Latin that comes up. It took four years of Latin in high school. So now next you go to the width. Now you're going to start to see your picture, but it's way, way, way too big. 500 is probably going to be more than you want. I start with 300 actually looks pretty good. I only ever play with width. The height kind of just adjusts itself. If you want, well, if you want to get really fancy and adjust the photo left or white within the post, your answer, you can do that down here. I'm just going to leave that be. And there's my photo. Then I'm going to be right back. I'm going to another tab and I'm going to grab, I pre-wrote my text that I'm going to add with this. And then there's my text. See if I can meet in the stuff a little bit. I have a question. What if you need to source a photo? What if this isn't one of your own personal photos? Ah, okay. Well, that's a great question. Remember that we're on wiki tree. We are very, very respectful of copyright privileges. So you shouldn't be using a photo that's of course that's copyrighted, or that is, if it's not yours, you need to have permission from somebody. What about Google Earth or something like that? That's a good question about. I don't know about Google Earth. I know that you can go to creative comments where things are explicitly have been given permission to be used and on other sites. And that's where I stick to that or personal photos or photos where I have written permission from the owner of the photo. And then I put that on the image description. Like if it's something from Ancestry, I will communicate with the Ancestry user. And then I will put on our wiki tree page used with permission of Ancestry user Smith 10. Great job. So I just had a quick Google search on Google Earth images. And as long as you attribute it properly, you can use it. You can use Google Earth images. Great. It's good to know. Thanks, Sarah. It's like a free product. And no additional permission. You just need to make sure, you know, you got it from Google. See what kind of things we learn in our Saturday life. That's great. Yes, yes. Okay, so this is how it's going to look. I'm going to add the answer and then ta-da. Nice. Yes. That was good. Yeah, thanks. I'm reading the comments. Yes. Hey, Kiki. She doesn't look very happy about you waving her arm, though. She's very happy. That's funny. So that's the tip of the week. Tip of the week from Betsy Coe, who will be doing another Zoom meeting this or you're going to be doing something else this week, right? No, that was last weekend, the first weekend of every month. The first weekend of every month, she's going to be talking about new years of tips. So you can check that out. And Betsy's going to be taking off so she can go and pretend that she's conducting an orchestra. Nice. Not pretending she's really going to be conducting an orchestra here shortly, so. Doing her own magic. Yes. Doing her own magic. Oh, look at Kiki's another... What was Kiki? Yeah, that was... Was he conducting? No. Oh, that's good. Displeased. We know he's... I'm going around. Go ahead. Say goodbye and I will watch you later. All right. Bye. Bye. Betsy. Oh, I'm going to jump straight into the question of the week for everybody. And also, also real quick, I put a post-op of the hashtag for the video series that I'm doing. What are you getting ready for? What are you getting ready? What are you doing to get ready for RootsTech? And if you follow this tag on Facebook, you will be able to see all of those videos. And we did a video here just a few minutes ago, right before we started. So you can see that one too. So I'm going to post that up for just a second so you can catch up on those videos. You know me. They're not... They're serious, but they're not, you know? So the question of the week, we have a great question of the week this week. Let me get in line. Can I interrupt you real quick, Megs? Please do. So what... I don't know if this person's named GSL. I don't know if there's a name attached to this person, but he said that they don't necessarily need to be on WikiTree to post it on G2G, as long as you have an image URL link to it. Thank you very much. So thank you. Question of the week. So the question of the week is what favorite family discovery have you made in your research? You people wrote some novels. I was like going on vacation and sitting at the cottage and looking at the water and reading these novels. What a great, great bunch of answers. What is your favorite discovery you made in your research? And I have a favorite answer, but I'm not going to show it yet. I loved this one. I worked with a fifth cousin to prove our community ancestors who they were. The key was a South Carolina will that acknowledged the fatherhood of several mixed race children and granted them the proceeds of his estate to gain their freedom via the recolonization project for the 1840s. I have no idea what that was. So of course I googled it. And on Wikipedia, because Wikipedia is always right, there's a really interesting article that says the American colonization society was an organization founded in 1816 to encourage and support the migration of freeborn blacks and emissated slaves to the continent of Africa. And so it's interesting to watch, to read through this, she talks about the kids going to boarding schools in New Hampshire and showing up in census reports. So I'm assuming they didn't get back to Africa. But I was watching a show last night with Samuel L. Jackson and Rihanna of the Carolina chocolate drops. And they were talking about the recolonization effort. So obviously there's a thread running through some of the stuff that I was watching. It's called Enslaved, the name of the show that Samuel L. Jackson is doing. It's a really good show. It has lots of fun archaeology and genealogy. So if you want to watch that, Erin Bain says there are family rumors that a great grandfather had another family in South Africa or India. And she discovered that yes, indeed he had another family in South Africa. It was his brother's family. Just not, you know, he didn't have another wife. So this one, I'm going to wait and show you the picture. Hold on a second. This is from Alexis Nelson, who always uses great content for our Saturday morning. We should have her on so she can like talk about her own content. I'm having such fun watching Kiki and Yoruba behind your head. Her tail was up right behind you. You look like you had a headdress of some kind on. Okay. Before doing serious genealogy in 2017, I never made the effort to find anything out about my father in World War II. And if you have veterans in your family, I have veterans in my family. And one of them talked about it a lot, my grandfather. My other veteran in my family never talks about the worse that he was in. So finding letters and war records were kept in a box, no bigger than a box. Might keep a pair of boots in and she seldom opened it. My mother had mentioned that my father's best friend was a tail gunner on a B-29 and they were both killed when the plane was shot down. In doing research, I found the tail gunner, Charles Markowitz. Therefore, with more research, I was able to find his younger brother, Joel. And this bond that I made with Joel has been very special. And a writer is doing a book about our meeting. How fun is that, Alexis? Okay. So all this story, it's a wonderful story. We know these people were flyers. So here's a picture of Alexis and Joel. Does anybody notice anything? Maybe it's not big enough for you to see. But let me see if I can zoom. There's something above them. Yes. There's a plane above them. There's a plane. And I don't know, even though that Alexis realizes that there's a plane right here, you can't tell what kind of plane it is. But in my mind's eye, it's a B-52 bomber. That's right. A B-29. Isn't that funny? I bet Alexis hadn't even noticed that. And it's perfect. That's a very cool place right between their heads. Yeah. Right there, right there. Yeah. All right. Let me see if I can make this bigger. Will that make the picture bigger? I don't know. There we go. So if you right, if you right click it, Mags, right click it, right click the image. Yeah. Open image in new tab. That first one. That first. Yeah. And then. Then it's even bigger. And it was there. You already opened it. I did. Oh, there it is. Oh, and I can make it even bigger. But yeah, see, there's some, isn't that cool? Very cool. That is very cool. So now I have to go back. It could also be Superman. I think it's a plane. I think it's, I think that there's Kismet going on here. Well, this was, if this was a Christmas special, that would be the B-52 coming back in time with their fathers on it. Yes. Absolutely. So yeah, that, isn't that a cool picture of Alexis? That's very cool. There's always something fun. And lots of people love the picture. And I don't even know if anybody noticed the plane and commented on it. I didn't read all of the comments. Like I said, I spent like two days reading all of the posts. It's been fabulous. Let's see. Let me buzz on down here. Oh, I like this one too. After 40 plus years of research, I've had many wonderful discoveries. My favorites, says Greg Lamberson, however, is finding out that my ancestor, David B. Lee, was not only an attorney, but also an inventor and air balloon pilot, 1792 to 1836, very early. So he corresponded with Thomas Jefferson about traveling through the atmosphere and even petition Congress for the rights to the airspace above the U.S. How fun is that? And so he's got a WordPress blog about that. You can check that out and go over and check out that and look at the airship. It looks like from a Monty Python movie, the way that this thing is. So check that out. That's fun. I always love sharing other people's stuff. Star Climb was really excited about it, as was Marion's Rudy. Finding out Elizabeth Laffer received her rightful place in his family tree on Wiki Tree upon my discovery of her name on a marriage record of her daughter. So finding out somebody's name was a big one. Another thing, let's see. Oh, that's right. Died from eating mushrooms. Sorry. Finding out the K. Smith. And this is not Kitty Smith. I was doing some research on that. We were thinking this might be Kitty Smith. I don't think it is. Somebody died from eating mushrooms. That was an interesting one. Amazingly, there were a couple of people who said that they had discovered that their family was in the circus. Oh, let's see. Oh, and here's another one. Lady Godiva. Like chocolate Godiva? Yeah. Look at Kiki now. Oh my goodness. Yeah. She's got a shawl on. Yeah, that's right. It's a boa. She's my parrot. Yes. Lady Godiva, that's Jamie Johnson, found out that she's her 30th great-grandparent. Wow. And if Betsy was still here. Yes. That my grandchildren related to Antonio Luisa Brico, the first female conductor of the New York Philharmonic. Oh, gone. Oh, man. Yeah, that's from Peter Vandenberg. Abolutionists. Circus folks. Here we go. Circus folks. I discovered one of my great-grand aunts, Mamie Howie, married a man named Miles Orton, whose family started the Orton Brother Circus in Portage, Wisconsin in the 1800s. How cool. It actually said circus performer. As an occupation. Yeah, isn't that crazy? That's wild. So we had. Who could join the circus? That's from John Vaskey. He's one of our regular Saturday people, too. I like this one now. I say I'm Desjardins. You have one of my family names, so Desjardins. I like exploring admixtures in ancient DNA because people were talking about making discoveries because they had done DNA testing. On one side, I was surprised that it said I was related to the Arpad dynasty. This led me back to Wiki Tree, and I was surprised to see that not only am I 33rd great-granddaughter of Arpad of Hungary, but also the 47th great-granddaughter, Attila Lahan. So Attila Lahan was one of the great progenitors of, you know, so there you go. You found out my great-grand-uncle saying at the Coronation of the King. That's pretty cool. That's very cool. Circus performers found out stories about wars. This is the best question they answer the week. This is it. Wiki Tree is one of my favorite. This is