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15 answers

All the free information you want can be found here.

http://free-genealogy-info.zoomshare.com/

I call it my bible and I hope it helps you to achieve what you plan to do. Good luck.

2007-01-28 11:06:37 · answer #1 · answered by lollipoppett2005 6 · 0 0

Hey Livewireguy,

Hmm, sort out your family tree. Does this mean that you have tons of data and need to organize it? Ancestry.com offers online trees. But then, do you really want your family tree draft online?

You can organize and sort out your family tree by using Genealogy Software intended for that purpose, several listed below. I use Family Tree Maker, others use Rootsmagic, and there are Free packages too. The most that these cost is $30.00 dollars.

FTM keeps track of Vital Records (Birth, Marriage, Death) certificates, pictures, notes, letters, wills, anything you can scan in can be associated with an individual on the tree. Your links from parent to children are complete from top to bottom. You can see where you need to do more work, you can print various representations of your tree, or you can plod along one person at a time doing a fantastic job.

After you have a tree you are happy with, then, you can export a GEDCOM file (standard genealogy share file), and post it on any one of the sites that allows that. If you are collaborating with others, you can simply keep the master on your own computer, and upload the Current Version of a GEDCOM file.

This allows you to share a branch with one side of the family and not show them the other branch, a benefit for simplicity.

If it is information you are looking for, starting with genealogy software gives you search engines and free access to pay sites for a few months too.

2007-01-30 11:31:41 · answer #2 · answered by BuyTheSeaProperty 7 · 0 0

Why not buy a family history magazine and get an idea that way. They are pretty informative.

By the way don't expect to hoover up all your ancestors on the web. You can only get so far for free, (I'll give you a couple of sites to start with) and then you'll have to start paying, or visiting Record Offices where your ancestors lived. First gather all the info you can from living relatives, this stuff is gold dust.

Family Search Site (all info needs to be verified though it does have good valid entries of the 1881 Census)
http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/frameset_search.asp

FreeBMD (Gives you references to buy Birth, Marriage and Death Certs, then you have to pay out £7 for each cert)
http://www.freebmd.org.uk/cgi/search.pl

2007-01-28 07:16:54 · answer #3 · answered by efes_haze 5 · 0 0

they have get entry to to various digitized files like beginning, lack of existence, marriage registries, ocean liner passenger lists, telephone directories, nationwide census files. So once you've an uncommon call, you'll locate it really easily. "John Smith", that's type of harder. they do no longer have strong files for all centuries for all countries. round 1840-1940 in Britian is okay. they don't get entry to files for residing human beings, so that you won't be able to bypass very present day. various the registries do not provide correct dates, in user-friendly words quarter-3 hundred and sixty 5 days. i imagine you may in certain circumstances purchase copies of man or woman beginning/lack of existence certificate with the help of the positioning. Then they flow-search for with different individuals and provide you with tricks if it feels like your John Doe born in Durham in 1912 is an same as their J. Doe born in Durham on a million April 1912, so that you may merge tips in case you've faith the different member's documents. you may also contact different individuals, similar as Y!A. they are including extra digitized docments each and every of the time, so merely because they do no longer have some particular list yet, would not recommend they received't sometime. you may also import and export GEDCOM information (Mormon documents format utilized by technique of maximum kinfolk tree software). that's no longer ideal, notwithstanding it extra often than not works.

2016-12-03 03:57:44 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Hi there

You might wish to contact the Times newspaper, a couple of months ago they were giving away suitable CD software in order for you to trace your history.

I cannot remember exactly what it was called but it ran over a weekend; first part Sat and second part Sun.

Might be worth giving them a shout?

Cheers

2007-01-28 06:36:05 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Ancestry.com

2007-01-31 03:48:29 · answer #6 · answered by Duffer 6 · 0 0

www.igiworldwide.com
www.familysearch.org
www.genealogy.com
wwww.ancestry.com
www.familytreesearcher.com
www.genesreunited.co.uk
1901censusonline.com
www.kindredkonnections.com
www.onegreatfamily.com

Also your local County Hall should hold all the Census records from 1841 (i think that eyar is correct!) and your local Library is a good way to get hold of parish records

2007-01-28 06:36:15 · answer #7 · answered by Helen S 1 · 0 0

www.familysearch.com just type in a relatives name and the state they lived in. I had better luck finding deceased relatives than ones still living.

2007-01-28 06:32:16 · answer #8 · answered by Lynz 1 · 0 0

So do I so I'll log on to you and nick the info you receive from our cous's

ATB Red

2007-01-28 07:42:18 · answer #9 · answered by Redmonk 6 · 0 0

Try this site. I hope it works for you.
https://www.familyrelatives.org/treequest/jsp/customer/index.jsp

2007-01-28 06:34:05 · answer #10 · answered by destroyed-by-madness 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers