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Recorded Webinar with Diane Richard, Feb 2024
Friday, February 2 – Sunday, February 4 EST
The North Carolina Genealogical Society is delighted to present:
Diane L. Richard, MEng, MBA
“Migrations 1: Many Arrive – Early Migration In, Across, and Out of North Carolina”
This recorded Webinar will be freely available to the public from midnight Thursday night through midnight Sunday night (ET), 2-4 February 2024. (The live webinar was originally presented on 2 Dec 2020.)
The handout for this presentation will only be available to the public during the viewing period, and will not be downloadable or printable. It will open in a separate tab, however, so it can be referred to during the webinar. For logged in members, the handout is always accessible from the main Webinars page. (On the top menu, under Education & Events, select Webinars to go to the main webinars page. Scroll down and click on “Explore the Webinar Library”. That page has a link to “Member Webinar Handouts” (which is arranged in alphabetical order) in the leading paragraph.) This webinar is always available to members in the Member Webinars area of the website. Each members’ webinar page also has a direct link to the handout.
About the Webinar:
Many individuals and families migrated into North Carolina, especially in the colonial and pre-Civil War period. Depending on who was immigrating and when, different locales in North Carolina were hot spots for emigrants from abroad either directly or via Virginia, South Carolina, Pennsylvania and beyond. As the state developed, resources were depleted, productive land was becoming scarcer; settlers considered it to be getting too crowded; and we see a pattern of westward migration. This migration often did not stop at the state borders. Many families spent a few years, one or several generations in North Carolina, often hopscotching across the state, east to west, before migrating to adjoining states and beyond. Let’s explore these years of migrating North Carolinians – the history of the times and the documentary trail left behind.
About the Speaker:
Diane L Richard, Mosaic Research and Project Management (MosaicRPM), www.mosaicrpm.com, has been doing genealogy research since 1987 and since 2004 professionally focused on the records of North Carolina and southern states. She regularly contributes to Internet Genealogy and Your Genealogy Today. In 2019 she published, Tracing Your Ancestors — African American Research: A Practical Guide, via Moorshead Publications. Since 2016 she has been editor of the North Carolina Genealogical Society (NCGS) Journal.
As a speaker she has delivered webinars and in-person talks about the availability and richness of records documenting Southerners, pursuing formerly enslaved ancestors and their descendants, genealogical research tips, techniques, tools and strategies, under-utilized resource collections [online and on-the-ground], and much more. She has appeared on Who Do You Think You Are? (Bryan Cranston episode) and The Dead Files (Detox episode).
She is co-leader of Tar Heel Discoveries, www.tarheeldiscoveries.com, started in 2018, which offers guided North Carolina genealogical research programs providing participants targeted, focused, research assistance leading to new family discoveries.
This webinar is always accessible on the website to NCGS members as a member benefit.
Click on the flyer title to open the pdf in a new browser tab. Depending on your browser, the Download button may open the pdf in a browser tab, or offer to save it to your computer. You can always save a pdf to your computer from a browser tab.
Downloadable/printable pdf Flyer for this webinar:
Migrations 1: Many Arrive Flyer