The October 2024 issue has four feature articles.
In I0 Easy Steps to Grow Your Own Family Tree, Laura Berry from Who Do You Think You Are? shares the elementary steps genealogy newbies need to follow to uncover ancestors’ stories,
Mike Esbester writes in Blood on the Tracks about the Railway Work, Life & Death project and explains how to find out if, like Rose Ayling-Ellis, you have a forebear who was injured on the railways.
Else Churchill previews the 27 September – 6 October online event All About That Place, and reveals why focusing on location can give family historians a different perspective. It’s a free event of short presentations. Find out more at subscribepage.com/allaboutthatplace
In Politics for the People Caroline Roope celebrates the Chartists’ hard-fought campaign to extend the vote in the 19th century. I’ve wondered if my 2xgreat-grandfather’s move from Cumberland to London around 1848, when the movement was at its height, was a coincidence.
Those are just the feature articles — a bit more than the tip of the iceberg.
While I usually read the magazine on PressReader through free Ottawa Public Library access, it misbehaved this month. OPL delivered a perfectly readable copy on Libby.


MesAieux.com, a family history service that specializes in French Canadian genealogy, is now part of the MyHeritage family.

