Here’s your chance to become the family historian you never knew you wanted to be.
What’s Happening
The Central Library is hosting “Writing Your Ancestor’s Story” this Wednesday, July 23rd, and it’s exactly what every family needs but nobody thinks to do until it’s too late.
When: Wednesday, July 23, 2025, 2:00-3:00 PM
Where: J. Erik Jonsson Central Library, 8th Floor (or join online via Zoom)
Cost: FREE
Who: Adults 18+ (but the stories you create will matter to everyone in your family)
Why This Matters More Than You Think
Picture this: Your great-great-grandchildren stumble across a box in an attic someday. Inside, instead of just random photos of people they can’t identify, they find your written stories. They discover why their great-great-grandmother had those incredible cheekbones, how their family survived that brutal winter of 1952, and what their ancestor was really like when she laughed.
That’s the difference between leaving behind mystery and leaving behind legacy.
Here’s What You’ll Learn
Turn Detective Work Into Storytelling:
- How to weave together family research, oral histories, and those mysterious old photographs
- Techniques to fill in the gaps when official records don’t tell the whole story
- Ways to capture the personality behind the dates and facts
Get Unstuck on Your Research:
- Strategies for when you hit dead ends in your family tree
- How to make the most of what you already know
- Tips for organizing scattered information into coherent narratives
Create Stories That Actually Get Read:
- Writing techniques that make historical facts come alive
- How to structure family stories so they’re engaging, not just informative
- Ways to preserve both the big moments and the everyday details that make ancestors feel real
What Makes This Different
This isn’t just another “how to research your genealogy” workshop. This is about becoming a storyteller for people who can’t tell their own stories anymore.
Think about it: Every family has that one relative who remembers everything – the keeper of all the stories. What happens when that person is gone? All those details about personality quirks, family jokes, the way someone’s eyes lit up when they talked about their dreams – that’s the stuff that makes ancestry come alive.
The Real Reason You Should Go
Your family’s stories are disappearing faster than you think. Every year that passes, another family story gets lost. Every relative who passes away takes irreplaceable memories with them. Every old photo that stays unlabeled becomes just another face in a box.
But here’s the beautiful thing: You can change that trajectory. In just one hour, you can learn techniques that turn you into your family’s memory keeper, story weaver, and bridge between generations.
Who Should Attend
- The Family Researcher: You’ve got names, dates, and places, but your family tree feels like a spreadsheet instead of a story
- The Story Keeper: You know all the family tales, but they’re only in your head
- The Curious Beginner: You want to start somewhere but don’t know where to begin
- The Stuck Detective: Your research hit a wall and you need fresh approaches
How to Join
Registration Required – and it closes at 10:00 AM on July 23rd, so don’t wait until the last minute.
Choose your adventure:
- In-person: 8th floor of the J. Erik Jonsson Central Library
- Online: Join via Zoom from anywhere
The Bottom Line
Your ancestors lived full, complex, fascinating lives. They weren’t just names on a census form – they were people who fell in love, made terrible jokes, had favorite songs, and faced challenges that would probably intimidate us today.
The question is: Will their stories die with you, or will you be the one who makes sure they live on?
This Wednesday, you can learn how to become the bridge between your family’s past and future. Your great-grandchildren are counting on you – they just don’t know it yet.
Ready to become your family’s official storyteller? Register now before spots fill up.
Because the best family stories aren’t the ones that get lost – they’re the ones that get written down.




