 Good morning, everyone. Good morning. Just Saturday. Saturday. Happy belated Canada Day for all of my fellow Canadians who celebrated yesterday. And happy early 4th of July for everybody in the United States. I don't know if there's any other holidays this weekend for any other for anybody else, but if there is, let us know. We should call this neighbors day because it's in between the two holidays. Neighbors day, yes. So let's see who's here. Well, not many people watching at least right now. Maybe, well, you can't blame them. You know, a lot of people probably doing stuff for the holidays. So I know my mom's at the beach right now, so she's not going to be here today. So we have Susie here, Janine, Chris, Tommy, John, that's it so far. That's it so far. Hey, did you say, you said, Chris, hey, yeah. When Susie says she hasn't checked out my new app yet. Well, you can still check it out. I'm still working out. So thanks to all those who did try out the beta last week and give me suggestions. I thought I had everything working perfectly. And then someone gave me an example of their South African heritage where there's endogamy and first cousin's marrying. And it just, when you get to that sixth generation, it's a rat's nest. And I thought I had worked out all the logic so that it would print nicely. But anyways, but there's Megs. Megs has joined us. I have no guarantees how I might sound this morning. But I'm here. You're here. So you were celebrating Canada Day while visiting the U.S.? I was, I was. Actually, I went out to dinner with some old, old, old friends. And the table behind us said, where are you from? And I said, I'm from Canada. And they all stood up and we sang, oh, Canada together. Oh, nice. Oh, that's great. So you're celebrating two, you're two holidays and one weekend. I do. I get to have two. Actually, I get to have three because my dad's 92nd birthday is coming up. So. Oh, wow. I'm speaking at a conference next weekend. So I won't be here. So you won't be here next weekend. Sure. I have to get my stuff together here. Talk amongst yourselves. We were planning on doing the profiles while you. You're doing the profiles first, going a little bit out of order. That sounds great. Okay, then. So it's going to be, it's going to be fun because Greg's going to do the profiles and guess what the profiles of the week are this week. What are they, Greg? They are American presidents. And guess who knows a whole pile about American presidents. Not Greg. Unfortunately, I know some. That's why we love him so much, Greg. Oh, I know, I know. And you know what? I was telling Sarah beforehand that. I was, I was going to go through it. You know, I always go through and prepare, but just before we have some visiting dogs. And just before the, I started going through all the pros presidents. I went, I heard them outside and this is what my wife, this is what half of my wife's flower garden looks like. And that's what the whole garden is supposed to look like. Unfortunately, the dogs actually, wait a second, that's it. That's the picture there. The dogs got digging into the garden and that's what it looks like. Well, it looked like 45 minutes ago. All of these have been dug up and you, you can't really tell, but all of these have been uprooted this half here. So I went to work and I replanted them. Most of them had roots. I don't know if they're going to survive or not, but did you replant them before your wife saw it or after my wife is teaching yoga right now. She has no idea. She has no idea. When she comes back, she would not be very namaste if this is what she was greeted with. It would lose all of the calm that she had. But speaking of Canada Day before, this is a picture of me and my, my siblings, my siblings that I just reconnected with four and a half years ago. Yeah. So they all came up for Canada Day and joined with us. So my brother, Marty, my house sister, Tara and my sister, Tracy, right next to me. So there's the four of us. Nice. And then of course I have to show off. There's my granddaughters. So that is so cute. Yeah. There we go. Anyways, enough of grandpa Greg. We'll just put him aside. Yes. So my, my wife, of course, of Italian heritage insists on being called Nona, but I just, I didn't think that no, no would was really thing. So grandpa Greg is what I'm going by. So anyways, back to the profiles of the week. I'm buying you lots of time here, Mags to get a cup of coffee or I'm going to die. So I'm going to go ahead. You as presidents, which ones are you most closely connected to? So the ones that have been chosen by the wiki tree, let's see. There we go. Trying to find. At first I wasn't sure. There we go. Too many tabs. Too many tabs. I know too many tabs. Well, I was freaking out because it was five two and you hadn't joined quite yet and Mags wasn't here. I had, I found the question of the week, but I could not find the photos. When you do the photos, I'm going to write down the step that you take again to find them because it's not as easy. Yeah. It's a John Adams. Okay. John Adams. President. President John Adams born October 30th, 1973 in Braintree, Suffolk, province of Massachusetts Bay. Obviously born before US became a country. So hence the province of Massachusetts Bay, which is kind of cool. I didn't realize that Massachusetts Bay was its own province. And he was the second president of the United States. I just, I just want to point out real quick, Greg, he died on the 4th of July. Look