Choose from free online events in the next five days. All times are ET except as noted. Those in red are Canadian, bolded if local to Ottawa or recommended
Assume registration in advance is required; check so you’re not disappointed.
Tuesday 25 Jan. 2 pm: Virtual Genealogy Drop-In, from Ottawa Branch of OGS and The Ottawa Public Library.
https://ottawa.ogs.on.ca/events/.
Tuesday 25 Jan. 2 pm: New Records on MyHeritage, by Mike Mansfield for MyHeritage and Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/new-records-on-myheritage-2/
Tuesday 25 Jan. 2:30 pm: Researching Scots-Irish Ancestors, by John Beatty for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/6010585
Wednesday 26 Jan. 2:30 pm: Flappers, flights and freedom: a social history of the 1920s, by Kate Williams for the (UK) National Archives.
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/flappers-flights-and-freedom-a-social-history-of-the-1920s-tickets-221285630277?aff=hp
Thursday 27 Jan, 7 pm: Optimizing Your Searches on the Internet – It’s More Than FamilySearch and Ancestry, by Maureen Brady for Brigham Young University Family History Library. Click on the link at the time of the webinar byu.zoom.us/j/97185943513?pwd=TkUyRkhucTJPMDVmRUROSm1RbWdlZz09

Saturday 29 Jan. All Day. Family Tree Webinars offers five presentations, fours from their archive, one new, as the first in a series of free monthly online genealogy conferences in 2022.
| Speaker | Title |
| Teri E. Flack | Organization: Create a Finding Aid to Locate Your Records (brand new) |
| Mary Hill | Get Organized Using the FamilyRoots Organizer Color-Coding System |
| Cyndi Ingle | Maintaining an Organized Computer |
| Lisa Louise Cooke | Organize Your Online Life |
| Thomas MacEntee | You Can Do This: Photo Organizing and Preservation |
www.FamilyTreeWebinars.com/Conference



From 24 January to 5 February 

The feature articles in the February issue.
This photo posted on Twitter shows the memorial at Reading Cemetery to H. G. L. Smith, with the word (SLOPE) beneath the name and the inscription “Sergt Maj Princess Patricia Canadian LI. Died at Boulogne. France. Feb 2ND 1915 of wounds received in action. And laid at rest here, Aged 36. “For Honour and the Empire.”
Leveraging the interest in the 1921 census of England and Wales, this week sees the release of images for the entire year of the 1921 Police Gazette — 152 issues, with 12 or 13 issues published each calendar month. The collection detailed wanted criminals, reported crimes, and apprehensions to police forces across the UK.
Until Sunday,
In this new release find over 72,000 landowner and occupier property tax records, collected by the Inland Revenue’s Valuation offices, for Camden and the surrounding London areas in 1910.
Here is the complete table of contents for the February issue.
Chris Paton is hosting a series of talks during February sponsored by Family Tree magazine and History Scotland.