 Hello everyone happy Wednesday or maybe it's probably Thursday. We are depending where you live I hope everyone's having a great whatever time it is for you. I know it's evening time for me I think for most of us here. It's evening and Today we are wrapping up the week for Tim and we are starting sherry But real quick, let me introduce maybe some people who you don't know. This is your first time watching So my name is Sarah. I am a wiki tree team member and then next to me We have Mindy who is our overall wiki tree coordinator We'd nothing would happen without Mindy, I think And then next to Mindy, we have Christine. She is the captain for Tim's week She's been hard at work for affecting his treat and then we have Tim, you know our Our current genealogy guest star and then next to Tim. We have sherry who We're kicking off pretty much right now And then next to sherry's Karen and Karen is sherry's team captain and that's everybody who's here so Maybe this like I said, this is your first time watching and you don't know what wiki tree is But Mindy would love to tell us all about wiki tree and what we do So I would wiki tree is a community of genealogists who are working together on a single family tree and So unlike a lot of other genealogy sites where you work on your tree and I work on my tree And we probably never talk on wiki tree We get to a common ancestor and we all work together to find information Share sources and resolve any discrepancies on the profile So in other words, we collaborate to grow an accurate single family tree that connects us all and most remarkably it's free We all love free. Thank you, Mindy And that is wiki tree and now the wiki tree challenge The week your challenge is our year-long event where each week a team of wiki tree years takes on a genealogy Guests or a tree and makes them more accurate and complete than it is anywhere else For instance this past week we've been working on Tim and we're about to start Sherry's week The challenge is part of our year of accuracy and our goal is to improve our accuracy on wiki tree make more connections and make friends Right, and I'm gonna go ahead and explain to you a little bit about our point system while we're working on the challenge points aren't everything But they are you know, they give us some motivation and we all work together To earn those so on the spreadsheet that you see on the left. We put the profile We're working on sometimes we have 40 to 50 genealogists working at the same time And you don't want to be all tripping over the same three profiles So that's how we keep track of which one we're on at that moment on the right You see the g2g our forum post Each guest has their own post we can go in and post questions We post our bounty points there are new relatives things we found stuff like that And then this is our biggest means of collaboration and honestly, I don't know how we do it without it We do our live chat and discourse So, you know, we go in there we can talk to each other We can say hey, I need a second set of eyes on this or I need a translation Can you look at this document and please tell me what the date is or you know, make sure it's the right parents We get in there. We cheer each other on Sometimes we just go hey, I'm not good at writing narrative for a biography. Who wants to do that? I put a ton of sources on there. There's always somebody to help out, which is really it's really fun It keeps us motivated once again And yeah And we just had a past genealogy guest star join our discord. Yes, we did very exciting Catherine Wilson And she will actually be a participant this week. She is Okay And then this is our top five where I kind of hinted at the points our MVP is our most valuable player Now they can get points two ways they can get bounty points for every brick while they break or a correction They make on wiki tree They get individual points for every one of the nuclear ancestors So a direct line ancestor their siblings their children the system automatically gives our participants a point and You know, it's just a little fun way to keep track and and get people going if things slow down during the week. So Anonymous Sharky was our MVP and top five player this week Participant then it was Donna Bowman Carol Keeling Joan Whitaker and Alice Thompson Let's take a look at all of the stats really quick for this week Yep, and do a refresh. Oh Yeah, let's hit that refresh button because people are working till the last minute. Let me tell you they were still working I know people who are still asking questions at this last hour. They hadn't quite switched sherry I'm sure they probably a lot of them have already started on your tree But some of them once you get you know in that profile, you just can't give it up so total points now this is ever, you know, things combined any Ancestors or the nuclear relatives that are added. It's 357 points So what that works out to is 18 direct line ancestors of Tim's that were not already added and then created relatives Those are those nuclear ancestors I was talking about and there's 219 of those now bounty points once again This is either a brick wall ancestor or a correction we made on wiki tree Is 120 points So that's 12 ancestors that were added or or corrected on Tim's wiki tree branches Now for profiles edited we had a unique 606 unique