 Hello, good morning. Happy Saturday Or maybe it's Sunday for you. I don't know but Same time same last week. We didn't have this normal because it was a source of thon But you saw us You saw mags a lot. I was kind of I was kind of scarce last weekend Scared or scarce scarce Really saw me a couple times But here we are again, we are back. We actually didn't leave we were here. We were just doing this Okay, again whoa We have Thomas Kathy Lynette Donna Charles John Kay a lash lash Tommy Nancy and Flow from Oregon and a flow if you're And if that's your name, which is another name, but hello flow Whenever I think of flow, I think of the flow from that one commercial. Oh, I oh, yeah Oh, is that the one with the palm olive? Is that flow? No, the insurance commercial thing. It's oh Progressive. Yes progressive. There we go. There's flow from from Moe's diner Hmm Yes And flow from black forest Florian Florian flows No, we have June and Jeanine New Hampshire Tori and flow the Norwegian striker Hello, but not the same flow says Individual she is herself. Yes, I said oh Patricia from Kentucky. We have a Lexus. Hi Lexus. We always love looking at your stuff that you upload. Yes, we do So we have a pretty interesting Hello My kitty cat We have a pretty come to say hello She gets jealous, I think it's hilarious I mean Sarah and I've been sitting here. We've been chat a little bit and Kiki's been on the windows still behind her and as soon as We the music comes on Kiki jumps down runs around and gets up and Sarah's lap because she doesn't like She's jealous. She is yeah. She knows me the rest of the time Live she wants to be part of it We should add Kiki to the list of our hosts Kiki hostess Kiki A mango pineapple smoothie while watching ooh, I have my coffee with cats on it Happy Canadian Thanksgiving Greg Clark. Yes. Well, that is Today or it's actually officially Monday, but today tomorrow on Monday I'm eating at my sister-in-law's house on Sunday and my best friend's house on Monday Look, it's my mom. Hey Joe And we also had Leslie from Arizona Greg Kirk Kirsten from Brighton, you know kingdom piggy Dallas Hello flow for mill diner says Charles Woo-hoo K-night can drink coffee again We're excited for you K because coffee is important You know what? We have a really crazy cool question of the week and I'm just gonna get right to it And please and I also if any of you have anything to add, please put them chat Throw it in the chat and Sarah. I'll throw it up on screen while we're going Um, I'll start with a wiki tree Facebook page if you have the time you can go over there and read these So what unusual jobs have you found in your research? A lot of people? Just talked about some ordinary jobs that today would be unordinary like blacksmiths are kind of unordinary today But they weren't unordinary back in the day So that kind of thing went on but we're gonna talk about as many of them as we can Um My third grandfather was a competitor of Ulysses S. Grant in the saddle making business for a couple of years That's from Travis Henderson from Sharon. All right mo moller Not unusual but found many artists and have original work from an uncle a great Aunt put tents on black and white photos to give them that little bit of color. I love that kind of colorizing the photos I don't like this new colorizing Thing but I love it when there's like the artistic tinting. That's pretty cool from Sue and Carter Laurie Mandragan says that I have several a third great-grand Parent who immigrated from Prussia to New York City gave his occupation as a possibly Don't know how to pronounce that John tiner's got coach builders Cat a case mentoring a fringe weaver Nancy Wilson's got lots of day labors in June says my great-grandfather was the last shoe maker or that last shoe Laster in Manchester, New Hampshire before the mills took over how cool is that? Husband's answer sester was a whip maker from Donna Dawson Richard Mason Williams says dining room or dining room turned out to be boarding house that house Men that's pretty cool and fed people from surrounding houses Canine says I didn't answer but remember finding a pig killer who work at the slaughterhouse in the Midwest Yeah, case case from a long line of pig killers That's crazy One of my great-grandfathers was a cigar maker in Chicago. That's from Don Wolfman Ron Wyatt farmer many many many times over Uh Pave pavoire Hadn't heard of it. Anyway, it means someone who lays pavers. That's cool a hand chairman In the hand chairman is we don't know John tiner says that his ancestors built the Queen's Irish state coach. That's pretty cool Let's see Laurie for us says I was helping a friend with his family history and found one article in his relatives He called the person a yeg a yeg is a cinnamon for a cinnamon them for burglar Huh, and then Cheryl Plunk now. I read this wrong. I thought it said my grandmother pickled worms, but she picked worms Imagine eating pickled worms. No pickled worms. No. No, I was just talking to somebody about pickled garlic