Genealogy

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(archived description) (Lemmy's community for those interested in learning more about their genealogy.-)

Welcome to c/[email protected] officially under new management since March 27th 2024

For all your Genealogy needs all on Lemmy. Here we Help with research Give software suggestions Talk about Genealogy And more!

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Genealogy guide (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

 

 

What is genealogy? Defined by Wikipedia, genealogy is “the study of families, family history, and the tracing of their lineages.”

 

Why should I get into genealogy? There are many reasons! Genealogy is a great hobby for those interested in their family,history,and many other topics. It can teach you more about yourself. 

 

Where do I start? It may seem overwhelming at first, but don’t worry; it’s not as hard as it seems. The best place to start is to see if anyone in your family has done any research themselves. Many families have at least one member who has a small family tree or a stash of helpful records. Once you have determined if you have any resources to give you a head start or not, you must make another choice. Where do you go from here? Will you focus on a certain branch of the family tree? Or will you go for a more general approach and try to tackle multiple branches? This way is more complicated, and I would recommend not taking this route unless you are experienced. 

 

What should I look for? Official documents are your best bet, as they are the most accurate, and courthouses and local libraries are likely to keep copies. Birth certificates, marriage certificates, draft cards, etc. are very useful as they contain birth dates, death dates, places of residence, and other useful information. Don’t be afraid to ask family members as well. If you have relatives who were alive during the lives of your great-grandparents or other family members, they may have information you did not know about.

 

By this point, it’s very likely you’ve been gathering a lot of information or maybe even started your own family tree. It’s very important to keep this information organized. Depending on how you’d like to conduct your research, there are many different methods. If you’d prefer to stick to pen and paper documents, I would suggest a good binder and multiple folders that are clearly marked and neatly kept. For those of you who wish to take your work digital, there are several free and paid resources that can help.

 

Free 

Familysearch

Family search

A great tool for both creating and maintaining a family tree, it provides free digitized records of your family and may show you a family tree created by others, saving you a lot of work.

 

Pros 

Free

Gives access to various records across many sites. 

Collaborative 

 

Cons 

There is no way to lock a tree, which allows for vandalism.

Some people may have false relatives on the tree 

 

Gramps (FOSS)

Gramps

A Linux native program useful for offline family tree management, according to the website, is “a free software project and community. We strive to produce a genealogy program that is both intuitive for hobbyists and feature-complete for professional genealogists. It is a community project, created, developed, and governed by genealogists.”

 

Pros

FOSS

Can be used offline. 

Support for multiple trees 

 

Cons 

Outdated interface 

Can be confusing for first-time users.

 Find a grave

https://www.findagrave.com/ A index of thousands of cemeteries and millions of graves

Pros Free Easy to use Community transcribing system

Cons Graves may have incorrect information which requires the profile managers to accept edits

Wikitree

https://www.wikitree.com/

A place for genealogists to collaborate

Pros Free forever Easy to use and work with others Claims to be extremely private

Cons

Site design may make navigate difficult for some

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PAID

 

Ancestry.com

One of the largest paid genealogy services Ancestry has thousands of paid records.

 

Pros

Lots of records 

 

Cons 

pricey 

Newspapers.com  https://www.newspapers.com/

A archive of thousands of newspapers

Pros Lots of papers from many places

Has free days

Cons Pricey Index system may not provide exact match for searches

This is nowhere near a complete list, and suggestions and more will be added soon.

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Hey all! Thank you for joining this community. We haven’t had large growth yet, but we do have quite a few subscribers!

I’d like to bring on two or three new moderators preemptively. If anyone is interested in becoming a moderator, just reply to this post. Let me know if you have ever been a moderator before and for how long.

Thanks!

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I don't work for Ancestry.com or have any financial interest in the company. I just thought I'd share this a) in case anyone has been thinking of registering but doesn't want to pay full price, and b) as a record of when paid sites offer discounted memberships to avoid paying full price—usually they have sales around major holidays, such as Memorial Day or July 4th in the US.

There are excellent free sites, such as FamilySearch.org, but for some people, Ancestry.com has records not found on other sites.

If you're uncertain whether it's worth paying for a membership, try searching their records first. Ancestry will show you possible search results. Also try searching FamilySearch.org to see if you can find the record for free on that site.

Visit Ancestry.com | Archive.org | Archive.today

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One Man, Two Identities: How Salvatore Giovanni Riggitano lived his life as John R. Prevost

On May 13th 2025, a team of researchers from The Genealogy Discord successfully broke through the Prevost brickwall in Pope Leo XIV’s family tree, via a WW1 draft card.

At the same time, a team at Ancestry.com arrived at the same conclusion independently via an Alien registration record.

