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  • 26 Feb 2024 10:00 AM | Anonymous

    All Swedish-language newspapers published in Finland are now available digitally, as the National Library's digitization project has been completed.

    The University of Helsinki reports that nearly 3.9 million pages were digitized in the project which ended on December 31st.

    Now, almost six million pages of Swedish-language newspapers are available digitally through the National Library's digi.kansalliskirjasto.fi service. According to the National Library, Swedish-language papers account for 30 percent of all newspapers available on the service.

    Searches can be made from digital content within newspaper contents and descriptive information.

    According to Kimmo Tuominen, Chief Librarian at the National Library, comprehensive digitized collections can promote language science, machine learning and AI development by opening up new opportunities for Finnish researchers to develop language models.

    "The availability of digitized newspapers revolutionizes research possibilities and deepens understanding of Finnish history and culture. We are grateful to our supporters and partners for making this part of Finland’s Swedish-speaking cultural heritage increasingly accessible," says Tuominen in a statement.

    You can read more in an article by Joakim Kullas published in the tivi.fi web site at: http://tinyurl.com/yvssene8.

  • 26 Feb 2024 9:47 AM | Anonymous

    Here is an article that is not about any of the "normal" topics of this newsletter: genealogy, history, current affairs, DNA, and related topics. However, I suspect it will be of interest to many readers of this newsletter.

    The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) has established an ‘‘Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Records Collection," per sections 1841–1843 of the 2024 National Defense Authorization Act (Public Law 118-31).  

    Please explore the links below to find out more about records related to unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs)/unidentified flying objects (UFOs) in NARA’s holdings. All links to items in the National Archives Catalog are downloadable and can be republished with attribution to the National Archives and Records Administration.

    RG 255: Records of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration

    • Items from the series “Photographs Relating to Agency Activities, Facilities and Personnel, 1960–1991” (National Archives Identifier: 5956182, Local Identifier: 255-GS)

    RG 342: Records of U.S. Air Force Commands, Activities, and Organizations, 1900–2003

    • Items from the series “Black and White Photographs of U.S. Air Force and Predecessors' Activities, Facilities, and Personnel, Domestic and Foreign” (National Archives Identifier: 542185, Local Identifier: 342-AF)
      • Items include 342-AF-63708AC, 342-AF-163969AC, 342-AF-34920AC, 342-AF-34923 AC, 342-AF-34919AC, 342-AF-163969AC, and 342-AF-34919AC.  A finding aid for these items is available in the Still Picture Research Room.
    • Items from the series “Black and White and Color Photographs of U.S. Air Force Activities, Facilities, and Personnel, Domestic and Foreign” (National Archives Identifier: 542326, Local Identifier: 342-B)

    RG 341: Records of Headquarters U.S. Air Force (Air Staff)

    • “Project “BLUE BOOK”, 1954–1966.” (National Archives Identifier: 542184, Local Identifier: 341-PBB)
    You can read more at: https://www.archives.gov/research/topics/uaps.


  • 23 Feb 2024 5:13 PM | Anonymous

    The following is a Plus Edition article written by and copyright by Dick Eastman. 

    Genealogists often use terms that are not familiar to others. Most of these terms become familiar soon after we get involved in searching for our family trees. We soon speak of pedigree charts, enumerators, Henry numbers, fan charts, and more. However, one term we do not hear often pops up occasionally: Kekule Numbers. 

    The German mathematician Stephan Kekule of Stradonitz (1863-1933) was a genealogist as well as the son of famed mathematician and chemist Friedrich August Kekulé. He used a numbering system to show relationships in text format. In German-speaking counties, lists of names created with Stephan Kekule’s numbers are still referred to by his name: Kekule numbers. However, in English-speaking countries the same numbers in lists would be called “numbers.” 

    Indeed, ahnentafel numbers and the Kekule numbers for listing ancestors are the same. However, Stephan Kekule also created a similar system for listing descendants, a system I have rarely seen in English-language publications.

    Ahnentafel is a word commonly used in genealogy although it probably confuses most newcomers. Ahnentafel is a German word that literally translates as "ancestor table." It is a list of all known ancestors of an individual and includes the full name of each ancestor as well as dates and places of birth, marriage, and death whenever possible. It also has a strict numbering scheme. 