at that. He's so he did at the age at grand age of 90. Wow. I feel like we should get all the profiles of people who died on the, on a day that significant to like, to their history. There's a lot of, there's a lot of coincidences like that. I think there was one like last week or the week of the death. Well, Harry Houdini, right? Didn't die on Halloween. Halloween. And there was another one last week, I think. So they. Yeah. I don't remember what it was, but. Well, there was, um, oh, uh, who was it? Was it, um, uh, the one guy who died on Pi day? Oh, yes. That was it. It was when we were doing the, yeah. Yeah. Stephen Hawking, right? I guess that was it. Yes. Yes. And it's not more of it. It's just a, it's a fun. It's a little coincidence. Yeah. That's an excellent. We should put a three pace page together for that. Yes. Anybody who wants to help. Someone write that down. Chris, you start that page. Chris is in. Chris is. He's out for me. He's in the chat there. Um, anyways, so he, the John Adams is a second president. Now is this different from John Quincy Adams? Or is this? What's his middle name? What's that? It doesn't say who he has a middle name here, but. Well, his, his wife is Abigail Quincy Adams. So John Quincy Adams is his son. Oh, there, there he is. Hello. I couldn't, I could answer my uncle. And he was a president. So cause when I read John Adams, I thought, I thought it was John Quincy Adams who was president. Yeah, I got, I, you, you tricked me there really quick. I was like, I'm not very familiar with presidents either, even though I am from the United States. Okay. So apparently so John Adams, who's the second president, his son was the sixth president. Runs in the family being presidents. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, that's happened before that happened again too, didn't it? Yes. Right. The bushes. The bushes. The bushes. Yes. How cool is that? So, and then we're moving on. President. Do we have any fun facts for either of the John Adams? Oh, we have any fun facts for me. Well, besides that, you know, the first John Adams died on July 4th. I don't know if that's on fact, but second John Adams died on the 23rd of February. He died at age 80. So his dad lived to 90. He only lived to 80. Second one. But he died in the speaker's room of Congress. So the location was appropriate. Yes. That's kind of, so I guess he was on the job. Let's see. What else was he? So he was the president and what else? Yeah. So he was secretary of state. And he died in the senator. I guess he went from a senator to secretary of state. So he died in 48. His presidency ended at 29. What? What? Hold on. That makes sense. There was another one, Greg. Look. What? Thomas Jefferson also died on July 4th. Really? You're trolling somewhere else. He died on May 24th. So he died on July 4th. And he died on July 5th. So he died on July 4th. It's crazy. Very cool. Very cool. Well, let's if we go back one to the original. John Adams that we were supposed to be talking about. He had been VP, VP vice president before he became president. And there we go. Five children in 10 years. Okay. profiles are well done and long. So I'm not going to go through and read them. And I apologize, because I had not had a chance to read them because I was fixing my flower garden. So we're going to be doing more of the highlights. So the next one on the list was Calvin Coolidge, who was born, he was born on the 4th of July. Oh my gosh. Can I also say that John Adams and Thomas Jefferson died in the same year. So they died on the same day. Wow. So I don't know what that means, but. Conspiracy theory? That's so exciting. Ooh, something happened, was did they both just die coincidentally on the same day? So did they die the same year that, no, so died in the same year? They did, they both died in 1826. Okay, and is he born in 1872? I was thinking, because if Calvin Coolidge was born on the same day that the other two had died. It was reincarnated. Oh my goodness, that would have been just too much. I'm sorry, Greg, go on. That's okay. See, it's not just me, Megs. People, it's me on. So he was the 30th president. Okay, much later on. Oh yeah, in the 1920s, of course, that makes sense. But before becoming president, he was also vice president and governor of Massachusetts. So, and then. Passed away in the 5th of January with his second witness. Okay, so he'd finished his presidency. I'm always curious to see if they've passed away while they were still in the role. By the way, I have another fun fact about Quincy. There's the Quincy, right, neighboring city, right next to me in Tallinn. So named after John Quincy Adams. Oh, neat. Yeah, I didn't connect the dots, but. Someone connected them. Dwight D. Eisenhower in the D stands for David, apparently Dwight David Eisenhower. Born on the 14th of October in 1890 in Denison, Texas. Passed away on the 28th of March, 1969, at the age of 78. Abilene Dickinson County, Kansas. So he Dwight D. Eisenhower as your 34th president. And he was preceded by Harry Truman and succeeded by John F. Kennedy. So, Sarah, your closest is George Washington. Yeah, I'm actually cousins with a lot of them. 15 degrees. Greg, your closest is, you're 18 from Martin Van Buren and 18 from William Parrison, so. Interesting, yes. And I think both of those, oh, let's see, I wonder where both of those come in. Interesting. So, Ike, Dwight D. Eisenhower, also known as Ike. And then John Hansen, okay, wait a second. Now, I