 Good morning everyone. Happy Saturday or Sunday. I know sometimes for some people it's Sunday. And some people think it's like Wednesday, but it's not. It's Saturday. So have fun. I usually have the problem where I think it's either Friday or towards the end of the week. I don't think I confuse unless you're on a mixed, you know, don't have the weekends off. Wednesday is a Friday. That's true. And then every day just kind of molds into every other day. Uh-huh. I have friends whose weekends are Sunday and Monday. Yeah, my sister has off Monday, Tuesday. So her weekend is Monday, Tuesday. You know what? And it might be fun to have a weekend that's Monday and Tuesday, because then everything would be open. Always open. And then when you go to touristy places like the beach or something, it's not crowded. It's not crowded. There are benefits. So let's see who's here. So we have Lynette and Andrew Coop and Haver, who said his first time live with us live on for Weekie Tree. Welcome Andrew. We have John. He says he'll watch the replay later. He says birthday parties today. John and Chris. Thomas. Thomas is our member of the week this week. So go read all about him. He absolutely was the member of the week this week. So we all got to see how closely we are related to Thomas. I didn't actually see my connection to him yet. Even though I made his, you know, I make the little circles. Little avatars for the member of the week. Hello, my mom. Hello, mom. Janine. David. Hillary. Donna. Betsy. Hello, Betsy. Tommy. Betsy. And Alexis. Alexis Nelson. Here. Betsy's talking about making coffee. I already made my coffee. I know Max probably has her coffee already too. And I may have found a blueberry M&M. Maybe. It might be blueberry. I'll let you know. Yes, I do make those little avatars, Thomas. Look for the member of the week and the profile of the week. Those little circles. You know, I should have loved my coffee before we started. Did John say how old his niece was? Did I miss that? Because they asked him how old his niece was. Boop, boop, boop, boop, boop. I probably missed it. I guess I did. I can't find it. Okay. Oh, 14. There it is. She's turning 14. So she's 14 now. Where she's 14 turning 15. You are 22 degrees through from Thomas Kroneline. And it is through, of course, your mama. Your mama. Thomas is making a cake with blueberries later. I knew I liked you. Oh, she's turning 14 tomorrow. So today is just a Saturday birthday party because on Sundays are birthday. How nice. It is nice. Well, I guess we can go into our, really? I think Max is always excited about the question of the week. Because there's always so many interesting things to see and answers to find and answers to wonder about when you ask the question of the week. So let me get my screen share set up here. We'll look at first right off the bat. We'll look at Miss Sarah's relationship to Thomas Kroneline. How about that? Is it a direct one? No. Oh, it's green, isn't it? Thomas, are we cousins? Oh my goodness. We have to show it though, Max. It's like, Mom, we're related to Thomas. Oh, I didn't do it. How fun is that? Okay, question of the week. We had a good question of the week. And before we start, just on Facebook, if you go to Facebook, you're going to notice that Julie Ricketts and Kate Goodwin are, their faces are showing up to the left. Because every other Friday there is Friday day night. And so they were on yesterday talking about those important dates that are missing in our profiles, which are sometimes those dates and things. And if you are near a wiki tree and you really don't have any idea what it was, or what it is, somebody asked me this, why don't we ever explain what wiki tree is at the beginning of our talks on Saturdays? Because we just kind of assume everybody's here because you already know about it. Wiki tree is a single global family tree that did something amazing this week. It rolled over to 28 plus million profiles. That's a lot, a lot, a lot of wiki tree. Let me see what the number is this morning. Go straight to it. It is 28 million, 15,614. That's pretty cool. And 8,682,000 plus with the N.A. connections. So wiki tree is a free global family tree that is just free and accurate. And we not only work to make it accurate, we help each other learn about genealogy as we go. So when you join wiki tree, you get like a college degree and wiki done in genealogy if you join wiki tree. It's not really, but you know what I'm saying. I answered that question of the week was what is wiki tree? So the question of the week is very interesting this week. And it's what's one of the biggest challenges that you've faced in your research? And there were lots of really good answers. And of course on my little sheet that I keep, I wrote down all the big ones. And we had a lot of people talking about adoptions being the big issue and doing family research or an event that happened where somebody was adopted into a family or a fake adoption or there were really the sisters child, but the grandparents raised them as their own. So they grew up, their niece