Tuesday, June 2, 2026

First Half 2026: Genealogy Look-Back and Look Ahead

 
So far in 2026, my family history research and projects have been moving along nicely! Top priority has been sharing what I know with family and online. Progress to date:

  • From my maternal side, I've digitally shared the 30 years of scanned Farkas Family Tree minutes (600+ pages) and 42 minutes of Farkas home videos with at least one cousin in every line descending from our journey-taking immigrant ancestors, Moritz Farkas and Lena Kunstler Farkas. This project began in 2014 when I scanned the tree association's written minutes and printed spiral-bound copies. Now my cousins have the minutes in digital,  searchable form. Happily, this has prompted more questions about our genealogical background.
  • Sis and I printed the first of a series of photo books about our parents (Harold Burk and Daisy Schwartz Burk) and ourselves. This initial chapter focuses on our family's first decade. We are going to plan our next photo book during the summer, after getting feedback from the younger generation.
  • I've added more ancestors and information to my family trees on Ancestry, MyHeritage, and WikiTree, as well as linking ancestors and posting bite-sized bios on Find a Grave. I also participated in two WikiTree Connect-a-Thons, putting dozens of ancestors on that free worldwide collaborative tree. In the process, I solved a handful of small family history mysteries.
  • I completed the trans-Atlantic donation of family artifacts to an important repository! The Imperial War Museum now has possession of letters written from a family in England to my maternal grandparents (Hermina Farkas Schwartz and Theodore Schwartz) and to my Mom (Daisy Schwartz), in the Bronx, New York, during World War II. 
  • My hubby and I had his peacetime US Army memorabilia framed in a custom shadowbox and wrote notes to explain the significance and timing of each item in the frame. This was at the request of the family, a future heirloom.
Looking ahead, my plans for July through December are:

  • We will record (audio or video) my husband's peacetime military memories and submit to the US Library of Congress for its Veteran's Oral History Project. My senior community has a small recording studio where we will conduct a 30-45 minute interview together. The studio volunteers have kindly agreed to put this into the required format. Just think, my husband will be in the Library of Congress!
  • Continue curating my genealogy materials with an eye toward physically or digitally donating to appropriate institutions. This downsizes my collection or at least shares selected items beyond the family. I want info about my ancestors or artifacts from their past to be in different museums, libraries, archives, and other repositories. 
  • Maybe, just maybe, I'll finally move those old family photos into archival albums. I have everything on hand, and the photos are sitting safely in archival envelopes inside archival boxes. I just have to make the time to concentrate on this project, including captioning.
  • LOCKSS. After 28 years of genealogy fun, it's most important to me to perpetuate my family's past by sharing it appropriately and widely. Remember, lots of copies keep stuff safe. Family history is less likely to be forgotten if it's available in many places and in many hands.

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