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Genealogy Tech Talk

Genealogy Tech Talk. Spanish. Basic Research Strategy. START WITH YOURSELF & MOVE BACKWARDS. Get Organized (fill out a pedigree chart) Talk to Ancestors Research in the U.S. Census Research in Vital Records. Basic Research Strategy. Ancestry.com. Ancestry.com.

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Genealogy Tech Talk

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  1. Genealogy Tech Talk Spanish

  2. Basic Research Strategy • START WITH YOURSELF & MOVE BACKWARDS. • Get Organized (fill out a pedigree chart) • Talk to Ancestors • Research in the U.S. Census • Research in Vital Records

  3. Basic Research Strategy

  4. Ancestry.com

  5. Ancestry.com The Home Edition of Ancestry.com also has user-contributed data such as family trees.

  6. HeritageQuest

  7. WorldCat

  8. Exercise 1 What can we learn by reading a census page?

  9. Census Basics Each decade, enumerators have used different modes of travel to take them from interview to interview. (Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Public Information Office.)

  10. A word of caution… • Census research is not always straightforward • The census misrecords a name, or there is name variation. • The census indexer misreads a name • The family story is wrong • Examples: • Mason Edgar McCarty (actual name) -> Nathan E. McCarty (census misrecords) -> Wattan E. McCarty (indexer misreads)

  11. A word of caution cont’d… Vincenzia Carbone immigrated in 1915 from Corleone, Sicily --> after living in the U.S. she changed her name to the English version: Virginia Carbone

  12. A word of caution cont’d… Great-Grandfather Jake McCarty -> is actually Great-Great-Grandfather Jacob McCarty

  13. Vital Records Birth, marriage and death records. Free internet sites to look for Vital Records include: USGen Web: http://usgenweb.org/ Cindy’s List: http://www.cyndislist.com/usvital.htm Death Indexes & Records: http://www.deathindexes.com/ Centers for Disease Control: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/w2w.htm Genealogy Roots Blog: http://genrootsblog.blogspot.com Family History Library Catalog: http://www.familysearch.org/eng/Library/FHLC/frameset_fhlc.asp

  14. Exercise 2 How can we request a copy of an original Social Security application using Ancestry.com?

  15. Social Security Record • Full name • Full name at birth (including maiden name) • Present mailing address • Age at last birthday • Date of birth • Place of birth (city, county, state) • Father’s full name “regardless of whether living or dead” • Mother’s full name, including maiden name, “regardless of whether living or dead” • Sex and race • Ever applied for SS number/Railroad Retirement before? Yes/No • Current employer’s name and address • Date signed • Applicant’s signature

  16. Newspapers and Obituaries

  17. Newspapers and Obituaries Local Public Libraries (small community newspapers on microfilm) Statewide Repositories (Sutro Library - Branch of the California State Library with a large genealogy and family history resource collection.) Major Commercial Digitization Projects – ProQuest has digitized The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune, The Atlanta Constitution, etc. ProQuest has a product called ProQuest Obituaries that extracts just the obituary from these papers. Genealogy Bank - Newsbank offers access to the San Jose Mercury News. Ancestry’s home subscription also offers a number of digitized newspapers. Free Digitized Newspapers - The Library of Congress has started a major newspaper digitization project called Chronicling America.

  18. City Directories • City Directories are the predecessor to today’s phone books. The bulk of them were published in the period 1860-1930. They listed city residents (Name, Home address, Job title, Place of employment) and city institutions. City directories are great tools for genealogists for two reasons: • They track individuals in the years between censuses. • They provide an annual snapshot of a city: its churches, schools, street addresses and other basic information that researches find useful. • There are a number of places that tend to hold city directories in print format e.g. your local public library. Digitized city directories are available from a number of websites. Ancestry offers some digitized directories. USGenWeb might also have some. Increasingly, book digitization projects such as Google Books at http://books.google.com/ and the Open Content Alliance/Internet Archive at http://www.archive.org/ include digitized copies of city directories.

