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March 29, 2001
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Getting Started Online
Q: Please
give us some guidance to help us research our family tree. We do not know where
to start. We have spent hours on the Internet but cannot seem to get anywhere.
We know the dates and locations of birth for our mother and father. We also
know this information for a few of our family members that are now deceased.
-- Kim & Tammy
A:
While it is true that the Internet is offering many Web sites devoted to genealogy,
some researchers discover that these sites have their limitations when it comes
to researching twentieth-century ancestors.
If your parents are still alive, you will certainly want to talk to them. Ask them what they remember about growing up. Write down the names of family members that they mention. Try to get an idea of how old they were at the time of the events they share.
You will also want to order their birth certificates. You may be able to order
these online through VitalRec.com. While
some states are allowing orders online, others have legislation that protects
birth records for a set number of years. For those states, you may need to go
through the county where they were born in order to get a copy of the birth
record.
If your parents were born prior to 1920, you will also want to begin to look
for them in the census records. If they were alive in 1900, you may be able
to find them through Genealogy.com's 1900
Census Subscription. If they were not alive that far back, then you will
want to turn your attention to the microfilmed census records for the 1920 census.
Finding Families
Q:
I have found the name of my grandfather, Barrett Ingram and where he died. How
can I find out if he had any children other than my mother? -- Linda
A:
In researching your grandfather's life, you will come into contact with a wide variety of record types. Many of these will hold clues as to the names and possibly the ages of his children.
Depending on when your mother was born, you will want to search the census records. A search of the 1920, 1910 and 1900 census may give you information about additional children born to Barrett Ingram.
Also look into probate records. If he left a will, he probably mentioned the
names of all of his children in it. If there isn't a will, it is possible that
the probate record will include receipts of a published newspaper item that
mentions the names of the children.
You might also want to see if there are microfilms of birth records for where your mother was born. At the very least there may be an index to the births for the area. Usually such indexes list the names of the father and mother allowing you to perhaps identify additional children.
Early
Immigrant Arrivals
Q:
I am new to the art of genealogy searches, I am very interested in tracking
my father's family and I've made it as far back as the mid 1600s. I want to
delve deeper and try to pinpoint the day my ancestors came to Philadelphia.
I think the family was a part of William Penn's party, but how do go about looking
for ships and the travelers there on? -- Karen
A:
Passenger lists for those arriving in the United States were not begun until
the year 1820. At that time the government required that the customs agents
take a list of those individuals traveling on the ships that stopped at the
various ports. These early passenger lists only included the names of the individuals,
his or her gender, and age. Once in awhile you would also get the occupation
and the country from which the individual came.
Information on our ancestors that arrived prior to 1820 will not be found in
a standard passenger list. You may find information in a published volume though.
The best resource for this is the compiled index done by P. William Filby, and
now available online through Genealogy.com.
The Immigrant and Passenger List Index, a multi-volume work compiled
by Filby is now part of Genealogy.com's International
and Passenger Records Subscription.
This multi-volumed work may also be available through your local public library
if they have a good genealogy department. This set is generally considered part
of the reference collection, and therefore is not allowed to be removed, you
may have access to it without realizing it.
Massachusetts
Research
Q:
I am seeking birth and death dates for Mary Bass who married Captain John Capen
in Braintree, MA 20 Sept. 1647. And her parents. -- Pepelegs
A:
Research in New England, especially Massachusetts, can be made easier or more
difficult by the great number of records and resources available. It is because
so many records and resources exist, that it can also be difficult. Many families
had generation after generation of individuals with the same names for the children.
This can make it difficult to pin down a particular child in a family as definitely
being the right one.
You will want to search all available Massachusetts resources such as those
available on CD-ROM
and on the Internet. You will want to start by visiting Genealogy.com's Family
Finder search page. By searching on your ancestor's name, you'll be able
to find out what pages and CD-ROMs may include information on Mary Bass.
If you know where she was married, you will want to concentrate your research on that town. It is likely that she was living with her parents in that town before she was married. Searching land and probate records for BASS men may prove fruitful.
Rhonda R. McClure is a professional genealogist specializing in celebrity trees
and computerized genealogy. She has been involved in online genealogy for fifteen
years. She is the author of the award-winning The
Complete Idiot's Guide to Online Genealogy, now in its second edition.
She is the author of four how-to guides on Family
Tree Maker. In late 2001, she wrote The
Genealogist's Computer Companion. She is a contributing editor to Biography
Magazine with her "Celebrity Roots" column and a contributing writer
to The History Channel Magazine. Her latest book is Finding
Your Famous and Infamous Ancestors. She may be contacted at rhondagen@thegenealogist.com.
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