Thursday, March 1, 2012

DearMYRTLE's Genealogy Blog: WHERE to Look Next - Part 1

On March 13th, Ol' Myrt here will provide a virtual presentation titled "Where to Look Next?" from her home in Utah to the gathering of the Citrus County Genealogical Society of Inverness, Florida. The meeting will be held at the LDS Church, 3474 W. Southern St., Lecanto, Florida beginning at 10am.

When family historians hit the proverbial brick wall, it?s time to regroup and look again at a broad variety of record groups. Learn more about the locality where each ancestor lived, gathering clues about ecclesiastical and government jurisdictions, migration patterns, legal policies, and social customs, in addition to information about surviving records groups in local and regional repositories in manuscript, microform or digital format.

Much of genealogical research isn?t about people, it?s about the places they once lived.

LET?S ASSUME YOU'RE

  • Gathering info from family
  • Locating "proof" documents
  • Evaluating evidence
  • Typing / scanning into a genealogy program

IT?S NOT ALL ON THE ?NET

All too often beginning researchers think climbing one?s family tree is just a few mouse clicks away. Recent TV advertising for a major genealogy website mislead researchers by stating ?You don?t have to know what you are looking for, you just have to start looking??.

PRACTICAL ADVICE

The key to renewed research success is to seek advice of experienced researchers. The FamilySearch Research Wiki http://wiki.FamilySearch.org is a great place to start.? Many articles are compiled by employees of the Family History Library (FHL) and include references to essential resources outside the FHL collection. Additional articles are submitted by those who have research experience in a locality or ethnic group. BELOW: A screen shot of the Massachusetts page from the FamilySearch Research Wiki. Note the variety of topics:


The page includes links to ?unique genealogical features?:

And there are links for counties and towns for specific details.

?

BELOW: A review of the section titled ?Massachusetts ? Military Records? on the wiki shows the following information about Colonial Wars. If you aren?t in Salt Lake City with access to the Family History Library books, the wiki informs you of titles that might solve your research challenges.?

Colonial Wars (1620?1763)

Numerous records of colonial wars have been published. The Family History Library has copies of most of them, including:
  • Doreski, Carole. Massachusetts Officers and Soldiers in the Seventeenth Century Conflicts. Boston, Massachusetts: The Society of Colonial Wars in Massachusetts and the New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1982. (Family History Library book 974.4 M24d.)
  • Bodge, George M. Soldiers in King Philip's War. Baltimore, Maryland.: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1991. (Family History Library book 974 M2b.) A concise history of the Indian Wars of New England from 1620 to 1677. Contains lists of soldiers, stories of battles, copies of ancient documents relating to the King Philip's War, 1620?1677.
  • MacKay, Robert E. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the French and Indian Wars, 1744?1755. Boston, Massachusetts: Society of Colonial Wars, 1978. (Family History Library book 974.4 M2mc.) Gives in-depth information about the years of turmoil among the French, Indians, and Colonists. It includes details about forming the militia force to combat the unrest.

More ideas in the next blog post.

Happy family tree climbing!
Myrt???? :)
DearMYRTLE,
Your friend in genealogy.

Source: http://blog.dearmyrtle.com/2012/03/where-to-look-next-part-1.html

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