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Cultural history is most often preserved not only in institutions but also in families, neighborhoods, classrooms, and community spaces. It lives in stories shared across generations, in photographs kept in drawers, and in records created for everyday rather than historical reasons. Your Heritage Matters™ was created to support this work, community-based history-making that happens close to home, often with limited resources and deep responsibility. Designed for educators, librarians, students, and community practitioners, the toolkit centers care, consent, and community authority as foundational principles of both digital and public history. It begins with the premise that historical work is shaped by power, access, and representation, and that decisions about what to document, how to describe it, and how it circulates online have lasting public consequences. Rather than offering a single narrative or prescribing specific tools or platforms, it provides modular frameworks, decision-making tools, and examples that can be adapted to local contexts, capacities, and needs. The toolkit supports work in oral history, storytelling, genealogy, commemoration, and digital stewardship across classrooms, libraries, cultural organizations, and grassroots projects, using everyday technologies such as smartphones, scanners, and personal computers. The emphasis is on thoughtful, sustainable practice rather than technical mastery or premature permanence. Grounded in digital and public history best practices, the toolkit encourages action with accountability. Users are prompted to reflect on ethics, shared authority, sustainability, and audience as integral to historical practice. Preservation is treated not as a final product but as an ongoing public process of care that evolves as communities, technologies, and historical understandings change. In this way, Your Heritage Matters™ supports participatory, responsible digital history work that remains accountable to the communities from which it emerges.