Preview Mode Links will not work in preview mode

Mar 31, 2026

The founding of the United States is usually told through public moments. Documents, debates, and decisions take center stage. The Declaration of Independence, the Continental Congress, and the arguments that led toward separation from Britain are often where the story begins and ends. Those moments are important, but...


Mar 27, 2026

When the United States first began to take shape as a nation, it didn’t just need laws and structure. It needed a voice people could recognize and trust. That voice, more than anyone else’s, came from George Washington. He wasn’t the loudest figure of his time, and he didn’t speak constantly, but when he did,...


Mar 25, 2026

By July of 1776, the arguments had been building for a long time. Tensions with Britain were no longer new. Colonists had already spent years listening to speeches, reading newspapers, hearing sermons, arguing in taverns and homes, and watching events move from protest to open conflict. So when the Declaration...


Mar 24, 2026

When people think about the founding of the United States, they usually begin with the Declaration of Independence. That is understandable. It is the best-known document of the nation’s early history, and it still holds a central place in how Americans think about their beginnings. Yet the language of 1776 did not...


Mar 18, 2026

Artificial intelligence is showing up almost everywhere now, and genealogy is no exception. It is being used for transcriptions, translations, document summaries, handwriting recognition, search tools, and even writing projects. That can be exciting, especially for those of us who have spent long hours trying to read a...