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How do you research your family tree for free? How far back in history can you go?

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How do you research your family tree for free? How far back in history can you go?

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  1. Various sites allows you to create and research family tree for free. Popular amongst them are:

    http://www.familysearch.org/

    http://www.tribaljunction.com/

    http://www.ancestry.com/

    http://www.genealogy.com/

    http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/

    How far back in history can you go depends upon how successfull you are in connecting to the relatives who have created their family tree. As you add relatives, your tree automatically grows and automatically links to existing trees of more distant relatives.


  2. I'll paste my standard answer below. Most of us dead end in the 1500 - 1750 range for men, 1600 - 1850 for women (Maiden names are our bane.)

    How far back you can go depends on how long you work at it, who your ancestors were and how much faith you have in the records.

    If you are of Northern European heritage, believe everything you see on the Internet and spend three years, you can usually get to Charlemagne, and from him to Adam and Eve. African Americans almost always dead end with the people they find alive in 1870.

    Below:

    This is a text file I paste to questions like yours. People ask similar questions 3 - 14 times a day here. By pasting, you get a long, detailed answer, but I don't get finger cramps. It is long because there are over 400,000 free genealogy sites.

    It is also long because researching your family tree is as hard as writing a term paper in a History class. You don't have to be a rocket scientist, but you won't do it with five clicks. I could tell you everything I know in 30 minutes, but not 3. The fact you have to do research stops nine out of ten teens and many adults.

    If you didn't mention a country, we can't tell if you are in the USA, UK, Canada or Australia. I'm in the USA and my links are for it. If you are not, please edit your question to add a country. Or, better yet, delete it and ask again, this time putting inthe country. Genealogists from the UK answer posts here too. They are more experienced and more intelligent than I am. I'm better looking and my jokes are better.

    The really good stuff is in your parents' and grandparents' memories. No web site is going to tell you how your great grandparents decorated the Christmas tree with ornaments cut from tin foil during the depression, how Great Uncle Elmer wooed his wife with a banjo, or how Uncle John paid his way through college in the 1960's by smuggling herbs. Talk to your living relatives before it is too late.

    You won't find living people on genealogy sites. Don't look for yourself or your parents. Crooks can use your birth date and your mother's maiden name to steal your identity. If your parents were married in June and your oldest brother was born 4 months later, it isn't anyone's business, which is another reason living people's dates are not on public sites.

    So much for the warnings. Here are some links. These are large and free. Many of them have subtle ads for Ancestry.com in them - ads that ask for a name, then offer a trial subscription. Watch out for those advertisements.

    If you try the links and don't find anyone, go to

    http://www.tedpack.org/yagenlinks.html

    It repeats each link, but it has a whole paragraph of tips and instructions for each one.

    http://www.cyndislist.com

    Cyndi's List has over 250,000 sites.

    http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/f...

    The Mormon's mega-site.

    http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.c...

    RootsWeb World Connect. The links at the top are advertisements. They mislead beginners. Ignore them and scroll down.

    http://www.rootsweb.com/

    RootsWeb Home.

    This is the biggest free (genealogy) site in the world.

    http://www.ancestry.com

    Ancestry has some free data and some you have to pay for.

    http://www.usgenweb.net

    US Gen Web. Click on a state. Find a link that says "County".

    http://www.ancestry.com/learn/facts/defa...

    Surname meanings and origins, one of Ancestry's free pages.

    http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-b...

    Social Security Death Index. Click on "Advanced". Women are under their married names. They are under their maiden names in most other sites.

    http://find.person.superpages.com/

    USA Phone book, for looking up distant cousins.

    http://vitals.rootsweb.com/ca/death/sear...

    California Death Index, 1940 - 1997.

        

    http://www.genforum.com

    GenForum has surname, state and county boards.

    http://boards.ancestry.com/

    Ancestry has surname, state and county boards too. They are free.

    Read

    http://www.tedpack.org/goodpost.html

    before you post on either one.

    Read the paragraphs about query boards on

    http://www.tedpack.org/yagenlinks.html

    before you search them.

          

    http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/lis...

    Roots Web Mailing List Archives.

    Read

    http://www.tedpack.org/maillist.html

    if genealogy mailing lists are new to you.

    Off the Internet, some public libraries have census image subscriptions. Many Family History Centers do too. FHC's are small rooms in Mormon churches. They welcome anyone interested in genealogy, not just fellow Mormons. They have resources on CD's and volunteers who are friendly. They don't try to convert you; in fact, they don't mention their religion unless you ask a question about it.

  3. You can do a little bit free on ancestry.com, familytree.com and such.  You can also get a free trial membership to some.  You might also try your public library.  Some of them have lots of genealogy info.

  4. Try ancestry.com You have to pay for it.

    Free site is ellisisle.org. You can also check for information with the the Church of Latter Day Saints ( Mormons) who have a vast database of immigration.

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