didn't, okay, so here's a, I did not realize you had a president named John Hansen. I apologize for that. But he was your ninth president, or wait a second, ninth president of the Continental Congress. Does that, that doesn't mean President of the United States, though, does it? Which one? This is John Hansen. Uh-huh. What was it? So, he was the ninth president of the Continental Congress. Not president of the U.S. No. Not president of the U.S. Okay, was he a signer of the Declaration? He was there. Yes, he did. Yeah. He was a founding father. And was the president of the United States under the Articles of Confederation? Well, how did that work? Here at Provincial Leaders to instruct Maryland's delegates to the, in the Continental Congress to declare independence from England, okay? He had lots of roles. Welcome to the live cast, Wikitree's version of a Canadian teaching us about American people. Except that I didn't check up on this earlier, so I'm learning as we go along. As one of the Maryland representatives, he signed the Articles of Confederation in 1781 and they were adopted. He was elected as the president of the Confederation Congress, sometimes styled president of the United States in Congress Assembled, called the Artification of the Articles. So, his title included president of the United States, but does he count? So, let me see, let's, if we went back to John Adams, who was the second president, so that's 1797, right? George Washington, his presidency started in 1789. See, as a poor Canadian here, I would have assumed that your first president, his reign would start in 1776, because that's when your country began. He was out on the, he was in the battlefield fighting. He didn't even want to be president. No, he didn't want to be president. Okay, so, bear with us here, folks, in the live cast as we do. This is fun. Do some figuring out. So, the ninth president of the Continental Congress, so look at that, 1781 to 1782, so that precedes George Washington's 1789. He was president before the first president. Yes, so he was president before president was cool. So, that's kind of neat, John Hansen, but he's not the person that you hear that, like the phrase, sign your John Hancock, that was a different person, correct? Yes, there's a lot of John Hancock. Yes. That was John Hancock. Yeah, that's right, yeah, so that's what you'd think though, that since he was the first president, or he was our president, you could say sign your John Hansen, but no. Okay, move it on. The reason I say sign your John Hancock, was that John Hancock wanted everybody to know he'd signed, so he signed it huge. Oh, so he's really large. Huge, huge on the document. That's why, this is so funny. Well, I'm glad you're enjoying it, Susie. I'm just wondering how many people have tuned out because this is so painful to watch. No, Susie thinks it's hilarious. I know, I know, I'm going to go, Susie. I mean, we're all learning. I mean, there's a lot of stuff I didn't know. Well, okay, that's good. That's, I'm here to help. Yeah, you're doing better than me, Greg. You're doing better than me. You're doing better than me, so. Oh no. So William Henry Harrison was born the 9th of February, 1773 in the Berkeley Plantation of Charles City County in the colony of Virginia. Again, before he became a country, so the country is a colony of Virginia. He died on the 4th of April, 1841 at the age of 68. Wow, they're getting younger and younger. Mm-hmm, the stress. The stress of the president of the state. Oh, okay. It says that his, he married his wife and they eloped, so it doesn't actually have a location. They just eloped. And he eloped. Oh, how cool is that? I'm sure they eloped in a particular place. Yeah. Wow. Eloped Kentucky, wouldn't it be funny if a place was named Elope? People to go to get married. So William Henry Harrison was your 9th president of the United States. And before that, he was the first governor of Indiana territory and a U.S. Senator from Ohio. Don't you have to, it seems funny to me that he would be an Indiana endow. He'd represent Indiana and Ohio. Don't you have to live or come from the state where you're representing? Maybe Ohio, maybe. Or did they overlap? Something, yeah, I think Indiana are, not very good, because they're like right there next to each other. So they probably just created Indiana. Maybe Indiana just kind of formed. And then, yes, he looked at formed in 1800. So maybe he was originally from Ohio, I don't know. Yeah, that would make sense. Because yeah, you're right. Well, and territories were generally a lot larger than the eventual states became, right? Because they would chop them up into other. So very cool. William Henry Harrison, neat. Oh, so Chris has a, well it's not, it's just, I wouldn't say fun fact. But if you see, he only lasts for a year. Well, he was only one year there. His inauguration speech was in the rain. He got pneumonia and he died 30 days later. That's very sad. That's very sad. Is that the shortest presidency? I probably. So, and Susan- He died on his 32nd day of office. Yeah, applications were only, oh, and his death sparked a constitutional crisis, but it was resolved because of the presidential succession. They had to be like, what do we do when the president dies? Yeah, yeah. You have to write all of those contingencies into the constitution, just in case. And who would think that a president would die that quickly? Susan's saying that US history classes pretty much ignore the