Tri-City Genealogical Society John Clat(e) the Immigrant

  Please join us for Tri-City Genealogical Society’s General meeting at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, March 11th.  The presentation will be at the Richland FamilySearch Center located at 1314A Goethals Dr.  Entrance is down the ramp from the parking lot north of Dairy Queen.  The presentation will also be on Zoom so you can join in from your home.  See below for the Zoom link for the March presentation.

  The March presentation will be by longtime TCGS member, Lawrence Clay.  His presentation, John Clay(e)The Immigrant,” is about his Jamestown ancestor. 

  Upcoming on April 8th, another longtime TCGS member, Margie Beldin, will be speaking on “New Tools in FamilySearch.”

  And, on May 13th, longtime TCGS member and TCGS Librarian, Sandra Meacham Floberg, will    discuss “Repatriation of MIA/KIA using DNA.”

  RootsTech 2026 is being held March 5 – 7.  There will be over 200 presentations streamed at no cost.  To register go to https://www.familysearch.org/en/rootstech/registration .  The online schedule can be found at https://www.familysearch.org/en/rootstech/schedule?day=2026-03-04&type=online .  Recordings of the presentations are often saved for later access.

  Thank you to everyone who has already joined TCGS for 2026.  For those who would like to join, the online application can be found at https://tricitygenealogicalsociety.org/q/join/join_renew/ and a printable application can be found at https://tricitygenealogicalsociety.org/q/wp-content/uploads/2023TCGSBrochure.pdf .

Topic: TCGS March General Meeting

Time: Mar 11, 2026 07:00 PM Pacific Time (US and Canada)

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Let’s Talk About DAR: What’s In It For ME?

“The DAR of our grandmothers has grown and flourished. Inspired by our Founders, we are celebrating history while shaping the future.” So stated an email message from DAR headquarters inviting me into membership. 

The email went on to extole and explain:

*DAR member achieved 7.4 million service hours to their communities in 2024.

*DAR is heavily involved and promoting the America 250! celebrations nationwide.

*DAR gave a $2 million contribution to help preserve Washington DC’s iconic cherry trees.

*DAR’s Patriots of Color Database now featured on the 10 Million Names project, providing public access to research on those of African descent who lived in pre- and post-colonial America.

*DAR donated $250,000 to the Military Women’s Memorial.

And the list went on for a full page. 

Did you know there are 36 DAR chapters in Washington State? Surely there is one in or near your town. Click to www.dar.org/national-society/become-member-chapters to find one.

If you’ve been doing family history for most any time at all, and if you have Colonial era ancestors, you do most likely qualify for DAR membership. You most likely do have a patriot ancestor. Be proud to recognize your connection! 

Let’s Talk About: An Apple A Day


David Benscoter is a pomologist on a mission. That means he studies fruits and in his case, his passion is apples. 

He’s given several presentations in the area, and I enjoyed learning about his apple passion at a Westerners meeting in November, 2025. 

David explained that by the early 1900s, there were over 17,000 cultivars of apples in North America. A “named cultivar” is any apple someone thought was good enough to give a name to after immigrants first came to North America. But unfortunately, over 12,000 of those apples are lost and probably extinct today, he told us. 

In his 2024 book, Lost Apples: The Research for Rare & Heritage Apples in the Pacific Northwest, Benscoter states “When the earliest settlers reached Washington, Idaho and Oregon, one of the first things they did was plant apple trees. They knew each apple tree planted had a specific purpose. Some apples ripened early and could be enjoyed in the middle of summer. Fall apples were especially good for canning or drying while late fall apples kept well in the cellar until the next spring.”

For over a decade, Benscoter has searched out old homesteads…. old apple trees…. wanting to resurrect some of the lost apples. And he has succeeded in identifying (by DNA) some 1623 previously-lost varieties. He said that evening that he’s still on the hunt. 

“Did you know,” he said, “that the Spokane Beauty apple was introduced about 1900 by a WSU nurseryman? This was a big commercial success. Cosmic Crisp is one of the newest varieties to come out of WSU.”

David ended his excellent presentation with a quote from Henry David Thoreau: “Surely, the apple is the noblest of fruits.”

Society Spotlight Yakima Valley Genealogical Society

YAKIMA VALLEY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

1901 S 12th Avenue, Union Gap, WA 98903

509-248-1328

Web address: www.yvgs.net Email address: yvgs@yvgs.net

Social media: Facebook

Library hours of operation: Tuesday – Saturday, 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM

Membership Dues $25.00 annually; membership year January-December

Yakima Valley Genealogical Society meets the first Saturday of the month at 10:00 AM at the library 1901 S 12th Ave, Union Gap with a general meeting and a program. Narcissa Whitman Chapter D.A.R. usually meets the 3rd Saturday of the month at our library. We have mini seminars.

We offer simple research to the public for free (donations are accepted). We are handicap accessible. We have 6 computers, printers and a copier for members and nonmembers alike to research family history. Our librarians are trained to help you find your family and the source records you need as proof.

We use Ancestry library subscription and are an affiliate library with LDS Salt Lake City and have inter-library loan with libraries across the country. We offer a comfy couch and Wi-Fi for tag-alongs. We have bathrooms and a kitchen on site for your comfort. We also have microfilm and microfiche and readers. Parking is on site.

We have many special collections. A few of our most well-known are:

  • Yakima County and some Benton, Kittitas and Klickitat County obituaries, funeral and grave records; some marriage and births as well
  • Yakima County School Census Records
  • Map collections
  • Complete set of Mayflower through Five Generations books
  • City directories from around the state though not complete
  • High school and college/university annuals from around the state, not complete
  • Some excellent Indigenous (Indian) sources
  • All 50 states – many books including many county histories
  • The Connecticut Barbour collection of town records
  • The Doomsday English census requested by William the Conqueror
  • Many country books from around the world (Canadian and Germans from Russia, etc.)
  • Excellent collection of ship passenger lists
  • Many church materials
  • War room – America’s wars before and after the Revolution including Indigenous conflicts
  • Narcissa Whitman Chapter D.A.R. records collection available for research as well
  • Shelves of Family Histories already published or donated

COME VISIT US!

America 250: Israel Ellsworth A Young Green Mountain Boy

Israel Ellsworth (1755–after 1832): A Young Green Mountain Boy

When Israel Ellsworth was a young man growing up near what is now Pittsford in Rutland County, Vermont, the excitement surrounding the Green Mountain Boys was impossible to ignore. One of the children of Samuel and Aimee Holliaday Ellsworth, Israel came of age in the turbulent years when the settlers of the New Hampshire Grants were fighting to defend their hard-won homesteads against New York’s competing land claims. Stories of these bold young men—who patrolled the frontier, resisted outside authority, and protected their neighbors—must have stirred the imagination of fifteen-year-old Israel and helped set the course for his early life.

Drawn by both duty and the spirit of adventure, Israel joined the ranks of the Green Mountain Boys, the militia that would soon have an outsized impact on the opening chapter of the American Revolution. In May of 1775, the unit achieved its most famous victory with the surprise capture of Fort Ticonderoga, securing artillery that would later prove vital to the Continental Army. Family tradition holds that Israel was among the men present during this celebrated operation. Like many of the Boys, he later served in the rugged borderlands between Lake Champlain and Canada, where patrols, scouting missions, and foraging parties frequently brought small detachments into contact with British forces.

During one such mission, Israel and the men under his command were captured by a British officer. As was common for prisoners taken along the northern frontier, they were marched into Canada, where soldiers were often quartered in private homes or improvised facilities. Israel may have endured similar conditions before eventually being freed through a prisoner exchange. Once released, he returned to the cause without hesitation, rejoining comrades from his earlier service and taking part in the Battle of Hubbardton in 1777, the only major Revolutionary War battle fought on Vermont soil.

Israel Ellsworth’s wartime experiences place him among the early defenders of the region and link his life to the dramatic story of Vermont’s formation. His service with the Green Mountain Boys reflects the courage, hardship, and frontier resolve that helped shape not only the history of his community but also the legacy carried forward by his descendants

Israel Ellsworth is Jill Ellsworth Scott’s 4th Great Grandfather. He was born in 1 April 1755 in Simsbury, Hartford Co., Connecticut and died after 15 Oct 1832 Fairfax Co., Virginia. He married Hopestill Stevens in Nine Partners, Dutchess Co., New York on 15 Nov 1778.

