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Researching Your North Carolina Ancestors – Free webinar by Mark Lowe now online for limited time

Researching Your North Carolina Ancestors – Free webinar by Mark Lowe now online for limited time

LogowhiteThe recording of today's webinar, "Researching Your North Carolina Ancestors," by Mark Lowe, is now available to view for free at www.FamilyTreeWebinars.com. Lots of great comments:

  • The best webinar ever. I have so many ancestors from NC and this webinar has been one of the most helpful for me. J Mark always delivers. Thanks so much Geoff and J Mark for a great webinar. Very grateful for the Legacy webinars.
  • This was the most informative webinar EVER! Mark gave us so much to consider and so many websites that I will be busy forever! Thank you Legacy and Mark Lowe.
  • One of the best genealogy lectures I've ever attended anywhere! Thank you!

View the Recording at FamilyTreeWebinars.com

If you could not make it to the live event or just want to watch it again, the 1 hour 38 minute recording of "Researching Your North Carolina Ancestors" is now available to view in our webinar archives.

Coupon code

Use webinar coupon code - carolina - for 10% off an annual or monthly webinar membership, valid through Monday, December 15, 2014.

Holiday Sale

Through December 31, 2014, take $10 off any new Legacy Family Tree software. Plus every Legacy QuickGuide and webinar CD have been discounted. No coupon required. Only at www.LegacyFamilyTreeStore.com.

Legacy QuickGuide: North Carolina Genealogy – $2.95

Looking to find those elusive Tar Heel State ancestors? The North Carolina Genealogy Legacy QuickGuide™ contains useful information including a timeline of North Carolina history events, tips on North Carolina research strategy, outline of major immigrant groups, and more. Also included are links to websites and resources covering vital records, church records, census records, as well as general North Carolina resources. This handy 8-page PDF guide can be used on your computer or mobile device for anytime access.

North Carolina is home to many “firsts”: one of the original Thirteen Colonies; Virginia Dare, the first white child born in the New World; America’s first gold rush in Cabarrus County; the first public university in the United States, the University of North Carolina; and home to the Wright Brothers’ first flight at Kitty Hawk.

Click here to purchase.

Webinar Memberships/Subscriptions

Webinar Members get:

  • On-demand access to the entire webinar archives (now 197 classes, 289 hours of genealogy education)
  • On-demand access to the instructor handouts (now 804 pages)
  • 5% off all products at www.FamilyTreeWebinars.com (must be logged in at checkout)
  • Access to all future recordings for the duration of their membership
  • Chance for a members-only door prize during each live webinar

Introductory pricing:

  • Annual membership: $49.95/year (that's about the cost of 5 webinar CDs)
  • Monthly membership: $9.95/month

Click here to subscribe.

Register for our upcoming webinars (free)

