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‎08-24-2015 08:42 PM
@151949 wrote:
@MyGirlsMom wrote:@MariotaMurielle, I did a dna test and the results were more than I expected! I hope you have the same expectations.
So you felt like it was worth the money? My friend's sister has done it and is waiting for her results.
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ABSOLUTELY! ![]()
‎08-24-2015 08:47 PM
@151949 wrote:
@BreezyBri89 wrote:You can try familysearch.org. It is free and I have found some very interesting information on there!
Thanks, I'll look there.
UH Oh - I went to this site but find it is The church of latter day saints and I am nervous they will be bugging me , because they require my address and phone #, so I am leary of using this site.
‎08-24-2015 08:50 PM
@151949 wrote:
@151949 wrote:
@BreezyBri89 wrote:You can try familysearch.org. It is free and I have found some very interesting information on there!
Thanks, I'll look there.
UH Oh - I went to this site but find it is The church of latter day saints and I am nervous they will be bugging me , because they require my address and phone #, so I am leary of using this site.
***
I've NEVER had a problem with them contacting me at all.
‎08-24-2015 09:02 PM - edited ‎08-24-2015 09:04 PM
My interest began as a child listening to my father's family at family holiday dinners discussing our genealogy. Some 35 yrs. ago, my grandmother(a DAR) had traced her lineage through her mother back to the Mayflower and gave me a copy, and my father (her son) had obtained a 100 pg. document of my grandmother's father's lineage and gave me a copy of that as well.
I am the 1st. born grandchild on both sides of my family and always identified with the older generations, so I was very excited to delve into our history. I set aside time every Christmas break for researching and walked the 2 cemeteries where my relatives were buried taking notes from their headstones.
I've found Ancestry.com, the LDS site: FamilySearch.org, FindAGrave.com, communicating with 1st., 2nd. and 3rd. cousins as well as posting on the Ancestry.com message boards to be very helpful.
Although most of my research has involved my father's side of the family, I have also sought information on my mother's side most of whom were only children (including my mother) and are buried in a Pittsburgh cemetery or in Los Angeles.
I find genealogical research fascinating!
‎08-24-2015 09:11 PM
@151949 wrote:
@151949 wrote:
@BreezyBri89 wrote:You can try familysearch.org. It is free and I have found some very interesting information on there!
Thanks, I'll look there.
UH Oh - I went to this site but find it is The church of latter day saints and I am nervous they will be bugging me , because they require my address and phone #, so I am leary of using this site.
You don't have to sign up on the site. Go to the menu across the top of the page to SEARCH and then RECORDS. From there, you will be able to search records for your deceased ancestors by name.
I've used this site for decades and the LDS has never contacted me.
‎08-24-2015 09:12 PM
My parents died when I was in my teens, I'm an only child with not much extended family. Several years ago through ancestry.com, I located a cousin and family I didn't know existed, and we have connected. Unfortunately, my great-grandparents were poor immigrants, and we have not been able to find any records of their siblings or parents. More records get posted all the time - so you never know.
‎08-24-2015 09:25 PM
For those of you who would like to use the Ancestry.com website without subscribing or using the Free Trial, go to the bottom of the home page and click on SITE MAP then go down to HISTORICAL RECORD SEARCH. From there, you can search for your ancestor.
‎08-24-2015 09:43 PM
Using Ancestry.com and the (I thought) little information I knew (grandparents names and state/city), I have been able to find out more about both sides of my family than I ever dreamed I would know. I started out using only census records, and suddenly there were grands, great-grands and their entire families.
From there - if you let your tree/research be public (no reason not to for most people), Ancestry emails you "hints" for other peoples' public trees that share matches with you, and you can add *all their research* to your tree!
In this way, I traced both sides of my family back to Shakespeare's England, and one side to the Mayflower - not something I would have dreamed of before I started. My family didn't know, either.
I found a second cousin who sent me priceless family photos (I never had many, and lost what I'd had in a fire) and put me in touch with three first cousins I didn't know existed - and we have since met and they have also given me photos. One of them did the necessary paper-proofing to join The Mayflower Society. I could use her papers and also join, but it's not so much my thing.
I did the DNA testing (I have no male relatives to test), and what came back was 99% exactly what my family tree said - no surprises - which was interesting in itself.
‎08-24-2015 09:45 PM - edited ‎08-24-2015 09:48 PM
Other search tips:
Search Census Records on Ancestry.com
This will provide you with others in the household in addition to the person for whom
you are searching.
To Access the Message Boards on Ancestry.com
Search Intelius.com
May provide you with those related to the person for whom you are searching.
Search Google.com for Surnames
ETA: All of my suggestions are FREE. I have yet to pay for genealogical information.
‎08-24-2015 09:49 PM
My uncles wife was very much into geneology years ago, she traced his families roots back to Austria and Germany. Their family actually traveled to Austria to meet them and stayed with them at their farm. We also found out that his grandmother lost her US citizenship because she married a man from Germany who came to the US via Canada ,which at that time was illegal. My husbands people came over on the Mayflower so they say.LOL! My people are from Poland and they have visited us here in the states and my cousins who speak Polish fluently have visited them in Warsaw. It's a good thing we know who our people are because there are so many people in Poland who use our last name it would be like trying to find a needle in a haystack.
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