Okay onto the G to G feed there's a lots of really fun stuff a few comments here Blacksmith was a tootin from Luke's get to stall Norm brand a tootin were traveling copper pot peddlers Members was a doffer one that retrieved empty bobbins from textile mills now As as a fun show and tell I have brought a bobbin from my grandfather's He was a plant engineer at Lawrence mill in Lawrence, South Carolina, and I brought one of the bobbins from his mill how cool is that and the Thread would wind around the cotton thread There's even cotton dust in this one and this this one actually has a crack in it So I'm sure that is why it was pulled from Production and why my grandfather had it but it's just so cool And it's worn down from years and years and years of use in that cotton mill Anyway, the cotton mill had a really interesting smell and I have his chest From his office at the cotton mill and every time I open the drawers of that chest. It smells like the cotton mill uh, let's see Uh thomas kerlan answered the g to g but the kerlan family were from numerous generations all icemen Owned one of the first artificial ice companies in the midwest and shipped all over the region That is cool um Seventeen-year-old girl in the census occupation works out now. This is funny She said sadly she had zero followers on her instagram account Sarah's doing her curls right now um Here's one i've looked across run across recently, but it's come up more than once a color man uh And a color man is the guy who mixed paint and back then the paint was full of toxin stuff. So surely we're appreciative of your Sacrifice of your family not my relatives, but two neighbors were bundlers and bone fat trees And I think that speaks for itself Joyce vander bogart. That's pretty interesting Eater laurence. There's your comment um And he says that he has ancestors of his mother who were null and mocker His last name was schmaltz or schmaltz lean I've not been able to find out his first name yet. He was buried in schmalt called them of course um And when I read his profession, I could not do anything with the word and thought schnallen marker buckle maker or novel marker Nail maker interesting But what he made was teddy bears That's that's so cute. Nancy wilson's grandfather was a type setter Uh, my finger stinger. This is from barry smith ancestors started the first glassworks in the usa. That's pretty cool Uh mechanic in 1835, which baffled me for quite a while Um, he kept wagons in shape. That's from kathy forbes from thomas kernel. I'm we've already seen yours. That's great David Preston foley listed in 1870 census as working on a steamboat And um, he lists these listed as a vile cleaner at furnace That's pretty cool. That's janine isleman I wish I could take credit for finding them But there are some unusual occupations listed in the various censuses And I pulled that up if you go to legacy tree. They have a couple um whorehouse pimp is one of them Uh, and oliver butt's worked at a pettit fogger Uh, presumed what is that? What's that? What is the pity? William is a pettit fogger is a lawyer whose methods are petty underhanded and disreputable So that's interesting if you guys want to run over there and look at that The link is in this g to g post here From roger strong George farnsworth moody was a scene painter, uh, mainly in masonic temple temples, and he wanted to be a Um camouflage painter during world war one. That's interesting Third time great grandfather's occupation was listed as maker of dugout war canoes That's fascinating alex atkins langen Those those canoes were massive and could fit over a hundred people were built to withstand ocean travel Uh, Mary Ann memma Albert tear hoon from the another lens his family was Wealth had been lost and he wished to recoup their ruin fortune and once more ownerage estate He became a ribbon weaver Now i don't know how he was planning on getting back the family fortune doing that but There you go z tyler and volunteer research job So it was not my own family the person's ancestor in question was a golf club maker He even made golf clubs for the emperor of japan. That's crazy And z tyler also found a palm reader uh My two times great great grandfather was an underhand puddler He worked in staffordshire in england in the iron industry peddling was done in reverberatory Reverberatory furnaces in which the iron came into contact with the flame alone these furnaces processed two doors Through the larger of which the furnace was charged with while the smaller was used By the puddler when he stirred or worked the iron That's crazy That's I would that was from m ross. I I can't imagine how hot that would be Uh 1865 broken new york occupation night scavenger Uh one who cleans cesspools latrines and privy privies night soil refers to human waste Night scavenger reminds me of a vampire Yeah Laurie dunahue, uh, that's pretty cool adrian hazelton while doing research on my friend my ancestor massachusetts was a fresco painter Tommy buck says his father was a cold