period under the Articles Confederation. So not many people are aware of that in history. Yeah, so next one is Thomas Jefferson who was born on the 13th of April, 1743 in the shadow plantation in the colony and dominion of Virginia. Okay, so someone else was born in Virginia, in the colony of Virginia, but this is the colony and dominion of Virginia. What is the dominion of Virginia versus the colony? So in 1773, it was called the colony, William Harrison was born there, but in 1743, it was the colony and dominion of Virginia. Well, Canada used to be called the dominion of Canada. That was its official title, which is a British term. It's some English thing. It's some English thing, yes. Some British thing. That's right. Well, in 1743, it was more British than I guess in 1773. I don't know, that's my guess. But yeah, it was Canada was named the dominion of Canada. So definitely a British term they like to use. No worry, Lisa. I was late too. And yeah, so there he is, died on the 4th of July, just as Chris warned us and you told me. I have another one though. I know there was a third president who died on the 4th of July. Who was that? James Monroe. He was the fifth president. I don't think he's one of the ones on the profile, but yeah, so three presidents who died on the 4th of July. And you also know the day that Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died was the 50th anniversary of the approval of the Declaration of the Independence. So they died on the 50th. That's ironic, that's ironic. Wow. It's all a grand conspiracy, guys. It's a conspiracy at 1826, right? 1776 plus 50. There you go. You're right. So Thomas Jefferson was the third president. So we've seen the profiles of one, two, and three, right? George? George? Yeah, George, John. George, John and Tom. They should not go. That's what I'm gonna say. It sounds like the Beatles. Exactly. Where's Ringo? Make a little funny sitcom about George, John and Tom. And before he was president, of course, he was the second vice president. The second vice president, not second vice president. You know how some companies have first vice president. We don't have second vice president. I know, you don't have second vice presidents. The second person to become vice president of the United States. And he was the first United States secretary of state and the second Virginia, Virginia of governor. No, governor of Virginia. Sorry. Oh, Monroe is coming up. Oh. I think bending over, digging up those flowers this morning affected your brain. I think it is. Yeah, they must have had some type of, I don't know what. Abraham Lincoln. My favorite. Yeah. Thank you everybody, it's Abraham. You're related to him too. I know I am. Maybe he's my favorite. That's very cool. Greg is 19 from Abraham. Oh, that's pretty close. That's pretty close. Close for you as president. For Canadian aid. Hey, look at this. He was born in Sinking Spring Farm. Oh, that is kind of cool. What's kind of sad? If it means that the fields were always underwater in the springtime, that would be a real pain as a farmer. But in Kentucky. And he passed, well, died as assassinator, right? On the 15th of April in 1865 in Washington City, District of Columbia. Oh, Washington City? Is it called Washington City? Or I just thought it was Washington District of Columbia. District of Columbia now. I'm 15 from him. Oh, that's nice. And 14 from Washington. I just pulled mine up. Oh yeah, there you go. He was 16th president and before that he was in the US House of Representatives. And then we have James Monroe, just like we had mentioned. I thought he wasn't here, but he was here. He was here. There we go. Who also died on the 4th of July, just like you said, age 73, okay, in New York County. And he was born on the 20th of April, 1758 in the colony of Virginia. They had lost their dominion by the 50s to 17th. A lot of the first presidents were from the colony of Virginia. Mm-hmm, besides the... Erin Dulleson said it was Washington City during the Civil War. Okay. Yeah, I love all this great trivia. I know. You would never? I actually pulled up a whole bunch of fun facts about the presidents. I can read off a couple later too. Oh, okay, cool. Good, good. So along with being your fifth president, James Monroe was your seventh United States Secretary of State. He was the Secretary of War. Oh, during the 1814, 15th. So at the end of the War of 1812. Well, which you might call something. Do you call it the War of 1812? Or do you call it a different war? I think that's what we call it. Okay. What do you call, what do we call it in Canada? We call it the War of 1812. Yeah, but there's one war that we have that, I know that we have different names for. And I can't remember what it was. I thought it was the War of 1812. I thought you called it the French-American War or something like that. No, the French-American War was before the revolution. Oh, okay. Okay. 12th Governor of Virginia, 16th Governor, oh, 12th and 16th Governor of Virginia, and a center. So he was busy. He was- Busy man. Busy man. And then we have Franklin Delano Roosevelt, FDR, born in 1882, 30th January in New York. Married Eleanor, Anna Eleanor, and died on the 12th of April of 1945. So with World War II still on? Yes, it hadn't- Yes. Because it was August, it ended, right? The World War II. So he almost finished the war. At the age of 63, Worm Springs, Georgia. Well, if you're gonna pass away, Worm Springs sounds like a nice place to- At least he