How to Start My Family History Research – Join a Local Family History Society

How to Start My Family History Research - Introduction

How to Start My Family History Research:

Join a Local Family History Society!

Joining a Local Family History Society!

Joining your local family history society can be a great way to learn about your family‘s past and connect with other people who are interested in genealogy. It is also an inexpensive way to gain access to resources you may otherwise not have access to.

Here are ten reasons why you should join a local family history society:

1. Access to Expertise:

Local family history societies often have members who are experts in various aspects of genealogy research. This can be incredibly helpful if youre stuck on a particular branch of your family tree or, you need help interpreting old documents among other things.

2. Networking:

Family history societies are great for networking with other genealogy enthusiasts. This can help you find connections that you may not have been able to find on your own. It can also help you learn more about the history of your family and/or find records that you may not have been able to find yourself.

3. Resources:

Local family history societies often have access to resources that you may not have been able to find on your own. This can include things like old documents, records, photos, books and lots, lots more.

4.  Learning:

Attending meetings and events hosted by a family history society is a great way to learn more about genealogy. You can learn the tips and tricks of the trade and get access to new resources that can help you with your research.

5. Saving Money:

Family history societies often offer discounts on products and services that can help you with your research. This can be a great way to save money on the cost of researching your family tree. It is also a good way to access resources that otherwise you may not be able to afford

6.  Sharing:

Joining a family history society is a great way to share your discoveries and stories about your family. You can also learn from other members and get ideas for further research.

7. Connection:

Joining a family history society is a great way to connect to your family’s past and to the other members of the society..

8. Socialising:

Attending events and meetings hosted by a family history society is a great way to meet other people with similar interests and socialise. It‘s also a great way to get to know other members and share stories about your families.

9. Fun:

Researching your family tree can be a fun and rewarding experience. Joining a family history society allows you to share your discoveries with other people who have the same interests, making the experience even more enjoyable.

10. Support:

It can be incredibly helpful to have a support system of a likeminded group of people who are as passionate about family history as you are. They can help provide you with much-needed support which is a great way to stay motivated and inspired as you research your family tree.

 

 

How to Start My Family History Research

My Password does not work!

My Password Does not Work!

If you try to log in but find you have forgotten your password :

  1. From the Login Page, Click the Lost your password? link underneath the login form .
  2. You will then be taken to the Lost Password page where you will be asked to enter your username or your email address.
  3. Once you enter your username or email address, Click the reset password button.
  4. You will then receive a email with the subject line: Password Reset Request for Warwick’s Genealogy Services
  5. When you open this email, Click the: Click here to reset your password link and you will be taken to a page where you can create a new  password.

How Do I Claim My Sign Up Gift?

How Do I Claim My Sign Up Gift?

To Claim Your Sign Up Gift:

  1. Login.
  2. Once you have logged in, Click the Admin Menu from the top navigation bar.
  3. From the drop down menu that appears, select the Request Sign-Up Gift option.
  4. On the page that appears Fill in the form with your details and choice of gift.
  5. Click Submit.
  6. When I receive the email I will, depending on your choice, either email you the item or send it to you through the mail ASAP.

How Do I Cancel My Membership

How Do I Cancel My Membership?

To Cancel Your Membership:

  1. Login.
  2. Once you have logged in, Click the Admin Menu from the top navigation bar.
  3. From the drop down menu that appears, select the Cancel Account option.
  4. On the page that appears Click the Cancel Link next to your Subscription Level.

Or:

Simply email me and request your membership to be cancelled and I will cancel your membership ASAP.

How Do I Update My Accounts Payment Details?

How Do I Update My Accounts Payment Details?

To update your account details:

  1. Login
  2. Once you have logged in Click the Admin Menu from the top navigation bar.
  3. From the drop down menu that appears, select the My Billing option.
  4. This will then take you to the page where your billing details can be updated!

