Ancestry.com has begun giving members a summary of their stats for the year, sort of similar to what Spotify Wrapped does for its listeners.
Among the stats for me in 2025, this one jumped out: I uploaded 70 items to share with other researchers and relatives.
Most of these uploads were birth, marriage, and death certificates I downloaded from the New York City Municipal Archives Historical Vital Records databases. The vast majority of my ancestors came through Ellis Island and Castle Garden, often staying in the Big Apple to work, raise a family, and live out their lives.
My research was super-charged this year when the New York City Muni Archives finally introduced indexes to free (uncertified) digitized vital records.
So when I'm looking at an ancestor who lived in New York City and I don't have all of their original vital records, I click over to the Muni site and try to locate a birth, marriage, or death record. Then I download the record and upload it to Ancestry, attaching it to the pertinent people on my family tree.
A great deal of info is on these documents: names of the ancestor, ancestor's parents, dates and places, and more. Scans of originals and in color too.
Importantly, these documents serve as proof of what I assert on my family tree. If, for example, someone wants to see why I named "X maiden name" as the mother of Y, they can look at the original birth record scan I uploaded. The Genealogical Proof Standard in action!
These uploads are also my way of showing appreciation for the kindness of relatives and family historians who added vital records scans to their family trees in the past.

























