Be careful using relationships from obituaries as your sole source of information for your database. Modern obituaries especially may: not mention all children may not distinguish children from step-children may not indicate which spouse was the parents of which children Any of these things can confuse later genealogists if you assume an obituary was entirely correct. Best bet is to transcribe it (or scan it) and look for other materials to back it up. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
Are you looking in other records besides census records for occupational clues on your ancestor? Estate inventories are good places to get an idea of what occupation your ancestor might have had. Those with city-dwellers in their family tree should use city directories for clues of this type. And don’t forget some European church records use occupations to distinguish men of the same names from each other. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
Are there any living relatives you haven’t talked to yet with your family history questions? Remember that cousins, near and distant, may have family items or memories that you don’t. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
Have you tried to determine if the state archives where your ancestor lived might hold records that could be helpful in your search? Remember that state archives could hold records created at the state level or county records that have been transferred to their control. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
Sometimes all of us need to admit that we’ve reached the end of our research on a particular person or a particular lineage. Maybe records have been destroyed or were not even created during the time period we need. Maybe your ancestor changed his name and the original simply will never be known. There are situations where, unless new records are discovered or finding aids are created, research will reach a standstill. Sometimes it’s good to know when there’s just no more you can do. The problem is that sometimes we reach that conclusion before we should. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
When looking for that relative’s obituary, look in more than one location. Try where they were living where they died, where they were born, where they lived the bulk of their life, where their children were living at the time of their death. You might be surprised where an obituary pops up. Of course, there may be no obituary at all. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
[the earlier version of this that went out was a “draft” that accidentally went live instead of this version] Remember that the month of Xber is actually October. Tip of the day readers familiar with their calendar history will know that X is the Roman number for ten and that the prefix “oct” means 8. That’s because before the calendar change of 1752, March was the first month of the year, making October the eighth month and not the tenth month. Chances are after the calendar change of 1752, Xber refers to December and that before the calendar change of 1752 it referred to October. Best advice: Record the month EXACTLY as written. If your software program doesn’t “like “Xber” then personally, I would leave the date blank […]
This post has been deleted in favor of the corrected one here. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
If you are looking for a specific piece of information–ask yourself “where could that be written?” Don’t focus initially on locating a birth record, instead think where could information about the birth be written? This might be a birth certificate, newspaper announcement, family bible, etc. Then try to access those sources. It might be that when you locate one of the items it provides a clue to help you actually locate the birth certificate. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
There are several places where you could locate signatures of your ancestor. Two good places are packets of estate papers (for receipts, etc.) and actual pension or bounty land applications. Estate papers would be (usually) a county level record and pension/bounty land applications are typically a federal record (except for Confederate pensions given by states). ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
There’s several counties in Kentucky where different individuals have transcribed the marriage records. Different people read things differently. I went through both sets of transcriptions. Good thing I did. The name of a husband of a relative was transcribed in two significantly different ways. One was so far off that I never would have found them in later records. Fortunately the second transcription was more accurate and helped me find more materials. If there are duplicate sets of transcriptions for a record use both–partiularly if the originals are not at your disposal. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
Have you considered the possibility that the indexer missed something when creating the index? It might be that the only way to be certain the name is not in the record is to look page by page. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
Don’t forget on 1840 census enumerations to look at both the left hand page and the right hand page. The left hand page includes slave numbers, information on individuals engaged in various types of employment (categories only, no names), and names of Revolutionary War pensioners. There might be a big clue hiding on the right hand page of that census–don’t forget to look, grandpa might be living with the family. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
Remember that what “killed” your ancestor might not be what actually “killed” him. Look for the secondary cause of death–that might have been the lingering illness that really was the culprit. Kidney failure might have been the result of something else. Don’t ignore those other illnesses listed on the death certificate. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
Does your ancestor have a series of deeds where he sells land over time? Have you looked closely at the place where the widow releases her dower? Is it the same wife every time? Might be a clue to multiple spouses. ———————————— Check out GenealogyBank’s Offer for Tip of the Day Fans!
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