Quick Tips for Successful Family History Research


Quick Tips for Successful Family History Research

(Tips obtained from the ancestry.com learning center)

1. Talk to elderly relatives

Your parents, aunts and uncles and grandparents may have a lot of information that can start you off in your research. Ask them what they know about their own parents and grandparents but also question them about what life was like for them when they were small. Family history is more than just names and dates and places – you should find out as much as you can about the people in your family if at all possible. The more information your relatives can provide for you, the better your starting point will be. Remember, they may not always be around for ever and a common complaint in family history is ‘If only I had asked my grandparents about their relatives when I was younger.

2. Work from the known to the unknown

Genealogical research is likened to following crumbs along a trail. You can’t jump ahead at any point and still be sure you are on the right track. Instead you have to work on a step by step basis looking for clues which we lead you to the next generation before them. Until you have proven a link with the preceding generation you can’t move on and still be sure you are researching the correct people. It is all too easy to jump ahead and end up tracing the ancestry of people who are not related to you.

3. Record your progress

In your researches you will amass a great deal of information so at every stage you need to know exactly where you are and what you have discovered. It is a good idea to draw a pedigree chart showing how everyone is related as this can then act as a handy reference work to your research. The ‘Family Tree’ feature found on the Ancestry.com.au site under the ‘My Ancestry’ tab will allow you to create a chart of your family in easy and simple steps.

4. Record your searches

As well as recording what you find, you will also need to record what you have looked for, especially if you haven’t found anything. If a particular record makes no mention of your ancestor, it is easy to simply not record the fact that you have looked at it. However, in a few months or years time you may return to that record and not recall that it has already been searched. Therefore to avoid duplicating searches and wasting your time, you should always note down details of all of the searches you have undertaken and the records you have consulted whether the results are positive or not.

5. Get a map

One of the problems researchers find is where they discover that their ancestors have moved into a town or parish from another locality. In order to make your research more effective it is worth locating the places where your ancestors lived on a map. If you do this you will then see where they lived in relation to other nearby towns and villages. This may provide you with clues as to where they may have moved from by looking at the road, rivers and other lines of communication. Similarly, you may find that there are several places of the same name in the country in which you are researching and a map will help make sure that you are concentrating on records of the correct locality and not the one of the same name three hundred kilometres away!

6. Consider spelling variants

There is no such thing as the correct way to spell your surname and only a little research back to the 1800’s will show you that names can be spelt in a wide variety of ways – sometimes even within the same document. Many people were not able to read or write and were reliant on someone else recording their name of important documents such as marriage certificates. That person would write down how they thought the name should be spelt, and this may be different as to how we would do it today. You will therefore need to be flexible in regard to the spelling of the name you are researching. For example, Whittaker, Whitaker and Wittaker would all be pronounced in the same way and could all therefore be encountered if you were researching a family of that name. Just because the spelling is different does not mean it is a different person being recorded.

7. Do not make assumptions

You can’t rely on your ancestors to have necessarily acted in the way in which you would have expected them to do. The majority of people are married after the age of 20 and have children in the 15 years or so after that. However, that isn’t the case for everyone. People in England could marry over the age of 12 (for girls) or 14 (for boys) prior to 1929. Similarly, some people might not marry until their 60’s perhaps. Many people might have a child prior to their marriage and some women were able to have children over a twenty five year period or more. It therefore pays not to assume anything about your ancestors and instead to make sure that you have covered all possible scenarios in your searches.

8. Work as effectively as possible

Many records are now being made available online and the internet has revolutionised family history research. It can now be carried out much more quickly and also from the comfort of your own home. It is therefore important to discover what information is available online and what information still has to be sought in person in the various archives and record offices. As with any transcribed and indexed material it is good practise to make sure that you also check with the original documents if at all possible to make sure that the online details are correct. Sites like Ancestry.com.au where you have access to digitised images of the original documents make this much easier. By discovering what information is available online you can therefore plan your research in an effective way so that when you have to make trips to an archive, you can maximise your research time there.

