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The following are descriptions and links (click on "Register Now") to past BCG webinar recordings arranged by the most recent first. Titles and descriptions for BCG webinars recorded before February 2024 are available here.

May 21, 2024 Editing Your Own Writing – Part 1

JonesTomRegister now

21 May 2024

8:00 pm - 9:30 pm (Eastern)

Genealogists write. Their written narratives include stories of ancestral families, biographies of individual ancestors, and explanations supporting genealogical proofs. For their writing to succeed, genealogists—like all effective writers—repeatedly self-edit everything they write. The process results in polished products that the genealogist’s readers will understand, enjoy, and cherish.

Emphasizing genealogical narrative, these two webinars will addresses the self-editing process. Part 1 will focus on “big-picture” editing, including stages of self-editing; focus; keeping the writer out of the narrative; editing the writing’s overall structure, organization, and flow; and improving major and minor subdivisions of written genealogical narratives, including paragraphing. Part 2 will focus on “nitty-gritty” editing, including capitalization, punctuation, sentence structure, spelling, word choice, and reducing word count.


 

April 16, 2024 - French Emigrants: They Were Not All Huguenots, or Nobles, or from Alsace-Lorraine

Morddel ARegister now

16 April 2024

8:00 pm - 9:30 pm (Eastern)

One of the great difficulties for people researching their French immigrant ancestors’ roots is that so little is known outside of France about when and why the French left their country. This dearth of knowledge has led many family historians of the 19th century to presume Huguenot, noble émigré or Alsace-Lorraine ancestry for any ancestor with a French name. The supposition became a family legend that then became a research frustration as more recent family historians attempt to prove what was never more than a misguided supposition.

This webinar looks at the many waves of French migration, as well as the three mentioned in the title, from the 17th to the 20th centuries. The historical reasons for when, why and to where they emigrated will provide the key points to bear in mind when conducting research. The bibliography, in English and French, contains not only books and articles concerning French emigration but a list of websites to aid the researcher.


 

March 19, 2024 - Maternal Threads Unwoven: Identifying Margareta’s Mother in 18th Century Sweden

Morelli Jill ImageRegister Now

19 March 2024

8:00 pm - 9:30 pm (Eastern)

In spite of birth entries for Margareta’s five siblings in Hishult, there was no record of her birth in the parish. Tax records quickly identified the father, and revealed multiple moves within a narrow span of time; however, identification of the mother remained elusive. No witnesses to births of the children provided clues; no household examinations existed. Coupling the understanding of broad context (naming patterns, inheritance laws, the calendar shift, etc.) with mtDNA and documentary evidence, the mother was identified and the lack of a records was explained.


 

February 20, 2024 - Metes & Bounds Land Plats Solve Genealogical Problems

JerrySmithRegister Now

20 February 2024
8:00 pm - 9:30 pm (Eastern)

This session provides a brief overview of metes and bounds land descriptions seen in deeds, mortgages, patents, grants, and other land documents. The land descriptions are an essential part of land research. This presentation discusses metes and bounds land descriptions and how the metes and bounds can solve genealogical problems.