was really their sisters. They were growing out lots of interesting answers about adoptions. Name variations were one of the biggest things or name changes happening. People talked about there being a language barrier where they don't speak Polish or they don't know anything about Polish and they're trying to figure out what a Polish record says. Common Irish names or common Irish naming patterns, which I'm going to mention a little bit more in detail in just a second. People talked about having an access to information and not only an access to information, but an access to accurate information. And let's see in the all important facts and information that do and don't belong in those family lores. Those family stories and in tales that have been spun for centuries by family. So just to run through here, some of some of these are, let's go back to the first page. 40 something questions. Yeah, 40 answers in the GDG post. Probably 20 answers in the Facebook post. And Lester Larraby started off in those family tales that we were talking about. He wanted to know or discover what his grandmother's truth was. He has a very interesting thing from his family that's from Dalhousie, New Brunswick Canada. And saying that he found a lot of information in the Catholic records of Canada, which are called the Druay collection. And he also used DNA but he still has things that he doesn't know. So he'd love to be able to find that information. Yeah, Hillary, I agree. Biggest hurdle is birth outside the marriage. That's another one. David Smith Slum enumeration. I've never really thought about this. But this is a really good post from David Smith. The biggest challenge I faced was constructing my father's side of the tree. Most of it marked as uncertain. The challenge is in slum enumeration in a nice country village where the well-known vicar enumerates his parish nurse. The chances are most of the population is recorded. And an inner city slum enumerated by someone who's local only by distance. I found only one of eight out of 50 at least 50 dwellings were enumerated. So sometimes in those areas where there's not that connection you might find that the records aren't quite as good. So slum enumeration, which is a new one for me. I thought that was very interesting. Let's see. Dieter Lawrence. Dieter in here this morning. Dieter was talking about the Druid. But David was. Stay. What's that? David's in here. David Smith. Oh, David Smith. Yeah, thanks David. That was a good one. Thank you. And the Druid estate in Bernhof. There were no names given for any of the people. And so he's had a big issue with that. Janine Isleman. She's got the name variation issue going on. Is it Iceman? Is it Isleman? Is it Ice and Mum? That she goes through all of the different various stories on how some of the name variations are going on in her family. Illegitimacy. Hillary. Where is Hillary? Hillary talks about her big challenge. Has been to discover my father's paternal line. Luck was on my side with the mother of my two times great-grandmother when I found her settlement examination in Southampton Archives. Managed to get back as far as her grandparents on her mother's side. Very good answer, Hillary Gatsby. Let's see. And here is one about access to information here. Gregory Morris. Short and sweet. Oh, and M. Ross. Common Irish surnames is a big issue. Peter talks about the language barrier. What's going down here? Facts from fiction. Biggest challenge, sort out facts from fiction. I like this. Lots of cowboy trails on ancestry family trees leading to the wrong ancestor. I had that come up this week and I was so upset I posted on Facebook about it. I ranted. Oh, and Jim Vincent. Let's see. My grandmother gave me a family tree that appeared to be accurate showing us as descendants of the Mayflower. But it turned out the tree was inaccurate. However, most of my cousins had a copy of it and they wanted to cling on to the tree given to them by their grandmother rather than accept the disturbing news that it was inaccurate. Yup. Let's go on down. The idea in Brazil where the indexing has been very slow, like so knowing a geographic, but do we have a Brazil project on WikiTree yet? I knew that we had South American. The other idea for some of these is to contact the projects and the geographic areas where you're researching like the Ireland project. See, what did Virginia write? Oh, a really good one. An incomplete family Bible. The Bible has lists of lots of stuff, but it's missing some information. Why would a family Bible miss that information? That's a big, big stumbling block. Danish naming conventions down here for Chris Shearer. You might want to try with the Denmark project. Facing the family lore with Jay Eggleston. Oh, and Summer Sealy, an ancestor who's missing many, many, many years. Like just disappeared from the face of the earth for 40 years. That's crazy. Let's go on down. Oh, Jim Walker. Where are you Jim? Let's go down to you. I guess you're on the next page. Jim Walker posted that he was having trouble making the information that he has