Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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I started my family tree on Ancestry and an overwhelmed by all of the hints. I need help understanding how to use the hints and delete irrelevant ones. If you like ancestry I would really appreciate your help.
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#2
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As I recall there are 2 or 3 clubs for thi type of research, I would suggest contacting the clubs directly. the list is on district.gov, you will need to use the search function as the list is over 3000 clubs and almost 200 pages the last time i looked at it.
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Pennsylvania, for 60+ years, most recently, Allentown, now TV. ![]() |
#3
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I sent you a PM.
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#4
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Genealogy-African Amer SIG
2SAX6,7,8,12@2:30PM-HB Hibiscus Village Recreation Center Carol LaSalle clasalle585@gmail.com (864) 378-2478 Genealogy-Brick Wall Solutions 4Wx12@8:30AM-SA Savannah Regional Recreation Complex Nancy Heydt noheydt@comcast.net (352) 430-2076 Genealogy-Eastern European SIG 1TH@1PM-SB SeaBreeze Regional Recreation Complex Carol Myers srm684@aol.com (352) 633-8295 Genealogy-Genealogical Society 4Wx12@10AM-SA Savannah Regional Recreation Complex Patricia Adams Welcome to The Villages Genealogical Society website! adams007@comcast.net (352) 751-6966 Genealogy-German SIG 2TH@9:30AMLK Lake Miona Regional Recreation Complex Steven Buhrow steven.buhrow@pm.me (571) 278-8796 Genealogy-Italian SIG 2Mx6,7,8@1PMSA Savannah Regional Recreation Complex Laura Wright catelina10@gmail.com (352) 362-4630 Genealogy-New England SIG 3THx6,7,8@12PM-SB SeaBreeze Regional Recreation Complex Christine Courtwright number1cc@gmail.com (352) 753-6139 Genealogy-New To SIG 2Wx6,7,8,12@2:30PM-SB SeaBreeze Regional Recreation Complex Carol LaSalle clasalle585@gmail.com (864) 378-2478 |
#5
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Ahhhh, the flood of Hints. I highly recommend you take your time and ONLY approve the hint info IF you can verify it is YOUR ancestor. Too many people blanket click all the info to add to their tree and it very quickly gets convoluted. I leave hints un-approved until I can confirm with other family or census records that the hint I'm approving is actually MY relative, since so many people have similar names.
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Chino 1960's to 1976, Torrance, CA 1976-1983, 87-91, 94-98 / Frederick Co., MD 1983-1987/ Valencia, CA 1991-1994/ Brea, CA 1998-2002/ Dana Point, CA 2002-2019/ Knoxville, TN 2019-Current/ FL 2022-Current |
#6
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Sent you a PM. I have done dozens of trees. Do not believe hints, evaluate. Do NOT believe trees you see online. Someone makes a guess, wrongly and everyone else then copies it. Always try to get a document to verify. I would be happy to help you. If you are looking at Missouri data, noticing you have St Louis, it is hard as not as much is available as for some other states. But death certs are all at Attention Required!
for 1910 to 71 Digital newspapers start page is Missouri Digital Newspaper Project | The State Historical Society of Missouri and the library of congress has others Search U.S. Newspaper Directory, 1690-Present << Chronicling America << Library of Congress Familysearch.org is excellent as well although their search function can be a challenge
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Men plug the dikes of their most needed beliefs with whatever mud they can find. - Clifford Geertz |
#7
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I have found the Mormon Church to have lots of information available and you don't need to be a Mormon.
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#8
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If you are ever fortunate to win any powerball, mega, lottery etc, good luck btw, your relatives will find you.
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#9
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Concur.
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Chino 1960's to 1976, Torrance, CA 1976-1983, 87-91, 94-98 / Frederick Co., MD 1983-1987/ Valencia, CA 1991-1994/ Brea, CA 1998-2002/ Dana Point, CA 2002-2019/ Knoxville, TN 2019-Current/ FL 2022-Current |
#10
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Ancestry.com was started by Mormons and used LDS databases. It was sold to a bigger company in 2010, but its headquarters is in Lehi, Utah.
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#11
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I have been researching for quite some time. My advice is get as much info from the oldest people in your family as to what they know - names , birthdays, areas they came from , etc. Next look at the census to find those family members first. That will give you birthdays which is the best way to get the most accurate info. Once you go through the census’ , you will find additional info that will lead you through the rest. If you can get access to newspapers , those will give you additional info on family members that you may not know. Wedding announcements are good for this because back then they listed who attended the weddings.
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#12
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#13
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You’ll probably be able to create a reasonably complete and accurate family tree back 3-4 generations just by the recognition of names, with very little reliance on the Ancestry hints.
As one who spent a whole lot of time during the pandemic building a tree that from my fraternal grandmother goes back to the 1400’s. That was the same with my maternal grandmother. My maternal grandfather? No luck at all going back more than four generations. The ‘family story’ was that my great-great-grandfather who born in Finland, stowed away on a ship from Norway to New York, where he got into the U.S. with forged documents and a changed name. But to try to answer your question. —Typically, I’ll start with the ancestry family trees created by other members. You can pretty much tell which people have been careful with their research and whose trees might be more reliable. —Pay attention to the surnames, dates of birth and death, and locations of birth and death. In generations long past, people tended to remain very close to where they were born. Amazingly so, actually. So if those factors don’t seem to “track”, ignore the Hint —Pay attention to the birth, marriage and death documents. As public documents, they can be more reliable Hints. Same with the Census information. There can be mistakes in the spelling of names, but the census was an official function every ten years to count and identify residents. —Some of the Hints are copies of family histories. Read them. They can be helpful and very interesting. —A lot of the Hints are photographs, family crests, etc. Save them if you wish. I tend to ignore and discard them. —Maybe the most important entries to make sure make sense are the dates of birth and marriage. There was no birth control many generations ago, so families were huge by todays standards. But does the date of marriage make sense? Would a woman start bearing children at age 12? Not likely. Can a woman still be bearing children into her 50’s? Does a life span more than about 80 years make sense? —-And like real estate, location, location, location. Generations of families seemed to live in the same communities. Make sure the Hints reflect that,unless there’s historical proof to the contrary. Have fun! Building your family tree is a whole helluva lot more satisfying than watching CNN, Fox News, or MSNBC.
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Politicians are like diapers--they should be changed frequently, and for the same reason. Last edited by Villages Kahuna; 09-08-2022 at 02:33 PM. |
#14
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https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/records/...2022-03-16.pdf But it is a start. Digital Vital Records - Historical Vital Records of NYC shows what years have been uploaded. Warning they include the year even if only one document from that year is online. Then you chose either the beta search function or browse by year and borough. So far there are 10 million documents to view. Happy hunting.
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Men plug the dikes of their most needed beliefs with whatever mud they can find. - Clifford Geertz |
#15
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In many families you find shocks. Relatives denied by altered, buried family history |
Closed Thread |
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