Genealogy Round Up, June 22

 Argentine Siblings Volunteer for DNA Tests to Determine if they were Stolen from Political Prisoners 

Who wouldn't want to go to a genealogy conference in the Bahamas??
 thebahamasweekly.com - Bahamas Genealogical Conference - July 16, 2011

 Can you believe this?! A WDYTYA cake at Homerville, GA reception! 

More great genealogy records!
FamilySearch Adds Free Records for 10 Countries | FamilySearch.org

Whether she knows it or not, she got the crown back.
Besse Cooper Is Oldest Living Person At 114

Elmer Spear

Just received this news about Elmer Spear. Pls keep him in your thoughts and prayers.

Hi, Megan - I don't know you directly but I thought you might be able to spread the word to the genealogy community quickly. I just finished IGHR 2011 and Elmer Spear was a classmate in the Genealogy as a Profession group. There was a heavy downpour in Birmingham as the course was letting out yesterday and I just learned from Elmer's wife June that Elmer was involved in a serious auto accident and is in intensive care at University of Alabama with head trauma (he is awake and talking). Any chance you would tweet to the genealogy community to keep him in their thoughts? They can join the Elmer's Genealogy Corner Facebook page for updates on his progress. Thanks - Jennifer Arthur

Genealogy Round Up, June 16

 For many Illinois adoptees, door will soon open to the past

Seriously?
Box Labeled 'Grandma's Urn' Left At Goodwill Store

If you like this, please "like," "recommend," tweet or share. Thanks!
Genealogy Tips from Megan Smolenyak - AARP The Magazine: 5 Genealogy Secrets

Solve a mystery & win a trip to Belgium.
Talking “Do You Know This Girl?” with Master Genealogist Megan Smolenyak

Willow Tree: The Roots of Pink and Carey Hart's Baby Girl

My kind of guy!
Leo Plass, Man Who Quit College In 1932 Graduates At 99

An article Elyse Doerflinger recently wrote ("Finding Mom in the SSDI: http://t.co/pKSNL0u) reminded me of one I did back when I lost my mother. Really wish the comments hadn't been removed. As I recall, they were the best part.
SSDI Blues

Check out photo #9! Ollie Hayes with Barack & Michelle #Obama showing 'em how it's done!
Behind-The-Scenes White House PHOTOS: UK Trip, Tornado Devastation & More

Genealogy Round Up, June 9

Wow, one of my Army cases from 2002. RIP, Cpl. Moore.
Local soldier to be buried - NewsandSentinel.com | News, Sports, Jobs, Community Information

Shared the front page of local paper (@haddonfieldsun) with a tree!
http://t.co/RLX4cWB

Julian, Adrian Riester, Buffalo-Born Twin Friars, Die On Same Day At Age 92

Like the sound of this latest #genealogy TV show
UKTV signs first product placement deal | Media | guardian.co.uk

I used the original Chef Boiardi as a naturalization example in my Who Do You Think You Are? how-to genealogy book!
Chef Boyardee's granddaughter writes a family cookbook/history

Thank goodness for the scrapyard owner. I think the women should be "sentenced" to place flags at local cemeteries each Memorial Day for the next 5 years. Commemorative military gravemarkers stolen from local cemeteries
Stolen from a graveyard, found at Philly scrapyard

Woman, 100, has bank account dating to 1913

Say it isn't so!
The 'Jersey Shore' cast traveling across Italy to discover past

Great read!
The Time Traveler's Guide to Medieval England: A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century

Genealogy Round Up, June 2

Some photos and a brief video about my encounter with President Obama in Dublin. Not often you hear genealogists mentioned in a Presidential address!
http://megansmolenyak.posterous.com/54870245

Sure hope some of my fellow genealogists will come join us this Sat in Ewing, NJ!
GSNJ: Society Events

Irish American Barack Obama Heartily Welcomed Home

Know anyone 50+ who'd like some help from me with their family history?
Discover Your Roots Sweepstakes

Can I ask y'all a favor? If you're part Irish, if you're familiar with Annie Moore (first immigrant through Ellis Island), if you support historical venues & resources, if you're descended from immigrants(!), pls "like" this Cobh, The Queenstown Story page (the Irish counterpart to Ellis Island):
http://www.facebook.com/cobhthequeenstownstory

National Archives Names First Wikipedian In Residence

The World's Most Creative Marriage Proposal? A Graffiti Mural Time Lapse.

