Where am I from? Researching a family tree
83Introduction to genealogy: researching your family tree
If you want to research your family tree, it is undoubtedly the case that the exact methods you use will be different, depending on where your ancestors came from.
I am from the United Kingdom, as are all my known ancestors for some four centuries.
Therefore, although a lot of the general comments I make will apply to any country, the specifics are in relation to England and Wales in particular.
I'm lucky, as England is a particularly easy country in which to research ancestry - records have been kept for a long time (church records since the 1530s, civil registration since the 1830s) and there haven't been revolutions and invasions which destroyed documents, as is sadly the case in many European countries.
Discovering who your ancestors were, what they did, where they lived, and how many children they had is utterly fascinating, even addictive!
A great beginner's guide to assembling a family tree
Great video on reseaching and organising your family tree
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The Everything Guide to Online Genealogy: A complete resource to using the Web to trace your family history (Everything Series)
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Family Tree Magazine
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Get information from your family
The first crucial step to assembling a family tree is to talk to your close relatives.
If your parents and grandparents are still alive, they are the obvious place to start.
Ask them for as much detail as they can remember, including the full names and (if they know them) dates of birth, or approximate time they were born.
Also ask them about location, where they were born, whether they migrated, and any other details of their lives.
There is far more detail to be obtained of relatives and ancestors of whom there is living memory than of those who are further back in time.
It is also useful to ask about any family legends of origins and so forth, such as great-granny’s story told to her own children that her grandfather had been a Bishop in England.
Such family legends are often untrue. But they provide a source of interest, and a place to start.
As well as getting information on your ancestors, it’s a good idea to ask your parents, siblings, or uncles or aunts for details of more distant cousins and relations.
Depending on how well you get on with these cousins, or whether you know them, it’s well worth giving them a ring or writing them a letter or email explaining that your interest is in tracing your family tree, and asking if they have any details of your ancestry.
It may very well be that some of these cousins have already done some research which they’re willing to share with you.
Or they may have family tales of their own which will help in your quest, or even they may have a family bible with names and dates and details.
Video showing how to obtain original records
Keep records in order
Once you’ve received all this information, it’s a good idea to write it all down, and draw a brief family tree with what you already know. Then comes the time where you need to check your facts and try and move back in time.
Once you have information, it's important to keep it in an orderly way. You don't want to order the same birth certificate twice, or forget searches you've made that were negative, and do them all again.
You can record it all on paper, or there are numerous software and internet options for recording and displaying all your family history data (make sure you back it up!)
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Family History: A Novel
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Our family history
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- FAQ on the UK Census records
- The UK's national archives on-line
- 1901 Census of England and Wales Online
1901 Census of England and Wales Online. View 1.5 million original 1901 census documents of England and Wales online detailing 32 million people: A unique source for your family's history from The National Archives - FamilySearch.org - Family History and Genealogy Records
Search for family ancestors. Billions of free family tree, family history, ancestry, genealogy and census records. - GENUKI: UK & Ireland Genealogy
GENUKI is the genealogical information service for the UK and Ireland, containing a large structured tree of information.
- Saturdays Child
A fascinating blog by an American woman, complete with endless photos and details of various ancestors and relatives. A wonderful read!
Civil Records
In the UK, there has been civil registration of births, marriages, and deaths since the 1830s. Baptism, marriage and burial records date back in some parishes in the UK to the 1530s. The further you go back in time, the more patchy is the survival of older parish registers.
The logical first place to start is to get the birth certificates of your parents, and grandparents.
Your parents may, of course, already have copies of their own birth and marriage certificates, or those of their own parents.
Or your cousins may have such certificates. If so, that’s a great start, and you should ask if you should make copies of such certificates.
A full certificate from England and Wales contains in the case of births, the name and maiden name of the mother, the father’s name (unless the mother was unmarried and the father didn’t register, in which case it usually states “the father unknown”) and the address where the birth took place, and the family’s normal address if different. The father’s occupation also appears.
Armed with this information, you can look for the marriage of the parents.
A marriage certificate contains lots of useful information, such as the occupation of the bridegroom, the occupations of both couples’ fathers, the age of the couple (in earlier certificates it will often just say “over 21” if the couple had obtained their majorities) and the names of witnesses to the marriage.
Witnesses can often prove an interesting sideline, as if they include people with the same surname as your couple, they may well be further relatives.
A death certificate will contain the age of the person at death, often occupation, address and cause of death.
Do note, however, that many of the causes of death are not known to medical science today. Death certificates today will rarely just list old age as a cause of death.
In order to obtain such certificates you need a reference for where the certificate appears in the official volumes.
You can obtain such references online, but there is not full coverage yet. You can also obtain it by looking up the books yourself if you live in London, in Middleton Square, the Family Records office, or there are other places where such certificates are held.
The website www.genuki.org.uk is a fascinating repository of information about obtaining certificates and very very much more. In addition to certificates, you can look at many other sources of information, including local newspapers, trade directories, business and poor law records, and land records held in local record offices.
Many of these documents have been copied, particularly by the Mormon Church, who have a particular interest in baptising ancestors of theirs into the Mormon faith, and therefore are very interested in genealogy.
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Comments
great hub. I was actually talkin about researching our family history because of the Indian connection and possibly recieving grant money for college. thanks for the info.
Best of luck - it's a fun thing to do, wherever your ancestors are from.
Good hub. I have used all these methods and more, lucky for me I got a break throguh after ten years of hard research. It was worth it too.
Am I one of your fans? I thought I was. I'm gonna fix that now. BTW, I mentioned you in my hub Little Tolden Goad jokes and you haven't been there. :-(
Glad you enjoyed it! What was your breakthrough? Details, man, details!
Hi LondonGirl,
My middle brother is a keen geneaologist, and has traced our family back in many directions, sometimes easily, and sometimes only after painstaking research. The name I use to write here on HubPages is a family name, although not my original maiden name, and I know from my brother's research that Severn is a fairly unusual name, and that should I ever come across other Severns (I haven't so far) they're quite likely to be related somewhere along the line.
Recently my brother offered to do some research on my husband's family and was amazed at the ease with which he was able to trace them back hundreds of years in just a few hours. The main reason for this is that my husband's family are so home-grown that they must have virtually sprung out of the Sussex soil. Lewes, Brighton, and the small villages in between, have been their home for at least four centuries that we know of so far, and many of the houses that they've lived in still stand. Families that do not move around too much, certainly seem easier to trace.
LondonGirl, I grew up hearing stories of how these brothers all came to America way back when from Ireland and they pretty much spread out over appalachia. They said they had been sent to ireland by the queen to subdue the Irsh and after so many years, they left and became colonists in America.
Well, my name being Campbell helped a lot and when I finally tracked down my Great-grandfather it all came together and I was able to find out so much more of our family history thanks to the peerage they were connected to. I just had thought we came from some low class sept of the Campbell Clan and I find that I am in the Argyle bunch and related to so many historic figures of the UK and Scotland.
It's just a lot of fun knowing these things as I also found out Lady Di was a cousin also. Ain't that a hoot?
Hi Amanda - unusual names and / or sticking in one place really help! Tracing the Mr. Smith who moved to London or the Mrs Jones who lived in Wales is a right barrel of laughs.
Some of my ancestors were also considerate enough to stay in the same place, or have unusual names, such as Luxton and Springett and Morecroft, all of which are more traceable.
As you go back in time, the higher up the social scale your ancestors were, the easier it is to trace them.
Hi CC - what a great connection! If you can make a link to a solid aristocratic family, then a lot of research already done opens up for you.
This was one of my first hubs, and I've just realised what a mess it was! One text capsule, and that was about it. So I've done some quick editing (-:
I think you have a great hub here. I love the hunt one has to do for searching family connections and have done several others, my wife's and other friends and family members too, when I have time. I also the historical facts one can dig up, that's the greatest thing. I love it. Thanks a bunch for this. I keep coming back to see more.
great hub! I love researching my geneology... I have traced my ancestry in so many directions....way back to the Aztec-Tanoan heritage, Also I found a Castle in Iran ( Persia) that was my mother's fathers familys ( SHOUSH CASTLE)it is now a university. Also I see my father's grandmothers family came from Spain and my fathers father from Norway as well as my mothers mother from Armenia.......Geneology is so much fun!
HI CC and jjrubio - I agree, it's great fun.
My other half's family tree would be an absolute nightmare to trace - he, his parents and grandparents, the 7 of them, were born in 7 different countries! And 3 of those countries don't even exist any more.
My ancestors were a much more obliging bunch, they were all in the UK, for several centuries, mostly England and Wales.
Interesting, I am a direct descendent of John Buckeridge, he was Archbishop of Ely, he died leaving funds, to help the members of the Clergy improve their way of life, and a Trust for the poor of his Parish which still runs today. He was clearly better with money than moi'
Because everything has been recorded in History books, I have had no trouble, finding him, however, I have had trouble finding exactly when my family moved from France, as It did. I would like to know more past the 1500's, but at that point, name spelling gets sketchy and records are sparser.
He probably had a lot of money to be good with!
Before 1500 it's very difficult indeed, unless your ancestors were seriously high up the social scale, and even then, it's tricky. Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard, for example - the years in which they were born aren't known, and they were Queens!
Many Chinese families, esp. in rural areas, keep a family genealogy book which records all important info like birth, marriage, and death. Some families use generation name poems to name the children, i.e. all the children in a same generation have the same middle name which is a word from the generation name poem. You can tell their generation simply by looking at their middle name. My mother side has a generation name poem. My mother, uncles (her brothers), and aunts (her sisters) all have the middle name 'pine'.
These make tracing family tree much easier in Chinese culture.
I'm considering to write a hub about this.
That would be a very interesting hub, do write it!
I've always been interested in finding out more of my family history and the tree branches of distant family, just to see what the Tully's got up to many years ago!
Great hub with some great points to start researching your family tree!
Go for it - it's a fascinating thing to do!
So many people, including myself, wouldn't know where to begin to find out our family tree. Beyond the people that are still living and those who preceded them it is hard to find a starting point. This gives good direction on the where and how to begin. Excellent hub...
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Lgali says:
10 months ago
good hub lot of good info