Ep. 43 REWIND - Donating your Family History Treasures to an Institution

Published: Jan. 6, 2015, 10:51 p.m.

b'Fisher opens the show with word of a new scent that\\u2019s on the market to make you smell \\u201clike a Viking!\\u201d\\xa0 It\\u2019s the real deal!\\xa0 Fisher visits with Academy Award nominee Edward James Olmos who shares his family\\u2019s remarkable path.\\xa0 In \\u201cFamily Histoire News,\\u201d a museum in Norwich, Connecticut is lauding \\u201cBenedict Arnold\\u2026 Hero!\\u201d\\xa0 It\\u2019s all about his contributions to the cause of freedom\\xa0before\\xa0turning traitor.\\xa0 Find out what that\\u2019s all about.\\xa0 And, a Seattle man recently found a box full of color slides taken on his grandparents\\u2019 1939 honeymoon in England.\\xa0 You\\u2019ll want to see the links to these gorgeous pictures taken just before the outbreak of World War II.
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This week\\u2019s expert guest is Judy Lucey of the\\xa0New England Historic and Genealogical Society\\xa0who gives some great advice about things to consider when looking at contributing your family history treasures to an institution or archive.\\xa0 It\\u2019s something many of us will have to think about at some point.
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And Pat Mulso of Minnesota has solved a 164-year-old family mystery.\\xa0 In 1850 a baby was left in the temporary care of a priest in New York.\\xa0 When they returned, the priest and the baby were gone.\\xa0 No one ever learned the fate of that baby\\u2026 until now.\\xa0 Hear Pat\\u2019s remarkable story!
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Preservation Authority, Tom Perry, talks home movies in answer to a listener question.'