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Basic Genealogy: Saving Your Family History
Basic Genealogy: Saving Your Family History
Basic Genealogy: Saving Your Family History
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Basic Genealogy: Saving Your Family History

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Find your roots! Start your search now. The author reviews a simple process that will help everyone be successful in their genealogy research. The author draws from his genealogical research experiences to describe the resources that are available and how to use them to find your ancestors and their history. Both Internet and archival research efforts are covered. The first part of the book gives hints that will help make your beginning research successful. The author then reviews the major resources and documents used in Genealogy research and the last section covers useful hints that go beyond the basics. This is a "must have" book for the beginning genealogy researcher.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 24, 2020
ISBN9781393521884
Basic Genealogy: Saving Your Family History
Author

Stephen Szabados

Steve Szabados grew up in Central Illinois and is a retired project manager living in the Chicago Suburbs. He received a Bachelor of Science Degree from the University of Illinois in Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, and a Masters in Business Administration from Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, Illinois. Steve Szabados is an author and lecturer on genealogy. He has been researching his ancestors since 2000 and has traced ancestors back to the 1600s in New England, Virgina, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and the 1730’s in Poland, Germany, Bohemia, Hungary, Slovakia, and Slovenia. He has given numerous presentations to genealogical groups and libraries in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. His mission is to share his passion for Family History with as many people as he can. He is a former board member of Polish Genealogical Society of America, and he is a genealogy volunteer at the Arlington Heights Memorial Library. Steve also is the genealogy columnist for the Polish American Journal.

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    Book preview

    Basic Genealogy - Stephen Szabados

    INTRODUCTION

    This book goes beyond the great tips I covered in my earlier book, Basic Genealogy, and gives many additional methods and sources to find more information to help create a wonderful family history of your ancestors. My new book includes the basic material from Basic Genealogy and includes new material that covers search tips, organization, an outline of steps to find where your European immigrants left, and the basics of using DNA testing in genealogy.

    I want to share my successes in my genealogy research with the reader to help them enjoy more successes in researching their family history. My goal for this book is to outline the steps that I should have followed to begin my genealogical research and give tips to make everyone successful. These are the steps that I now follow. I developed my current methods after some wasted efforts learning what not to do. I know my book will prove helpful to you. Following these steps should help you to be more efficient in your beginning research than I was.

    The book will give you a method to get started in your research and hopefully give you a plan to find your family history. We will cover the initial portion of genealogical research so that you will become familiar with genealogical sources. We will discuss the use of documents such as census records, passenger manifests; vital records and others that will help identify your family members and will also give you information about your family's history.

    I also cover methods and sources to help find where our European immigrants left. These will be basic steps. I would suggest reading my book Finding Grandma's European Ancestors when you are ready to start looking for your ancestors in European records.

    Now turn to Chapter One and start your journey to your family's history.

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    CHAPTER 1: Genealogy Begins at Home

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    Your first steps in your genealogical research begin with the documents you find at home and writing down facts you remember about your parents, grandparents, aunts, and uncles. Also, write down the family stories that were passed along by each generation at family gatherings. You need to find all the pictures and documents that you can.

    Collect the following if possible:  

    Birth, baptism, marriage, and death certificates

    Obituaries and funeral cards

    Family Bibles

    Family pictures, baby books, birth announcements, wedding books, birthday books, diaries

    Passports, naturalization and immigration papers

    Land and mortgage papers

    Military papers

    Retirement papers, probate papers

    Family letters, postcards, business papers, medical records, insurance papers, newspaper clippings, and other papers

    Old documents and pictures

    As you lose your older relatives, search the desk drawers, file cabinets and shoe boxes for old papers to see if your ancestors saved documents. Searching for old papers is especially important if they were immigrants. If they are still alive, you need to ask what they have or ask their permission to do look at the older documents.

    Baptismal or birth certificates from the old country, naturalization documents or military papers would yield extremely valuable information if found. Old letters and postcards from relatives or friends are also significant. The messages may be from friends or relatives that still lived where your ancestor was born. These documents may also contain references to where your ancestor left or the names of other family members. Pictures are also significant because they may show other people who may be friends or relatives. Identify all other possible relatives and track down their descendants to see if they have any treasures that pertain to your ancestors.

    Other critical personal documents you may find are

    Family bibles that may have lists of the births, marriages, and deaths of various family members.

    Diaries that can give insight into the thoughts and interests of family members

    Newspaper clippings of births, marriages, deaths and news stories about family members.

    Be prepared to find some documents that are written in languages that are not English. Some may be in the ethnic language of where your ancestors were born, or they may be in Latin recorded by the priest in the Catholic churches. Genealogists have compiled word lists of genealogical terms that list the word in English and many other languages. Many books include examples of these lists, but the most convenient source is online at Familysearch.org. Use their Wiki section and search for word list or XXXX word list where XXXX is the name of the language you need.

