Main menu:
GETTING STARTED
ON YOUR FAMILY HISTORY
Welcome to the very addictive world of genealogy and family history
research.
It is time consuming but very rewarding.
The First Rule
The first rule of genealogy is to start with yourself. Look at your
birth and marriage certificates, and from them gather the details of
your parents and spouse’s parents.
Next, obtain your parents’ birth, death and marriage certificates and
gather details of your grandparents. Work backwards with details from
these entries.
Look-Ups
Request look-ups of bmd by people such as myself or local family
history groups.
Go to your local library to see if they have a Genealogy/History
Resource Center.
If they do, you can look up bdm, passenger lists etc directly from
micro fiche.
Some may allow access to CD roms for this information.
Check out the links on this site for some of the many such groups.
Join your local Family History Group.
They often have CD roms or fiche to enable you to do bdm, passenger
lists etc directly.
Contact researchers with your request but be aware that most of these
individuals and organizations require the payment of a fee.
Your Own Memories
Record your own memories and interview older relatives and friends of
the family.
This will help you begin your journey into the lives of your ancestors.
Oral family history can later be verified as other documents come to
hand.
Photographs
Although it does not fit into the strict sense of genealogy, collect as
many quality copies of photographs of your family, immediate relations
(aunts, uncles cousins etc.) and ancestors as possible before they are
lost.
Make sure where possible to write on the back of these photographs the
names, ages, relationship (to you) and date of photo.
These will be invaluable to your overall family history document when
you complete it.
You may then create a rogues gallery on a wall in your house.
Set out in the form of your family tree.
Some of the better genealogy software allows the insertion of photos.
This produces a more visually effective screen display or report.
Certificates
For accuracy (which is very important), you will need to obtain birth,
death and marriage certificates.
This is a very expensive exercise when first starting out, but it is
necessary to verify information you have gleaned from a variety of
sources such as family oral history or hearsay or people like myself
who have access to bdm indexes.
It is often possible to get photocopies of these certificates or
extracts directly from your family and relatives. This will save a
considerable expense initially.
When applying for certificates, it is advantageous to have the
Certificate Registration Number
as this will speed up the search and hence delivery process.
This number is often included in information you have obtained from
researchers
to whom you sent a request.
The Internet
The internet is a good source of genealogical information.
There are hundreds of thousand site of which this is one.
Check the links page on this site for some of the more useful sites.
Australian Genealogical Web Sites and Family History
Information You Need
Information you need to find for each individual includes:
(It may not be possible to find all of this information)
Family Name
First Name/s
When and where born
Parents names
When and where died
When and where married
Spouse's name
Children's Names
Additional information
ships they immigrated on
occupations
where they lived
how they lived
Journal or Diary
It is very handy to have a diary in an exercise book (not loose leaf)
where you
write down what information you have just found, the source and any
reference notes.
This can then be referred to at a latter time when your memory has
failed you and
you need to find where you found that vital bit of information.
Genealogy Software
You then need to organize your information into an easily accessible
easy to read format.
This is best done by using a suitable computer genealogy software
program.
There are many such programs available, mostly commercial (cost) but
some are free.
The two that I use are REUNION (a commercial program)
and PERSONAL ANCESTRAL FILE 5
(can be downloaded free from the Latter Day Saints web site
http://familysearch.org ).
Of the other genealogy software programs, some are good and others are
difficult to use.
Remember that
Genealogy
without
Documentation
is
Mythology.