in his family histories match up with the peerage books. Well, I have an answer to that. I have a line of Bacon's that go back to this fellow Edmund Bacon as the earliest person in my line who was connected by this guy named Gustave famous and notorious fraudster who in the late 19th century and early 20th century had roped these people who thought that they were related to ancestors who were the big gateway to ancestors, the barons of Europe. He connected all of these people to these people with no evidence. And so he is a big reason why there are so many fraudulent peerages for people. My specific line Gustave Anjou connected my Edmund to this fellow who actually in his will says I had no children. So this guy could not have been the father of my Edmund. And so thankfully another WikiTreeer found that and helped get that disconnected for me. I didn't know about the Gustave Anjou deception in that part of the Bacon line. So there you go. WikiTree, post your questions in G2G sometimes if you've got big questions or big problems because the G2G posts those people, those people who hang out in G2G and answer those questions and do research for people that's great. We had another one that was, she said that she couldn't get out and do the research anywhere because she couldn't travel to the location whether it's because of you know lockdowns or whatever right now. But in general if you ask a question in G2G and say I would like to have a local researcher help me with this a lot of times you're going to find people who are willing to go out and do some research for you if you can't get there. So oh that's Mary R. So get out and let's see if I can find Mary R. Mary post that in the G2G that you can't get out to do some of your research and see if you have any people volunteer. I had somebody do that for me in Kansas. How about that? Somebody did it for me in Kansas but they lived in Salt Lake City. I think that they had an in at the Family History Center. Let's see. Oh, and Sandy Morley down here it was up for you pastor. Ben Molesworth yeah I did. She's right above him somewhere. There he is. Sandy my greatest challenge has been how to understand how to do something that is being suggested in a wiki tree email. She says the help is not helping her. Well how about this? Find help. Let's see. Do you see that? A mentor connects contact another member privately for personal help using wiki tree. So go up to the help menu scroll down a mentor. Click on that baby and talk to a mentor. Let's go down here to Ben Molesworth. We always like to say hey to Ben. Is he still here or is he asleep? He woke up. He's away. As far as Australia goes I found the early days in Tasmania to be quite hit or miss with records unfortunately. Well of course with all those Tasmanian devils flying around. Anybody else saying the cartoon character? Most of my ancestors and that of friends and other trees are usually relatively easy to track to and when they came before they coming to Australia. But not easy if through Tasmanian he calls it Tassie. I'm assuming that's the nickname. It certainly isn't to say that Tasmania Public Records website isn't good. It's probably one of the best in Australia because they provide photos of the original records for freed nice. But I suspect many records have been lost either that or perhaps due to the high convict population there was a tendency not to report birth death marriages to the government of church. Who knows? Yeah that sounds like a problem that's specific Ben have you contacted the Australia project? Okay. And Pip, Pip Shepard. It's not here. Why is he not here? I don't know. I'm going to answer his question. Where is he? There he is. Getting across the pond while I have a few lines back to Europe. Most of my lines stop at the seashore. Okay so this is a little personal stuff here. If you are interested on September the 22nd I'm going to be presenting jumping the pond, finding my Irish home. Jumping that pond at the British Isles Family History Society of Greater Ottawa's conference and here's the write-up genealogy and genetic genealogy can team up to help family discover it's way to Ireland. Not an easy feat when the family believes it would be Scottish having lost the knowledge of its origins. Follow along as Mag's using this case study reveals how discoveries turned in North American families beliefs into an exceptionally large leap into a small Northern Irish peninsula in the Irish Sea. So there you go. There's one other thing that I wanted to talk about. Somebody was talking about the Lloyd family of Pennsylvania to Ireland or to, let's see where was it? And thank you Aon for answering a bunch of these questions. And Aon pointed out in the Facebook post that there are a lot of questions that might be answered if you contact the project for the area where you're looking. Let's see. Oh and if you're curious about DNA getting started in DNA, Roberta Estes has a new blog DNA beginnings. Roberta Estes, isn't she coming up on the challenge here soon? And October. October. I don't remember who it was who