Article by Ancestry.com: https://www.ancestry.com/c/ancestry-blog/entertainment-and-culture/pope-leo-xiv-sicilian-roots

Paper by The Genealogy Discord: https://docs.google.com/viewerng/viewer?url=https%3A%2F%2Fdiscordgenealogy.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2025%2F05%2FPope_Leo___Case_Study.pdf

Youtube livestream with members of both research teams: https://www.youtube.com/live/kZcRfBdB2Ls

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people move around a lot. plus, i heard a lot of french people have taken ancestry dna tests and have gotten most of it in england and northwestern europe. i’ve also heard that in france, most dna testing like this is illegal.

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I’d like to print and frame a family tree. There’s a million diffrent templates online and I’m looking for some recommendations

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Gramps 6.0 released (gramps-project.org)
submitted 2 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Didn't see any posting about this. Gramps 6.0 was released on March 20th.

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

So as many are aware the DNA testing company 23 and me has declared bankruptcy and users data is at risk of being sold off to the highest bidder. This thread is for discussion about this debacle

urgent information!!!

Guide by California attorney general on how to request a data deletion

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During the last in-person class I taught at RootsTech, on Saturday afternoon, I asked attendees which tech announcements they were most excited about. The answers included Ancestry’s upcoming clustering tool, FamilySearch’s new catalog, Ancestry Networks, and the FamilySearch Together app.

These are just a few of the many exciting announcements made at RootsTech 2025! It’s fun to see so many companies announce new technology that will help us with our genealogy research.

Here are a few of our favorites:

(..continued in article)

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Networks are private workspaces where you can collect and organize information about groups of people who interacted wirh each other - godparents, friends, neighbours or associates.

The linked PDF and video explain how it works.

Currently available to ancestry.com Pro Tools subscribers

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Hey all! I’d like to share a tale of mine from a few weeks ago. I’ve been on a few years long hunt for my 2nd great grandmother and I thinking I'm finally starting to narrow down where she was buried at and who she was. Anyways, I had gotten a tip from another relative of mine who does genealogy and went to look in this local cemetery. Around my area, cemeteries with stones going back over 150-200 years ago are quite common, and as a freelance headstone cleaner, I’ve seen quite a lot in my area. The one I went to was on the side of a hill, so it wasn’t the easiest to get up, but it had dozens of headstones. After searching for a while, I was unable to find the particular headstone I was looking for. I did, however, find some of my other relatives who I had no idea were buried up there.

After I got back, I went to update the cemetery’s Find a Grave page because it had no photograph of the sign. While doing this, I found another cemetery nearby, which I believe has the stone I’m looking for. When I get a chance, I’ll go and look, and I’ll update the community if I have any luck.

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Hello everyone!

I’m looking to get some help with this community if you wish to apply inquire below!

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In the genealogy world you go to a lot of strange places. One of these for me is abandoned cemeteries. I always feel bad finding these places. Not only is a piece of history lost someone’s family member has been lost. I have a few cemeteries tied to my family that range from grass mowed, people visit to up on a hill where only a few people a year visit. I clean headstones as a freelance cleaner as well so I’ve seen places that had none of my family either.

Thanks for reading my bit of a rant there and I’d like to say one more thing if you find an abandoned cemetery (on public property be careful not to trespass) report it to your local historic society they may be able to help and try and help save history and people’s memory by using find a grave.

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This is something I’ve wanted since I started running this community. I was wondering if anyone knew of any service like this that existed. I’m aware of FOSS genealogy tools like GRAMPS, but I believe that a federated service could work well for genealogy. I believe that this would be useful for increasing free access to useful genealogy tools like records, newspapers, online family tree builders, and more.

Anyways if anyone knows any services or can think of other ways federation could help genealogy I’d love to hear!

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I was wondering if there are any DNA kits similar to what 23AndMe does, but aimed at soon-to-be-parents? We're expecting a child and I thought something like that could be an interesting valentines present. I realize it's not possible to get a report for the actual fetus we have, but I assume at least some information can be drawn by comparing both parents. Thanks!

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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

For a long time I’ve been trying to figure more about who my great grandmothers grandmother was. I’m lucky enough to be around at the same time my great grandmother is. To make this easier to understand I will call my great grandmother. E. E was around 5 or so when her grandmother Jane Hughes died so she remembers very little about her.

From records I’ve found and interviews with E I’m aware of the following

E’s father had a sister by the same mother

E’s grandfather never married Jane

Jane had at least 3 children with 2 different men Wilson Triplett and Isom B. Slone but was never married to either. The children were Robert Allen, Polly Anne and Grover Cleveland Slone

Jane was probably born October 17th 1877 or sometime in this time range

She lived most her life in the Knott and Perry county areas of Kentucky

Jane seemed to go by or have her name misspelled in the records as Phebejane Hughes and Janet Hughes

I’m sorry if this post is a bit of a mess and hard to understand but thanks for any help anyone can give!

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I’ve thought about putting flowers on a their grave or for those I knew personally making a small cake and doing a little something with family who were close to them how about you all?

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