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I have this beautiful family tree with over 1000 ancestors. The problem is, on some of them that I have birth/death location on, I have only part of the Information on the location.

Like with my Mother who was born in 1932 (no census info. yet) I know she was born in Boswell, Oklahoma. The state has changed since 1932 and I can't find out if Boswell was the town or county. If it was the town, I would like to know what county it was in.

It would be nice if there were a site that you could just input what you know and it gives you the Information that is missing.
Is there such a place or am I just dreaming?

2007-07-02 13:20:53 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Genealogy

I know how to do the research or I wouldn't have 1000's of people on my family tree.

Thank you so much I have found Boswell!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Great tips !!!!!!!!

I just thought there would be an easier way to fill the gaps!

Ok OK I was dreaming but atleast I didn't want it free!

2007-07-02 17:45:05 · update #1

9 answers

You are just dreaming. Gaps are what makes it fun. If you were a nature photographer, and every time you stepped out into the back yard, you saw a two-headed elk eating your roses, (just as a rainbow formed over the swimming pool) you'd soon tire of the sport. If you could enter a person's name in a magic web site and get all of the dates and places, plus a 3,000-word biography, it wouldn't be any fun.

This site will tell you what county a town is in, in the USA:
http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/townco/townco.pl

The Yahoo! search Directory will tell you what towns are in a county today; the path is
USA -> State -> County -> Towns in this County

Many (not all) US Gen Web State sites
http://www.usgenweb.net/
will have a brief history of county formation, and th ecounty sites will tell you when they were formed and from what other counties. Somewhere on the Web is an amazing animated map that shows how Virginia's counties formed.

Note that you still may not find out all you want. I have run into place names where the state has a town named that in one county and a county named that elsewhere. Alabama, for instance, has towns named "Madison" in Jefferson, Madison and Montgomery counties.

2007-07-02 13:44:08 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Boswell is located in CHOCTAW COUNTY, Oklahoma--71 miles Northeast of McKinney, Texas, and 100 miles NE of Dallas.
In the case of the census, if she and her family still lived there then, try checking the 1940 census. In the 2000 census, about 703 people still lived there.
I just typed in "Boswell, Oklahoma" in the Yahoo search, and it showed some 303,000 listings with just those words.
A very good genealogy site is www.familysearch.org. It is the huge Mormon site out of Utah. It is free, and has ancestor listings at least back to the 11th century and maybe before. You just type in the name you are searching for, and it will list out everybody in the world with that name or what is called a "soundex" or sound-alike listing. They have Ancestral Files, Pedigree Resource files, International Genealogical Index files, the US Social Security Death Index, and a Vital Records Index that they check for birth/christening, marriage, and death/burial. There is also www.rootsweb.com ; www.genealogy.com; www.genforum.genealogy.com (where you can look for others searching for the same name/info); and www.cyndislist.com that are also free sites.

2007-07-02 15:50:10 · answer #2 · answered by jan51601 7 · 0 2

Try this Latter Day Saint's website where they have information for all over the world. Just fill in the information like, first name, last name, the year that you want, and the country. If they have it listed it will come up and tell you town county state and country. www.familysearch.org Good Luck.

2007-07-02 13:29:49 · answer #3 · answered by Alwyn C 5 · 1 0

I observed that one ( properly a minimum of while i began typing ) guy or woman used "politically perfect" to describe what's going on in our society. I replace "politically perfect" with "communistic coverage". It helps me clarify what the beep is going on. You no longer stay in a unfastened society. you will conform or you would be taken to court docket till you're the two broke or broken. I examine an prolonged time in the past that a necessary physique of strategies to changing a society to Communism is to degrade its language. the place as a guy or woman won't be able to be confident of a words which skill. lookup the definition of Factoid its a super occasion. yet another may well be that a Christmas tree now has a sparkling call and the hot call is a already in use. think of approximately it, now a christmas tree is tied on your genealogy. i think of I going to pass get the biggest pine tree i will and beautify it in my backyard as a Christmas tree. i'm hoping its so impressive that somebody complains.

2016-10-03 10:59:35 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Though I don't think it exists yet, I think it's a great idea to have a place where you could upload your gedcom and it could identify WHERE the gaps are....but you would still have to find the information. Something that might help is to be able to visualize your genealogy, perhaps online, where you can easily navigate in between individuals and families to check what information is missing. If you're looking to put your family tree online, you may want to look at http://www.familypulse.org .

2007-07-02 15:51:34 · answer #5 · answered by genealogist84 4 · 1 0

Go to "Google" and type in Boswell, OK. It is located in Choctaw County. You will be able to access info.

M. Wagner

2007-07-02 13:42:46 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

First and foremost, start with the people who are living. Find out what they know. Talk with aunts and uncles, cousins, and so on - anybody who is part of your family. Get dates, locations, names, memories, stories - it's ALL important. Find out what they remember about people who are no longer living, too. Put all your information into a database that will help you organize it. The Mormon church offers a free one, "Personal Ancestral File," that you can download from their web site (they won't bug you in terms of their religion). Once you have included as much as you can from people who are living, start to search online sites, records, etc., for matching people and events. Computers have revolutionized genealogy in the last two decades, and there are ENORMOUS amounts of data available, as well as innumerable personal genealogical web sites.

Good luck in your search!

http://www.ldscatalog.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/CategoryDisplay?catalogId=10151&storeId=10151&categoryId=14000&langId=-1&cg1=13669&cg2=&cg3=&cg4=&cg5=.

http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin...
http://www.familysearch.org/eng/default....
http://www.ancestry.com

2007-07-02 15:13:51 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

I kinda like mapquest.com. That and the Thorndale/Dollarhide Map Guide to the US Federal Censuses work well together.

2007-07-02 13:40:30 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

http://www.rootsweb.com/~okchocta/
http://www.health.state.ok.us/program/vital/brec.html
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/howto/w2w/oklahoma.htm
http://www.rootsweb.com/~okccgs2/

Hope this Helps Oklahoma can be a little Tricky since many county lines have changed in the past 100 years. Hope this helps

2007-07-02 14:31:36 · answer #9 · answered by Mitchell 4 · 1 0

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boswell,_Oklahoma
Boswell is a small town in Choctaw co, Okla.

2007-07-02 13:27:56 · answer #10 · answered by wendy c 7 · 2 0

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