was warm. At least he wasn't warm. He was down there trying to get help for his polio. Oh, for his polio. And in one of the previous ones, he was a late-onset polio victim, right? Yes, he was, which is very unusual. And when he originally started showing the symptoms, his mother was defiant that he did not have polio because he was too old to have it. Too old, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, one of the profiles just a couple of weeks ago was someone who also had a late-onset polio. So he was your 32nd president and the 44th governor. So my question when I realized that he had died before the war had officially ended was, who finished the war? And I guess that would be Harry Truman. Because Truman is the one who dropped the bombs. See, I didn't associate that. I don't know if that's an association I'd want with my name. I mean, it's good, I guess the war was over, but I mean, wow. I have a fun fact about FDR. Okay, go for it. So currently, FDR met President Grover Cleveland when he was five years old. And Cleveland said, I am making a wish for you and you may never become President of the United States. The whole Cleveland told FDR that he wished he wouldn't be, you know, he didn't, you know, he wouldn't put that on him, I guess. Right, yes. And then he ended up becoming President. But he did anyways, wow. And Eleanor Roosevelt was Teddy Roosevelt's niece. So when they moved into the White House, she knew about secret passages and stuff from the White House that her husband had no idea about. Wow. My grandma also taught Mrs. Roosevelt how to dance. No way. Yeah. Your grandma, did you say? How cool is that? Okay, so Eleanor Roosevelt was related to Teddy Roosevelt. And how was FDR related to Teddy Roosevelt? Or was he not? Long, distant cousins. Oh, really? Yeah. So his wife was closer related to the previous President than he was. Very much closer, yes. That's kind of cool. I did not know that. I just assumed that they were, I guess. You were thinking big endogamy. Well, that's right. We could put them in the sixth degree app and see what it looks like. Anyways, Martin Van Buren, Sr. As opposed to not to be confused. It's not a name that comes up when you think of President sometimes. It's not one of the ones that I'd be like, Van Buren. There are people in my family that are named Martin Van Buren Hunt. No way. And I've noticed other, yeah, I've noticed other families down in this area that their family names the kids, Martin Van Buren as well. And are there, is there Dutch background there too? Or are they just like the Van Buren? They just like the Martin Van Buren. People would name themselves after Presidents. We had Thomas Jefferson Hunt. So. Oh, yes. I had a George Washington Powell. And you should because you're so close to George. Yeah, that would make sense. So President Martin, little magician, Van Buren Sr. Now that's interesting. Where did he get the nickname Little Magician? We'll have to figure that out. Okay. So he was your eighth President of the United States. So he was early on. Little Magician came because nobody else could tame his hair. That's a, is that true or just a good guess? Cause that looks good. Just me and my humor. Oh, I like it. I like it. I could buy it by that. So it looks like he only served one term as President, but he was also the Vice President, the term before that. And then the term before that, he was in the, he was Secretary of State for a bit, Governor of New York. He was a U.S. Senator. So he climbed the ranks. He did the work and obviously was popular for four years of peace being renamed. So work in progress. Okay. He's the first President, not of British, of British or Irish descent. He was the first President boarded as a citizen of the U.S. Oh, look at that. Yeah. And he was also the only President to speak English as a second language. Wow. Growing up speaking Dutch. That doesn't make sense, but. Not to have spoken English as a first because he grew up speaking Dutch. But that's funny. Yeah. A U.S. citizen, the first U.S. citizen, but not an English speaker. That's a really wild dichotomy there. Very ironic. Yes, that's right. Okay. Do we see here, I don't see anywhere here where we got the nickname for, oh, there it is. He gained the nickname of Little Magician for the skill with which he exploited it. Oh, what is it? Oh, the bucktails became a successful movement that emphasized party loyalty. They captured and controlled many patronage posts throughout the New York. They originate the system, but gained the nickname Little Magician for the skill with which he exploited it. So because of his magical politics, political skills, if I'm reading that correctly. Wow, certainly. There is some sort of magic if you can actually pull off some political maneuvering. And then we have George Washington, which I think we popped back to earlier because we wanted to check something out. Who had been born in Pope's Creek? Okay, did you remember? Did you guys know he was born in Pope's Creek? I would not have guessed that was the name of the little village, whatever. In the colony of Virginia. He and Martha were married in the same church that my family attended in New Kent County, Virginia. Wow, St. Peter's Church. What denomination is that? It would have been Church of England, I believe. Church of England? Like Protestant. Yeah, married on the 6th of January. Interesting. 