 Good morning. I'm David Ferriero, Archivist of the United States. Welcome to our Virtual Genealogy Fair. For 14 years, the National Archives has hosted an annual Genealogy Fair, and since 2013 we've been doing a live webcast on YouTube. Our sessions offer family history research tools on federal records for all skill levels. Thousands of family historians participate in the live event each year. As a virtual attendee, you can participate with the presenters and other family historians and watch individual sessions and download the materials at your convenience. Since going virtual seven years ago, we are able to have these resources and tools available for family historians in the form of lecture video recordings and handouts on our Genealogy Fair web page. This annual event is an opportunity to bring us together to share knowledge about the National Archives Holdings and research strategies. Sessions will offer guidance on the National Archives History Hub, preserving personal collections, using records relating to immigration, World War I Soldiers and Marines, Bureau of Indian Affairs Schools, and the Homestead Act. As you enjoy this Genealogy Fair, I encourage you to visit our website archives.gov. We have many other resources available including videos from our Know Your Records programs, an ongoing series of free public programs created to show you how to use federal government records held at the National Archives for historical and genealogical research. These videos include the previous six virtual Gene Affairs. Our National Archives catalog where you can find documents of genealogical interest to genealogists and the research at the National Archives page on Facebook where you can follow the latest topics on genealogy. You can also connect with virtual genealogy attendees on Twitter using the hashtag shown on the screen. The dedication of National Archives staff is one of our greatest assets in carrying out the mission of this agency. I want to thank our presenters, Rebecca Collier, Darren Cole, Kelly Osborne, Sarah Holmes, Elizabeth Burns, Nathaniel Patch, Cody White, and James Moon for their efforts. Moreover, special thanks to our research services workplace culture and training manager, Vernon Smith, and the program analyst Andrea Matney for putting this all together. Our role at NARA is to preserve the records that have permanent value. We have over 15 billion pages of records, 44 million photographs, thousands of motion pictures, maps, broadsides, and electronic records. History comes to life at the National Archives through these holdings. Thank you and enjoy the Virtual Genealogy Fair.