    Note: Ahnentafel numbers for ancestors did not originate with Stephan Kekule. He simply popularized the system in his 1896 Ahnentafel Atlas. Spanish genealogist Jerome de Sosa first used the same ancestor numbering system in 1676, and ahnentafel/Kekule numbers are sometimes called “Sosa-Stradonitz system.” Kekule's contribution was the numbering system for descendants.

    Once the reader is accustomed to ahnentafels or Kekule numbers, it becomes very easy to read these lists, to move up and down from parent to child and back again, and to understand the relationships of the listed people. Ahnentafels are very good at presenting a lot of information in a compact format. However, the numbering system is the key to understanding ahnentafels or Kekule numbers. 

    The starting-person receives the number 1. For an example, let’s create a list of your ancestors and give each person a number. You are number one. 

    The father of the starting-person receives the number 2, and the mother gets the number 3. In our example, your father is #2 and your mother is #3. As we continue, a pattern emerges: your paternal grandfather is #4, your paternal grandmother is #5, your maternal grandfather is #6 and your maternal grandmother is #7. Moving up another generation continues the numbers: your father’father’father is #8 and so on. 

    Here is an excerpt from a list of one famous American’ancestors:

    1. George Walker Bush

    2. George Herbert Walker Bush

    3. Barbara Pierce

    4. Prescott Sheldon Bush

    5. Dorothy Walker

    6. Marvin Pierce

    7. Pauline Robinson

    8. Samuel Prescott Bush

    9. Flora Sheldon

    10. George Herbert Walker

    11. Lucretia [Loulie] Wear

    As you continue listing ancestors, you will soon see a pattern developing: 

    Male ancestors have always even numbers.

    Female ancestors always have odd numbers.

    The number of the father of a person is always twice as large as that of the original person.

    The number of the mother is twice as large as the original person’s plus one.

    To visualize the numbers, first consider a typical pedigree chart: 

    Carefully observe the numbers in the chart. You will notice that every person listed has a number and that there is a mathematical relationship amongst the individuals listed: 

    Gender: Male ancestors always have even numbers (ignore the starting person, or #1); female ancestors have odd numbers.

    Parents: The father of any person has a number of double that of his child (2n), and the mother of any person always has number of double that of her child plus one (2n + 1).

    Mate: A male ancestor's mate has number n + 1, and a female ancestor's mate has number n - 1.

    Relationship: The exact relationship between any ancestor n and the individual at position 1 is found by successively dividing n by 2, discarding fractions at each stage, until reaching the number 1. The resulting list of integers identifies the ancestral positions that form the lineage. The number of times that n is halved equals the number of generations between the individual and the ancestor at position n.

    Ancestors per generation: The first ancestor number in every generation (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, etc.) corresponds to the number of ancestor positions in that generation.

    Generation numbers: The above numbers are also exponentiations of 2 (i.e., 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, etc.), and the exponent may be used as the generation number (i.e., 16 - or, 2 to the fourth power - represents the fourth ancestral generation).

    Now, let's take a typical ancestry chart and write it in ahnentafel format: 

    1. person

    2. father

    3. mother

    4. paternal grandfather

    5. paternal grandmother

    6. maternal grandfather

    7. maternal grandmother

    8. paternal great-grandfather

    9. paternal great-grandmother

    10. paternal great-grandfather

    11. paternal great-grandmother

    12. maternal great-grandfather

    13. maternal great-grandmother

    14. maternal great-grandfather

    15. maternal great-grandmother

    Notice that the numbers are exactly the same as in the pedigree chart. The rules of father=2 times child, mother=2 times child+1, child=one-half of parent, etc., remain the same. This is an ahnentafel chart. 

    The remainder of this article is reserved for Plus Edition subscribers only. If you have a Plus Edition subscription, you may read the full article beginning at: https://eogn.com/(*)-Plus-Edition-News-Articles/13320124.

    If you are not yet a Plus Edition subscriber, you can learn more about such subscriptions and even upgrade to a Plus Edition subscription immediately at https://eogn.com/page-18077

  • 23 Feb 2024 4:55 PM | Anonymous

    The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) will host a panel discussion on “Artificial Intelligence: The Intersection of Public Access and Open Government'' Thursday, March 14, at 1 p.m. ET. This program is being offered during Sunshine Week, an annual nationwide celebration of access to public information.  The event will be in person at the William G. McGowan Theater at the National Archives in Washington, DC, and livestreamed on the National Archives YouTube Channel.   

