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Wednesday, 9th December 2009

Using the web to track your ancestors

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Published Date: 04 October 2006
BY ITS very nature the internet has an incalculable number of sites which may help the ancestor hunter put flesh and blood onto the bones of that skeletal scaffolding which you are slowly building up. Here are a few sites that are definitely worth getting to know.
Genuki

This is the place to zoom in on that city or village or corner of Scotland where your forebears lived out their lives.

The site arranges its treasury of information into four tiers:

  • The British Isles

  • Scotland

  • Scottish regions

  • Scottish parishes



  • Have a look at all of these and get used to the format. At each level there will be sections on archives and libraries, newspapers, poorhouses and schools, social life and customs and much, much more.

    Quick tip:

    Local family history associations are becoming more and more common and provide a really useful service to anyone wanting to know more about the area. Out-of-town members are welcomed.

    Now get down to the region that you have identified as the soil from which you spring. Scroll though and see the wealth of material you can access.You will find old maps and directory entries, articles on trades and industries and a ragbag of goodies that defies cataloguing or listing. You can go down to the next level - the very parish where all those baptisms, marriages and burials took place. Dip into the site and be delighted.Familysearch.orgThe mighty site of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It describes itself as "the largest collection of free family history, family tree and genealogy records in the world" and few would argue with that.For anyone seeking Scottish roots, it is worth every minute of your time getting to know this site. In particular look out for:
    • The birth, marriages, deaths search facilities
    • The simple Census searches for England, Wales, USA and Canada which should catch any of your wandering ancestors
    • The ancestral files which may lead you to someone else's research that overlaps with yours
    • The articles and tips which give you the benefit of the experience of the world's greatest genealogical organisation
    • Quick tip:

      Try the search facility on Familysearch.org which allows you to enter two parents and see what offspring appear on those enormous Salt Lake City computers.

      Scottish Genealogy Society

      This is the site of the distinguished Scottish Genealogy Society. A good resource, it is useful in particular for the family history index.

      This index has over 2,500 separate files deposited by researchers with the society over a period of almost 50 years. Each file contains research on a specific family or number of families and there may be a number of files for each one. They range from one page to substantial family histories running into the hundreds of pages. They may take the form of research notes, random jottings, family group sheets, pedigree charts, family trees, original documents, transcripts, newspaper cuttings, photographs or fully written histories.

      Keep your fingers crossed for this one.

      Ancestral Scotland

      As you would expect from the site of the folk who run Scotland's tourist industry, VisitScotland has put together a comprehensive package for those of you wishing to visit the hills of home.

      Despite the image of the clearances and a mass movement of people into the towns, in the 19th century many folk stayed close to their ancestral roots. Once you have identified where this was, this site is for you.

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  • Last Updated: 03 October 2006 11:37 AM
  • Source: scotsman.com
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Tracing Tips
 
1

Angus Og,

Scottish Borders 29/10/2006 09:53:51

I recommend www.bordersfhs.org.uk , the Borders Family History Society - they have useful info on Borders ancestors, and a useful library.

2

Angus Og,

Scottish Borders 29/10/2006 09:58:11

Incidentally, www.highlandfhs.org.uk which looks similar is also a great resource for Highland ancestors.

Other Scottish family history societies can be found in the Members list at www.safhs.org.uk.

3

Cambusnethan,

Berne, Switzerland 21/02/2007 07:23:40

A really major site for internet genealogy in Scotland is the fantastic www.scotlandspeople.co.uk where one can find and purchase images of birth, death, marriage and census records.

4

Anne Sloan,

Roane County, Tennessee, USA 07/03/2007 17:51:47

I wrote a while ago that we had posted Waddell's "Annals of Augusta County, Virginia" (full of immigrants from Scotland and Ireland) on the website http://www.roanetnhistory.org and it is entirely searchable. We have now posted Peyton's "History of Augusta County" on the same site. Next will be some of the Kendrick collection of old letters of a man researching his ancestors and then will be Ramsey's "Annals of Tennessee"--it is 750 pages so will take awhile. Don't forget to come back and look to see what is being added. The people who settled these areas were mostly "Dissenters" so were mostly Irish and Scotch. I love tje "Scotsman".

5

Anne Sloan,

Roane County, Tennessee, USA 01/07/2007 17:14:51

Since I wrote in March '07 Ramsey's "Annals of Tennessee" is entirely posted, but second proot-reading is not yet completed. I have begun work on Wells' "History of Roane County, Tennessee"--not much of a history, but includes many lists of names. This book is not nearly as long as Ramsey (only 315 paes) and I will start Kerceval as soon as I finish Wells. I hope someone finds their ancestors in these books. The Ramsey history I found interesting, even without the genealogy. These sites are entirely searchable and more search capabilities have been added. We appreciate the Scotman's readers who have come to our site.


 

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