from Stephen and Harris. My favorite discovery was Wiki Tree. I was doing research for years, but it never really clicked for me, and I never really understood the importance of documenting sources or providing anything other than relations until I stumbled upon Wiki Tree because Wiki Tree is such a great collaborative site. Stephen Harris was able to bump up his game. There you go. I'm going to jump on over to the next one that I had picked out, Discovering a Family Bible. This particular one belonged to Marty Frunk. While going through the family home of my grandfather, I came upon the Family Bible that my great-uncle brought when he immigrated from Sweden. It's about nine inches thick. Wow. That's pretty big. That's pretty big. It contains gorgeous calligraphy and artwork throughout. It also has pictures of his parents inside. I mean, that's like a discovery on top of a discovery, like Kiki's on top of Sharon's. Let's see. Oh, yeah. This is another fun one. Years ago, a distant cousin, a mutual friend, and I went on a genealogical research trip day, day trip for the day at a local history society on the way home. We were discussing what we had found. When I mentioned Finding the Marriage Record for my fourth great-grandparents, which gave me the name of my fourth great-grandfather's father, the mutual friend asked if he was the one who was the Pennsylvania Fracture Artist. What is a Fracture Artist? I'm going to show you and I'm going to show you her grandfather's drawing. This is from the Winterthur Museum and this is Johan Conrad Gilbert. How fun is that? His art is like everywhere. How cool is that? That's pretty darn cool. That was a really cool discovery that somebody made. That was my second voice. Then all the circus performers were third. There were lots of DNA discoveries people were talking about. There's lots of great stuff. Go and check out The Question of the Week and you will find out lots of great information. I'm going to go ahead and hand this off. Okay. I'll take the baton and we'll talk about the challenge of the week and the profiles of the week. The profiles of the week are actually a mixed bag this week. They chose three people who were born on February 8th, which was the day that the Wednesday newsletter came out. Then the rest are seven profiles from the seven-by-seven challenge, the third wiki-tui challenge of the year, and the OPS stands for one-place studies. And so these seven people were the key seven people from seven one-place studies that were done. Let's see if I can do this right here. I'm going to go through them starting with the birthdays. But before I do that, let me show you like I have on previous weeks the map. I'm using wiki-tui plus to do the maps now that that's working for me. I said last week I was going to show you how I did it, but I didn't really come back and do that. So here's the trick is you go into wiki-tui plus, and it opens by default with the suggestion tabs open, but I want to close that up and go into search. And then in the text search, I put all of the profile IDs of the people who I want to make a map of. So I just go from here, this list, and I find the wiki-tui ID of each of the people. And you can copy that from their profile page, because there's a little button you just have to click on ID to copy it. And then in front of that, you use the keyword wiki-tui ID equals, and then that will find those people. Hit the get profiles that list them here. And then when you click on the profile map, this link here, it will automatically do a search. It tells you, okay, it found 11 people. And if you hover over those people, you see there the locations get highlighted on the maps. You see, I'm hovering over George Wallace, so you will see. He was your closest. He was my closest? Yes. Oh, how cool is that? I wonder if that's why he's first on the list. I don't know. 17 degrees. That's pretty close. I don't know if he has a cut. Just looks like he went to Canada anyway, so that makes sense. He did go to Canada. Yeah, because he died in Ontario. He died in Reach. And if you have children right now, you know that reaching is when you go over to a friend's house or you call a friend, that's reaching, so. Yeah, so that makes sense. Now, interesting, the place he died is no longer, there is no longer in Ontario County in the province of Ontario. It got split into two simple counties, but he's actually, that's actually fairly close to my house or my area. But if I move to here, you get James Dean, his birth and death location, and there's Lana Turner, who we'll be talking about. But and then there's another, but having over John and I don't see that arrow because he's over in England, so I'm going to have to zoom out a bit and go across. So all of the profiles this week are basically North America and United Kingdom. If I zoom out again, I'm pretty sure there's no other profiles in the rest of the world. But whereas the last couple of weeks, we focused on just one little country, one, well, one country, some of Canada wasn't that little, but this week they're a little more spread out. So that's kind of neat. So going through the birthdays, the first person who was born on February 8th is James Dean, James Byron Dean, born in 1931, Marion Grant County, Indiana. And as many people know, passed away on the 30th of September 1935 at only at age 24 in California. You're 20 from him, Sarah. Okay. And Greg, you are, I have to find them. Oh, 21. 