    Pamela Wright, NARA’s Chief Innovation Officer, will moderate a panel of open government and transparency experts who will discuss artificial intelligence and how it intersects with the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and access to information. Panelists include Gulam Shakir, NARA’s Chief Data Officer; Abigail Potter, Senior Innovation Specialist at the Library of Congress Digital Innovation Lab; Eric Stein, Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Office of Global Information Services at the U.S. Department of State; and Bobak Talebian, Director of the Office of Information Policy of the U.S. Department of Justice.

    Immediately following the program, the National Archives will make available for viewing documents related to the Freedom of Information Act. 

    More about past Sunshine Week at the National Archives programs is available here:https://www.archives.gov/ogis/outreach-events/sunshine-week

    Moderator and Speakers: 

    Pamela Wright became NARA’s first Chief Innovation Officer in December 2012. She leads staff responsible for agency-wide projects and programs in the following areas: innovation, digitization, web, social media, online description, and online public engagement. Ms. Wright previously served as the agency's Chief Digital Access Strategist (2009–2011), where she pulled together the web, social media, and online catalog staff into an award-winning integrated team for improved online public access, and as the manager of the Archival Research Catalog (2005–2008), where she led staff responsible for developing and implementing policies, processes, systems, and standards relating to the description of records. She served as the agency representative to the White House Open Government Working Group from 2010 to 2017 and serves on advisory boards for the Digital Public Library of America and the Library and Archives Canada. In 2022, Ms. Wright was selected by President Biden as a Distinguished Executive in the Senior Executive  Service. Ms. Wright holds undergraduate degrees in history and English from the University of Montana as well as a graduate certificate in project management from George Washington University. 

    Abigail Potter is a founding member of the Library of Congress Labs team and has led a program of digital experimentation with an emphasis on practical and human-centered outcomes. Since joining the Library of Congress in 2005, she’s helped build capacities in local, national, and international networks for mass digitization, digital preservation, web archiving, and machine learning. In the past year she led the creation of the LC Labs AI Planning Framework, the NLP vendor evaluation guidance from the General Services Administration's AI Community of Practice, and is the current co-chair of the AI 4LAM Secretariat (AI for Libraries/Archives/Museums). Ms. Potter, who has a background in digital publishing, earned her bachelor of arts degree from Western Michigan University and her master of arts degree from the University of Michigan.

    Gulam Shakir has been NARA’s Chief Technology Officer since May 2020. In this role, he continues to establish agency-wide enterprise technology architectures and provide program level IT strategic direction to mission-critical programs. Some of Mr. Shakir’s recent achievements include exploring options for the transfer of electronic records from various cloud sources, providing secure access to partners in external agencies, migration of legacy applications to the cloud, and advising on the modernization of legacy applications that process requests to veterans’ records. As NARA's Chief AI Officer, Mr. Shakir is leading AI-related pilots to improve search within the National Archives Catalog to detect personally identifiable information (PII) within NARA records before public release, and to create AI-assisted first draft of descriptive metadata for NARA’s records. In the past, he has served as NARA’s Chief Data Officer and as a system architect within Information Services since 2016. Before joining NARA, Mr. Shakir served in various technical leadership roles at DataXu, Inc.; Marchex, Inc.; and IBM Corp. He has a master of science degree in computer science from West Virginia University. 

    Eric Stein is the Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Office of Global Information Services (A/GIS) at the U.S. Department of State. In this role, he is the Department’s Senior Agency Official for Privacy. He is a career member of the Senior Executive Service. Prior to serving as the A/GIS DAS, he served as the Director of the Office of Information Programs and Services at the State Department. This office is responsible for the Department’s records management, Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Privacy Act, classification, declassification, library, and other records and information access programs. Mr. Stein has served in key leadership roles involving the Department’s improvement of records management and agency-wide FOIA initiatives. He also serves as co-chair of an interagency FOIA technology working group led by the Department of Justice and NARA. Mr. Stein served as an intra- and interagency coordinator on the State Department’s efforts to mitigate the WikiLeaks incidents. During this assignment, he also served as the Department’s point of contact for Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) mandated by Executive Order 13556, tribal consultations and other cross-cutting, Department-wide programs. Mr. Stein received a bachelor of arts degree in political science from Boston College and a master of arts degree in politics (American government) from the Catholic University of America.