typesetter in 1986 when the first mac was purchased Boy, that's kind of like ironic, isn't it? That's very ironic Newspapers found a great uncle who raised skunks A female ancestor who was a rag picker, which I found very sad when I found out that it's a person Who picks up rags and other waste material from the streets refuse heaps for a lively fluidity? Uh, a great grandmother was a teenage lion tamer monica edmunds. That's craziness I wonder if they used a whip that the other ancestor made. Yeah. Yeah, okay uh Sorry scrolling for you Uh maker of nets lay on fronts Uh worked for the railroad moved engines. So he was a hustler That's from john bristow. Olaf sorenson found somebody who was a magnetic healer in 1905 That was a big thing the spirit Yeah, uh wall paper hanger not an unusual job, but having a paper hanger for four generations might be from ludin Perry, uh See a goat dairy I've gotten what it was Allison that's a long one. I'm not going to read it. I just saw one phrase instead of wrote a wild Mushroom recipe book and that was long one That's crazy Uh translator and a teacher braille translator and a teacher of esperanto that kind of goes along with the 1905 time frame with that spiritualism uh grandfather charles william truman Um Was a jet worker Uh, he worked with black fast fossilized wood. It was fashionable by queen queen victoria. That's philip truman uh northwell straw maker and on del willy felch was a Clamor on the flats of seabrook jim bookum. My friend in new jersey was a motorcycle globe rider during the holocaust Oh my gosh, that is crazy. Have you ever seen those? They like put three or four people in a globe and they get that's crazy Uh linette jester my mama was a bomb girl poor pure Pure liquid tnt She poured liquid tnt in the warheads Uh, let's see D d d A fly proprietary a proprietor a fly is a light drawn public passenger vehicle or delivery wagon But it sounds good a fly proprietor A lamp lighter k. Harrison williams Was a cooper marion sorutie Uh a straw worker in milford Uh, that's from kathy carol A pipe smoking great aunt, Emmeline Swingler took over her late husband's junkyard in England. That's pretty cool. Malcolm McNamara, a French polisher, a polisher of French people, that's a process of applying many thin coats of shellac to furniture. That's from Janet Gunn. Elaine Fiveland, a friend of mine was a feather dyer in New York. Kathy Schutler was metal works, metal spinner at the time, making good money, so he's a metal spinner. Carol Koernick, a Scottish ancestor, was a Merrick maker. He took the princesses on and discovered that he was a maker of shoes of Moroccan leather, I believe it's supposed to be. Harry Hilbert, one census record, found that somebody was a bone-turner that made stabs that were shipped out to other companies, so they were making stabs for something. Like many others, some of my ancestors worked in the cotton mills, there we go, there's that bobbin again, joined jobs with several names, Gypsy of the Family, Show Folk, okay. Then onto the third page of these, I'm going to start at the bottom because the one at the very top is the one that's going to segue, so a tin maker and a Cornish mine from Jenny Johnston, Pig Inspector or Pig Warren from Donald Sylvan, while working the England orphan trail, Kathy Carroll found a family of needle makers, let's see, this one comes from, say it is, say it as it is, department, a distant relative of my wife was detained, I think, Hackney Workhouse in North London under occupation, it read quite clearly prostitute and the reason for detention, syphilis, Donna Baumann says my other grandmother was a matron in a female prison, she was about four foot ten, so it must have been, not have been dangerous or no, she probably was forced to reckon with, that's my call on that. And Alyssa Mayfield, my grandmother's tools of the trade was an acoustic martin guitar, she made a career of traveling the country, storytelling and singing folk music, I listened to her music every morning on my way to work, Sarah, how is that, you know, that's like perfect because our profiles of the week are folk singers, folk singers, folk singers, folk singers, look who just joined us, Chris, Chris just joined us, Chris has, oh, but before I do that, while you were reading the question of the week, somebody was asking about the final stats for the Soursathon, so I think we can talk about that real quick. It was not my guess, what was your guess again, 84,690, we got the final total of 56,972 with the Virginia Sorcerers number one, and then who had the most, Leandra Ford was number one with the most source profile, look, Pip's up there and Emma and Sandy and Maddie, so those were, that was the stats for the Soursathon, there should be AG2G post, kind of wrapping it up, but I haven't seen it yet, but usually happens within a week or so of the Soursathon, okay, now, oops, folk musicians, so our main connect, our main featured folk musician is Joe Hill and his birthday was, oh my goodness, on October 