GENEALOGY RESEARCH
A STEP BY STEP GUIDE
Copyright Ó 2005 Thomas E Corey
"The man who feels no sentiment of veneration for the memory of his forefathers; who has no natural regard for his ancestors or his kindred, is himself unworthy of kindred regard or remembrance" Daniel Webster
A question I am often asked is where do I start on my family research. Of course the obvious answer is with your self. Why do you start with your self? You start with your self because the only thing you know for certain is that you exist. You grew up knowing your parents, grandparents and possibly great grandparents. To do a good family history or genealogy you will have to obtain documentation or records of who you are and who your parents, grandparent's etc. are. If you ever plan on joining a blood line lineage society such as the Daughters of the American Revolution, Sons of the American Revolution, or the Mayflower Society, you will have to prove this blood line with verifiable source records. To join a society you will have to obtain records showing birth, marriage, military service, birth of children, and death records for each generation to your ancestor. At the present time I would estimate 6 to 7 generations to a Revolutionary War ancestor. It will be eleven to twelve generations to the Mayflower. Now that we have an idea of the number of generations we are looking at, what do we need for records to prove our descent?
Start With Yourself
The best way is to start with the most recent event in your life. Any item that would have generated a document that would have proven that you the person are involved is a source record. This document will prove that you were in a given place at a given time and that you were involved as a first hand participant. This record or document is considered a primary source record. With this in mind, you will have to put yourself in the place of your ancestor and find this same type of record for him.
1. Let us suppose for a moment that you recently had a child. The birth of a child will generate a birth record. This civil record will be recorded and will have the father's name, the mother's name with maiden surname. Also found on this record will be the birth name of the child, the time of birth, and the location of the birth. Because of the information on this record and the names recorded are all first hand participants, it is considered a primary source record.
2. Perhaps the next most recent event in your life was the purchase of a home. This would generate a number of records. Obtaining insurance, securing a mortgage to purchase the property. Also the local court will record a deed and abstract for the property description. The deed will show you as the most recent purchaser of this property. Because you were a participant in this record generation this record is considered a primary source. An item not to forget is that this is property and being it is property you will have to pay real estate taxes on it every year. Taxes are also recorded as being paid by you the individual at a given time and a given place. This shows you as being a first hand participant in generating this record.
4. The next most recent event in your live may have been getting married. This would generate several records. The most recent document would be the marriage license, signed by the minister, the witnesses, and the Bride and Groom. The church may or may not keep a register ledger of the marriage. Many churches do keep ledgers of events involving congregational members. The court requires the license be returned to it to be recorded in a civil registry of marriages occurring in its township or county. The next previous record will be the application to marry record. The application will normally have the bride and groom's name along with the parent's names of the bride and groom. Many times the ages are listed along with places of residence as well as occupations. This document contains a wealth of information about the individuals involved. This record is also considered a primary source document.
5. Going back further in time, perhaps we find you served in the military. The most recent document showing military service will be your discharge record. For recent times this document will be called a DD214. The DD214 will show your name, place of enlistment, your military job classification, rank at discharge.
Before January 1, 1950, several similar forms were used by the military services, including the WD AGO 53, WD AGO 55, WD AGO 53-55, NAVPERS 553, NAVMC 78PD, and the NAVCG 553. Because you were a participant in generating the items reported on this document it is considered a primary source record.
6. Before military service, perhaps you attended a college or simply graduated from high school. Attendance to a school or graduation will generate records. Most school systems will compile a census of students or perspective students in its school district. This document will list where the student lives, whom they live with and other children of school age in a respective residence. This record will show you where you were at a given time.
7. If you attended church regularly with your family you would have been confirmed into the church that you attended. Again most churches keep a register of confirmation of members. You probably would have been 12 to 14 years old at the time. Since you were a first hand participant of this event, this record is considered a primary source record.
8. The church document before confirmation would be of your baptism. This information will be recorded in a church register. The register will also have your birth date, father's name, and mother's name, possibly with mother's maiden name. Names of witnesses will also be recorded in the register. Lutheran Church registers sometimes listed maternal and paternal grandparent names as well. This document is probably the closest one to your birth.
9. The earliest record of your existence will be a birth certificate. A birth will generate several documents. The most notable will be the birth certificate itself. Most states will record live births at the Bureau of Vital Statistics. Most recently the Social Security Administration will receive notice of the birth also. The birth certificate will have the birth child's name, the time of birth and the place of birth. Also on the record will be the father's name, the mother's name with maiden name. The age of the mother along with number of children she had will generally be on the record also. This is considered a primary source document.
As you can see we generate records in our live simply by living. Events in our lives also happened to our ancestors. They had similar things happen in their lives. The living of their lives would generate similar records to the records generated in our lives. The way to search for the records is the same as we did here. Start with the latest event in your live and work back to the earliest. The same research will have to be used for you ancestor. Start with the latest event in their live and work back to the earliest event.