    Bobak (Bobby) Talebian began serving as the Director of the Office of Information Policy (OIP) of the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) in February 2020. OIP is responsible for developing policy guidance for executive branch agencies on the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), providing legal counsel and training to agency personnel on the procedural and substantive aspects of the Act, and for overseeing agency compliance with the law. OIP also manages the Department of Justice's obligations under the FOIA. This includes adjudicating administrative appeals from denials of access to records made by DOJ components under the FOIA or the Privacy Act of 1974; handling initial requests for records of the Offices of the Attorney General, Deputy Attorney General, and Associate Attorney General as well as other Senior Management Offices; providing staff support for the Department Review Committee, which reviews DOJ records containing classified information; and handling the defense of certain FOIA matters in litigation. Mr. Talebian is a graduate of Kenyon College and the University of Tennessee College of Law where he served on Law Review.

  • 23 Feb 2024 9:57 AM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by the folks at Findmypast.com:

    With over 13,000 new Roman Catholic records to explore, what surprising stories will your research uncover?

    We're in West Yorkshire this week, with updates to three Roman Catholic record collections. We've also added a brand new Yorkshire newspaper title, and updated 25 existing publications with even more pages for you to explore.

    Here's a full rundown of all that's been added this Findmypast Friday.

    Roman Catholic parish baptisms

    First up, we've added a total of 8,814 baptism records from St Mary's Batley parish in Leeds to our Roman Catholic parish baptism collection. 

    Leeds parish baptism record

    A baptism record from 1913.

    With both images and transcriptions available, these new additions cover 1853 to 1914. They may just help to shed light on the early lives of your Leeds ancestors.

    Roman Catholic parish marriages

    We've also added Roman Catholic marriage records for the parish of St Mary's Batley, Leeds. Spanning 61 years, there are 3,012 new images and transcriptions to explore.

    Roman Catholic parish burials

    Rounding off our trio of Leeds updates is Roman Catholic parish burials, to which we added 1,379 records from St Mary's Batley. 

    You can discover both images and transcriptions for these new records, which also span over 60 years, from 1853 to 1914.

    Discover over 200,000 new pages

    The Yorkshire-based Ripon Gazette joined our newspaper collection this week. We also updated 25 of our existing titles, bringing you a total of 201,657 new pages.

    Here's everything that's been added to our newspaper archive this Findmypast Friday.

    New title:

    Updated titles:

    • Ballymena Weekly Telegraph, 1994, 1996
    • Banbury Guardian, 1930, 1938, 1964
    • Biggleswade Chronicle, 1969
    • Blackpool Gazette & Herald, 1950
    • Bo’ness Journal and Linlithgow Advertiser, 1884, 1888
    • Brechin Advertiser, 1973-1981
    • Broughty Ferry Guide and Advertiser, 1963-1973, 1982
    • Buchan Observer and East Aberdeenshire Advertiser, 1930-1960, 1975-1984
    • Dalkeith Advertiser, 1969-1975, 1977-1978
    • Leicester Chronicle, 1864
    • Maidstone Journal and Kentish Advertiser, 1908
    • Maidstone Telegraph, 1970, 1985
    • Market Harborough Advertiser and Midland Mail, 1869-1891, 1893-1897, 1899, 1953
    • Mearns Leader, 1976-1980
    • Melton Mowbray Times and Vale of Belvoir Gazette, 1894-1896, 1898-1905, 1932-1942, 1974-1981, 1985-1989, 1991
    • Morpeth Herald, 1993
    • Motherwell Times, 1977, 1979-1982
    • Northampton Chronicle and Echo, 1989, 1991
    • Northampton Mercury, 1986
    • Pateley Bridge & Nidderdale Herald, 1991-1992
    • Retford, Worksop, Isle of Axholme and Gainsborough News, 1954, 1974-1975, 1982
    • Shetland Times, 1987-1999
    • Southern Reporter, 1986
    • Suffolk and Essex Free Press, 1981
    • Sunday Post, 1951-1964

    Join us for a very special Friday Live...

    On 23 February, our very own Rose Staveley-Wadham will be joined on Friday Live by historian Suzannah Lipscomb. They'll be taking a deep dive into researching and writing about female ancestors and discussing the importance of remembering the stories of the women within our family trees. 

    Suzannah Lipscomb

    Whether you're an expert or a genealogy newbie, this exciting session is not to be missed. 

    We added four brand-new South African record sets last week. Don't miss out - discover the full releasehere

    More on this topic: 

    Birth Records

    Historical Newspapers


  • 23 Feb 2024 9:47 AM | Anonymous

    The following is an announcement written by the folks at TheGenealogist:

    Family history website TheGenealogist has announced today an exciting new feature as part of their powerful Map Explorer™ tool. For the first time, you can explore 1861 census records for England, Scotland and Wales seamlessly connected to contemporary maps with pins revealing the parish, thoroughfare, or even the very building where your ancestor lived. This enhancement adds a fascinating layer to your research and exploration.

