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How To Do A Family Tree – 4 Critical Public Resources
December 9, 2009 by Chris
Filed under Articles, Getting Started in Genealogy, Introduction to Genealogy, Lesson 2 Articles, Public Records
I thought it would be helpful to review the public resources available to you when trying to figure out how to do a family tree. We cover each of these in detail in The Genealogy Guide so I won’t go overboard here. Sometimes knowing the list of resources available is half the battle.
How To Do A Family Tree – Four Must Know Resources
- First of all, you need to know that much of the Social Security database can be accessed as a part of public record in the United States. This is a great place to start
- Other Government resources include the Office for Vital Records and the Department of Veteran Affairs
- Don’t overlook your local courthouse or other public records like those kept by the Knights of Columbus
- Finally, local records from the main ports of call in the US are a great source for immigration records
This is just the basics. What do you think? Am I missing a fundamental public resource? Use the comments area below to add your favorite basic public source for genealogy record hunting.
How to Do a Family Tree – Update on New Resource
December 30, 2008 by Chris
Filed under Blank Family Tree, Family Search The LDS, Genealogy Records 101
The Family Search website has added over 15 million new indexed records to its Record Search pilot, all from the 1850 and 1870 U.S. Censuses. The records are linked to the digital images of the originals. The new records can be searched for free at FamilySearch.org (Click Search Records, then Record Search pilot).
Chris
Scotland’s Greatest Story: www.ScotlandsGreatestStory.co.uk
Professional family history research & genealogical problem solving
(This posting is from Scottish Genealogy News and Events. Click the link to view the full article from its original source.)
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