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Starting family history research - please add tips
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Joy | Report | 1 Jul 2010 22:23 |
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Joy | Report | 1 Jul 2010 22:24 |
There are no hard and fast rules; different people do things in different ways, and there is no one right way nor one wrong way. What suits one person may not suit another. I can give tips on what to do from a personal perspective, and hope that others will, too. |
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Joy | Report | 3 Jul 2010 22:20 |
Anyone like to add their thoughts? before I continue. |
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Nickydownsouth | Report | 3 Jul 2010 22:30 |
One useful tip is when you are doing a general search in a town/parish, make a note of all people with your ancestors surname, or similar allowing for poor/mistrancscribed spelling..... |
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Joy | Report | 3 Jul 2010 22:45 |
Thank you, Nicky. |
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TootyFruity | Report | 3 Jul 2010 23:50 |
Start with what you know and work back. |
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Rambling | Report | 4 Jul 2010 00:00 |
A lot of us only started to think about researching a family tree after there are few people left to ask... sit for a while and think of all the memories you can drag up from childhood...maybe who came for Christmas, whether when you visited aunts and uncles you travelled and to where...keep a note book handy, you will be surprised at the snippets of information that you didn't think you knew, that suddenly pop into your head from long ago. |
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Joy | Report | 17 Jul 2010 23:10 |
Only you know just how much you know about yourself and your immediate or distant family. Sometimes the memory needs a nudge. Do ask questions of relatives and friends; all too often one hears "I wish I had been interested enough to ask Mum and Dad, and Gran and Grandad, but now it is too late". |
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Joy | Report | 31 May 2011 17:37 |
I know that certificates cost money, but it is necessary sometimes to buy them in order to go backwards and be 99.99% certain that one's ancestral research is accurate. |
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Mark | Report | 31 May 2011 21:53 |
Ask family members - Not always that simple when your fostered or adopted but all leaflets and websites seem to say the same thing over and over again. |
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Nannylicious | Report | 31 May 2011 22:01 |
Never never rule anything out and keep a notepad of any little bits of information you come across. Something turned up recently that I had originally recorded about 4 years ago but had put to one side because I couldn't validate the information. |
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Joy | Report | 16 Jul 2012 21:46 |
Any more tips for starting out on the research road? |
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GlasgowLass | Report | 16 Jul 2012 22:18 |
Traditional Scottish Naming Pattern |
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MarieCeleste | Report | 16 Jul 2012 23:44 |
Be clear about what you want to achieve, and embark on the journey for the right reasons - don't become just a "name collector" or try to get as far back in time just because you can. |
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Robert | Report | 6 Sep 2012 23:08 |
If you can find who you are looking Try there middle name, For Example My Great Aunt was Born Jane Lilian, but on her marriage Cert. Its was Lilian Jane. He mother was Jane,so she grow up being called Lilian. Also be careful with stepparents My Grandmother was born Nash , but when my Grandmother in her twenties adopted her stepfathers name,so her marriage she used the surname Matthews not Nash , so it worth trying a combination of the names that have been called |
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JustDinosaurJill | Report | 6 Sep 2012 23:15 |
If you ask for help or information from us on here, a please and/or thank you will get you much further. I can only speak for myself but if I read a request for info and the poster hasn't bothered to say either or both, I click off and go look at the next post. |
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GlasgowLass | Report | 6 Sep 2012 23:38 |
One piece of advice that I forgot to add is simple...... |
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Malcolm | Report | 16 Sep 2012 18:07 |
Keep all family photographs safely no matter how recent, and especially the older B&W ones. Learn about acid free papers and photo storage methods. Write information on the back in pencil and cover that with acid free paper also. Scan them to files on a memory stick and copy the images to labelled CD's. Do not just leave them on your hard drive. Do the same with new digital images. They will be history to someone someday. |
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Robert | Report | 17 Sep 2012 11:15 |
i find when i have come up against a brick wall when researching my family, i will leave that section of that family alone for a few months then return to them. this enables me to look at it with a clear mind. as most of us sometimes take on more research than we can handle, and we confuse ourselves |
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Joy | Report | 15 Jan 2013 23:07 |
For Richard. |