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| How to Trace
Your Family Tree |
Genealogy is the record or account derived from
the search for your family. Yet, it is more than a list of people,
places and dates. It is the total experience that one goes through
learning about his/her family. Genealogy is the world's most popular
hobby. You can start anytime, take a break and pick it up anytime with
ease. There are three areas to search:
-
Yourself, parents, family, friends and relatives
- Public records,
local, county, state, federal, world
- Private materials
such as books, agencies, church
The following steps will get you started.
1. Start with yourself and work from the present
to the past.
Keep in mind who you are searching for; it's
your genealogy.
- BEGIN to record events (names, dates, places)
- COLLECT all records
- LIMIT your research
2. At home, locate your family records. Prepare
an area to keep your records reasonably safe.
- personal papers letters/diaries/scrapbooks
- high school yearbooks awards and
recognition/diplomas
- birth/marriage certificate funeral/mass
cards/bibles
- mortgage/deeds newspaper articles
- snapshots/photos
3. Searching Outside the Home. Keep records,
time plays tricks on us.
- compile family information collect data &
documents
- write to relatives note other cities states
- take oral interviews identify people and
addresses
4. At Your Public Library. They are ready to
help.
- begin at the info desk or reference section
learn to use interlibrary loan
- identify materials available begin to search
documents
- check out and read materials investigate
equipment
5. At the Courthouse. Some counties do not
permit public searches.
- obtain a directory of offices and services
register of deeds (birth, marriage, death)
- probate office (wills probated and those
filed but not probated)
- clerk of courts
- land sales (property transfer, sales index)
- other offices
6. Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints
(Family History Center).
- become acquainted with services available
- request assistance with outof area
materials
- foreign research options
7. General Research Suggestions. Establish a
pattern.
make backup copies or
duplicate records
store duplicates elsewhere
print clearly, limit abbreviations
bring basic facts with you on searches
record document sources and location |
keep a research Inventory,
updated
check spelling variations and cultural differences
be consistent and systematic prepare a search goal
ask for help when necessary |
8. Organize Your Information. Share your
findings with the family.
- use standardized forms and format
- purchase professional charts and forms
- color code your filing system
- write your family narrative history
- plan your activities
- be patient, it may take years
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