profiles edited So, you know with a small group that we had working about 30 people this week that was amazing and then total edits over the week's time was 2,574 edits so anytime somebody went in added a source fixed a date did something Over 2,500 edits that's incredible Yeah, did a great job 12 brick walls broken and we're gonna reveal those momentarily Where Christine is gonna tell us all about Tim's tree Right well, I'm gonna do my best because as usual there was so much going on it was difficult to keep up with everybody's hard work the first one we're gonna look at is Peter Jacob Jansen and there was some Brick walls broken up in Renata mirrors Line, I think it's Renata. I think that's Renata. Yeah, Renata. It's a German name. Okay. I Need to learn some German apparently so Anyway, her father Gained a father and a grandfather so Those lines went up. We still need to fill in all of the Girls are missing all the mothers, but that's not unusual. I don't think yeah, and there's such a shortage of the records It's really unfortunate. Yeah, you know that even when you do find like a baptism finally or a marriage It'll just list the father's name. There is no mothers It's not like or sometimes the American or English records They just put the first name on some of those you don't even get a first name on the mom I'm just impressed that we can find any of these really early German and Prussian parish registers and then translate them And you get those profiles made And then up it's still in the Jansen line We added some people to Isaac Bourne So he was married first to Maria Barron's and there was a little bit of confusion About how many children she had Because she had passed away and then all of her children were baptized a significant amount of time after that But we learned that because they were Mennonite that was a tradition that they had that they would baptize the children Not immediately after they were born but much later when they were adults So we don't know exactly when she did pass away, but we know that she was buried two days before Christmas in 1775 and Her four children were then baptized between 1767 They were born between 1767 and 1775 and they were baptized between 1787 and 1790 and then he was married again in 1776 so a year after Maria had passed away and he had two more children with his second wife Anna and I know we have a free space page about that church well Mennonite church So it's an example of what you're not just making profiles But also other aspects like free space pages and this wasn't even included in the edits for the total points So right this didn't count just extra stuff. We like to do and that shows you a little bit of history about that particular areas church and you know what their difficulties were and it also lists some of Tim's ancestors that were Baptized married and perhaps even died, you know in that parish and services were held at that church So that that's kind of fun to look at and this really helps bring the whole story to life. It shows the community Where you're not just looking at one person and you know here they were born they were married. They had some kids. They died. They died You're seeing how everybody was connected, you know the way that we we still are today through various communities whether it be church or work or otherwise Yeah, that's what we treat about getting getting more than just dates and names getting And then we had some people working on Elizabeth Lawrence So the family had come to America on a ship that was called the state of Nevada There's two different people who had Recorded when they when that ship actually docked. We know it came in August of 1875 But we have one record saying it was the fifth and one the record saying it was the eighth But either way and they came over in 1875 in August And they docked at Antwerp in New York Diedrich had a brother Heinrich who came later on another ship in In 79 And then they all moved out to Nebraska, which must have been I can't even imagine in In the 1870s traveling from From New York to Nebraska And all the things that they must have gone through to get there Yeah, and then we have Peter Peters who I thought was going to be difficult But almost immediately there was definitely some records found His father was also Peter Peters And they were from South Russia and I know that the names there are The geographical names are always changing But eventually there was After everybody was creating jobs and factories and everything there was a Five-year period where there was In around 1920 where there was a plague And I mean we see that a lot of times you see that in Ireland. We see that in Europe But this was the impetus for a lot of these families to to leave to emigrate and Some of them came to Canada And some of them just moved around they went to the Prussia and Then we have a record or we think that he died around 1930 in Russia Peter did But that line got extended And Peter's was proven to be the father of the elder Peter And that just opened up that wall for more ancestors to be done Mindy worked on Margarita And added all of these children Now in this list of children Everywhere where you see the little angel wings that was a child who died young And unfortunately we do see this a lot with With families where they lose a lot of their children quite young. What