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Are you brand new to genealogy and not quite sure where to start? Maybe you?ve been doing this for a while and need some inspiration to help you break through that long standing brick wall. As we head into the long weekend, I plan on spending a little time working on my own family history research. If you are going to do the same, here are six ideas to help jump start your genealogy weekend.
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1. Talk to your family
Memorial Day was originally a time to pause and remember those who died while serving in the United States Armed Forces. Many of us now use it as a time to memorialize any of our loved ones who have passed on. Still others use the three day weekend to get together with living family members. If you fall into that last category, take advantage of the time you spend with family this weekend to talk to them. Record their stories. Go through that box of pictures and see who they can identify. Ask if anyone knows about a family bible or copies of military service records held by someone in the family. Then take a picture of those people or those documents and attach them to your tree. Speaking of attaching things to your tree?
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2. Document your work That shaky leaf leads to a record hint. Record hints need to be analyzed and considered in context to determine if they really pertain to your person. Then they need to be attached. (Don?t forget that step.) Also, remember that those shaky leaves only provide hints to a small percentage of our most popular databases. There are more records to find. Be sure to search for your family members. Which brings me to? | ![]() |
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3. Try a new search technique
I often find myself in a groove. I find something that works and I stick with it. But, I?ve learned that when I try something new, I usually learn something new and, sometimes, I discover something new as well. If you always view your search results by record try viewing them by category. If you only check the Card Catalog to find what databases are available, try using the place pages. If you aren?t sure how to search or you aren?t getting the search results you expect?
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4. Watch a video
There?s a video for that. If you aren?t quite sure how to find your immigrant ancestors, there?s a video for that. Need some tips on creating memorial pages to honor the men and women in your family tree who have served in the armed forces? There?s a video for that, too. Ancestry.com has a library full of helpful videos and tutorials that just might give you the information you?ve been looking for or that spark of an idea to help you break down that brick wall. And, while we are discussing brick walls?
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5. Post your brick wall Have you posted yours to the appropriate surname or locality message board? The process of writing out what you know, how you know it, and what you are trying to find out is a super useful exercise that might help you see your genealogy challenge in a new light.?Posting it to a message board?gives you the opportunity to interact with thousands of others who are researching that same surname or that same small county in West Virginia. You never know who may have the information you need. |
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6. Sign up for a genealogy conference
We are smack dab in the middle of the genealogy conference season. There are opportunities ? large and small ? all around to attend a conference or Ancestry Day, interact with others who are interested in genealogy and learn some new skills that will help you in your family history journey.
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Which of these are you going to try this weekend?
Source: http://www.thepetmenagerie.com/dna/?p=2914
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