was talking about finding out information about the Lloyd family. One of the things that I bought for the project that I'm working on, the presentation for September is a book called Albion Sea, the Four British Folkways to America. And it details the Lloyd family actually in this book. And that is in the section entitled not that one. Let me look. The South of England to Virginia, no. The Exodus of English Puritans, the Stress Cavaliers and Entered Servants. Anyway, it details the Lloyd family in here. So you're interested, look up Albion Sea. It's a very, very, very sociological, anthropological work about the four Folkway migrations to Canada. And so if you're interested, check out the question of the week on our G to G post or go into the Facebook group and look at what other people wrote. What notes are going, I got to date it. I got to date it. Should have been around yesterday afternoon for the date one. Just a little week. And just everybody know Brazil is part of the Latin American project, which Mindy leads. And we can kind of, I think, I don't know if Mindy or Fluent in Portuguese or just know a lot of Portuguese. I don't know. But yeah, so they don't have their own separate project, but they're under the Latin America project. So do you know that Dear Myrtle has videos in each chapter of the book mix? On Albion Sea. That's what June just said. I didn't know that. Mindy knows a lot of Portuguese. Mindy, can you post a link to that, please? Oh, June was the one who said about the video. Mindy, oh, look, I'm getting my Mindy's and my June. Oh, look at Mindy. I'm getting my Mindy and my June's mixed up. Don't do that. Okay, so I guess we can do our profiles of the week now. I guess. I guess. So if we have to, I think I'll be able to pronounce all of these. Oh, I'll get it boom up. As they're all, because we're to mark the anniversary of the end of the siege of Atlanta for the United States Civil War. We're doing Civil War generals on both sides, the Union and the Confederate. So, and our main connection is General William Sherman. The middle name I'm not going to try. Takumsa. I'll start with him. We're in 2020 in Ohio. He was on the Union side. American soldier, businessman, educator and author and he served the generals as a general in the Union Army during the Civil War. Which he received recognition for his outstanding command of military strategy. Look, here's a picture of him on a horse. You know, I love to look at pictures with animals in them. You know, growing up in the south, we had we had the something that you would see on the side of the road and my grandmother would always say that the Sherman Monument and a Sherman Monument was the burnt out hull of a house and the only thing left standing was the fireplace chimney. That's a Sherman Monument in the south. Just saying. And apparently three U.S. states have named counties after him, Kansas, Nebraska and Oregon. Fun fact. Okay, next we have on the Confederate side Robert E. Lee born in 1807 in Virginia and died in 1870. Apparently pointed as cadet at West Point on July 1st, 1825 from Virginia. He graduated second in the class of 46 and was commissioned as second lieutenant and Robert was the first cadet to achieve rank of sergeant at the end of his first year. Go figure. Robert E. Lee is my closest at 13. You are. Yeah, I had two closest at 15. I was looking. You were 16 from him. So, Robert, he has a very long biography. So I would, if anybody's interested, go and read it. Oh, a little bit about Gettysburg and yes, go back and watch the recording because I did a whole section on your question. You're late, Pip. Late. Do we have Robert E. Lee on a horse? Yes, we do. Look at that. It's a postcard but it still counts. Okay, next we have Union side George McClellan. Born in 1826 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was also the 24th governor of New Jersey. Look, here's a look him and a horse. The horse is in the background. Painting with the painting in the background or no. Is what? Something about the background? Nothing. I hope we hold on. Things are going crazy. I hope we find a photo of each of them with the horse. Now, that's my goal. Okay, now I'm watching him on his biography but there's a lot of sources. Okay. Sorry. I did. I've got to do it southern style. I did not check to see if I was connected to any Yankee general. Okay. So next we have on the veteran side Camille Dibb. I spoke too soon saying I was going to be able to pronounce everything. Did I open it? Camille Dibb. Good thing Meg is here. She can kind of print. So he was born in 1832 in France and also died in France. Oh, we actually know exactly what time he was born at 2 a.m. on February 16th, 1832. He served in the Confederate States Army for most of the Civil War. He began as a Lieutenant Colonel in 1861 and promoted to Major General in 1864 for his service to the French as Brigadier General. He was made Chevalier de la Legion honor. He got a medal. He got some kind of award. And that's interesting that we have somebody who came to serve as a Secretary. There was a lot of French support during the Union during the Civil War. Lots of French support. Because anyway we don't have a photo of him on a horse though. That's unfortunate. That is too bad. So we have Ambrose Burnside born in Indiana in 1824. He was the 30th Governor of Rhode Island and a Senator for Rhode Island. Oh look, keeping our streak except for one so far. I can't even see Ambrose in my liverious. 