Genealogy Roundup, March 27
In this week's Roundup: Nobel-winning book becomes a movie, ancestry humor, and a WWII airman identified.
In this week's Roundup: Nobel-winning book becomes a movie, ancestry humor, and a WWII airman identified.
In this week's Roundup: A movie about a shell with shoes searching for his family.
In this week's Roundup: News for Black people with Sierra Leone roots, Paul McCartney's magic piano, Stephen Colbert's roots, and much more!
In this week's Roundup: News from the DPAA, a census reminder, a couple of COVID-19 diversions, and a way to help medical personnel get personal protective equipment.
In this week's Roundup: A soldier lost in WWII identified and recently interred at Arlington National Cemetery, two oldie-but-goodie genealogical videos, and more.
In this week's Roundup: WWII soldier and pilot laid to rest, Genealogy Roadshow applications in the UK, and more.
This week: Explore a mystery mansion for sale in London, watch a suspense trailer for the New York Public Library (somebody had fun making this and it's fun to watch, too!), TLC announces that Who Do You Think You Are? will return for a ninth season, and much more . . .
This week's Roundup serves up a plethora of goodies, including a look at family trees through 3,000 years of history, news of a 70-year-old first-time mother in India, archives in the Villa le Corti spanning 600 years of one family's history, and more.
In this week's roundup, we explore DNA and the role it can play in uncovering the past, the Manhattan Burial Crisis of 1822, the story of Nueva Germania, and more . . .
This week, we have the story of former U.S. President George H. W. Bush's WWII escape from cannibals, a look at Leah Chase, the Queen of Creole Cuisine, a very fun video in which Saoirse Ronan and Stephen Colbert pronounce 'ridiculous' Irish names, and much more!