21. So he only made three films. And yet he's became a cultural icon. I like here. He symbolized the brooding unrest that's simmered inside this generation. You could say that for every youthful generation. Yeah, that's right. I'm sure there's been brooding unrest everywhere. George Washington's children, they were all brooding, right? Yeah. But anyways, someone said his good looks didn't, well, it didn't, I'm paraphrasing his good looks didn't hurt either. But tragically, his life ended when he was driving his Porsche, which he named Little Bastard, which is why that's called I don't know if I can say that out loud, but it's written there. So I'm just reading the text. I don't think that that's yeah, I think he actually has it had it engraved and put on his on his Porsche title that way. But in an accident, someone was making a left hand turn in front of him. And he ran into at a full speed and he died instantly. It's very sad. And the accident occurred just before the release of Rebel Without a Cause. So that just made it even more famous. I'm pretty sure. Interestingly enough, the person who did run into him has a profile on WikiTree. He did not go to jail. He was not actually charged at being at fault. There was no official finding a fault. And his family was able to he only did one interview the day after the crash. And his family saved him basically from all the spotlight that and all the negative fallout that would have happened because because I mean, yeah, it would be hard to happen this day in time. Oh, there's no way he would have been toast. But the other interesting thing from the profile, it said that there's a curse on his car. So not only did he die in it, of course, which, you know, his work is bad. But the curse, the curse came a week before he passed away. He met, where is it here? He met someone, he met Obi-Wan Kenobi at a restaurant, Alec Guinness. And outside of the restaurant, he showed him his car. Guinness said that the car had a sinister appearance and said if you get in that car, you'll be found dead in it by this time next week. Seven days later, lo and behold. Oh my gosh, I never heard that story. Wow, there's some major force, dark force happening there. Yeah, we got that. But not only that, oh, it goes on. So the person who did the detailing on it, bought the carcass and it soon it slipped off its trailer and broke a mechanics leg. And then parts of it and it goes on and on and people who have like little pieces of the car, bad things were happening to them, it's wild. So I'll get distracted and we'll take up the whole rest of the podcast. About the curse of Littlest. So go to the James Dean profile and click on the thing to just to go through all the details of the curse, it's wild. I just want to interject here that Joe Mama's here. I know, I saw. People were asking about her and then now she's here. Hey Joanna, how are you doing? Okay, the next person who was born on February the 8th is John Ruskin. He was born in the London borough of Camden, great London, son of James Ruskin and Margaret Cox. And he died on the 20th of January 1900 at the age of 80. He was an interesting character. He was a leading he was an art critic of the Victorian era, an art patron, the addressman, water colorist, a prominent social thinker and philanthropist. And he wrote books on subjects as various geology, architecture, myth, or mythology, the study of birds, literature, education, botany, and political economy. So he really, like he covered everything like the whole spectrum, which is really interesting. He was born, this is where he was born in this complex here in the far right would have been the number 54 where he was born, was educated in Oxford, took three attempts to actually convocate and then it goes on about his publications. His marriage was not very successful. But he did some he did some art critic work, was famous for promoting the theory that which was taken up by the Victorian area, that truth and beauty and religion were all intertwined. And so the fallacy that you know, someone is someone who's beautiful must be truthful or all those positive connotations when it's not always, well, I would say that that's not always necessarily, they're not always necessarily partnered with each other, but very interesting, very well done, and very prolific profile, which goes through a lot of details of his life. So I would highly recommend reading that to find out more. And the last person who's a famous person that they've decided to profile because she was born on February the eighth is Julia Jean Mildred Francis Turner, more commonly known as Lana Turner, born in 1921 in Idaho. And what's that? She's my closest. She's your closest. Neat. Oh, she's my cousin. Six times removed. 17 degrees from me and she is my seventh cousin. Way closer. Yeah. Look at that. Wow. And she passed away at the age of 74 in Los Angeles County. But so she was a famous movie star in the in the 40s. A lot of people looks like she had seven marriages. Only four of her husbands are documented here in the or have wiki tree profiles. So there are three that we that someone should do. Just putting it out there. And it goes through. But she is her marriages were sort of like Mayflies. They didn't last very long at all. The first one went from February to August of 1940. The second person she married twice because she married and then divorced because he wasn't fully divorced from his first wife. So that had to be annulled. So more than a divorce. Well, yeah, I guess. Yes. That's right. So it was annulled. It wasn't so but she did have to marry him twice. And then the second marriage went from March 43 to August 44. And then the third marriage lasted four years. So she's good. And then but none of them lasted really super long, which is very sad. And she died at 74. And I think it was cancer of some sort. It's said down here in her I think. But anyway, she was very famous film actress and the love for that. Known as the was the sweater. Sweater lady or sweater girl or something like that. The sweater girl. There we go. Was one of her nicknames in a famous pen up. So then yeah, yeah. And that pen up was in lots and lots and lots and lots and lots of care packages that was sent by and walkers. And yes, yeah, that's right. That's right. So the next group are all from one place studies. And so this is the the challenge tree for this from the Society of One Place Studies. They chose there are seven one place studies that they were highlighting and they chose one person from each of those one place studies. And I actually have another map here for you. This is the map and all those black dots on that map are places that have one place studies on wiki tree. Wow. That's pretty wild. It