9. Share your findings

One of the benefits of researching your family tree is, of course, the fact that you will discover members of your extended family. Second, third and fourth cousins whose relatives have long since lost contact can soon be reunited. By sharing the results of your researches with your family, and the wider genealogical community, you will encounter other people who have also been working on the same ancestry. This is a great way to learn about extra information and family memorabilia which may not have passed down to your own side of the family. By sharing the results of your labours on sites like Ancestry.com.au, you add to the knowledge of the family history community and can reap the benefits of the research by others.

10. Join a Family History Society

There are thousands of family history societies around the world and it can be helpful to join the one which covers the area from where your ancestors originated. Similarly, you may also want to join the society in the area where you live so that you can attend their meetings. The societies do a lot of work making records from their locality available for researchers and they also provide a useful forum for swapping information and research. They also usually have an interesting education and lecture program from which you can learn about new research skills and sources. A list of societies can be found at http://www.cyndislist.com/society.htm.

How to Start My Family History Research – Find Out What Information Already Exists!

How to Start My Family History Research - Introduction

How to Start My Family History Research:

Find Out What Information Already Exists!

Depending on your circumstances, this first search can turn out to be a very rewarding one for you.

The kind of documents you should look for are those that can give you a persons vital information.

This can include, but not be restricted to:

  • Birth Certificates
  • Marriage Certificates
  • Death Certificates
  • Baptism Certificates
  • Family Bibles
  • School records
  • Military Records
  • Previous Research

These of course, may not be the only verifiable information you may obtain, with the more you can lay your hands on the better.

What is Family History?

What is Family History?

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Although the terms Genealogy and Family History are often interchanged, strictly speaking, if you only collected the Birth, Death and Marriage dates of your ancestors, you are only undertaking Genealogy research and not Family History research.

However, as there is no right or wrong way to research your family’s history, if this is all the information you wish to obtain that is perfectly fine. The choice is yours!

But, if you are anything like me, you love to find out all the details and want to know more than just the Birth, Death and marriage dates.

(For more clarification on this point, please read the post What is Genealogy?).

So, when we are talking about Family History, as it relates to the extremely popular and addictive pass time of researching your family ancestry (whether Maternal, Paternal or both), you are building on the research of “Genealogy” by finding out information about your ancestors that then adds the “colour” or “body” which allows you to build up the life story of each ancestor, thereby making the lives of each your ancestors real and relevant.

It is the how , the when, the where, and if possible the why the of their existence, and can include information on their everyday lives such as their work, their play, their loves, their fears and their personal relationships.

You can also think of it like this: genealogy is like a simple sketch on a piece of paper, while family history is the same sketch with the backgrounds, details and colour added.

It also places these events into the context of the social, economic and historical world in which your ancestors lived and can sometimes reveal surprising, and emotional stories that strengthens your understanding of who you are.

This research is then documented and shared with other family members and is quite often published as a book.

Scottish Naming Conventions

Scottish Naming Conventions!

Scottish Naming Conventions!

Scottish naming conventions, although not always followed, were very popular and were in use until approximately the last half of the nineteenth century.

These conventions are as follows:

Male Children

 

  • The family’s first son was named after his father’s father,
  • The second son was named after his mother’s father,
  • The third son was usually named after his father.

 

Female Children

 

  • The family’s first daughter was named after her mother’s mother,
  • The second daughter was named after the father’s mother,
  • The third daughter of the family was named after her mother.

 

Some Miscellaneous Conventions

 

  • With any extra children in the family, you could look back a further generation. For example, the fathers fathers father for males and the mothers mothers mother for females.
  • If there has been a child’s death in the family, later children may have been named after their dead sibling.
  • Middle names of ancestors were often the mother or grandmother’s maiden name.

 

Having said all that though, don’t take them as gospel as there were families that did not follow them and instead named their children after close friends or, even prominent figures in their society.

 

Hopefully though, you can get some benefit from this list of Scottish naming conventions but please remember to be careful, especially if you are trying to identify an ancestor who was born within the last 150 years or so.

 

Scottish Naming Conventions!