1759, died on the 14th of December, 1799. Oh, he almost made it to the 1800s. Almost. He could have just gone on a couple more weeks. But 67, that's pretty young. I didn't realize he was that young when he passed away. I mean, I think that's young now. Didn't used to think it was that young, but now I do. That's 10 years with a 92-year-old man. I think it's young. Yeah, it is, it is young. Anyways, of course, he was your first official president of the United States. And the office was, oh, so the office was created in the March 4th, 1789. So there we go. Nice paintings and whatnot. So, where is, here I am. So I'm actually, I'm actually a cousin of George Washington. We're 16th cousins, 10 times removed. And it goes. Do you whistle or hum Yankee Doodle Dandy when you brush your teeth? No, I don't. So, and there's a few of those that I'm related to. So in fact, if I went to my connections in U.S. presidents, then there's a list of all of the U.S. presidents. When you go to my connections page for a group, it actually splits those people up into the first group as people who are actually related, who are cousins or ancestors. So I'm not, none of the U.S. presidents are my direct ancestors. But all of these ones in this first group are actually cousins, well, distant cousins. So I showed you the connection between George Washington and myself. So FDRR and I are the closest in terms, I'm seventh cousins five times removed, which is pretty close. And I found that when I'm closely related to one of your American politicians. One of your American politicians often, it goes through this John Rising, Josiah Rising, who was one of, who was raised, captured and then raised in an Indian village and then married Marie-Angélique Seguin, a French woman, Quebecois. Well, French Canadian. So that connection gives me a lot of cousins. So that's an interesting. But what, how I got here was, if you're on a connection page, if you're at the connection finder page for anyone, when you go to my connections, at the top here, you can look at all the featured connections and then it shows you a quick link to, say US presidents, but if you click on in more, then you can see a list of others. So if you're not American and you thought, well, what if I wanted to find out how I was related to say Canadian prime ministers? Oh, for Canada Day. For Canada Day, you could click on this and then you could see there's the list of all the Canadian prime ministers who have profiles on Wiki Tree and then click on the my connections button in the top, right? And then you see this list of just the Canadian prime minister, the ones at the top or the ones that you're related to and the ones that are below are, you're connected to via marriages and whatnot. So my closest connection to a Canadian prime minister is I'm fifth cousins three times removed from Louis Saint-Anneau. And because we're both French, a French Canadian descent, there's also 78 other common ancestors. But this my connections page, there's lots of different categories you might wanna explore. So there's Germany, Australia, there's UK, I think there's UK here's two somewhere, Britain, anyways, lots of different Scottish royalty. So if you're interested in other connections besides the featured one of the week, this is another way to get to that page. So I just thought I'd show that off to people as well. I vote since it's 20 minutes to 11, I vote we skip the question of the week because I quite frankly, I can't read them because I'm gonna cough like crazy because I'm still so sick, so sorry. I'm ex. I can read out some interesting facts about the presidents. I see there's some fun ones. So do you know the S and Harry S Truman does not mean anything, doesn't stand for anything. No. Oh, the S is, you know what it's, S is for silent, the S is silent. And then let's see, there was another one that was, so John Tyler had 15 children. So he had just 15 children running around the White House. Wow. 15, did you say? John Tyler. And then, let's see, there was, so George Washington was the only president, you know, unanimously elected, meaning all of the state representatives voted for him. So it was the only one who everybody voted for. Wow. Which makes sense. And- Is there anyone else on the bill? Anyone else? Yeah, probably not. Oh, I don't know. And- There's as many animus if you're the only one on the list. There was one more, one of the, what, which one? I guess James K. Polk was the first president to have his photograph taken while in office. And so, and then, so at 42 years old, Teddy Roosevelt was the youngest man told office. And Joe Biden is the oldest one, at 78. I thought Clinton was your youngest. No? No. Says, yeah, it says, because Teddy Roosevelt was free too. I don't know how old Clinton was. Clinton. Sorry, sorry to distract you, and I'm probably wrong. Oh, no, it's a, it's a good, it's a good question. Okay, so Bill Clinton. Or maybe playing saxophone. 