26 Genealogy Tips to get you Started
- Ideal for Homework & Family Tree School Projects- Talk to your parents! Find out where they grew up. Which town, county,
state/province, etc.
- Research birth & death dates of both their mother and father.
- Get your parents marriage date and location of marriage.
- Ask them (if applicable) where their parents, or grandparents are buried
(locations, cemeteries name, county, state/province)
- Ask if there are any of your Aunts, Uncles or other relatives have
previously done any genealogy research.
- Find out who their oldest living relatives are (then make plans to visit
them and record your conversations with them)
- Ask questions about what they know about the family
- Ask where relatives are buried
- Ask if they know any dates for birth, death, and marriage
- Ask if they know any stories about the family
- Ask if they know any other living relatives (visit them and do the
same thing with them)
- Search the internet for the surnames that you have found (mothers maiden
name, grandmothers maiden name, etc.) This will possibly find others doing
research on the same lines of genealogy you are wanting.
- Your local library should be able to point you in the right direction to
research areas that you have found from your interviews and census records.
- U.S. Government Federal records center have all census records from
1790-1920. These can be searched for grandparents and great grandparents.
Also several local libraries have microfilms ( SS records exist after 1935
can be sent for).
- Find if any of your relatives were in any wars, a lot of information is
available at the Federal Government level (National Archives). To send for
their records is a small charge.
- Visit cemeteries that your relatives are buried, some good information
is sometimes on the gravestones (birth death)
- Visit the Everton Genealogy Web page and signup for a subscription to
the Genealogical Helper magazine (you can submit queries and search for
others doing the same). Sometimes your local library will have copies of
this book the you can look at if you can't afford to get the subscription.
- Send for copies of birth, death, and marriage records for those
relatives you know or find (they usually have names of mother and father,
etc.).
- Gather pictures of older relatives while making your visits (if distance
prevents the visit write letters or call, remember to record them).
- Visit your local LDS church, most have a library that you can send to
Salt Lake and have microfilm sent back to the church for you to view.
These records are extensive and probably the best available.
- Take a course in searching your relatives from your local library or
historical society (usually every state or county has one).
- You can hire a professional genealogist, but before doing this make sure
that you have good references from others that are familiar with this
persons work.
- Join your local Genealogy or Historical Society. State Societies can
also be a lot of help in your research.
- Visit the internet GenWeb Project for your area. You can search the
internet for their web sites, usually have good hints for searching in that
area.
- Visit Used books stores looking for genealogical books, you will be
surprised to find some great older books that have "how to" information in
them.
- YOU need to dedicate yourself to doing this. That means spend the time
do all the steps and you will start gathering information.
- Save the information in an orderly way as to preserve the information
you have gathered (future generations will appreciate it and you will to
when searching for information quickly). I use plastic sheet protectors on
all of my documents (keeping dirty fingers off of them!).
- Search the internet phone directories and email directories. Drop these
folk a note asking about your family with direct, not general questions. You
will be surprised by receiving good area to search or names of others doing
research.
- Take a camera with you and take pictures of those pictures that others
won't let you have. Even if you just want to run down the street to have a
copy made most people will NOT let you leave with their original pictures.
- Let the other members of your family know that you are doing genealogy
research on your family and ask for any old pictures they have, here again
you may be stuck with taking a picture of their picture.
- Be considerate of others and their privacy, record and views. You are asking for help - treat them with all the respect that you would also want. You will find some have information, but are unwilling to share it with you. Try to find out why there is this feeling and do your best to set their minds at rest all.
Have fun!
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