This Forum has been archived there is no more new posts or threads ... use this link to report any abusive content
==> Report abusive content in this page <==
Post Reply 
 
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Votes - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
What are the best family history websites?
11-09-2012, 07:52 PM
Post: #1
What are the best family history websites?
I am trying to find out my family history. But, every website i use gives me different information. Any websites that are accurate? I know a little bit.

Ads

Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
11-09-2012, 08:00 PM
Post: #2
 
Websittes don't 'know' your family history 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/recordsinyourownhome.htm 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.

Ads

Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
11-09-2012, 08:00 PM
Post: #3
 
Websites are not documents.
If a "website" says you were born in 1976, and your BIRTH CERTIFICATE says 1975... which are you going with?
The BEST SITES are those which are TEACHING you basic genealogy standards. Original documents are more reliable. You may..or may NOT...find original documents, online.
Go back to square one, and understand how to find reliable sources. Then, you can evaluate if a website is providing access to records..or just blowing hot air.
http://www.cyndislist.com/beginners/
A FRIENDLY mantra...
"don't tell me what you know...tell me what you have documented"
Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
11-09-2012, 08:00 PM
Post: #4
 
Genealogical websites work a little like Facebook or Wikipedia. They are places where people can access a collection of information gathered from multiple places. Some things on the websites are user submitted, some are primary or secondary records, some are compilations based on computer generated algorithms that search for similarities and assume a certain degree of similarity is for the same person. Without knowing what websites or records you're working with, we really can't give you proper direction on how to resolve your particular issue, only a little general guidance.

The trick is to know what type of information you are looking at in each and every case and how to evaluate it. In genealogy, there's always a margin of error, because humans provide information and keep the records we work with. We'll often find multiple census records that suggest a person was born in 2 different years 2 years apart, for example. This is common because A) the birth year was estimated from age, B) someone else in the house gave the information, and/or C) people didn't keep track of birth dates as carefully in the past as they do now. But, a birth certificate is considered way more accurate than an un-sourced and un-cited user submitted tree, for example. Another trick is making sure you're looking at information for the same person, and not someone of the same name. How the information was collected, from whom, when, and how many opportunities there have been for human error (re-writing or re-telling) are critical for evaluating information.

A few hints for making good use of resources: Avoid user-submitted or prepared trees/pedigrees except where they have sources cited, and go to the sources. Indexes and transcriptions are better than trees but still likely to have more errors. Use these to get you to the original source. Try to find and work with original documents or images as exclusively as possible. Understanding how each type of record was collected and prepared and what that means is an invaluable tool for assessing the information.

I've also found that folks jump to websites first and have problems because they started in the middle of a process. First, lay a good foundation by following a basic research process:
1. Interview your living relatives.
2. Examine your documents and those of relatives that will allow it. (In steps 1 & 2 you'll want to get to a deceased ancestor or those born 70-100 years ago).
3. Prepare for research by learning about basic genealogy, genealogy specific to your known ancestors.
4. Organize your data. Free software is available.
5. Research one document at time for one generation at a time, one ancestor at a time.

In the U.K. I've found FreeBMD, FreeCen, FreeReg, GENUKI, Find My Past, and Family Search to be the most helpful.
Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
Post Reply 


Forum Jump:


User(s) browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)