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Family Cooking Memories That Last a Lifetime
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Family cooking memories last a lifetime—the good ones, the disasters, and everything in between. As we just celebrated Thanksgiving, I was reminded how gathering around shared meals connects us to those who came before. My childhood memories revolve around Mom’s special stuffing and breakfast casserole, dishes that define our holidays.…
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Same Name Genealogy Challenge: Four Generations Deep
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The same name genealogy challenge becomes exponentially harder when four generations carry identical names. Four William Dowlings span my family tree, each reflecting vastly different American experiences. The Irish immigrant William (1839-1893) built a Brooklyn dry goods empire from a peddler’s cart. His son William F. (1866-1917) never married, channeling…
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Four Sets of Twins: Two Families, Remarkable Stories, and Missing Records
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Four sets of twins across two family lines—maternal great-grandmother Anna Hurkala Marcisak and paternal 2x great-grandmother Julia Clarke Smith. I can prove three sets: Bernard and James Plunkett (Brooklyn, 1851), Eva and Adam Marcisak (1911), and Paul and Pauline Marcisak (1922). But the fourth set remains lost in that seven-year…
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Life Before America: Farming, Famine, and the Roots of Emigration
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Before my ancestors became Americans, they were farmers in three very different European worlds. Life before emigration meant surviving conditions most of us can’t imagine. My Swedish great-grandfather David Sten worked isolated farmsteads created by enclosure reforms, where winter brought only six hours of daylight and families lived scattered across…
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A Quick Look at My Ancestors Who Chose the Urban Chaos of NYC and Brooklyn
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When it comes to urban, you don’t get much more urban than New York City and Brooklyn. My ancestors chose to live stacked on top of each other in buildings where you could hear your neighbor sneeze three floors up. But that urban density brought revolutionary infrastructure changes that transformed…
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The 1973 NPRC Fire – When Flames Destroyed Military History
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On July 12, 1973, flames tore through the National Personnel Records Center in St. Louis, destroying 16 to 18 million military personnel files in a four-day inferno. No duplicate copies existed. No microfilm had been made. For genealogists researching World War II and Korean War veterans, this fire remains one…






