Genealogy

183 readers
1 users here now

(archived description) (Lemmy's community for those interested in learning more about their genealogy.-)

Welcome to c/[email protected] officially under new management since March 27th 2024

For all your Genealogy needs all on Lemmy. Here we Help with research Give software suggestions Talk about Genealogy And more!

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
1
5
Genealogy guide (lemmy.world)
submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

 

 

What is genealogy? Defined by Wikipedia, genealogy is “the study of families, family history, and the tracing of their lineages.”

 

Why should I get into genealogy? There are many reasons! Genealogy is a great hobby for those interested in their family,history,and many other topics. It can teach you more about yourself. 

 

Where do I start? It may seem overwhelming at first, but don’t worry; it’s not as hard as it seems. The best place to start is to see if anyone in your family has done any research themselves. Many families have at least one member who has a small family tree or a stash of helpful records. Once you have determined if you have any resources to give you a head start or not, you must make another choice. Where do you go from here? Will you focus on a certain branch of the family tree? Or will you go for a more general approach and try to tackle multiple branches? This way is more complicated, and I would recommend not taking this route unless you are experienced. 

 

What should I look for? Official documents are your best bet, as they are the most accurate, and courthouses and local libraries are likely to keep copies. Birth certificates, marriage certificates, draft cards, etc. are very useful as they contain birth dates, death dates, places of residence, and other useful information. Don’t be afraid to ask family members as well. If you have relatives who were alive during the lives of your great-grandparents or other family members, they may have information you did not know about.

 

By this point, it’s very likely you’ve been gathering a lot of information or maybe even started your own family tree. It’s very important to keep this information organized. Depending on how you’d like to conduct your research, there are many different methods. If you’d prefer to stick to pen and paper documents, I would suggest a good binder and multiple folders that are clearly marked and neatly kept. For those of you who wish to take your work digital, there are several free and paid resources that can help.

 

Free 

Familysearch

Family search

A great tool for both creating and maintaining a family tree, it provides free digitized records of your family and may show you a family tree created by others, saving you a lot of work.

 

Pros 

Free

Gives access to various records across many sites. 

Collaborative 

 

Cons 

There is no way to lock a tree, which allows for vandalism.

Some people may have false relatives on the tree 

 

Gramps (FOSS)

Gramps

A Linux native program useful for offline family tree management, according to the website, is “a free software project and community. We strive to produce a genealogy program that is both intuitive for hobbyists and feature-complete for professional genealogists. It is a community project, created, developed, and governed by genealogists.”

 

Pros

FOSS

Can be used offline. 

Support for multiple trees 

 

Cons 

Outdated interface 

Can be confusing for first-time users.

 Find a grave

https://www.findagrave.com/ A index of thousands of cemeteries and millions of graves

Pros Free Easy to use Community transcribing system

Cons Graves may have incorrect information which requires the profile managers to accept edits

Wikitree

https://www.wikitree.com/

A place for genealogists to collaborate

Pros Free forever Easy to use and work with others Claims to be extremely private

Cons

Site design may make navigate difficult for some

———————————————————————————-

PAID

 

Ancestry.com

One of the largest paid genealogy services Ancestry has thousands of paid records.

 

Pros

Lots of records 

 

Cons 

pricey 

Newspapers.com  https://www.newspapers.com/

A archive of thousands of newspapers

Pros Lots of papers from many places

Has free days

Cons Pricey Index system may not provide exact match for searches

This is nowhere near a complete list, and suggestions and more will be added soon.

2
3
 
 

So I recently moved my stuff to gramps web - and it features the gramps query language but I can't figure out how to find places with no parent place...

Anyone know how to do that?

4
 
 

A lot of records have been digitized but I still enjoy looking thought the original documents. I talked to the clerk and it appears my county has received a grant to digitize even more records. I’ll be checking out my surrounding counties libraries and courthouses in the coming weeks.

5
 
 

I’m going to be trying this next week I’ll be updating with results

6
7
 
 

cross-posted from: https://toast.ooo/post/3740832

Canvas in 30 days 👀

turns out I did my math wrong, so it’s a little less than 30 days

July 12th, 2024 @ midnight EDT

https://canvas.fediverse.events

✨ this year’s event also supports the entire fediverse not just Lemmy!

