Upstate New York Genealogy
What's On My Lens
My Family Lines I'm Researching
My wife's families: Hogan, Gilstrap, Mulherin, Wall, Canada, Vestal
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- Organizing Family Discoveries
Genealogy article brought to you by William Teleo, Posted on: 2006-06-05
It's great when the family gets together, but you know that it'll be much greater if all family members can get to know each other and share the family history. Much interest had been given to genealogic researches in the past years, but still, the most common form of genealogic research remains to be the family tree and its branching out. A family tree is a cinch to make if you intend to include only members of your immediate family (parents, sibling, grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins) but what if you aim to include the three generations before you? Or what if you intend to find out who your ancestors are? This entails a much larger scope and therefore a more thorough research. This also means more extensive notes, files, pictures, interview transcripts, and other documents. To save you from disorganization and make your research easier, Carolyn Billingsley and Desmond Allen have devised an efficient filing system specifically for genealogic research.
The materials they prescribed are easy enough to procure such as a filing cabinet (boxes will do), data records, pens with black ink, file folders, notebook (loose leaf), and notebook dividers. They recommend that you start by making nuclear family records. Printed forms are available to make it easier. Record information by family. Separate your own family record from that of your parents. Use marriages as guide, as each marriage requires a separate data sheet. Fill out forms backward, starting from the present and to the past. Make all information on each family uniform, leave spaces for unknown data and fill them out later when you got the missing links. It is also important to indicate sources of the information. Include birth certificates, death certificates, and marriage certificates with the members' personal information but remember to use only photocopied records. Label sheets with family surnames and put them in file folders duly labeled. Collect and store these nuclear family sheets to larger family groups. To do these use bigger filing folders. Label these folders by the family patriarch's name, for example, your grandfather's name. Include in this folder all files of your uncles, aunts, parent, married siblings, married cousins, etc. An optional step is to add a contents page to give you a clue about what is inside the folders. These will make it easier for you to fill out your family tree and its branches. An organized research will save you the trouble of diving into heaps of paper searching for documents that you think are there but have no idea where to find.
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Who are you searching for?
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- Robin_Forlonge_Patterson Robin_Forlonge_Patterson May 24, 2009 @ 6:05 am
- Who am I searching for? Well, several hundred direct ancestors. None in New York.
I'm also searching for people in upstate New York or anywhere else to come and share in the free genealogy wiki called "Familypedia" - see my lens that introduces it and leads you step-by-step through the process of creating your first page on it.
Groups on MSN and Multiply and Facebook have their value, but specialized wiki software has distinct advantages for some aspects of genealogy.
The wiki has separate pages for each county in the U.S. and Great Britain and Ireland, with links to existing or potential pages listing people who were born, married, or died or merely lived in that county and other things such as land and census records and cemeteries. Any individual and any surname can have their own dedicated page, with very easy creation of links to any related page.
Come and have a look!
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- KLemons22 KLemons22 Mar 23, 2009 @ 10:59 pm
- Nice lens! I just made one too, on genealogy, Its called "DNA Testing for Genealogy". My paternal line has been part of a DNA surname project for 10 years. We have confirmed 2 branches of families with the same surname living close to my family from the 1850 TN census. We may have just found our immirant family with a variation of my surname. DNA is the fastest way to prove connections and matches. http://www.squidoo.com/FamilyDNA
Links to Genealogy Sites
Familypedia, a free genealogy wiki
Use the same easy clever software and markup as Wi more...1 point
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/GenealogyGatheringPlace/
GenealogyGatheringPlace: Genealogy Research Gather more...0 points
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/UpstateNYGenealogy/
UpstateNYGenealogy: Upstate New York Genealogy0 points
Genealogy Blog
Articles about Genealogy0 points
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/researchingfamily/
researchingfamily: Researching - Fish & Hogan0 points
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ObituaryPress/
ObituaryPress: ObituaryPress0 points
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