12. He's my closest. I think he was one of my closest. And he's a Union man? Oh my. Oh my gosh, through Mary Langston who's one of the biggest. Anyway, yeah. Interesting. So here's a fun fact. Ambrose received the middle name Everett because of a clerical error when he enrolled in West Point and this was used by him for the remainder of his life. Because his middle name was actually Everts, but the chance to Everett because of typo. A clerical error. Okay, next. Nathan Bedford Forest born in 1821 in Tennessee. He enlisted as a private along with his brothers. Look, we have a statue of him on a horse. Of course. So I guess some stuff about his military career. And after the war, he entered private business as a lumber merchant and planter, later becoming president of the Selma Marion and Memphis Railroad. For somebody asked if I was related to this fella. I probably am through that T connection, but the connection finder is not showing that connection. Oh yeah, actually it is. It's a fella T, Joshua T, but it's not showing it as a real connection. Okay, next is Grigory born in 1804 in New York. Long time abolitionists and temperance advocate motivated by his deep religious beliefs. He formed the 91st Pennsylvania infantry in 1861 served throughout the war and he died in 1871. And he was also a lumber merchant in Cincinnati. Apparently he claimed to incidentally help runaway slaves escape to Canada. And yeah, some of them have really in-depth biographies, so I'd suggest everybody go in to read them. Kind of learn a lot. Okay, next another Ambrose. I have some Ambroses actually have in my family Ambrose Powell Hill on the Confederate side born in 1825 in Virginia. One of my last names is Powell too. I know his last name is not Powell but. From the Hill family through your dad. Yeah, Powell, that makes sense. Virginia Powell, yeah, that makes sense. Is it a direct connection? Or just a... No, no, it's not direct. So Ambrose Powell Hill was a career US Army officer in the Mexican-American war and Seminole war is a Confederate general in the American Civil War. He became one of the Stonewall Jackson's ablest subordinates distinguished himself in the 1862 battles of Cedar Mountain, Second Bull NTM, and Fredericksburg. And he was killed in action during the Civil War. So he died in 1865 in Peterburg, Virginia and we have three more. William Sewell, I don't know why that's difficult for me. Born in Ireland in 1835 he was a senator for New Jersey and a vice, the class one and class two. And there's not really much of a biography for him, but apparently he was also awarded the middle of honor. He died in 1901 in New Jersey. Next we have Gilbert Sorrell on the Confederate side. Born in Georgia in 1838. He grew up in the Sorrell-Weed House. That was now a historic landmark. Apparently he attained the rank of Brigadier General and died in 1901 in Virginia. In Roanoke, Virginia. Then our last one George Custer on the Union side. Born in 1839 in Ohio he was the United States Army officer and Calvary commander in the American Civil War and the American Indian Wars. And had some bad luck. What about bad luck? He had bad luck. Oh, he had bad luck. Why do you say that? Because he was the commander of one of the biggest massacres in U.S. Army history. Apparently also the Custer family lost a number of family members in the battle. In addition Custer's brothers, brother-in-law and nephew. And he was awarded middle of honor twice. And interestingly I wanted to point out for those who are of Indigenous heritage there is a source on his profile. One of the things that is very interesting to see is how the battle of Little Bighorn was won. And it is from the point of view of the Native Americans who fought in that battle. Which often we don't think about the view of the Native Americans. So it's interesting you should check that out. That was our last profile of the week guys. We don't have a picture of him on a horse. Doesn't look like maybe. No. No such luck. Did people say who they were most closely? We had a lot of people talking about. It looks like we have a pretty southern crowd in our chats on Saturday. Because a lot of people were talking about how they were related to different people in the southern campaign shall we say. My mom's side was in the north and my mom's side was in the south. I have a family who fought on both sides. Thomas Kerneline has a friend who is of Cheyenne heritage is descended from a man who served as a translator for Custer. That's interesting. More people I've been trying to flash up any photos. I guess because it's the kind of the start of the new school year with this time of year. Our photo theme is school. This