looks like almost the full United States film. That's right. Yeah. Now if I zoom in, let's see if this I don't know if this is going to work or not. Oh, and yeah, it looks like it will. Okay, that's good. Or what's taken at swat time to redraw. There we go. So there's still a few places. There's a few places here that don't have one place studies. So if you haven't got one places may not have places. Populated areas. Yeah, but look at yeah. So yeah, it looks like a good chunk of the US. And this is southern Ontario right here where my cursor is flying. I don't know if you can see that. Um, heavily covered. Yeah. And then we go across the Newfoundland has a has a bunch there. So that's pretty cool. I saw someone nice Iceland I think. The Azores have the Azores have one. Yeah. Look at Iceland has at least six that I can tell. Where's the Azores there? The island. Nope, there. Is that the Azores there? Yeah, I think so. Yeah, cool. Anyways, oh, we got to get some one place studies. Oh, there we go. There. I was like England doesn't have anyone. Oh, yeah, yeah, England. And look at this. The the coast. Oh, that's is that answer. So this is Netherlands, right? As you're saying those aren't the studies. Those aren't studies. The she said the map. It's not the map for the place studies. Those must be the profiles of people in place studies. I went. Well, let's see. I went to I'll show you how I got there. I went to the help page for wiki tree plus for the tech search because that's I wanted to see if there was a way I could I could search for one place days. She's giving you the one place study. There you go. Grab that. Got it. Grab it from the chat. Okay. Oh, I have to move my cursor over to the right screen. Oh, no, I don't want to hide it. I just want to grab it. Ah, do I need to just type it? I might just have to type it in. Okay. Okay. Oh, now I lost. That's pretty funny. What's that? That that people are never afraid of correcting us. That is good. But I followed a link from the wiki tree plus. So that's that says you have to add calm and then another back. Oh, I see. Paris. Five four three nine slash off smash forward slash calm forward slash. Yeah, I've got it here. Okay. Well, I was following the link that that Alessia put in the help. So it could still be the same one. There could have been 95 dots there and 150 dots in that section. Let's let's compare. That is a prettier map. Oh, it's much prettier map. It is pretty. So you can find it if you go to the project page, you can find this map. Right. Is there one for Island McGee Ireland just just blow up Ireland. I tell you. No, here. Nope. Yeah, I don't see one. I'm going to have to do one for Island McGee. You're going to have to do one. I am. You are. Okay. To be living in Island McGee right now. Right. Okay. Well, um, here we are on something new on wiki tree every Saturday morning. Yes. So I would suggest I would say azure's right, but I'm right too in that this is still a map of the one place studies, but it's just not it's the one that wiki tree gives us which is not as pretty as the one that azures. So azures more right, but I'm more right. I was calling the link that you know posted. So anyways, we will move on. So Charles Bullock. He's one of the one place studies and he his one place study was some Lexington Oxfordshire, England, part of the lecture. And so if you open up that page for Lexington Oxfordshire, one place study, you'll get information about so first of all, they need to study coordinator. So if you're around that area and like to help out with that, I'm sure that people people would like to do that. Nice little picture here. Thanks, Chris. History of the place. And then there's some some other place where you can fill out more about that. And if you go to the category for black children, you can see the list of all the profiles that are attached to that place. Um, and back here, what I like about the the stickers that they put on them is that you can actually that photo that's on on the one place study page becomes part of the sticker. How cool is that? That is really cool. Isn't that cool? That is really cool. I thought I thought that that really appealed to me. Anyways, way to go, Hillary. Good stuff. So Charles, born November 1822. Um, he died. He was born. He died when he was born. He was born first, then he died, but they both happened in Lexington. You almost made me spit coffee out. Born before the third of November because that's when he was Christian. So this is a case of where you have the baptismal record, but you don't have the official birth record because they probably it probably wasn't an official birth record or they're just hard to find. Uh, and so, and then there's obviously some census records there, list children and what not, and then all the sources, lots of sources. Look at that, which is very cool. Um, then moving on from Charles and Lexington, we moved to Roseanne Holton from Quebec. Uh, she was born in 1865 before Canada became Canada in 1867. So just before, so she was born in San Gabriel de Valcazie in Canada East or Bacanada, lower Canada. As it would have been known if you were a French speaker, though, looking at her parents' names, John Holton and Catherine Sweeney were her parents. So she made, it doesn't say here whether she grew up being an English speaker, a French speaker, but my guess is looking at her ancestors, Holton and Sweeney O'Reilly, is that she would be an English speaker in Quebec. But probably she was bilingual. Most people, many people were um, to survive because, because of the combination. But um, and there's the person who designed this, Roe, um, created their own website for um, Valcazie genealogy. You're pretty close to her too, Greg. Yeah, well, I'm not surprised. Um, because I'm related to many people from Quebec, if they have Quebecois lines, French Canadian lines. Twenty three degrees. Okay. Uh, not official cousins though, it doesn't work. No. No. She was born and, born on the 14th and baptized on the 21st of July in the San Gabriel Quebecois Catholic Church. Um, and she was the, um, she