were you saying, Wendy? I was just saying I we did we had these last week too and I know especially the the Prussian families And just had they had to have had incredible women, you know that they had a lot of this where they had a dozen kids And you know, they're lucky if four make it old enough to to get married And right off the bat in here going into this research I found two different families and I hit the one on the as the second one I had found like this and I have to tell you and I'm not trying to make light of this But I had to say in discord Okay, is everybody getting large families where the kids all die or am I just drawn to these because that was you know Like the first couple of families I worked on it was like I said don't peek at it. It'll break your heart. You'll cry No, unfortunately, yeah, we do we do see that a lot Even we didn't there was a lot of families last week they would even talk about but we saw that with them cherry-holmes Yeah Rare surname So Mary cherry-holmes's father Edward has new parents and Edward now has five new ancestors. I Don't know if Sarah you have this slide there or not This one Yeah, so we'll just yeah, we'll move on to the young man. Keep going with the young man family So Charles young man we added more siblings and other children for him And then someone found that his sister flora was married secretly to a doctor Davis in February of 1899 and then their marriage announcement was published in the newspaper a few months later in May. Oh They eloped I Guess why do you want to hide a doctor? I don't really know I think you Look what I got It would be interesting to know more stories about that And the Charles's father was involved in a workplace accident He worked at the armor packing plant where they Had ammonia and he was exposed to that and they really thought that he was going to die But he didn't he survived and he lived I think it was another 43 years after that And as a result of finding this information, we also have another free space page For the armor packing plant There it is For the refrigeration in that packing plant and that was a very touching story when I first Found out about maybe four years or so ago That's yeah, I thought you know the and as I recall it said that six doctors worked through the night to save his life And being a physician myself. I thought that was an incredible dedication that they saved my great great grandfather's life That was a pretty amazing thing for me emotionally to to read about that story And probably to in a in an area of manufacturing or Industry where they weren't particularly familiar with ammonia and its potential fatal effects So yeah, that was surprising to me too, but Not a tragedy Which is good to find Unfortunately, we do find tragedies. So I Think this was I think this is Lewis's This is the Fannin's anyway Charles maternal aunt Right, right. So she was a daughter of John all good Anyway for whatever reason Her husband suddenly Killed her one day And there's quite a few articles about it in all of the newspapers Their children were grown by that time. She was 52 And the the best they could surmise at the time was that maybe he had been drinking And Decided to come up behind her and kill her and then he killed himself and they if he hadn't they had already set up A lynch mob they were the community was going to go and kill him anyway My first friend that I thought he was killed by the mob But no it was a lynch. Yeah, so they had formed a mob and they went to look for him And they found him in an outhouse and he had drank carboic acid and by the time they found him He was already dead They found a lot of paper clippings for this. He also set the house on fire But they were able to put the fire out so they saved the house For what it's worth and arms strong Yeah, so Anna's line goes up Into the wyren family and we actually found another wyren this I Don't know how anybody wants to pronounce it zooch But that makes him your 10th great-grandfather cool, and then we had a lot of work done in In New York With with various Guests that we've had we've had a lot of I mean where do you come when you come to America you land in New York and So a lot of families settled there. So it's not Uncommon I wouldn't say for us to find that ancestors of other guests that we've had have Settled in the same area. So we have this map of Kayuk County And then we have a free space page done to it for it and you can see where all of the Where all of the people had settled and all everybody's identified like your ancestors and Thomas McKinney's ancestors and Catherine Wilson's ancestors where they all lived and there was one of the Families and it was Sarah Dewey Root the root family had 136 acres in Brutus and it was They received that Land grant and then it stayed in the family. It sounds like for quite some time yeah, and It was Kay who worked on this free space page and she was actually used to be a professional Cartographer, yes So if anybody has any map work to be done Hey everybody needs work to do right Yeah, this is the copy of Part of the land record where the 136 acres in Brutus was Given to Ralph Brut and others and it lists the whole family so if you can read the cursive it lists Ralph and Clarissa and Edward and Sally as well in there and I want to talk about this relationship finder This