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Organize Your Family History

Stay focused and happy while exploring your roots

A great resource for Ancestry.com subscribers

October 26, 2012 By Janine Adams Leave a Comment

I’ve been a subscriber to Ancestry.com for years but just this week learned about a resource there that I’m really excited about. In its Learning Center, Ancestry offers a Family History Wiki with some terrific information and links.

I learned about the Wiki while watching an archived Livestream lesson from Ancestry, on finding death records. I clicked on Vital Records at the top, then on the state I was interested in and simple as that, I got the information I need about the availability of vital records and how to go about getting them. In the past, my first choice in searching for vital records from a specific state has been Google. Now it’s going to be this Wiki. So far, I’ve used the Wiki only for vital records, but there are sections on census records, immigration records, military records, African American research, Jewish American research and more.

Much of the vital record information provided comes from the resource, Red Book: American State, County, and Town Sources. I’m so excited at how easily accessible the information is!

This is just one of the many reasons that I am happy to fork over $155 a year to Ancestry. I have found it to be an invaluable resource. I’m hopeful that their recent acquisition (as reported on Family Tree’s Genealogy Insider blog) by the European private equity firm Permira doesn’t affect the quality and accessibility of the content.

I clearly have not explored the learning opportunities available via Ancestry. Time to do more investigating of the Learning Center!

Filed Under: Genealogy tips Tagged With: excitement, resources, vital records

Just do something

October 9, 2012 By Janine Adams Leave a Comment

One of the goals of this blog is to help readers not feel overwhelmed when it comes to their family history research. I got so overwhelmed some years back that I stopped doing it all together.

I advise my organizing clients who feel overwhelmed to break the project down into tiny components and just do something, anything. I also suggest setting a timer for 15 or 30 minutes. Telling yourself you can stop when the timer goes off is a great way to get past that overwhelmed feeling.

With genealogy research, I’m usually eager to do the work, but sometimes there are so many options I can’t figure out where to start. “What should I work on today?” is a question I ask myself all the time. And if I don’t quickly figure out the answer to that question, the time slot I’ve set aside from research can degenerate into indiscriminate web surfing or watching of Project Runway or something on the Internet.

I was delighted to see in the October/November 2012 of Family Tree Magazine an article called Weekend Warrior that lists seven genealogical projects that can be accomplished in a weekend. The ideas in the article, like locate your family’s grave, solve immigration mysteries, find patriot ancestors in the Daughters of the American Revolution Database, will lead me on paths I haven’t explored before. And the article provides starting points for all those quests.

Even better from a “just do something” perspective is the article’s sidebar called “Quick Fixes,” which lists five genealogy tasks you can do in thirty minutes or less. Last weekend, when I wanted to sit down for just a little while to work on my research, I pulled out this sidebar and started searching for genealogy and historical societies and libraries from my ancestors’ hometowns. That particular task had never occurred to me.

If you feel overwhelmed when you think about doing family history research, please take my advice. Just do something to get the ball rolling and feel the thrill of discovery. Write down your findings (with sources). Then come back for more later!

Filed Under: Challenges, Genealogy tips, Organizing Tagged With: Family History Magazine, resources, time management

Playing with Ages in Reunion 10

October 4, 2012 By Janine Adams 4 Comments

I haven’t had a lot of time to play around with the Reunion 10, the family-tree software I use on my Mac, but one thing I have enjoyed is the Ages feature. I don’t know if this was available on Reunion 9, but if it was, it wasn’t as accessible.

Here’s how it works: Click on a couple in the Family View and on Ages in the left sidebar and in the right sidebar you’ll see exactly how old they were at the various that are entered in their event database. (You can toggle between the two members of the couple.)

For me, this brings these people back to life. I see, for example, that my maternal grandmother, Susie Brown, was 22 years, 9 months and 4 days old when she married my grandfather. And that she was between 25 and 33 when she moved from Missouri to Washington state. (I know that trip occurred in 1936, so she was actually 28 or 29.) I’d always known that my mother was 3 years old when that migration occurred, but I’d never thought about it from my grandmother’s perspective.

Perhaps since I always remembered my grandmother as an old person, I never bothered to think about what it must have been like for her, as a young woman, to move to a strange (perhaps exotic) part of the country. I haven’t really thought about what the over-the-road trip (this was before airplanes were commonly used) with two small children must have been like.

Of course, this makes me wish I’d quizzed her and my mother more when I was growing up. It’s not too late to ask my mother, but she’ll have no memory of the actual move. But she can share family lore.

Simply playing around with the Ages feature on one relative has sparked a whole line of inquiry. I can’t wait to see what it sparks as I use it more.

Filed Under: Genealogy tips, My family Tagged With: Brown, excitement, software

Free family fan chart

September 20, 2012 By Janine Adams 2 Comments

Family tree fan template
I love a family fan chart. With the software program I use on my Mac, Reunion, I can easily create one. (I love technology.) I think it’s a wonderful, pretty, easy-to-read way to see where I am in my family history research.

Martha Stewart, queen of crafts, offers a free family fan chart template for those who might like to make one on their own.(Me, I’ll let the computer do it.) If that sounds like fun to you, go on over to Martha’s website to download it!

Filed Under: Genealogy tips Tagged With: martha stewart, resources

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about me

I'm Janine Adams, a professional organizer and a genealogy enthusiast. I love doing family history research, but I find it's very easy for me to get overwhelmed and not know where to turn next. So I'm working hard to stay organized and feel in control as I grow my family tree.

In this blog, I share my discoveries and explorations, along with my organizing challenges (and solutions). I hope by sharing what I learn along the way I'll be able to help you stay focused and have fun while you do your research, too.

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