married Patrick Cassin later, and then it has some, a census record as well. And again, lots of records here. So, nicely done. And so that profile is, is part of the Valcazie, San Gabriel de Valcazie, uh, one place study. We're so glad we have you here for now, so all that stuff. Well, it's fun. So, I would be butchering everything. Well, I might be too, but I'm just doing it with Panache. You're doing it with confidence. Exactly. William Edward Manley is the next profile, and he is from the Port of Hulse Society Sailors Orphan Home, one place study. So, this is interesting. This is one that's not based on a, a city or a town, but actually of a, an individual, like an actual home, like just one building basically, or, or organization that took in orphans. His story is rather sad. He was the son of a fisherman, John Manley, and his mother was Marianne Gregory, born, born 1867 on the 10th of August, and baptized 13th of November, 1867. His family left Essex when he was young, moved to Hull, Yorkshire. His father was still a fisherman on the Vessel Vary. His father died, actually drowned in 1875. And he, the mother seemed unable to cope because they had a big family. And so he and his younger brother were sent to live in the, the Port of Hull Society Sailors Orphan Home, which is very, you know, so that's where he, he basically grew up there. And he did become a fisherman himself. And he was, when he was married, when he was married, or the census right before he was married, because he was married in 91, and the census was just before then, he was living with his sister, Louisa, in her house in Hull. So, so this one place study would be all about people who lived or grew up in that orphan's home. And as, I just posted that, as is saying that, or as you're sorry, as you're saying that she's going to be featuring this on the One Place Study one. This study, this one right here? That's apparently. Very cool. Nice. Okay. Well, I won't go into any more details. You have to tune into Azure for that. Good. But I thought that was interesting, you know, that a One Place Study doesn't have to be just a town, you know, which is what you think of, or at least. It could be a house. Well, it could be a house study, but it could be a One Place Study for the house. Yes. Well, wasn't Betsy saying that she was doing a One Place Study for a specific apartment building? Her grandfather's house, yeah. I've heard some people do like street studies. Oh yeah, our neighborhood study. Neat. Neat. Sarah Monksfield, born in the 3rd of January, 1820 in St. Leonard's, Shoreditch in Middlesex, England. And that is the only official record that they have, is the birth and baptismal record of her. But this one has a lot, has some research notes, things that they found. And so there's details there, but they just haven't, the records just don't exist, or they don't, we're not sure where they go from here. And that's part of the Shoreditch Middlesex One Place Study. And that is a, so it is a, it's a district in the east end of London. So again, not a full city, just a district apart. It should have lots of people on it because that's a busy point. I would think it would. I'd have to go somewhere else to find the list of all those that are connected to them. Then we have Elspeth Duncan, or Elspeth Smith, born daughter of Alexander Smith and Anne Ross, born in 1837 in Aberdeenshire, Tarvis, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Married twice and passed away at the age of 71 in 1908. And she's part of the Tarvis Aberdeenshire One Place Study. She had a son with George Melvin before she was married and then she did get married and had four children subsequently from there. And again, lots, lots of sources. The people who do this, you know, they, lots of good sources. I love when you see the actual records with the actual handwriting on them. That's, that's very cool. Samuel Heinz Vic is part of the Wilson, North Carolina One Place Study. He was born in 1863 on April 1st. I was gonna say April Fool's Day, but it probably wasn't called April Fool's Day back then. Now I have to look up one April Fool's Day. Yeah, gotta do it, Sarah. When did that become a thing? It was a thing ever since I was in, I was in elementary school, but I don't know when it started. Nash County, North Carolina, and passed away in Wilson, Wilson, North Carolina. So that is the town of Wilson in the county of Wilson? In Wilson County? Yes. On the 8th of July, 1946. He's also part of the Black Heritage Project. He was an educator, a politician, a businessman, a real estate developer, and a church leader. He was born likely enslaved in Nash County, North Carolina. And then his parents were Daniel Vic and Fanny Blount. And that was on a census in 1880. So that would have been after they were freed, right? And then he graduated from Lincoln University. And then he got married, became a school board member of the school board. He became a postmaster for Wilson. So very cool. He even went into real estate. Really neat. I loved how they found all these little details, snippets of his life. You know, he sold a quarter lot for $150. That's kind of neat. That little piece of... Was it his lot or was it part of his real estate venture? Which also is pretty impressive. Yeah, exactly. It's very cool. I have some history about April Fool's Day. And it's been around for a long time. So there's no... It's unknown the origin of April Fool's, but there are theories around it. So there's... So I'm going to name a couple of them. So there's a disputed association between April Fool's and the Foolishness and the Canterbury Tales, which came out in 1392. Oh, my. And then in 1508, a French poet kind of mentioned it. And then there's actually in 1686 there was a ticket to the washing of lions at the Tower of London that they put in a... I think in an ad, so a bunch of people went and they were tricked into going to see the lions washed at the Tower of London. So they got to call it the Fool's Holy Day, April's Fish, or... And then the French, they call it Poisson d'Avril. Oh. That was a good one there. Very