Research Trip to Scotland

Hello!

I’m a member of the British Columbia Genealogical Society who’s recently started offering small-group genealogical research trips to Edinburgh. The next one is coming up in June, and I thought it might be of interest to some of your members who may have Scottish heritage. If you agree it might be, I’d very much appreciate you sharing the blurb below with anyone you think may be interested. Thank you so much. The warmth and support of the genealogy community is a large part of what made me pursue this career and decide to offer these research trips. 

BCGS member and professional genealogist Kathy Chung is offering a fun, supportive, small-group genealogy research trip to Edinburgh from June 13-20, 2026. The tour includes seven nights hotel and seven breakfasts, 3 days of supported research at Scotland’s People, a day-long bus tour out of the city, a closing night dinner with Scottish music, and pre-trip information and guidance. Enjoy the company of other family history buffs while you deepen your knowledge of your roots in the country of your ancestors. For this inaugural trip, Kathy is offering genealogy society members who register by March 15 a $200CAD discount. Simply mention your genealogy society membership in the “anything else you’d like us to know” section of the registration form. Details and registration at https://scottishgenealogy.ca.

All the best,

Kathy

Kathy Chung, MLitt, QG

ScottishGenealogy.ca

Tacoma Pierce County Genealogical Society Legacy Family Tree Software SIG March 2026

Tacoma-Pierce County Genealogical Society Legacy Family Tree Software SIG Meeting
Tuesday, March 3, 2026, from 7:00 pm to 8:00 pm virtual via Zoom

This month we will be screen sharing as we look at various commands in Legacy and working through “How do I …” questions that attendee’s will have. It should be a fun meeting and I hope you will attend.

This is our monthly meeting to share tips & tricks, problems & solutions. Sometimes we will watch videos or share our screens to aide in learning more about using Legacy Family Tree software.

Everyone is welcome to attend and participate in the learning. If you are just thinking about trying Legacy for the first time, you’ve been using it for a year or two or you are an old pro with many years of experience using Legacy this is the group for you.

We look forward to meeting with you, every month on the First Tuesday at 7:00 PM Pacific Time

We look forward to meeting with you, every month on the First Tuesday at 7:00 PM Pacific Time

Please download and import the following iCalendar (.ics) files to your calendar system.

Monthly Calendar Reminder: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/tZYpfuyuqDovHNwtBgxtQjWKOjDQ8k5Q9bPD/ics?icsToken=98tyKuGqqjIvHNKUtR-PRpwQBor4Z-7wpn5Ygo1KiD3iGzRiaDTdGehmA-p0RemJ

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Italian Interest Group of the Eastside Genealogical Society US Catholic Church Records

Italian Interest Group (IIG) March 2026 Meeting
Click here to request the Zoom Meeting Invitation
Date: March 21, 2026 (Saturday)
Time: 1:30 PM (PT)
Find Your Family in U.S. Catholic Church Records
Presenter: Sunny Jane Morton
Description: Roman Catholic sacramental records often contain vital
events, relationships, and overseas hometowns. They’re also confidential, so they can be tricky to access. Learn about Catholicism in the U.S., what’s in sacramental records and what they look like, how to identify an ancestral parish, and tips for accessing Catholic records.
Suzanne Russo Adams Presenter: Sunny Jane Morton
Sunny Jane Morton is a genealogy educator, editor and writer. She has expertise in U.S. records and history, and is co-author of How to Find Your Family History in U.S. Church Records, which received a book award from the National Genealogical Society, and Searching for Sisters: A Guide to Researching Catholic Nuns in the United States. She is Editor of NGS Magazine; Contributing Editor at Family Tree Magazine; an instructor at GRIP Genealogy Institute and the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy; and past Editor of Ohio Genealogy News.
COUNTDOWN TO THE MEETING:
Days Hours Minutes Seconds
Italian Interest Group (IIG) of the Eastside Genealogical Society P.O. Box 374
Bellevue, WA 98009-0374