Family Tree Magazine November/December 2025 Digital Edition
Highlights from this issue include:
- Tips for researching 20th-century family members from recent generations
- A comprehensive look at the new Family Tree Maker 2024 software
- Expert guidance on reviewing your DNA test results again and again
- 6 simple steps to making a family cookbook
- A FREE Immigration Records Cheat Sheet
Contents
Days of Our Lives: By Sunny Jane Morton. Uncover and share the stories of recent generations—including family you may have known yourself—with these tips.
Maker Space: By Rick Crume. This tour of Family Tree Maker 2024 will show how the long-awaited software can help you take ownership of your research.
Next Steps: By Diahan Southard. Did you take a DNA test, then ask yourself “Now What”? Here’s how and why you should revisit your results—even if it’s been several years since you tested.
In the Write Order: By Rhonda Lauritzen. An expert storyteller shares how to efficiently write well-organized, gripping family history projects.
Original Recipe: By Gena Philibert-Ortega. Create cookbooks that save and share your favorite family recipes—just like Grandma used to make.
Plus!
- Research Guides: Arizona and Pennsylvania
- Stories to Tell
- Tech News
- Lisa’s Picks
- Website Tutorial: Scotland’s People
- Photo Detective
- Family History Home: Saving Pet Memorabilia
- Now What
- From the Archive: The Origins of Surnames
- DNA Q&A: Transferring DNA Results
Once you download the November/December 2025 issue of Family Tree Magazine, you’ll need a PDF reader, such as the free Adobe Reader software, to open it. Adobe Reader is available for both Mac and Windows computers.
Highlights from this issue include:
- Tips for researching 20th-century family members from recent generations
- A comprehensive look at the new Family Tree Maker 2024 software
- Expert guidance on reviewing your DNA test results again and again
- 6 simple steps to making a family cookbook
- A FREE Immigration Records Cheat Sheet
Contents
Days of Our Lives: By Sunny Jane Morton. Uncover and share the stories of recent generations—including family you may have known yourself—with these tips.
Maker Space: By Rick Crume. This tour of Family Tree Maker 2024 will show how the long-awaited software can help you take ownership of your research.
Next Steps: By Diahan Southard. Did you take a DNA test, then ask yourself “Now What”? Here’s how and why you should revisit your results—even if it’s been several years since you tested.
In the Write Order: By Rhonda Lauritzen. An expert storyteller shares how to efficiently write well-organized, gripping family history projects.
Original Recipe: By Gena Philibert-Ortega. Create cookbooks that save and share your favorite family recipes—just like Grandma used to make.
Plus!
- Research Guides: Arizona and Pennsylvania
- Stories to Tell
- Tech News
- Lisa’s Picks
- Website Tutorial: Scotland’s People
- Photo Detective
- Family History Home: Saving Pet Memorabilia
- Now What
- From the Archive: The Origins of Surnames
- DNA Q&A: Transferring DNA Results
Once you download the November/December 2025 issue of Family Tree Magazine, you’ll need a PDF reader, such as the free Adobe Reader software, to open it. Adobe Reader is available for both Mac and Windows computers.
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