is one of the tools that we have at the key trade, which is great You can enter in two unique profile IDs So yours and somebody else's or if you are trying to figure out how two people in your family are related You can enter the two IDs and hit the find relationship And it will tell you the genealogical relationship of those two people if there is one now, of course It's not perfect because you know in order for it to work perfectly We need to have everybody on here everybody's profiles done and everybody's families worked out with all the descendants and Spouses and so on and so forth but it was interesting and I plugged a couple of IDs into it and We found out that Dalen Quass potentially is your 10th cousin Cool On the on the cutter line. Yes. I remember that line Yeah, so you'll see like some of like one of his profiles up there is marked as uncertain so We just need to go through you just you know, I'm sure that the research we're probably we're pretty good I would say at wick tree at sourcing but If all of that is correct, then yeah, you're 10th cousins Okay Well, we're all connected and yeah, everybody's connected But it's fun to see how you know Genealogy runs in the family and then we get to a person McIntyre so his dad was born in Harrison County and In 1863 it was drafted for the Civil War But he made it through the war and he celebrated his 76th birthday with his children grandchildren great grandchildren Which is amazing I Yeah, I didn't I didn't look at this line Mindy. Do you know this line at all? This one she just gained the new parents on so George Renwick and Margaret laying Renwick The only thing that I thought was kind of cool You know as we always look for the wills and the different things that help prove it but also tell you about the family dynamics and On Isabella's husband's will he left her all the household furniture to cows to sheep One horse and the use of the mansion house to my dearly beloved Isabella It was sweet. That is oh, oh, I thought there was another one there. I think you just Know she gained parents I think as well Call me and Martha Knight They're both from North Hamptonshire, England and they were married in Tiffield North Hamptonshire and Had their children baptized in St. Martin Litchborough great Yeah, and that that was all of the new ancestors interesting finds for for Tim There was more I just there was everybody was working so hard and there were so many things To try to keep track of and you know when you only have seven days It's hard to get as much done as you want to But challenging lines. Some of these are very very challenging and will require I think more DNA analysis which of course is my my love and joy, so I I'm not giving up on any of these brick walls I I'm gonna continue to plug away on all my parents's matches and my other relatives matches to try to Break through even some of those that you haven't been able to break through or I haven't I've struggled with for years Yeah, I'm not done yet either, but I appreciate all the effort. Yes, sure Yeah, we like making the families too like I hate seeing you know We have a husband and a wife and they only have one child, you know, they didn't have just one kid So, you know, we like to find the rest of the dozen And all those and hopefully by filling some of these families out for you, Tim I know you already have an incredible amount of research, but hopefully it you know helps you in the long run Find more records for the families and track where they've been And you're gonna share like the research notes, for instance like the Renwick situation is particularly That's that's a that's a definite break Breakthrough for for me because I hadn't really looked at that line in great depth. So All the notes should be on all the profiles. All the notes will be on the profiles. Okay That's the whole point. So whenever we find something we have to put the source on the profile So that the next person can come around and see where did you find that information? And it should be in the citations and the sources and we also put things like negative evidence, you know So if I look in this parish for this marriage record and I can't find it anywhere I put that in there, you know on this date so that you don't go back later and look through that whole same parish Right. Yeah, I know there was a lot of that, you know when we get into Wales and nobody knows Nobody knows how to find anything in Wales except everybody who lives over there Wales is that there everybody has the same surnames and it's very difficult to piece the families together because It's not really clear Which people were related to other people and think if they moved then you're really really stuck there in terms of the research. Yeah But our our England project has worked I would say a fair number of miracles so far this year in finding incredible incredible resources sources for for all of those profiles and then of course our German project has been finding Crazy amounts of records parish registers and and whatnot for everybody from Germany and Prussia and It's really it's been fantastic absolutely so Really quickly because we had a question in the chat about something wakytree related So let me because Lewis was asking oh if we wanted to find a free space page search to see if there's already one created How would I find it? So one way is you're in this special search page on wakytree you can get there simply by clicking the little search bar up there and then you scroll all the way to the bottom and You can search like let's say the armor plant right armor packing Yep, and It will search all of wakytree There's ads at the front, but it should come up. Well grab some other stuff too, but in theory This would show everything on wakytree. That's how you basically search all of wakytree You found didn't find this one particularly which is interesting, but this is how you would search and You can narrow it down to categories images help pages so Yeah, but I just wanted to answer that question I think in future then more free spaces free space pages that we create then we can Alter that search criteria to just look for the free space pages And there's also a way in wakytree plus for those of you who know wakytree plus to search specifically for free space pages But I won't show that right now So we broke down what 12 12 brick walls well, is that right? Did I say that right? There's there's brick walls in correction. So yes So 120 bounty points for brick lines very good It's a great free space pages some corrections wrote some good biographies We did was a great week Analyzing it more and then got digging into the source citations and and things that you've you found that I haven't seen before So that'll be really fun So That unless anybody has any questions for Tim or Tim you have questions for us We will make our way into starting for Sherry's week and then we will Introduce Sherry first and I think your captain has graciously volunteered to introduce you Karen and I am excited to learn more about Sherry and Sherry's family this week Sherry had some pasties. She's best known for her company Carolina girl Genealogy and when we look at her ancestry chart will understand why she chose that name With her company as she does not only traditional client research, but she offers instruction She gives classes and does individual coaching sessions and she enjoys giving presentations on family history and Right at Carolina girl genealogy calm Sherry has also been part of a team of genealogical researchers who have worked with the US Army to repatriate the remains of soldiers who have been Listed as killed in action. The team employs their genealogical skills in conjunction with DNA testing To locate next of kin so that these war heroes can return home to their families She's a member of a great number of genealogy Organizations and a frequent participant in and speaker at genealogy conferences across the country just just Two months ago. We saw a number of presentations from Sherry at Roots Tech on top of all that She hosts gen friends, which you can find here on YouTube So do we have any questions for Sherry Or it or Sherry is did we cover everything for you was that Thank you So excited for this I can't even tell you because I spend so much time doing Genealogy for other people that I mean, I'm sure my tree looks really kind of pathetic Yeah, a lot of our stars have said that that they focus on their time on helping others And now it's our opportunity to help you so Nebulage, thank you. So Sherry, what got you interested in genealogy? Oh gosh, you know I I really can't pinpoint a moment But I do tell people that one of the first things that I remember just hitting my heart about family history was discovering I Asked my mom when I was about 10 years old. Why we called my step-grandfather and my head It wasn't connecting who's a step-grandfather. Why why did we call grandma and grandma and why do we call Frank Frank? Why don't we call him grandpa and so she explained to me that her father had died in World War two and That my grandmother had remarried and so that's why it just stuck. That's just what we called it And so that's the first time I can remember just that Heart, you know getting into and wanting to know more and and then you know, I was always a kid listening to all the family stories So they did what and they had they married Step and so just just gonna be bald. I can't really say this is what got me started. I think I just was always interested So who's your favorite ancestor? Oh gosh, you know people ask me that like I I Don't know my most intriguing one is a great-great-grandfather who just walked away from home one day And they don't know what happened to him. There's all these theories But what is that one? It's a bitch on Campbell price and he was last seen with a bunch of money in his Going out to buy property is what a court case says because I've got the court case Says he was going out to buy some land and he never returned And so there's all these different rumors and theories in the family of whatever happened to him. So Don't mind him. I'd appreciate it I Then you could go anywhere, right? You could change your name You could you could just write 20 miles away from home and nobody would know that that's where you were So, you know, sherry, I have a I have a grandfather that was like that or a great-grandfather rather and You know at the end of it all told when all the Mystery was solved. He had three different wives in three different places He had kids with each of them the third wife didn't even know anything about the first two and when I contacted one of Her children. He was like you're lying I've got one of those too, but I found the marriages and yeah Yeah, yeah, people didn't know what I'm saying Out of the closet. Yeah So that brief story was very interesting. Do you have any other interesting stories about ancestor and any of your ancestors? Most of them just let you know Just just normal lives. I have a lot of military men and my family history Um, I have a lot of people that just came to South Carolina and stayed Didn't go anywhere else. I joke and say my dad joined military. He joined the Air Force and he was the first one to really leave And here I am back I was I was born here, but I wasn't raised here So my husband and I we came and moved here about 13 years ago. So but um, yeah I just I know that there's some other Things probably going on in the family. Maybe I don't know about most of them were just well my um My grandmother's mother Was supposed to have been adopted and so the only the only the only record that I can find that That says that she was adopted because everything else just says daughter, right? was her Her marriage license because she was under age and her father had to give permission and it was one of those Things where I just cranked to the next page because everything else was just the front and the back the front and the back the front And the back all the way through everybody's Everybody's record and for some reason I just thought I'm gonna keep going and there it was I give permission for my adopted daughter Mary Things always go a couple of pages both ways. You never know what might be put in there. Oh, I've got that Um I'm so excited to see what you guys She says I just want to hear your stories your new ones. Yeah, I just want to see what you find So when did when did you first discover wiki tree sherry? Oh gosh? Oh gosh, I can't even just I know I've had a tree on there forever Yeah, looking at when you created some stuff looks like like 2013 when you uploaded a dead calm Exactly and so You know, I can't say they've been really good about coming back and fixing things But I sure appreciate the people when I guess, you know an email saying we'd like to merge or somebody saying I don't think that this is right. I'm like, isn't that? Because we want people to say This is right and this is why I think that yeah, so we might already have a little bit of that going on Probably in the discord And that's Wanted to be correct, you know so what are your current brick walls that You know of that you have that you maybe you would want to bust through There's Campbell price, but I don't know if anybody's gonna be able to figure out what happened to that man and I just don't know um my Early family in North Carolina I have found a cemetery with There's a Martin in an early, but I haven't been able to connect. I know that there's people I Know there's people that are working on the line and you know people will say this is the mom This is the dad, but they've got no sources. You don't know You know, where they found the information and you ask them and they don't remember where they found the information But um, so that's that's one of them too, I'd like to see Also majority line my software line a dirty line I'd like to know when they came in and where this is a funny story because those family stories that you Discover that you're not through and my mother's or that her door these came in and in the south. It's it's darty It's it darty Anyway, her darty family um came during the potato famine But they couldn't have because I keep finding I hate I hate to tell you this, you know, and then she had the whole story about oh, there's a dirty reunion and You know, they all came from ireland in this one county. I'm like Part of that story might be true because it was a previous potato famine in the late 1700s so perhaps That's when they came And the family story, you know how they get twisted and turned around so yeah Perhaps there is a little truth to that Or perhaps it's just that she made it all up because she didn't know her grandparents They died when she was young both of her parents died when she was young. So I don't know I don't know where she got this story from but I'd like to know where majorities came from in ireland And when you know when they came to south carolina And I know there's a lot of people working on that. So there's a lot of people that would really appreciate We could find that I know that's why I'm so excited Now I know you said you're hoping to see new finds, but you know keeping in mind what our challenge has been What do you hope overall to get out of participation? Um, I think just a cleaner tree a more to date tree a more source tree Yeah, would that's that's really what I hope that we can do That would be fabulous that would be just you know icing on the cake But really to know that this tree is is as as good as it can be in a week of all people looking at it. So That excites me that excites me. So And I'm Grateful to grateful to be on and be chosen to do this. So Yeah, we we thank both you sherry and you tim for for participating in our challenge. It's been great And um, I know each week we have at least Found broken one at least one brick wall. We haven't gone a week without breaking a brick wall. So And we've broken over 200 brick walls in total I believe for the whole challenge Maybe more I'm just kind of Moving Yeah, it's it's been awesome. Oh look we we have a whole bunch of guest stars watching ellen mert's watching ellen's watching now And actually hitting our our month three mark is complete our first quarter We've broken down 237 brick walls This was the one that got me at the end of those three months You know for those edits I told you every time somebody added a source fixed a date it would ever We're at 39,904 edits from the wiki tree community. I mean, it's just crazy, right? Wow, that that doesn't include That only includes nuclear relatives. So like any of the free space page edits or if somebody went off on a real tangent rabbit hole So what a wonderful service that you're providing that's it's just thank you. Thank you so much Mm-hmm Well, we thank you Yeah We've also just surpassed. Uh, what is it eight million? 800,000 genealogy Eight million with DNA test connections. No, not Is it eight? Uh, I think it's 800,000. Oh pro files. Oh I know I thought you meant genealogists on wiki tree, but yes. Oh 800,000 genealogists. Yes And eight million over eight million DNA test connections With 26 million over 26 million profiles on wiki tree. Yeah, and this challenge is just growing all of that beautiful wiki tree connections, so Good karma. Great Karen, did you have any other questions for sherry? Hi, sherry, any questions in the chat? All right Um, sherry, would you like us to copy any photos from your personal collection? On to your ancestor profiles at wiki tree and where would we find those would we look on your blog or your ancestry tree? Or are there photos that you don't want moved? Oh, no, anything. It's fine Anything that I've got posted on my blog I've got permission to put on there from they're either mine my grandparents or I've asked for permission and the copyright is on there So, all right. And so that's yeah That's a fun task for folks who Who are you know, not not familiar with the research in the area where we'll be finding your family and You saw the free space pages like the packing company And the land records in new york that happened during tim's week And there's so many of these things that are part of history that just aren't evident on the vital records and the census and the probate and so I wonder if there are clubs and societies that were important to Your ancestors are there some uh Of those that you might like to learn more about? Um, let me think I might I have several family members who worked in the mills in South Carolina a lot of mill families That um, was it textile? Yes Uh Mills in columbia, um hermitage mills in camden Um, you know, they would just go there's some mills in achon and and charlotte They would you know, just go where the work was and as a matter of fact We just my mom and I just went up and down the streets in camden, south carolina looking for the house that her grandparents Trying to figure out But maybe Anyway, so yeah, that would be great And I have a lot of ancestors who fought with the swamp fox too, and I don't know if you've got a page I'm sure you do for frances maryon on there, you know, right? I'm I'm singing the disney song right now. Yeah And so we talked about the employers and professions we're really talking about the textile mill How about any special schools or or colleges are That are dear to your heart Uh, no most of my people were real, you know farmers and that but I do have My grandmother's mother was sent to a catholic school in sumter, south carolina called st. Joseph's academy And I've been looking for records for that for a while. But yeah, so they sent her there She's the one that was adopted and And adopted mother died, I guess Her father just said I need to put her somewhere So they sent her to this apparently she just I mean, they were southern baptist, but they sent her to this this catholic school Just loved it. My grandmother remembers her taking her over there when she was a child introducing her to the nuns and so But and like you said, uh, her family was southern baptist. Is that the main? Faith community that's been your family over the years some presbyterians. Yeah, but mostly those baptists in South carolina, but yeah, there was some there were some Methodist and Presbyterians as well. We'll check the chat for more questions. But my last question for you is sweet mustard or vinegar with Pepper or the mild tomato sauce. Oh, no, no the sweet mustard piggy park all the way Thanks, so If anybody has any questions for sherry in the chat or tim or any of us for the about the wiki tree challenge well We'll wait a minute or so just in case but again, I want to thank everybody. I want to thank everybody who is watching all of our Captains christine and karen thank mindy and then our guests and then we have some guests in the chat Just thank you everyone. Everyone just made this challenge so fantastic So I don't see any questions coming in So with that we'll probably head off. Don't forget you can always find us at wiki tree dot com We're on social media So check us out and then friday we have our friday date night where we date lonely profiles. It's always fun And then saturday morning, we have our weekly live cast where I go over All of our updates about wiki tree and we talk about fun stuff. We look at photos and my cat always interrupt So it's great Until next time everyone we will see you then