  19. Local Histories & Family Histories Local histories were a popular genre for subscription-based publishers. Canvassers would gather historical information about the county while simultaneously selling the publication. As a result, these books are packed with detail about local residents. County histories typically record the history of each town and township in a county, describe the founding of institutions such as churches and schools, and contain biographical sketches of county residents. Most family histories were self-published in small runs and are fairly rare. The bulk of family histories published in the United States describes early Anglo-American families, because these families were the most popular subject for genealogical publishing before the 1970s. In the 1970s, the genealogical field broadened, and a more diverse group of Americans published their family history.

  20. Local Histories & Family Histories WorldCat To locate a print history of… A county: (name) county, (state) – history (name) county, (state) – biography Example: Santa Clara County, California – History or Santa Clara County, California - Biography A family: (Surname) family Example: McCarty family

  21. Local Histories & Family Histories Family History Library catalog at http://www.familysearch.org/eng/Library/FHLC/frameset_fhlc.asp Use the “surname search” option.

  22. Exercise 3 Locate a family history for the McCarty family who lived in Pocahontas County, West Virginia in HeritageQuest & Ancestry.com

  23. Cemetery Records WorldCat To locate a print index… County, state - genealogy or perform a keyword search Example: Santa Clara County, California – Genealogy Or Jewish Cemeteries Istanbul

  24. FindAGrave.com

  25. Immigration Research • Passenger records • Naturalization records Colonial era to 1820: In these early period of immigration, passenger lists were fairly spare- they did not record a great deal of information about the immigrants. 1820-1880: More manifests exist from this time period, and many were preserved and microfilmed by the National Archives. 1880-1957: For this period, detailed manifests exist for most U.S. ports. Many of the records are available digitally through commercial and free websites. For the post-1820 era, researchers can see the original passenger lists on microfilm. The National Archives’ website at http://www.archives.gov/genealogy/immigration/passenger-arrival.html lists what records are available on microfilm.

  26. Immigration Research Castle Garden and Ellis Island were arrival stations for international passengers traveling to New York City. Castle Garden was active from 1855 to 1890, and Ellis Island served from 1892 to 1954. • Ellis Island Database: http://www.ellisisland.org/ • Castle Garden Database: http://www.castlegarden.org/

  27. Passenger Records on Ancestry.com Ancestry has been aggressively digitizing the microfilmed passenger lists from the National Archives, covering the period of 1820-1957. These records are similar to those included in the Ellis Island database, but also cover other ports such as New Orleans, Boston, Philadelphia, and San Francisco.

  28. Exercise 4 What can we learn by reading a passenger record?

  29. Naturalization Records Naturalization is the legal process whereby immigrants become citizens. The naturalization process changed over time in the U.S. Colonial Period: Naturalization was uncommon in this period. British subjects did not need to naturalize when coming to the American colonies. Some non-British immigrants did take an oath of allegiance to the British crown, and scattered records of those oaths exist. 1790-1906: During this period, naturalization records were filed at a local court. Women automatically assumed their husband’s naturalization status during this period, so few women are well documented in the naturalization records of this era.

  30. Naturalization Records 1906-1922: In 1906, the Federal government standardized the naturalization process under a new administrative body, the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization. Naturalization records from this period contain a great deal of information, including place of birth, date of birth, port and date of entry, name of ship, and names of spouses and children. 1922-2002: In 1922, Congress passed a law ending the automatic naturalization of women married to naturalized citizens. This motivated more immigrant women to naturalize than in previous years. Otherwise, the naturalization process remained largely the same until 2002, when immigration and naturalization was placed under the authority of the Department of Homeland Security.

  31. Naturalization Records Christina Schaefer’s Guide to Naturalization Records of the United States is an essential reference work for locating where the records of a particular county or state are held.

  32. Naturalization Records Another option for researchers is to search for ancestors in foreign records prior to immigration. For example, if an ancestor immigrated from England in 1885, researchers can search for them in the 1881 British Census.

  33. International Research • Ancestry.com (Offers some foreign Census records, Address Books, Discussion Boards etc.) • Family History Library (Do a Place Name search to see what’s available on microfilm) • JewishGen (Great place for Jewish ancestry research worldwide) • The Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names – Yad Vashem (Find Holocaust records) • WorldCat (Search for print material such as census, burials, etc. for ILL) • ShtetlSeeker database from JewishGen (A geographic tool to search current and historical places in Europe, North Africa, Central Asia and the Middle East.) • The Internet (Perform a keyword search using your favorite search engine)

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