2024 Writing Contest: Movers & Shakers
Did your ancestors make an impact on their local community? Submit an article for our 2024 writing contest.
Did your ancestors make an impact on their local community? Submit an article for our 2024 writing contest.
Do genealogical societies still have a place in the modern world? Four DGS members say “yes!”
Our society thrives because of our volunteers. Please join us!
Listen to Cheri Hudson Passey as she helps you add new tools to your research toolbox.
Sessions:
* What Does That Say? Strategies for Reading Old Handwriting
* 5 Elements for Sound Research: A Guide for Applying the Genealogical Proof Standard
* They Lived Where? How to Tackle a New to You Research Location
* Finding the Living: Genealogy in Reverse
Come join us and bring your questions, dilemmas, and suggestions to our gatherings as we discuss all things Mac, getting the most out of your genealogical research! The meetings are free and open to the public and are held in a round-table, open discussion format with a facilitator.
Come join us and bring your questions, dilemmas, and suggestions to our gatherings as we discuss all things Mac, getting the most out of your genealogical research! The meetings are free and open to the public and are held in a round-table, open discussion format with a facilitator.
We are meeting on the 7th floor!
Join Beri Kaplan Schwitzer discussing the History of the Jewish Community in Dallas.
Join DGS Seminar Administrator Barbara Coakley Presenting Searching vs. Research. Searching is just one step in the research process. A case study based on a family story from Chicago in the 1920s demonstrates the research process from beginning to end – how to develop a research goal, plan the research, document results, and preserve your findings.
Join us over Zoom or in person on the 7th floor! Ari Wilkins will present “Let Your Fingers Do the Walking: Exploring City Directories, Telephone Books and Criss-Cross Directories.”
We are meeting on the 7th floor!
Join us for LaDonna Garner presenting “Surfing for African American Records.”