    More documents, pictures, and letters

    To find personal documents such as baptismal certificates, passports, letters, and postcards, search for the papers of your parents and grandparents. If your family saved any of the personal papers, they would be treasured because they usually list the birthplaces of the immigrant ancestors. Other relatives may have also preserved treasures. Your ancestors may have lived with one of their children before they died. If they remained in the home until they died, one or two of the children might have watched over them. These were the caregivers. Track the descendants of these caregivers who may have sorted through all of the papers and pictures in the home and saved some of them. If you find documents with other relatives, ask for copies of the documents and offer to share the results of your research. Also, be very careful with the originals since they may be very fragile due to age. Use copies or electronic scans in your research and store the originals in a safe place.

    Remember at this point in your research; you are dealing with documents that you find in the personal papers of your parents, grandparents and other relatives. After you get copies of the materials, record the information and get organized. Next, you start your search for information from other sources, including interviewing older relatives, and family friends is an essential step in the process. Also remember to work on the easiest to find documentation, dates, and places first.

    Remember that the old papers of your parents or grandparents may contain their birth certificate because they needed to show proof of their age to the Social Security Administration when they applied for their Social Security number to work after 1935.

    The illustration below is the Nebraska birth certificate for Harold Howard. Note that Harold's birth certificate lists the names, birthplaces, and occupations of his parents.

    Photographs

    Photos are a record of the lives of your ancestors. Photos capture the events in your ancestor lives and their lifestyles. Identifying the people in the pictures is an integral part of your genealogy research. Photos will give you another source to track down and get more documents and information. It is vital that you preserve the original photos. Make copies and only take copies to family gatherings. Scanning the originals will also allow you to share copies with your family. The images show the experiences for your ancestors and are treasures you should include in your family history.

    The next illustrations show two pictures that were in my mother's scrapbook. One is the portrait taken for my grandparent's wedding. Identifying and finding the flower girl led to more photos and more stories about my grandparents. The other picture includes two unknown women that may be relatives of my grandmother. Once identified these two women or their descendants might add more information to the family history.

    Other steps to do as soon as possible

    The next three chapters cover early stages in your family history research that include steps you should implement as quickly as possible.

    Filling out genealogy charts will help give you a picture of your family tree and help you keep relationships straight as you talk to your family members.

    Organizing documents, pictures, and notes will help you understand the next areas to research and also help you share your research with your relatives in a readable format.

    Interview older your oldest relatives as soon as possible is essential because you cannot afford to lose them before you have recorded their memories and stories. However, organizing and preparing a pedigree chart before you talk to your older relatives may help them remember some relevant facts. A solution may be to call to schedule a visit to your relative and then try to get your material organized as much as possible before the appointment.

    These steps are continuous, and your notes and charts should be updated as you review new documents, and interview your family. Schedule interviews as soon as you can. If you find a long-lost cousin, schedule a visit at the earliest because you may lose the opportunity if you wait.

    Summary of personal papers

    Search desk drawers, file cabinets and shoe boxes for birth records, baptismal certificates, exit visas, and pictures.

    Begin filling out Genealogy Charts (see Chapter 2)

    Organize your research to help your research and to share your research with your relatives (see Chapter 3)

    Track down descendants of caretakers of ancestors before they died.

    Interview the oldest embers of your family as soon as possible (see Chapter 4)

    CHAPTER 2: Genealogy Forms & Lineage Software

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    The use of standard genealogical forms will help record the information you already know about family members. There are two forms that genealogists use when they begin their research. They are the pedigree chart and the family group sheet. The next two pages show examples of each form. You can download them from many genealogy websites such as Familysearch.org and Ancestry.com.

    Pedigree Chart

    Pedigree charts are the roadmaps to your family history. They may have space for four or five generations (parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents) and are sometimes called Ancestor or Lineage Charts or Family Trees. The forms provide spaces for full names, dates, and places of birth, marriage dates, and dates of death. Begin filling out your pedigree chart as soon as you can and take it with you to all family gatherings, so the relatives can help fill in some of the blanks. Filling in your pedigree chart will help you focus your research and keep all the relationships straight. To continue your ancestral lines beyond the first pedigree chart, start another page using an ancestor from the last generation shown on your full chart as the first person shown on the next chart. Each person listed in the previous generation shown will be the first person shown on the next chart. Lineage software can also be downloaded or purchased to enter this information and print updated charts electronically.

    Family Group Sheets

    Family group sheets are the genealogy forms that are the traditional method of recording

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