Our Family Tree: A Generational History
By (Author) Julie Bunton
Introduction by Sharon Leslie Morgan
Quarto Publishing Group USA Inc
Wellfleet Press,U.S.
10th October 2023
28th September 2023
United States
General
Non Fiction
Thematic journals and notebooks
Genealogy, heraldry, names and honours
Hardback
160
Width 216mm, Height 276mm
454g
Organize your ancestry research while creating a beautiful keepsake to pass on to future generations with Our Family Tree. Calling all family history buffs and professional genealogists. Whether you're a beginner, just starting your journey, or a professional who's run out of space, this beautiful volume gives you a physical place to record your results alongside fun facts and tips and tricks for the most successful and customized family tree. This charming guide to your ancestry includes: A research checklist Worksheets Roads Our Family Traveled Explore Your Genes Family Origins Learn where your family comes from! Find your way through your family history from African, European, and Native American descent. With Our Family Tree, youll be the most knowledgeable of your whole family on where you come from! No matter how thorny your family tree may be, discovering your ancestry can connect you to an essential part of your identity. Get this easy-to-use, beautifully illustrated keepsake to remember your family history and try your hand at genealogy.
Sharon Leslie Morgan is a writer and genealogist as well as an expert in multicultural marketing. She is the founder of Our Black Ancestry, a website and Facebook group devoted to African American genealogy, that has more than 35,000 members. She writes and speaks extensively. In 2021, she was a keynote speaker for the annual RootsTech conference. Sponsored by FamilySearch, it is the largest family history convocation in the world. It was attended (virtually) by over 1 million participants from 242 countries. She is the co-author, with Thomas Norman DeWolf, of GATHER AT THE TABLE: The Healing Journey of a Daughter of Slavery and a Son of the Slave Trade (Beacon Press, 2012). It won the Phillis Wheatley Award for best nonfiction/memoir at the Harlem Book Fair.