The first rule of genealogy is to start with your self and work back! If you have living parents, talk to them find out as much as you can about your family. Talk to aunts, uncles, or anyone else in the family that is older than you. Ask questions; find out as much as you can.
It may be helpful to tape record the people you talk to in addition to writing down their answers. Keep the tapes for future reference. Be sure to ask permission before taping someone.
Second Generation
This would be your parent's. If they are living, talk to them. Ask the above questions; find out as much as you can from them. Be sure to write notes about your conversation. Don't forget about the events in your life that generated records. Your parents had similar things happen to them in their lives. Before recording the information, verify against the actual document. Keep in mind that if you do want to join a lineage society you will have to submit copies of your proof document for acceptance in that society.
If your parents are deceased you will have to do some research.
The latest event would be after the death of your respective parent. If they had a will the items mentioned in the will would have been ordered by the probate court.
PROBATE RECORDS
3. The Widows Dower rights honored
4. Debts paid.
5. Final distribution of the estate is made to the heirs according to the terms of the will.
Intestate Cases
Documents of Probate Files
As you can see a tremendous amount of records are generated by the court. All of these records are about the deceased individual or the heirs to his estate.
The next document would be the death certificate. The information on a death certificate is given by survivors of an individual. This information may or may not be correct. The only credible information will be the death date, and cause of death as reported by the physician. Questions asked are parent names of the deceased person, birth date, occupation, spouse's name, etc. The reporting individual will state to the best of his knowledge what he knows. Grief will be a factor also. What ever we find on a death record should be backed up with information from records generated by the person when he was alive.
The next items of information to obtain would be the same as for your self. Remember to work from the most recent to the first event in there live.
If your parent was married more than once, record the events of all the marriages. Any thing that would generate a record should be recorded for future reference. Do the same research for your grandparent's, great grandparents, etc.
BASIC TIPS ON TRACING A FAMILY TREE
CITING YOUR SOURCES
Citing your source is very important to genealogy research. The topic is documentation, citing sources, and endnotes. Those pesky little information blurbs we dreaded when writing English class research papers. Thanks to state-of-the-art software it's easy now to attach a footnote with the stroke of a key.
For every individual person you have in your family pedigree you need to cite a source of information on him. You must also include were the information came from. Why do we do this?
When we give a source in our records we lend it credibility. Genealogist gets a bad rap because of a lot of sloppy work and Internet records that can not be backed up with a credible source. When you cite a source for your information make sure it can be found from the information you cite. Please don't use family folklore as a source, it may or may not be correct. If you have always been told that great-great grandpa homesteaded the southwest quarter of section 11 but haven't verified against the deed records, you really can't cite that he homesteaded this land. Check out the deed record, If it says United States of America to him then it is a homestead or land grant. If it states Ethan Gray and wife for money in hand sell to great-great grandpa, then it is not a homestead but a purchase.
Sources can be cited on the back of family group sheets. Assign numbers to each footnote. You must provide all the necessary information so that anyone could locate this source again.
Sources that are not accepted by organizations such as SAR, DAR, and the Mayflower Society are the Ancestral File, any Internet source, newspaper articles, family histories or folklore. Don't get me wrong, these can be a tremendous tool to help in your research. But these sources need to be verified against a credible source.
If you are doing serious genealogy and family research, join your local and state societies. They have many resources and willing individuals that will help you get started in the right direction. Family research can be fun and frustrating all at the same time. But when you run across a diary entry that was written 140 years ago stating that he rode the news to St. Joseph about the assassination of President Lincoln, this brings history into perspective. Knowing that several of your ancestors marched from Newbury to Boston 230 years ago to fight at Bunker Hill lets you know that an ancestor was there and participated in a small way in history's making.
RESEARCH SOURCES
HOME
1. Family Bible; If you use a Bible source, as evidence be wary of entries that are in the same handwriting and ink color that span several years or even decades. This is evidence that the entry was done at the same time and not when the event occurred. Also check the published date for the Bible, if the published date is many years after the dates of the event then you know that you will have to verify with another source. Bible entries are a great source, but be aware that entries sometimes are made many years after an event occurrence. If this is the case the Bible source can not be cited as primary source.
2. Family Letters; This is an excellent source. The letters were probably written at the time an event occurred. Also family letters will give you an insight into their lives and how they lived at the time the letters were written.
COUNTY RECORDS
TOWN RECORDS
CHURCH REPOSITORIES
STATE RECORDS
NATIONAL RECORDS
LIBRARIES
LAND AND PROPERTY RECORDS
A theoretical township is six miles square. It contains thirty six sections, one mile square, of 640 acres each. A township will contain 23040 acres.
