Finding Your Elusive Female Ancestors in Local Archives

Melissa Barker
Feb 12, 2025
1.4K views
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About this webinar

Local archives of all kinds have records for your female ancestors. Many times, these records are not digitized or available online. Learn from a seasoned archivist how to locate and research female records in local archives.

About the speaker

Melissa Barker is a Certified Archives Manager and Public Historian currently working at the Houston County, Tennessee Archives & Museum where she has been the first and only archivist for the pas...
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Comments (115)

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  1. LG
    Lydia Goularte
    1 year ago

    Interesting topic. My female ancestors worked since their husbands died. My GGG Grandmother worked until 90. As a birthday present from her employer she was let go. She lived another 10 to 12 years.

  2. JB
    Jane Bensinger
    1 year ago

    So many good reminders of what we should be paying attnention to and places to go for finding new information and clues

  3. BC
    Betty Case
    1 year ago

    Very interesting. Lots of great ideas for sharing.

  4. KC
    Kathleen Cloonan
    1 year ago

    Great suggestions for "thinking outside the box" to find more info on female ancestors besides the usual birth, marriage, & death dates.

  5. MF
    Marlene Ford
    1 year ago

    She was excellent, as usual! I'm going to go back and review more of her webinars!

  6. CL
    Clara Lawver
    1 year ago

    Melissa described me and one of my cousins to a 'T', I am the 'archivist' and she is the 'scrapbooker'. We live more than 200 miles apart, but with computers and internet access we communicate frequently. Even tho' we have been doing this for over 30 years, Melissa had a few ideas we can incorporate. Thank you, Melissa.

  7. EM
    Esin Murat
    1 year ago

    Incredibly inspiring!! Thank you so much for advocating for women; indeed, no female ancestor is ever "just" a housewife! She is a whole person in her own right, with her own stories to tell and deserves to be thoroughly researched and remembered just like everyone else. Credit needs to be given where credit is due :)

  8. LH
    Lori Hammell
    1 year ago

    Interesting

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Finding Your Elusive Female Ancestors in Local Archives - Legacy Family Tree Webinars