7th, so which was the one day when we featured all of them, and you are 30 degrees from Joe Hill through your dad, Joe, sorry. So, he changed his name to Hill, those formerly, formerly Hegelund, how would you pronounce that, I think Thomas, so he immigrated to North America 1902, he learned English while working various jobs, during that time his immigrant worker, he found himself frequently unemployed or underemployed and started writing songs and drawing cartoons to support labor unions, he also used the alias Joseph Philstrom, oh, he was accused of murder and though he was most likely innocent, he was convicted and found guilty, just prior to his execution, Joe had written to Bill Haywood, goodbye Bill, I died like a true blue rebel, don't waste any time in mourning, organized, and I actually died in Salt Lake City, Utah, so that's pretty interesting, looks, don't mourn, organize, this last thing he wrote to for his execution, well it's pretty interesting, we just learned some interesting things with these people, okay, so next we have Woody Guthrie or Woodrow Wilson Guthrie born in 1912 in Oklahoma, he was an American folk musician, believed to have written more than a thousand folk type songs, apparently Woody's younger sister Clara was killed in an oil stove explosion, and his mother Nora developed Huntington's, Corian later died in the state asylum, and he, Woody died from Huntington's disease, he's survived by his two daughters, he died in October 3rd, so also this month in 1930, 1967, you are 18 degrees from him again through your dad, ooh, usually through my dad, my closest connections through my dad, and I'm 17 degrees from Woody, probably through my mother, let me look, no actually through my dad, fun, so next we have Peter Seeger born in, Pete Seeger, or Peter, his middle initials V, but I guess we're uncertain what the V stands for, for 1919 in New York, his parents were Charles Seeger, a Harvard trained composer and musicologist and founder of the American Musicologist Society, as well as the academic discipline of ethno musicology, and a concert violinist in Juilliard School of Music Teachers, so he had his parents, he had lots of love too, Pete had deep Christian American roots, tracing his ancestry to Germany and the American Revolution, he's best remembered as an American folk singer and activist, regularly heard on nationwide radio in the 1940s, he was a member of the Weavers, most notably the recording of Leed Belly's Good Night Irene, and he died in 2014 on January 27th in New York as well, next on our list, Malvina Reynolds, born 1900 in California, she was an American Folk's Blues singer, songwriter, and political activist, best known for her songwriting, particularly the songs Little Boxes and what have they done to the rain, let's see, you are 26 degrees from Malvina through your father, so while she was doing graduate work she did some student teaching in which she used pop songs to teach her high school students about rhyme scheme and meter, as they were not poetry readers, so that's cool, I guess that's kind of what this, maybe not, 66 year old speaks language of younger generation, I know that's related, but Joe says that she's 25 degrees from Joan Baez on her mom's side, and apparently she was in 1977 an associate of the Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press, non-profit publishing organization, next we have Paul Robison, born in 1898 in New Jersey, died in 1976 in Philadelphia, he was an American bass singer and actor, go ahead, 22 degrees from your mom's side, goodness, that's pretty cool, he was an American bass singer and actor who became involved with the U.S. Civil Rights Movement, his distinctive powerful deep bass voice was best known in showboat, and her rendition of All Man River became the benchmark for all future performances of the song, he was blacklisted in the 1950s because of his sympathies to Stalin and the Soviet Union, apparently his mother was from a prominent Quaker family of mixed ancestry, African, Anglo-American and Lenape, Lenape, and then he died in Philly at the age of 77 in complications of stroke, very cool, seems like an interesting guy, yeah it is, I can hear his Old Man River in my ears right now, I'm gonna have a brain, what is it, an earworm now, pickled worm, yeah, pickled worm earworm, Old Man River, a pickled worm seeing an Old Man River, next we have Paul Simon, who was the short, short little bio, born on October 13th, so just his anniversary, coming up, 1941 in New Jersey, and he was part of the Simon and Argar Funkle duo, so there you go, he was Simon and Simon and Argar Funkle, that's all we got on him, he's there, here, next we have Haydee, Haydee, Hedwig, Hedwig was like her West, born in 1930 in Georgia, she was an American folk singer and songwriter playing both guitar and banjo, best known for the song 500 Miles, she's my closest at my mom, is she, am I pretty close to her too? You are probably 20, 20 degrees from Hedy West through your dad, so West began performing at