B&O Railroad Museum now the National Museum of Railroad History & Innovation

Press release today from the B&O Railroad Museum as it changes its name and expands the focus of the museum. I have some presentations related to railroad history and records online and offline that I was planning to enhance for 2027 and some for the autumn of 2026.. ime to update some slides and handouts about the B&O.

 

 

For the full press release with more information: 

https://nationalrailroad.org/bo-railroad-museum-the-birthplace-of-american-railroading-becomes-the-national-museum-of-railroad-history-innovation/

and directly to the Archives & Library https://nationalrailroad.org/explore-learn/collections/archives-library/

 

 

Southern Minnesota genealogy research? Do you know about the Dalby Database?

Indexes, transcripts, and added knowledge are great to find in our family history endeavors. In Minnesota, we have a unique collection that fits that sentence. Do you know about the Dalby Database? Many years ago I discovered this as I was working on my Faribault, Rice County, Minnesota Cooks. My Great Grandfather, John Thomas Cook, was born there to his Irish immigrant parents. His father James had a brother, Andrew, who was also a plasterer in Faribault. My James eventually moved his large family to Saint Paul. This bit of history about the databases is from the authors who have expanded it far beyond Rice County into surrounding southern Minnesota. Obituaries, births, deaths, censuses, city directories, histories, and more are included. Check it out for yourself at http://www.dalbydata.com/user.php?action=history

 

 

Life changes at unexpected times. Even for a genealogist

In the midst of my moving, my daughter’s moving, and the new great grandson, our family has suffered a sad loss. My baby sister passed away this past weekend.

 Sheila Anne Stuart, Mom, Grandma, Daughter, Sister, and Aunt. April 8, 1954 – June 6, 2026.

Her many health issues are no longer causing her pain and she has joined her beloved dog, Curly. At the same time, her family is sad to lose her at only the age of 72 and are thankful that several of us celebrated her April birthday with her and friends. She is survived by her beloved son, Shawn, little granddaughter Sloan, sisters Paula Stuart-Warren and Linda (Don) DuBois. Sheila is also survived by three nephews, Jim, Patrick, and Tim, and two nieces, Katie and Danielle. She has four grandnieces, six grandnephews, and two great grandnephews. Her extended family includes many cousins. She has friends who supported and cared for her over the years and the family especially thanks Julie, Barb, Brian, and Bill.

She was predeceased by her infant brother, Richard, her parents William and Patricia (Hanley) Stuart, grandparents, aunts, and uncles.

Sheila will miss the annual “Sisters Picnic” recently scheduled for June 17th to celebrate their late mother’s birthday. The next time you have peanut butter on crackers, bread, or toast, think of Sheila.

 

 

Don’t miss it! 2 weeks left to register for June 22-26 virtual genealogy course!

Only 2 weeks left to register for the June 22-26 virtual “Digging Deeper: Records, Tools, & Skills” virtual blockbuster course. I lead this long running course and teach along with 4 specialists in the field of genealogy. We cover 19-21st century US records, online resources, “hidden” records, analysis, & methodology. This course can prepare you for other GRIP Genealogy Institute courses and for the future of your research ventures and success. June 18th is the last day to register. You know you want to join us!

More details on the instructors, class sessions, interactive activities to put leaning to immediate use, and other info at https://grip.ngsgenealogy.org/courses/digging-deeper-records-tools-and-skills/



June 2 means 19 years blogging. I’ve been a bit behind lately.

June 2, 2007. Seems so long ago that I began this blog. It was 19 years ago and that means next year will be the 20th Anniversary of this blog. I haven’t been blogging much over the last two months. The reasons are many and diverse.

  1. My landlord raised my rent big time, and I knew it was time to move. But where!
  2. Had lunch with a good genealogy friend and at the end of lunch, she asked if I wanted to house sit while they were out of the country. YES! Gave notice I was leaving the old apartment.
  3. My middle sister and my daughter joined forces to continue looking for a new apartment for me.
  4. Daughter and granddaughter helped a ton as I packed to move, packed, packed, packed, and moved most to storage. Donated 17 boxes of books, films, and related materials to the Minnesota Genealogical Society.
  5. Partially moved into my friend’s home. What a perfect bridge residence for me!
  6. Daughter found an apartment, I agreed, and signed a lease. Packing time again.
  7. Memorial Day weekend was moving time out of the storage facility and what I had brought to my friend’s home. My oldest son, daughter, adult grandson and granddaughter, and a family friend went above and beyond with the moving and more! We laughed a lot!
  8. In the midst of all this, I presented 6 webinars and prepared 8 handouts for presentations.
  9. On Friday of the moving weekend, my new great grandson was born. When he was 29 hours old, he and his parents surprised our crew at my new apartment. They said it was on the way home from the hospital. It was not!

 

 

 

Family Tree Webinars May Top 10 includes my genealogy presentation

A month ago I presented a webinar for Legacy Family Tree Webinars. It made the top 10 for May!  My topic was Insight into State Archives: ARCs, IRADs, ONAHRs, and Other Branches and is accompanied by a 6-page handout. No clue to those acronyms? Watch the webinar for that insight, finding aids, and records. It was free for a week and now is available for webinar members. If you aren’t a member, it’s easy to join. Don’t miss any of the other excellent May webinars. Learning never stops. That’s how we solve missing family details, learn about new records, or how to make better use of specific records, DNA, AI, Ethnic research, and the list could go on.

View the webinar https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/insight-into-state-archives-finding-records-in-regional-branches/?ref=566036

Become a member https://familytreewebinars.com/checkout?ref=566036

Top 10 Webinars of May 2026

 

 

Free access to historical military records May 22-26 on MyHeritage

This Memorial Day, MyHeritage is opening free access to all 213 million U.S. military historical records from May 22–26, 2026. As the United States celebrates its 250th year, it’s a meaningful time to explore the stories, service, and sacrifices of the ancestors who helped shape the nation across generations of military history.

Search U.S. Military Records for Free 

 

The free access includes 286 collections spanning early American conflicts through modern wars, including major additions from the past year such as World War II enlistment and draft registration records and navy muster rolls.



NYG&B Two Day Virtual Event focused on Ancestral Occupations

Two days of presentations. All online and the recordings available through July 16, 2026! Join me and other great presenters for this seminar. I am doing another version of railroad worker research with some special finds! To see the full schedule and register: https://www.newyorkfamilyhistory.org/events/work-craft-and-calling-understanding-ancestral-occupations

 

 

 

Lyon County, Minnesota Veterans Database launched

I have several types of Google alerts set and tonight this one really touched me on several levels. What a wonderful project to remember the veterans and to provide access to the information. 1,100 veterans are already in the database. Searches can be done by name, city, service branch, and time period of the service. Lyon County is in Southwestern Minnesota. https://veterans.lyoncomuseum.org/veteran-search/