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Is there a website that's safe to put names into, and one that's free so I can figure out my family tree?

2007-10-23 13:27:42 · 4 answers · asked by LOSTfann 2 in Arts & Humanities Genealogy

4 answers

I am curious; why would you put names into a website? Unless it is password protected to the Nth degree.
You can use programs; better yet, just type things into a word document. It works much better than any genealogy program.

To look for your family tree, try:
The "easy way" would be to hire a professional genealogist.

Due to the amount of information required to do a fairly decent family tree, if you go back more than just a few generations, you will find it to be VERY time intensive. PCs now have humongous storage on their hard drives; but, if you COULD put everything into the computer, you will soon find it is very difficult to organize all that information. I currently have more than 100 MB of info, and most of it is not even in the computer YET.

If you are sincerely interested in your ahnentafel, your genealogy, you will need to be dedicated and organized. So, try these sites and suggestions:

The biggest expense will be TIME; I have spent hundreds of hours and have so much left to compile.
Remember, no matter where you obtain the information, there are mistakes (yes, I include "official" documents, such as birth certificates, marriage licenses, death certificates, whatever). My maternal grandmother's tombstone doesn't even have her name correct!
Anyhew, as to searching, try these:
Free sites: there are several to choose from. Start with:
http://www.searchforancestors.com/...

http://www.censusrecords.net/?o_xid=2739...

http://www.usgenweb.com/

http://www.census.gov/

http://www.rootsweb.com/

http://www.ukgenweb.com/

http://www.archives.gov/

http://www.familysearch.org/

http://www.accessgenealogy.com/...

http://www.cyndislist.com/

Assuming they emigrated from Europe, start with Ellis Island and the Battery Conservancy sites:
http://www.ellisisland.org
http://www.castlegarden.org
For those with native American ancestry, try:
http://www.tribalpages.com/

For a fee, try a DNA test:
When you really want to know where your ancestors came from, try such sites as: www.familytreedna.com, dnatribes.com, dnaancestryproject.com, and, of course, the National Geographics Genotype program, https://www3.nationalgeographic.com/geno...
For Jewish ancestry, try:
www.israelgenealogy.com
Have a look at these sites these are South African ones,
http://genealogy.about.com/od/south_afri...
http://www.rupert.net/~lkool/page2.html....
http://www.jewishgen.org/safrica/website...
http://southafricanfamilyhistory.wordpre...

Meaning of names:
http://www.winslowtree.com/surname-meani...

http://www.familysearch.org/eng/search/f...

Finding live people:
Two good places I use are www.zabasearch.com and www.peoplefinder.com

Don't forget, use your local library. Ours (a small one, yet) has www.ancestry.com and www.heritagequest.com, as well as periodicals, books and guidance from an experienced genealogist.

Keep good notes on where you find what: sources are very important.

I became interested in genealogy when I was a small lad, before I started to school, as my Mom would tell me about her parents, my Dad's parents, and on back. That is also when I first got used to the idea of "the power of 2": You have 2 parents, they each have 2 parents, and so on. 5 generations ago, you would have had 16 g-g-g-grandparents; by 10 generations ago, the number would be 512 "grandparents"; by 35 generations ago, the number is 16,179,869,184 persons (compared to a total of 6,700,000,000 people alive on Planet Earth today). In other words, basically every one on earth can trace their COMMON ancestry back to within the last 34 generations! (Or, since Medieval Times.)

Good luck!

2007-10-23 15:33:42 · answer #1 · answered by Nothingusefullearnedinschool 7 · 1 0

Usually, names of living people are left out of public forums in genealogy.

Ancestry.Com's Ancestry World Tree has a policy in not putting in for public viewing any living person who was born 1930 and after.

Don't take as fact everything you see in family trees on any website, free or paid. They are user submitted and most is not documented. Even when you see the same information repeatedly by many different submitters, that is no guarantee it is correct.
A lot of people copy without verifying.

2007-10-23 14:24:47 · answer #2 · answered by Shirley T 7 · 0 0

His agoraphobic cousin -- No Gogh gets missed because he's scared to come outside long enough to get on the family tree.

2016-05-25 07:03:59 · answer #3 · answered by jerry 3 · 0 0

maybe Genealogy.com???

2007-10-23 13:41:40 · answer #4 · answered by marsh 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers