Arts & Humanities: Genealogy: “Question: Last name change in NY?” plus 5 more |
- Question: Last name change in NY?
- Question: How do I trace ancestry?
- Question: How do I explain to extended family that they shouldn't hide any family secrets out of shame?
- Question: Fee new york obituaries free search?
- Question: Genealogy? My grandma (Mary Pina Narvaiz) is lookin4info on her mom's side (Cecilia Garcia Pina). Cecilia's mom n dad Sabas&Matilde Garcia!!?
- Question: Free Genealogy sites that give real info?
| Question: Last name change in NY? Posted: 18 Mar 2015 05:09 PM PDT Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Question: How do I trace ancestry? Posted: 18 Mar 2015 04:31 PM PDT Family often say they don't know, so you need to push a little and ask about their records and to get those out. You don't start online nor do you take a DNA test, neither will help you so before you rush to the internet and start looking for websites to find your ancestors.Do your groundwork first or you just won't know who you are looking for, where they are from and if who you do find are your ancestors or not. Read this first, http://familytimeline.webs.com/recordsin... then..... Collect all the information you have in your own home and in your living relations homes is the first place to start , its free and it will encourage your family to look for more and help you, it teaches you the principles and good habit of record research and the details you can find on records while there are still people alive to ask further questions of, which helps you later on as you are familiar with records, understand what can be found on them, you understand the importance of citing your research to prove what you have found and can generally see very clearly the very basic mistakes/errors that many people make by only trusting online resources, especially when one mistake can mean you are no longer researching your family. These records are primary information, so it is more likely to be correct and you will achieve an impressive start with your family tree, also learn/hear a lot about your family which will help you when you do start looking at records in the Records Office or on Internet cited databases. These are your best resources by far living people and the records they hold, FREE, primary and will get you back 3-5 generations of proved, cited ancestry which is a great foundation for your research. |
| Posted: 18 Mar 2015 09:32 AM PDT I am researching my mother's family. My mother is dead and both of her parents are dead. My mother's father passed away when I was five, so I don't remember anything about him. And my mother didn't talk about her family a lot. I got a copy of my grandfather's obituary notice and it listed two children that I had never heard of before. I believe these two children were born to my grandfather before he got married to my grandmother. I found an address for one of the children, which would be my uncle and am planning on sending him a letter. I am afraid that he will not write back. I don't know if he was born legitmate or not, or what kind of relationship my grandfather had with him. How do I explain to him that I'm not trying to upset him by digging up old family secrets but at the same time I want to know about my family and where I came from? |
| Question: Fee new york obituaries free search? Posted: 18 Mar 2015 05:52 AM PDT https://familysearch.org/search/record/r... Seems there are several so research which one it is and then you will know what date to look for an obituary |
| Posted: 17 Mar 2015 08:32 PM PDT Date? location? (mentioned those in last reply to you). If there are 4 Cecilia Pinas, that is how to tell someone has the RIGHT RECORD. EDIT IS this Cecilia? https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:... https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH... |
| Question: Free Genealogy sites that give real info? Posted: 17 Mar 2015 08:23 PM PDT I'm going to copy and paste my standard answer for free death records. You can write to me via my profile if you want other free records. There are over 400,000 free sites devoted to genealogy, but you have to be alert. If they say "Ad" in 4-point font in Google, they will ask for money, even though they say "Free". Those Nigerians who have $8,000,000 they want to share with you are lying, too. If you fell for the ad, you might fall for them. These are all free. Some have ads at the top, which sometimes ask for a name and take you to a pay site, so be careful to distinguish between the advertisement and the input form. An INDEX will have name, date and maybe something else; death RECORDS - 500 KB jpg's of death certificates - are rare. Social Security Death INDEX Find-a-Grave (INDEX) Arizona Genealogy death RECORDS California Death INDEX Other Roots Web Death INDEX pages. Y!A only allows 10 links per answer, so I cheated. Change the "/ca/" in the URL for the California Death index, above, to Texas death RECORDS through 1976 Missouri Digital Archives death RECORDS Utah Death RECORDS West Virginia Birth, Death and Marriage RECORDS Barbour: 1853 - 1859, 1861 - 1969 Not free, but if your library subscribes to Ancestry.com, you can find a wealth of death information in their subscription data bases. |
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