folk festivals in her teen years, winning a prize for ballad singing in Nashville, Tennessee in the mid, in the mid 1950s, and she studied first at West Carolina College and then later at Mann's College and Columbia University in New York, and she knew around where my family is from, she knew the other one, Pete's Cigar, there you go, Thomas Kernelon says he's currently teaching himself to play 500 Miles on the banjo, that's cool, did he tell me how to pronounce this one, this one, okay, apparently 1970 West, she moved to Germany, where she was wed a third time, and she moved back to New York, and she died in Philly in 2005, thank you Thomas Kernelon for putting that profile together last week, that's great, I love the community, collaborative nature of Wiki Tree, yes, I agree, we're all a big family like John says before, the sun is like beaming in my face right now, so next on our list we have Joan Baez, Biaz, born in, born on January 9th, 1941 in New York, American Folk singer, songwriter, musician, and activist, her folk music often includes songs of protest and social justice, she's fluent in Spanish and English, and has recorded songs in at least six other languages, now even though your mom was throwing up her connection to Joan Baez, the connection that Wiki Tree is showing for you is 26 degrees through your dad, yeah, because I'm probably closer to, closer to them through my dad and my mom, probably also, also connected through my mom, but closer to my dad, hey, how do you like being in the spotlight there Sarah, literally in the spotlight, somebody turn the sun off for a few minutes, okay, please, please, so next we have Lionel Long, Lionel Joaquin Paul Long, born in 1938 in Australia, he was an Australian country and folk singer, songwriter, guitarist, actor, and artist, he became one of Australia's most successful and popular country and folk artist in the 1960s, releasing over a dozen albums, he's also well known for his acting appearances on television programs such as Crawford, Productions, Homside, I know we had one or two people from Australia here, you guys familiar with Lionel Long, I have a list of all of his albums, this is the photo of his first album while saying Matilda, all his TV shows and films, and he got an award, he was awarded the Medal of Honor, Medal of the Order of Australia in 1993, service to the performing and visual arts, and he died on January 1st, 1998, wow that's a pretty medal, next we have Stan Rogers from Canada, born in 1949, was a Canadian folk musician and songwriter, he spent his childhood summers in Nova Scotia, main main his mother's hometown, mother's hometown of Canso, he was touring with his brother Garnet and bass player Jim Morrison, Roger Field's large halls on Canada's, wow Canada's East Coast and headline folk venues across Canada and the US, he died in a fire aboard Air Canada fight 797 on the ground at Greater Cincinnati Airport, and apparently there is a Stan Rogers folk festival held every year in Canso, Nova Scotia, they have one more, all these folk musicians, we have Emma Overd, born in England in 1838, she was barely literate, agriculture laborer, she lived in a small area around the parish of Currie Rival in Somerset for her entire life, she became well known in this area for her singing, the song she sang were those she heard and memorized, nice, let's see is anybody familiar with her, her singing, well look we have a YouTube link here, I'm not gonna, I'm just curious to see what, so this is I guess the song is Mary of the Wild Moor, song dates back to an 18th century broadside ballad, there's a lot of research history, so she didn't really song write, she just sang songs and was well known in the area to that, there's lots of discussions going on about particular songs that people have done like 500 miles, there's lots of conversation after the banjo comment, Thomas Carlin says yeah the Stanley Brothers, that's my area of the woods, did that and then Peter, Paul and Mary and everybody's done 500 miles, that's a good one, and that was our last one, now for our favorite, oh my, yeah my favorite segment of the, oh my goodness this is gonna be good one, silly is the theme, what is it, silly, silly, silly, let's see, retirement party caricature, I have to point out that Thomas Carlin just answered your question, have we heard of Overd, he knew her before the week and he wasn't the one who suggested her, she was one of the many old farmers that the folk revivalists discovered and recorded during doing the old British ballads and such, that's kind of cool, that's cute, trying to see what is it's a water pump, a well pump in the middle, right, looks like they're holding their hair, I don't know, what's in this one's lap, I think it's a dog, it's a dog, I wasn't sure that's why I was zooming in and I wanted to make sure you saw that, oh see you've got your pumpkin, dressed as children on a teeter totter, oh they're on a teeter totter, that's not a well, gotcha, a seesaw, I call it a seesaw, not a teeter