good. Poisson d'Avril. Yeah. And I'm sure you've seen the... I always think about the one where they posted a thing of how spaghetti grows on trees. I don't know if you've ever seen that thing. Oh, yeah. Or they had the video, BBC posted a video of how the spaghetti grew on cheese for people, you know. Yeah. Oh, that's funny. It probably did exist when he was born, so. Wow. Well, I take it back. Okay, there we go. Wow, there we go. So the last thing I was... Again, lots of really good research notes added, which is really cool. And Cathy Navar I noticed in the chat was talking about how many profiles were added. And all seven of these people had many profiles. I think the lowest was like 560 some profiles. And some of them were way more like 965. There was a couple that were in the thousand, you know, over a thousand profiles added to lines. So that was very good. This is the last one. The one I'm closest to, like to 17 degrees, George Wallace, born in Aberdeenshire and moved to Ontario. So he's part of two toxic, two one-place studies. So Peter had Aberdeenshire where he was born. And also the Reach County, Reach County, Ontario, one-place study where he moved to. Or did he move or did the county line move? Did the county line... No, I don't think Scotland and Ontario are... I don't think any boundary could confuse those two. Well, I thought you said Reach on Township. Well, it was Reach. It's a Reach. But yeah. So anyways, there's some really good detective work done here in creating. So he was a farm laborer. He was working on a farm and his future wife happened to be working at the same location. And then, lo and behold, they got married. What a shocker. You know, how they got, how they met. And then they moved. Okay, so he arrived in Canada in 1852. First baby was born 1853 and then followed by 12 others. So 13 kids. Wow. But what's really neat is they actually included links to maps, which Ontario has this really neat... Well, Canada actually has this project where it has maps of many of the counties. And so I think this one's 1870, 1880. It's around that time. It'll probably say... It shows the property owners. It shows the property owners. So this is, this is the county. And if you, that little wee chicken scratch you see, if you zoom in, you actually can see there's the property. There's a little creek that runs through it. There's the railway line. And George Wallace is, I had it open here. Let's see. I have to turn my head sideways. Oh, now I've lost where I am now. Okay. He was concession 13. Concession 13, number eight and nine. So it was way over here somewhere. There it is. G Wallace. G Wallace. That's the actual property where he, where his family, and I've got, I've got maps like this where the, where the original Clarks had settled in my area here. So it's very cool resource that we have available, which is neat. And that's it. Over to you. Over to you, Sarah. So, okay. I just want to say that, you know, I was still looking at this Wikipedia article for April Fool's Day. Apparently there's a list of genuine news that happened on April 1st, where people were restaking it as a hoax. On April. So it was like things that people thought were April Fool's hoaxes that were actual news. And there's like a list of those that happened. So that's where they had that on. But two photos. Two photos. No. What? Two of the photos. Two of the photos. Two of the photos. Two of the photos. Two of the photos. Okay. I'll share my screen. While she's getting her stuff up, I have to say that I joined the Appalachia Project Discord channel and it's been so much fun. Biscuits. Okay. I've done everything I was supposed to do. Biscuits and the channel. Okay. So this theme, so if you guys didn't know this year, instead of doing a theme every week, we're doing a theme every month. So this month for the month of February, it's the theme is homes. So we looked at a couple of them that had been posted last week. So we'll look at, I'll scroll through all of them, but we'll focus on the ones we didn't see last week. We saw that one last week. Let's see if we see any animals either. See if we see any, then we just had the three, I think. Oh, and then now we've got Sarah's, or not Betsy's. Betsy's. There's Betsy's. The one that she just posted about. Right. I like the little little flags. Penance or whatever. Yeah. The GGG post, I think she wrote details about it. Right. Oh, cool. That looks like a southern house. Yeah. Looks like that. That was probably one of my cousins in Quebec, White County, Tennessee. Jeannine. Yes. Jeannine. Yes. This is her great grandparents house. Sadly, the house was burnt down several years ago. At least they have the photo. Look, there's a cartoon dog, but a dog nonetheless. Wait, there's a cartoon dog. What do you mean? It's a real dog. It's not a real dog. Is that a picture? Is that a drawing? It's like a drawing to me. I think that's a real picture. I think, I see what you're saying. Blow it up more, lady. Or I think maybe the resolution was so poor that it looks like a picture. Or it looks like a cartoon. Yeah. It looks like a cartoon to me. Huh. To me, it does. Get the opinion of the crowd. Yes. What do the viewers think? What do the viewers think? So there's a girl in her, oh, that's a small picture, a girl in her pink sweater almost. Oh, look at that. Well, you could zoom in on that one. I'm trying. That's as far as it goes. You could zoom in on the other one. I could have zoomed in on the other one. Here, let's go back. Yeah. Go back. There we go. Yeah, that's a picture. Huh. It looked like a cartoon. I guess it's a pixelation. Look, there's a dog. The important part of the picture she's already pointed out is that there's a dog in the picture. Yeah. Looks like he's holding one shot. He looks like almost he's holding some kind of tool. Yeah. And then there's a child. Yeah. But the dog is the important part. Yes, that's right. It is the important part of the picture. And that's it. Let's see if there are any, since we just talked about the G2G, let's go look there real quick to see if there's any