92? You're younger. So he, so he was, okay, let's do some, do some math. And definitely got his gift, he was the youngest. He was born in 1946 and elected in 1992. Do some math, Greg. 46, he was 46 then. I apologize for my 90 year old, 92 year old father just went by in his bathrobe. Oh! I would have wished him happy birthday if I noticed that I didn't. I've been trying to, I've been trying to turn the camera off. Well, at least he's wearing his bathrobe. But you know what, 92, he can do whatever he wants. Oh, there, and there's one more. Maybe she's doing it, maybe he is. And there, there is another, there's another president who had a descendant who was president, William Harrison, his grandson, Benjamin Harrison and his 23rd president. Oh! So they're, I guess that's three. So we, John Adams, the Bushes and Harrison, I don't know if there was another one, but, you know, I think that's all I got for the fun facts. We can look at the photos now. You look at some photos. I love, I love this one. We're doing a good job with this one for the president. Yeah! Surprising considering this Canadian here. You know what? We all, we love educating you. And Greg wanted to, so I wanted to show everybody how you, at least how I find how you get to the photos of the week. Yeah. Because I'm getting my pencil to write it down. Yeah, they said JFK was the youngest. Well, what was, hold on. I mean, what did it say? So. 43. Lisa, I think he said 42 was 43. Oh, he was 43. Yeah, so JFK was saying us to be elected president, but Teddy Roosevelt was saying us meant to hold office, the office of president. That makes sense. Oh man, all these distinctions. Okay, I'm ready to write down. Okay, hold on. Here's my, here's my fun fact president page. Oh, wow. I just want to like, he was, it's for presidents, Dave, the kids site for fun facts. So I thought that was fun. So on the homepage, I usually go to the current featured photo and I click on it. The one right now, this involves extra steps, but usually there's a tag for 52 photos. So I'll usually go to the tag for 52 photos, which that's how I find here. So if you're in the tag for 52 photos, usually the top one is the photo of the week. That's how I get to it. If you have an easier way to get to that tag, it's probably also on the Wednesday link to the email, but this is how I get to it. Oh, it's misspelled, grand parents. Grand parents. Grand parents. Grand pappy. That's our theme. Let's see. We have a few photos this time. I said there was 16. So we have this one. I wonder what that would probably go to church or they're going to a wedding, not their wedding, but maybe somebody else's wedding. They have little flowers on there. Yeah, that's right. They have the whole corsages. Yeah, they do. I bet you they are at a wedding, yeah. Oh, and this is, I guess it's the same family. So Stovall and then Thomas Stovall on the left. And there's one guy has overalls and they're all in hat. Oh yeah. So Oliver Den's war and shorelines semi-professional baseball team. Wow. He probably wasn't a grandfather when he cut that picture taken though. No. Another one of the same guy when he was a grandfather, I guess. Wow, neat. That's cool. I like that. That's a little bit blurry. Can't see him in, but. Yeah. Now, Sally Stovall uploaded a lot of photos of her family. This is all still a one family. Wow. Oliver and Meryl Den's war. So for grandparents. Mesquite. Mesquite Texas. Hmm. They must like barbecue sauce, right? Isn't that a barbecue sauce? This one we have soon, Harry Hill at the wedding of their granddaughter. Nice. But they're wearing corsages too. Yeah. That's a nice touch to buy corsages for your grandparents. Yeah. Oh, this is an older photo. That's nice. It's probably some great, great grandparents. Alexis Nelson, she always has photos to share with us. We have Charles and Mery and Evelyn. In Ontario, Canada. Yay, Arnpryor. Okay. That's in your mags neck of the woods. Oh, Janine. Oh. She took a photo of a photo. A photo of a photo. Cool. Charles, Edward, Eilman, and Jerush. Jerushia. Jerushia, Adeline, Gregory. Eiselman. Gregory. Hopefully I pronounced all that right. Yeah. I wonder if Gregory was her maiden name? Or named after a favorite grandfather. Tell us, Janine. Is it, was Gregory her maiden name? Or part of her middle name? I've seen it used as a last name, as well as a first name, so. The 25th anniversary photo. And that was just my mom that walked by. Oh. Wow. Your whole family met in appearance. I didn't hear her in comments, so, yeah. Stealth mode. It was her maiden name, Janine's. Gregory was her maiden name. That was her maiden name. Thanks, Janine. Charles and Lillian Williams. Oh, Janine, upload this one, too. Wow. You guys look so cute. Look at her long socks. Very nice. This one, also another one from Canada, from British Columbia. Looks like he's holding like a document. A scroll, some scroll of import. Maybe it's a newspaper to hit the kids when you're misbehaving. No, I'm just kidding. Yeah. That was a cute one. That is sweet. Looks like, looks like she has a teapot in her hand, but it's not like he has a cup in his hand. Yeah, like a, or a crap of some sort, yeah. Looks like an early remote control. Oh, how does this work? How do you change the channel? Yeah, push this button. They look deep in thought, so. They do. Is there a story? No, there's no story with that one. Minnie and John Wright in Oregon. I like that picture. Look, they're like round glasses and. It almost looks like they both are wearing ties, but it's just because. Yeah, yeah. Oh, Betsy, upload this one. Betsy, go, I love Betsy's photographs. Aw, neat. Is she here? I haven't, I don't think she's in today. I'm not even going to try to pronounce that, but that's a nice photo from my collection of my mother and her mother and her mother. My great-grandmother Anna here is cool. Am Shire, all of our wonderful grandparents with equally fine husbands who are all great role models for my children and grandchildren child. Sounds like Zadry, but probably not, I'm sure. But I was very, very lucky. Aw, nice. Look, the little