should be interesting and fun. I would see all the photos people have uploaded. Probably a lot of class photos I would assume like this one from Canada. Canada. The original correspondence school brochure in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Scranton from the office. Sorry. Maybe more song in front of the Ringwood school house with eight of her children. I guess that's not all of her children. Royal Oak School in 1932. Gloria Ophelia Simmons' bottom row. I'm right. Her. Right there. Also in Canada. I guess it's still there. Built in 1884. Sunday school class. That's a nice photo. There's a guy over here. There's somebody hanging out the window right next to him. Look at that. That's a cute one. Is that your mom? Is she still in here? Her grandmother? Oh, Jeanine Eisenman. All those temples ended up in White County. What's in the window? That's just flowers. It kind of looks like there's an eye. Joe Frank Seal. A teacher certificate. This teacher certificate was from the Choctaw Nation. Bessie McKinnon. Cool. Both of my grandmother and my grandfather and my dad side were teachers and my grandfather was a principal of the school. Julie Ricketts just showed up. Julie, I talked about you and showed your picture. I did. Julie? He was the class clown or he got into trouble. He looks like a mischievous smile. He's very mischievous. Robert Earl Dobbs. His name was written underneath the picture. It's hard dots. Who else? Nebraska. Look at his face. He's making a very serious frown. He wanted everybody to know. This one is in Pennsylvania. I see somebody in a window. Here? I think it's a reflection. No people in the windows this time. I want to see if there's any funny faces in this photo. There's probably a task to get all the kids to stand still long enough. I want to see if there's any funny faces in this photo. It wasn't as fast as it was today. They had to sit for a couple of minutes. Charlie Hall Cavill. 1914. Oh look, all the names are written around the edge. That's a great photograph. 1934. The third from the left in the back. He's super excited. They all look pretty excited having a photo taken of them. They're all in overalls. Coveralls for working on the farm. Iowa. We still have a few photos left. There's still hope. At least we have some photos of horses in our profiles of the week. At least there's that. I can guarantee you these kids walk to school in the snow at some point. In Canada? There's a picture of that story. I walked to school for three miles in the morning. That's a fancy looking school. My school does not look that fancy. Kindergarten class. 1920s. One more page of photos. We still have hope for a kitten. That was the last one. Darn. Maybe let's look at the post. Was there an animal in that barn? No. Another certificate. Superintendents to get to the second grade. We still have hope. Graduation day. Carol. In Michigan. None of the class photos has one kid holding cat or dog. We didn't see this one. We saw this one. A teacher contract. Another fancy school. We didn't see what he said. Photo is a grade one of my father. Look at that letter sweater. Lettered in football at Alma college. 1947. People are talking about walking to school. June. 2.5 miles uphill. My mom had to cross a creek. I had to cross a creek in elementary school. My dog would lie outside the door of the school until school was out. Until the school told me he was scaring people. I had to make him not follow me to school in the morning. I just want to point out the top of this photo says yeah. There's a man walking. We saw this one. We saw that one. We saw that one. We didn't see this one. My maternal grandmother. Sorority. O-X-G-O-N-I-A-N. O-X-G-O-N-I-A-N. The agonian. The teacher's training college. Jamaica, Brooklyn, New York. The fancy school we saw. We saw that one. That's it. Hold on a second. As a teacher, how could I not post for this week's theme? Here is my mother. Age six. My mother. She attended public school number eight in Yonkers. The school is still there and I get a kick every time I'm in the area and drive by it. I would love to know what sparked the look on her face. We were wondering that too. She looks like she's up to something. This was Petty who uploaded this one. She uploaded great photos. That's her mom, the little mischievous kid. Hiding behind her book. That was great. Good photos. There were some horses. Next week, I count on you every week to provide me photos. Before we head off, we have our weeky-tree challenge. This week we're working on Lorraine McGuinness, Shultz of Olive Tree genealogy. We do have some bounty points so far. And some pending ones. People are working on her Ontario lines. She will be very pleased on Wednesday when we do her reveal. It's going great. We're doing awesome. If anybody uploads a photo of llamas, I will be extremely happy. Uploads a picture of what? A llama. If you want to know more about WikiTree's challenge of the week, go to WikiTree.com and you will see the WikiTree challenge over there to the right with the big 500 brick walls broken symbol. So