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APOLOGY
Issues apologizes for not being able to maintain all of the responsibilities we have set forth to accomplish. This week you will find updated links, however the basic information and the personal story have yet to be updated.
We hope that our reader's understand and continue to support our ezine
Updates to this page will be posted on 5/12/2002

I Want To Do My Family Tree, Where Do I Start?

Following the Guides: Volume 3!

If you have been following the instructions, great! If not you might first want to check the genealogy sections of: Volume 1 and Volume 2 before continuing on, or you may choose to just check out our site map.

I personally have two sets of records, paper records and electronic records. This week we shall discuss paper records. Last week we discussed writing down every piece of information you knew about your family. Staring with the basic information about your immediate family, you should easily be able to fill our a Family Group Sheet. You'll also have a great start on completing the first page of your Ancestral Chart.

A few other charts, and you'll be as organized as a pro. You'll need just a few more forms initially, like a Correspondence Record. This will assist you in keeping track of all of the people and/or organizations you have contacted in regards to your research. You'll also need a Research Calendar, which will assist you in keeping track of all of the sources you have utilized in your research. A Research Extract keeps your source information in tact, and a Source Summary will assure that your steps are not readily retraced. There is nothing more exasperating than retracing your steps because you have misplaced your research notes.

My Progress: Stage 3

In last week's edition, the reader was left hanging as I made my way to local cemeteries. The information I had located via the Internet indicated that my ancestors were buried in two local cemeteries, both Catholic.

I drove to the smaller of the two cemeteries first. I found many of the stones were within the realms of decay; broken with the lettering worn away by years of exposure to the environment. Unsettled, but advantageous, I began slowly working my way through the gravestones, until I stumbled upon two faded markers indicating the last name; Nunweiler.

Both of the stones were worn and difficult to read. I did my best to brush the years of dirt away. (In those days, I had never heard of tombstone rubbing and knew nothing of the treasures one could find by doing a rubbing, let alone the mere basics of tombstone cleaning. In the beginning, I had no idea about the tricks to get better readings.) After wiping off the dirt, I did my best to decipher the worn lettering, carefully noting the information before taking several photos of each marker.

From there I proceeded to the next cemetery, which is approximately twenty times larger than the first. The Catholic section of this cemetery is somewhat intermingled with the Protestant section, and in some cases it became difficult to decipher where one section ended and the other began.

I located several tombstones with the Nunweiler surname, most in excellent condition. I jotted down the information and took two snapshots per stone, before heading home.

Back at my computer, I set out to verify the information I had located on the Internet against the information I obtained from the tombstones. As luck would have it, every piece of information was an identical match. Now, it was time to begin requesting data from the area churches.

I made several errors on that first trip. My first error was not to have had at least attempted to locate an index for the cemeteries, either online or at the local historical society. This would have saved me a great deal of time, for I would not have had to walk back and forth across row after row, and section after section of the cemetery. The second mistake was not noting markers, intermingled with the Nunweiler markers. Additionally, I did not plot the cemetery for easy reference on return visits, nor did I note the section and lot number of the markers I had located. My final mistake was my failure to visit the Protestant section of the cemetery, wrongfully assuming that each of my ancestors had been Catholic.

Bookmark this page so that you can check in on 5/12/2002 to learn more about my next step.

 

Table of Contents
APRIL 2002

GENEALOGY HOT SPOTS ON THE WEB:

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Native American Genealogy

1812 HORSESHOE BEND CHEROKEE MUSTER

Creek Enrollment Cases Index 1899-1907+

CHAPMAN ROLL EASTERN CHEROKEES 1851

Free Genealogical Search (freegensearch.com)

Italian Genealogy

1851 Census of Cherokee's east of the Misssissippi

African-American Genealogical Databases

Genealogy Portal (genealogyportal.com)

Minnesota Death Certificate Search

Genealogy Help and Guides

Ancient Faces

Genealogy Archive Database

Indiana Marriages Through 1850

Search or Add Marriage Records

Illinois Databases

Top Surname Search

Colored Troops in the Civil War

Genealogy for Children

The Society of German Genealogy in Easter Europe
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Utah Archives
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Mogilev Birth Index for Boys, 1864-1894

U.S. Census Browser

Ontario Birth Databases
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San Fransisco Surname Index

Kentucky Biography Project

The Mayflower Web Page

Genealogylinks.com

Canadian Directory

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EDITORS NOTE:

Maintenance of this site is all I can presently handle due to an injury to my leg. If you are looking for researchers in the Western New York area, please contact genfinderwny.

Note: researchers may require a minimal charge to cover expenses.

Are you looking for a specific genealogical source or database? Is it a source that is not presently listed? Let me know what you are seeking. I'll do my best to find the database for you.

 

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Page Last Updated 5/15/2002
C 2002 Linda Munro