The Boulder Genealogical Society is here to help you with your family history no matter where you are researching. We also contribute to the greater genealogical community through local history research.
Society meetings are free and open to the public
on the first Tuesday of each month at 7:00 pm, currently by Zoom.
Presentation:
In the beginning women owned nothing. They were under the control of fathers and then husbands. Royalty owned all land and granted it to men who did them service. Transferring that process to the wild frontier on the American continent forced changes in the customs and eventually laws of land ownership.
Speaker:
Carol Cooke Darrow has been a professional genealogist since 2004 and published The Genealogist’s Guide to Researching Tax Records in 2007. She regularly teaches free Beginning Genealogy classes on ZOOM on the second Saturday of each month from 10 am – noon. You can sign up at www.cogensoc.us.
This is a Zoom meeting only. Please register at https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/LjBRMeRWTWSHCidi7fO-fw
Presentation:
This is the story of how I conceived the book, the years of work on it and the contract signed with Ancestry to publish it and how it was self-published and then republished in its current and greatly improved form.
Speaker:
Born & raised in Denver attending Barnum, Rishel & West; then attending Mesa College when it was a junior college, took a year off to become a VISTA volunteer working in Baltimore in a Community Action Agency before returning to go to Greeley when it was called Colorado State College intending to become a history teacher.
A television production class changed my life and I spent 35 years in video production after graduating from the recently renamed University of Northern Colorado. Five years of winter survival training by living in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis & St. Paul taught me there were lots of smart people from Minnesota – including my grandmother.
I returned to Denver and divorced, was hired by the largest utility company in the state and worked there for 24 years when I was offered early retirement. Went back to school and got a masters degree in Library Science and worked at the Denver Public Library as an archivist and Reference Librarian until retiring in 2019.
This is a Zoom meeting only. Please register at https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/l4X0YPvpTympHuRGuswnwA
Presentation:
Learn how adoptees and others find biological parents and siblings through DNA testing. Review the case that started it all and see today’s recommended strategies. View examples of surprise discoveries and see the tools used to identify relationships.
Speaker:
Richard Hill was the first adoptee to identify his birth family through DNA tests for genetic genealogy. He shared the story of his decades-long search in an award-winning book, “Finding Family: My Search for Roots and the Secrets in My DNA.” His Kindle Short Book, “Guide to DNA Testing,” provides readers with just enough information to choose the proper DNA tests for their needs. He has founded two websites on DNA testing, most recently DNAFavorites.com.
Richard gives presentations on genetic genealogy topics both virtually and in person. He is a member of the Genealogical Speakers Guild. He lives in Michigan with his wife of 57 years and two cats.
This is a Zoom meeting. Please register at https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/_dfK60S8Q4-9KhdsVUD6TA