Unofficial Guide to FamilySearch.org

Unofficial Guide to FamilySearch.org
Author: Dana McCullough
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2020-08-04
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 144030078X

Master the #1 Free Genealogy Website! Discover your ancestry on FamilySearch.org, the world's largest free genealogy website. This fully-updated in-depth user guide shows you how to find your family in the site's databases of more than 3.5 billion names and millions of digitized historical records spanning the globe. Learn how to maximize all of FamilySearch.org's research tools—including hard-to-find features—to extend your family tree in America and the old country. In this book, you'll find: • Step-by-step strategies to craft search queries that find ancestors fast • Practical pointers for locating your ancestors in record collections that aren't searchable • Detailed overviews of FamilySearch.org's major U.S. collections, with helpful record explanations to inform your research • Guidance for using FamilySearch.org's vast record collections from Europe, Canada, Mexico and 100-plus countries around the world • Tips for creating and managing your family tree on FamilySearch.org • Secrets to utilizing user-submitted genealogies, the site’s revamped Digital Library with digitized family history books, and the FamilySearch catalog of 2.4 million offline resources. • Expanded coverage of the FamilySearch mobile app, and updates on FamilySearch-compatible services and apps • A new chapter on accessing records on-site at the Family History Library, local FamilySearch Centers and affiliate libraries • Worksheets and checklists to track your research progress • Illustrated step-by-step examples teach you exactly how to apply these tips and techniques to your own research. Whether you're new to FamilySearch.org or you're a longtime user, you'll find the guidance you need to discover your ancestors and make the most of the site's valuable resources.

Palatines to America

Palatines to America
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1982
Genre: Palatine Americans
ISBN:

The Palatines to America Ancestor Chart project is a collection of thousands of ancestral charts showing the direct lines of many past and present Palatines to America (Pal-Am) members. The collection serves as Pal-Am's surname exchange file to connect people with common ancestors. Names in some volumes are abstracted and indexed from the ancestor charts submitted and updated by members of the Pal-Am as early as 1985, and continue to be added to, updated, and published here in subsequent volumes. The indexes provide names, dates, and places of births, christenings, marriages, and deaths of ancestors from Alsace, Austria, Bohemia, Denmark, England, France, Germany, Holland, Ireland, Poland, Prussia, Scotland, Sweden, Wales, and elsewhere as early as the 1500's. Some settled in Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and elsewhere in the 1600's. Some settled in Canada, Connecticut, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, and elsewhere in the 1700's. Some moved to New Brunswick and Ontario (Canada), Italy, Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wisconsin, and elsewhere in the 1800's. Later descendants also immigrated to Bermuda (West Indies), Colorado, Louisiana, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington D.C., and elsewhere.

Official Guide to Ancestry.com, 2nd edition

Official Guide to Ancestry.com, 2nd edition
Author: George G. Morgan
Publisher: Turner Publishing Company
Total Pages: 309
Release: 2008-10-01
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 1618589865

Whether you are coming to Ancestry.com for the first time or have used it for years, you need The Official Guide to Ancestry.com. Written by noted genealogist and lecturer George G. Morgan, this official guide takes you inside the #1 website for family history research for an unprecedented tour. This second edition includes chapters on the new search at Ancestry, MyCanvas, and Ancestry DNA. In addition, it helps you create and develop your own Family Tree, explore obscure databases you didn't know existed, and more. You've always known Ancestry.com was a valuable resource. Now you can learn to use it like never before.

The Genealogy Guide : Trace Your Family History

The Genealogy Guide : Trace Your Family History
Author: R.K.
Publisher: 大賢者外語
Total Pages: 53
Release:
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN:

Do you want to know exactly who your ancestors were: where they lived; what they did for a living; whether that story of highwaymen, criminals and corrupt relatives is factual, or a figment of Grandma's over-active imagination? Genealogy - defined as "an account of the descent of a person or family through an ancestral line", is a high faluting description of what, to the rest of us, is known simply as "tracing the family tree". Today, many of you are eager to trace your own family histories, but you don't know where to start. That's why you need The Genealogy Guide! The Genealogy Guide is like a complete course in tracing family histories.

Ancestor Chart Index

Ancestor Chart Index
Author: Des Moines County Genealogical Society
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 19??
Genre: Des Moines County (Iowa)
ISBN:

Genealogy 101

Genealogy 101
Author: Barbara Renick
Publisher: Thomas Nelson Inc
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2003-04-23
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 1418540919

A recent Maritz Poll reported that 60% of Americans are interested in their family history. And with good reason. Through genealogy, you can go back into history to meet people who have had more influence on your life than any others -- your ancestors. And the better you get to know your ancestors, the better you will get to know yourself: the who's and what's and why's of you. Barbara Renick, a nationally-known lecturer on genealogy, tells the uninitiated researcher the steps needed to find out who their ancestors really were, and brings together for even the more experienced genealogical researchers the important principles and practices. She covers such topics as the importance of staying organized and how to go about it; where and how to look for information in libraries, historical societies, and on the internet; recognizing that just because something is in print doesn't mean it's right; and how to prepare to visit the home where your ancestors lived. Genealogy 101 is the first book to read when you want to discover who your ancestors were, where they lived, and what they did.