So far, all of the research I've done has been by computer, except for family documents shared with me by relatives. I recognize and appreciate the fact that much of the information I've discovered on Ancestry is there only because someone did a lot of the original legwork in the pre-computer days.
Here are the resources that have helped me the most in my research:
Findagrave - this website is just amazing. People from all over the world visit cemeteries and contribute photographs of tombstones, transcribing the information on them. Some entries are created by family members or descendants, with detailed biographical information. Others are created by people who have no relationship with the people in the graves, but who wish to add to the body of knowledge. If a relative of that person wishes to add information, the creator of that entry can transfer it to the relative. A network is created where people can request a photo of a grave in a certain locale, and someone in that locale will provide it. I cannot express how valuable this website has been to me.
Google Maps - whenever I have clues to a location, I look it up on a map and explore the area. Exploring the streets, viewing buildings, and looking at the relationships between places, I have gained insight into my ancestors' lives that at times has broken through a wall in my research. This strategy has made my research immensely more real and tangible, and has greatly affected my understanding of the way of life of my forebears. I can go to street view and visit the actual places where my ancestors built their lives. I can take a snapshot of a building and include it in my documentation. If I find a plat of a town from colonial times, I can compare it to the current landscape and pinpoint the location of property owned. Street names have provided clues to my family's stories. The number of instances where this resource has helped me are countless.
Ancestry - this goes without saying. This database grows continually as members add documents and information. I have learned which sources to ignore - Ancestry trees, Family data, Millenium files - all of these are rife with errors due to amateurs' enthusiasm and lack of discipline! Their information is valuable only to pick up possible names to verify. With experience, I have learned which researchers are the most careful and accurate. I have actually contacted a few of these folks to find out more information. On Ancestry, there are indexes listing the names but not the actual information included in a variety of resources. There are also sources such as DAR applications, Census documents, and Veteran's pension applications which contain reliable information.
Google books - many original transcripts of old books can be found here. A Google search using a person's name will turn up many of these sources. I can scroll through a major portion of a book to learn about my ancestors' part in history.
Postcards and letters - family memorabilia or online - these provide major clues to family relationships, important places, and life events. There are photos of buildings from as long ago as the mid-1800's.
Journals, stories, personal accounts - these can be original documents or online resources. Carefully chosen search terms yield a surprising number of sources, such as newspapers and local histories, that might mention your ancestor's name. Searching multiple ways with different combinations of search terms will affect the results. These are fairly reliable, especially if they are firsthand accounts, though not necessarily. I discovered that my great grandmother was a storyteller, and her stories were often passed down by word of mouth and often distorted.
I have taken the step of expanding my search to International databases. The next step will be to join subscription websites such as newspapers.com. Right now I am working on verifying the information I have already added to my tree before adding anything new.
Showing posts with label letters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label letters. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Research Strategies
Labels:
ancestry,
census,
DAR applications,
database,
findagrave,
google,
indexes,
journals,
letters,
newspapers,
pensions,
personal accounts,
research
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Plain brown wrapper
I received a mysterious package in the mail today from Aunt Teeny. It was a thick packet of papers, but was addressed to "Leah & John" at my address. So I called Aunt Teeny and she said that she had found a pile of genealogy papers and put them in the mail for me. No clue why it said Leah & John. When I opened it, it appeared to be a random assortment of letters and old typewritten documents. On closer inspection, I realized that it was years of correspondence between Aunt Miriam and Uncle Herman and a relative in New Jersey named Ray Eggers. Mr. Eggers had spent years doing research on the family and had published books about it. He was particularly determined to prove the link with Roger Williams. He did it the old fashioned way, by traveling all over the Northeast doing research using primary documents. It took more than a decade, but he finally accomplished his mission.
As I scanned the documents to post online, it occurred to me that Ray Eggers was probably a source for the Weismantel family Ancestry research as well. I have been communicating with Matt Weismantel through Ancestry over the last year. Ray's connection with Marge Weismantel was the source of many photos and documents, as well as the Bryant family Bible, all of which had already been shared with me by Matt. We are all descendants of Roger Williams through the Abbott line.
All of Ray's work and correspondence is now posted in Google Docs and has been shared with my fellow Ancestry researchers.
May Abbott Cowan, half sister of George Wright Abbott > Bonnie F. Cowan > Raymond F. Eggers.
[George Wright Abbott > Jacqueline D. Abbott > John B. Zaun > Teresa Zaun Austin]
In talking with Aunt Teeny this afternoon, more stories came out about the Butler family. She said that Rawley Martin Butler came home from WWI with syphilis. He came to live with the Lukhards when Junior (Herman, Jr.) and Dee (Rawley) were young and shared a bed with the boys until the syphilis was discovered. Rawley's wife Hilda divorced him and he eventually died of it in 1944. Rawley's grandson questions some of these details, however, because Rawley and Hilda had two children in the 20's and she lived to a ripe old age. He also said that Rawley had been known to have a gambling problem and had lost the family home which could very well have been a reason for the divorce. The chronology of this story doesn't exactly make sense, but either way, it's a very sad situation.
As I scanned the documents to post online, it occurred to me that Ray Eggers was probably a source for the Weismantel family Ancestry research as well. I have been communicating with Matt Weismantel through Ancestry over the last year. Ray's connection with Marge Weismantel was the source of many photos and documents, as well as the Bryant family Bible, all of which had already been shared with me by Matt. We are all descendants of Roger Williams through the Abbott line.
All of Ray's work and correspondence is now posted in Google Docs and has been shared with my fellow Ancestry researchers.
May Abbott Cowan, half sister of George Wright Abbott > Bonnie F. Cowan > Raymond F. Eggers.
[George Wright Abbott > Jacqueline D. Abbott > John B. Zaun > Teresa Zaun Austin]
In talking with Aunt Teeny this afternoon, more stories came out about the Butler family. She said that Rawley Martin Butler came home from WWI with syphilis. He came to live with the Lukhards when Junior (Herman, Jr.) and Dee (Rawley) were young and shared a bed with the boys until the syphilis was discovered. Rawley's wife Hilda divorced him and he eventually died of it in 1944. Rawley's grandson questions some of these details, however, because Rawley and Hilda had two children in the 20's and she lived to a ripe old age. He also said that Rawley had been known to have a gambling problem and had lost the family home which could very well have been a reason for the divorce. The chronology of this story doesn't exactly make sense, but either way, it's a very sad situation.
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