UNITS OF LINEAR MEASURE
|
1 Mile |
5280 |
Feet |
|
1 Mile |
80 |
Chains |
|
1 Chain |
100 |
Links |
|
1 Chain |
66 |
Feet |
|
1 Link |
7.92 |
Inches |
|
1 Rod |
16.5 |
Feet |
UNITS OF AREA
|
1 Acre |
10 |
Square Chains |
|
1 Acre |
43560 |
Square Feet |
|
1 Sq. Mile |
640 |
Acres |
EVALUATION OF SOURCES
Since not all sources are of equal value, when you are analyzing which one you want to rely on you need to know which ones are of most value. Remember that most people tend to be more honest when they are in court than when they are in a parlor game. Some of you go through agony when you find genealogical records, which have conflicting data. You want to find the "perfect record". I haven't found one yet! Life, and genealogy, will be a lot easier if you understand something about primary and secondary sources of information.
|
PRIMARY SOURCE |
SECONDARY SOURCE |
|
An eye-witness |
Not an eye-witness, hearsay witness |
|
Someone concerned with the event |
Someone not concerned with the event |
|
Event written down when it occurred |
Event written down later or not at all |
|
WORST SOURCES |
GOOD SOURCES |
BEST SOURCES |
|
Family Tradition |
Personal Diary |
Court Record |
|
Family Histories |
Family Bibles |
Property Records |
|
Lineage Books |
Old Photo's |
Probate Records |
|
Tombstone |
Federal Census |
Vital Records |
|
Reference Works |
Death Certificates |
Church Records |
|
Family Group Sheets |
Obituaries |
Fraternal Records |
|
Academic Lineage's |
Government Publications |
Alliance Records |
|
Periodicals |
School Records |
Insurance Records |
|
County Histories |
Employment Records |
Military Records |
|
LDS Ancestral File |
City Directories |
Manuscripts |
|
Surname Registries |
Newspapers |
Ethnic Sources |
|
Surname Folders |
Institutional Records |
Wills |
|
Internet Source |
Undertaker Records |
National Archives (NARA) |
Begin a genealogy pedigree chart then family group sheets. Fill in as many blanks as possible. If you do not have exact dates, pencil in approximate dates (abt Mar 1885). Use pencils for preliminary work. Always use letters to indicate months (15 Jan 1900). Write surnames in all capital letters. This had been a rule of thumb for genealogy, some computer genealogy programs will not except all caps and returns an error (Family Tree Maker returns an error and asks to correct). Use maiden names of female ancestors, if you don't know her maiden surname simply enter her first name only.
Begin collecting copies of death and birth certificates, and marriage licenses. Each state is different on where the records are kept. The state of Nebraska keeps the Birth, Death, and Marriage records in Lincoln at Health and Human Services Bureau of Vital Statistics. Marriage records are usually available at the county level in Nebraska. This step will involve money because all states charge for copies. You will need to know the date and the county and state where the event occurred. These records may give you information about the person and often about their parents. You can also find some of this information in newspaper announcements of the event. Be aware that if you are planning on joining a lineage society of bloodline descent you will have to have copies of the actual birth, marriage or death certificates. A newspaper account or Internet source is not considered a primary source record. Examples of lineage societies are Daughters of the American Revolution, Sons of the American Revolution, General Society of Mayflower Descendants.
Visit your local genealogy society. Become a member, which will provide you with benefits such as checking out research material that would otherwise have to be viewed at the library. If you have a local LDS Family History Center make use of their research tools such as the Ancestral File CD's and International Genealogy Index CD's. A warning on the Ancestral files, this is a research tool only, this is submitted records and prone to error. Much of the Ancestral file does not have source records, before you add to your family files verify with source records what you find. Much of the International Genealogical Index is extracted record from primary sources. This information is credible and has been proofread by several people. The source record is also available on microfilm from the LDS research library in Salt Lake City. You can find these records on line at http://www.familysearch.org or purchase a copy of the Library Catalog on CD-ROM; this will provide access to their vault of microfilms and microfiche, which you may order through your local FHC.
COMPUTER SOFTWARE
If you do not have a genealogy program you can download a very good program from the family search site. The program version at the present time is Personal Ancestral File 5.2. PAF 5.2 is a free download, and it is easy to use. I have used it and it is very good for beginning genealogy. Don't worry about changing to something else in the future, you can always export your file to a gedcom format which is excepted by almost all genealogy programs. Family Tree Maker is a very good program and has lots of support research CD's. Legacy is another very good program, if you plan on publishing to the web sometime, the choice would be Legacy. All of the programs allow publishing to the web with some limitations. Features I required for some of my work was best met by Legacy; PAF was a very close second. Family Tree Maker requires you use their user site to publish to. I cannot say which is the best software package. All of the software mentioned is good and has features that make it very attractive. My personal all around preference is Family Tree Maker, simply because it offers the best research tools in the way of support CD-ROM's. As a starting program I would use Personal Ancestral File. Legacy is a very good program, but it is somewhat complex and takes some time to learn its features. You can download trial versions of programs to try out. Try the trial versions, they are limited in how many individuals you can enter, but they will give you an idea of the features in each program.
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