totter, clowning around, that's cute, you know there are a lot of people who are scared of clowns, well with all of the scary stuff that's gone around, I don't know which started for people's fear of clowns, so then they create horror things of clowns or horror things of clowns that then led to people being afraid of them, that's a pretty funny one, he's gonna get pissed on, under the faucet, oh Janine uploaded this one, silly bullies, oh my no, he's doing some contortion, I don't know, that hurts me unless, I think there's two boys, yeah I think there's, yeah I don't think it's him filming it, yeah he looked way too comfortable, yeah that's a cute one, it's actually a pretty good quality photo too, it is and it's an old photograph too, 1916, yeah, oh my, definitely not a fascinator, it's like a bandana, it may be that she's going to church, is there anything on this, taken by family, yeah family photo archive, like Greek Orthodox or you know pig, pork with an attitude, hey whose ancestor was the pig killer, oh that's cute, that is cute, dancing in her tutu, looks like they're asleep over something, helping him stand, I don't know exactly what's going on this photo, they used to have a trunk on the back of the cars and so he's standing on the trunk, that literally was a trunk before they became trunks and that's where you put your stuff, he's standing on the little trunk that's holding the spare tire, I wonder what he's doing though, why he wants to stand up there, looks like he's looking at something, I'm not sure, is he got a camera on his hand, that's what I'm thinking, it almost looks like he's taking, so there's two photographers, he's taking a photo of something and then taking a photo of them, yeah that's cute, Brian Lawson, well that's a cute one, that little bag thing he's holding is almost too big for him, he's going fishing, I don't know what the name of this bag was, what did you say it was, it's a bag you put the fish on once you're done, I don't know if there was like a technical term for it, just fish bag, looks like he has a cigar in his mouth, a cigarette, something, or I don't know if it's just the photos conveniently messed up in that area, it's kind of what it looks like, oh my, mixing up his wife and his girlfriend, that's pretty funny, that just makes you laugh, playing poker, it looks like it's all her, it's all the same lady and she's like has mirrors, that's crazy, I wonder how that it was accomplished in 1915, I wonder if she's just like had mirrors or something, was that 1915 for real, well it's of her who was born in 1860, it died 1904, so wait a second, wait a second, yeah, yeah, wait a second, so it's a ghost, this last one, let's look at the V2Gs, see if there are any explanations for, a wicker kreel basket for fishing, there you go, June Butka coming in, okay, a kreel, a wicker basket, kreel, look, Captain Jack Sparrow, nice, and clown, we saw that one, we saw the faucet, no they were in Japan in this one, army buddies in Japan, there is station there for the reconstruction, recombobulation area, that's funny, that's one of my mom's favorite words, discombobulated, I'm discombobulated, yeah, so this is where you have to go to get undiscombobulated, to get discombobulated, I love it, oh and there's the fella, two of my father John Miller's students, 1937, I did a double take for a son, that is really a really really top quality photograph, this is my mom being silly, it was taking it, my family home, I'm not sure when it was taken, it was scanned in 2010, perhaps at a party for my dad's birthday, hmm, hmm, I have no idea who's convinced her to put a cloth napkin on her head, but she does look happy, she saw that one, it's kind of fun that we guess it stuff and then go to G2G to find out the real story, yeah, yeah, I like that, I like guessing first and then getting the real truth, mm-hmm, oh she's bowing after a performance, mm-hmm, that's adorable, mm-hmm, the retirement party won, oh they were doing a dog pile, a dog pile, puppy pile, puppy pile, oh that photo didn't load, oh I didn't see this one, two great uncles, Hildreth and Vincent on vacation in New Jersey, they told me silly, apparently the sister told a silly story about her brothers, which probably happened during the same decade, this photo was taken, when Vincent learned that Hildreth had a hot date one night, as a silly gesture, some may call it as a practical joke, Vincent slipped a slice of Limburger cheese into the pocket of Hildreth's jacket, people who like Limburger cheese describe the smell as a pungent aroma, those who don't like it describe the smell as a horde stench, a silly story about a silly act, that's funny, okay, this is my father standing on a trunk of a car intent on taking a photo of the landscape, this future brother-in-law is pretending to disrupt his photography by pinching him or something similar, so we were kind of right, him taking a photo, yep, me in the seventh grade, Brian Lawson, that's funny, oh another photo didn't load, uh-huh, around