baby looks so happy. Okay, and that's it on the page. Let's go to the G2G post real quick and see if there are any stories attached or other photos that this was on Janine uploaded. So this one was her father's parents and her mother's parents. So this is a photo taken in 1868 of my great-grandparents, Seth and Risa. Seth was actually her stepfather and they married after her mother's death. Therefore, Seth was first married to my second great-grandmother. Interesting. I wanna see how this works in your, in your, how that would work. Yes. So this is a photo taken when my paternal grandparents were set up by their 25th wedding anniversary. This is a, I guess it's the only photo that she has of her grandparents together. Oh, we didn't see this one. This one's cute. Yeah, that's neat. My husband never knew his grandmother who died before he was born. Here she is with her only other grandchild, his cousin Floyd. Nice. So I only knew my grandmother in a more, as her husband, John, more passed away before my birth. But she didn't dwell in the past. Oh, okay. Casual photo of my paternal grandparents. Usually they like to be posed for photos of them again. Took this picture without their knowledge. Yes. Another thing, my grandfather never smiled as far as I can tell. He does look like he has like that permanent. Like. I'm very serious. One of his kids was the same way, never smiled even when telling a funny story. It was all dead pan. We saw this one, they're at their grand daughter's wedding. And somebody said in the chat that they thought that might be an anniversary picture also. Casual photo of my paternal grandparents. The notation in dad's photo album doesn't give any particular reason for this photo. Dad was frequently experimenting with his camera and his photo could be one of those experiments. Nice. And that is it. Cool. Look, and then this person says that, to my eyes, at least in this photo, your grandfather looks like President Roosevelt. Yeah, a little bit. That's what they said. Because of the round glasses. Probably. That is all the photos, guys. Cool. Nice. Indeed. Anything else that we wanted to? Well, did we talk about Wiki Tree Day last week? I don't know, pretty good. Because it's official now, right? It's in November? Yeah, it's official. The first though. November 4th and 5th. Weekend of November? Or 5th and 6th, something like that, yeah. Yeah, and I get to start it all off by interviewing Chris Whitton. I do. You do? I do, I get that. I get that. I'm gonna ask him some really serious questions. Wow. Very cool. Very, very, very serious questions. Yeah. You can only imagine. Why orange and green? Why orange and green? Why? Because orange stands out. Everybody can see us. Do you know what? Well, we're at Roots Tech. You can spot Wiki Tree people from a mile away. Yeah. Is orange a favorite color? That's why we chose it for that math. You know, before I got my official Wiki Tree t-shirt, I'm not wearing it today because I'm wearing my Canada Day t-shirt. Nice bright red. But the orange one I wore before I got the Wiki Tree one was from our math conference. And we chose orange for exactly that reason, so that all the volunteers wearing the official costume or whatever for the eyes of us can stand out, so that people can find them. It's a good reason. So you guys put Wiki Tree Day on your schedule and we're gonna run it 24 hours so that all of our Wiki Treeers from around the world are gonna have a chance to participate. It'll all be recorded, so everybody will get a chance to go back and watch it if they don't get to catch everything that they need to, so that'd be so cool. Symposiums, people are gonna be doing presentations. It's gonna be a lot of fun. Yeah. And all online and virtual. You don't have to fly anywhere to come here. No flying, dude. No flying anywhere. Just wanted to fly and see a Wiki Treeer and watch Wiki Tree Day together, but. You could, you could. I'll be back in Ottawa. You're welcome to come by. I don't have enough room for you to stay, but there's lots of little places you can go sleep in a park down the street. Well, unless anybody has questions or. So we'll be back next weekend, or at least some of us will be back next. Are you back next weekend, Sarah? I should be. Okay. I will not be. And you will not be at a conference. Right, so good luck in the conference, Megs. Thank you very much. I'll just be Greg and I. Yeah, and then two weeks from now it will be in the middle of the Connectathon, right? Oh, and Kathy Navas bringing up the fact that they are working on Archie Griffin. Or the Wiki Tree Challenge for this week. Okay. Thanks, Kathy. Sarah and I are trying to push buttons with the same time again. I'm not, not me. It's not my fault. And then the Connectathon later this month. So yeah. Yeah, I signed up and you signed up. I'm signed up. Are you still at Corny? Me? Yeah. I haven't, I haven't done a thought on a bit, but at heart I'm still at Corny. I'm still Corny at heart. I will be back home and hopefully healthier by then. Yes. My apologies for the way I've been just been coughing through this, but that's okay. I have to get better by Friday or I won't be able to talk. I know. Yeah, imagine me standing in front of a room going. That would not be as much fun. Not at all. Not for me or for them. Well, with that, we will, we will see you next girl, Greg and I will see you next week. Yep. And we'll see you all of you during the Connectathon two weeks hence. Good bye. Ciao.