Why Scientific Tools Still Require Historical Context
Scientific tools have changed genealogy and historical research. DNA testing adds biological evidence. Digitized archives add scale. Search tools and AI add speed. It is […]
Scientific tools have changed genealogy and historical research. DNA testing adds biological evidence. Digitized archives add scale. Search tools and AI add speed. It is […]
DNA testing has made genealogy feel more scientific. It produces numbers, charts, and match lists that look precise. That aesthetic of precision is exactly why […]
Historical research used to be defined by scarcity and physical travel. You needed access to an archive, time to read handwriting, and a tolerance for […]
Some family stories are easy to verify. A military service claim matches a draft card and a pension file. A hometown story aligns with a […]
Genealogy attracts two kinds of people: those who want a compelling family narrative and those who want provable lineage. Most people want both. The problem […]
Genealogy often assumes that records are neutral, like a camera capturing the past. In reality, government records are closer to a ledger. They record what […]
Modern travel makes passports feel inevitable, as if people have always carried a standardized booklet that proves who they are and where they belong. In […]
Genealogy and historical research are built on a hopeful assumption: if you search long enough, the answer is out there. Sometimes it is. Sometimes it […]
War does not only kill people and move borders. It changes paperwork. It destroys archives, interrupts civil registration, forces populations to relocate, and creates new […]
Few phrases create more heat than “they are rewriting history.” People use it to suggest manipulation, propaganda, or dishonesty. Sometimes that accusation is fair. But […]