  • Bagging a Live One – Connecting with Cousins You Never Knew You Had by Mary Kircher Roddy. December 17.
  • Genealogy on the Go with iPads and Tablets by Lisa Louise Cooke. January 7.
  • Tracking Migration Using the Big 4 U.S. Record Sources by Mary Hill. January 14.
  • Expanding Your Research from a Single Fact by Marian Pierre-Louis. January 16.
  • My Genealogy DO-Over – A Year of Learning from Research Mistakes by Thomas MacEntee. January 21.
  • Getting Started in Scrapbooking by Susan Budge. January 28.
  • One-Place Studies – Tracing the History of a Community by Kirsty Gray. February 4.
  • Step-by-Step – Finding Confederate Soldiers and Their Records by Mark Lowe. February 6.
  • Zigzagging through German Church Records by Jim Beidler. February 11.
  • Researching Your New Zealand Ancestors by Jan Gow. February 18.
  • Tap Into Your Inner Private Eye – 9 Strategies for Finding Living Relatives by Lisa Louise Cooke. February 25.
  • Researching with Karen! by Karen Clifford. March 4.
  • Technology and Techniques for Differentiating Two People with the Same Name by Geoff Rasmussen. March 6.
  • Crafting Ancestor Profiles from Start to Finish by Lisa Alzo. March 11.
  • Irish Genealogical Records in the 17th-19th Centuries by Judy Wight. March 18.
  • Where Does It Say That? Learning to Love Indirect Evidence by Chris Staats. March 25.
  • Genealogy 101, a 3-Session Course in Beginning Genealogy – Part 1 by Peggy Clemens Lauritzen. April 1.
  • American Revolution Genealogy by Beth Foulk. April 8.
  • Hookers, Crooks, and Kooks – Aunt Merle Didn't Run a Boarding House by Jana Sloan Broglin. April 10.
  • Ten Genealogical Lessons I Learned the Hard Way by Warren Bittner. April 15.
  • D-I-V-O-R-C-E! by Judy Russell. April 22.
  • Using Legacy with Specialized Studies – Legacy is for more than your family history by Tessa Keough. April 29.
  • Genealogy 101, a 3-Session Course in Beginning Genealogy – Part 2 by Peggy Clemens Lauritzen. May 6.
  • After You're Gone – Future-Proofing Your Genealogy Research by Thomas MacEntee (bonus webinar for annual/monthly webinar subscribers only). May 8.
  • GenealogyBank – The Power of Finding Our Ancestor's Stories by Tom Kemp. May 13.
  • Martha Benshura – Enemy Alien by Judy Russell. May 20.
  • Migration Patterns East of the Mississippi Prior to 1860 by Mary Hill. May 27.
  • Genealogy 101, a 3-Session Course in Beginning Genealogy – Part 3 by Peggy Clemens Lauritzen. June 3.
  • Tips for Planning a Successful Seminar by Jana Sloan Broglin. June 10.
  • 10 Tips for Using Legacy with Specialized Studies by Tessa Keough. June 12.
  • The Secret Lives of Women – Researching Female Ancestors Using the Sources They Left Behind by Gena Philibert-Ortega. July 1.
  • Pinning Your Family History by Thomas MacEntee. July 8.
  • Making a Federal Case Out of It by Judy Russell (bonus webinar for annual/monthly webinar subscribers only). July 10.
  • Researching with Karen! by Karen Clifford. July 15.
  • Have Swedish Roots and Don't Know How to Get Started? by Kathy Meade. July 22.
  • Storyboard Your Family History by Lisa Alzo. July 29.
  • What's in a Name? Trouble! by Ron Arons. August 5.
  • Power Platting – Technology Tools to Create Pictures from Property Descriptions by Chris Staats. August 12.
  • Discovering Your Kentucky Ancestors by Mark Lowe. August 19.
  • Digital Family Reunions by Devin Ashby. August 21.
  • German Names and Naming Patterns by Jim Beidler. August 26.
  • Break Down Brick Walls in Eastern European Research – Tips, Tools and Tricks by Lisa Alzo. September 2.
  • Research Your Swedish Ancestors in Living Color Using ArkivDigital Online by Kathy Meade. September 9.
  • Genealogy Serendipity – Listening For Our Ancestors by Geoff Rasmussen. September 11.
  • Researching Your Dutch Ancestors by Yvette Hoitink. September 16.
  • Researching Your Ancestors in England and Wales by Kirsty Gray. September 23.
  • Using Periodicals to Find Your Ancestors by Gena Philibert-Ortega. September 30.
  • Wearables and Genealogy – Wacky and Wild or Worth the Wait by Thomas MacEntee. October 7.
  • Colonial Immigration – The English Pioneers of Early America by Beth Foulk. October 14.
  • Billions of Records, Billions of Stories by Devin Ashby. October 16.
  • What Happened to the State of Frankland – Using Tennessee's Pre-Statehood Records by Mark Lowe. October 21.
  • Complex Evidence – What is It? How Does it Work? And Why Does it Matter? by Warren Bittner. October 28.
  • Researching with Karen! by Karen Clifford. November 4.
  • Organizing Your Genetic Genealogy by Diahan Southard. November 11.
  • Bringing it All Together and Leaving a Permanent Record by Tom Kemp. November 13.
  • Mapping Madness by Ron Arons. November 18.
  • Stories in Stone – Cemetery Research by Gail Blankenau. December 2.
  • Thinking about Becoming an Accredited Genealogist? by Apryl Cox and Kelly Summers. December 9.
  • Pointing Fingers at Ancestors' Siblings – Breaking Down Brick Walls with Collateral Research by Marian Pierre-Louis. December 16.

Click here to register. Or click here register for multiple webinars at the same time.

Print the 2015 webinar brochure here.

See you online!

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