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Performing a Genealogy Search

Many people perform genealogy searches today because they are vary interested in learning about their histories. A genealogy search can help to find information about the past and to have it recorded easily so that future generations can add to it. If you are looking to perform a genealogy search you will need to follow a few useful tips for the process to make it more effective.

 

First, you’ll need to start your genealogy search by talking with family members for assistance. Your parents, grandparents and other members of your family tree can help you with getting information on your family history. Also, check with any family artifacts that they may have. This can help you with your genealogy search because you will have the information needed to get the search to be more effective. These artifacts include birth and death certificates, marriage information, diaries and military records. Photo albums can help with the genealogy search too, as you can get information on what types of people were in the family at certain points in history.

If someone in your family is working on a genealogy search alongside with you it always helps to work together on the genealogy search. Of course, visiting family members always helps. In fact, if you know of anyone who has worked or lived with one of your older family members it never hurts to talk with them as well.

You should check your locality in your genealogy search too. By going to local courthouses, churches, schools and other areas you can get information on civil records from your family history, including mortgages and property transfers. The Bureau of Vital Statistics can give you copies of certificates involving mortgages and other transfers.

Historical societies are especially interested in working on genealogy searches. Also, religious groups like the Mormon Church and Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints have extensive genealogical searches that can especially help. Be sure to get references from these groups for help in the future with your genealogy search.

Of course, there are some problems you may get into during your genealogy search. Cases where family members were adopted can be a problem. If you can find information on the biological parents of an adopted member you can easily progress through working on the genealogy search.

Sometimes there are no marriage records for some couples. By checking newspaper documents and other church bulletins you can get details on possible weddings involving your ancestry if you cannot find marriage records.

Sometimes a family member can disappear from a genealogy search altogether. Causes for this include marriages, relocations to other parts of the world and changes in politics over history. Some countries may not even exist anymore, thus deleting past records.

If you are having a hard time with a genealogy search you can consult a professional genealogist for your genealogy search. The Board of Certification of Genealogists, located in Washington, D.C., can help. The Denver-based Association of Professional Genealogists can also help.

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THE NEWS JOURNAL/JENNIFER CORBETT » The Iron Hill Genealogy Project -- 11 am-1:30 pm Feb. 11 at Hockessin Public Library, 123 Valley Road, Hockessin; Noon-1:30 pm Feb. 15 at Wilmington Public Library, 10 E. 10th St., Wilmington; 6:30-8 pm Feb.

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The old court house was built in 1903, in a beautiful Romanesque Revival style, and the exposed vaulted cathedral type ceiling, with english varnished woodwork, with massive iron braces and wood is a beautiful sight to see in the original courtroom ...

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Everett is an English professor at the University of Southern California and author of 17 other novels. • "All I Did Was Shoot My Man" by Walter Mosley, who appeared for the Bee Book Club in 2010 (Riverhead, $26.95, 336 pages): The fourth entry in the ...

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Dr Ramirez concluded the first episode with manuscripts which demonstrated the legitimacy of William the Conqueror to hold the English throne with a genealogy stretching five metres in length, the work of Matthew Paris, a monk at St Albans widely ...

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