you can check that information out. There's Thomas. I don't think I knew what he looked like until I saw that photo. Sometimes I'm always like, oh, because a lot of people don't actually have a photo of themselves sometimes on WikiTree. So when they're the member of the week, then I'm like, oh, that's what they look like. What was your image of Thomas? I don't know how old I think he was. Yeah, I thought he was going to be older. If you go to a genealogy conference, the majority of the room is older. Yeah. Where does a rookie even start? Jill, are you new to WikiTree? New to WikiTree. Okay, Matt is going to show her page again. WikiTree can be overwhelming and there is a learning curve, but take it one step at a time. You see the upper right-hand corner, there are menus up there for everything. There's a My WikiTree menu that can tell you a lot of stuff. Or WikiTree ID menu can tell you stuff specifically about you, like searching for matches, name displays, your family training tools list, your descendants, your DNA. There's a really important one over there, the help menu. If you go down to the help index, if you're looking for something and you're lost, check out the help index. It'll get you hopefully where you need to go. And if you get to a point where you're completely lost and you don't know what's going on, go to the G2G and ask a question. She just found out about us last week. Well, welcome, Jill. Thank you for finding us and using us. Don't be afraid to use G2G. Yeah, ask questions. Ben posted that if you want to, you're going post in a G2G post. All of the people here on our Saturday will go and say hi to you on that G2G post. That's my challenge to everybody. Go and follow her. Julie Moore. Was it Julie Moria? Show her the Intro to Wiki Tree link. The Intro to Wiki Tree on the help. Help. Intro to Wiki Tree. So if you go to the help, there's Intro to Wiki Tree. There's some great things like this wonderful Leanne Cooper. I love listening to this. Leanne's voice is so nice. Oh no. Not an ad. I'm not going to do it. I'm bigger than that. Jill can discover the... Intro to Wiki Tree. There you go. Thank you, Jill. I hope you keep enjoying it. Julie is saying about the... I almost got my Jill and Julie confused. Fine. Intro to Wiki Tree. Julie is telling me the last link on the page. We have a series of short tutorials that help new members get started. Click here. Let me click there. Wow, look. Climbing our tree. I remember when you guys were working on this, Julie. Very good. That's nice. Benjamin just helped somebody build their tree. Can I show her something really quick? Here you go. Jill Marie. If you're on a profile, let me find one to do for you. Okay, let me go down here to my surname list and just pick one of my ancestors. Say the very first one, Alan. If you go up here to the Wiki Tree ID and you scroll down here to Research, you get taken to the root search IO and it will auto fill all of the information for your ancestor with all the information that they have and you can search on all of these different sites, including Wiki Tree, and you can find information. If I went to Family Search to look about my Alan guy, it would bring me to Family Search and it would show me all the records that are available and then you can easily enter that record information. So Mary Alan is not my person. None of these people are my person, so that's anyway. But if it was if Mary Alan was my person, then I could go and I could find that information and right here I could just clip that little bit of citation and pop it into her profile. So there you go. That's a really cool thing to do. Be able to do research straight from Wiki Tree to your profile. Okay. Yes, and join us every Saturday, Jill. We always have fun. And Julie says they're working on more new user tips. Bookmark stuff is one of my biggest. Yeah, definitely always bookmark pages so you can find them again. You can watch this live again because we're only live once. You can watch this as many times as you want. You can watch it during your lunch break. You can watch it in the afternoon. You can watch it as long as you want it to. As your nighttime, as you're going to sleep, you can just watch us and go to sleep with this. No, no, that's Ben Molesworth. He's the only one. You can watch us later, you know, and watch us, you know. Nice. June says she learned something new every week. So do I. From the profiles of the week, I always learned something new. Yeah. Well, Benjamin also is being smart too, saying she can't watch it live again because it's only live once. Bye Betsy. Bye. Bye everybody else. I guess we should probably, unless there is anything else we'll probably head off too. Don't forget to watch Wednesday, the reveal for our week two challenge. Yeah. I'm taking off the new person and next Saturday we'll be here. Really? Kathy falls asleep. Are we that boring, Kathy? I'm sorry. So we will see you next time all fairly well like Thomas says, fairly well. Lovely to see you Julie. It popped in with us and been live with us. Bye Joe. Bye bye. Bye bye.