Genealogy is a lot of fun, but at times, it can feel like the lottery. People
that play the lottery know they are taking chances and don’t always win, the
same is true for genealogy. You may end up looking for a very long time and may
never find that missing data. But the idea of winning is exciting, and when you
do win, you are filled with excitement. The same excitement happens when you find
a piece of data that you have been looking for.
Research Begins with what you Know
All research starts with some known information about an ancestor. Interviewing
your living relatives is a good place to start. Ask questions that include the basics
such as names of relatives, hometowns, and trades or occupations. Also ask open-ended
questions that help reveal stories about your
family heritage. This can help you to not only
answer questions that might come up as you are following the trail of your ancestry,
but it may provide additional insight into your heritage. Comb for clues about military
involvement or how a period in history may have contributed to your ancestor’s
lifestyle. You might also gain interesting leads by following up on research that
another relative has conducted – be sure to inquire about any existing family
trees. Use facts that have already been discovered to help verify your own findings
or guide you in your efforts.
Find Sources to Build a Family Tree
Once you begin, assemble the details you have into the form of a family tree by
using a pen and paper or a genealogy program to record your relative’s
information. When you start to record your data, it can become overwhelming on what
should be recorded, how it should be recorded, and how to uncover missing facts.
Don’t settle for just recording the facts of events (the dates and locations)
of your ancestors. Beware of data that is copied from another person who did not
have first hand or second hand knowledge of the facts, it does not constitute the
information as being accurate and true. It is the historical documents, oral and
written that can recount the events that are needed to prove the information is
accurate.
Documents Need to be Analyzed
All records are subject to interpretation and can contain errors. Your analysis
should take into account the clues that further substantiate or contradict information
known about the ancestor and their family.Keep in mind the following when doing
your analysis and before adding a document to your ancestor:
Conducting research for your family tree and finding sources does not mean
your data is accurate. An index entry accompanied by an associated image does not
necessarily relate to an ancestor, even if the person’s name, age, and origin
are matching the information you have
When you find a document, you need to analyze it for its accuracy and verify
that it is for your ancestor. Remember names, dates, and places are common. Even
if a person does have sources for an ancestor, it does not mean it is providing
the correct evidence for a person to belong in the tree. Just because we can "see
an image" does not mean we should stop looking for corroborating evidence or for
alternatives. If we don't we will create genealogies (based on original images)
that should not be trusted.
Even primary sources in their original form or copies of them (not extracted
or indexed versions) such as marriage, and military enlistment forms can contain
errors, either on purpose so a person would appear old enough to get married or
enlist in the military. Because people can make mistakes during the recording of
information, errors also occurred on accident.
Indexed and transcribed documents rarely contain enough evidence to verify
kinship and they often contain errors during the transcription process.
Extract the Important Data
Because it is not the source alone that proves the person belongs in the tree,
genealogists need to collect several documents that provide the date and location
of birth, marriage, death, and burial information; and provide parents, siblings,
spouse, aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents, and other important relationships
that solve family
history related questions. The information from the documents you
researched should be added to your family tree. By adding a copy of the source and
attaching it to the people and events that it relates to gives a historical reference
to your family tree research and is a reminder of how the facts and relationships
are verified.
Rate Your Sources
Part of the family tree research process is to rate your sources. The rating is
to help you understand the reliability, quality, and information the source offers.
This helps genealogists to distinguish good sources from sources that are not so
reliable. The most common method used is the Genealogical Proof Standard.