other pictures or there's some cool stories. Like this one's not on, oh yeah, I guess we saw that house from Alexis. Alexis, yeah. Okay, I'm looking for, oh, we didn't see this one. So, this is a photo of a reunion of Michael and Elizabeth Seyfert, taking in the early 1890s. The house was called Seyfert Row and it was in, doesn't say where the house was, but it says the families who moved to, I think this one's in Illinois, but they took it before they moved to California, I believe. Maybe, but that's one we didn't see. That's one of his favorites. Are there any animals in that one, Sarah? I don't see any. Nope. It might be a bird or a tree. What is the little girl doing in the front? Is she petting a duck? Oh, what is that? Hold on, let's zoom in. I can't tell. Maybe she's looking at the ground. Okay, I think it's a dog. We saw this one. It was burned down several years ago, so. Mm-hmm. There's the dog picture. Dog picture. So, it was published in the church journal. You know, that is called a one and a half story log house, and those are very important structures in Canada, and all of the loyalist homes were constructed that way. And if you drive through parts of Ontario, you can identify the routes that the loyalists took because these crazy cool log houses, that you can't tell their log houses anymore, but you can tell that they were the one and a half story houses all the way through. Horsey bunnies, I saw you get excited. Yeah. Look, there's lots of animals in this one. There's some horses. A puppy. Wow. This is a, I like this photo. Yeah. That's a big house. Yeah, it is. This person is just resting over here. Is that mama? She couldn't walk all the way out. It's such a big picture. Yeah. She looks elderly, doesn't she? Yeah. Look at the vines on the porch. Wow. That's a cool photo. Now, a photo of them staring on that one. I'm sure. Yeah. And you took a photo retouching on that. That would really pop, I think. Yeah. Somebody do that. Somebody grab that picture and do a photo retouching and then repost it. Okay. Oh, this is that one. So, old Barnett, my parents' farm collapsed in the wee hours of the night in May 1965. I hope there weren't any. I was going to say it looks like from the Barn Builders show. Barn Builders. I guess they built that on top of it. Oh, nice. Maybe. Neat. Oh, and a pool. So now it's a pool house. A cement pond. A cement pond. This was probably from Google Earth or Zillow, Chris, maybe. This is a Betsy's post. A little girl in the pink dress. Franklin County, Virginia. And that's all the photos, my friends. We saw some animals this time. We did. And we got to see Kiki wrapped around your neck. That's right. She's on my lap right now. Okay. John Tyner says that he spotted a buzzard on a tree outside his window. So he had nature time today, too. We can look at some of the stuff coming up in the next little bit. We'll try and do that. So let me get my screen share up. We'll start off with the wiki tree G to G, which shows us that we've got some interesting stuff, that policy stuff that Chris has up. Creating profiles for the new system. Have you seen the changes to the family tree profiles? Wiki tree challenge number four is the Freedman Bureau of Friday, the sentence of enslaved communities. Fun. And then, well, it's a great project. Because the more people we identify and we recognize on wiki tree that we're enslaved, the more people are going to find their families. Because wiki tree is so good about that. And then the highlights for the wiki tree challenge for the Society of One Place Studies, which we have covered, I think, quite well this week. So have you seen what's happening around wiki tree? I love Aowyn's gotten this up for us. That's fantastic. Let's see. Today is the 11th. So coming up, the Saturday Sourcing Sprint is going on now. We're going on right now. The Nation's Global Tour Argentina wrap-ups coming up on the 13th, the Freedman's Bureau Friday. It's February 16th to the 23rd. The 17th is bingo night. The 17th is Friday is bingo night. Puerto Rico and first responders projects. And then the wiki tree roundup. Next week, I will not be here physically in my place, my home. I will be in Yarker, Ontario, if anybody knows where that is. I'll give you a hint. It's in the woods. It's in the woods. Yeah. I've done some wiki tree livecast from there before. So hopefully that'll be okay. I've got all sorts of stuff to do. I am puppy sitting for my pup niece while my sister-in-law goes to Mexico with her husband. How fun is that? Nice. So don't break into her house while she's gone or you'll find me in a beautiful German shepherd. She's not much of a puppy anymore, but I guarantee you. Yeah. So all right. Let's see. And social media, as yours always got a good list up. So if you want to share some of the stuff that we've got going on on wiki tree, you can run over and grab the links for Facebook, Twitter. There you go, Mastodon. And Instagram. There you go. And YouTube. So you can grab all that information. They've got the profile images up for you. So question of the week, 15 nations. And if you have the extension and you hover over something, it'll tell you all about it. One name study Tuesday. And one name study Tuesday. Does that have anything? Are you going to connect that with Valentine's Day? That is the 14th. That's my grandfather's birthday, my parents anniversary. Look, one place Wednesday, Balli Carey. That's from the Northern Ireland Family History Society's projects. And they are doing an incredible job. They're the ones who really have helped identify my Island McGee connections. I'm excited for that one place study. Project showcase on Thursday and what is wiki tree on Friday and the connection fighter Friday and Friday night bingo is happening on Friday. So no date night this week. And then Saturday, there's going to be a new meet the members and of course us. So you'll get to see us next week as well. Is that it? Did I just run through everything? I think you did. So we enjoy seeing you people here and we'll see you here next week. We promise we'll see you next week. See ya.