![]() |
Ancestry dot com
Is it bad if you family tree has no branches? :)
|
Quote:
|
I am working on mine right now too. I find it entertaining that the town my family originates from is 20 miles from Stuttgart. So close yet so far away.
|
Quote:
My brother has done a ton of research on our family. He says the Mormon ancestry info is much better than Ancestry.com and free to boot. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
This brings up a good point. Document everything you find & give a copy to another family member. Usually one family member gets obsessed with tracing the family roots & he/she drives everybody else in the family nuts. My brother was ours. I always had a glancing interest but he did the digging. Interviews with everybody. Trips to the gov't archives in Ottawa. Trips to the local Mormon church. He & a distant relative (a retired prof who was as obsessed) shared research. A ten year obsession. I ended up with the data.
Ian |
The last thing I wanna know is who I'm related to......
|
I found others who had matching family members. I have found photos of some of my ancestors. I am amazed!!!
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
As my family came to the US from China in the 1950s, I'm fairly confident the site has nada for us :-(
|
I found some family members on familysearch.org, but couldn't figure out a way to "link" to other relatives. Do you have to know their name to search? For example, if I can find my grandfather, how do I locate his brothers and sisters if I don't know their names? Or is there no way to "link" from one ancestor to another?
Thanks, JA |
win the lottery....
all your relatives will find you, and then some :D |
Quote:
Quote:
Here is a census entry for my great-grandfather from familysearch http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1296944359.jpg This gives me some of his brothers & sisters & his mother & potential birth year of all of them. But unless you know a name & a place, you are searching blindly. Just follow everybody back & hope for more clues. Ian |
Quote:
Does the paid site have a lot more information? I could see ponying up for that after I get whatever information my aunt was able to find out about the family back in the 1990s. I'm surprised census results were so spotty but that's what happens when they live in a rural area I guess. |
The info that is online is just a portion of what the Mormons have available on microfiche. It is very much an ongoing process. I have done some volunteer indexing for them online (anybody can) & it is tedious work. But they are as accurate as the available source lets them be. That is my concern about any independent sites. It is real info or just somebody's great aunt's recollections? Often people will input info based on family story rather than a written record.
Ian |
I started with grandparents since they were all well known and worked back from there. Their siblings online matched the people I knew in person, and last names and states for a generation or two back matched what info I already knew. But into the 1800s searches mostly brought back nothing.
My problem was that records just dried up. Family on one side goes back to Missouri and Illinois and information from both states seems to be seriously lacking. That would be the draw for ancestry.com - if searches actually pull up information. |
And just to illustrate bogus info . . . the above-mentioned Dugald (or Dougald) was actually born Aug 13, 1846 not 1845 as estimated.
Here he is: http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1296958150.jpg And as for family stories, I was told that my great-great grandfather (Dugald's father) was one of seven brothers that emigrated. As it turns out, he was one of eight kids - 5 brothers & 3 sisters - one of which died in infancy with no name listed in the parish record in Scotland. Ian |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 02:34 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website