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[...click on headline to read full story] Genealogy News… Great news for TalkingScot members. The site is now back online. Here’s a message from the TalkingScot Administration Group: Dear TalkingScot Members TalkingScot has been successfully re-loaded to it’s old home at talkingscot.com/forum2/index.php. We thank everyone for their support and patience during our down time and look forward to seeing all of you back on the board, working furiously to catch up for lost time! Those brick walls have waited
[...click on headline to read full story] Geneaology News…
Time Machine readers who are also members and visitors to the Talking Scot geneaology website will be pleased to learn that after an abrupt disappearance earlier this month, due to the unannounced closure of the site’s former web hosts, reconstruction is well under way and the site will be up and running as soon
[...click on headline to read full story] ![]() Pioneer wagon trains wind through Echo Canyon in 1865. © 2009 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved. Each year on 24 July, Mormons all around the world commemorate the arrival of the first company of Mormon pioneers to the Salt Lake Valley in 1847 with parades, concerts and other festivities. The festivities honor the sacrifice of tens of thousands of pioneers and are a reminder to Mormons of their faith. More than 160 years ago, several hundred Mormons began a migration of over a thousand miles to reach the valley of the Great Salt Lake. The first company of pioneers was led by Church President Brigham Young. There were hardships along the way, violent weather, trails forged through hostile terrain, personal sacrifice and many deaths. The 19th-century Mormon migration beginning in 1846 in Illinois, then through Iowa and Nebraska and eventually to a place of refuge in the Rocky Mountains, was one of the most remarkable episodes in the history of the United States’ great western migration. Unlike the thousands of migrants streaming west to California and Oregon looking for a better life, the Mormon pioneers migrated involuntary — the result of expulsion from Illinois and Missouri by hostile neighbors. Later, the Mormon pioneer trail would be filled with converts coming from Europe. (Read detailed history of Mormon Pioneers on Church History Website) President Thomas S. Monson, then second counselor in the Church’s First Presidency, noted in 1988: Continue reading Mormons Celebrate Their Pioneer Heritage The detailed service records of 250,000 medieval soldiers – including archers who served with Henry V at the Battle of Agincourt – have gone online. The database of those who fought in the Hundred Years War reveals salaries, sickness records and who was knighted. The full profiles of soldiers from 1369 to 1453 will allow researchers to piece together details of their lives. Thomas, Lord Despenser is the youngest soldier on the database, whose career
[...click on headline to read full story] If you have the slightest interest in history, then this article from the Harvard Magazine should have you spellbound! Goelet professor of medieval history Michael McCormick (right) argues that now the written record of history meets genomics, evolution, demography, and molecular archaeology, can we discover why a million
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School’s out for summer
Kelmarsh Hall
School’s out for summer here in the UK and parents nationwide are desperately searching for activities that will keep the kids entertained over the next few weeks. I can’t guarantee wall-to-wall amusement for that long but I can suggest a great diversion (and ‘heaven forbid’ an educational experience) for youngsters in Northampton this Saturday and Sunday (25-26 July).
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