the turn of the 20th century, trick photography was the rage, this photo Serena at Squire Arwood in a matching photo of her husband illustrate the technique, the main thing I can't figure out is the variation in the part and her hair across various angles, maybe they flipped the pictures to get facing views and instead of taking separate views of each, pretty fascinating, that is cool, well those are all our photos guys, well we have breaking news from York that Hilary Gatsby is not in Wales today, she is in York breaking news and she wants to know how many people are using Rob's app now that I have been beta testing, Rob's app, yeah it's a new source and citation app, let's go look at it, let's go look at it, just really, we had a question way back at the very top and I didn't want to post it until after we were done, wanting to know what the the source of fun quick sourcing challenge that's going on right now is and I'm not familiar with that and I don't know if you've heard of that, that was a while you're working on that I'll go back up and see if I can find that specific question, so what so can you tell me exactly what Rob I'm trying to search the app, what is the sourceathon sprint that is going on now, oh so there is usually a weekend sprint every so often for sourcing, they have a sourcing sprint every weekend I believe, I can find the thing about Rob it's on the front page I believe, oh it should be on the app page okay find apps, is it called something source, source something, let me show my page so you guys can see, tell me tell me what it is, an extension, Weakie Tree Sorcerer, there we go, I found it, Rob Pavy, so Weakie Tree Sorcerer is a free browser extension developed by Rob that helps the user to search for sources and cite them thus saving a lot of time and manual typing, that's cool, that's good, so it's an extension, so it's an extension that you have to, is it for just Google the Chrome, okay so it works on Chrome and Firefox and currently you can I guess you can use it on Ancestry, Find My Past, Family Search, DRO and free BMD sites are supported, oh cool go check that out and Nancy Wilson answered the question about the sourcing sprint, it's just a monthly sourcing challenge for you, there you go is your answer, okay well here are a lot of great cards, sorry K Knight kind of wrapped up what what the source the app is, to use defined sources create source citations and create narrative with citations, K is one of our fun app developers and she knows, we have her on once to show her app that she does, yeah that's what you did, mm-hmm and a lot a lot of people are talking about what kind of platforms that they've used it on to do it, Ancestry, Ancestry reworked their source citations and it's kind of hard to pick your citation out of those so that that I may have to load it just be able to use it for Ancestry, I find Family Search's citations easy to grab and they have the links in them and stuff and it's easy to copy too like they always have like a thing where you can click and it copies it for you, yeah Ancestry that's why if I can't all use Family Search if it's there because then I don't have to think about me creating source, all right wait did you change most or is anything else, what's your mug? Show us your mug, I showed it, it was cats, where was I when you did that, obviously somewhere else, somebody should fire me, probably, probably, so unless anybody has anything else, we looked at some so check out the different apps, go read those profiles, learn something new, yes, has anyone experienced a slowdown on wiki tree, no, yes, yeah June says, June remember is I showing it, hey, hey, well at least I got to see it since I missed it, yeah cats, well, yes, well yes, until next time, the challenge this month or this week, the purse, okay, hold on my brain, my brain, get your brain to work and I know my time moves so quickly that I don't even remember, okay this week we're going Shelly Murphy, yes, so check out on Wednesday where we wrap it up, we wrap her up and nice little bow and then I think next we have, I'm not sure who exactly is next, but we will be wrapping up Shelly Murphy and kicking off our next guest star and I'm sure things are going really well, Shelly Murphy is a cool genealogist, I guess I can see, let's see if we have any, do we have any bounty points left yet, let's see, I'm going to check real quick, we do have some bounty points, so check in on Wednesday to see what bounty points we have gotten, Chris Ferriero says that it's Roberta Astus next, oh yes that is right, she was coming up soon, she's after Shelly, all right cool, so check out Wednesday, wrap up, I'm not sure, I lose track of when Friday day night is, I don't think it was yesterday, no I think it's next Friday, so Friday day next Friday and then next Saturday, same time, same place, I don't know how to point, there we go, Sarah, no I mean I thought I guessed right, yeah I know, you can never, it's like, bye Jim, bye Chris, bye John, bye Tommy, bye Hilary,