In small towns across America, a single person often holds the keys to generations of family history — and that kind of power comes with complicated strings attached. We look at the unsung heroes, the occasional hoarders, and the community tensions that simmer when one person becomes the unofficial archivist of everyone else's past.
Jul 16, 2026
A growing number of serious family researchers are quietly stepping back from public ancestry platforms and building their own closed, invitation-only DNA networks. We dig into why they're doing it — and what the rest of the genealogy community stands to lose if the trend keeps spreading.
Jul 16, 2026
Genealogy has quietly become one of the most expensive hobbies in America, and millennials are leading the charge. From DNA subscriptions to overseas heritage tours, younger Americans are pouring real money into finding out where they came from — and the reasons run a lot deeper than mere curiosity.
Jul 15, 2026
Forget the stereotype of genealogy as a retiree's hobby. A growing wave of twenty-somethings is logging off TikTok and logging into ancestry databases, driven by a hunger for identity, community, and something that feels genuinely real. Here's what's behind the shift — and why it matters for everyone who loves this field.
Jul 15, 2026
Somewhere in a farmhouse in rural Ohio, a retired schoolteacher has boxes of handwritten letters, church ledgers, and land deeds stretching back to the 1700s — and she's not sure she wants to share them. It's a scenario playing out across America, where private family historians sit at the crossroads of preservation and gatekeeping. What happens to collective history when it belongs to just one person?
Jul 15, 2026
Some of the most dedicated family historians in America have spent decades building extraordinary research — and then locked it away. We dig into why genealogy gatekeeping happens, what drives it, and what the rest of us lose when hard-won discoveries never leave a private folder.
Jul 14, 2026
For Black Americans, the search for family history runs into a wall that was deliberately constructed — one built from enslavement, legal segregation, and systemic record destruction. But researchers, community organizations, and new technology are chipping away at that wall, and the stories emerging on the other side are extraordinary. This is about those challenges, those breakthroughs, and the people making them happen.
Jul 11, 2026