    Charles Dickens location in the 1861 census displayed on Map Explorer™ 

    Family historians and house historians will now find it easier than ever to locate a person in the official population count from 1861. With one click, you can view a historic map with a pin indicating where a person was living in that year. 

    You can then go on to see the routes your ancestors would have used to visit shops, local pubs, churches, places of work, schools and parks. You can also find where the nearest railway station was, important for understanding how our ancestors could travel to other parts of the country to see relatives or visit their hometown.

    The 1861 Census joins previously released 1871 to 1911 censuses and the 1939 Register, which are all linked to TheGenealogist’s innovative Map Explorer™. This means that with just the click of a button, you can travel in time through 7 decades of records to discover future occupants and see how an area changed.

    Most of the Greater London area and other towns and cities can be viewed down to the property level, while other more rural parts of the country can be identified down to the parish, road or street.

    Read TheGenealogist’s article: Where the Dickens Are They? to discover more and see an interesting case study: 

    https://www.thegenealogist.co.uk/featuredarticles/2024/where-the-dickens-are-they-7061/

    Save Over 50% on our Diamond Personal Premium Package

    To celebrate this latest release, TheGenealogist is offering its Diamond Personal Premium Package for only £98.95 a saving over 50%.

    This offer includes a lifetime discount! Your subscription will renew at the same discounted price every year you stay with us.

    To find out more and claim the offer, visit: https://www.thegenealogist.co.uk/MGBCEN224

    This offer expires at the end of 23rd May 2024

    About TheGenealogist

    TheGenealogist is an award-winning online family history website, who put a wealth of information at the fingertips of family historians. Their approach is to bring hard to use physical records to life online with easy to use interfaces such as their Tithe and newly released Lloyd George Domesday collections. 

    TheGenealogist’s innovative SmartSearch technology links records together to help you find your ancestors more easily. TheGenealogist is one of the leading providers of online family history records. Along with the standard Birth, Marriage, Death and Census records, they also have significant collections of Parish and Nonconformist records, PCC Will Records, Irish Records, Military records, Occupations, Newspaper record collections amongst many others.

    TheGenealogist uses the latest technology to help you bring your family history to life. Use TheGenealogist to find your ancestors today!

  • 22 Feb 2024 8:16 AM | Anonymous

    The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) will help provide access to important records related to Puerto Rican history. NARA will work together with the Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña (ICP/Institute of Puerto Rican Culture) to increase access by digitizing pertinent records in the National Archives’ holdings. 

    refer to caption

    Enlarge

    Deputy Archivist of the United States William J. Bosanko (sitting, left) and Institute of Puerto Rican Culture (ICP) Executive Director Carlos R. Ruiz (sitting, right) hold the signed Memorandum of Agreement between the two organizations. Standing behind them are ICP General Archivist Hilda T. Ayala Gonzáles and Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Executive Director Luis Dávila Pernas. National Archives photo by Susana Raab.

    Deputy Archivist of the United States William J. Bosanko signed a Memorandum of Understanding with ICP Executive Director Carlos Ruiz Cortés on January 30, 2024, outlining the National Archives’ intent to support the ICP’s digital archiving efforts. The ICP is part of the government of Puerto Rico and has the mission of researching, preserving, promoting, and disseminating Puerto Rican history and culture.

    You can read more in an article by Kristin Phillips published in the National Archives News at: https://www.archives.gov/news/articles/puerto-rico-records-digitazation.

  • 21 Feb 2024 3:31 PM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release issued by WikiTree:

    Feb 21, 2024 – WikiTree, the free genealogy community and collaborative family tree, now hosts the largest free database connecting African-American families.

    African-Americans are underrepresented in genealogy. Slavery tore apart families and remains an ugly genealogical brick wall for many Americans. In 2020, a group of volunteers led by genealogist and author Emma MacBeath came together on WikiTree to create the US Black Heritage Project. Its mission: make it easy for descendants of enslaved ancestors to discover their roots and connect with family members.


    Over 200 professional genealogists and amateur family historians have donated thousands of hours of research time to the Black Heritage Project. As of today, they have created over 282,000 African-American family member profiles. These are all available to the public, entirely free, on WikiTree.com. An African-American who comes to WikiTree now has a good chance of finding their ancestors, cousins, and connections across the entire 32,000,000-person global family tree.


