DGS Newsletters now on the Portal To Texas History
Our collection of newsletters published between 1976 and 2015 has been digitized and is now available on the University of North Texas Portal to Texas History.
Our collection of newsletters published between 1976 and 2015 has been digitized and is now available on the University of North Texas Portal to Texas History.
I grew up never knowing or meeting my father. My mother, who had been adopted at birth, died when I was eight years old.
Keeping up with the rapidly changing development in the use of DNA for genealogy can be made simpler by subscribing to free DNA blogs.
I have worked for the Dallas Public Library for almost seven years, six of which have been in the History and Genealogy Department at the J. Erik Jonsson Central Library.
The spread of the Covid-19 virus in Texas made the cancellation of our April 18th Spring Seminar inevitable. It also made us think long and hard about if and how we should proceed with the Summer Seminar scheduled for July 25th.
It may be that we have all had enough changes these past few months to last quite a while. However, I will ask you to accept a few more changes from the Dallas Genealogical Society, which we hope are all for the better.
One of Google Books’ best features is the selection. The site offers over 10 million free books, and countless other books for sale.
Hello, my name is Ron and Ancestry DNA shows that we are cousins. I’m adopted and looking for my biological parents. I was adopted in Dallas, Texas in 1971 when I was born.
With just weeks to go before the start of the 2020 conference in May, the National Genealogical Society announced on April 16 that NGS would hold this year’s conference virtually.
An overview of the McGowan Funeral Home Collection, and the kinds of information you may find in its records