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Add an Alert Note to FamilySearch to Connect with Future Researchers

Image: rawpixel.com   After I've written a blog post on a particular ancestor, I like to add a link to the post to the Memories section of a person's FamilySearch Family Tree profile. Recently I had a revelation about something else I could do to ensure my family stories and research are shared in the future. It occurred to me that I could leave an Alert Note on my own Family Search Family Tree profile directing individuals to this blog, Leaves on the Tree, after I am gone. If the goal of my blog is to record my memories, research, family stories, and more, this alert is one way future researchers might be able to find those stories—assuming Blogger is still around. I don't often think about my own FamilySearch profile, and when I looked at my page, it was pretty skimpy indeed! I had only entered the bare basics of my important relationships, dates, etc. Add beefing up my own profile to the 2026 goal list. Who knows me better than me? Here's what I wrote for the Alert N...

Did I Meet My Goals in 2025?


Inspired by Linda Stufflebean's post about hitting her genealogy goals in 2025, I thought I'd recap mine as well. How did I do? 

Here's what I had planned back in January in my post "Hitting the Target in 2025," and if I achieved my goals.

Attend the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy and participate in the 14-Day Research Like a Pro 14-Day Challenge

Accomplished both! 

  • I really enjoyed Gena Philibert Ortega's SLIG course "Advanced Techniques: Material Culture Research Techniques for Genealogy" in January. What a wide-ranging group of lecturers were part of this course! It was a feast. It also inspired me to take an in-depth look at one piece of material culture that I own: my grandmother's Slovak catechism booklet. I wrote about that in several blog posts beginning with "Katechismus: Finding Meaning in Grandma's Artifact."
  • For the Research Like a Pro 14-day Challenge, I had fun attempting to track down a marriage record for my third great-grandparents Mary Jane Sheridan and Philip Cassidy. I didn't ultimately find it, but the challenge helped me eliminate some sources for the record. I wrote about the challenge starting with "14-Day RLP Challenge: The Marriage Record Search Continues."
 

Focus on the Women

Also accomplished! I completed reading Sharon DeBartolo Carmack's book, Telling Her Story: A Guide to Researching and Writing about Women of the Past, and then embarked on a research project to find out more about my great-great-great grandmother Mary Jane Sheridan. I thought I could do this research quickly, but how wrong I was! It took many months to really explore her world and her life. But it resulted in a series of posts beginning with  "From Buffalo to North Evans, New York: Mary Jane Sheridan's Early Life." (My "applied book review" of Telling Her Story will be published in the Texas State Genealogical Society's journal Stirpes early in 2026.) I've begun a second such project on another ancestress, Mary Jane Darragh, who married Mary Jane Sheridan's son, Charles Cassidy. Stay tuned in 2026 for the results of that.

 

Clean Up Tasks

Mixed success!

Oh boy! I projected more progress on these tasks—email clean up, archive closet clean up, and download folder clean up—than I was able to accomplish, with one exception. 

 

  • was able to delete more about 7,500 emails from my inbox and it is now around 2,400, down from over 10,000! The better news there is that I've labelled the remaining emails so that they are at least categorized into what family line the email belonged to. 
  • I did bits of clean up on the archive closet, but it's like a Pandora's box every time I go in there! Every box leads to wondering, researching, etc. I can't seem to part with many things. 
  • Download clean up was also a slow go. I managed to get rid of some items and recoup some space, but still a long ways to go. I am also a big Snipping Tool user, which add a ton of images to the Pictures > Screenshots on my computer that also need attention.


Not on the 2025 bingo card, but fun developments all the same:

  • Made contact with a couple of distant cousins who have been wonderful to work with. One was a lovely cousin in my Schiltz line who I met in New York, and the other was a cousin who reached out to me when he saw a blog post on our shared ancestor, Catherine Ryan Gilbride.
  • Did several "spur of the moment" research projects at the request of others, including on John Schiltz for my NY cousin; on Bruno Albaugh, Civil War vet, for my aunt; and on my McAndrew line, spurred on by another cousin.
  • Placed several articles in publications in research locales, including in Ontario Ancestors' Families, Lackawanna County Historical Society's History Bytes; and the Sheldon (NY) Historical Society's newsletter.  
  • Took an amazing research trip to western New York and St. Catharines, Ontario, to nerd out on locales, history, churches, etc., for my Sheridan, Cassidy, Becker, Baker, Dyer, and other lines. (Thanks, Hubs!)
  • Placed second in the blog category in the 2025 Texas State Genealogical Society's Writing Awards. 

What's in store for 2026? Well, I'll take a look at that in my next post.

In the meantime, what do YOU have planned for 2026? Drop a comment and let me know!

Happy New Year!

 

© Nancy Gilbride Casey, 2025. All rights reserved. 

Images: Main image, Canva; other images, rawpixel.com

 

 

 

 

 

Comments

  1. Congratulations on accomplishing so much. I laughed (sorry!) at the 10,000 emails in your inbox, now down to 2400. That sounds like my husband's inbox. Mine currently has zero. :) Happy New Year!

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    1. It's one of those things where you don't even think about it until it's out of control (at least for me!). The ones that remain are still "actionable" as they contain tidbits and clues for research on various lines. Until I get to those research projects again there is not much to be done on them. I am in awe if you have zero! Happy New Year!

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  2. You really achieved a lot in 2025! I especially liked reading about what was not on your bingo card -- some fun and rewarding projects. Happy new year!

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    1. Happy New Year to you as well! Hope you achieve all you want and nothing you don't! LOL!

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  3. Congratulations on achieving so much this year! I need to follow suit with emails and have a clean out ... My inbox is relatively clear but the folders are full of stuff collected over many years and no longer needed

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    1. Thanks Jane. That's a good goal. I still have a ways to go, but I am pleased with my progress thus far. I need to now go through the folders and do anything actionable. Good luck!

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  4. You've done a great job of accomplishing so much this year. The research trip was certainly one of your highlights.

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    1. It really was! Thanks for reading and commenting. And Happy New Year!

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  5. Seems like you set some great goals for last year's genealogy and spent the time to go through and keep track of what went well and what can improve - what a way to continually improve but also got in some spur of the moment projects!

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    1. Hi! I keep a google doc of what I hope to achieve in writing, education, volunteering, etc. It was a way to keep myself motivated when I retired and it's nice to see a few check marks as the year progresses! Thanks for reading and commenting.

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  6. Great job on accomplishing so much this paste year! I concur with all of the Clean Up Tasks. I have been doing exactly the same tasks, and it seems to be a never ending story. ;) Happy New Year! :)

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    1. I've been thinking alot this past week about what priorities I should have in 2026...I think photos has to be one of them. This, hopefully, I can corral my husband into helping with, since some will be of his family. We need a project, right? That will help with my Archives Closet clean up. Good luck with continuing your priorities for 2026! Happy New Year.

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  7. Bravo Nancy pour avoir si bien atteint tes objectifs et pour nous en avoir fait profiter !

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