Think they're finally realizing this might not be such a bad thing?
'Blue Bloods,' 'Dancing with the Stars' among oldest-skewing shows

Meeting President Obama in Ireland

For a genealogist who is so diligent about discovering the lives of others, I am spectacularly bad at recording my own. If it weren't for Facebook and Twitter, I'd hardly remember what I did last week, but this past week is definitely worth remembering so I've decided to post some photos and a brief video to my blog to help retain the memory.

Back in early 2007, I traced Barack Obama's roots to a small town in Ireland by the name of Moneygall. On May 23, 2011, he visited there to meet his distant cousins and pay tribute to his Irish heritage. I also traveled to Ireland and had the opportunity to meet the President and First Lady, as well as the first couple of Ireland, Taoisearch Enda Kenny and his wife, Fionnuala. These photos and video capture some of those moments.

  1. Henry Healy, Barack Obama's 8th cousin (now affectionately known as Henry VIII in Ireland), handing me a pair of "golden tickets" for access to Moneygall during the President's visit. We were in Ollie Hayes's pub at the time. And BTW, Henry and his family are all sweethearts! I nominate Henry for some sort of cultural ambassador position.
  2. A pair of "golden tickets" for access to Moneygall during the visit of the President and First Lady. One was for me and the other for my sister, Stacy Neuberger.
  3. A pair of VIP passes for the President's Dublin address, provided by the White House. Again, one for Stacy and one for me.
  4. Meeting the President in Dublin. Because of what transpired in the video, I introduced myself by simply saying, "I'm the genealogist."
  5. A Presidential hug!
  6. My sister remarkably managed to snag these shots in spite of the frenetic energy of the crowd. The President at one point said, "Let's do this right," and motioned over the White House photographer to take a few shots. He said they'd send me one, so fingers crossed!
  7. Some of the media was behind us and one of my Irish friends alerted me to the fact that BBC had included my hug in their coverage that evening, so I've borrowed this still to provide more of a perspective of the crowd. This still doesn't do it justice, though, as the crowd was estimated at anywhere from 25,000 to 100,000. It's hard to say, but the sea of people went down the road as far as the eye could see. BTW, the woman dressed in white next to me and the President is my sister gamely capturing some of these other photos.
  8. I also got to meet Michelle Obama who warmly greeted me (and Stacy) with a kiss and graciously posed for a couple of photos, telling Stacy to take her time.
  9. Taoisearch Enda Kenny was next, but we weren't fortunate enough to get a photo. When I explained that I was Irish American and honored to have made the discovery, he reached out and placed his hand on my face, a gesture that was both unexpected and endearing. His wife, Fionnuala Kenny, seen in this photo, generously thanked me for what I had "done for Ireland."

As to the video, it's brief -- just a few seconds -- but it's how the President spotted me in the crowd. You don't often hear genealogists being thanked in a Presidential address! My sister initially shouted me out (President Obama had been bandying back and forth a bit with the audience) and others nearby (whom we had been chit-chatting with earlier) pointed me out when he paused and said, "Right here?"

This visit to Ireland was an experience I'd like to remember for a long time! As genealogists, we make many valuable contributions, but to see such a positive ripple effect spill out of my research was a rare and special opportunity, and one I am beyond grateful for. I only hope that every one of you reading these words has the chance to experience a similar "wow!" moment as a result of your own sleuthing!