(you have to be able to make/receive text posts, like mastodon, lemmy, pixelfed, etc) (peertube accounts will not work)

you can get update announcements on other fedi platforms with @[email protected] link

chat about Canvas on Matrix or Discord (they’re bridged)

8
 
 

Hi Lemmy, I wanted to share a story about trying to find a very distant ancestor with DNA.

In the early 1800s, my 3x great grandfather came to Canada from Portugal. I have no record of his birth, his immigration or anything from before 1850, and he definitely changed his name after leaving Portugal. For a long time, I thought that I would never be able to break this brick wall.

But about a year ago, I noticed something interesting in my Ancestry DNA matches. I found several distant relatives with Portuguese ethnicity who consistently share DNA with descendants of my 3x great grandfather. I realized that since I have no other Portuguese ancestors, they must be related through my 3x great grandfather.

In fact, almost all of these matches had ancestors from a small island called Porto Santo in the Madeira archipelago.

I decided to give triangulation a shot since some of the DNA matches had public family trees. Using the Madeira archives website, I built off of their research and extended 3 trees back to the late 1700s. When I did this, I found a few duplicate ancestors, but none that show up in all 3 trees.

Which brings us to now. I've not been successful so far at triangulating my 3x ggf, but I feel so close. Out of curiosity, I made a rough calculation of the likelihood that 3 random people with ancestors from Porto Santo share the same 4x ggf, and it came out to 0.4%. So if I get a triple match in my DNA matches family trees, I can be almost certain that I found a close relative to my 3x ggf.

Any thoughts or advice? This is probably the nerdiest thing I've done to solve a mystery. I'm not sure if it'll work to be honest, but I find it crazy that DNA can make it even remotely possible.

9
10
 
 

I'm sure not many of us here are from Slovakia but just wanted to share.

So this is kind of embarasing but after 4 years of making family tree I found out that 1930 and 1940 census from Slovakia is apparently online. I don't know how I missed it. Nevertheless to say the least, my excitement has been through the roof for like 2 weeks.

Note that 1940s census is "blacked" since it hasn't passed 90 years from its creation. It'll be "un-blacked" in 2030. However you can still see the names which might be also helpful (it was for me).

Note 2: there is an (quite successful) attempt at indexation of the results here:

https://scitacieharky.sk/

Note 3: you cannot download the forms because of license. Printing sucks so screenshots are probably the only option

11
 
 

I’d like to but the privacy problems are holding me back

12
 
 

I’ve been meaning to do this for a while something less complex than your normal chart. Something fun to look at like this

13
 
 

For me it’s my 5th great grandmother anyone further back in the tree is my ancestor because I think 6 greats is a bit much.

14
 
 

This is something I’ve always wanted to do since I’ve started genealogy research for my family.

When I was way younger I had 2 great grandmothers I didn’t know what a great grandmother was until I was older to me they were just my grannies. I lost one of them years ago and there isn’t a lot about her out there. Someone I knew in my lifetime and I’ve had to dig deep to find records about her.

I’ve still got family left who know a lot about my family history and I’d like to interview them before I don’t have a chance anymore has anyone done this themselves?

15
16
 
 

When doing genealogy there’s many different documents to look through my favorites to find are census records and death certificates because they provide a lot of info in very few documents. However there are a lot of other types including social security index records and tax records. Today I am asking what type of record or document has a lot of good information that you don’t see used enough in genealogy?

17
 
 

The one who seemingly has no records or takes so much work to dig up one record

I finally found some Info on mine. I went back to the basics and asked some family who was alive when I believe this mystery person was and it helped a lot. let’s hear yours!

18
5
submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

I know folks here on Lemmy love FOSS so I’d suggest Gramps if you’re looking for suggestions!

19
20
21
22
23
 
 

Please fill out forum to apply https://forms.gle/E2baEBSF6LZBgtkr9

24
 
 

For me anything before about 1750 is pretty murky and the records are harder to find and confirm

25
view more: next ›