    “WikiTree is the perfect place for us to connect families who have been left disconnected for generations," says Emma MacBeath. "There is nothing like this project out there. There are many projects working on groups of families or large document sets. But no one else is combining document processing with tree building in a public one-world tree like WikiTree. Best of all, our information is freely available to everyone."


    Despite these accomplishments, WikiTree’s generous volunteers say they are just getting started. This month – Black History Month in the US – a new project was announced: The US Black Heritage 1880 Project. Its goal: create a connected WikiTree profile for all 6.6 million Black Americans enumerated in the 1880 US census. Anyone can help this project. Click here to volunteer.


    WikiTree has been growing for 16 years, from the grassroots up. Our community now includes over one million members and over 37 million profiles. Our tree is considered the most accurate and trusted global tree because of WikiTree’s collaborative culture, sourcing requirements, and incorporation of DNA. See this 90-second animated explanation.

  • 21 Feb 2024 3:20 PM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release issued by the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy:

    The Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy is now accepting applications for Hive Minders for Fall Virtual 2024.

    Hive Minders help our virtual classrooms function smoothly, addressing challenges that arise. If you are comfortable with technology, consider applying to serve during one of the courses offered during SLIG Fall Virtual 2024.

    Hive Minder job responsibilities include:  

     • starting Zoom for each weekly class session;

    • managing closed captioning, breakout rooms, polls, and recordings;

     • assisting faculty and students with light tech and announcements;

     • taking attendance with the provided Airtable attendance tracker;

     • keeping SLIG staff aware of classroom and student issues or concerns.

    Hive Minders receive:  

     • a tuition waiver for the course for which they serve as Hive Minder;

     • training to be a Hive Minder;

     • a Hive Minder reference packet;

     • assistance and support from SLIG's Virtual Coordinator, Tech Assistant, and Director for emergencies and questions.

    Courses offered during SLIG Fall Virtual 2024 may be viewed here.

    To apply to be a Hive Minder during SLIG Fall Virtual 2024, please complete the application at this Airtable link. The deadline for applying is May 1, 2024. All applicants will receive notification via email whether they have been selected.

    A call for Hive Minders during SLIG 2025 and SLIG Spring Virtual 2025 will arrive in April.

    Did we mention that Hive Minders receive a tuition waiver?

  • 21 Feb 2024 10:06 AM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release issued by the (U.S.) National Archives and Records Administration:

    Kansas City, MO

    The National Archives at Kansas City is pleased to announce that its exhibit space will reopen on February 20, 2024.

    The public space at 400 West Pershing Road will be open to the public for self-guided tours Tuesday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Central Time. 

    At the exhibit entrance, visitors will experience the We the People exhibit featuring records from the holdings of the National Archives at Kansas City. Alongside the stories of the great and powerful, the exhibit features facsimile records that give insight into the lives of ordinary people. Nearly all Americans can find themselves, their neighbors, their ancestors, or their community in the records of the National Archives. Interactive displays include flip books and a station where visitors can make rubbings of famous signatures from Kansas City holdings.

    “The exhibit at the National Archives at Kansas City highlights valuable archival holdings and local history,” said Archivist of the United States Dr. Colleen Shogan. “I’m thrilled that the exhibit space will now be more accessible to everyone seeking to learn why records matter and how they impact our lives.”

    The exhibit closed to walk-in visitors at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, though researchers with appointments to the research room were able to visit the space starting in January 2022.

    Visitors to the exhibit space are welcome to use the public access personal computers with connections to genealogy resources. The research room remains open by appointment only, and researchers can email kansascity.archives@nara.gov to schedule appointments.  

    For more information, visit www.archives.gov/kansas-city. For media inquiries, please contact the National Archives Public and Media Communications Office at 202-357-5300 or public.affairs@nara.gov.

    About the National Archives at Kansas City

    The National Archives at Kansas City is home to historical records that date from the 1820s to the 2000s that were created or received by federal agencies in Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. There are also records from across the country, including bankruptcy cases, court of appeals records, and patent case files. For more information, call 816-268-8000 or visit www.archives.gov/kansas-city/.

    About the National Archives

    The National Archives and Records Administration is the nation's record keeper. It safeguards and manages the official records of the U.S. Government, ensuring the documentation of our nation's history. For more information, visit www.archives.gov.

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